[Congressional Bills 119th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H.R. 8800 Reported in House (RH)]

<DOC>





                                                 Union Calendar No. 606
119th CONGRESS
  2d Session
                                H. R. 8800

                          [Report No. 119-698]

     To authorize appropriations for fiscal year 2027 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 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

                              May 13, 2026

    Mr. Rogers of Alabama (for himself and Mr. Smith of Washington) 
 introduced the following bill; which was referred to the Committee on 
                             Armed Services

                             June 15, 2026

  Reported with an amendment, committed to the Committee of the Whole 
       House on the State of the Union, and ordered to be printed
 [Strike out all after the enacting clause and insert the part printed 
                               in italic]
[For text of introduced bill, see copy of bill as introduced on May 13, 
                                 2026]


_______________________________________________________________________

                                 A BILL


 
     To authorize appropriations for fiscal year 2027 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 2027''.

SEC. 2. ORGANIZATION OF ACT INTO DIVISIONS; TABLE OF CONTENTS.

    (a) Divisions.--This Act is organized into four divisions as 
follows:
            (1) Division A--Department of Defense Authorizations.
            (2) Division B--Military Construction Authorizations.
            (3) Division C--Department of Energy National Security 
        Authorizations and Other Authorizations.
            (4) Division D--Funding Tables.
    (b) Table of Contents.--The table of contents for this Act is as 
follows:

Sec. 1. Short title.
Sec. 2. Organization of Act into divisions; table of contents.
Sec. 3. Congressional defense committees.

            DIVISION A--DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE AUTHORIZATIONS

                          TITLE I--PROCUREMENT

              Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations

Sec. 101. Authorization of appropriations.

                       Subtitle B--Army Programs

Sec. 111. Standards for networked, autonomous, kinetic capabilities to 
                            protect against small unmanned aircraft 
                            systems.

                       Subtitle C--Navy Programs

Sec. 121. Temporary unavailability of amphibious warfare ships.
Sec. 122. Authority to use incremental funding for long lead-time 
                            components for Virginia class submarines.
Sec. 123. Multiyear procurement authority for Arleigh Burke Class 
                            Destroyers.
Sec. 124. Multiyear procurement authority for John Lewis class Oilers.
Sec. 125. Procurement authorities for certain amphibious shipbuilding 
                            programs.
Sec. 126. Contract authority for submarine tender program.
Sec. 127. Multiyear procurement authority for E-2D Advanced Hawkeye 
                            aircraft.
Sec. 128. Authority to use incremental funding for the construction of 
                            a Guided Missile Destroyer (DDG).
Sec. 129. Authority for advance procurement of components for Ship-to-
                            Shore Connector class craft.
Sec. 130. Torpedo modernization, testing, and inventory sufficiency for 
                            two simultaneous regional conflicts.
Sec. 131. Limitation on construction of Battleship pending 
                            certification on technology readiness 
                            levels.
Sec. 132. Strategy for iterative development and flight modifications 
                            for FF(X) class frigates.
Sec. 133. Report on continuity of mission and readiness during 
                            transition of F-5 to F/A-18E/F aircraft for 
                            the Navy Reserve.

                     Subtitle D--Air Force Programs

Sec. 141. Inventory requirements for certain fighter aircraft.
Sec. 142. Extension of prohibition on retirement of F-22 aircraft.
Sec. 143. Limitation on retirement of E-3 airborne warning and control 
                            system aircraft and requirements relating 
                            to E-7 aircraft.
Sec. 144. Evaluation for potential transfer of certain A-10 aircraft 
                            among military departments.
Sec. 145. Extension of requirements relating to C-130 aircraft.
Sec. 146. Limitation on availability of funds for C-37 aircraft 
                            recapitalization program.
Sec. 147. Limitation on retirement of MQ-9 Reaper aircraft.
Sec. 148. Analysis of alternatives for next generation airlift 
                            capabilities.
Sec. 149. Authorization of transitional activities to improve airlift 
                            operations.
Sec. 150. Conveyance of certain F-14 aircraft to U.S. Space and Rocket 
                            Center Commission in Huntsville, Alabama.
Sec. 151. Report on the feasibility of restoring nuclear capability to 
                            the B-1B Lancer bomber aircraft.

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

Sec. 161. Multiyear procurement authority for F-15EX aircraft.
Sec. 162. Multiyear procurement authority for F-35 aircraft.
Sec. 163. Prohibition on procurement and use of humanoid robotic 
                            systems produced, developed, or controlled 
                            by foreign adversaries.
Sec. 164. Limitation on availability of funds to retire or decommission 
                            certain radar systems.
Sec. 165. Standards for common operating system for small unmanned 
                            aircraft systems.
Sec. 166. Minimum annual procurement goal for AbilityOne Program.
Sec. 167. Implementation of Comptroller General recommendations on F-35 
                            Joint Strike Fighter technical data needs 
                            for sustainment.
Sec. 168. Implementation of GAO recommendation on F-35 joint strike 
                            fighter use of contract incentive fees.
Sec. 169. Study on fuel procurement practices of the Department of 
                            Defense.

         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. Budget review and certification for certain categories of 
                            research and development.
Sec. 212. Deputy Directors of Operational Test and Evaluation.
Sec. 213. Repeal of pilot authority for use of other transactions for 
                            installation or facility prototyping.
Sec. 214. Modifications to responsibilities of the Defense Innovation 
                            Unit.
Sec. 215. Test and evaluation repository and regional test hubs of the 
                            Test Resource Management Center.
Sec. 216. Weapon system platform modernization and cyber hardening.
Sec. 217. Repeal of requirement for Secretary of Defense to act through 
                            a specified official for NATO innovation 
                            program.
Sec. 218. Modification to test program for engineering plant of certain 
                            vessels.
Sec. 219.  United States-Israel Defense Technology Cooperation 
                            Initiative.
Sec. 220. Establishment of synthetic training environment to support 
                            Indo-Pacific operations.
Sec. 221. Requirement to establish test and training corridors for 
                            small unmanned aircraft systems and 
                            associated capabilities.
Sec. 222.  Operational autonomy requirements for unmanned surface 
                            vessels.
Sec. 223. Realignment of the National Strategic Research Institute to 
                            the Department of the Air Force.
Sec. 224. Reimbursement of National Guard for research, development, 
                            test, and evaluation expenses.
Sec. 225. Use of innovative and emerging food production technologies 
                            for components of military rations.
Sec. 226. Support for advanced technologies that strengthen United 
                            States agricultural production, agrifood 
                            systems, and associated bioindustrial 
                            manufacturing capacity.
Sec. 227. Prize competitions to support the research and development of 
                            biotechnology for the Department of 
                            Defense.
Sec. 228. Pilot program to recognize outstanding achievements in 
                            technology and prototype development.
Sec. 229. Pilot program on forward deployable biomanufacturing 
                            capabilities.
Sec. 230. Pilot program on the use of automated data security posture 
                            management technologies for artificial 
                            intelligence systems.
Sec. 231. Pilot program on technologies to strengthen authentication 
                            and attribution of human authorization for 
                            consequential actions.
Sec. 232. Cloud laboratory pilot program.
Sec. 233. Pilot program to test and evaluate muzzle blast overpressure 
                            mitigation devices.
Sec. 234. Space technology demonstration of advanced nuclear propulsion 
                            technologies.
Sec. 235. Prohibition on pilot trainees operating T-7 aircraft pending 
                            testing and corrective actions.
Sec. 236. Prohibition on availability of funds for gain of function 
                            research.
Sec. 237. Prohibition on availability of funds for animal research in 
                            collaboration with foreign countries of 
                            concern.

             Subtitle C--Plans, Reports, and Other Matters

Sec. 251. Policy to guide the development and acquisition of quantum 
                            computing systems for the Department of 
                            Defense.
Sec. 252. Plan for competitive experimentation relating to autonomous 
                            and nontraditional capabilities relevant to 
                            the A-10 mission set.
Sec. 253. Plan for establishment and evaluation of experimental, drone-
                            centric reconnaissance and security 
                            formations.
Sec. 254. Plan for use of certain aircraft for research and development 
                            purposes.
Sec. 255. Sonobuoy modernization, testing, and inventory sufficiency 
                            for two simultaneous regional conflicts.
Sec. 256. Review and implementation of strategies to accelerate the 
                            qualification process for domestically 
                            produced advanced energetic materials.

                  TITLE III--OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE

              Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations

Sec. 301. Authorization of appropriations.

                   Subtitle B--Energy and Environment

Sec. 311. Inclusion of nuclear energy in energy policy of Department of 
                            Defense and related matters.
Sec. 312. Modification to pilot program on Navy installation nuclear 
                            energy.
Sec. 313. Standardized document on scope of projects carried out under 
                            Military Munitions Response Program.
Sec. 314. Pilot program for secure recycling of domestic electronic 
                            waste.
Sec. 315. Program for deployment of transportable nuclear microreactor 
                            in area of responsibility of the United 
                            States Indo-Pacific Command.
Sec. 316. Prohibition on operation of connected vehicles designed, 
                            developed, manufactured, or supplied by 
                            persons owned by, controlled by, or subject 
                            to the jurisdiction of a foreign entity of 
                            concern on Department of Defense property.
Sec. 317. Pilot program on off-grid tactical power.
Sec. 318. Clarification of certain authorities independent from 
                            designated Executive Agent for installation 
                            or operational nuclear energy.

                 Subtitle C--Logistics and Sustainment

Sec. 321. Requirement for quarterly reports on munitions inventory 
                            numbers.
Sec. 322. Increase of capital investment program threshold for working-
                            capital funds.
Sec. 323. Establishment of Civil Reserve Industrial Base.
Sec. 324. Modification of minimum capital investment for certain depots 
                            of Department of Defense.
Sec. 325. Expansion of covered depots to include Crane Army Ammunition 
                            Activity, Indiana.
Sec. 326. Expansion of space-available travel program for members of 
                            the Armed Forces stationed at United States 
                            Naval Station Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Sec. 327. Authorization of sustainable aviation fuel procurement.
Sec. 328. Modification and extension of pilot program on optimization 
                            of aerial refueling and fuel management in 
                            contested logistics environments through 
                            use of artificial intelligence.
Sec. 329. Army expansion of production of 155mm artillery ammunition.
Sec. 330. Requirements relating to aerial refueling capability of Air 
                            Force tanker fleet.
Sec. 331. Navy containerized expeditionary advanced manufacturing 
                            capabilities pilot program.
Sec. 332. Expansion of transportation services on Navy installations.
Sec. 333. Requirements relating to sustainment of A-10 aircraft and 
                            related training.
Sec. 334. Requirement for standardized munitions with respect to 
                            certain unmanned aircraft.
Sec. 335. Requirement to ensure sufficiency of naval mine inventory.

                          Subtitle D--Reports

Sec. 341. Strategy to support Joint Strike Fighter sustainment and 
                            maintenance in contested operating 
                            environments.

                       Subtitle E--Other Matters

Sec. 351. Establishment of Center for the Study of the National Guard.
Sec. 352. Disposition of accountable property in designated theaters of 
                            operation.
Sec. 353. Certification requirement for motor carriers transporting 
                            Department of Defense freight.
Sec. 354. Establishment of national security registry for motor 
                            carriers handling Department of Defense 
                            freight.
Sec. 355. Protection of property owned, possessed, or shipped by the 
                            Department of Defense from lien, arrest, or 
                            seizure during shipment.
Sec. 356. Establishment of United States Marine Corps Museum System.
Sec. 357. Requirement for FireGuard program.
Sec. 358. Pilot program for testing and evaluation of counter-fire 
                            unmanned fire suppression aircraft systems 
                            on military installations.
Sec. 359. Pilot program on data collection and analysis in connection 
                            with Army combat training center rotations.
Sec. 360. Minimum maritime firefighting capability standards for naval 
                            installations that berth large naval 
                            vessels.
Sec. 361. Minimum staffing requirements for fire apparatus at certain 
                            Space Force installations.
Sec. 362. Activities for evaluating integration and interoperability of 
                            technologies for subterranean operations.
Sec. 363. Improvements to Osprey aircraft safety efforts.
Sec. 364. Army pilot program on electronic ammunition simulation for 
                            small arms training.
Sec. 365. Pilot program on hydrophobin-based biomanufactured treatment 
                            as flame-resistant and water-repellent 
                            treatments for military uniforms.

              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: Senior enlisted members on active duty 
                            or on full-time National Guard Duty for 
                            administration of the Marine Corps Reserve.

              Subtitle C--Authorization of Appropriations

Sec. 421. Military personnel.

                   TITLE V--MILITARY PERSONNEL POLICY

      Subtitle A--Officer Policy and Reserve Component Management

Sec. 501. Flexibility in requirements of selection boards: composition; 
                            convening.
Sec. 502. Requirements for removal of certain general and flag 
                            officers.
Sec. 503. Ranks of Judge Advocates General.
Sec. 504. Grades of certain chiefs of reserve components.
Sec. 505. Grade of Chief of the Veterinary Corps of the Army.
Sec. 506. Limitation on the transfer to the Space Force of certain 
                            functions of the Air National Guard.
Sec. 507. Inclusion of Judge Advocates in Global Force Management 
                            processes.
Sec. 508. Role of military chaplains.

Subtitle B--Recruitment, General Service Authorities and Prohibitions, 
                          and Military Records

Sec. 511. Recruitment: improvements relating to secondary schools.
Sec. 512. Prohibition on reduction in personnel assigned to duty with a 
                            service review agency; report on reviews of 
                            certain discharges related to PTSD.
Sec. 513. Selective Service System: omission of deceased persons from 
                            registration.
Sec. 514. Requirement of equal opportunity, racial neutrality, and 
                            exclusive use of merit in military 
                            personnel actions.
Sec. 515. Prohibition of hate symbols: regulations; guidance; training.
Sec. 516. Timely resolution of career-impacting administrative 
                            investigations.
Sec. 517. Prohibition on use of prediction markets by personnel of the 
                            Department of Defense.
Sec. 518. Pilot program on modernization of drug testing using voice-
                            based risk assessment.
Sec. 519. Soldier Digital Lifecycle Modernization Initiative.
Sec. 519A. Authority to study the propensity of certain students to 
                            serve in the Armed Forces.

                      Subtitle C--Member Training

Sec. 521. Ineligibility of a national of a non-allied foreign nation to 
                            attend a Service Academy.
Sec. 522. Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics program for 
                            Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps.
Sec. 523. Additional nominees to the Service Academies from the 
                            Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana 
                            Islands.
Sec. 524. Elimination of cap on the number of cadets or midshipmen who 
                            may receive alternative service obligations 
                            to become professional athletes.
Sec. 525. Elimination of the right of cadets to automatic 
                            reexamination.
Sec. 526. Congressional communications officials of the Service 
                            Academies.
Sec. 527. Revision to decision timeframe for expedited transfers at the 
                            military service academies.
Sec. 528. Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps instructor pay.
Sec. 529. Establishment of program to promote participation of foreign 
                            students in the Senior Reserve Officers' 
                            Training Corps.
Sec. 529A. Establishment of the Military Service Academy Panel on 
                            Athletics.
Sec. 529B. Limitation on authority to eliminate the 70th Flying 
                            Training Squadron of the United States Air 
                            Force Academy.

                      Subtitle D--Member Education

Sec. 531. Establishment of a doctor of psychology program and a master 
                            of social work program at the Uniformed 
                            Services University of the Health Sciences.
Sec. 532. Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarship and Financial 
                            Assistance program: eligible institutions; 
                            continuity of payments.
Sec. 533. Inclusion of National Intelligence College as part of the 
                            National Defense University.
Sec. 534. Defense Information School: authority to grant associate's 
                            degree in communications.
Sec. 535. Eligibility of an enlisted member to receive a degree from 
                            the Naval Postgraduate School.

                      Subtitle E--Military Justice

Sec. 541. Clarification of qualifications for judge advocates.
Sec. 542. Authority of special trial counsel to enter into pretrial 
                            agreements with respect to certain 
                            offenses.
Sec. 543. Clarifying amendment to completion of appellate review under 
                            article 57 of the Uniform Code of Military 
                            Justice.
Sec. 544. Review of courts-martial records.
Sec. 545. Uniform Code of Military Justice: prohibition of review of 
                            factual sufficiency in certain appeals 
                            before a Court of Criminal Appeals.
Sec. 546. Clarification of court of criminal appeals review of 
                            sentencing.
Sec. 547. Expansion of victim access to Court of Appeals for the Armed 
                            Forces.
Sec. 548. Modifications to offense of wrongful broadcast or 
                            distribution of intimate visual images 
                            under the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
Sec. 549. Authorization of death penalty for offense of rape of a child 
                            under the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
Sec. 549A. Punitive article on retaliation for reporting of sexual 
                            harassment under the Uniform Code of 
                            Military Justice.
Sec. 549B. Revision of Department of Defense Instruction regarding 
                            early release eligibility for offenders 
                            convicted of certain sexual offenses under 
                            the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
Sec. 549C. Notification required to implement changes to military legal 
                            system recommended by Special Review Panel 
                            activities.
Sec. 549D. Analysis of potential establishment of separate punitive 
                            article on hazing under the Uniform Code of 
                            Military Justice.

           Subtitle F--Investigations and Other Legal Matters

Sec. 551. Extension of Special Victims' Counsel services to domestic 
                            violence victims.
Sec. 552. Policies regarding the reporting of missing members of the 
                            Armed Forces.
Sec. 553. Authority of Naval Criminal Investigative Service to 
                            investigate sexual harassment.
Sec. 554. Cross-service data sharing regarding substantiated 
                            allegations of sexual misconduct.
Sec. 555. Inclusion of sexual harassment in Catch a Serial Offender 
                            program.
Sec. 556. Military domestic violence emergent housing policy.
Sec. 557. Requirement for standardized policies and processes to ensure 
                            the timely review, documentation, and 
                            resolution of requests for military 
                            protective orders.
Sec. 558. Reestablishment of Defense Advisory Committee for the 
                            Prevention of Sexual Misconduct.
Sec. 559. Pilot program on use of advanced monitoring and 
                            rehabilitative technologies in Army 
                            correctional facilities.

                     Subtitle G--Career Transition

Sec. 561. Establishment of separation oath for members of the Armed 
                            Forces.
Sec. 562. Designation of senior official for military-to-civilian 
                            transition.
Sec. 563. Authorization of pilot program to help members separating 
                            from certain Armed Forces obtain employment 
                            as teachers.
Sec. 564. Study on separation of members of the Armed Forces due to the 
                            mandate to receive the COVID-19 vaccine and 
                            the transfer of education benefits by such 
                            members.

    Subtitle H--Family Programs, Child Care, and Dependent Education

Sec. 571. Extension of non-medical counseling services program for 
                            military families.
Sec. 572. Pilot program to increase payments for child care services in 
                            high-cost areas.
Sec. 573. Pilot program to provide financial assistance to members of 
                            the Armed Forces for in-home child care: 
                            inclusion of au pairs.
Sec. 574. Modifications to pilot program to provide financial 
                            assistance to members of the Armed Forces 
                            for in-home child care.
Sec. 575. Certain assistance to local educational agencies that benefit 
                            dependents of military and civilian 
                            personnel.
Sec. 576. Policies to support military families subject to court-
                            ordered child custody arrangements.
Sec. 577. Authority for pilot program for certain military spouses to 
                            become special education teachers in DODEA 
                            schools.
Sec. 578. Pilot program for push-text notifications to members and 
                            dependents.

                   Subtitle I--Decorations and Awards

Sec. 581. Gold star survivor: definition prescribed by Secretary of 
                            Defense.
Sec. 582. Medal of Honor recipients: access to any military 
                            installation; liaison.
Sec. 583. Technical correction to authorization to award the 
                            Distinguished-Service Cross to Isaac 
                            ``Ike'' Camacho.
Sec. 584. Authorization of service ribbon for a member of the National 
                            Guard who performs homeland defense duty.
Sec. 585. Authorization for posthumous award of Medal of Honor to 
                            Rafael Peralta for acts of valor.
Sec. 586. Authorization for posthumous award of Medal of Honor to 
                            Robert A. Lodge for acts of valor.
Sec. 587. Authorization for award of the Distinguished-Service Cross 
                            for James O. Ratliff for acts of valor 
                            during the Vietnam War.
Sec. 588. Authorization to award the Distinguished-Service Cross to 
                            Joseph P. Lynch for acts of valor as a 
                            member of the Army during the Vietnam War.
Sec. 589. Sense of Congress regarding award of medal of honor to Thomas 
                            J. Grasso for acts of valor during 
                            Operation Freedom's Sentinel.
Sec. 589A. Sense of Congress regarding award of Medal of Honor to 
                            retired Colonel Philip J. Conran for acts 
                            of valor in Laos during the Vietnam war.

          Subtitle J--Other Matters and Miscellaneous Reports

Sec. 591. Expansion of eligibility of veterans for certain military 
                            adaptive sports program.
Sec. 592. Expanded goals of authorized program regarding the National 
                            September 11 Memorial and Museum.
Sec. 593. Local agricultural procurement in Guam commissaries.
Sec. 594. Submission of review of operational effectiveness of Army and 
                            Marine Corps ground combat units.

           TITLE VI--MILITARY COMPENSATION AND OTHER BENEFITS

                  Subtitle A--Bonus and Incentive Pays

Sec. 601. One-year extension of certain expiring bonus and special pay 
                            authorities.
Sec. 602. Authorizing board certification incentive pay for medical 
                            officers with doctoral degrees.
Sec. 603. One-time corrective increase and annual adjustments for 
                            certain special and incentive pays for 
                            members of the armed forces; clarification 
                            of special and incentive pay authorities 
                            for members of reserve components.
Sec. 604. Payment of maximum amount of aviation incentive pay to 
                            aviation officers with more than 8 years of 
                            aviation service; enhancement of retention 
                            incentives available to aviation officers.
Sec. 605. Expansions of authorities to contract with members of the 
                            Senior Reserve Officers' Training Corps.
Sec. 606. Retroactive granting of waivers for aviation incentive pay.

                         Subtitle B--Allowances

Sec. 611. Basic needs allowance: exclusion of basic allowance for 
                            housing from the calculation of gross 
                            household income of an eligible member of 
                            the Armed Forces.
Sec. 612. Basic allowance for housing: permanent authority to make 
                            certain temporary increases.
Sec. 613. Temporary adjustment to a rate of the basic allowance for 
                            housing for members of the uniformed 
                            services: lower threshold; permanent 
                            authority.
Sec. 614. Modifications to cost-of-living allowance in the continental 
                            United States for members of the Army, 
                            Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, and Space 
                            Force.
Sec. 615. Payment of costs to ship breast milk of a member performing 
                            certain duty.

                           Subtitle C--Leave

Sec. 621. Accrual of leave for members of the Armed Forces.
Sec. 622. Accumulation of leave for members of the Armed Forces.
Sec. 623. Bereavement leave for a member of the Armed Forces in the 
                            case of a loss of pregnancy or stillbirth.

                Subtitle D--Family and Survivor Benefits

Sec. 631. Payment to participant in Survivor Benefit Plan whose spouse 
                            dies before the participant.
Sec. 632. Increase in and cost-of-living adjustment of death gratuity.

                   Subtitle E--Defense Resale Matters

Sec. 641. Use of commissary stores by employees of the Department of 
                            Defense Education Activity and military 
                            child development centers.
Sec. 642. Single-use shopping bags in commissary stores.
Sec. 643. Limitation on implementation of Supply Chain Transformation 
                            Initiative of the Defense Commissary 
                            Agency.

           Subtitle F--Other Benefits, Reports, and Briefings

Sec. 651. Career flexibility programs: eligibility of a member already 
                            subject to a period of obligated service; 
                            minimum length of program.
Sec. 652. Provision of information regarding food access and child care 
                            for members receiving orders for a change 
                            of permanent station.
Sec. 653. Reserves and retired members: acceptance of employment, 
                            payments, and awards from foreign 
                            governments through private entities.
Sec. 654. Program to provide to certain patrons a discount on motor 
                            fuel sold at exchange stores.

                   TITLE VII--HEALTH CARE PROVISIONS

             Subtitle A--TRICARE and Other Health Benefits

Sec. 701. Dental readiness for certain members of Selected Reserve.
Sec. 702. Expanded access to dental care for certain dependents.
Sec. 703. Fertility treatment for certain members of the Armed Forces 
                            and dependents.
Sec. 704. Limitation on ability of Secretary of Defense to modify scope 
                            of medical services.
Sec. 705. Prohibition on and reversal of actions to modify scope of 
                            medical services provided at certain 
                            military medical treatment facilities.
Sec. 706. TRICARE coverage for increased supply for contraception.
Sec. 707. Pilot program to help certain members of the Armed Forces 
                            stop smoking.

                 Subtitle B--Health Care Administration

Sec. 721. Improvements to Defense Health Agency.
Sec. 722. Improvements to administration of military medical treatment 
                            facilities.
Sec. 723. Designation of Defense Health Agency as Combat Support 
                            Agency.
Sec. 724. Accounts for medical and health care programs of the 
                            Department of Defense.
Sec. 725. Availability of Combat and Operational Medicine Program 
                            Account and other funds for certain medical 
                            countermeasures.
Sec. 726. Inclusion of Defense Health Agency in reporting requirements 
                            relating to unfunded priorities.
Sec. 727. Joint trauma system.
Sec. 728. Clarification of consistent evaluations of medical 
                            malpractice claims.
Sec. 729. Chaperones for certain sensitive examinations at military 
                            medical treatment facilities.
Sec. 730. Requirement to offer medical chaperones during sensitive 
                            medical examinations.
Sec. 731. Uniform protocols on screening for unwanted sexual behavior.
Sec. 732. Requirement to notify Committees on Armed Services of 
                            hospitalization of combat wounded members 
                            of the Armed Forces.
Sec. 733. Authority to provide residencies, internships, and similar 
                            postgraduate programs for civilian health 
                            care professionals of the Department of 
                            Defense.
Sec. 734. Notification to TRICARE beneficiaries of coverage transition 
                            requirements.
Sec. 735. Waiver of referral requirement under TRICARE Prime for 
                            certain physical therapy.
Sec. 736. Rates of pay for a provider of care or services furnished 
                            under TRICARE program.
Sec. 737. Plans on military health system.
Sec. 738. Modification to qualification waiver authority for applicants 
                            for nursing or practical nurse positions in 
                            the Department of Defense.
Sec. 739. Aerial transport and Department-wide capability for high-
                            consequence infectious diseases.
Sec. 740. Availability of obstetrician-gynecologists and certified 
                            nurse-midwifes at military medical 
                            treatment facilities.
Sec. 741. Availability of sexual assault nurse examiner services at 
                            military medical treatment facilities.
Sec. 742. Improvement of process for filing of complaints and reporting 
                            of issues under TRICARE program.
Sec. 743. Pilot program on filling primary care management positions at 
                            remote military medical treatment 
                            facilities.
Sec. 744. Establishment of pilot program on use of health care 
                            assessments other than periodic health 
                            assessments.

            Subtitle C--Studies, Reports, and Other Matters

Sec. 751. Quarterly briefing on military treatment facilities.
Sec. 752. Enhanced medical coverage for civilian employees of the 
                            Department of Defense and dependents in 
                            certain locations.
Sec. 753. Modifications to pilot program to assist certain members of 
                            the Armed Forces and dependents with 
                            additional supplemental coverage relating 
                            to cancer.
Sec. 754. Modifications to evaluation and report on TRICARE program 
                            effectiveness.
Sec. 755. Extension of extramedical maternal health providers 
                            demonstration project.
Sec. 756. Modification of traumatic brain injury oversight strategy and 
                            action plan of the Department of Defense.
Sec. 757. Expansion of prohibition on painful research on certain 
                            animals.
Sec. 758. Pilot program to treat pregnancy as a qualifying event for 
                            enrollment in TRICARE Select.
Sec. 759. Access to automated external defibrillators during military 
                            physical training.
Sec. 760. Pilot program on remote blood pressure monitoring for certain 
                            pregnant and postpartum TRICARE 
                            beneficiaries.
Sec. 761. Pilot program on secure, mobile personal health record for 
                            members of the Armed Forces.
Sec. 762. Pilot program to provide for the use of blue-light 
                            dissipating displays to certain 
                            individuals.
Sec. 763. Extension and improvement of pilot program of the Uniformed 
                            Services University of the Health Sciences 
                            on pharmaceutical supply chain.
Sec. 764. Working group on digital strategy for traumatic brain 
                            injuries.
Sec. 765. Study on long-term effects of military flight operations on 
                            brain health and mental health.
Sec. 766. Study on feasibility of establishing military medical 
                            treatment facility at Homestead Air Reserve 
                            Base.
Sec. 767. Study on feasibility of establishing digital system relating 
                            to access to care at military medical 
                            treatment facilities.
Sec. 768. Review by Inspector General of the Department of Defense on 
                            efforts to prevent suicide.
Sec. 769. Requirements relating to wellness checks for health and 
                            welfare of certain members of the Armed 
                            Forces.
Sec. 770. Reports on Department of Defense Comprehensive Autism Care 
                            Demonstration program.
Sec. 771. Transition of medics to civilian workforce.
Sec. 772. Strategic plan to address mental health of certain members of 
                            the Armed Forces.
Sec. 773. Briefing on prostate cancer incidence and emerging diagnostic 
                            technologies.
Sec. 774. Assessment of access, fairness, and transparency under 
                            TRICARE pharmacy benefits program.
Sec. 775. Report on feasibility of pilot program on behavioral 
                            neurology fellowships.
Sec. 776. Government Accountability Office study on reserve component 
                            dental readiness and benefit sufficiency.
Sec. 777. Review of the occupational health and safety conditions of 
                            operational facilities associated with the 
                            LGM-30G Minuteman III intercontinental 
                            ballistic missile system.
Sec. 778. Continued evaluation of the TRICARE program through 
                            beneficiary experience surveys.
Sec. 779. Removal of peptides from prohibited performance enhancing 
                            substances list.
Sec. 780. Study on long-term effects of exposure to toxic substances on 
                            reproductive health and fertility.

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

             Subtitle A--Acquisition Policy and Management

Sec. 801. Responsibilities and authorities of portfolio acquisition 
                            executives with respect to contractors.
Sec. 802. Ensuring best value in procurement.
Sec. 803. Limitation on certain contract clauses for commercial 
                            products or commercial services.
Sec. 804. Elimination of late cost and pricing data submission defense.
Sec. 805. Reporting of price increases.
Sec. 806. Limitation on suspension of progress payments.
Sec. 807. Uniform requirements for electronic contract writing systems 
                            and acquisition management systems.
Sec. 808. Risk-based approach to monitoring contractor business 
                            systems.
Sec. 809. Procurement of initial spares.
Sec. 810. Procurement of local produce, seafood, and meat in the area 
                            of responsibility of the United States 
                            Indo-Pacific Command.
Sec. 811. Review of defense audit agencies.

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

Sec. 821. Modification to certain acquisition thresholds.
Sec. 822. Use of accrued interest by certain consortium managers.
Sec. 823. Amendment to other transaction authority.
Sec. 824. Requirement for modular open system approach and 
                            modifications to rights in technical data.
Sec. 825. Modifications to requirements relating to long-term 
                            concessions agreements with certain 
                            retailers.
Sec. 826. Prohibition on contracting with employers of convicted 
                            traffickers.
Sec. 827. Acquisition thresholds for certain materials.
Sec. 828. Clarification of certain elements of Department of Defense 
                            Mentor-Protege Program.
Sec. 829. Codification of program for negotiation of comprehensive 
                            small business subcontracting plans.
Sec. 830. Consumption-based procurements and associated payments.
Sec. 831. Extension of briefing and certification requirement.
Sec. 832. Preference for recycled strategic and critical materials.
Sec. 833. Transfer authority for rapid transition of other transaction 
                            authority prototypes.
Sec. 834. Portfolio-based acquisition of autonomous capability.
Sec. 835. Establishment of Pathfinder Programs to inform requirements 
                            reform.
Sec. 836. Requirements for certain unmanned surface vessels to be 
                            manufactured in the United States.

  Subtitle C--Provisions Relating to Acquisition Workforce Development

Sec. 851. Acquisition workforce data analytics capability.
Sec. 852. Chief Acquisition Talent Officer.
Sec. 853. Codification of acquisition workforce key performance 
                            objectives.
Sec. 854. Demonstrated proficiency requirements for critical 
                            acquisition positions.
Sec. 855. Extension and modification of acquisition workforce 
                            demonstration project.

               Subtitle D--Intellectual Property Matters

Sec. 861. Reform of technical data and software rights to support 
                            competition, sustainment, and readiness.
Sec. 862. Intellectual Property Ombudsman; voluntary expert mediation 
                            for certain intellectual property matters.
Sec. 863. Expansion of reverse engineering authority for prototype 
                            projects.
Sec. 864. Clarifications to sustainment planning requirements for 
                            covered systems.
Sec. 865. Software accountability improvements over lifecycles.
Sec. 866. Assessment of a Pay-to-Print Program.
Sec. 867. Prioritizing maintenance, repair, and overhaul for readiness.

                       Subtitle E--Other Matters

Sec. 871. Enhancement to defense supply chain resilience and secondary 
                            source qualification.
Sec. 872. Tailored acquisition pathways for non-traditional 
                            intermediate-range fires capabilities.
Sec. 873. Pilot program for domestic antimony and copper production for 
                            defense applications.
Sec. 874. Addressing the backlog of open cases related to the Defense 
                            Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement.
Sec. 875. Limitation on availability of funds for purchase of 
                            photovoltaic cells, modules, or inverters 
                            from foreign entities of concern.
Sec. 876. Ensuring Department of Defense contractor compliance with 
                            disability hiring goals.
Sec. 877. Expedited implementation of commercial acquisition reforms.

      TITLE IX--DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT

Sec. 901. Transfer of responsibility to supervise activities of 
                            Department of Defense relating to export 
                            controls.
Sec. 902. Membership of Commandant of the Coast Guard on the Joint 
                            Chiefs of Staff.
Sec. 903. Oversight of geographic combatant commands.

                      TITLE X--GENERAL PROVISIONS

                     Subtitle A--Financial Matters

Sec. 1001.  General transfer authority.
Sec. 1002. Annual report on unfunded priorities of Defense POW/MIA 
                            Accounting Agency.
Sec. 1003. Equivalency standards for financial management positions.
Sec. 1004. Compliance with Payment Integrity Information Act 
                            requirements and strengthening improper 
                            payments detection.
Sec. 1005. Authority to establish Joint Task Force Audit.
Sec. 1006. Budget transparency for Army multi-domain task force and 
                            Marine Littoral Regiment.

                Subtitle B--Naval Vessels and Shipyards

Sec. 1011. Modification of authority to purchase used vessels with 
                            National Defense Sealift Fund.
Sec. 1012. Requirement for procurement of components for naval vessels 
                            from manufacturers in national technology 
                            and industrial base.
Sec. 1013. Settlement of admiralty claims against the United States.
Sec. 1014. Amphibious fleet force structure.
Sec. 1015. Armament of naval auxiliary vessels.
Sec. 1016. Additional measures for Navy strategy for investment in and 
                            support for the maritime industrial base.
Sec. 1017. Inclusion of Navy surface combat ship maintenance as a 
                            separate line item in operation and 
                            maintenance budget.
Sec. 1018. Contracting reform for surface ship maintenance, repair, and 
                            overhaul.
Sec. 1019. Realignment of contract management for Polar Security Cutter 
                            program.
Sec. 1020. Domestic sourcing of bulk fuel to support Tanker Security 
                            Program.
Sec. 1021. Requirements relating to unmanned surface vessels.
Sec. 1022. Enhancement of Navy submarine rescue capabilities.
Sec. 1023. Navy-Coast Guard maritime workforce and capacity 
                            coordination plan.
Sec. 1024. Pilot program on use of additive and advanced manufacturing 
                            to support naval shipbuilding.
Sec. 1025. Limitation on use of funds for procurement of a battle force 
                            ship.
Sec. 1026. Strategy for distributed shipbuilding.
Sec. 1027. Strategy of Department of Defense relating to small uncrewed 
                            surface vessels.
Sec. 1028. Arctic-focused forecasting, ice modeling, and naval 
                            readiness assessment.
Sec. 1029. Renaming of USNS Cesar Chavez.
Sec. 1030. Sense of Congress regarding naming of vessel for Battle of 
                            Dai Do.
Sec. 1031. Sense of Congress regarding naming of a vessel ``USS 
                            Guadalcanal''.
Sec. 1032. Sense of Congress regarding naming of a naval vessel for 
                            Battle of Midway.
Sec. 1033. Sense of Congress regarding naming of a naval vessel in 
                            honor of Casimir Pulaski.
Sec. 1034. Sense of Congress regarding naming of vessel for Rear 
                            Admiral Alene Duerk.

                      Subtitle C--Counterterrorism

Sec. 1041. 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. 1042. 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. 1043. 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. 1044. Extension of prohibition on use of funds to close or 
                            relinquish control of United States Naval 
                            Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

         Subtitle D--Miscellaneous Authorities and Limitations

Sec. 1051. Establishment of the Secretaries of Defense historical 
                            series and priority declassification 
                            authority.
Sec. 1052. Inclusion of National Guard Relief Foundation as a military 
                            welfare society for certain purposes.
Sec. 1053. Joint Experimentation and Training Range Innovation Office.
Sec. 1054. Establishment of Army Information Operations Center of 
                            Excellence.
Sec. 1055. Extension of limitation on retirement or divestment of EA-
                            18G Aircraft.
Sec. 1056. Authority for Secretary of Defense waiver relating to 
                            certain training.
Sec. 1057. Expansion of prohibition on destruction or scrapping of 
                            World War II-era aircraft.
Sec. 1058. Prohibition on Department of Defense contracts with certain 
                            foreign-owned online tutoring services.
Sec. 1059. Prohibition on display of unapproved flags.
Sec. 1060. Prohibition on lobbying activities with respect to the 
                            Department of Defense by certain officers 
                            of the Armed Forces and civilian employees 
                            of the Department following separation from 
                            military service or employment with the 
                            Department.
Sec. 1061. Integration of small unmanned aircraft systems and counter-
                            unmanned aircraft systems training into 
                            initial, officer, and joint collective 
                            training.
Sec. 1062. Eastern Regional Range Complex demonstration project.
Sec. 1063. Pilot program on total replacement value for Air Force Test 
                            Center ground test infrastructure.
Sec. 1064. Pilot program for blockchain-enabled inventory management.
Sec. 1065. Extended deadline to reassess necessity of use of immediate 
                            response authority of Department of 
                            Defense.
Sec. 1066. Reconstitution of A-10 demonstration team.
Sec. 1067. Implementation of cognitive performance enhancement program 
                            for special operations forces.
Sec. 1068. Senator Robert J. Dole Greatest Generation Education 
                            Program.
Sec. 1069. Recognition program for working dogs.
Sec. 1070. Prohibition on availability of funds for closure of Rock 
                            Island Arsenal Museum.
Sec. 1071. Limitation on availability of funds for deactivation of 
                            Expeditionary Combat Aviation Brigades.
Sec. 1072. Limitation on availability of funds for travel expenses of 
                            the Office of the Secretary of Defense.
Sec. 1073. Limitation on availability of funds for travel expenses of 
                            Office of the Secretary of Defense until 
                            submission certain assessment.

                    Subtitle E--Studies and Reports

Sec. 1081. Repeal of obsolete reporting requirements.
Sec. 1082. Extension of briefing requirement regarding civil 
                            authorities at the Southwest border.
Sec. 1083. Extension of requirement for annual briefings on national 
                            biodefense strategy.
Sec. 1084. Annual report and briefing on implementation of Army 
                            Transformation Initiative.
Sec. 1085. Quarterly reports on effects of unplanned global taskings on 
                            operations, deterrence, and readiness in 
                            the area of operations of United States 
                            Indo-Pacific Command.
Sec. 1086. Biannual reports on operational adaptation and fielding of 
                            Defense Autonomous Warfare Group.
Sec. 1087. Service-wide enterprise strategies for human performance.
Sec. 1088. Mobility capabilities strategic plan.
Sec. 1089. Required doctrine on use of unmanned autonomous systems and 
                            autonomous formations.
Sec. 1089A. Strategy for sustainment of certain unmanned aircraft 
                            systems.
Sec. 1089B. Strategy for use of low-cost and attritable Group 4 and 5 
                            unmanned aircraft systems in contested 
                            logistics operations.
Sec. 1089C. Feasibility study on tactical information operations 
                            command authority.
Sec. 1089D. Public availability of findings of Inspector General 
                            investigation of certain targeting 
                            operations.
Sec. 1089E. Report on cost of United States military operations in 
                            Iran.
Sec. 1089F. Report on Operation Southern Spear.
Sec. 1089G. Report on civilian harm investigation relating to Shajareh 
                            Tayyebeh Elementary School.
Sec. 1089H. Report on Port Shuaiba investigation.

                       Subtitle F--Other Matters

Sec. 1091. Deeming references to the Department of Defense and 
                            Secretary of Defense as references to the 
                            Department of War and Secretary of War.
Sec. 1092. Definition of special operations activities.
Sec. 1093. Definition of counter-sUAS system for purposes of Joint 
                            Interagency Task Force 401.
Sec. 1094. Increase in cap for support of small scale construction 
                            projects of foreign partners in support of 
                            counterdrug activities and activities to 
                            counter transnational organized crime.
Sec. 1095. Modification to funding limitation for procurement of 
                            equipment for certain drug interdiction and 
                            counter-drug activities.
Sec. 1096. National Guard attorney license portability.
Sec. 1097. Oversight and direction of Irregular Warfare Exercise 
                            Laboratory.
Sec. 1098. Ubiquitous technical surveillance and digital force 
                            protection.
Sec. 1099. Potential designation of information as a domain of warfare.

                      TITLE XI--CIVILIAN PERSONNEL

Sec. 1101. Limitation on outside income for individuals in Office of 
                            the Secretary of Defense.
Sec. 1102. Skills-based hiring for Department of Defense civilian 
                            positions.
Sec. 1103. Establishment of a student internship program for military 
                            child and youth programs.
Sec. 1104. Expansion of eligible educational programs under the Smart 
                            Defense Education Program.
Sec. 1105. Military technician (dual status): elimination of title 32 
                            authority; conversions of existing 
                            positions.
Sec. 1106. One-year extension of authority to waive annual limitation 
                            on premium pay and aggregate limitation on 
                            pay for Federal civilian employees working 
                            overseas.
Sec. 1107. One-year extension of temporary authority to grant 
                            allowances, benefits, and gratuities to 
                            civilian personnel on official duty in a 
                            combat zone.
Sec. 1108. Living quarter allowance for Department of Defense civilian 
                            employees with permanent duty station in 
                            Guam.
Sec. 1109. Pilot program on integration of United States tech force 
                            with skills-based hiring authorities.
Sec. 1110. Enhanced hiring authority for instructor pilots and civilian 
                            simulator instructors.
Sec. 1111. Pilot program on tech talent competitiveness.
Sec. 1112. Civilian employee and contractor financial management 
                            workforce within the Department of Defense.
Sec. 1113. Department of Defense best practices guide for Family Child 
                            Care homes.
Sec. 1114. Delegation of authority for corrective action for 
                            nonappropriated fund employees in cases of 
                            complaint of reprisal.
Sec. 1115. Limitation on use of funds to limit collective bargaining.
Sec. 1116. Hiring freeze exceptions.
Sec. 1117. Prohibition on availability of funds for termination of 
                            DODEA, childcare, and healthcare workers.
Sec. 1118. Demonstration project relating to pay and personnel policies 
                            for employees at ground-based 
                            intercontinental ballistic missile 
                            development and maintenance facilities.
Sec. 1119. Demonstration project relating to pay and personnel policies 
                            for employees at Naval shipyards, Navy 
                            regional maintenance centers, and Navy 
                            trident refit facilities.
Sec. 1120. Demonstration project relating to pay and personnel policies 
                            for prevailing rate employees at covered 
                            depots.
Sec. 1121. Prohibition on carrying out hiring freeze, reduction in 
                            force, or hiring delay without cause at 
                            public shipyards of Department of Defense.

             TITLE XII--MATTERS RELATING TO FOREIGN NATIONS

                  Subtitle A--Assistance and Training

Sec. 1201. Modification of authority for support of special operations 
                            for irregular warfare.
Sec. 1202. Authority to build capacity for space domain awareness.
Sec. 1203. Establishment of Inter-Pacific Air Forces Academy.
Sec. 1204. Review of execution of programs to build partner capacity.
Sec. 1205. Establishment of partnership programs on military trauma 
                            care and research between the United States 
                            and foreign countries.

        Subtitle B--Matters Relating to the Near and Middle East

Sec. 1211. Extension of counter-terrorism support authority.
Sec. 1212. Extension of authority for reimbursement of certain 
                            coalition nations for support provided to 
                            United States military operations.
Sec. 1213. Deadline for Afghanistan War Commission final report.
Sec. 1214. Prohibition on use of funds to support the Taliban.
Sec. 1215. Extension of authority to provide assistance to counter the 
                            Islamic State of Iraq and Syria.
Sec. 1216. Extension of limitation on availability of funds for the 
                            Iraqi Security Forces.
Sec. 1217. Prohibition on transfers to the Badr Organization.

                 Subtitle C--Matters Relating to Israel

Sec. 1221. Extension of war reserve stockpile authority for Israel.
Sec. 1222. United States-Israel subterranean cooperation.
Sec. 1223. United States-Israel cooperation to counter unmanned systems 
                            in all warfighting domains.

                 Subtitle D--Matters Relating to Europe

Sec. 1231. Arms sales and weapons system transfers to NATO countries.
Sec. 1232. Extension and modification of oversight of United States 
                            military posture in Europe.
Sec. 1233. Modification of certification with respect to oversight of 
                            United States military posture in Europe.
Sec. 1234. Poland defense industrial cooperation program.
Sec. 1235. Policy on NATO standardization and allied production for 
                            next-generation small arms ammunition.
Sec. 1236. Review of the analytical basis for United States force 
                            posture adjustments in Europe.
Sec. 1237. NATO defense planning and burden sharing activities.

            Subtitle E--Matters Relating to the Indo-Pacific

Sec. 1241. Sense of Congress on defense alliances and partnerships in 
                            the Indo-Pacific region.
Sec. 1242. Extension of Pacific Deterrence Initiative.
Sec. 1243. Extension of requirement for public reporting of Chinese 
                            military companies operating in the United 
                            States.
Sec. 1244. Modifications to public reporting of Chinese military 
                            companies operating in the United States.
Sec. 1245. Extension and modification of annual report on military and 
                            security developments involving the 
                            People's Republic of China.
Sec. 1246. Modification of Taiwan Security Cooperation Initiative.
Sec. 1247. Oversight of United States military posture on the Korean 
                            peninsula.

                          Subtitle F--Reports

Sec. 1251. Oversight of military-to-military exchanges and contacts 
                            between the United States and the Russian 
                            Federation.
Sec. 1252. Report on Russia's targeting of religious infrastructure in 
                            Ukraine.
Sec. 1253. Study on effectiveness of United States-Somalia policy.

                       Subtitle G--Other Matters

Sec. 1261. Repeal of temporary authority to provide training to 
                            military forces or national security forces 
                            of Costa Rica and Panama.

                    TITLE XIV--OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS

                     Subtitle A--Military Programs

Sec. 1401. Working capital funds.
Sec. 1402. Chemical agents and munitions destruction, defense.
Sec. 1403. Drug interdiction and counter-drug activities, defense-wide.
Sec. 1404. Defense Inspector General.
Sec. 1405. Defense Health Program.
Sec. 1406. Cable security fleet expansion.

                       Subtitle B--Other Matters

Sec. 1411. Extension of authorities for funding and management of joint 
                            Department of Defense-Department of 
                            Veterans Affairs Medical Facility 
                            Demonstration Fund for Captain James A. 
                            Lovell Health Care Center, Illinois.
Sec. 1412. Authorization of appropriations for Armed Forces Retirement 
                            Home.
Sec. 1413. Critical minerals traceability pilot program.

                  TITLE XV--CYBERSPACE-RELATED MATTERS

                       Subtitle A--Cybersecurity

Sec. 1501. Data recovery requirements and strategy.
Sec. 1502. Department of Defense AI incident and vulnerability 
                            reporting program.
Sec. 1503. Review and realignment of Department of Defense 
                            cybersecurity responsibilities.
Sec. 1504. Inclusion of critical infrastructure and operational 
                            technology security in combatant command 
                            planning and readiness exercises.
Sec. 1505. Pilot program for autonomous mission integration of unmanned 
                            surface vehicles.
Sec. 1506. Civilian cybersecurity reserve corps pilot program.
Sec. 1507. Federal contractor vulnerability disclosure policy.

     Subtitle B--Information Technology and Artificial Intelligence

Sec. 1521. Software planning, programming, budgeting, and execution 
                            reform.
Sec. 1522. Requirement for guidance and prohibition on use of 
                            artificial intelligence of certain 
                            artificial intelligence companies.
Sec. 1523. Artificial Intelligence Model Rapid Deployment Framework.
Sec. 1524. Update of policy on autonomous and artificial intelligence-
                            enabled systems.
Sec. 1525. Expansion of AI-enabled maintenance intelligence platforms 
                            across Air Education and Training Command.

                 Subtitle C--Reports and Other Matters

Sec. 1541. Roadmap for modernization of Top Secret and Special Access 
                            Program network architectures.
Sec. 1542. Semiannual reports on Cyber Operational Readiness Assessment 
                            program.

   TITLE XVI--SPACE ACTIVITIES, STRATEGIC PROGRAMS, AND INTELLIGENCE 
                                MATTERS

                      Subtitle A--Space Activities

Sec. 1601. Reorganization of acquisition responsibilities of the Space 
                            Force.
Sec. 1602. Reorganization of oversight of the Department of Defense 
                            positioning, navigation, and timing 
                            enterprise.
Sec. 1603. Space launch support services and alternative launch 
                            procurement process.
Sec. 1604. Spaceport of the Future initiative.
Sec. 1605. Procurement of commercial space-based data and to support 
                            wildfire resilience.
Sec. 1606. Continuation of Next-Generation Overhead Persistent Infrared 
                            Polar program of the Department of the Air 
                            Force.

  Subtitle B--Defense Intelligence and Intelligence-Related Activities

Sec. 1611. Expenditure of funds across fiscal years for Department of 
                            Defense intelligence and 
                            counterintelligence activities.
Sec. 1612. Permanent authority for military intelligence collection and 
                            analysis partnerships.
Sec. 1613. Repeal of certain reporting and briefing requirements.
Sec. 1614. Modification of authority of Army counterintelligence agents 
                            to execute warrants and make arrests.
Sec. 1615. Periodic strategy and assessment of intelligence, 
                            surveillance, and reconnaissance 
                            capabilities to meet intelligence 
                            collection priorities.
Sec. 1616. Integration of open-source intelligence training and 
                            tradecraft into all-source intelligence 
                            analysis curricula.
Sec. 1617. Object-based generative artificial intelligence for open-
                            source intelligence.
Sec. 1618. Report on protection from disclosure of members of the Armed 
                            Forces under cover.

                       Subtitle C--Nuclear Forces

Sec. 1631. Matters relating to intercontinental ballistic missiles.
Sec. 1632. Designation of Air Force Global Strike Command as National 
                            Center for Conventional-Nuclear 
                            Integration.
Sec. 1633. Quadrennial report on the plan for the nuclear weapons 
                            stockpile, nuclear weapons complex, nuclear 
                            weapons delivery systems, and nuclear 
                            weapons command and control system.
Sec. 1634. Prohibition on reduction of intercontinental ballistic 
                            missiles of the United States.
Sec. 1635. Limitation on reallocation of funds for Ronald Reagan Space 
                            and Missile Test Range and United States 
                            Army Garrison Kwajalein Atoll.
Sec. 1636. Feasibility assessment for potential designation of Joint 
                            Global Strike Operations Center as Global 
                            Operations Center-Alternate.
Sec. 1637. Space Launch Complex 46.
Sec. 1638. Modification of report requirement for certain decisions 
                            relating to nuclear weapons employment 
                            strategy of the United States.
Sec. 1639. Independent assessment of bone marrow radiation shielding 
                            for nuclear survivability.

                  Subtitle D--Missile Defense Programs

Sec. 1651. Prohibition of unauthorized use of name or seal of the 
                            Missile Defense Agency.
Sec. 1652. Removal of duplicative Missile Defense Agency testing 
                            requirement.
Sec. 1653. Updated Middle East integrated air and missile defense 
                            strategy.
Sec. 1654. Next-generation integrated air and missile defense system 
                            munitions strategy.
Sec. 1655. Space-based interceptors.
Sec. 1656. Low-cost exo-atmospheric interceptor development.

                       Subtitle E--Other Matters

Sec. 1661. Briefings and reports on cross-functional team for anomalous 
                            health incidents.
Sec. 1662. Cooperative threat reduction funds.
Sec. 1663. Solid rocket motor industrial base.

                   TITLE XVII--OTHER DEFENSE MATTERS

         Subtitle A--Miscellaneous Authorities and Limitations

Sec. 1701. Availability of funds for Department of Defense State 
                            Partnership Program.
Sec. 1702. Inclusion of members of special operations forces in 
                            preseparation counseling.
Sec. 1703. Copyright to a literary work produced by a civilian faculty 
                            member of a Space Force professional 
                            military education program in the course of 
                            employment: free use by the Federal 
                            Government.
Sec. 1704. Inapplicability of Defense Base Act to Guam.
Sec. 1705. Extension of admission for certain nonimmigrant H-2B 
                            workers.
Sec. 1706. Reauthorization of the Cybersecurity Act of 2015.
Sec. 1707. United States-Abraham Accords Defense Cooperation 
                            Initiative.
Sec. 1708. Establishment of the Atomic Civilians Commemorative Service 
                            Medal.
Sec. 1709. Establishment of the Blast Overpressure Task Force of the 
                            Department of Veterans Affairs.
Sec. 1710. Authorization of transfer of certain land near Dayton 
                            National Cemetery to Department of Veterans 
                            Affairs.

                       Subtitle B--Other Matters

Sec. 1721. Technical and conforming amendments.
Sec. 1722. Countering China's control of the Caucasus.
Sec. 1723. Comptroller General study on Skillbridge programs.

       TITLE XVIII--REVITALIZATION OF THE DEFENSE INDUSTRIAL BASE

     Subtitle A--Provisions to Protect and Strengthen Supply Chains

Sec. 1801. Requirements for information relating to supply chain risk.
Sec. 1802. Oversight of specialty metals procurements under exception 
                            relating to agreements with foreign 
                            governments.
Sec. 1803. Critical materials: tiered sourcing restrictions and 
                            requirements.
Sec. 1804. Changes with respect to the Federal Acquisition Security 
                            Council.
Sec. 1805. Modifications to strategy to eliminate sourcing of computer 
                            displays from certain nations.
Sec. 1806. Extension of Comptroller General assessments and reports on 
                            compliance with procurement requirements 
                            relating to rare earth elements and 
                            strategic and critical materials.
Sec. 1807. Requirements related to detection and avoidance of 
                            counterfeit electronic parts.
Sec. 1808. Analysis and report on sourcing of certain items.
Sec. 1809. Assessment and implementation plan for sourcing of synthetic 
                            diamond and super abrasive materials used 
                            in defense applications.
Sec. 1810. Defense Supply Chain Intelligence and Risk Response Program.
Sec. 1811. Identification of supply chain dependencies.
Sec. 1812. Federal Acquisition Security Council exclusion orders for 
                            Chinese military company designees.
Sec. 1813. Domestic preference in the procurement of professional 
                            services.
Sec. 1814. Prohibition on the use of Chinese-manufactured optical fiber 
                            by the Department of Defense.
Sec. 1815. Report on primary aluminum sector industrial base 
                            assessment.
Sec. 1816. Assessment of risk related to adversarial capital in the 
                            defense industrial base.
Sec. 1817. Integration of demand for foreign military sales into 
                            industrial base planning.
Sec. 1818. Report on the feasibility of requiring Bills of Materials 
                            for defense acquisition.

      Subtitle B--Provisions Relating to Defense Industrial Base 
                             Manufacturing

Sec. 1831. Clarification of eligible uses of Defense Industrial Base 
                            Fund.
Sec. 1832. Inclusion of biotechnology in uses of the Industrial Base 
                            Fund.
Sec. 1833. Development and application of alternative material sources.
Sec. 1834. Report and implementation of plan for advanced manufacturing 
                            for certain critical readiness items of 
                            supply.
Sec. 1835. Additional guidance related to advanced manufacturing.
Sec. 1836. Modifications to advanced manufacturing policy review and 
                            guidance.
Sec. 1837. Enhanced domestic content requirement for shipbuilding 
                            programs.
Sec. 1838. Triennial review of merger and acquisition activity 
                            associated with major defense suppliers.
Sec. 1839. Multiyear procurement authority for certain munitions.
Sec. 1840. Multiyear procurement authority for platforms and components 
                            systems.
Sec. 1841. Managing and mitigating risks in major munitions programs.
Sec. 1842. Comptroller General assessment on improving weapon systems 
                            and technology procurement.

                  Subtitle C--Organic Industrial Base

Sec. 1861. Modification to annual report on depot-level maintenance and 
                            repair workloads by public and private 
                            sectors.
Sec. 1862. Authority to write off capital expenditures for certain 
                            depots of Department of Defense.
Sec. 1863. Reforms relating to Army organic industrial base.
Sec. 1864. Exclusion of manufacturing arsenal workload from depot 
                            carryover calculation.
Sec. 1865. Temporary authority for use of operation and maintenance 
                            funds to provide training for certain 
                            employees performing services or work 
                            funded by working-capital funds.
Sec. 1866. Demonstration and prototyping program for qualification of 
                            organic industrial base as alternate source 
                            for manufacture of casts and forged 
                            components for legacy aircraft.
Sec. 1867. Briefing and report on Defense industrial base chokepoints 
                            and organic industrial base modernization.

                   Subtitle D--Small Business Matters

Sec. 1871. Exception to contract price requirement relating to use of 
                            test and evaluation installations by 
                            commercial entities.
Sec. 1872. Amendments to the procurement technical assistance 
                            cooperative agreement program.
Sec. 1873. Pilot program on digital engineering and advanced 
                            manufacturing to address no-bid 
                            solicitations.
Sec. 1874. Pilot program to improve participation by small business 
                            concerns in certain Department of Defense 
                            contracts.
Sec. 1875. Guidance to ensure protection of covered information during 
                            covered preaward engagements.

         Subtitle E--Defense Industrial Base Workforce Matters

Sec. 1881. Skills-based requirements for Department of Defense 
                            contractor personnel.
Sec. 1882. Modification of working group on the advanced manufacturing 
                            workforce.
Sec. 1883. Workforce development initiatives to support mining of 
                            critical minerals.

                       Subtitle F--Other Matters

Sec. 1891. Exemption from trademark licensing fees for certain military 
                            exchange contractors.
Sec. 1892. Major system cost growth oversight.
Sec. 1893. Inapplicability of Berry Amendment exceptions to certain 
                            seafood purchases.
Sec. 1894. Clarification of commercial solicitation restrictions during 
                            initial entry training for memorabilia and 
                            photography.

            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. Extension of authority to carry out fiscal year 2021 project 
                            at Fort Gillem, Georgia.
Sec. 2105. Extension of authority to carry out certain fiscal year 2022 
                            projects.
Sec. 2106. Modification of authority to carry out fiscal year 2022 
                            project at Fort Stewart, Georgia.
Sec. 2107. Extension of authority to carry out certain fiscal year 2023 
                            projects.
Sec. 2108. Extension of authority to carry out certain fiscal year 2024 
                            projects.
Sec. 2109. Modification of authority to carry out fiscal year 2025 
                            project at Grafenwoehr, Germany.
Sec. 2110. Modification of authority to carry out fiscal year 2026 
                            project at Joint Region Marianas, Guam.

                 TITLE XXII--NAVY MILITARY CONSTRUCTION

Sec. 2201. Authorized Navy construction and land acquisition projects.
Sec. 2202. Family Housing.
Sec. 2203. Authorization of appropriations, Navy.
Sec. 2204. Extension of authority to carry out certain fiscal year 2023 
                            projects.
Sec. 2205. Extension of authority to carry out certain fiscal year 2024 
                            projects.
Sec. 2206. Extension and modification of authority to carry out fiscal 
                            year 2024 project at Marine Corps Base 
                            Quantico, Virginia.
Sec. 2207. Modification of authority to carry out fiscal year 2026 
                            project at Pacific Missile Range Facility 
                            Barking Sands, Hawaii.
Sec. 2208. Transfer of amounts for mitigation for projects located at 
                            Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Bremerton, 
                            Washington.

              TITLE XXIII--AIR FORCE MILITARY CONSTRUCTION

Sec. 2301. Authorized Air Force construction and land acquisition 
                            projects.
Sec. 2302. Family Housing.
Sec. 2303. Authorization of appropriations, Air Force.
Sec. 2304. Extension of authority to carry out certain fiscal year 2019 
                            projects.
Sec. 2305. Extension of authority to carry out certain fiscal year 2020 
                            projects.
Sec. 2306. Extension of authority to carry out certain fiscal year 2023 
                            projects.
Sec. 2307. Extension of authority to carry out certain fiscal year 2024 
                            projects.
Sec. 2308. Authority to carry out project at Eglin Air Force Base, 
                            Florida.

           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.
Sec. 2404. Extension of authority to carry out certain fiscal year 2023 
                            projects.
Sec. 2405. Extension of authority to carry out certain fiscal year 2024 
                            projects.

                   TITLE XXV--INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS

  Subtitle A--North Atlantic Treaty Organization Security Investment 
                                Program

Sec. 2501. Authorized NATO construction and land acquisition projects.
Sec. 2502. Authorization of appropriations, NATO.

             Subtitle B--Host Country In-Kind Contributions

Sec. 2511. Republic of Korea funded construction projects.
Sec. 2512. Republic of Poland 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.
Sec. 2607. Extension of authority to carry out certain fiscal year 2023 
                            projects.
Sec. 2608. Extension of authority to carry out certain fiscal year 2024 
                            projects.
Sec. 2609. Modification of authority to carry out fiscal year 2026 
                            project at Colonie, New York.

          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.

         TITLE XXVIII--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION GENERAL PROVISIONS

               Subtitle A--Military Construction Programs

Sec. 2801. Execution of projects under the North Atlantic Treaty 
                            Organization Security Investment Program.
Sec. 2802. Inclusion of Tribal governments in Defense Community 
                            Infrastructure Program.
Sec. 2803. Briefing required for certain basing actions of the 
                            Department of the Air Force.
Sec. 2804. Unspecified minor military construction dollar thresholds.
Sec. 2805. Repeal of limitation on available funds for research, 
                            development, test, and evaluation military 
                            construction projects.
Sec. 2806. Modification of approval and notification thresholds for 
                            repair projects on military facilities.
Sec. 2807. Department of Defense military installation stormwater 
                            project acceleration program.
Sec. 2808. Expansion of annual report on unfunded requirements for 
                            certain military construction projects.

                  Subtitle B--Military Housing Reforms

Sec. 2811. Congressional notification of window fall incidents in 
                            certain privatized military housing.
Sec. 2812. Expansion of protections against reprisal or retaliation for 
                            certain tenants of privatized military 
                            housing.
Sec. 2813. Treatment of nondisclosure agreements with respect to 
                            privatized military housing.
Sec. 2814. Expansion of pilot program to include authority to replace 
                            certain Department of Defense laboratories.
Sec. 2815. Modification to pilot program for military construction 
                            projects to replace certain military 
                            unaccompanied housing facilities.
Sec. 2816. Establishment of timeliness standards with respect to 
                            maintenance work orders for covered 
                            military unaccompanied housing; annual 
                            report.
Sec. 2817. Expansion of elements included in annual reports on the 
                            condition of covered military unaccompanied 
                            housing.
Sec. 2818. Modification to required investments in improving military 
                            unaccompanied housing.

        Subtitle C--Real Property and Facilities Administration

Sec. 2821. Authorization for certain planning, design, and construction 
                            contracts in support of military service 
                            academies.
Sec. 2822. Exemption of certain military installations from guidance 
                            with respect to aggregate square footage 
                            requirements.
Sec. 2823. Matching requirement for the public schools on military 
                            installations program.
Sec. 2824. Improvement to procedures for processing visitors to 
                            Department of Defense military 
                            installations.
Sec. 2825. Restrictions on data facility equipment placed on facilities 
                            leased from the Department of Defense.
Sec. 2826. Name of Department of the Army military installation, 
                            Augusta, Georgia.
Sec. 2827. Name of the Department of the Army military installation 
                            located in Muscogee County and 
                            Chattahoochee County, Georgia.
Sec. 2828. Military installation renamings.

              Subtitle D--Land Conveyances and Withdrawals

Sec. 2831. Report on land withdrawal at Yuma Proving Ground, Arizona.
Sec. 2832. Land conveyance, State Armory Board, Utah National Guard, 
                            Camp Williams State Military Reservation, 
                            Lehi, Utah.
Sec. 2833. Land conveyance, Milan Army Ammunition Plant, Tennessee.

                       Subtitle E--Pilot Programs

Sec. 2841. Digital twin models at certain military installations.
Sec. 2842. Pilot program on wastewater monitoring and pathogen-agnostic 
                            monitoring system of certain military 
                            installations.
Sec. 2843. Department of Defense pilot program for development and use 
                            of online real estate inventory tool.
Sec. 2844. Pilot program to provide integrated connectivity service.

                 Subtitle F--Miscellaneous Authorities

Sec. 2851. Authority for Secretary of Defense to acquire real property 
                            and facilities in the National Capital 
                            Region and to administer such property as 
                            part of the Pentagon Reservation.
Sec. 2852. Establishment of a dashboard for military construction 
                            projects for Research, Development, Test, 
                            and Evaluation facilities.
Sec. 2853. Additional authority for defense site reimbursement in the 
                            Federated States of Micronesia.
Sec. 2854. Recognition of certain aspects of the National Navy UDT-SEAL 
                            Museum in Fort Pierce, Florida, as a 
                            national memorial, national memorial 
                            garden, and national K9 memorial.

                 Subtitle G--Reports and Other Matters

Sec. 2861. Annual report on supervision, inspection, and overhead costs 
                            for military construction projects.
Sec. 2862. Requirements relating to the Multi-Mission Dry Dock military 
                            construction project at Puget Sound Naval 
                            Shipyard, Washington.
Sec. 2863. Comptroller General review of Shipyard Infrastructure 
                            Optimization Program.
Sec. 2864. Conditions on transfer of Department of Defense power grid 
                            infrastructure in Guam.
Sec. 2865. Annual report on military construction projects supporting 
                            readiness and public interest in Guam.
Sec. 2866. Annual report on effects of extreme weather on Department of 
                            Defense military installations and 
                            combatant commander requirements.
Sec. 2867. Reports to Census Bureau with respect to military and 
                            civilian personnel on military 
                            installations.

 DIVISION C--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY AUTHORIZATIONS AND 
                          OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS

      TITLE XXXI--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY PROGRAMS

       Subtitle A--National Security Programs 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. Modifications to requirements for plutonium pit production 
                            capacity.
Sec. 3112. Modification to implementation of programs for acceleration 
                            of replacement of cesium blood irradiation 
                            sources.
Sec. 3113. Other transaction authority.
Sec. 3114. Extension of alternative personnel system of the National 
                            Nuclear Security Administration.
Sec. 3115. Deadline for commencement of High Explosive Synthesis, 
                            Formulation, and Production Facility.
Sec. 3116. Contracting authority to acquire commercial testing services 
                            for effects of radiation.
Sec. 3117. Prohibition relating to reclassification of high-level 
                            waste.

                 Subtitle C--Reports and Other Matters

Sec. 3121. Technical and conforming amendments relating to codification 
                            of atomic energy defense provisions.
Sec. 3122. Modification of submission deadline for certain Selected 
                            Acquisition Reports.

          TITLE XXXII--DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD

Sec. 3201. Authorization.

                 TITLE XXXIV--NAVAL PETROLEUM RESERVES

Sec. 3401. Authorization of appropriations.

                  TITLE XXXV--MARITIME ADMINISTRATION

              Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations

                  Subtitle A--Maritime Administration

Sec. 3501. Authorization of appropriations for Maritime Administration.

                  Subtitle B--Merchant Marine Academy

Sec. 3511. Transferring the Administration of the United States 
                            Merchant Marine Academy to the Department.
Sec. 3512. Establishment of the United States Merchant Marine Academy 
                            as an office within the Office in the 
                            Department.
Sec. 3513. Support for athletic programs of the United States Merchant 
                            Marine Academy.

                       Subtitle C--Other Matters

Sec. 3521. Limitation on waiver of navigation and vessel-inspection 
                            laws to address foreign entities of 
                            concern.
Sec. 3522. Financing of fishing vessels.
Sec. 3523. Cranes; shore power.
Sec. 3524. Cargoes procured, furnished, or financed by United States 
                            Government.
Sec. 3525. Assistance for small shipyards.
Sec. 3526. Committee on the Marine Transportation System.
Sec. 3527. Assessment of channel depths and placement of aids to 
                            navigation.
Sec. 3528. Waiver.
Sec. 3529. National Maritime Workforce Advisory Committee.
Sec. 3530. Enhancing United States maritime workforce.
Sec. 3531. Enhancing United States shipyards and shipbuilding.

                     TITLE XXXVI--SHIPS FOR AMERICA

Sec. 3601. Report on privilege.
Sec. 3602. Fleet testing and briefing requirement.
Sec. 3603. Assessment of the use of commercial best practices for Navy 
                            shipbuilding.
Sec. 3604. Military Sealift Command.
Sec. 3605. Assessment on maritime infrastructure readiness.
Sec. 3606. United States Merchant Marine Academy infrastructure and 
                            facilities modernization.
Sec. 3607. United States Merchant Marine Academy.
Sec. 3608. State maritime academies.
Sec. 3609. Enforcement of service obligation requirements.
Sec. 3610. State Maritime Academy Sea Term Scholarship Programs.
Sec. 3611. Implementation plan.

                       DIVISION D--FUNDING TABLES

Sec. 4001. Authorization of amounts in funding tables.

                         TITLE XLI--PROCUREMENT

Sec. 4101. Procurement.

        TITLE XLII--RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION

Sec. 4201. Research, development, test, and evaluation.

                 TITLE XLIII--OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE

Sec. 4301. Operation and maintenance.

                     TITLE XLIV--MILITARY PERSONNEL

Sec. 4401. Military personnel.

                    TITLE XLV--OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS

Sec. 4501. Other authorizations.

                   TITLE XLVI--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION

Sec. 4601. Military construction.

      TITLE XLVII--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY PROGRAMS

Sec. 4701. Department of Energy national security programs.

SEC. 3. CONGRESSIONAL DEFENSE COMMITTEES.

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

            DIVISION A--DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE AUTHORIZATIONS

                          TITLE I--PROCUREMENT

              Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations

SEC. 101. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2027 
for procurement for the Army, the Navy and the Marine Corps, the Air 
Force and the Space Force, and Defense-wide activities, as specified in 
the funding table in section 4101.

                       Subtitle B--Army Programs

SEC. 111. STANDARDS FOR NETWORKED, AUTONOMOUS, KINETIC CAPABILITIES TO 
              PROTECT AGAINST SMALL UNMANNED AIRCRAFT SYSTEMS.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army shall establish 
standards to guide the development, procurement, and fielding of 
covered capabilities to protect ground combat, support, and mobility 
platforms against small unmanned aircraft systems.
    (b) Requirements.--The standards established under subsection (a) 
shall provide for the development, procurement, and fielding of covered 
capabilities that--
            (1) are interoperable across brigade combat team elements, 
        including interoperability of capabilities for the detection, 
        tracking, and kinetic interception of small unmanned aircraft 
        systems;
            (2) ensure seamless networking between a wide variety of 
        sensors and ground platforms; and
            (3) meet such other requirements as the Secretary of the 
        Army determines appropriate.
    (c) Report to Congress.--Not later than 90 days after the date on 
which the Secretary of the Army establishes the standards under 
subsection (a), the Secretary shall submit to the Committees on Armed 
Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a report that 
includes--
            (1) an explanation of the standards; and
            (2) identification of any hardware or software components 
        that--
                    (A) potentially meet such standards; and
                    (B) would be appropriate for incorporation into 
                covered capabilities.
    (d) Covered Capabilities Defined.--In this section, the term 
``covered capabilities'' means platforms and other capabilities that--
            (1) are networked and autonomous;
            (2) are capable of the detection, tracking, and kinetic 
        interception of small unmanned aircraft systems; and
            (3) incorporate--
                    (A) passive and active sensors for the persistent 
                detection and tracking of threats posed by unmanned 
                aircraft systems;
                    (B) autonomous kinetic effects capable of 
                neutralizing threats with minimal operator 
                intervention; and
                    (C) mesh networking to allow for sensor-to-shooter 
                handoffs between multiple ground platforms.

                       Subtitle C--Navy Programs

SEC. 121. TEMPORARY UNAVAILABILITY OF AMPHIBIOUS WARFARE SHIPS.

    Section 8062(b) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by inserting ``(1)'' before ``The naval''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(2) In this subsection, the term `temporarily unavailable', when 
used with respect to an amphibious warfare ship, means that the ship 
has not surpassed its planned availability by a margin of--
            ``(A) greater than 100 percent of the nominal duration of 
        that availability in 2026 or 2027;
            ``(B) greater than 75 percent of the nominal duration of 
        that availability in 2028 or 2029;
            ``(C) greater than 50 percent of the nominal duration of 
        that availability in 2030 or 2031; and
            ``(D) greater than 25 percent of the nominal duration of 
        that availability in 2032 or any year thereafter.''.

SEC. 122. AUTHORITY TO USE INCREMENTAL FUNDING FOR LONG LEAD-TIME 
              COMPONENTS FOR VIRGINIA CLASS SUBMARINES.

    Section 126 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 755) is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsections (b) through (d) as 
        subsections (c) through (e), respectively; and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (a) the following:
    ``(b) Authority to Use Incremental Funding.--In exercising the 
authority under subsection (a), the Secretary of the Navy may enter 
into incrementally funded contracts for the procurement of covered 
components that are long lead-time items.''.

SEC. 123. MULTIYEAR PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR ARLEIGH BURKE CLASS 
              DESTROYERS.

    (a) Authority for Multiyear Procurement.--Subject to section 3501 
of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary of the Navy may enter 
into one or more multiyear contracts for the procurement of up to 15 
Arleigh Burke class Flight III guided missile destroyers.
    (b) Authority for Advance Procurement.--The Secretary of the Navy 
may enter into one or more contracts, beginning in fiscal year 2027, 
for advance procurement associated with the destroyers for which 
authorization to enter into a multiyear procurement contract is 
provided under subsection (a), and for systems and subsystems 
associated with such destroyers in economic order quantities when cost 
savings are achievable.
    (c) Condition for Out-year Contract Payments.--A contract entered 
into under subsection (a) shall provide that any obligation of the 
United States to make a payment under the contract for a fiscal year 
after fiscal year 2027 is subject to the availability of appropriations 
or funds for that purpose for such later fiscal year.
    (d) Mandatory Inclusion of Prepriced Option in Certain 
Circumstances.--
            (1) In general.--In the event the total base quantity of 
        destroyers to be procured through all contracts entered into 
        under subsection (a) is less than 15, the Secretary of the Navy 
        shall ensure that one or more of the contracts includes a 
        prepriced option for the procurement of additional destroyers 
        such that the sum of such base quantity and the number of 
        destroyers that may be procured through the exercise of such 
        options is equal to 15 destroyers.
            (2) Definitions.--In this subsection:
                    (A) Base quantity.--The term ``base quantity'' 
                means the quantity of destroyers to be procured under a 
                contract entered into under subsection (a) excluding 
                any quantity of destroyers that may be procured through 
                the exercise of an option that may be part of such 
                contract.
                    (B) Prepriced option.--The term ``prepriced 
                option'' means a contract option for a contract entered 
                into under subsection (a) that, if exercised, would 
                allow the Secretary of the Navy to procure a destroyer 
                at a predetermined price specified in such contract.
    (e) Limitation.--The Secretary of the Navy may not modify a 
contract entered into under subsection (a) if the modification would 
increase the target price of the destroyer by more than 10 percent 
above the target price specified in the original contract for the 
destroyer under subsection (a).

SEC. 124. MULTIYEAR PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR JOHN LEWIS CLASS OILERS.

    (a) Authority for Multiyear Procurement.--Subject to section 3501 
of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary of the Navy may enter 
into one or more multiyear contracts for the procurement of John Lewis 
class Oilers and systems, components, and long-lead time materials 
associated with such vessels.
    (b) Authority for Advance Procurement.--The Secretary of the Navy 
may enter into one or more contracts, beginning in fiscal year 2027, 
for advance procurement associated with the oilers for which 
authorization to enter into a multiyear procurement contract is 
provided under subsection (a), including economic order quantity 
purchases and advance procurement of long-lead time materials, to 
support the continuous production of such vessels and to achieve cost 
savings.
    (c) Condition for Out-year Contract Payments.--A contract entered 
into under subsection (a) shall provide that any obligation of the 
United States to make a payment under the contract for a fiscal year 
after fiscal year 2027 is subject to the availability of appropriations 
or funds for that purpose for such later fiscal year.
    (d) Termination Liability.--A contract entered into under 
subsection (a) shall provide that the total liability to the Federal 
Government for termination of the contract shall be limited to the 
total amount of funding obligated for the contract at the time of 
termination.

SEC. 125. PROCUREMENT AUTHORITIES FOR CERTAIN AMPHIBIOUS SHIPBUILDING 
              PROGRAMS.

    (a) Contract Authority.--
            (1) Procurement authorized.--The Secretary of the Navy may 
        enter into one or more contracts for the procurement of covered 
        ships.
            (2) Procurement in conjunction with existing contracts.--
        The ships authorized to be procured under paragraph (1) may be 
        procured as additions to existing contracts covering programs 
        for covered ships.
    (b) Certification Required.--A contract may not be entered into 
under subsection (a) unless the Secretary of the Navy certifies to the 
congressional defense committees, in writing, not later than 30 days 
before entry into the contract, each of the following, which shall be 
prepared by the milestone decision authority for the covered ship 
program concerned:
            (1) The use of such a contract is consistent with the 
        Commandant of the Marine Corps' projected force structure 
        requirements for amphibious ships.
            (2) The use of such a contract will result in savings 
        compared to the total anticipated costs of carrying out the 
        program through annual contracts. In certifying cost savings 
        under the preceding sentence, the Secretary shall include a 
        written explanation of--
                    (A) the estimated end cost and appropriated funds 
                by fiscal year, by hull, without the authority provided 
                in subsection (a);
                    (B) the estimated end cost and appropriated funds 
                by fiscal year, by hull, with the authority provided in 
                subsection (a);
                    (C) the estimated cost savings or increase by 
                fiscal year, by hull, with the authority provided in 
                subsection (a); and
                    (D) the contractual actions that will ensure the 
                estimated cost savings are realized.
            (3) The Secretary of the Navy has a reasonable expectation 
        that throughout the contemplated contract period funding will 
        be available for the contract at the level required to avoid 
        contract cancellation.
            (4) There is a stable design for the property to be 
        acquired and the technical risks associated with such property 
        are not excessive.
            (5) The estimates of both the cost of the contract and the 
        anticipated cost avoidance through the use of a contract 
        authorized under subsection (a) are realistic.
            (6) The use of such a contract will promote the national 
        security of the United States.
            (7) During the fiscal year in which such contract is to be 
        awarded, sufficient funds will be available to perform the 
        contract in such fiscal year.
    (c) Authority for Advance Procurement.--The Secretary of the Navy 
may enter into one or more contracts for advance procurement or advance 
construction associated with a ship or ships for which authorization to 
enter into a contract is provided under subsection (a), and for 
systems, sub systems, spare parts, and major shore based spares 
associated with such ships in economic order quantities when cost 
savings are achievable.
    (d) Authority to Use Incremental Funding.--The Secretary of the 
Navy may incrementally fund a contract entered into under subsection 
(a) or (c).
    (e) Condition for Out-year Contract Payments.--A contract entered 
into under subsection (a) shall provide that any obligation of the 
United States to make a payment under the contract for a fiscal year is 
subject to the availability of appropriations for that purpose for such 
fiscal year.
    (f) Termination.--The authority of the Secretary of the Navy to 
enter into contracts under subsection (a) shall terminate on September 
30, 2030.
    (g) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered ship'' means a San Antonio-class or 
        America-class ship.
            (2) The term ``milestone decision authority'' has the 
        meaning given that term in section 4251(e) of title 10, United 
        States Code.

SEC. 126. CONTRACT AUTHORITY FOR SUBMARINE TENDER PROGRAM.

    (a) Contract Authority.--The Secretary of the Navy may enter into 
one or more contracts for the procurement of not more than two AS(X) 
submarine tenders.
    (b) Use of Incremental Funding.--With respect to a contract entered 
into under subsection (a), the Secretary of the Navy may use 
incremental funding to make payments under the contract.
    (c) Liability.--Any contract entered into under subsection (a) 
shall provide that--
            (1) any obligation of the United States to make a payment 
        under the contract is subject to the availability of 
        appropriations for that purpose; and
            (2) the total liability of the Federal Government for 
        termination of the contract shall be limited to the total 
        amount of funding obligated to the contract at the time of 
        termination.

SEC. 127. MULTIYEAR PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR E-2D ADVANCED HAWKEYE 
              AIRCRAFT.

    (a) Authority for Multiyear Procurement.--Subject to section 3501 
of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary of the Navy may enter 
into one or more multiyear contracts, beginning with the fiscal year 
2027 program year, for the procurement of twelve E-2D Advanced Hawkeye 
aircraft.
    (b) Authority for Economic Order Quantity.--The Secretary of the 
Navy may enter into one or more contracts, beginning in fiscal year 
2027, for advance procurement associated with the aircraft for which 
authorization to enter into a multiyear procurement contract is 
provided under subsection (a), which may include procurement of 
economic order quantities of material and equipment for such aircraft 
when cost savings are achievable.
    (c) Liability.--Any contract entered into under subsection (a) 
shall provide that--
            (1) any obligation of the United States to make a payment 
        under the contract is subject to the availability of 
        appropriations for that purpose; and
            (2) the total liability of the Federal Government for 
        termination of the contract shall be limited to the total 
        amount of funding obligated to the contract at the time of 
        termination.

SEC. 128. AUTHORITY TO USE INCREMENTAL FUNDING FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF 
              A GUIDED MISSILE DESTROYER (DDG).

    (a) In General.--Amounts authorized to be appropriated by this Act 
or otherwise made available for the Navy for Shipbuilding and 
Conversion for fiscal year 2027 may be used by the Secretary of the 
Navy to enter into an incrementally funded contract for the 
construction of one Guided Missile Destroyer (DDG).
    (b) Availability of Funds and Termination Liability.--A contract 
entered into under subsection (a) shall provide that any obligation of 
the United States to make a payment under the contract is subject to 
the availability of appropriations for that purpose, and that total 
liability to the Government for the termination of the contract shall 
be limited to the total amount of funding obligated at time of 
termination.

SEC. 129. AUTHORITY FOR ADVANCE PROCUREMENT OF COMPONENTS FOR SHIP-TO-
              SHORE CONNECTOR CLASS CRAFT.

    (a) Authority for Advance Procurement.--The Secretary of the Navy 
may enter into one or more contracts, prior to ship authorization, for 
the advance procurement of components for Ship-to-Shore Connector class 
craft, including procurement of such components in economic order 
quantities when cost savings are achievable.
    (b) Condition for Out-year Contract Payments.--A contract entered 
into under subsection (a) shall provide that any obligation of the 
United States to make a payment under the contract for a fiscal year is 
subject to the availability of appropriations for that purpose for such 
fiscal year.

SEC. 130. TORPEDO MODERNIZATION, TESTING, AND INVENTORY SUFFICIENCY FOR 
              TWO SIMULTANEOUS REGIONAL CONFLICTS.

    (a) Strategy and Inventory Requirement.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 90 days after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall 
        develop and implement a comprehensive strategy for torpedo 
        modernization, testing, production, and inventory sufficiency.
            (2) Elements.--The strategy required under subsection (a) 
        shall include the following:
                    (A) An assessment of the minimum required inventory 
                levels of--
                            (i) MK-48 heavyweight torpedoes;
                            (ii) lightweight torpedoes, including MK-54 
                        torpedoes;
                            (iii) advanced torpedo variants;
                            (iv) exercise, training, and telemetry 
                        torpedoes; and
                            (v) torpedo countermeasure systems, 
                        necessary to support not fewer than two 
                        simultaneous regional conflicts.
                    (B) An assessment of wartime torpedo expenditure 
                assumptions for combat operations against peer and 
                near-peer maritime adversaries.
                    (C) An evaluation of current torpedo production 
                capacity, including limitations associated with--
                            (i) energetics;
                            (ii) propulsion systems;
                            (iii) acoustic seekers;
                            (iv) guidance electronics;
                            (v) specialty metals;
                            (vi) undersea weapon integration 
                        facilities; and
                            (vii) single-source suppliers.
                    (D) A plan to increase annual torpedo production 
                capacity and reduce production lead times during 
                contingencies.
                    (E) An assessment of the adequacy of existing 
                torpedo testing infrastructure, including--
                            (i) undersea warfare test ranges;
                            (ii) target vessels and unmanned targets;
                            (iii) telemetry and instrumentation 
                        systems;
                            (iv) contested electromagnetic environment 
                        testing capabilities;
                            (v) digital engineering and modeling 
                        environments;
                            (vi) Arctic and deep-water testing 
                        capacity;
                            (vii) shallow water testing capability; and
                            (viii) opportunities to cooperate on 
                        testing activities with allies and partners of 
                        the United States.
                    (F) A description of efforts to improve torpedo 
                survivability and effectiveness against advanced 
                countermeasures and adversary electronic warfare 
                systems.
                    (G) An assessment of storage, transportation, 
                reload, and expeditionary rearmament capacity for 
                torpedoes during wartime operations.
                    (H) A description of any statutory or regulatory 
                barriers limiting expansion of torpedo production, 
                testing, or procurement.
                    (I) Recommendations for legislative or 
                administrative action necessary to improve torpedo 
                readiness and wartime sufficiency.
    (b) Industrial Base Expansion Plan.--Not later 90 days after the 
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall 
develop a plan to expand the undersea weapons industrial base to 
support sustained wartime production requirements. Such plan shall 
include--
            (1) options for second-source suppliers;
            (2) expansion of Government-owned, contractor-operated 
        facilities;
            (3) use of multiyear procurement authorities pursuant to 
        section 3501 of title 10, United States Code;
            (4) opportunities to expand public-private partnerships for 
        undersea weapons manufacturing and sustainment;
            (5) measures to improve supply chain resilience for 
        critical components; and
            (6) options for surge production during national 
        emergencies or armed conflict.
    (c) Reports Required.--Not later than 120 days after the date of 
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall submit to 
the congressional defense committees--
            (1) a report on the strategy developed under subsection 
        (a); and
            (2) a report on the plan developed under subsection (b).
    (d) Briefing Required.--Not later than 120 days after the date of 
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall provide to 
the congressional defense committees a briefing on--
            (1) the highest-risk shortfalls in torpedo inventory and 
        testing capacity;
            (2) operational testing methodology for torpedos and 
        efforts to test for real world scenarios;
            (3) projected wartime torpedo inventory depletion 
        timelines; and
            (4) investments required during period covered by the 
        future-years defense program to ensure torpedo sufficiency for 
        two simultaneous regional conflicts.

SEC. 131. LIMITATION ON CONSTRUCTION OF BATTLESHIP PENDING 
              CERTIFICATION ON TECHNOLOGY READINESS LEVELS.

    The Secretary of the Navy may not enter into a contract or other 
agreement that includes a scope of work for the construction of the 
lead ship of the Battleship program until the date on which the 
Secretary certifies to the congressional defense committees that the 
weapon systems planned for inclusion in such lead ship are at a 
sufficiently mature technology readiness level.

SEC. 132. STRATEGY FOR ITERATIVE DEVELOPMENT AND FLIGHT MODIFICATIONS 
              FOR FF(X) CLASS FRIGATES.

    (a) Strategy Required.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall submit to 
the congressional defense committees a strategy for the iterative 
development of the FF(X) class frigate. Such strategy shall include the 
following:
            (1) Information on the estimated timeline for each planned 
        variant (commonly known as a ``Flight'') of the FF(X) class 
        frigate.
            (2) Details on the integration of additional capabilities 
        for future Flights of the frigate, such as vertical launch 
        systems or improved sensors, and implications for the space, 
        weight, power, and cost of the hull form.
            (3) Any additional mission sets or combat functions that 
        may be added to the concept of operation for FF(X) class 
        frigates.
    (b) Interim Briefing.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall provide to the 
congressional defense committees a briefing on the development of the 
strategy required under subsection (a).
    (c) FF(X) Class Frigate Defined.--In this section, the term ``FF(X) 
class frigate'' means the new class of frigate vessel under development 
by the Secretary of the Navy (as of the date of the enactment of this 
Act) based on a design derived from the Legend class Coast Guard 
cutter.

SEC. 133. REPORT ON CONTINUITY OF MISSION AND READINESS DURING 
              TRANSITION OF F-5 TO F/A-18E/F AIRCRAFT FOR THE NAVY 
              RESERVE.

    (a) Report Required.--Not later than March 1, 2027, and annually 
thereafter for four years, the Secretary of the Navy shall submit to 
the congressional defense committees a report on the status of efforts 
to transfer F/A-18E/F aircraft to the Navy Reserve to replace the F-5 
aircraft.
    (b) Elements.--Each report under subsection (a) shall include an 
explanation of--
            (1) how the Secretary will mitigate risk to any 
        degradation, gap, or delay in mission execution, fleet 
        readiness, or pilot and maintainer qualification during the 
        period in which aircraft are being transferred and replaced as 
        described in subsection (a);
            (2) the Secretary's plans for retaining key Navy Reserve 
        personnel to support operational readiness during such period;
            (3) how the Secretary plans, if possible, to ensure that 
        assigned operational and adversary training missions are 
        executed during such period;
            (4) how the Secretary plans to maintain pilot and 
        maintenance personnel proficiency, currency, and qualifications 
        during such period; and
            (5) the timelines associated with the transfer and 
        replacement of aircraft described in subsection (a), including 
        timelines associated with--
                    (A) support equipment and initial spares;
                    (B) pilot and maintenance personnel training;
                    (C) achievement of initial operational capability 
                and full operational capability; and
                    (D) execution of all contracts supporting the 
                transfer and replacement of such aircraft.

                     Subtitle D--Air Force Programs

SEC. 141. INVENTORY REQUIREMENTS FOR CERTAIN FIGHTER AIRCRAFT.

    (a) Modification of Inventory Requirements for Air Force Fighter 
Aircraft.--
            (1) In general.--Subsection (i) of section 9062 of title 
        10, United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
    ``(i)(1) During the period beginning on October 1, 2026, and ending 
on October 1, 2035, the Secretary of the Air Force shall maintain a 
total aircraft inventory of fighter aircraft of not less than 1,800 
aircraft.
    ``(2) In this subsection:
            ``(A) The term `fighter aircraft'--
                    ``(i) means an aircraft that--
                            ``(I) is designated by a mission design 
                        series prefix of F- or A-;
                            ``(II) is manned by one or two crewmembers; 
                        and
                            ``(III) executes single-role or multi-role 
                        missions, including air-to-air combat, air-to-
                        ground attack, air interdiction, suppression or 
                        destruction of enemy air defenses, close air 
                        support, strike control and reconnaissance, 
                        combat search and rescue support, or airborne 
                        forward air control; and
                    ``(ii) does not include collaborative combat 
                aircraft.
            ``(B) The term `primary mission aircraft inventory' means 
        aircraft assigned to meet the primary aircraft authorization to 
        a unit for the performance of its wartime mission.''.
            (2) Effective date.--The amendment made by paragraph (1) 
        shall take effect on October 1, 2026.
    (b) Authority to Increase Planned Procurement.--Beginning on 
October 1, 2026, the Secretary of the Air Force may increase the total 
planned procurement of F-15EX aircraft to beyond 267 aircraft.

SEC. 142. EXTENSION OF PROHIBITION ON RETIREMENT OF F-22 AIRCRAFT.

    Section 9062(k)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``September 30, 2027'' and inserting ``September 30, 2032''.

SEC. 143. LIMITATION ON RETIREMENT OF E-3 AIRBORNE WARNING AND CONTROL 
              SYSTEM AIRCRAFT AND REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO E-7 
              AIRCRAFT.

    (a) Extension and Modification of Minimum Inventory Requirement.--
Section 149 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2026 (Public Law 119-60) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``below 16'' each place it appears and 
        inserting ``below 15''; and
            (2) in subsection (a), by striking ``fiscal year 2026'' and 
        inserting ``fiscal year 2026 or 2027''.
    (b) Requirement to Plan and Budget for E-7 Program of Record.--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--
            (1) a detailed schedule for procurement, fielding, and 
        achievement of initial and full operating capability for E-7 
        Wedgetail aircraft; and
            (2) a funding profile across the period covered by the 
        Future Years Defense Program sufficient to meet the 
        requirements of paragraph (1).
    (c) Capability Assurance.--The Secretary of Air Force shall certify 
to the congressional defense committees that--
            (1) the plan under subsection (b) will ensure there is no 
        degradation in the airborne early warning, battle management, 
        and command and control capabilities available to support 
        combatant commands; and
            (2) any proposed retirement of E-3 aircraft will not result 
        in a gap in operational coverage, mission availability, or 
        responsiveness to the demands of the combatant commands.

SEC. 144. EVALUATION FOR POTENTIAL TRANSFER OF CERTAIN A-10 AIRCRAFT 
              AMONG MILITARY DEPARTMENTS.

    Section 137(b) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2024 (Public Law 118-31; 137 Stat. 174) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``by this Act or by the National Defense 
        Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (Public Law 117-263)'' 
        and inserting ``to the Department of Defense for any of fiscal 
        years 2023 through 2030''; and
            (2) by inserting ``to another military department or'' 
        after ``evaluated for potential transfer''.

SEC. 145. EXTENSION OF REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO C-130 AIRCRAFT.

    (a) Extension of Minimum Inventory Requirement.--Section 
146(a)(3)(B) of the James M. Inhofe National Defense Authorization Act 
for Fiscal Year 2023 (Public Law 117-263; 136 Stat. 2455), as most 
recently amended by section 145(a) of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 
760), is further amended by striking ``2026'' and inserting ``2028''.
    (b) Extension of Prohibition on Reduction of C-130 Aircraft 
Assigned to National Guard.--Section 146(b)(1) of the James M. Inhofe 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (Public Law 
117-263; 136 Stat. 2455), as most recently amended by section 145(b) of 
the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 
119-60; 139 Stat. 760), is further amended by striking ``2026'' and 
inserting ``2028''.
    (c) Report Requirement.--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 detailing the 
following:
            (1) The total number and variant types of C-130 aircraft in 
        the inventory of the Air Force.
            (2) Any planned retirements, divestments, or reductions to 
        the fleet of such aircraft.
            (3) Modernization and recapitalization efforts, including 
        block upgrades and procurement schedules.
            (4) Planned basing actions for fielding C-130J aircraft to 
        recapitalize C-130H aircraft.

SEC. 146. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR C-37 AIRCRAFT 
              RECAPITALIZATION PROGRAM.

    Of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise 
made available for fiscal year 2027 for the Air Force for the 
procurement of C-37 aircraft, not more than 50 percent may be obligated 
or expended until a period of 30 days has elapsed following the date on 
which the Secretary of the Air Force submits to the congressional 
defense committees--
            (1) the acquisition strategy for such aircraft; and
            (2) a justification for using other than competitive 
        procedures under section 3204 of title 10, United States Code, 
        for the award of a contract for the procurement of such 
        aircraft.

SEC. 147. LIMITATION ON RETIREMENT OF MQ-9 REAPER AIRCRAFT.

    (a) Limitation on Retirement or Divestment.--None of the funds 
authorized to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise made available 
for fiscal year 2027 for the Department of the Air Force may be 
obligated or expended to retire, divest, place in storage, transfer to 
nonoperational status, or prepare for retirement any MQ-9 Reaper 
aircraft.
    (b) Certification Requirement for Future Retirement or 
Divestment.--Beginning after September 30, 2027, the Secretary of the 
Air Force may not retire, divest, or transfer to nonoperational status 
any MQ-9 Reaper aircraft until the Secretary certifies in writing to 
the congressional defense committees that--
            (1) a replacement capability has achieved initial 
        operational capability;
            (2) such replacement capability provides comparable or 
        superior--
                    (A) persistent intelligence, surveillance, and 
                reconnaissance capability;
                    (B) strike capability;
                    (C) survivability in a dynamic and high-threat 
                environment;
                    (D) maritime surveillance capability;
                    (E) communications relay capability; and
                    (F) operational availability and sortie generation 
                capacity;
            (3) the replacement capability is available in sufficient 
        operational quantities to meet requirements of the combatant 
        commands;
            (4) the retirement or divestment will not increase 
        operational risk to ongoing contingency operations, homeland 
        defense missions, maritime domain awareness missions, or crisis 
        response operations;
            (5) the Secretary has conducted a force structure 
        assessment evaluating the impact of such retirement on--
                    (A) globally deployed operations;
                    (B) distributed operations in the Indo-Pacific 
                region;
                    (C) operations in the United States Central Command 
                area of responsibility;
                    (D) support to special operations forces; and
                    (E) support to allied and partner nation 
                operations; and
            (6) the Secretary has submitted the assessments required 
        under subsection (c).
    (c) Combatant Commander Sufficiency Assessment.--Not later than 30 
days prior to submitting a certification under subsection (b), the 
Secretary of the Air Force shall submit to the congressional defense 
committees an assessment from--
            (1) each of the commanders of the combatant commands 
        regarding the operational sufficiency of the remaining remotely 
        piloted aircraft force to execute approved operational plans 
        and ongoing missions;
            (2) the Commander of United States Special Operations 
        Command regarding the impact of such retirement on support to 
        special operations missions;
            (3) the Commander of United States Indo-Pacific Command 
        regarding the impact on distributed maritime surveillance and 
        targeting operations in the Indo-Pacific theater; and
            (4) the Commander of United States Central Command 
        regarding the impact on ongoing counterterrorism, force 
        protection, and crisis response operations.
    (d) Replacement Capability Defined.--In this section, the term 
``replacement capability'' means a platform, family of systems, or 
operational capability intended to replace the operational functions 
currently performed by the MQ-9 Reaper fleet, including--
            (1) intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance;
            (2) precision strike;
            (3) maritime domain awareness;
            (4) electronic warfare; and
            (5) communications relay.

SEC. 148. ANALYSIS OF ALTERNATIVES FOR NEXT GENERATION AIRLIFT 
              CAPABILITIES.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of the Air Force, in coordination 
with the Commander of the United States Transportation Command, shall 
conduct an analysis of alternatives for next generation airlift 
capabilities.
    (b) Elements.--In conducting the analysis of alternatives required 
under subsection (a), the Secretary of the Air Force shall--
            (1) evaluate a range of options for next generation airlift 
        capabilities, including recapitalization of existing platforms, 
        service life extension and modernization efforts, and 
        development of new airlift platforms;
            (2) in evaluating such options, consider operational 
        effectiveness, survivability in contested environments, fuel 
        efficiency, lifecycle costs, connectivity, basing, and 
        interoperability with joint and coalition forces and battle 
        networks; and
            (3) assess the feasibility of incorporating unmanned or 
        optionally crewed systems and innovative concepts of 
        operations.
    (c) Report.--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 results of the 
analysis of alternatives conducted under subsection (a). The report 
shall include--
            (1) the findings and conclusions of the analysis;
            (2) recommendations, if any, for future investment in next 
        generation airlift capabilities; and
            (3) such other information as the Secretary determines 
        appropriate.

SEC. 149. AUTHORIZATION OF TRANSITIONAL ACTIVITIES TO IMPROVE AIRLIFT 
              OPERATIONS.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of the Air Force may carry out 
activities, prior to fielding the next generation airlift aircraft, to 
improve the readiness, reliability, capacity, and capabilities of the 
Air Force with respect to airlift operations.
    (b) Activities.--The activities carried out under subsection (a) 
may include--
            (1) entering into partnerships with commercial entities--
                    (A) to provide the Air Force with access to 
                commercially developed aircraft capable of handling 
                outsized airlift payloads; and
                    (B) to modify such aircraft, as necessary, to meet 
                military requirements;
            (2) carrying out a pilot program to assess the feasibility 
        and advisability of using commercial providers to test, 
        certify, and operate select C-5 aircraft in support of the Air 
        Force; and
            (3) such other activities as the Secretary of the Air Force 
        determines appropriate.
    (c) Funding.--This section shall be carried out using amounts 
otherwise authorized to be appropriated to the Department of the Air 
Force and no additional funds are authorized to be appropriated to 
carry out this section.

SEC. 150. CONVEYANCE OF CERTAIN F-14 AIRCRAFT TO U.S. SPACE AND ROCKET 
              CENTER COMMISSION IN HUNTSVILLE, ALABAMA.

    (a) Authority.--The Secretary of the Navy may convey, without 
consideration, to the U.S. Space and Rocket Center Commission in 
Huntsville, Alabama (in this section referred to as the 
``Commission''), all right, title, and interest of the United States in 
the following:
            (1) F-14 aircraft (Bureau number 159437).
            (2) F-14 aircraft (Bureau number 164341).
            (3) F-14 aircraft (Bureau number 164602).
    (b) Form of Conveyance.--Any conveyance under subsection (a) shall 
be made by means of a conditional deed of gift.
    (c) Conveyance at No Cost to the United States.--Any conveyance 
under subsection (a) shall be made at no cost to the United States. Any 
costs associated with such conveyance, costs of determining compliance 
with terms of the conveyance, and costs of operation and maintenance of 
the aircraft conveyed shall be borne by the Commission.
    (d) Condition of Aircraft.--The aircraft being conveyed under 
subsection (a) do not have any capability for use as a platform for 
launching or releasing munitions or any other combat capability that it 
was designed to have.
    (e) Conditions.--The Secretary shall include in the instrument of 
conveyance of the aircraft under subsection (a)--
            (1) a condition that the Secretary is not required to 
        repair or alter the condition of the aircraft before conveying 
        ownership of the aircraft;
            (2) a condition that the Secretary shall provide any 
        maintenance and operations manuals that--
                    (A) are specific to the F-14 aircraft; and
                    (B) the Secretary has sufficient intellectual 
                property rights to convey;
            (3) a condition that the Secretary may provide excess spare 
        parts to make one of the F-14 aircraft flyable or able to 
        complete a static display, provided that any part transferred 
        from existing Navy stock is reimbursed at fair market value by 
        the Commission, with no items being procured by the Secretary 
        on behalf of the Commission; and
            (4) a condition that the Secretary will not be responsible 
        for transferring any additional parts or providing any 
        additional support beyond what is stated in this section, 
        during or after the conveyance of the aircraft.
    (f) Agreements for Restoration and Operation.--The Secretary may--
            (1) authorize the Commission to enter into agreements with 
        qualified nonprofit organizations for the purpose of restoring 
        and operating the aircraft transferred under subsection (a) for 
        public display, airshows, and commemorative events to preserve 
        naval aviation heritage; and
            (2) if the Secretary authorizes any such agreement, require 
        such additional terms and conditions in the instrument of 
        conveyance as appropriate to protect the interests of the 
        United States.
    (g) Reverter Upon Breach of Conditions.--The Secretary shall 
include in the instrument of conveyance of the aircraft under 
subsection (a)--
            (1) a condition that the Commission shall operate and 
        maintain the aircraft in compliance with all applicable 
        limitations and maintenance requirements imposed by the 
        Administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration;
            (2) a condition that the Commission shall not convey any 
        ownership interest in, or transfer possession of, the aircraft 
        to another party without the prior approval of the Secretary; 
        and
            (3) a condition that if the Secretary determines at any 
        time that the Commission has failed to comply with the 
        conditions set forth in paragraphs (1) and (2), all right, 
        title, and interest in and to the aircraft, including any 
        repair or alteration of the aircraft, shall revert to the 
        United States, and the United States shall have the right of 
        immediate possession of the aircraft.
    (h) Clarification of Liability.--Notwithstanding any other 
provision of law, upon the conveyance to the Commission of interests in 
the aircraft under subsection (a), the United States may not be liable 
for any death, injury, loss, or damage that results from any use of 
such aircraft by any person other than the United States.
    (i) Applicable Law.--The conveyance of an aircraft under subsection 
(a), and the use of such aircraft following such conveyance, shall be 
subject to all applicable Federal and State laws and regulations, 
including the Arms Export Control Act (22 U.S.C. 2751 et seq.), the 
Export Control Reform Act of 2018 (50 U.S.C. 4801 et seq.), chapter 37 
of title 18, United States Code (commonly referred to as the 
``Espionage Act''), the regulations set forth in subchapter M of 
chapter I of title 22, Code of Federal Regulations (commonly referred 
to as the ``International Traffic in Arms Regulations''), subchapter C 
of chapter VII of title 15, Code of Federal Regulations (commonly 
referred to as the ``Export Administration Regulations''), and chapter 
V of title 31, Code of Federal Regulations (commonly referred to as the 
``Foreign Assets Control Regulations'').

SEC. 151. REPORT ON THE FEASIBILITY OF RESTORING NUCLEAR CAPABILITY TO 
              THE B-1B LANCER BOMBER AIRCRAFT.

    (a) In General.--Not later than December 1, 2026, the Secretary of 
the Air Force, in coordination with the Commander of the United States 
Strategic Command, shall submit to the congressional defense committees 
a report assessing the feasibility of restoring nuclear capability to 
the B-1B Lancer bomber aircraft.
    (b) Elements.--The report required under subsection (a) shall 
include the following:
            (1) A description of any structural, electronic, software, 
        and weapons-integration modifications required to enable the B-
        1B aircraft to deliver nuclear weapons.
            (2) An assessment of the compatibility of such aircraft 
        with currently fielded and planned nuclear gravity bombs and 
        air-launched cruise missiles.
            (3) Identification of any military construction, storage, 
        security, and certification infrastructure that would be 
        required at forward operating locations within the continental 
        United States should nuclear capability be restored to such 
        aircraft.
            (4) Requirements related to aircrew certification, 
        maintenance training, security forces training, nuclear surety 
        inspections, and personnel reliability programs should nuclear 
        capability be restored to such aircraft.
            (5) Estimated research, development, test, evaluation, 
        procurement, operations, and sustainment costs over a the five-
        year period following the initiation of any efforts to restore 
        nuclear capability to such aircraft.
            (6) An assessment of the expected remaining service life of 
        the B-1B aircraft fleet.
            (7) The estimated time required to achieve initial 
        operational capability and full operational capability should 
        the Air Force pursue restoring nuclear capability to such 
        aircraft.
            (8) An assessment of the military utility and strategic 
        deterrence value of restoring nuclear capability to the B-1B 
        aircraft.
            (9) An assessment of any costs and additional requirements 
        to restore nuclear capability across bomber bases.
    (c) Form.--The report required under subsection (a) shall be 
submitted in unclassified form but may include a classified annex.

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

SEC. 161. MULTIYEAR PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR F-15EX AIRCRAFT.

    (a) Authority for Multiyear Procurement.--Subject to section 3501 
of title 10, United States Code, and except as provided in subsection 
(b), the Secretary of Defense may enter into one or more multiyear 
contracts, beginning with the fiscal year 2027 program year, for the 
procurement of--
            (1) F-15EX aircraft; and
            (2) initial spare parts, alternate mission equipment, and 
        conformal fuel tanks for such aircraft.
    (b) Limitation.--The Secretary of Defense may not enter into a 
contract for the procurement of an aircraft under subsection (a) until 
the date on which the Secretary certifies to the congressional defense 
committees that such contract will provide for the procurement of the 
full complement of initial spare parts, alternate mission equipment, 
and conformal fuel tanks for each aircraft to be procured under the 
contract.
    (c) Condition for Out-year Contract Payments.--A contract entered 
into under subsection (a) shall provide that any obligation of the 
United States to make a payment under the contract for a fiscal year 
after fiscal year 2027 is subject to the availability of appropriations 
or funds for that purpose for such later fiscal year.
    (d) Authority for Advance Procurement.--The Secretary of Defense 
may enter into one or more contracts, beginning in fiscal year 2027, 
for advance procurement associated with the aircraft for which 
authorization to enter into a multiyear procurement contract is 
provided under subsection (a), which may include procurement of 
economic order quantities of material and equipment for such aircraft 
when cost savings are achievable.

SEC. 162. MULTIYEAR PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR F-35 AIRCRAFT.

    (a) Authority for Multiyear Procurement.--Subject to section 3501 
of title 10, United States Code, and except as provided in subsections 
(b) and (c), the Secretary of Defense may enter into one or more 
multiyear contracts, beginning with the fiscal year 2027 program year, 
for the procurement of--
            (1) F-35 aircraft; and
            (2) initial spare parts and alternate mission equipment for 
        such aircraft.
    (b) Limitation.--The Secretary of Defense may not enter into a 
contract for the procurement of an aircraft under subsection (a) until 
the date on which the Secretary certifies to the congressional defense 
committees that such contract will provide for the procurement of the 
full complement of initial spare parts and alternate mission equipment 
for each aircraft to be procured under the contract.
    (c) Additional Requirements and Limitations.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense may not enter 
        into a contract for the procurement of an aircraft under 
        subsection (a) until the date on which all of the following 
        requirements have been met:
                    (A) The Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition 
                and Sustainment has certified to the congressional 
                defense committees that--
                            (i) any multiyear contracts for the 
                        procurement of F-35 aircraft units will achieve 
                        savings of not less than 5 percent compared 
                        with the estimated cost of procuring the same 
                        number and configuration of F-35 aircraft 
                        through annual contracts over the same period; 
                        and
                            (ii) the Director of Cost Assessment and 
                        Program Evaluation reviewed and validated such 
                        savings estimate.
                    (B) The Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition 
                and Sustainment has submitted to the congressional 
                defense committees a report on the plan of the 
                Department of Defense to improve operational readiness 
                rates of F-35 aircraft. The report shall include--
                            (i) funding requirements, by fiscal year, 
                        that achieve readiness to the required rates of 
                        full mission capability, mission capability, 
                        and aircraft availability, as defined by the 
                        Air Force and the Department of the Navy; and
                            (ii) funding requirements across the period 
                        covered by the future-years defense program 
                        that demonstrate full resources budgeted and 
                        programmed to achieve annual readiness 
                        requirements as identified in clause (i).
            (2) Limitation on availability of funds.--Of the funds 
        authorized to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise made 
        available for the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2027 
        for the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for 
        Acquisition and Sustainment for official travel, not more than 
        50 percent may be obligated or expended until the date on which 
        the Under Secretary submits to the congressional defense 
        committees a certification--
                    (A) that funding for fiscal year 2026 has been 
                obligated and expended to meet the fiscal year 2026 
                readiness requirements as identified in paragraph 
                (1)(B)(i); and
                    (B) that funding for fiscal year 2027 has been 
                requested to meet fiscal year 2027 readiness 
                requirements as identified in such paragraph.
    (d) Condition for Out-year Contract Payments.--A contract entered 
into under subsection (a) shall provide that any obligation of the 
United States to make a payment under the contract for a fiscal year 
after fiscal year 2027 is subject to the availability of appropriations 
or funds for that purpose for such later fiscal year.
    (e) Authority for Advance Procurement.--The Secretary of Defense 
may enter into one or more contracts, beginning in fiscal year 2027, 
for advance procurement associated with the aircraft for which 
authorization to enter into a multiyear procurement contract is 
provided under subsection (a), which may include procurement of 
economic order quantities of material and equipment for such aircraft 
when cost savings are achievable.

SEC. 163. PROHIBITION ON PROCUREMENT AND USE OF HUMANOID ROBOTIC 
              SYSTEMS PRODUCED, DEVELOPED, OR CONTROLLED BY FOREIGN 
              ADVERSARIES.

    (a) Prohibition.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense may not procure, 
        lease, or otherwise obtain a covered humanoid robotic system 
        that--
                    (A) is produced or developed by a foreign adversary 
                or foreign adversary entity;
                    (B) incorporates firmware, software, artificial 
                intelligence models, remote update capability, or cloud 
                services provided by a foreign adversary or foreign 
                adversary entity; or
                    (C) is subject to remote access, maintenance, data 
                transmission, or update authority controlled by a 
                foreign adversary or foreign adversary entity.
            (2) Applicability.--The prohibition under paragraph (1) 
        shall apply with respect to contracts and other agreements 
        entered into after the date of the enactment of this Act.
    (b) Limited Waiver for Controlled Testing and Counterintelligence 
Purposes.--The Secretary of Defense may waive the prohibition under 
subsection (a)(1) with respect to a covered humanoid robotic system 
if--
            (1) the system is to be used solely for 
        counterintelligence, cybersecurity testing, vulnerability 
        assessment, or research purposes;
            (2) the system operates in a physically isolated or air-
        gapped environment;
            (3) the system is not connected to operational Department 
        of Defense networks; and
            (4) the Secretary notifies the congressional defense 
        committees not later than 30 days after issuing such waiver.
    (c) Implementation.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall issue any rules, 
regulations, policies, and guidance necessary for the implementation of 
this section.
    (d) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to prohibit the procurement or use of a covered humanoid 
robotic system solely on the basis that such system incorporates 
commercially available, off-the-shelf components not specifically 
designed for humanoid robotic systems, provided that such components do 
not enable remote access, data transmission, or control by a foreign 
adversary or foreign adversary entity.
    (e) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1)(A) The term ``covered humanoid robotic system'' means a 
        commercially available robotic system that--
                    (i) is designed for general-purpose interaction 
                within human-occupied environments;
                    (ii) possesses articulated upper extremities 
                capable of dexterous manipulation;
                    (iii) is capable of autonomous or semi-autonomous 
                operation using artificial intelligence or machine 
                learning systems; and
                    (iv) is equipped with wired or wireless networking 
                connectivity, including internet, cellular, satellite, 
                Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, radio-frequency communication, or 
                cloud-based data storage or processing services.
            (B) Such term does not include--
                    (i) industrial robotic systems permanently 
                installed in controlled manufacturing environments;
                    (ii) robotic systems incapable of network 
                connectivity; or
                    (iii) assistive medical devices regulated under the 
                Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 301 et 
                seq.).
            (2) The term ``foreign adversary'' means a covered nation 
        as defined in section 4872(f)(2) of title 10, United States 
        Code.
            (3) The term ``foreign adversary entity'' means an entity 
        that--
                    (A) is organized under the laws of, headquartered 
                in, or subject to the jurisdiction of a foreign 
                adversary;
                    (B) is owned or controlled by the government of a 
                foreign adversary; or
                    (C) is owned or controlled by an entity that meets 
                any of the criteria described in subparagraph (A) or 
                (B).

SEC. 164. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS TO RETIRE OR DECOMMISSION 
              CERTAIN RADAR SYSTEMS.

    (a) Limitation.--Except as provided in subsection (b), none of the 
funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise made 
available for fiscal year 2027 for the Department of Defense may be 
obligated or expended to retire, decommission, divest, or otherwise 
remove from active operational service, any covered radar system.
    (b) Exception.--The limitation under subsection (a) shall not apply 
to any individual unit of a covered radar system that the Secretary of 
the military department concerned determines has been damaged or 
degraded beyond economical repair.
    (c) Covered Radar System.--In this section, the term ``covered 
radar system'' means the following:
            (1) The AN/SPN-43 shipboard air traffic control and air 
        marshaling radar system.
            (2) The AN/SPY-1 phased-array radar system for the Aegis 
        Combat System.
            (3) The AN/TPQ-36 Firefinder counter-battery radar system.
            (4) The AN/TPQ-37 Firefinder counter-battery radar system.
            (5) Airborne Station Keeping Equipment radar systems, 
        including the AN/APN-243.

SEC. 165. STANDARDS FOR COMMON OPERATING SYSTEM FOR SMALL UNMANNED 
              AIRCRAFT SYSTEMS.

    (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 Secretaries of the military departments, shall establish standards 
for a common operating system for small unmanned aircraft systems.
    (b) Elements.--The standards established under subsection (a) shall 
provide for a common operating system for small unmanned aircraft 
systems that--
            (1) enables interoperability between small unmanned 
        aircraft system platforms from different vendors and classes 
        across the joint force;
            (2) enables modular integration of mission applications, 
        including by enabling the use of applications and features from 
        multiple different vendors on the same platform;
            (3) facilitates rapid deployment of autonomy and command 
        and control functions;
            (4) facilitates rapid deployment of autonomy and operating 
        capabilities in contested, degraded, and denied environments, 
        including capabilities enabling operation in contested 
        electromagnetic and degraded positioning, navigation, and 
        timing environments;
            (5) integrates operating software that can function on 
        multiple hardware platforms from different vendors;
            (6) supports secure software updates and cybersecurity 
        improvements;
            (7) avoids vendor lock by enabling multiple vendors of 
        hardware and software to develop and field applications and 
        capabilities; and
            (8) establishes baseline standards for aided target 
        recognition capabilities.
    (c) Implementation.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 90 days after the date on 
        which the Secretary of Defense finalizes the standards under 
        subsection (a), the Secretary, in coordination with the 
        Secretaries of the military departments, shall develop and 
        commence implementation of a plan for equipping small unmanned 
        aircraft systems of the Department of Defense with a common 
        operating system that meets such standards.
            (2) Use of commercially available solutions.--In 
        implementing the plan under paragraph (1), the Secretary of 
        Defense shall make use of commercially available solutions to 
        the maximum extent practicable.

SEC. 166. MINIMUM ANNUAL PROCUREMENT GOAL FOR ABILITYONE PROGRAM.

    Beginning in fiscal year 2027, the Secretary of Defense shall 
establish the goal that the total amount of funds obligated for the 
procurement of products and services from nonprofit concerns pursuant 
to chapter 85 of title 41, United States Code, in a fiscal year is 
equal to not less than one percent of the total amount of funds 
obligated for all procurement contracts entered into by the Department 
of Defense in such fiscal year.

SEC. 167. IMPLEMENTATION OF COMPTROLLER GENERAL RECOMMENDATIONS ON F-35 
              JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER TECHNICAL DATA NEEDS FOR 
              SUSTAINMENT.

    (a) Plan Required.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall 
        submit to the congressional defense committees and to the 
        Comptroller General of the United States a plan to address the 
        following recommendations made by the Government Accountability 
        Office:
                    (A) Recommendation 5 in the report titled ``F-35 
                Sustainment: Need for Affordable Strategy, Greater 
                Attention to Risks, and Improved Cost Estimates'' (GA-
                14-778).
                    (B) Recommendations 1 through 7 in the report 
                titled ``F-35 Aircraft: DOD and the Military Services 
                Need to Reassess the Future Sustainment Strategy'' 
                (GAO-23-105341).
                    (C) Recommendations 1 and 2 in the report titled 
                ``F-35 Aircraft: Actions Needed to Address Long-
                Standing Risks to Operational Effectiveness'' (GAO-25-
                107101C).
            (2) Elements.--The plan under paragraph (1) shall include 
        the following:
                    (A) With respect to each recommendation specified 
                in paragraph (1) that the Secretary has implemented or 
                intends to implement--
                            (i) a summary of actions that have been 
                        taken or will be taken to implement the 
                        recommendation; and
                            (ii) a schedule, with specific milestones, 
                        for completing implementation of the 
                        recommendation.
                    (B) Identification of any recommendations specified 
                in paragraph (1) that the Secretary does not intend to 
                implement, together with a discussion of the reasons 
                for not implementing the recommendations and any 
                alternative actions taken or intended to be taken to 
                address the matters identified by the Government 
                Accountability Office in connection with such 
                recommendations.
    (b) Plan Implementation Report.--Not later than one year after the 
date on which the Secretary of Defense submits the implementation plan 
under subsection (a), the Secretary shall carry out activities to 
implement the plan and submit to the congressional defense committees 
and the Comptroller General of the United States a report on the 
following:
            (1) All critical technical data rights requirements for F-
        35 Joint Strike Fighter sustainment, including for both 
        organizational-level and depot-level sustainment and repair.
            (2) Estimated costs for acquiring identified critical 
        technical data rights for sustainment.
            (3) The status of efforts for acquiring identified critical 
        technical data rights for sustainment.
            (4) Any known challenges for acquiring identified critical 
        technical data rights for sustainment.

SEC. 168. IMPLEMENTATION OF GAO RECOMMENDATION ON F-35 JOINT STRIKE 
              FIGHTER USE OF CONTRACT INCENTIVE FEES.

    (a) Implementation Plan.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall develop and 
        implement a plan to address recommendation 3 from the report of 
        the Government Accountability Office titled ``F-35 Joint Strike 
        Fighter: Actions Needed to Address Late Deliveries and Improve 
        Future Development'' (GAO-25-107632).
            (2) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to 
        the congressional defense committees and to the Comptroller 
        General of the United States a report on the plan developed 
        under paragraph (1). Such report shall include--
                    (A)(i) a summary of actions that have been taken or 
                will be taken to implement the recommendation specified 
                in paragraph (1); and
                    (ii) a schedule, with specific milestones, for 
                completing implementation of the recommendation; or
                    (B) if the Secretary does not intend to implement 
                the recommendation, discussion of the reasons and 
                alternative actions taken or intended to be taken to 
                address the issues to which the recommendation 
                pertains.
    (b) Report on Implementation.--Not later than one year after the 
submittal of the plan under subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense 
shall submit to the congressional defense committees and the 
Comptroller General of the United States a report on the status of the 
implementation of the plan. Such report shall include, at a minimum--
            (1) the results of a reevaluation of contract incentive 
        fees for inclusion in future F135 and F-35 production 
        contracts;
            (2) a timeframe for implementing a new incentive fee 
        structure in future F135 and F-35 production contracts;
            (3) a plan for determining the effectiveness of a new 
        incentive fee structure in achieving desired production 
        outcomes; and
            (4) an explanation of any efforts to apply a new incentive 
        fee structure more broadly across the F-35 contracting 
        enterprise.

SEC. 169. STUDY ON FUEL PROCUREMENT PRACTICES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF 
              DEFENSE.

    (a) Study Required.--The Secretary of Defense, in coordination with 
the Commander of the United States Transportation Command and the 
Director of the Defense Logistics Agency, shall conduct a study on the 
fuel procurement practices of the Department of Defense.
    (b) Elements.--The study under subsection (a) shall address the 
following:
            (1) The projected amount budgeted by the Department of 
        Defense for fuel procurement and consumption for fiscal year 
        2026, set forth separately by military department and Defense 
        Agency.
            (2) The actual amount spent by the Department of Defense 
        for fuel procurement and consumption for fiscal year 2026, set 
        forth separately by military department and Defense Agency.
            (3) Any changes to fuel cost and fuel cost projections for 
        fiscal year 2026 that have occurred since February 28, 2026, 
        including an examination of--
                    (A) the magnitude of such changes (expressed in 
                total dollars and as a percentage change from prior 
                projections);
                    (B) the factors driving such changes, including 
                changes in market crude oil prices, changes in the 
                standard price of fuel established by the Defense 
                Logistics Agency, changes in operational demand, and 
                any other relevant factors;
                    (C) the effects of such changes on the budget of 
                the Department of Defense as a whole and the budget of 
                each military department; and
                    (D) the effects of such changes on the ability of 
                the military departments to meet readiness standards, 
                including--
                            (i) any exercises (including joint 
                        exercises with allies and partners), training, 
                        or other operational activities that were 
                        modified, delayed, or canceled as a result of 
                        such changes, set forth separately by Armed 
                        Force;
                            (ii) any reductions in readiness accounts 
                        resulting from such changes, set forth 
                        separately by account, amount, and Armed Force, 
                        including--
                                    (I) operation and maintenance 
                                accounts; and
                                    (II) accounts for depot maintenance 
                                and spare parts; and
                            (iii) any effects of such changes on 
                        prepositioned fuel stocks or bulk fuel 
                        inventories.
            (4) Any transfers, reprogramming actions, or other 
        budgetary adjustments made or anticipated to be made during the 
        period of fiscal years 2026 through 2031 as a result of fuel 
        cost variances.
    (c) 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 results of the study conducted under 
subsection (a), including the findings of the study with respect to 
each element specified in subsection (b).

         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 2027 
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. BUDGET REVIEW AND CERTIFICATION FOR CERTAIN CATEGORIES OF 
              RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT.

    Section 133a of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (b)--
                    (A) in paragraph (4), by striking ``and'' at the 
                end;
                    (B) in paragraph (5), by striking the period at the 
                end and inserting ``; and''; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following new 
                paragraph:
            ``(6) in addition to the duties described in subsection 
        (c), promulgating guidance and recommended standards on 
        adequate levels of science and technology spending by elements 
        of the Department of Defense with responsibilities associated 
        with basic research, applied research, and advanced technology 
        development (budget activities 6.1 through 6.3, respectively, 
        as set forth in the Department of Defense Financial Management 
        Regulation (DOD 7000.14-R), or any successor budget 
        classification) and developmental test and evaluation that 
        could be incorporated into budget and planning guidance of the 
        Department as appropriate.'';
            (2) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (d); and
            (3) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(c) Budget Review and Certification.--
            ``(1) Transmittal.--The Secretary of Defense, acting 
        through the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller), shall 
        require the Secretaries of the military departments and the 
        heads of the Defense Agencies with responsibilities associated 
        with basic research, applied research, and advanced technology 
        development (budget activities 6.1 through 6.3, respectively, 
        as set forth in the Department of Defense Financial Management 
        Regulation (DOD 7000.14-R), or any successor budget 
        classification) and developmental test and evaluation to 
        transmit the proposed budget for such activities for a fiscal 
        year and for the period covered by the future-years defense 
        program submitted to Congress under section 221 of this title 
        for that fiscal year to the Under Secretary of Defense for 
        Research and Engineering for review under paragraph (2) before 
        submitting the proposed budget to the Under Secretary of 
        Defense (Comptroller).
            ``(2) Report and certification.--The Under Secretary of 
        Defense for Research and Engineering shall review each proposed 
        budget transmitted under paragraph (1) and, not later than 
        January 31 of the year preceding the fiscal year for which the 
        budget is proposed, shall submit to the Secretary of Defense a 
        report containing the comments of the Under Secretary of 
        Defense for Research and Engineering with respect to all such 
        proposed budgets, together with the certification of the Under 
        Secretary regarding whether each proposed budget is adequate.
            ``(3) Report to congress.--Not later than 15 days after the 
        date on which the budget of the President for each fiscal year 
        is submitted to Congress pursuant to section 1105(a) of title 
        31, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to Congress a report 
        specifying each proposed budget contained in the most-recent 
        report submitted under paragraph (2) that the Under Secretary 
        of Defense for Research Engineering did not certify to be 
        adequate. The report of the Secretary shall include the 
        following matters:
                    ``(A) A discussion of the actions that the 
                Secretary proposes to take, together with any 
                recommended legislation that the Secretary considers 
                appropriate, to address the inadequacy of the proposed 
                budgets specified in the report.
                    ``(B) Any additional comments that the Secretary 
                considers appropriate regarding the inadequacy of the 
                proposed budgets.''.

SEC. 212. DEPUTY DIRECTORS OF OPERATIONAL TEST AND EVALUATION.

    Section 139 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsection (l) as subsection (m); and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (k) the following new 
        subsection (l):
    ``(l) The Director shall have a sufficient number of Deputy 
Directors to supervise the activities of the Office and to carry out 
the duties and responsibilities prescribed by law. Each such Deputy 
Director shall be a appointed from the Senior Executive Service.''.

SEC. 213. REPEAL OF PILOT AUTHORITY FOR USE OF OTHER TRANSACTIONS FOR 
              INSTALLATION OR FACILITY PROTOTYPING.

    Section 4022 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking subsection (i).

SEC. 214. MODIFICATIONS TO RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE DEFENSE INNOVATION 
              UNIT.

    (a) In General.--Section 4127(d) of title 10, United States Code, 
is amended--
            (1) by redesignating paragraph (11) as paragraph (12); and
            (2) by inserting after paragraph (10) the following new 
        paragraph:
            ``(11) Coordinate with the portfolio acquisition executives 
        of the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, and Space Force 
        to--
                    ``(A) identify priority acquisition problems and 
                capability needs and gaps;
                    ``(B) identify platforms, capabilities, and 
                solutions developed by entities working with the Unit 
                that have the potential to address the priority 
                acquisition problems and capability needs and gaps 
                identified under subparagraph (A); and
                    ``(C) assist such portfolio acquisition executives 
                in establishing and carrying out programs for the 
                acquisition of such platforms, capabilities, and 
                solutions.''.
    (b) Clarifying Amendment to BOOST Program.--Section 1833 of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 
119-60; 10 U.S.C. 3453 note) is amended by striking ``commercial'' each 
place it appears.

SEC. 215. TEST AND EVALUATION REPOSITORY AND REGIONAL TEST HUBS OF THE 
              TEST RESOURCE MANAGEMENT CENTER.

    (a) In General.--Section 4173 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) in subsection (c)(1) by adding at the end the following 
        new subparagraph:
            ``(G) To carry out the activities described in subsections 
        (j) and (k).'';
            (2) by redesignating subsection (j) as subection (l);
            (3) by inserting after subsection (i) the following new 
        subsections:
    ``(j) Repository of Test and Evaluation Facilities.--(1) The 
Director shall establish and maintain a digital repository that 
identifies and provides relevant information on all testing and 
evaluation facilities in the United States that could be made available 
for use by the Department of Defense and qualified partners for the 
testing and evaluation of weapon systems and innovative technologies.
    ``(2) The repository established under paragraph (1) shall--
            ``(A) identify all testing and evaluation facilities that 
        meet the criteria specified in paragraph (1), including--
                    ``(i) facilities owned or operated by the Federal 
                Government, including--
                            ``(I) facilities in the Major Range and 
                        Test Facility Base;
                            ``(II) facilities not included in the Major 
                        Range and Test Facility Base; and
                            ``(III) National Guard facilities; and
                    ``(ii) facilities owned or operated by--
                            ``(I) State or local governments;
                            ``(II) academic institutions;
                            ``(III) nonprofit organizations; or
                            ``(IV) for-profit entities; and
            ``(B) with respect to each testing and evaluation facility 
        identified in the repository, provide--
                    ``(i) a description of the facility, including a 
                description of the capabilities and instrumentation 
                available at the facility;
                    ``(ii) points of contact for scheduling range time 
                at the facility; and
                    ``(iii) such other information as the Director 
                determines appropriate.
            ``(3) The Director shall update the repository under 
        paragraph (1) not less frequently than annually.
            ``(4) The Director shall make the repository established 
        under paragraph (1) accessible to such elements of the 
        Department of Defense and qualified partners as the Director 
        determines appropriate.
    ``(k) Authority to Establish Regional Test and Evaluation Hubs.--
(1) The Director may establish and maintain regional test and 
evaluation hubs at locations within and outside the United States for 
purposes of facilitating or conducting test and evaluation activities.
    ``(2) In the event the Director exercises the authority to 
establish and maintain regional test and evaluation hubs under 
paragraph (1), the Director shall develop a strategy and criteria for 
the selection of locations for such hubs, which shall include 
consideration of whether the geographic region served by the hub 
provides an environment conducive to the simulation of realistic 
threats and environmental conditions.''; and
            (4) in subsection (l), as so redesignated--
                    (A) in the subsection heading, by striking 
                ``Definition'' and inserting ``Definitions'';
                    (B) by striking ``In this section, the term'' and 
                inserting ``In this section:
            ``(1) The term''; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following new 
                paragraph:
            ``(2) The term `qualified partner' means an entity that the 
        Director determines--
                    ``(A) is engaged in the development of capabilities 
                for the Department of Defense, such as a contractor, 
                academic institution, or other private sector 
                organization; and
                    ``(B) is qualified to conduct test and evaluation 
                activities at a facility described in subsection (j) or 
                a regional test and evaluation hub described in 
                subsection (k).''.
    (b) Deadline.--The Director of the Test Resource Management Center 
shall establish the repository required under section 4173(j) of title 
10, United States Code (as added by subsection (a) of this section), by 
not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 216. WEAPON SYSTEM PLATFORM MODERNIZATION AND CYBER HARDENING.

    Section 228 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 786; 10 U.S.C. 4001 note) is 
amended--
            (1) in subsection (b), by inserting after paragraph (2) the 
        following new paragraph:
            ``(3) The Secretary shall, not later than two years after 
        the date of the enactment of this Act, select not fewer than 
        three additional weapon system platforms for participation in 
        the demonstration.'';
            (2) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (d), and 
        in such subsection--
                    (A) in paragraph (1)--
                            (i) by inserting after ``2027,'' the 
                        following: ``and again on January 1, 2028, and 
                        January 1, 2029,''; and
                            (ii) by striking ``with respect to the 
                        demonstration conducted pursuant to subsection 
                        (a)'' and inserting ``with respect to the 
                        activities carried out under subsections (a), 
                        (b), and (c)'';
                    (B) in each of paragraphs (2) and (3), by striking 
                ``The report'' and inserting ``Each report''; and
                    (C) in paragraph (2)--
                            (i) by redesignating subparagraph (B) as 
                        subparagraph (C); and
                            (ii) by inserting after subparagraph (B) 
                        the following new subparagraph:
                    ``(B) The results of the evaluation carried out 
                under subsection (c)(1) and any pilot efforts carried 
                out under subsection (c)(2).'';
            (3) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(c) Operational Integration.--The Secretary of Defense shall--
            ``(1) evaluate opportunities to integrate data collected 
        and analyzed from the demonstration into command and control, 
        logistics, sustainment, and maintenance systems of the 
        Department of Defense, prioritizing systems with the greatest 
        operational value; and
            ``(2) conduct pilot efforts to integrate the monitoring 
        capabilities included in the demonstration into the platforms 
        included in the demonstration, as appropriate.''; and
            (4) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(e) Duration of Authority.--The authority provided under this 
section shall remain in effect until September 30, 2028.''.

SEC. 217. REPEAL OF REQUIREMENT FOR SECRETARY OF DEFENSE TO ACT THROUGH 
              A SPECIFIED OFFICIAL FOR NATO INNOVATION PROGRAM.

    (a) Repeal of Requirement to Act Through Specified Official.--
Subsections (a) and (b) of section 222 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024 (Public Law 118-31; 137 Stat. 
189) are amended by striking ``, acting through the Under Secretary of 
Defense for Research and Engineering,'' each place it appears.
    (b) Repeal of Executed Requirement.--Such section is further 
amended--
            (1) by striking subsection (c); and
            (2) by redesignating subsections (d) and (e) as subsections 
        (c) and (d), respectively.

SEC. 218. MODIFICATION TO TEST PROGRAM FOR ENGINEERING PLANT OF CERTAIN 
              VESSELS.

    Section 221 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2022 (Public Law 117-81; 135 Stat. 1599) is amended--
            (1) in the section heading, by inserting ``and other large 
        surface combatant'' before ``vessels'';
            (2) in subsection (a), by inserting ``or any subsequent 
        class of large surface combatant vessels'' after ``destroyer 
        class of vessels'';
            (3) in subsection (b), by striking ``Senior Technical 
        Authority for the DDG(X) destroyer class of vessels'' and 
        inserting ``Senior Technical Authority for the class of vessels 
        involved (as designated pursuant to section 8669b of title 10, 
        United States Code)'';
            (4) in subsection (d), by striking ``for the DDG(X) 
        destroyer class of vessels'' and inserting ``for the class of 
        vessels involved'';
            (5) in subsection (e), by striking ``by not later than the 
        delivery date of the lead ship in the DDG(X) destroyer class of 
        vessels'' and inserting ``for a class of vessels by not later 
        than the delivery date of the lead ship in that class of 
        vessels''; and
            (6) by amending subsection (f) to read as follows:
    ``(f) Delivery Date Defined.--In this section, term `delivery date' 
has the meaning given that term in section 8671 of title 10, United 
States Code.''.

SEC. 219. UNITED STATES-ISRAEL DEFENSE TECHNOLOGY COOPERATION 
              INITIATIVE.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary of Defense shall designate an 
executive agent, as such term is defined in Department of Defense 
Directive 5101.01 (relating to DoD Executive Agent, issued February 7, 
2022), responsible for synchronizing cooperative efforts between the 
United States and Israel, to expand and accelerate bilateral defense 
technology research, development, testing, evaluation, integration, and 
industrial cooperation, by--
            (1) identifying jointly developed or Israeli-origin 
        technologies with operational utility for potential integration 
        into United States systems and programs of record;
            (2) ensuring collaborative research initiatives involving 
        government, private sector, and academic institutions in the 
        United States and Israel, is done in a manner that protects 
        sensitive technology and information and the national security 
        interests of the United States and Israel;
            (3) facilitating the transition of technologies from 
        research and development into procurement and acquisition 
        pathways;
            (4) establishing frameworks for joint ventures, licensing 
        agreements, and United States-based co-production or 
        manufacturing partnerships with Israeli industry;
            (5) coordinating with relevant Department of Defense 
        components, including the Irregular Warfare Technical Support 
        Directorate, capability development and innovation divisions, 
        the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering, 
        the Defense Innovation Unit, the United States-Israel 
        Operations Technology Working Group, the Defense Advanced 
        Research Projects Agency, the Missile Defense Agency, the 
        United States Space Command, the military departments, and 
        other Department of Defense entities, as appropriate, to align 
        efforts and avoid duplication; and
            (6) promoting joint training exercises and information-
        sharing mechanisms to enhance operational readiness to deploy 
        jointly developed technologies.
    (b) Cooperative Efforts.--The synchronized cooperative efforts 
under subsection (a) may be carried out through the following domains:
            (1) Counter-Unmanned Systems including aerial, maritime, 
        and ground platforms.
            (2) Anti-tunneling and subterranean threats.
            (3) Missile and air defense technologies.
            (4) Artificial intelligence, quantum, machine learning, and 
        autonomous systems.
            (5) Directed energy and advanced sensing.
            (6) Cyber defense, electronic warfare, and digital 
        resilience.
            (7) Biotechnology, biomanufacturing, and medical defense.
            (8) Network integration, data fusion, and contested 
        logistics.
            (9) Defense industrial base cooperation, manufacturing, and 
        co-production.
            (10) Other emerging technologies as jointly agreed by the 
        United States and Israel.
    (c) Activities in Coordination With Other Federal Departments and 
Agencies.--The Secretary of Defense shall coordinate activities, as 
appropriate, with the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Commerce, 
and the heads of other relevant Federal departments and agencies, to 
ensure consistency with existing laws and regulations.
    (d) Interim Progress Update.--Not later than 180 days after the 
date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall provide 
to the congressional defense committees an interim briefing on--
            (1) the executive agent designated pursuant to subsection 
        (a) and the efforts undertaken by such executive agent to lead 
        Department of Defense implementation of the synchronized 
        cooperative efforts described in such subsection;
            (2) the status of coordination, Department-wide, with 
        Israeli counterparts;
            (3) initial technology areas identified for accelerated 
        cooperation and technologies with operational utility for 
        integration into United States systems and programs of record; 
        and
            (4) any early transition, prototyping, or integration 
        activities initiated during the period covered by the update.
    (e) Annual Report.--Not later than 1 year after the date of 
enactment of this Act, and annually thereafter until 2030, the 
Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional defense 
committees a report on implementation of the cooperative efforts 
described in subsection (a). Each such report shall include--
            (1) a description of activities conducted;
            (2) an assessment of progress made in advancing shared 
        national security interests;
            (3) an assessment of collaboration with other relevant 
        Federal programs;
            (4) a description of technologies transitioned into United 
        States acquisition programs or fielded systems;
            (5) a description of partnerships established with United 
        States and Israeli industry; and
            (6) recommendations for future opportunities to promote the 
        long-term integration of joint capabilities between the United 
        States and Israel.
    (f) Form.--Each report required under subsection (e) shall be 
submitted in unclassified form and may include a classified annex.
    (g) Public Transparency.--The Secretary of Defense shall make 
available on a publicly accessible website of the Department of Defense 
periodic, unclassified updates, to the maximum extent practicable, on 
the synchronized cooperative efforts carried out under subsection (a), 
including a description of how these efforts contribute to United 
States technological and military supremacy. Such updates shall be made 
in a manner that ensures that classified information or other 
information that would compromise operational security, export 
controls, or sensitive technology are not released.

SEC. 220. ESTABLISHMENT OF SYNTHETIC TRAINING ENVIRONMENT TO SUPPORT 
              INDO-PACIFIC OPERATIONS.

    (a) Establishment.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with 
the Commander of the United States Indo-Pacific Command, shall 
establish a synthetic training environment that meets the requirements 
of subsection (b) to support operations in the Indo-Pacific Region.
    (b) Requirements.--The synthetic training environment established 
under subsection (a) shall--
            (1) incorporate live, virtual, and constructive elements;
            (2) integrate training, testing, and simulation 
        capabilities across the area of responsibility of the United 
        States Indo-Pacific Command;
            (3) provide integrated synthetic training and mission 
        rehearsal capabilities across all warfighting domains, 
        including land, maritime, air, space, cyberspace, and the 
        electromagnetic spectrum;
            (4) integrate and synchronize, to the maximum extent 
        practicable, existing training, experimentation, and simulation 
        capabilities of the Department of Defense;
            (5) enable distributed training of joint and combined 
        forces;
            (6) support rehearsal of operational plans and crisis 
        response;
            (7) enable experimentation for emerging capabilities;
            (8) be scalable to support additional combatant command 
        requirements as directed by the Secretary of Defense; and
            (9) be accessible to allies and partners of the United 
        States, consistent with applicable law and security 
        requirements.
    (c) Report to Congress.--Before establishing the training 
environment under subsection (a), but not later than 180 days after the 
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall 
submit to the congressional defense committees a report that includes--
            (1) an explanation of how the Secretary intends to 
        implement the synthetic training environment required under 
        subsection (a);
            (2) a cost estimate for the training environment;
            (3) a plan for making the training environment accessible 
        to allies and partners of the United States; and
            (4) an assessment of the potential effects of the training 
        environment on readiness.

SEC. 221. REQUIREMENT TO ESTABLISH TEST AND TRAINING CORRIDORS FOR 
              SMALL UNMANNED AIRCRAFT SYSTEMS AND ASSOCIATED 
              CAPABILITIES.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish or 
designate, and operate, one or more test and training corridors for 
small unmanned aircraft systems, counter-unmanned aircraft system 
platforms, and associated capabilities within the national airspace 
system.
    (b) Facilities.--The Secretary of Defense may construct new 
facilities, or use existing facilities available to the Department of 
Defense, to support one or more test and training corridors established 
or designated under subsection (a) that collectively address each of 
the functions described in subsection (c).
    (c) Functions.--The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that any test 
and training corridor established or designated under subsection (a) 
enables the research, development, testing, and evaluation of, and 
training for members of the Armed Forces on--
            (1) small unmanned aircraft systems and associated autonomy 
        software, kinetic and nonkinetic payloads, sensors, 
        communications, and navigation technology;
            (2) kinetic and nonkinetic counter small-unmanned aircraft 
        system capabilities, including high power microwave, high 
        energy laser, and electronic warfare capabilities, and any 
        requisite autonomy software, sensors, and command and control 
        capabilities;
            (3) small to medium caliber counter unmanned aircraft 
        systems ammunition and weapon systems, low collateral damage 
        weapons and munitions, and drone-versus-drone capabilities;
            (4) the acceleration of the integration of modular payloads 
        onto multiple unmanned aircraft systems and counter unmanned 
        aircraft systems and platforms;
            (5) the reduction in time-to-field for lethal and non-
        lethal drone-enabled munitions and munition payload 
        capabilities; and
            (6) standardization of payload-to-platform interfaces.
    (d) Site Selection.--In establishing or designating one or more 
test and training corridors under subsection (a), the Secretary of 
Defense, in coordination with the Director of the Test Resource 
Management Center and the Secretaries of the military departments, 
shall--
            (1) identify potential locations within the national 
        airspace system that would be conducive to conducting testing, 
        evaluation, and training activities with respect to small 
        unmanned aircraft systems and counter-small unmanned aircraft 
        capabilities, with prioritization of sites that best support 
        the test and training corridor functions described in 
        subsection (c);
            (2) assess whether existing test and evaluation facilities, 
        including Government-owned and non-Government owned facilities, 
        could be used to meet current and future requirements with 
        respect to such testing, evaluation and training;
            (3) identify any additional resources required to establish 
        or designate, and operate the corridor, including military 
        construction costs and personnel and manning costs;
            (4) identify any sensors and capabilities needed to 
        adequately simulate operationally realistic environments in the 
        corridor, including environments with denied or degraded--
                    (A) communications;
                    (B) electromagnetic spectrum; and
                    (C) global positioning system;
            (5) identify any interagency, legal, regulatory, or policy 
        impediments to carrying out testing, evaluation, and training 
        activities with respect to small unmanned aircraft systems and 
        counter-small unmanned aircraft capabilities within the 
        national airspace system, including any impediments to the use 
        of--
                    (A) electronic warfare;
                    (B) directed energy (such as high-powered microwave 
                and high energy lasers);
                    (C) GPS jamming and spoofing;
                    (D) spectrum enabled and cellular-network enabled 
                systems and capabilities; and
                    (E) other relevant capabilities;
            (6) consult with interagency partners to develop 
        recommendations for--
                    (A) addressing any impediments identified under 
                paragraph (4); and
                    (B) ensuring the safety of testing and training 
                activities conducted in the national airspace system; 
                and
            (7) consider diverse geographic regions across the United 
        States.
    (e) Notification to Congress.--Not later than 90 days after 
establishing or designating a test and training corridor under 
subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a written notification that 
describes--
            (1) the location of the corridor;
            (2) any funding, personnel, or other resources required to 
        support the corridor; and
            (3) any agreements with other Federal agencies that may be 
        required to safely operate the corridor in the national 
        airspace system.

SEC. 222. OPERATIONAL AUTONOMY REQUIREMENTS FOR UNMANNED SURFACE 
              VESSELS.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall take such 
actions as may be necessary, including modification of research and 
development and acquisition procedures as appropriate, to ensure that 
unmanned surface vessels are capable of autonomous operation--
            (1) during periods in which communications capabilities are 
        denied, degraded, intermittent, or limited; and
            (2) during periods in which positioning, navigation, and 
        timing capabilities are degraded or unavailable.
    (b) Briefing.--Following implementation of the actions required 
under subsection (a), but not later than 270 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall provide to the 
congressional defense committees a briefing on such actions. The 
briefing shall include an explanation of each of the following:
            (1) The ability of unmanned surface vessels to execute 
        preauthorized mission tasks without continuous human control.
            (2) The ability of such vessels to adhere to defined 
        autonomy behaviors, decision logic, and safety constraints 
        governing mission execution.
            (3) The ability of such vessels to adapt, recover, retask, 
        or terminate missions in accordance with preestablished 
        operational parameters when communications or positioning, 
        navigation, and timing are degraded or unavailable.
    (c) Unmanned Surface Vessels.--In this section, the term ``unmanned 
surface vessels'' includes--
            (1) unmanned surface vessels in use by the Navy or Marine 
        Corps; and
            (2) unmanned surface vessels planned for development or 
        procurement for the Navy or Marine Corps.

SEC. 223. REALIGNMENT OF THE NATIONAL STRATEGIC RESEARCH INSTITUTE TO 
              THE DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE.

    (a) Transfer of Responsibility.--Not later than two years after the 
date of the enactment this Act, the Under Secretary of Defense for 
Research and Engineering shall--
            (1) designate the Air Force as the primary sponsor of the 
        National Strategic Research Institute University Affiliated 
        Research Center (referred to in this section as the 
        ``Center''); and
            (2) coordinate with the Secretary of the Air Force and the 
        Commander of the United States Strategic Command to ensure that 
        the Center receives the funding and other resources necessary 
        to meet the applicable requirements of the UARC Management Plan 
        following such designation.
    (b) Resourcing Plan.--Not later than 90 days after the date on 
which the designation under subsection (a)(1) occurs, the Secretary of 
the Air Force shall submit to the congressional defense committees a 
plan for providing funding and other resources to the Center in 
accordance with subsection (a)(2).
    (c) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``prime sponsor'' has the meaning given that 
        term in the UARC Management Plan.
            (2) The term ``UARC Management Plan'' means the publication 
        of the Department of Defense titled ``Department of Defense 
        University Affiliated Research Center (UARC) Management Plan'', 
        dated July 2010 (or any successor to such plan).

SEC. 224. REIMBURSEMENT OF NATIONAL GUARD FOR RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, 
              TEST, AND EVALUATION EXPENSES.

    (a) Availability.--Amounts authorized to be appropriated after the 
date of the enactment of this Act for the Department of Defense for 
research, development, test, and evaluation shall be available for 
reimbursement of pay, allowances, and other expenses which would 
otherwise be incurred against appropriations for the reserve components 
of the Armed Forces, including the National Guard, in cases in which 
members of the such reserve components provide support to research, 
development, test, and evaluation projects in which their involvement 
furthers the project because of a member's or unit's availability, 
qualifications, experience, or education.
    (b) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed--
            (1) to authorize a deviation from established personnel and 
        training procedures of the reserve components of the Armed 
        Forces, including the National Guard; or
            (2) to authorize the direct engagement of members or units 
        of such components to conduct independent research, 
        development, test, and evaluation projects.

SEC. 225. USE OF INNOVATIVE AND EMERGING FOOD PRODUCTION TECHNOLOGIES 
              FOR COMPONENTS OF MILITARY RATIONS.

    (a) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that 
requirements for the future battlefield include dealing with contested 
logistics that--
            (1) cannot be achieved with the size and weight of 
        currently fielded rations; and
            (2) could be mitigated by incorporating within rations, 
        components produced with emerging and innovative technologies 
        developed in partnership with the Department of Defense Combat 
        Feeding Research and Engineering Program.
    (b) Activities Required.--Subject to the availability of 
appropriations for such purpose, the Secretary of Defense shall carry 
out the following activities with respect to military rations:
            (1) The Secretary shall seek to enter into one or more 
        contracts for the procurement of rations produced using 
        emerging food technologies such as sonic agglomeration and 
        vacuum microwave drying to reduce size and weight.
            (2) The Secretary shall maximize the use of the 
        technologies described in paragraph (1) for individual combat 
        ration components to ensure successful technology transition 
        from small business innovation research and research, 
        development, test, and evaluation.
            (3) As operational needs allow, the Secretary shall 
        prioritize clean-label, nutrient-dense components that do not 
        contain unhealthy fats or artificial preservatives.
    (c) Report to Congress.--Not later than 120 days after the date of 
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report that includes the following:
            (1) A description of any emerging and innovative food 
        processing technologies that have been developed or are being 
        developed using research, development, test, and evaluation 
        investments of the Department of Defense.
            (2) The total amount of Department of Defense investments 
        in the development of sonic agglomeration and vacuum microwave 
        drying technology for military rations, disaggregated by 
        research, development, test, and evaluation budget activity, 
        including small business innovation research.
            (3) The results of warfighter field testing of potential 
        ration components produced with the technologies described in 
        paragraph (2).
            (4) An explanation of quantitative and qualitative 
        logistical and nutritional benefits of ration components 
        produced using such technologies.
            (5) A description of any procurement processes for military 
        rations that may be barriers to the acquisition of components 
        produced with new and emerging food processing technologies.
            (6) A description of any activities carried out to advance 
        the transition and adoption of such technologies to better meet 
        the challenges of military operations in a contested logistics 
        environment.

SEC. 226. SUPPORT FOR ADVANCED TECHNOLOGIES THAT STRENGTHEN UNITED 
              STATES AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION, AGRIFOOD SYSTEMS, AND 
              ASSOCIATED BIOINDUSTRIAL MANUFACTURING CAPACITY.

    (a) In General.--The Under Secretary of Defense for Research and 
Engineering, in coordination with the Secretary of Agriculture, may 
carry out activities to support the development, testing, validation, 
demonstration, and transition of advanced technologies that strengthen 
the resilience, security, and operational continuity of United States 
agricultural production, agrifood systems, and associated bioindustrial 
manufacturing capacity against biological threats, supply chain 
disruptions, natural disasters, and other risks to national security, 
including technologies relating to--
            (1) agricultural biosecurity, including detection, 
        prevention, mitigation, and recovery relating to plant disease, 
        livestock disease, invasive species, and other biological 
        threats;
            (2) advanced plant, animal, microbial, and bioindustrial 
        technologies supporting defense readiness, domestic 
        manufacturing capacity, and supply chain security;
            (3) engineering, automation, artificial intelligence, 
        autonomous systems, and data systems supporting agricultural 
        production, logistics, and operational resilience;
            (4) natural resource management technologies relating to 
        water, energy, soil, forests, and food systems that reduce 
        scarcity risks and enhance civilian and military resilience; 
        and
            (5) wildfire prediction, prevention, mitigation, response, 
        and recovery technologies relevant to agricultural 
        productivity, infrastructure resilience, and military 
        readiness.
    (b) Activities.--The activities carried out under subsection (a) 
shall include--
            (1) interagency collaboration to accelerate research, 
        development, testing, evaluation, field validation, 
        demonstration, deployment, and transition of technologies 
        described in subsection (a);
            (2) collaboration with Federal agencies, federally funded 
        research and development centers, national laboratories, 
        institutions of higher education, nonprofit organizations, and 
        private sector entities; and
            (3) prioritization, to the extent practicable, of projects 
        demonstrating clear potential to enhance food security, 
        operational readiness, domestic production resilience, or 
        defense supply chain security.
    (c) Reporting.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and 
Engineering, in coordination with the Secretary of Agriculture, shall 
submit to the congressional defense committees an implementation plan 
for activities to be carried out under this section.
    (d) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to limit authorities of the Department of Defense or the 
Department of Agriculture that--
            (1) were in effect on the day before the date of the 
        enactment of this Act; and
            (2) authorize or require conduct or support of research, 
        development, testing, evaluation, or operational activities.

SEC. 227. PRIZE COMPETITIONS TO SUPPORT THE RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT OF 
              BIOTECHNOLOGY FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.

    (a) Program Required.--
            (1) In general.--Pursuant to the authority provided under 
        section 4025 of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary of 
        Defense shall carry out a program (referred to in this section 
        as the ``Program'') to award prizes to support the research, 
        development, and commercialization of biotechnology-based 
        capabilities that address priority areas identified by the 
        Secretary under subsection (b).
            (2) Additional requirements.--The Secretary shall--
                    (A) before commencing prize competitions under the 
                Program, establish requirements for the prize 
                competition process, including--
                            (i) eligibility criteria for participants 
                        consistent with paragraph (3); and
                            (ii) procedures for the testing, judging, 
                        and verification of submissions to the 
                        competitions; and
                    (B) ensure that information on the prize 
                competitions is made available to eligible 
                participants, including by conducting outreach and 
                posting such information to a publicly accessible 
                website of the Department of Defense.
            (3) Eligible participants.--To be eligible for a prize 
        award under the Program, an individual or entity shall meet the 
        requirements described in section 24(g)(3) of the Stevenson-
        Wydler Technology Innovation Act of 1980 (15 U.S.C. 
        3719(g)(3)).
            (4) Judges.--In accordance with section 24(k) of the 
        Stevenson-Wydler Technology Innovation Act of 1980 (15 U.S.C. 
        3719(k)), an individual from the private sector may be 
        appointed as a judge for a prize competition under the Program.
            (5) Coordination.--The Secretary of Defense shall carry out 
        the Program acting through the head of the Biotechnology 
        Management Office of the Department of Defense and in 
        consultation with the Secretaries of the military departments 
        and relevant officials from laboratories of the Armed Forces 
        and other appropriate elements of the Department of Defense.
            (6) Deadline.--The Secretary of Defense shall commence 
        implementation of the Program not later than one year after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act.
    (b) Selection of Priority Areas.--
            (1) In general.--Before commencing prize competitions under 
        the Program, but not later than one year after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall identify 
        and select specific, well-defined, and measurable priority 
        areas of biotechnology research and development to be advanced 
        through the award of prizes under the Program.
            (2) Biotechnology applications.--In carrying out paragraph 
        (1), the Secretary is encouraged to identify and select 
        priority areas that support the following applications of 
        biotechnology for defense purposes:
                    (A) Bioenergetics.
                    (B) Biobased material, including for use in 
                existing and planned systems where such materials could 
                provide improved performance over traditional material.
                    (C) Biomining, including for critical minerals.
                    (D) Biomanufacturing platforms and processes, 
                including for modular or deployable systems.
                    (E) Biotechnology convergence with other 
                technologies and subject areas, including artificial 
                intelligence, advanced manufacturing, and advanced 
                computing.
            (3) Public input and other considerations.--In identifying 
        and selecting priority areas under paragraph (1), the Secretary 
        shall--
                    (A) solicit and consider public input; and
                    (B) consider--
                            (i) relevant existing and planned programs 
                        and activities of Department of Defense and 
                        other research and development entities of the 
                        Federal Government;
                            (ii) the likelihood of relevant research or 
                        development being conducted by the private 
                        sector without further support from the Federal 
                        Government;
                            (iii) the likelihood that investment in an 
                        area by the Department of Defense will result 
                        in improved capabilities or readiness, 
                        including by increasing supply chain 
                        resilience; and
                            (iv) whether such an investment would 
                        foster innovation beyond the primary goal of 
                        the proposed priority area.

SEC. 228. PILOT PROGRAM TO RECOGNIZE OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENTS IN 
              TECHNOLOGY AND PROTOTYPE DEVELOPMENT.

    (a) Pilot Program.--The Director of the Defense Innovation Unit 
(referred to in this section as the Director) shall carry out a pilot 
program under which the Director awards prizes, on a competitive basis, 
to recognize outstanding achievements in technology development and 
prototype development that----
            (1) have the potential to address operational problems and 
        capability gaps identified by the Secretary of Defense, the 
        Secretaries of the military departments, and combatant 
        commanders; or
            (2) have potential for application to the performance of 
        the military missions of the Department of Defense.
    (b) Form of Prizes.--Prizes awarded under this section may 
include--
            (1) cash prizes; or
            (2) the award of contracts or other agreements.
    (c) Information Dissemination.--The Director shall carry out 
activities to publicize the prize competitions carried out under this 
section and to solicit participation in such competitions from eligible 
individuals and entities.
    (d) Prize Maximum and Coinvestment Requirements.--
            (1) Maximum value.--The value of a prize awarded under this 
        section may not exceed $15,000,000.
            (2) Coinvestment.--The Director may award a prize under 
        this section without receiving approval from the Under 
        Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering if--
                    (A) the value of the prize is not more than 
                $2,000,000; or
                    (B) in the case of a prize with a value exceeding 
                $2,000,000, at least half of the funds for the portion 
                of the prize in excess of $2,000,000 are provided by 
                the portfolio acquisition executive of an organization 
                of the Department of Defense outside the Defense 
                Innovation Unit.
    (e) Use of Prize Authority.--Use of prize authority under this 
section shall be considered the use of competitive procedures for the 
purposes of chapter 221 of title 10, United States Code.
    (f) Commencement and Termination.--
            (1) Deadline for commencement.--The Director shall commence 
        implementation of the pilot program under subsection (a) not 
        later than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act.
            (2) Termination.--The authority to carry out the pilot 
        program under subsection (a) shall terminate on the date that 
        is three years after the date of the enactment of this Act.
    (g) Congressional Notice.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 15 days after a contract or 
        other agreement that exceeds a fair market value of $2,000,000 
        is awarded under this section, the Director shall submit to the 
        congressional defense committees written notice of such award.
            (2) Contents.--Each notice submitted under paragraph (1) 
        shall include--
                    (A) the value of the relevant contract or other 
                agreement, as applicable, including all options;
                    (B) an identification of any portfolio acquisition 
                executive responsible for implementation or oversight 
                of technology development or prototype development (as 
                applicable) for which an award was made under this 
                section, and a brief summary of lessons learned by such 
                portfolio acquisition executive in carrying out such 
                implementation or oversight;
                    (C) a brief description of the technology 
                development or prototype for which such contract or 
                other agreement, as applicable, was awarded; and
                    (D) an explanation of the benefit to the 
                performance of the military mission of the Department 
                of Defense resulting from the award.
    (h) Portfolio Acquisition Executive Defined.--In this section, the 
term ``portfolio acquisition executive'' has the meaning given that 
term in section 1737 of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 229. PILOT PROGRAM ON FORWARD DEPLOYABLE BIOMANUFACTURING 
              CAPABILITIES.

    (a) Authorization.--The Under Secretary of Defense for Research and 
Engineering, in coordination with the Secretary of the Army, may carry 
out a pilot program--
            (1) to identify near-term and long-term use cases for 
        forward deployable mobile biomanufacturing capabilities; and
            (2) to conduct demonstrations of such capabilities.
    (b) Activities.--In carrying out the pilot program under subsection 
(a), the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering may--
            (1) consider the use of novel manufacturing processes and 
        equipment, including automation, modularity, and 
        miniaturization of production capabilities;
            (2) collaborate with industry to develop forward deployable 
        mobile biomanufacturing capabilities; and
            (3) consider the security measures required for such 
        capabilities when forward deployed.
    (c) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and 
Engineering shall submit to the congressional defense committees a 
report on the status of the pilot program under subsection (a). The 
report shall include--
            (1) an assessment of existing Department of Defense 
        capabilities related to biomanufacturing and an explanation of 
        whether and how those capabilities may be used as part of the 
        pilot program;
            (2) identification of near-term and long-term use cases for 
        the deployment of mobile biomanufacturing;
            (3) for each use case identified under paragraph (2), a 
        comparison of the estimated cost of fulfilling such use case 
        through domestic biomanufacturing at an industrial scale versus 
        the cost of fulfilling such use case using mobile 
        biomanufacturing at the miniaturized scale;
            (4) an assessment of security measures required to deploy 
        forward deployable mobile biomanufacturing capabilities; and
            (5) an assessment of the viability of transitioning 
        technology developed under the pilot program into operational 
        use within the Department, including the resources needed for 
        further development and scaling of such technology and the 
        potential benefits of such technology.

SEC. 230. PILOT PROGRAM ON THE USE OF AUTOMATED DATA SECURITY POSTURE 
              MANAGEMENT TECHNOLOGIES FOR ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE 
              SYSTEMS.

    (a) Establsihiment.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army shall establish and 
commence implementation of a pilot program to evaluate the use of 
commercially available automated data security posture management 
technologies to enhance the cybersecurity, effectiveness, and 
reliability of artificial intelligence systems.
    (b) Elements.--In carrying out pilot program under subsection (a) 
the Secretary of the Army shall--
            (1) identify, select, and deploy at least one commercially 
        available data security posture management technology platform 
        that is capable of continuous, automated monitoring and 
        assessment of artificial intelligence systems for security 
        threats specific to such systems;
            (2) designate at least one artificial intelligence system 
        currently deployed by the Army to demonstrate the data security 
        posture managed technology platform selected under paragraph 
        (1);
            (3) complete the demonstration described in paragraph (2);
            (4) train relevant personnel on the deployment, 
        maintenance, and data interpretation of the demonstrated data 
        security posture management technology platform;
            (5) evaluate the demonstrated data security posture 
        management technologies--
                    (A) across the different tasks involved in 
                development, deployment, storage, or hosting of 
                components of such artificial intelligence system;
                    (B) to determine the ability of such technologies 
                to identify, mitigate and restore any corruption or 
                malicious manipulation of the applications or data of 
                such artificial intelligence system; and
                    (C) for compatibility and ease of adoption into the 
                value chains of existing artificial intelligence 
                systems of the Army;
            (6) assess the feasibility of broader deployment of 
        commercially available automated data security posture 
        management technologies to improve the trustworthiness, 
        resilience and integrity of artificial intelligence systems 
        maintained by the Army.
    (c) Reports.--
            (1) Progress report.--Not later than 120 days after the 
        date on which the Secretary of the Army commences the pilot 
        program under subsection (a), and annually thereafter until the 
        termination date specified un subsection (d), the Secretary of 
        the Army shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services of 
        the Senate and the House of Representatives a report on the 
        status of implementation and preliminary findings of the pilot 
        program, including with respect to each element described in 
        subsection (b).
            (2) Final report.--Not later than 180 days after the 
        termination date specified in subsection (d), the Secretary of 
        the Army shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services of 
        the Senate and the House of Representatives a final report on 
        the results of the pilot program. The report shall include--
                    (A) any recommendations of the Secretary with 
                respect to the broader implementation commercially 
                available automated data security posture management 
                technologies to support artificial intelligence systems 
                of the Army; and
                    (B) an assessment of the costs and benefits of such 
                technologies.
    (d) Termination.--The pilot program under subsection (a) shall 
terminate on the date that is three years after the date on which the 
Secretary of the Army commences the pilot program.

SEC. 231. PILOT PROGRAM ON TECHNOLOGIES TO STRENGTHEN AUTHENTICATION 
              AND ATTRIBUTION OF HUMAN AUTHORIZATION FOR CONSEQUENTIAL 
              ACTIONS.

    (a) Pilot Program Authorized.--The Secretary of Defense may carry 
out a pilot program to evaluate commercially available technologies 
that strengthen authentication and attribution of human authorization 
for consequential actions in order to improve the cybersecurity and 
physical security posture of the Department of Defense.
    (b) Objectives.--Under the pilot program, the Secretary of Defense 
shall evaluate technologies that--
            (1) strengthen access controls for systems and physical 
        areas of the Department of Defense; and
            (2) can be integrated across various environments of the 
        Department without requiring specialized hardware.
    (c) Comencement and Duration.--If the Secretary of Defense 
exercises the authority to carry out the pilot program under subsection 
(a), the program shall--
            (1) commence not later than 180 days after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act; and
            (2) terminate not later than one year after the date on 
        which the program is commenced.
    (d) Report.--Not later than March 1, 2028, the Secretary of Defense 
shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report that 
includes--
            (1) a summary of the results of the pilot program under 
        subsection (a); and
            (2) recommendations regarding adoption the technologies 
        evaluated under the program at a wider scale across the 
        Department of Defense.

SEC. 232. CLOUD LABORATORY PILOT PROGRAM.

    (a) Cloud Laboratory Pilot Program.--
            (1) Program required.--
                    (A) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
                carry out a pilot program to support the establishment 
                of cloud laboratories at the Department of Defense.
                    (B) Requirements.--Each cloud laboratory supported 
                under the pilot program shall generate high-quality 
                data that shall be collected for use and analysis by 
                authorized researchers.
            (2) Implementation.--
                    (A) Initial laboratory.--Not later than one year 
                after the date of the enactment of this Act and subject 
                to the availability of appropriations, the Secretary 
                shall establish at least one fully operational cloud 
                laboratory.
                    (B) Additional laboratories.--Not later than three 
                years after the date of the enactment of this Act and 
                subject to the availability of appropriations, the 
                Secretary shall, on a competitive basis, establish not 
                fewer than two additional fully operational cloud 
                laboratories.
                    (C) Biotechnology-focused laboratory.--At least one 
                of the cloud laboratories established under this 
                paragraph shall be focused on advancing research and 
                development of biotechnology.
            (3) Implementation plan.--Not later than one year after the 
        date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to 
        the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of 
        Representatives a report that includes the following:
                    (A) A plan to establish the cloud laboratories.
                    (B) A plan for building in considerations related 
                to cybersecurity, biosecurity, and research security 
                from the beginning of development for each cloud 
                laboratory.
    (b) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``artificial intelligence'' has the meaning 
        given such term in section 5002 of the William M. (Mac) 
        Thornberry National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
        2021 (Public Law 116-283;15 U.S.C. 9401).
            (2) The term ``authorized researcher'' refers to an 
        individual who has been appropriately authorized to access data 
        generated by the cloud laboratories supported under the pilot 
        program, as determined by the Secretary using an authorization 
        process established by the Secretary for such purpose.
            (3) The term ``cloud laboratory'' means a physical 
        laboratory that is equipped with automation and data storage to 
        conduct continuous experiments.
            (4) The term ``Secretary'' means the Secretary of Defense.

SEC. 233. PILOT PROGRAM TO TEST AND EVALUATE MUZZLE BLAST OVERPRESSURE 
              MITIGATION DEVICES.

    (a) Program Required.--The Secretary of Defense, in coordination 
with the Secretaries of the military departments, shall carry out a 
pilot program to evaluate, test, and implement muzzle blast 
overpressure mitigation devices for small and medium caliber weapons in 
relevant training and operational environments.
    (b) Activities.--Under the pilot program, the Secretary of Defense 
shall--
            (1) assess the effectiveness of commercially available and 
        emerging muzzle blast overpressure mitigation devices in 
        reducing blast exposure to operators and nearby personnel;
            (2) evaluate the operational suitability, durability, and 
        performance effects of such devices across representative 
        weapon systems and mission sets; and
            (3) collect information to inform future Department of 
        Defense policies, requirements, procurement decisions, and 
        force-wide implementation strategies relating to blast 
        overpressure mitigation.

SEC. 234. SPACE TECHNOLOGY DEMONSTRATION OF ADVANCED NUCLEAR PROPULSION 
              TECHNOLOGIES.

    (a) Establishment.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Air Force, acting through 
the Commander of the Air Force Research Laboratory, may establish a 
pilot program to conduct in-space technology demonstrations, and 
related risk reduction technology development activities, with respect 
to both advanced nuclear fission propulsion systems and advanced 
nuclear fusion propulsion systems.
    (b) Purpose.--If the Secretary carries out the pilot program under 
subsection (a), the Secretary shall carry out the pilot program in a 
manner that reduces technical risk and informs future development 
requirements relating to nuclear propulsion for national security 
missions in space, including potential operations beyond geosynchronous 
orbit, including in cislunar orbit.
    (c) Selection.--If the Secretary carries out the pilot program 
under subsection (a), the Secretary shall select entities to carry out 
activities under the pilot program. In determining the criteria for 
making such selection, the Secretary shall emphasize previous 
subcomponent and prototype development and the ability to demonstrate 
within reasonable timeframes.
    (d) Demonstration Required.--If the Secretary carries out the pilot 
program under subsection (a), not later than three years after the date 
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall conduct in-space 
demonstrations described in subsection (a), with oversight by the Air 
Force Research Laboratory Rocket Propulsion Division at Edwards Air 
Force Base, California.
    (e) Activities.--In carrying out the pilot program under subsection 
(a), the Secretary shall, at a minimum--
            (1) establish technical objectives and success criteria for 
        the in-space demonstrations described in subsection (a);
            (2) develop a concept of operations and test and evaluation 
        approach for the demonstrations;
            (3) conduct ground test activities necessary to support the 
        demonstrations;
            (4) assist in the acquisition of launch services;
            (5) plan for collection and analysis of on-orbit data 
        sufficient to assess propulsion performance, operability, and 
        reliability; and
            (6) assess potential use cases for applications in cislunar 
        operations pending the conclusion of the demonstrations.
    (f) Plan.--Before commencing the pilot program under subsection 
(a), the Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense committees 
a plan on the pilot program.
    (g) Report.--If the Secretary carries out the pilot program under 
subsection (a), not later than one year after the date of the enactment 
of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense 
committees a report on the pilot program. The report shall include--
            (1) a description of the activities carried out under the 
        pilot program, including the planned demonstration concept of 
        operations and the associated timeline;
            (2) the technical objectives and success criteria 
        established under subsection (e)(1);
            (3) an assessment of major technical risks and planned 
        risk-mitigation activities; and
            (4) an assessment of parallel efforts by the People's 
        Republic of China to develop and deploy advanced space 
        propulsion technologies for strategic purposes.

SEC. 235. PROHIBITION ON PILOT TRAINEES OPERATING T-7 AIRCRAFT PENDING 
              TESTING AND CORRECTIVE ACTIONS.

    (a) In General.--A pilot trainee may not operate a T-7 aircraft of 
the Air Force until the Secretary of the Air Force certifies to the 
Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of 
Representatives that each of the following conditions have been met:
            (1) All corrections to flight control laws and mission 
        systems discovered in developmental testing of such aircraft 
        are fully implemented.
            (2) The subsonic, transonic, and supersonic full 
        operational flight and performance envelopes of such aircraft 
        are fully tested and characterized.
            (3) Qualification testing of the Ground Based Training 
        System for such aircraft is fully completed and all 
        deficiencies are resolved.
    (b) Pilot Trainee Defined.--In this section, the term ``pilot 
trainee'' means a non-rated officer of the Air Force enrolled as a 
student participating in a formal undergraduate pilot training course.

SEC. 236. PROHIBITION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR GAIN OF FUNCTION 
              RESEARCH.

    (a) Prohibition.--None of the funds authorized to be appropriated 
by this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2027 for the 
Department of Defense may be obligated or expended--
            (1) to conduct gain-of-function research on any potential 
        pandemic pathogen at any facility operated by or on behalf of 
        the Department; or
            (2) to award contracts, grants, cooperative agreements, or 
        any other form of financial assistance to any institution of 
        higher education, nonprofit organization, private entity, or 
        other research institute that is conducting gain-of-function 
        research on potential pandemic pathogens.
    (b) Waiver.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense may waive the 
        prohibition under subsection (a) on a case-by-case basis, with 
        respect to an individual research project, grant, contract, or 
        cooperative agreement, if the Secretary determines that such a 
        waiver is in the national interests of the United States.
            (2) Congressional notice.--Not later than 30 days before 
        the date on which an award is made, a project is initiated, or 
        an agreement entered into, with respect to which a waiver is 
        made under paragraph (1), the Secretary of Defense shall submit 
        to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House 
        of Representatives notice of such waiver.
    (c) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``gain-of-function research'' means any 
        research that may be reasonably anticipated to confer an 
        attribute to a pathogen such that the pathogen would have 
        enhanced pathogenicity or transmissibility in mammals.
            (2) The term ``potential pandemic pathogen'' means a 
        pathogen that, as a result of any gain-of-function research--
                    (A) is likely more transmissible or likely capable 
                of wide and uncontrollable spread in human populations;
                    (B) is likely more virulent or likely to cause 
                modest or greater morbidity or mortality in humans; or
                    (C) is likely to pose a severe threat to public 
                health, the capacity of the public health systems to 
                function, or national security.

SEC. 237. PROHIBITION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR ANIMAL RESEARCH IN 
              COLLABORATION WITH FOREIGN COUNTRIES OF CONCERN.

    (a) Prohibition.--None of the funds authorized to be appropriated 
by this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2027 for the 
Department of Defense may be obligated or expended--
            (1) to carry out research, development, test, evaluation, 
        or training activities involving animals--
                    (A) in collaboration with a foreign country of 
                concern; or
                    (B) at any facility located in, or owned or 
                controlled (directly or indirectly) by, a foreign 
                country of concern; or
            (2) to enter into a contract or other agreement, or make a 
        grant, pursuant to which such activities would be carried out.
    (b) Foreign Country of Concern Defined.--In this section, the term 
``foreign country of concern'' has the meaning given that term in 
section 9901 of the William M. (Mac) Thornberry National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (Public Law 116-283; 15 U.S.C. 
4651).

             Subtitle C--Plans, Reports, and Other Matters

SEC. 251. POLICY TO GUIDE THE DEVELOPMENT AND ACQUISITION OF QUANTUM 
              COMPUTING SYSTEMS FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.

    (a) Policy Required.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall issue a policy to 
guide the development and acquisition of quantum computing systems for 
the Department of Defense. Under the policy, the Secretary shall--
            (1) establish a definition of ``quantum computing system'' 
        for purposes of the policy;
            (2) establish a process for validating and verifying 
        quantum computing systems before such systems are developed or 
        acquired by the Department; and
            (3) ensure that the development and acquisition of such 
        systems is consistent with and informed by the findings and 
        processes of the Quantum Benchmarking Initiative of the Defense 
        Advanced Research Projects Agency (or any successor 
        initiative).
    (b) Limitation and Waiver.--
            (1) Limitation.--Following issuance of the policy under 
        subsection (a), a quantum computing system may not be developed 
        or acquired by an element of the Department of Defense unless 
        the system has been validated and verified in accordance with 
        such policy.
            (2) Waiver.--The Secretary of Defense may waive the 
        limitation under paragraph (1), on a case by case basis, with 
        respect to a specific quantum computing system. In the event 
        the Secretary issues such a waiver, the Secretary shall provide 
        to the congressional defense committees, not later than 15 days 
        after date on which the waiver was issued--
                    (A) written notice of such waiver; and
                    (B) the Secretary's justification for the waiver.

SEC. 252. PLAN FOR COMPETITIVE EXPERIMENTATION RELATING TO AUTONOMOUS 
              AND NONTRADITIONAL CAPABILITIES RELEVANT TO THE A-10 
              MISSION SET.

    (a) Plan Required.--The Secretary of the Air Force shall develop a 
plan to carry out competitive experimentation, prototyping, and 
operational assessment of autonomous, semi-autonomous, artificial 
intelligence-enabled, and adjunct aircraft capabilities relevant to the 
A-10 mission set.
    (b) Elements.--The plan under subsection (a) shall include the 
following:
            (1) Appropriate opportunities for participation by 
        nontraditional defense contractors, commercial technology 
        firms, venture-backed defense firms, and other private-sector 
        entities capable of rapidly developing relevant hardware, 
        software, autonomy, sensing, communications, or mission system 
        capabilities.
            (2) Measures to ensure operational experimentation is 
        conducted in a manner consistent with meaningful human command 
        and control, by a qualified military aviator, over mission-
        critical functions, including target engagement, weapons 
        release, mission abort, and such other functions as the 
        Secretary of the Air Force determines appropriate.
            (3) An estimated annual budget for implementing the plan.
            (4) Consideration of how to make available to a qualified 
        United States entity a limited number of A-10 aircraft, 
        components, or associated support equipment for the sole 
        purpose of research, development, test, and evaluation 
        activities relevant to the A-10 mission set, autonomous or 
        semi-autonomous aircraft integration, mission systems 
        development, digital battlefield communications, or other 
        related capabilities.
    (c) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Air Force shall submit to 
the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of 
Representatives report on the plan developed under subsection (a).
    (d) Qualified United States Entity.--In this section, the term 
``qualified United States entity'' means--
            (1) a nontraditional defense contractor;
            (2) a traditional defense contractor;
            (3) a federally funded research and development center;
            (4) a university-affiliated research center; or
            (5) another domestic entity the Secretary determines is 
        capable of carrying out the activities described in subsection 
        (a) in a manner consistent with national security and public 
        safety.

SEC. 253. PLAN FOR ESTABLISHMENT AND EVALUATION OF EXPERIMENTAL, DRONE-
              CENTRIC RECONNAISSANCE AND SECURITY FORMATIONS.

    (a) Plan Required.--The Secretary of the Army shall develop a plan 
for establishing and evaluating one or more experimental, battalion-
sized formations that integrate unmanned aircraft systems to carry out 
intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance and precision strike 
operations at-scale.
    (b) Elements.--The plan required under subsection (a) shall--
            (1) provide for the establishment of at least one 
        experimental formation, as described in subsection (a), 
        attached to a division;
            (2) include mechanisms to enable the Secretary of the Army 
        to evaluate the operational effectiveness, survivability, 
        targeting capacity, and cost-efficiency of such a formation 
        relative to legacy cavalry and scout formations, and to inform 
        future force design decisions;
            (3) identify any modifications to organizational design, 
        personnel structure, and training pipelines that may be needed 
        to facilitate the establishment of such a formation;
            (4) as appropriate, provide for the use of rapid 
        acquisition pathways to procure unmanned aircraft systems for 
        such a formation; and
            (5) coordinate with the Defense Autonomous Working Group to 
        ensure that defense-wide research, development, testing, 
        procurement, and fielding of mass-produced small unmanned 
        aircraft systems will meet current and emerging Army 
        requirements.
    (c) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report that includes--
            (1) the plan developed under subsection (a); and
            (2) an estimate of the funding required to establish and 
        sustain the initial experimental formation under the plan, 
        disaggregated by individual appropriation.

SEC. 254. PLAN FOR USE OF CERTAIN AIRCRAFT FOR RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT 
              PURPOSES.

    (a) Plan Required.--The Secretary of the Air Force shall develop a 
plan to regenerate, restore, modify, and use a limited number of 
covered aircraft for research, development, test, and evaluation 
activities relevant to--
            (1) autonomous and semi-autonomous aircraft capabilities;
            (2) human-machine teaming;
            (3) mission autonomy software;
            (4) mission systems integration;
            (5) sensing, communications, and digital battlefield 
        networking;
            (6) operational experimentation and tactics development; 
        and
            (7) such other defense innovation purposes as the Secretary 
        determines appropriate.
    (b) Elements.--The plan under subsection (a) shall include the 
following:
            (1) Plans for the use of covered aircraft for--
                    (A) developmental flight testing;
                    (B) operational evaluation;
                    (C) autonomy experimentation;
                    (D) software, sensor, communications, and mission 
                systems integration;
                    (E) optionally piloted, remotely assisted, or other 
                autonomy-related flight experimentation, to the extent 
                authorized by applicable law and regulation; and
                    (F) associated ground test, simulation, mission 
                rehearsal, and related research activities.
            (2) Consideration of how to make available to qualified 
        United States entities a limited number of covered aircraft for 
        the sole purpose of conducting the research, development, test, 
        and evaluation activities described in this section, including 
        any demilitarization requirements, cost reimbursements, and 
        access to approved testing and evaluation facilities that may 
        be required to facilitate the participation of such entities.
    (c) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Air Force shall submit to 
the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of 
Representatives report on the plan developed under subsection (a).
    (d) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered aircraft'' means an aircraft 
        preserved at, inducted into, or proposed for induction into the 
        309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group, including 
        an aircraft stored or preserved on behalf of another military 
        department or Department of Defense component, that the 
        Secretary of the Air Force, in coordination with the head of 
        the relevant military department or component, as appropriate, 
        determines--
                    (A) is structurally viable for regeneration, 
                modification, test, evaluation, or other authorized use 
                under this section;
                    (B) is not required to meet current operational, 
                training, test, contingency reserve, heritage, or 
                security cooperation requirements; and
                    (C) may be useful for research, development, test, 
                and evaluation, autonomy experimentation, mission 
                systems integration, uncrewed conversion, or related 
                defense innovation purposes.
            (2) The term ``qualified United States entity'' means a 
        domestic entity that the Secretary determines has the 
        technical, security, financial, safety, and programmatic 
        capability to support activities under this section, 
        including--
                    (A) a nontraditional defense contractor;
                    (B) a commercial technology company;
                    (C) a small business concern;
                    (D) a traditional defense contractor;
                    (E) a federally funded research and development 
                center;
                    (F) a university-affiliated research center; or
                    (G) a consortium, team, or other arrangement 
                composed of entities described in subparagraphs (A) 
                through (F).

SEC. 255. SONOBUOY MODERNIZATION, TESTING, AND INVENTORY SUFFICIENCY 
              FOR TWO SIMULTANEOUS REGIONAL CONFLICTS.

    (a) Strategy and Inventory Requirement.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 90 days after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall 
        develop and implement a comprehensive strategy for sonobuoy 
        modernization, testing, production, and inventory sufficiency.
            (2) Elements.--The strategy required under paragraph (1) 
        shall include the following:
                    (A) An assessment of the minimum required inventory 
                levels of----
                            (i) passive sonobuoys;
                            (ii) active sonobuoys;
                            (iii) multistatic sonobuoys;
                            (iv) air-deployed anti-submarine warfare 
                        sensor systems;
                            (v) exercise, training, and telementry 
                        sonobuoys;
                            (vi) extended-duration and deep-water 
                        sonobuoys;
                            (vii) Arctic-capable sonobuoys; and
                            (viii) next-generation networked or 
                        autonomous sonobuoy systems.
                    (B) An assessment of wartime sonobuoy expenditure 
                assumptions for combat operations against peer and 
                near-peer maritime adversaries, including assumptions 
                associated with high-tempo anti-submarine warfare 
                operations in the Indo-Pacific and North Atlantic 
                theaters.
                    (C) An evaluation of current sonobuoy production 
                capacity, including limitations associated with--
                            (i) acoustic transducers;
                            (ii) signal processing electronics;
                            (iii) microelectronics and semiconductors;
                            (iv) batteries and power systems;
                            (v) radio frequency transmitters and 
                        receivers;
                            (vi) specialty materials and rare earth 
                        elements;
                            (vii) air deployment integration systems; 
                        and
                            (viii) single-source supplies.
                    (D) A plan to increase annual sonobuoy production 
                capacity and reduce production lead times during 
                contingencies.
                    (E) An assessment of the adequacy of existing 
                sonobuoy testing infrastructure, including--
                            (i) undersea warfare test ranges;
                            (ii) acoustic measurement and calibration 
                        facilities;
                            (iii) contested electromagnetic spectrum 
                        testing capabilities;
                            (iv) Arctic and deep-water testing 
                        environments;
                            (v) shallow water and littoral testing 
                        capabilities;
                            (vi) digital engineering, modeling, and 
                        synthetic testing environments;
                            (vii) unmanned systems integration and 
                        testing capabilities; and
                            (viii) opportunities for allied and partner 
                        nation testing and interoperability.
                    (F) A description of efforts to improve sonobuoy 
                survivability, persistence, networking capability, and 
                effectiveness against advanced adversary submarine 
                quieting, decoys, electronic warfare systems, and 
                acoustic countermeasures.
                    (G) An assessment of storage, transportation, 
                prepositioning, and expeditionary resupply capacity for 
                sonobuoys during wartime operations.
                    (H) A description of efforts to integrate sonobuoys 
                with--
                            (i) maritime patrol aircrafts;
                            (ii) carrier-based aircrafts;
                            (iii) rotary-wing anti-submarine warfare 
                        platforms;
                            (iv) tiltrotor aircrafts;
                            (v) unmanned aerial systems;
                            (vi) unmanned surface vessels;
                            (vii) unmanned undersea vehicles; and
                            (viii) joint and allied anti-submarine 
                        warfare networks.
                    (I) An assessment of any statutory or regulatory 
                barriers limiting expansion of sonobuoy production, 
                testing, procurement, or fielding.
                    (J) Recommendations for legislative or 
                administrative action necessary to improve sonobuoy 
                readiness and wartime sufficiency.
    (b) Industrial Base Expansion Plan.--Not later than 90 days after 
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall develop a 
plan to expand the sonobuoy industrial base to support sustained 
wartime production requirements. Such plan shall include--
            (1) options for second-source suppliers;
            (2) the potential for Government-owned, contractor-operated 
        facilities;
            (3) use of multiyear procurement authorities pursuant to 
        section 3501 of title 10, United States Code;
            (4) opportunities to expand public-private partnerships for 
        anti-submarine warfare sensor manufacturing and sustainment;
            (5) measures to improve supply chain resilience for 
        critical components;
            (6) options for surge production during national 
        emergencies or armed conflict; and
            (7) opportunities for allied co-production and stockpile 
        interoperability.
    (c) Operational Test Events.--Beginning not later than fiscal year 
2028, the Secretary of the Navy shall conduct recurring operationally 
realistic sonobuoy exercises that include--
            (1) congested elecromagnetic spectrum conditions;
            (2) integrated fleet anti-submarine warfare operations;
            (3) multiple simultaneous submarine targets;
            (4) degraded communications and positioning, navigation, 
        and timing environments;
            (5) unmanned systems integration;
            (6) distributed maritime operations;
            (7) Arctic and littoral anti-submarine warfare scenarios; 
        and
            (8) joint and allied participation, as appropriate.
    (d) Briefing Requirement.--Not later than 120 days after the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall provide a 
briefing to the congressional defense committees on--
            (1) the highest-risk shortfalls in sonobuoy inventory and 
        testing capacity;
            (2) projected wartime inventory depletion timelines;
            (3) vulnerabilities associated with single-source suppliers 
        and critical materials dependencies; and
            (4) investments required during the future-years defense 
        program to achieve sufficiency for two simultaneous regional 
        conflicts.

SEC. 256. REVIEW AND IMPLEMENTATION OF STRATEGIES TO ACCELERATE THE 
              QUALIFICATION PROCESS FOR DOMESTICALLY PRODUCED ADVANCED 
              ENERGETIC MATERIALS.

    (a) Acceleration of Formulation-to-system Qualification for 
Advanced Energetic Materials.--
            (1) Review and implementation.--The Secretary of Defense, 
        acting through the head of the Joint Energetics Transition 
        Office shall--
                    (A) conduct a review to identify opportunities to 
                accelerate the qualification process for the 
                integration of novel advanced energetic materials into 
                military systems; and
                    (B) based on the results of such review, implement 
                measures to accelerate such qualification process.
            (2) Elements.--In conducting the review required under 
        paragraph (1)(A), the Secretary of Defense shall--
                    (A) conduct a detailed analysis of the feasibility 
                of--
                            (i) expediting the qualification of new 
                        formulations derived from advanced energetic 
                        materials, including developmental 
                        classification, insensitive munitions testing, 
                        and hazard classification activities;
                            (ii) streamlining nonstatutory 
                        administrative requirements for warhead-level 
                        and system-level qualification of advanced 
                        energetic materials in cases in which modeling, 
                        simulation, and surrogate testing of such 
                        materials provide sufficient evidence of 
                        equivalent or superior performance and safety 
                        compared to legacy energetic materials, without 
                        compromising statutorily prescribed safety or 
                        environmental standards;
                            (iii) implementing integrated test 
                        campaigns that enable concurrent or overlapping 
                        evaluations of the formulation, warhead, and 
                        system performance of advanced energetic 
                        materials to reduce total time to fielding, 
                        aiming for full system qualification within 18 
                        months to the extent feasible, while ensuring 
                        no compromise to safety or operational 
                        reliability; and
                            (iv) prioritizing advanced energetic 
                        materials for inclusion in mission-aligned 
                        prototyping, live-fire demonstrations, and 
                        portfolio-level experimentation under rapid 
                        acquisition authorities;
                    (B) identify any barriers to the integration of 
                novel advanced energetic materials into military 
                systems;
                    (C) develop a set of prioritized measures that may 
                be implemented to address such barriers, including 
                potential near-term measures achievable under existing 
                authorities; and
                    (D) determine--
                            (i) estimated timelines for implementing 
                        such measures;
                            (ii) the organizations and elements of the 
                        Department of Defense that could carry out such 
                        measures; and
                            (iii) any statutory, regulatory, or 
                        administrative barriers inhibiting the 
                        implementation of such measures.
    (b) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report on the findings of the review 
conducted under subsection (a)(1)(A) and the measures implemented under 
subsection (a)(1)(B). The report shall include--
            (1) a list of advanced energetic materials for which the 
        Secretary accelerated the formulation-to-system qualification 
        process as a result of the review under subsection (a)(1)(A) 
        and a list of advanced energetic materials that were identified 
        as candidates for acceleration;
            (2) a comparison of the timelines to qualification 
        milestones for materials identified under paragraph (1) 
        compared to such timelines if the formulation-to-system 
        qualification process had not been accelerated for such 
        materials, including quantitative estimates of time savings and 
        measurable milestones to the extent practicable;
            (3) a description of any other actions taken to accelerate 
        the qualification process for such materials, with 
        justifications; and
            (4) recommendations for further legislative or 
        administrative actions to enhance domestic energetics 
        production and qualification.
    (c) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to authorize the waiver of any statutory requirement, 
including any statutory requirement related to safety, environmental 
protection, or national security.
    (d) Advanced Energetic Material Defined.--The term ``advanced 
energetic material'' means a domestically produced substance or 
mixture, such as explosives, propellants, or pyrotechnics, that 
releases energy rapidly and demonstrates performance improvements over 
legacy energetic materials in areas such as energy density, as 
determined by the Secretary of Defense in accordance with established 
Department of Defense standards.

                  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 2027 
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. INCLUSION OF NUCLEAR ENERGY IN ENERGY POLICY OF DEPARTMENT OF 
              DEFENSE AND RELATED MATTERS.

    (a) Inclusion in Energy Policy.--Section 2911 of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsections (b) and (e), by inserting `` or nuclear 
        energy'' after ``renewable energy sources'' each place it 
        appears;
            (2) in subsection (g)--
                    (A) in the heading, by inserting `` and nuclear 
                energy'' after ``renewable energy'';
                    (B) in paragraphs (1) and (2), by inserting `` or 
                nuclear energy'' after ``renewable energy sources'' 
                each place it appears; and
                    (C) in paragraph (2), by inserting `` and nuclear 
                energy'' after ``the use of renewable energy''; and
            (3) in subsection (h)(2)--
                    (A) in subparagraph (C), by inserting `` or nuclear 
                energy'' after ``renewable energy source, other than 
                solar energy,''; and
                    (B) in subparagraph (D), by inserting `` or nuclear 
                energy'' after ``a renewable energy source''.
    (b) Inclusion in Matters Relating to Use of Energy for 
Facilities.--Section 2915 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in the section heading, by striking ``renewable forms 
        of energy'' and inserting ``nuclear energy, renewable forms of 
        energy,'';
            (2) by striking ``solar energy or other renewable forms of 
        energy'' each place it appears and inserting ``nuclear energy, 
        or solar energy or other renewable forms of energy,''; and
            (3) in subsection (b), by striking ``a renewable form of 
        energy'' and inserting ``such a form of energy''.

SEC. 312. MODIFICATION TO PILOT PROGRAM ON NAVY INSTALLATION NUCLEAR 
              ENERGY.

    Section 321(b)(2)(B) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60; 10 U.S.C. note prec. 8751) is 
amended by striking ``needed capacity of the reactor is in the range of 
20MW to 300MW'' and inserting ``needed capacity of the reactor is a 
minimum of 20MW''.

SEC. 313. STANDARDIZED DOCUMENT ON SCOPE OF PROJECTS CARRIED OUT UNDER 
              MILITARY MUNITIONS RESPONSE PROGRAM.

    (a) Establishment.--Not later than 270 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall establish a 
standardized document for the scope of munitions responses (in this 
section referred to as a ``scope document'') for each project carried 
out under the Military Munitions Response Program at a covered site.
    (b) Required Certification and Approval.--The Secretary of Defense 
shall require that, for each project specified in subsection (a), the 
Secretary of the military department or head of the Defense Agency 
concerned certifies and approves the scope document for the project 
prior to the issuance of any task order for the project.
    (c) Elements.--Each scope document shall include, with respect to 
the applicable project and at a minimum, the following:
            (1) A description of the scope of the project, including an 
        identification of the applicable phase or phases of munitions 
        responses under the project and the key assumptions, data gaps, 
        and principal risk drivers, affecting such scope.
            (2) A cost and schedule estimate for the completion of such 
        phase or phases, with contingencies sufficient to account for 
        uncertainty in subsurface conditions, anomaly or contaminant 
        quantity, access limitations, and explosives safety 
        constraints.
            (3) A summary of explosives safety, human health, 
        environmental, and mission risks, applicable statutory and 
        regulatory requirements, and the consequences of delayed action 
        with respect to the project, set forth in a format that 
        supports the prioritization of projects across covered sites.
            (4) Documented certification and approval of the scope 
        document, consistent with the requirement under subsection (b).
    (d) Guidance.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall issue guidance 
specifying the required form of, and additional details on the matters 
required to be included in, each scope document based on the complexity 
of the covered site at which the applicable project is carried out and 
the phase of munitions response under such project.
    (e) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The terms ``base closure law'' and ``Defense Agency'' 
        have the meanings given such terms in section 101(a) of title 
        10, United States Code.
            (2) The term ``covered site'' means a military installation 
        under the jurisdiction of the Secretary of Defense, a National 
        Guard facility, a military installation closed or realigned 
        under a base closure law, or a formerly used defense site.

SEC. 314. PILOT PROGRAM FOR SECURE RECYCLING OF DOMESTIC ELECTRONIC 
              WASTE.

    (a) Pilot Program.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish a 
pilot program to evaluate the use of domestic, integrated electronic 
waste recycling infrastructure to support the secure destruction of 
data and the recovery of critical materials from electronic equipment 
of the Department of Defense.
    (b) Scope.--In carrying out the pilot program under subsection (a), 
the Secretary shall--
            (1) use existing facilities capable of end-to-end 
        processing of the electronic waste referred to in such 
        subsection, including the secure dismantling and shredding of 
        such waste and metallurgical recovery from such waste;
            (2) assess the potential for reuse in the defense 
        industrial base of critical minerals and other materials so 
        recovered;
            (3) assess the environmental and supply chain benefits 
        associated with the domestic recycling of such electronic 
        waste; and
            (4) ensure compliance with applicable standards of the 
        Department of Defense and the National Security Agency, 
        respectively, for the destruction of data.
    (c) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of enactment of 
this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees a report on the results of the pilot program under 
subsection (a), including an assessment of--
            (1) the cost effectiveness of the pilot program;
            (2) security benefits realized through the pilot program, 
        including with respect to data protection;
            (3) the effect of the pilot program on supply chain 
        resilience; and
            (4) recommendations of the Secretary regarding the 
        potential expansion of the pilot program across the Department 
        of Defense.

SEC. 315. PROGRAM FOR DEPLOYMENT OF TRANSPORTABLE NUCLEAR MICROREACTOR 
              IN AREA OF RESPONSIBILITY OF THE UNITED STATES INDO-
              PACIFIC COMMAND.

    (a) Establishment.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall commence the 
conduct of a program for the deployment, operation, and evaluation of a 
transportable nuclear microreactor in the area of responsibility of the 
United States Indo-Pacific Command.
    (b) Designation.--The program under subsection (a) shall be known 
as the ``Operational Energy Deployable Nuclear Power Program''.
    (c) Leadership and Coordination.--
            (1) Executive agent.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
        designate the Assistant Secretary of the Army for 
        Installations, Energy, and Environment as the Department of 
        Defense executive agent for carrying out the program under 
        subsection (a) and ensuring budget accountability for such 
        program.
            (2) Coordination.--In carrying out the program under 
        subsection (a), the Assistant Secretary designated pursuant to 
        paragraph (1) shall coordinate with--
                    (A) the Commander of United States Indo-Pacific 
                Command, who shall be responsible for validating 
                operational requirements under the program, the 
                demonstration of technologies to be deployed under the 
                program, and the operational use of such technologies; 
                and
                    (B) as appropriate, the Secretary of Energy and the 
                Chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, for the 
                purpose of ensuring the deployment and operation of any 
                nuclear microreactor under the program is carried out 
                in a manner that is safe, secure, and in compliance 
                with applicable requirements of the Department of 
                Energy and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 
                respectively.
    (d) Objectives.--The objective of the program under subsection (a) 
shall be to deploy and operate, by not later than January 1, 2030, a 
transportable nuclear microreactor in support of distributed and 
expeditionary operations in contested logistics environments within the 
area of responsibility of the United States Indo-Pacific Command, with 
a priority for deployment in such an environment within the Western 
Pacific area.
    (e) Required Activities.--The activities of the program under 
subsection (a) shall include the following:
            (1) The validation of operational requirements of the 
        United States Indo-Pacific Command with respect to the 
        transportable nuclear microreactor to be deployed under the 
        program, and the integration of such nuclear microreactor with 
        expeditionary and dispersed power architectures in the area of 
        responsibility of such Command.
            (2) The development and implementation of a plan for the 
        test and evaluation of such nuclear microreactor, including 
        with respect to sustainment, safety, cybersecurity, and 
        physical security requirements.
            (3) The conduct of joint operational demonstrations with 
        the United States Indo-Pacific Command in connection with not 
        fewer than one major exercise within the area of responsibility 
        of such Command, to evaluate the deployment, integration, 
        sustainment, survivability, and operational use of such nuclear 
        microreactor under realistic conditions.
    (f) Budget Mechanism.--Beginning with respect to fiscal year 2028, 
the Secretary of Defense shall establish a dedicated program element, 
or equivalent budget mechanism, for the program under subsection (a), 
including to support the transition of technologies under such program 
from demonstration to operational capability.
    (g) Nuclear Microreactor Defined.--In this section, the term 
``nuclear microreactor'' means a nuclear reactor with a rated electric 
generating capacity of not greater than 50 megawatts.

SEC. 316. PROHIBITION ON OPERATION OF CONNECTED VEHICLES DESIGNED, 
              DEVELOPED, MANUFACTURED, OR SUPPLIED BY PERSONS OWNED BY, 
              CONTROLLED BY, OR SUBJECT TO THE JURISDICTION OF A 
              FOREIGN ENTITY OF CONCERN ON DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE 
              PROPERTY.

    (a) Prohibition of Operation of Prohibited Connected Vehicles.--
            (1) Phase 1.--After January 1, 2027, no covered connected 
        vehicle, as designated by the Department of Commerce under part 
        791 of title 15 of the Code of Federal Regulations, or any 
        successor regulation, may be operated on a military 
        installation or on any other property of the Department of 
        Defense.
            (2) Phase 2.--After January 1, 2029, no connected vehicle 
        on the list required under subsection (b) may be operated on a 
        military installation or on any other property of the 
        Department of Defense.
            (3) Exception.--The Secretary of Defense may waive the 
        application of a prohibition under paragraph (1) or (2) to a 
        connected vehicle if the Secretary determines the waiver is in 
        the interest of national security.
    (b) List of Prohibited Connected Vehicles.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than January 1, 2028, the 
        Secretary of Defense shall establish and make publicly 
        available on a website of the Department of Defense a list of 
        prohibited connected vehicles that--
                    (A) are designed, developed, manufactured, or 
                supplied by persons owned by, controlled by, or subject 
                to the jurisdiction of a foreign entity of concern; and
                    (B) the Secretary determines pose--
                            (i) an undue risk of sabotage to or 
                        subversion of the design, integrity, 
                        manufacturing, production, distribution, 
                        installation, operation, or maintenance of 
                        information and communications technology and 
                        services in the United States;
                            (ii) an undue risk of catastrophic effects 
                        on the security or resiliency of critical 
                        infrastructure in the United States or the 
                        digital economy of the United States; or
                            (iii) an unacceptable risk to the national 
                        security of the United States or the security 
                        and safety of United States persons.
            (2) Incorporation of existing federal rules.--In 
        establishing the list required under paragraph (1), the 
        Secretary shall incorporate Federal rules in effect as of the 
        date of the enactment of this Act for identifying prohibited 
        connected vehicles.
            (3) Annual review.--
                    (A) In general.--The Secretary shall review the 
                list required under paragraph (1) not less frequently 
                than once each year and shall make such additions, 
                subtractions, supplements, or amendments to the list as 
                the Secretary determines appropriate.
                    (B) Explanation of subtractions.--Any review under 
                subparagraph (A) that makes subtractions from the list 
                required under paragraph (1) shall include an 
                explanation of why the subtraction was made.
            (4) Notice.--If the Secretary adds a vehicle to the list 
        under paragraph (1), the Secretary shall provide public notice 
        of the addition.
            (5) Consultation.--
                    (A) In general.--The Secretary shall consult with 
                the head of any Federal department or agency that the 
                Secretary determines is appropriate in making the list 
                required under paragraph (1) and conducting any annual 
                review under paragraph (3).
                    (B) Transmittal of list.--The Secretary shall 
                transmit a copy of the list required under paragraph 
                (1), and any modification to that list, to the heads of 
                each Federal department or agency determined 
                appropriate under subparagraph (A).
    (c) Implementation Plan and Briefing.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than June 1, 2027, the Secretary 
        of Defense shall establish and provide to the congressional 
        defense committees a briefing on an implementation plan for 
        carrying out the prohibition under subsection (a).
            (2) Elements.--The implementation plan required under 
        paragraph (1) shall include--
                    (A) an identification of the lead organization 
                within the Department of Defense responsible for 
                implementing and overseeing the prohibition under 
                subsection (a);
                    (B) a description of the process by which the 
                Department will identify and assess prohibited 
                connected vehicles;
                    (C) a description of the means by which the 
                Department will conduct coordination with appropriate 
                Federal departments and agencies;
                    (D) an identification of the metrics by which the 
                Department will assess connected vehicles for threats 
                to national security;
                    (E) a description of the means by which military 
                installations will ensure compliance with such 
                prohibition; and
                    (F) an assessment of resource requirements 
                necessary to implement and maintain such prohibition.
            (3) Applicability of prohibitions.--A prohibition under 
        subsection (a) shall not take effect before the date on which 
        the Secretary submits to the congressional defense committees 
        certification that the implementation of the prohibition is 
        possible.
    (d) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``connected vehicle'' has the meaning given 
        that term in section 791.301 of title 15, Code of Federal 
        Regulations, or successor regulations.
            (2) The term ``foreign entity of concern'' has the meaning 
        given that term in section 9901 of the William M. (Mac) 
        Thornberry National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
        2021 (15 U.S.C. 4651).
            (3) The term ``military installation'' has the meaning 
        given that term in section 2801(c) of title 10, United States 
        Code.

SEC. 317. PILOT PROGRAM ON OFF-GRID TACTICAL POWER.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense may establish a pilot 
program on employing expeditionary off-grid power generation 
capabilities across the Joint Force.
    (b) Requirements.--If the Secretary carries out the pilot program 
authorized in subsection (a), the Secretary shall carry out the 
following activities under the pilot program:
            (1) The exploration of the research, development, 
        procurement, and operational integration of mobile 
        expeditionary tactical microgrid systems to provide resilient 
        power supply to forward-deployed formations and critical 
        command, control, and communications elements at the tactical 
        edge.
            (2) The incorporation of novel power generation and 
        advanced battery storage that can integrate with secure 
        satellite communications or other mission-essential electronic 
        systems.
            (3) The conduct of operational assessments and testing of 
        systems in conditions that simulate contested logistics and 
        degraded infrastructure.
    (c) Report.--If the Secretary carries out the pilot program 
authorized in subsection (a), the Secretary shall provide to the 
congressional defense committees, not later than one year after the 
commencement of the pilot program, a briefing on the status and results 
of the pilot program. The briefing shall include--
            (1) an assessment of the technologies used in the program;
            (2) an overview of the operational assessments and testing 
        of the systems, including system performance; and
            (3) recommendations for fielding across the Joint Force, as 
        appropriate.

SEC. 318. CLARIFICATION OF CERTAIN AUTHORITIES INDEPENDENT FROM 
              DESIGNATED EXECUTIVE AGENT FOR INSTALLATION OR 
              OPERATIONAL NUCLEAR ENERGY.

    (a) Military Departments.--Notwithstanding the designation of the 
Secretary of the Army or any other official as the Department of 
Defense Executive Agent for installation or operational nuclear energy, 
and except as expressly otherwise provided in another provision of law, 
the sole authority to transfer, reprogram, obligate, expend, and 
otherwise manage any funds authorized to be appropriated for a military 
department for advanced nuclear energy for installation or operational 
energy capabilities shall be vested in the Secretary of such military 
department.
    (b) Nuclear Fuel Allocation.--The Secretary of Defense shall make 
determinations regarding the allocation of nuclear fuel among the 
military departments, including determinations for the prioritization 
of such allocation between the military departments.
    (c) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed as limiting any previously authorized program of the 
Department of Defense.

                 Subtitle C--Logistics and Sustainment

SEC. 321. REQUIREMENT FOR QUARTERLY REPORTS ON MUNITIONS INVENTORY 
              NUMBERS.

    Section 222c of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in the section heading, by inserting ``; current 
        inventory numbers'' after ``Out-Year inventory numbers'';
            (2) in subsection (a), by striking ``subsection (c)'' and 
        inserting ``subsection (d)'';
            (3) by redesignating subsections (b) through (h) as 
        subsections (c) through (i), respectively;
            (4) by inserting after subsection (a) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(b) Quarterly Reports.--At the same time each year that the 
budget for the fiscal year beginning in such year is submitted to 
Congress pursuant to section 1105(a) of title 31, and on a quarterly 
basis thereafter, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report setting forth munitions 
inventory numbers current as of the date of the submission of such 
report, presented in the aggregate and disaggregated by armed force.'';
            (5) in subsection (d), as so redesignated, by striking 
        ``described in subsection (d)'' and inserting ``described in 
        subsection (e)'';
            (6) in subsection (g), as so redesignated, by striking 
        ``subsection (e)(1)'' and inserting ``subsection (f)(1)''; and
            (7) in subsection (h), as so redesignated, by striking 
        ``subsection (c)(10)'' and inserting ``subsection (d)(10)''.

SEC. 322. INCREASE OF CAPITAL INVESTMENT PROGRAM THRESHOLD FOR WORKING-
              CAPITAL FUNDS.

    Section 2208(k)(2) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``installation or a science and technology reinvention 
laboratory and not less than $250,000 for procurements at all other 
facilities'' and inserting ``installation, science and technology 
reinvention laboratory, or any other facility''.

SEC. 323. ESTABLISHMENT OF CIVIL RESERVE INDUSTRIAL BASE.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 131 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by inserting after section 2224a the following new section:
``Sec. 2224b. Civil Reserve Industrial Base
    ``(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense, acting through the 
Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment, shall 
establish the Civil Reserve Industrial Base program under which the 
Secretary shall enter into agreements under subsection (c) with covered 
commercial facilities--
            ``(1) to enhance the availability and responsiveness of 
        sustainment and repair capabilities in support of military 
        operations; and
            ``(2) to strengthen the collaboration during peacetime 
        between the Department of Defense and the defense industrial 
        base in theater by leveraging the capacity of covered 
        commercial facilities and the co-sustainment capabilities of 
        allies and partners of the United States, including through the 
        assignment of recurring low-volume or mid-volume workloads, to 
        ensure the availability of logistics, sustainment, and repair 
        surge capacity during contingency operations.
    ``(b) Program Elements.--In carrying out this section, the 
Secretary shall--
            ``(1) identify covered commercial facilities that are 
        located within the area of operations of each of the geographic 
        combatant commands, including facilities in allied and partner 
        nations;
            ``(2) develop arrangements to store, maintain, and manage 
        replenishment parts and related equipment at covered commercial 
        facilities identified under paragraph (1) that enter into 
        agreements with the Secretary under subsection (c);
            ``(3) enter into agreements under subsection (c) with such 
        facilities under which such facilities agree to provide 
        peacetime workload or sustainment activities or receive other 
        incentives to ensure such facilities and personnel employed by 
        such facilities remain qualified, ready, and available to 
        support contingency operations; and
            ``(4) integrate the participating facilities and the 
        capabilities such facilities provide into the product support 
        strategy developed in accordance with section 4324 of this 
        title, other relevant sustainment planning, logistics posture 
        efforts, and the operational plans of the geographic combatant 
        commands.
    ``(c) Agreements.--In carrying out this section, the Secretary of 
Defense may enter into contracts, grants, cooperative agreements, or 
other appropriate agreements with covered commercial facilities under 
which such facilities agree to provide for the storage, maintenance, 
repair, overhaul, and distribution of replenishment parts and related 
equipment. An agreement under this subsection may--
            ``(1) provide for the use of commercial facilities and 
        personnel during peacetime and contingency operations;
            ``(2) include terms addressing force protection, continuity 
        of operations, and security requirements;
            ``(3) provide for the sustainment of capability through 
        recurring peacetime workload, as appropriate;
            ``(4) provide for support for commercial entities 
        headquartered in the United States in order to provide surge 
        operational support when required by the Secretary; and
            ``(5) support and encourage the negotiation of voluntary 
        license agreements directly between original equipment 
        manufacturers and third parties in accordance with section 
        3771(b)(9)(C) of this title.
    ``(d) Contractor and Subcontractor Technical Data.--Sections 3771 
through 3775 of this title shall apply to contractor and subcontractor 
technical data in contracts or agreements entered into under this 
section.
    ``(e) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `covered commercial facility' means a 
        commercial facility owned by a United States entity that is 
        capable of providing one or more of the following:
                    ``(A) Warehousing and secure storage.
                    ``(B) Supply chain management and distribution.
                    ``(C) Maintenance, repair, and overhaul.
                    ``(D) Repairable management, component repair, and 
                test capability.
                    ``(E) Other sustainment-related capabilities 
                identified by the Secretary.
            ``(2) The term `replenishment parts' means repair parts, 
        components, or other items to support the sustainment of 
        Department of Defense systems and equipment through 
        replacement, repair, or overhaul.''.
    (b) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report on the implementation of 
section 2224b of title 10, United States Code, as added by subsection 
(a). Such report shall include each of the following:
            (1) A description of the structure and governance of the 
        Civil Reserve Industrial Base program, as established by such 
        section.
            (2) A description of the types of covered commercial 
        facilities and capabilities identified under subsection (b)(1) 
        of such section, including the number of such facilities 
        identified that are located in the area of operations of each 
        of geographic combatant commands.
            (3) An assessment of the sustainment, readiness, and 
        resiliency benefits of leveraging commercial facilities for in-
        theater replenishment parts storage and maintenance, including 
        the expected effect on time-to-repair and time-to-resupply for 
        key platforms.
            (4) A description of the contracting mechanisms, 
        incentives, or public-private partnership authorities required 
        to enable recurring peacetime use by the Department of Defense 
        of covered commercial facilities under the Civil Reserve 
        Industrial Base program.
            (5) A description of any force protection, operational 
        security, or continuity-of-operations requirements applicable 
        to covered commercial facilities participating in the Civil 
        Reserve Industrial Base in the event of conflict.
            (6) An identification of statutory, regulatory, or policy 
        barriers that limit the ability of the Department to implement 
        the Civil Reserve Industrial Base, including barriers related 
        to contracting, logistics policy, or cross-border sustainment.
            (7) Any recommendations for additional authorities needed 
        to expand or sustain the Civil Reserve Industrial Base.

SEC. 324. MODIFICATION OF MINIMUM CAPITAL INVESTMENT FOR CERTAIN DEPOTS 
              OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.

    Section 2476(a)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``the preceding three fiscal years'' and inserting ``the 
preceding fiscal year, the current fiscal year, and the estimated 
amount for the following fiscal year''.

SEC. 325. EXPANSION OF COVERED DEPOTS TO INCLUDE CRANE ARMY AMMUNITION 
              ACTIVITY, INDIANA.

    Section 2476(f)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
                    ``(J) Crane Army Ammunition Activity, Indiana.''.

SEC. 326. EXPANSION OF SPACE-AVAILABLE TRAVEL PROGRAM FOR MEMBERS OF 
              THE ARMED FORCES STATIONED AT UNITED STATES NAVAL STATION 
              GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA.

    Section 2641b of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsection (g) as subsection (h); and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (f) the following new 
        subsection (g):
    ``(g) Purchased Transportation to and From United States Naval 
Station Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.--(1) Notwithstanding subsection (b), an 
individual eligible for the travel program under subsection (c)(1) and 
stationed at United States Naval Station Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, may 
purchase transportation on Department of Defense aircraft, at 
commercially-competitive rates as determined by the Secretary of 
Defense, for travel to and from Naval Station Guantanamo Bay on a 
space-available basis.
    ``(2) An individual who purchases transportation pursuant to 
paragraph (1) shall receive a priority consistent with members of the 
armed forces traveling in a space-required status, as determined by the 
Secretary.
    ``(3) Amounts collected pursuant to paragraph (1) for 
transportation shall be credited to the applicable appropriation of the 
Armed Force providing such transportation, shall be merged with funds 
in the appropriation to which credited, and shall be available for the 
same purposes and period as the appropriation with which merged.''.

SEC. 327. AUTHORIZATION OF SUSTAINABLE AVIATION FUEL PROCUREMENT.

    Section 2911 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding 
at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(k) Sustainable Aviation Fuel Procurement.--The Secretary of 
Defense may procure sustainable aviation fuel for operational or 
training purposes at a cost that exceeds the cost of conventional 
petroleum based aviation fuel.''.

SEC. 328. MODIFICATION AND EXTENSION OF PILOT PROGRAM ON OPTIMIZATION 
              OF AERIAL REFUELING AND FUEL MANAGEMENT IN CONTESTED 
              LOGISTICS ENVIRONMENTS THROUGH USE OF ARTIFICIAL 
              INTELLIGENCE.

    Section 346 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2024 (Public Law 118-31) is amended--
            (1) by striking subsection (c) and inserting the following:
    ``(c) Deadline for Implementation.--The Under Secretary of Defense 
for Acquisition and Sustainment, in coordination with the Chief of 
Staff of the Air Force, shall implement the pilot program under this 
section, by not later than 270 days after the date of the enactment of 
the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2027.'';
            (2) by redesignating subsection (e) as subsection (g);
            (3) in subsection (g) as so redesignated, by striking 
        ``January 1, 2027'' and inserting ``January 1, 2030''; and
            (4) by inserting after subsection (d) the following new 
        subsections (e) and (f):
    ``(e) Responsibility.--Beginning on the date that is 180 days after 
the date of the enactment of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2027, the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and 
Sustainment, in coordination with the Chief of Staff of the Air Force, 
shall be responsible for carrying out the pilot program under this 
section.
    ``(f) Briefing.--Not later than January 1, 2028, the Under 
Secretary shall provide to the congressional defense committees a 
briefing on the status of the implementation of the pilot program under 
this section. Such briefing shall address--
            ``(1) outcomes and performance metrics of the pilot 
        program;
            ``(2) any barriers identified for integration of the pilot 
        program into operational planning; and
            ``(3) recommendations regarding continuation, modification, 
        or expansion of the pilot program.''.

SEC. 329. ARMY EXPANSION OF PRODUCTION OF 155MM ARTILLERY AMMUNITION.

    (a) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the production of 155mm artillery ammunition at a 
        minimum rate to reach total munition requirements is a national 
        priority; and
            (2) the production rate of such ammunition should be 
        sustained or increased over the next five years in order to--
                    (A) fully meet all Army and Marine Corps annual 
                training requirements;
                    (B) rebuild war reserve inventories for both the 
                Army and the Marine Corps to fully comply with the 
                planning guidance of the Secretary of Defense and 
                ensure that associated inventory and war reserve levels 
                are met;
                    (C) modernize the stockpile with the best 
                performing weapons; and
                    (D) continue foreign military sales of ammunition 
                manufactured in the United States to generate the 
                domestic workforce and assures wartime interoperability 
                with United States allies.
    (b) Production Expansion.--The Secretary of the Army shall--
            (1) expand and upgrade facilities of the Army that are used 
        to produce propellant, metal parts, explosive fill, load 
        assemble pack, and components of 155mm artillery; and
            (2) increase the production of propellant, metal parts, 
        explosive fill, load assemble pack, and components of 155mm 
        artillery to ensure that--
                    (A) the total production capacity of all such 
                facilities reaches 100,000 rounds each month; and
                    (B) the Out-Year Unconstrained Total Munitions 
                Requirement for 155mm artillery ammunition in effect 
                for the Army pursuant to section 222c of title 10, 
                United States Code, is met.
    (c) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report on the steps taken by the 
Secretary to carry out the requirements of this section. Such report 
shall include--
            (1) an identification of the amount of funds required to 
        reach the production capacity under subsection (b)(2)(A);
            (2) a plan for--
                    (A) expanding and upgrading facilities of the Army 
                used to produce 15mm artillery ammunition; and
                    (B) increasing the rate of production of such 
                munitions;
            (3) an estimated time frame for when the production 
        capacity under subsection (b)(2)(A) will be reached;
            (4) an estimated time frame for the production of 
        sufficient munitions to replenish stocks to reach total 
        munition requirements under the Out-Year Unconstrained Total 
        Munitions Requirement for 155mm artillery in effect for the 
        Army pursuant to section 222c of title 10, United States Code; 
        and
            (5) a long-term plan to sustain munitions production 
        facilities as demand for artillery ammunition may increase or 
        decrease.

SEC. 330. REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO AERIAL REFUELING CAPABILITY OF AIR 
              FORCE TANKER FLEET.

    (a) Requirements.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Air Force shall--
            (1) adopt the use of metrics and standards for specifically 
        assessing the aerial refueling capability of the tanker fleet 
        of the Air Force;
            (2) direct the Commander of the Air Mobility Command, in 
        coordination with any program offices and entities of such 
        command that the Commander determines relevant, to submit to 
        the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of 
        Representatives periodic reports on the application of the 
        metrics and standards required under paragraph (1) to assess 
        the aerial refueling capability of the tanker fleet;
            (3) conduct a comprehensive Air Force-wide assessment of 
        risks associated with the sustainment of the aerial refueling 
        tanker fleet of the Air Force, including, for each such risk, 
        an assessment of the likelihood of the risk occurring and the 
        likely effects of the risk if it occurs; and
            (4) develop a mitigation plan based on the results of the 
        risk assessment required under paragraph (3).
    (b) Report.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than September 30, 2027, the 
        Secretary of the Air Force shall submit to the Committees on 
        Armed Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a 
        report on the progress of implementing the requirements under 
        subsection (a). Such report shall include a comprehensive 
        readiness improvement plan for addressing the sustainment 
        challenges of the aerial refueling capability of the tanker 
        fleet.
            (2) Form of report.--The report required under paragraph 
        (1) shall be submitted in unclassified form, but may include a 
        classified annex.

SEC. 331. NAVY CONTAINERIZED EXPEDITIONARY ADVANCED MANUFACTURING 
              CAPABILITIES PILOT PROGRAM.

    (a) Establishment.--
            (1) Authority.--Beginning not later than 180 days after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy, 
        acting through the Commander of the Naval Sea Systems Command 
        and in coordination with the Commander of the United States 
        Indo-Pacific Command and the heads of such other Navy 
        organizations as the Secretary considers appropriate, shall 
        carry out a pilot program to--
                    (A) field, evaluate, and assess compact 
                containerized expeditionary advanced manufacturing 
                capabilities in support of naval and joint forces 
                operating in contested, remote, and expeditionary 
                environments;
                    (B) expand the use of advanced and additive 
                manufacturing within the Department of Defense;
                    (C) support the objectives of the Department of the 
                Navy Advanced Manufacturing Strategy, including 
                warfighter self-sufficiency and distributed 
                sustainment; and
                    (D) evaluate and define validated Navy requirements 
                for containerized expeditionary advanced manufacturing 
                capabilities rather than replace traditional industrial 
                base production, depot-level repair, or established 
                logistics systems.
            (2) Execution.--
                    (A) Lead agent.--The Naval Sea Systems Command 
                Technology Office, in coordination with the Naval 
                Surface Warfare Centers, shall serve as the lead 
                technical and programmatic agent for the pilot program.
                    (B) Support.--The Secretary may use the Naval 
                Postgraduate School, and seek to enter into agreements 
                with other appropriate public or private entities, to 
                support experimentation, operational execution, data 
                collection, digital integration, sustainment planning, 
                training development, and requirements capture 
                activities conducted under the pilot program.
    (b) Design of Program.--The Secretary shall design the pilot 
program to--
            (1) evaluate the operational utility of compact, 
        containerized expeditionary advanced manufacturing systems 
        capable of producing metal and polymer components in contested 
        and austere environments;
            (2) assess how such capabilities may provide commanders 
        with additional options to restore readiness in remote or 
        denied conditions when traditional resupply or depot support is 
        unavailable or delayed;
            (3) evaluate the appropriate role of commander discretion 
        and commander risk in the production and installation of 
        expeditionary-manufactured parts;
            (4) identify categories of components suitable for edge 
        production and establish associated qualification, 
        documentation, and digital traceability requirements;
            (5) assess operator training, workforce development, and 
        certification requirements necessary to normalize safe and 
        effective use of compact, containerized advanced manufacturing 
        systems;
            (6) evaluate sustainment requirements for expeditionary 
        manufacturing systems, including maintenance, consumables, 
        digital integration, configuration management, and supply chain 
        implications;
            (7) measure effects such systems on readiness, maintenance 
        timelines, logistics demand, and operational availability; and
            (8) inform future Navy requirements, acquisition pathways, 
        standards, and resourcing decisions regarding expeditionary 
        manufacturing as a complementary sustainment capability.
    (c) System Characteristics.--To the maximum extent practicable, the 
Secretary shall ensure that advanced manufacturing systems evaluated 
under the pilot program shall--
            (1) consist of containerized platforms not exceeding a 10-
        foot by 10-foot footprint;
            (2) provide multi-material additive manufacturing 
        capabilities;
            (3) integrate additive and subtractive manufacturing 
        processes;
            (4) support secure digital engineering workflows and 
        configuration control;
            (5) be compatible with naval and expeditionary power 
        sources; and
            (6) be operable by trained military personnel in deployed 
        maritime and expeditionary environments.
    (d) Elements.--The pilot program shall consist of the following two 
elements:
            (1) A forward-oriented element carried out in support of 
        exercises and deployed maritime operations of the United States 
        Indo-Pacific Command to evaluate--
                    (A) operational employment;
                    (B) test and evaluation under expeditionary 
                conditions;
                    (C) commander use authorities; and
                    (D) training in distributed and contested 
                environments.
            (2) An element carried out at one or more naval 
        installations designated by the Secretary that are located in 
        the continental United States and that may support surface, 
        subsurface, and aviation forces to conduct--
                    (A) real-time fleet feedback;
                    (B) operator training development;
                    (C) sustainment refinement;
                    (D) digital integration; and
                    (E) iterative requirements development.
    (e) Procurement Authority.--To carry out the pilot program under 
this section, subject to the availability of appropriations, the 
Secretary of the Navy shall procure not fewer than two expeditionary 
advanced manufacturing systems using amounts authorized to be 
appropriated for the Navy for research, development, test and 
evaluation, operations, or sustainment, consistent with applicable law.
    (f) Reporting Requirement.--Not later than one year after the date 
of the establishment of the pilot program, and annually thereafter for 
the duration of the pilot program, the Secretary of the Navy shall 
submit to the congressional defense committees a report that includes--
            (1) an identification of the units and locations selected 
        for purposes of the pilot program;
            (2) a description of the operational outcomes of the pilot 
        program, including case studies;
            (3) an assessment of the employment authorities of the 
        Commander of United States Pacific Command and associated risk 
        frameworks that are relevant to the pilot program;
            (4) an identification of part categories appropriate for 
        expeditionary production;
            (5) training, workforce, and certification requirements for 
        the pilot program;
            (6) an identification of the sustainment and digital 
        integration requirements of the pilot program;
            (7) the effects of the pilot program on readiness, 
        logistics demand, and maintenance timelines; and
            (8) the recommendations of the Secretary regarding formal 
        requirement validation and transition of expeditionary point-
        of-need advanced manufacturing to an enduring complementary 
        capability.
    (g) Duration.--The duration of the pilot program required under 
subsection (a) shall be not fewer than three years and not more than 
five years.

SEC. 332. EXPANSION OF TRANSPORTATION SERVICES ON NAVY INSTALLATIONS.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of the Navy shall seek to enter into 
a contract with a public transportation services provider for the 
purpose of expanding transportation services available on Navy 
installations for members of the Armed Forces and their families. A 
contract under this section shall prioritize expanding transportation 
services between lodging facilities, dining facilities, fitness and 
recreation centers, administrative offices, air terminals, and other 
activity centers of a Naval installation to improve security and 
personnel safety at the Navy installation.
    (b) Selection of Installations and Providers.--The Secretary 
shall--
            (1) select one or more Navy installations at which to 
        expand transportation services pursuant to a contract under 
        subsection (a); and
            (2) for each selected Navy installation, identify a public 
        transportation services provider that--
                    (A) provides public transportation services in the 
                geographic area where the Navy installation is located; 
                and
                    (B) the Secretary determines is capable of carrying 
                out the contract in a manner that--
                            (i) addresses the transportation needs of 
                        installation personnel, including junior 
                        enlisted personnel without access to personal 
                        vehicles;
                            (ii) improves the quality of life and 
                        military readiness of installation personnel; 
                        and
                            (iii) implements best practices for 
                        partnerships between the installation and the 
                        provider.
    (c) Termination.--The period of a contract authorized under this 
section may not exceed three years.
    (d) Report.--
            (1) Initial report.--Not later than 90 days after the 
        conclusion of the second year of a contract authorized under 
        this section, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional 
        defense committees an initial report on the contract that 
        includes--
                    (A) preliminary findings on the transportation 
                services provided under the contract, including 
                ridership levels and service effectiveness;
                    (B) an initial evaluation of effects of the 
                transportation services on the quality of life and 
                military readiness of Navy installation personnel;
                    (C) the cost to the Secretary of the contract for 
                the first two years; and
                    (D) the recommendation of the Secretary as to 
                whether to extend the contract or to enter into similar 
                contracts for the provision of transportation services 
                at additional Navy installations.
            (2) Final report.--Not later than 180 days after the 
        conclusion of the contract, the Secretary shall submit to the 
        congressional defense committees a final report on the contract 
        that includes--
                    (A) a comprehensive assessment of ridership levels 
                and service effectiveness of the transportation 
                services provided under the contract;
                    (B) a complete evaluation of effects of the mass 
                transit services on the quality of life and military 
                readiness of Navy installation personnel;
                    (C) the cost to the Secretary of the contract;
                    (D) the recommendation of the Secretary as to 
                whether to extend the contract or to enter into similar 
                contracts for the provision of transportation services 
                at additional Navy installations; and
                    (E) such other matters as the Secretary determines 
                appropriate.
    (e) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``congressional defense committees'' has the 
        meaning given that term in section 101(a)(16) of title 10, 
        United States Code.
            (2) The term ``Navy installation'' means a military 
        installation (as such term is defined in section 2801 of title 
        10, United States Code) under the jurisdiction of the Chief of 
        Naval Operations.
            (3) The term ``public transportation services'' means--
                    (A) public transportation, as defined in section 
                5302 of title 49, United States Code;
                    (B) over-the-road bus transportation, as defined in 
                section 1501 of the Homeland Security Act of 2002 (6 
                U.S.C. 1151), and school bus transportation;
                    (C) intercity rail passenger transportation, as 
                defined in section 24102 of title 49, United States 
                Code;
                    (D) the transportation of passengers onboard a 
                passenger vessel, as defined in section 2101 of title 
                46, United States Code; and
                    (E) other regularly scheduled waterborne 
                transportation service of passengers by vessel of at 
                least 20 gross tons.
            (4) The term ``public transportation services provider'' 
        means--
                    (A) a State, local, or Federal government entity 
                that provides public transportation services; or
                    (B) or a non-government entity that--
                            (i) receives financial assistance from a 
                        State, local, or Federal government entity; and
                            (ii) provides public transportation 
                        services.

SEC. 333. REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO SUSTAINMENT OF A-10 AIRCRAFT AND 
              RELATED TRAINING.

    (a) Limitation on Relocation of A-10 Training Unit.--The Secretary 
of the Air Force may not relocate the formal training unit of the Air 
Force for providing to pilots the qualifications necessary for the 
operation of A-10 aircraft, including by reassigning the primary 
training activities carried out by such unit to another military 
installation, unless--
            (1) the Secretary submits to the congressional defense 
        committees an analysis comparing the costs and benefits of such 
        relocation versus preserving the unit at its current location; 
        and
            (2) a period of 90 days has elapsed following the date of 
        such submission.
    (b) Sustainment Requirements.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of the Air Force shall 
        maintain, as necessary, sufficient training capacity, 
        development, test, and evaluation capacity, depot-level 
        maintenance and repair capacity, supply, logistics, and 
        contractor capacity, and other sustainment-related capacity to 
        ensure the A-10 fleet remains operationally viable through 
        fiscal year 2030, including with respect to each mission and 
        capability of such fleet as of the date of the enactment of 
        this Act (including combat search and rescue missions).
            (2) Formal training unit.--In carrying out this subsection, 
        the Secretary shall, as necessary, maintain a formal training 
        unit of the Air Force for providing to pilots the 
        qualifications necessary for the operation of A-10 aircraft, 
        and a process for the requalification of pilots formerly so 
        qualified.
            (3) Budget materials.--Concurrent with the submission to 
        Congress of a budget pursuant to section 1105 of title 31, 
        United States Code, for each of fiscal years 2028 through 2030, 
        the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional 
        defense committees a report on the amounts necessary to 
        implement this subsection.
    (c) Annual Briefing on A-10 Sustainment.--
            (1) Annual briefing.--Not later than March 1, 2027, and 
        annually thereafter until March 1, 2030, the Secretary of the 
        Air Force shall provide to the congressional defense committees 
        a briefing describing the extent to which the Department of the 
        Air Force met the requirements under subsection (b) during the 
        preceding fiscal year.
            (2) Elements.--Each briefing required under paragraph (1) 
        shall include, at a minimum, the following:
                    (A) An identification of the number of pilots that 
                received the qualifications necessary for the operation 
                of A-10 aircraft during the preceding fiscal year, 
                disaggregated by whether such qualifications were an 
                initial qualification or a requalification.
                    (B) An identification of the number of officers 
                that received advanced instructor qualifications 
                through the weapons instructor course for A-10 aircraft 
                offered through the United States Air Force Weapons 
                School, disaggregated by whether such qualifications 
                were an initial qualification or a requalification.
                    (C) A description of the status of actions taken to 
                meet the requirement under subsection (b)(2) during the 
                preceding fiscal year, and any related instructor 
                shortfalls.
                    (D) A description of the status of operational test 
                and evaluation capacity with respect to the A-10 fleet, 
                including major limitations affecting airworthiness, 
                weapons integration, tactics development, or mission 
                effectiveness.
                    (E) The status of programmed depot-level 
                maintenance and repair with respect to A-10 aircraft or 
                related infrastructure, and any resulting effect on the 
                ability of the Department to meet the requirements 
                under subsection (b).
                    (F) The status of logistics, supply, contractor 
                maintenance, and other sustainment functions for the A-
                10 fleet, and any resulting effect on the ability of 
                the Department to meet the requirements under 
                subsection (b).
                    (G) An assessment as to whether the Department met 
                the requirements under subsection (b) during the 
                preceding fiscal year.
                    (H) A description of any shortfall, delay, or other 
                deviation resulting in a failure to meet any such 
                requirement, including any corrective action planned or 
                underway.
    (d) Roadmap for A-10 Fleet Sustainment.--
            (1) Roadmap required.--Not later than 90 days after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Air 
        Force shall submit to the congressional defense committees a 
        roadmap setting forth proposed actions to meet the requirements 
        under subsection (b).
            (2) Briefing.--Not later than 15 days after the date of the 
        submission of the roadmap under paragraph (1), the Secretary of 
        the Air Force shall provide to the congressional defense 
        committees a briefing on such roadmap and any anticipated 
        material shortfall in meeting a requirement under subsection 
        (b).
            (3) Annual updates.--Not later than one year after the date 
        of the submission of the roadmap under paragraph (1), and 
        annually thereafter until September 30, 2030, the Secretary of 
        the Air Force shall submit to the congressional defense 
        committees a written update to such roadmap.
    (e) Program to Preserve Knowledge and History Relating to A-10 
Aircraft.--
            (1) Establishment.--The Secretary of the Air Force shall 
        establish a program to preserve technical and historical 
        knowledge relating to the operation and sustainment of the A-10 
        fleet.
            (2) Lead entity.--The Director of the Air Force Historical 
        Research Agency shall serve as the lead entity carrying out the 
        program under paragraph (1), in coordination with the Commander 
        of the Air Combat Command, the head of the National Museum of 
        the United States Air Force, and such other organizations of 
        the Department of the Air Force as the Secretary of the Air 
        Force determines appropriate.
            (3) Required activities.--The program established under 
        paragraph (1) shall include, at a minimum the following 
        activities:
                    (A) The collection of oral histories relating to 
                the A-10 fleet from pilots, advanced instructor-
                qualified aircrew, maintainers, joint terminal attack 
                controllers, and other personnel involved in the 
                operation (including operational support for combat 
                search and rescue missions) or sustainment of aircraft 
                within such fleet.
                    (B) The collection and preservation of records 
                associated with the A-10 fleet, including technical 
                data, operational tactics, weapons integration records, 
                upgrade and modification history, and records relating 
                to the sustainment of aircraft within such fleet.
                    (C) The digital archiving of materials collected 
                under subparagraphs (A) and (B) in a searchable 
                repository accessible to appropriate users within the 
                Department of Defense.
                    (D) The identification of lessons learned pursuant 
                to the materials so collected.
                    (E) The development of recommendations for 
                collecting, preserving, and transferring knowledge 
                relating to the A-10 fleet with respect to design, 
                doctrine, training, and sustainment activities relating 
                to successor aircraft.
            (4) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Air Force shall 
        submit to the congressional defense committees a report 
        containing a summary of--
                    (A) the activities carried out under the program 
                established under paragraph (1);
                    (B) the status of the archive established pursuant 
                to paragraph (3)(C); and
                    (C) the principal lessons learned identified 
                pursuant to paragraph (3)(D).
    (f) Depot-level Maintenance and Repair Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``depot-level maintenance and repair'' has the meaning given 
such term in section 2460 of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 334. REQUIREMENT FOR STANDARDIZED MUNITIONS WITH RESPECT TO 
              CERTAIN UNMANNED AIRCRAFT.

    (a) Requirement.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish 
standardized munitions for use in one-way attack operations by covered 
unmanned aircraft.
    (b) Covered Unmanned Aircraft Defined.--In this section, the term 
``covered unmanned aircraft'' means an unmanned aircraft (as such term 
is defined in section 130i(j) of title 10, United States Code), that is 
categorized as Group 1 or Group 2 pursuant to the Joint Publication 3-
30 of the Department of Defense, titled ``Joint Air Operations'' and 
dated July 25, 2019, or such successor publication.

SEC. 335. REQUIREMENT TO ENSURE SUFFICIENCY OF NAVAL MINE INVENTORY.

    (a) Requirement.--To the maximum extent practicable, the Secretary 
of the Navy shall ensure that the inventory of naval mines of the 
Department of the Navy is sufficient to meet validated operational 
requirements for not fewer than two simultaneous major regional 
contingencies.
    (b) Annual Certification.--
            (1) Submission.--Not later than March 1, 2027, and annually 
        thereafter, the Secretary of the Navy shall submit to the 
        congressional defense committees a certification that includes 
        the following:
                    (A) A determination of whether the requirement 
                under subsection (a) is met.
                    (B) If the requirement under subsection (a) is not 
                met--
                            (i) a description of the shortfall in the 
                        inventory referred to in such subsection; and
                            (ii) a remediation plan, including 
                        timelines and funding requirements, to achieve 
                        compliance with such requirement.
            (2) Form.--Each certification required under paragraph (1) 
        shall be submitted in unclassified form, but may include a 
        classified annex.

                          Subtitle D--Reports

SEC. 341. STRATEGY TO SUPPORT JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER SUSTAINMENT AND 
              MAINTENANCE IN CONTESTED OPERATING ENVIRONMENTS.

    (a) Strategy Required.--The Secretary of the Defense, in 
coordination with the Secretary of the Air Force, the Secretary of the 
Navy, the Commander of the United States Transportation Command, and 
the Director of the Defense Logistics Agency, shall develop a strategy 
to support the sustainment and maintenance of Joint Strike Fighter 
aircraft in contested operating environments. Such strategy shall 
address, at a minimum, the following:
            (1) The transportation of spares and repair parts for such 
        aircraft into and across contested theaters of operation.
            (2) Communications requirements necessary for the 
        transportation of such parts in a denied, degraded, 
        intermittent, or limited environment.
            (3) Requirements relating to relevant supply chain 
        management software.
            (4) Prepositioned stocks of spares and repair parts for 
        Joint Strike Fighter aircraft, including measures to ensure the 
        currency and serviceability of ready for issue parts and to 
        require that the statuses of such prepositioned stocks include 
        instructions for the disposition and replacement of any such 
        parts that are not current or ready for issue.
            (5) Spares and repair parts packages deployed on naval 
        vessels in which Joint Strike Fighter aircraft are embarked, 
        including measures relating to prepositioning, currency, and 
        serviceability described in paragraph (4) with respect to 
        spares and repair parts packages deployed on such vessels.
            (6) The incorporation of sustainment efforts for deployed 
        Joint Strike Fighter aircraft into the framework of the Air 
        Force for agile combat employment and the framework of the Navy 
        for distributed maritime operations.
            (7) The international system for managing spare parts for 
        Joint Strike Fighter aircraft commonly referred to as the 
        ``global spares pool''.
            (8) Support from, and coordination with, allies and 
        partners of the United States.
    (b) Report.--
            (1) Submission to congress.--Not later than one year after 
        the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense 
        shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report 
        on the strategy required under subsection (a).
            (2) Form.--The report required under paragraph (1) shall be 
        submitted in an unclassified form but may include a classified 
        annex.

                       Subtitle E--Other Matters

SEC. 351. ESTABLISHMENT OF CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF THE NATIONAL GUARD.

    (a) Establishment.--Chapter 1 of title 32, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 116. Center for the Study of the National Guard
    ``(a) Establishment.--The Secretary of Defense, in coordination 
with the Chief of the National Guard Bureau, shall establish a center, 
to be known as the `Center for the Study of the National Guard' at an 
appropriate academic institution that--
            ``(1) maintains an established relationship with the 
        National Guard Bureau;
            ``(2) possesses a strong academic program in military 
        history; and
            ``(3) is situated in proximity to a major National Guard 
        installation.
    ``(b) Responsibilities.--The Center for the Study of the National 
Guard shall--
            ``(1) serve as the principal repository for historical 
        documents, oral histories, and other records related to the 
        National Guard;
            ``(2) conduct research, analysis, and educational programs 
        related to the history, evolution, and operational 
        contributions of the National Guard;
            ``(3) facilitate outreach efforts to increase public 
        awareness of the role of the National Guard in national defense 
        and domestic response operations; and
            ``(4) support the Department of Defense in shaping policy 
        decisions and strategic planning related to National Guard 
        operations carried out under this title and title 10.
    ``(c) Collaboration and Support.--The Chief of the National Guard 
Bureau may--
            ``(1) collaborate with the Center for the Study of the 
        National Guard in the collection, preservation, and 
        dissemination of National Guard history;
            ``(2) provide historical documents, records, and resources 
        to support the research and archival efforts of the Center; and
            ``(3) facilitate joint initiatives between the National 
        Guard Bureau and the Center to enhance historical preservation, 
        education, and public awareness.
    ``(d) Public-private Partnership.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
seek to establish and maintain the Center for the Study of the National 
Guard as a public-private partnership to minimize costs to the Federal 
Government.''.
    (b) Deadline for Establishment.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
establish the Center for the Study of the National Guard required under 
section 116 of title 32, United States Code, as added by subsection 
(a), by not later than the date that is 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act.
    (c) Congressional Briefing.--Not later than one year after the date 
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall provide to 
the congressional defense committees a briefing that includes--
            (1) a description of the selection of the academic 
        institution where the Center for the Study of the National 
        Guard required under section 116 of title 32, United States 
        Code, as added by subsection (a), is located;
            (2) an identification of the status of the establishment 
        and initial operations of the Center;
            (3) a description of any ongoing efforts between the 
        National Guard Bureau and the Center; and
            (4) the recommendations of the Secretary to enhance the 
        preservation and study of National Guard history.

SEC. 352. DISPOSITION OF ACCOUNTABLE PROPERTY IN DESIGNATED THEATERS OF 
              OPERATION.

    (a) Oversight of Disposition.--Chapter 153 of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended by inserting after section 2581 the following 
new section:
``Sec. 2582. Disposition of accountable property in designated theaters 
              of operation
    ``(a) Reporting Requirement.--Not later than 60 days after 
initiating any significant force reposturing or withdrawal within or 
from a covered theater of operations, the Secretary of Defense shall 
submit to the congressional defense committees a report that includes, 
with respect to accountable property used in connection with the 
operations associated with such reposturing or withdrawal, the 
following elements:
            ``(1) A comprehensive inventory of such property 
        (including, to the extent practicable, the serial number and 
        end-item identity of any such property that is a controlled 
        inventory item), including an identification of--
                    ``(A) whether such property remains under the 
                custody and control of the United States;
                    ``(B) to the extent known and consistent with 
                available records, whether such property was previously 
                sold or otherwise transferred to an ally or partner of 
                the United States;
                    ``(C) whether the Secretary has proposed a 
                disposition for such property and if so, which 
                disposition; and
                    ``(D) to the extent known or assessed, the status 
                of such property, including, if known, the disposition 
                of such property and the end user of such property.
            ``(2) For each category of major defense equipment, an 
        assessment of the feasibility, timeline, operational effect, 
        and security, accountability, and end-user monitoring 
        considerations, associated with potential dispositions for 
        accountable property within each such category.
            ``(3) For any covered disposition assessed under paragraph 
        (2), a description of any operational or logistical constraint 
        rendering other dispositions unfeasible or impracticable.
            ``(4) For each potential disposition for accountable 
        property assessed as feasible pursuant to paragraph (2), an 
        estimate of the incremental costs of such option relative to 
        baseline costs of withdrawal and redeployment activities, 
        including an identification of--
                    ``(A) costs associated with the shipping and 
                handling of such property; and
                    ``(B) costs associated with the sustainment and 
                storage for such property.
            ``(5) A plan to mitigate the risk of diversion or misuse 
        resulting from dispositions of accountable property that 
        includes the following:
                    ``(A) An identification of relevant end-use 
                monitoring requirements of the Department of Defense, 
                including the office of the Department responsible for 
                implementing such requirements, the frequency of 
                monitoring under such requirements, and any procedures 
                for addressing noncompliance with such requirements, 
                including in the event of the loss of the property.
                    ``(B) An identification of any feasible remote 
                disablement capability that may be used with respect to 
                such property, and, for any such capability the use of 
                which is not feasible, an explanation of any technical, 
                operational, or legal constraints to such use.
                    ``(C) Procedures for the implementation of the plan 
                with respect to accountable property that is sensitive 
                technology (including communications security items, 
                cryptographic material, biometrics collection devices, 
                and associated databases) prior to determining a 
                disposition for such technology.
                    ``(D) A plan to secure, retrieve, disable, or 
                otherwise neutralize accountable property in the event 
                of the ally or partner of the United States to which 
                such property was sold or transferred experiencing a 
                collapse or regime change.
                    ``(E) A chain-of-custody plan for the transport, 
                storage, and transfer of accountable property, 
                including an identification of responsible units, 
                storage site controls, and inspection checkpoints.
            ``(6) For any accountable property previously sold or 
        otherwise transferred to an ally or partner of the United 
        States, or proposed to be so sold or transferred, an assessment 
        of the following:
                    ``(A) The capacity of the end user, or prospective 
                end user, to sustain such property absent support by 
                the United States Armed Forces or contractors of the 
                Department of Defense.
                    ``(B) To the extent practicable, whether the end 
                user, or prospective end user--
                            ``(i) has been subject to any security 
                        vetting or monitoring by the Secretary, 
                        including an identification of any period of 
                        continuous monitoring;
                            ``(ii) maintains effective command-and-
                        control structures; or
                            ``(iii) is subject to infiltration, 
                        coercion, or substantial influence by any 
                        foreign terrorist organization or other hostile 
                        actor.
                    ``(C) The effect, or anticipated effect, of the 
                sale or transfer on morale and retention with respect 
                to the United States Armed Forces.
                    ``(D) Whether there is a history of accountable 
                property previously sold or transferred to the ally or 
                partner being diverted to an unauthorized end user, 
                including, as applicable, an identification of any such 
                prior diversion, the assessed end user, and the 
                quantity and type of any major defense equipment so 
                diverted.
                    ``(E) The risk of the ally or partner experiencing 
                rapid collapse.
            ``(7) An assessment of the significant force reposturing or 
        withdrawal with respect to applicable lessons learned from the 
        operations of United States Armed Forces in Iraq in 2014, and 
        the withdrawal of such forces from Afghanistan in 2021, 
        including an assessment of--
                    ``(A) specific decision points with respect to such 
                operations in which diversion risk was underestimated; 
                and
                    ``(B) any mitigation measures that would have 
                reduced such risk.
    ``(b) Notification of Certain Sales and Transfers.--Not later than 
30 days after the date of a sale or transfer of accountable property in 
connection with a significant force reposturing or withdrawal within or 
from a covered theater of operations, the Secretary of Defense shall 
submit to the congressional defense committees a notification the 
contains, to the extent known--
            ``(1) a description of the accountable property sold or 
        otherwise transferred;
            ``(2) a description of the end user of such property; and
            ``(3) a certification of the conduct of the assessment 
        required under paragraph (1)(A).
    ``(c) Senior Approval Requirement.--(1) The Secretary of Defense or 
the Deputy Secretary of Defense shall approve, in writing, any 
determination to proceed with a disposition described in paragraph (2) 
for accountable property with an aggregate replacement value exceeding 
$10,000,000.
    ``(2) A disposition described in this paragraph is, with respect to 
accountable property, the abandonment or loss of such property without 
continuous custody and control by the United States or a partner or 
ally of the United States, the destruction of such property, or the 
demilitarization of such property.
    ``(d) Annual Report and Notification Requirements.--(1) Not later 
than one year after the date of the enactment of this section, and 
annually thereafter for five years, the Secretary of Defense shall 
submit to the congressional defense committees a report containing, 
with respect to the year preceding the date of submission of the 
report, the following:
            ``(A) A summary of the dispositions of accountable property 
        in covered theaters of operation, including any covered 
        dispositions.
            ``(B) A summary of any incidents in which major defense 
        equipment was diverted, including an identification of the 
        quantity and type of equipment so diverted and, to the extent 
        practicable, the assessed end user.
            ``(C) A summary of risk mitigation measures implemented, 
        consistent with the plan under subsection (a)(5).
            ``(D) Any material changes in the resilience of allies or 
        partners of the United States relevant to determinations 
        regarding dispositions for accountable property, including with 
        respect to the risk of infiltration or diversion.
    ``(2) Not later than 30 days after any date on which the Secretary 
of Defense becomes aware of a collapse of an ally or partner force or 
other event that the Secretary determines materially increases the risk 
of accountable property being diverted in a covered theater of 
operations, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense 
committees written notification that includes a description of the 
event, the categories of property at risk of diversion, and any 
mitigation measure implemented.
    ``(3)(A) Not later than 30 days after any date on which the 
Secretary of Defense becomes aware that accountable property subject to 
a covered disposition in a covered theater of operations has been 
diverted and used in an attack conducted by a foreign terrorist 
organization or other hostile actor against the United States, allies 
or partners of the United States, or local populations, the Secretary 
shall submit to the congressional defense committees a written 
notification.
    ``(B) Each notification under subparagraph (A) shall include, to 
the extent practicable--
            ``(i) an identification of the accountable property used in 
        the attack;
            ``(ii) an identification of the date on which, and the 
        location from which, the property left the custody and control 
        of the United States or an ally or partner of the United 
        States;
            ``(iii) an attribution as to the actor responsible for the 
        attack; and
            ``(iv) the total number of casualties caused by the attack.
    ``(e) Form of Reports.--Each report required under this section 
shall be submitted in unclassified form but may include a classified 
annex.
    ``(f) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `accountable property' means any accountable 
        property of the Department of Defense, as described in 
        Department of Defense Instruction 5000.64, titled 
        `Accountability and Management of DoD Equipment and Other 
        Accountable Property' and dated June 10, 2019 (or any such 
        successor instruction).
            ``(2) The term `aggregate replacement value', with respect 
        to accountable property, means the total replacement value of 
        such property as reflected in property accountability systems 
        of the Department of Defense, or, if not recorded therein, the 
        best available estimate for such value as determined by the 
        Secretary.
            ``(3) The term `controlled inventory item' means any item 
        designated as such pursuant to Department of Defense 
        Instruction 5000.64, titled `Accountability and Management of 
        DoD Equipment and Other Accountable Property' and dated June 
        10, 2019 (or any such successor instruction).
            ``(4) The term `covered disposition', with respect to 
        accountable property--
                    ``(A) means disposition of such property other than 
                a retrograde, destruction, demilitarization, sale, or 
                other transfer, carried out in accordance with 
                applicable provisions of law; and
                    ``(B) includes the abandonment of such property 
                without continuous custody and control by the United 
                States or a partner or ally of the United States.
            ``(5) The term `covered theater of operations' means any 
        geographic area designated by the Secretary of Defense for 
        purposes of this section in which the United States Armed 
        Forces are conducting contingency operations, advising or 
        assisting ally or partner forces engaged in hostilities, or 
        conducting operations in an environment with respect to which 
        the Secretary determines there is a material risk of the loss 
        or abandonment of such property without continuous custody and 
        control by the United States or a partner or ally of the United 
        States as a result of armed conflict, terrorist activity, 
        collapse of an ally or partner force, or seizure by a hostile 
        actor, taking into account any history of diversion of such 
        property to an unauthorized end user.
            ``(6) The term `disposition', with respect to accountable 
        property, includes the retrograde, destruction, 
        demilitarization, sale, transfer, loss, and abandonment of such 
        property.
            ``(7) The term `foreign terrorist organization' means an 
        organization so designated by the Secretary of State under 
        section 219 of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 
        1189).
            ``(8) The term `major defense equipment' has the meaning 
        given such term in section 47 of the Arms Export Control Act 
        (22 U.S.C. 2794).
            ``(9) The term `significant force reposturing or 
        withdrawal' means a reduction, redeployment, or consolidation 
        of the United States Armed Forces that the Secretary of Defense 
        determines is significant for purposes of this section, 
        including any action that--
                    ``(A) closes, transfers, or materially reduces the 
                capacity of a facility of the Department of Defense;
                    ``(B) results in the disposition of accountable 
                property with an aggregate value exceeding $10,000,000; 
                or
                    ``(C) reduces United States Armed Forces personnel 
                levels by more than 20 percent in a given covered 
                theater of operations over a 90-day period.''.
    (b) Initial Baseline Report.--
            (1) Report required.--Not later than 180 days after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit 
        to the congressional defense committees a report that provides 
        baseline information regarding the disposition of accountable 
        property in covered theaters of operation during fiscal year 
        2026 and contains plans for the implementation of section 2582 
        of title 10, United States Code, as added by subsection (a).
            (2) Elements.--The report under paragraph (1) shall include 
        the following:
                    (A) A description of the processes and systems of 
                the Department of Defense for the disposition of 
                accountable property in covered theaters of operations, 
                including any such systems used to record inventories 
                of, or dispositions for, such property.
                    (B) A description of any policies or procedures of 
                the Department of Defense governing dispositions for 
                accountable property, including the approval procedures 
                for covered dispositions, and any planned updates to 
                such policies to conform with the requirements of such 
                section 2582.
                    (C) An assessment of any gaps in data that would 
                affect compliance with such requirements, and a plan 
                and timeline to resolve any such gaps.
            (3) Form.--The report required under this subsection shall 
        be submitted in unclassified form but may include a classified 
        annex.
    (c) Report on Senior Leader Accountability for Certain 
Dispositions.--
            (1) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to 
        the congressional defense committees a report describing 
        processes to determine accountability for covered dispositions 
        of accountable property in connection with a significant force 
        reposturing or withdrawal.
            (2) Elements.--The report under paragraph (1) shall include 
        the following:
                    (A) A description of the policies and standards 
                applied to assess individual and command responsibility 
                for the covered dispositions referred to in paragraph 
                (1), including distinctions, if any, by grade, 
                position, or component.
                    (B) A description of any adverse personnel action 
                available, and (as applicable) taken, with respect to 
                members of the Armed Forces as a result of such covered 
                dispositions.
                    (C) An identification of the criteria used to 
                determine whether such covered dispositions trigger a 
                formal investigation or accountability review.
                    (D) Any recommendations for statutory, regulatory, 
                or policy changes to ensure accountability standards 
                are applied consistently and proportionately across 
                ranks and responsibilities.
            (3) Form.--The report required under this subsection shall 
        be submitted in unclassified form but may include a classified 
        annex.
    (d) GAO Review.--
            (1) Review.--The Comptroller General of the United States 
        shall review the implementation of section 2582 of title 10, 
        United States Code, as added by subsection (a), including with 
        respect to--
                    (A) the completeness of any inventories submitted 
                under such section;
                    (B) the validity of cost comparisons used in 
                implementing such section, including any assumptions 
                used in such comparisons;
                    (C) the adequacy of any plan developed under 
                subsection (a)(5) of such section; and
                    (D) the frequency of, justifications for, and 
                execution of, sales or transfers of accountable 
                property for which a waiver is issued under subsection 
                (b)(2)(A) of such section, including compliance with 
                the notification and reporting requirements of such 
                subsection.
            (2) Briefing.--Not later than one year after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Comptroller General shall 
        provide to the congressional defense committees a briefing on 
        the results of the review under paragraph (1).
    (e) Definitions.--In this section, the terms ``accountable 
property'', ``covered disposition'', ``disposition'', and ``significant 
force reposturing or withdrawal'' have the meanings given such terms in 
section 2582(f) of title 10, United States Code, as added by subsection 
(a).

SEC. 353. CERTIFICATION REQUIREMENT FOR MOTOR CARRIERS TRANSPORTING 
              DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE FREIGHT.

    Chapter 157 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
inserting after section 2631a the following new section:
``Sec. 2631b. Certification regarding affiliations with Chinese 
              military companies for surface transportation contracts
    ``(a) Certification Required.--(1) No contract for the 
transportation of cargo by motor carrier for the Department of Defense 
(including contracts awarded by the United States Transportation 
Command or the Military Surface Deployment and Distribution Command) 
may be awarded to, or performed by, any covered carrier unless such 
covered carrier submits a certification described in subsection (b).
    ``(2) The requirement under paragraph (1) shall apply to prime 
contractors, subcontractors, and owner-operators at all tiers.
    ``(b) Contents of Certification.--A certification under this 
section shall state that, to the best of the covered carrier's 
knowledge after reasonable inquiry--
            ``(1) the covered carrier is not owned or controlled by, 
        and does not have significant business relationships with, any 
        entity identified on the most recent list of Chinese military 
        companies required under section 1260H of the William M. (Mac) 
        Thornberry National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
        2021 (Public Law 116-283; 10 U.S.C. 113 note); and
            ``(2) the covered carrier will require the same 
        certification from any subcontractor or owner-operator it 
        engages for performance of the contract.
    ``(c) Flow-down and Recordkeeping.--Prime contractors shall include 
the substance of this certification requirement in all subcontracts and 
lease agreements for Department of Defense freight transportation. 
Covered carriers shall maintain records of certifications for not less 
than 5 years.
    ``(d) Penalties.--Any covered carrier that knowingly provides a 
false certification under this section shall be subject to suspension 
or debarment from Department of Defense contracting and civil penalties 
under section 1001 of title 18.
    ``(e) Implementation.--The Secretary of Defense shall prescribe 
regulations to implement this section not later than 180 days after the 
date of the enactment of this section, including integration into 
existing carrier approval processes of the Military Surface Deployment 
and Distribution Command.
    ``(f) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) Covered carrier.--The term `covered carrier' means 
        any motor carrier, subcontractor, or owner-operator providing 
        surface transportation services.
            ``(2) Significant business relationships.--The term 
        `significant business relationships' shall have the meaning 
        given by the Secretary of Defense in regulations.''.

SEC. 354. ESTABLISHMENT OF NATIONAL SECURITY REGISTRY FOR MOTOR 
              CARRIERS HANDLING DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE FREIGHT.

    (a) In General.--Subtitle IV of title 49, United States Code, is 
amended by inserting after chapter 139 the following:

         ``CHAPTER 140--SECURE DEFENSE FREIGHT CARRIER REGISTRY

``14001. Definition of registry.
``14002. Establishment of registry.
``14003. Eligibility and approval.
``14004. Use of registry.
``Sec. 14001. Definition of registry
    ``In this chapter, the term `registry' means the Secure Defense 
Freight Carrier Registry established under section 14002.
``Sec. 14002. Establishment of registry
    ``Not later than 1 year after the date of the enactment of this 
chapter, the Secretary, acting through the Administrator of the Federal 
Motor Carrier Safety Administration and in coordination with the 
Secretary of Defense, shall establish and maintain a registry, to be 
known as the `Secure Defense Freight Carrier Registry', of motor 
carriers approved to transport freight for the Department of Defense.
``Sec. 14003. Eligibility and approval
    ``(a) Eligibility Requirements.--To be included in the registry, a 
motor carrier shall--
            ``(1) hold valid operating authority from the Federal Motor 
        Carrier Safety Administration;
            ``(2) meet all applicable Department of Defense carrier 
        qualification standards;
            ``(3) undergo enhanced national security vetting, 
        including--
                    ``(A) screening for ownership, control, or 
                significant business relationships with--
                            ``(i) an entity identified on the list 
                        maintained by the Department of Defense under 
                        section 1260H of the William M. (Mac) 
                        Thornberry National Defense Authorization Act 
                        for Fiscal Year 2021 (10 U.S.C. 113 note; 
                        Public Law 116-283); or
                            ``(ii) any other foreign adversary entity 
                        designated by the Secretary of Defense; and
                    ``(B) verification that drivers and personnel with 
                access to Department of Defense freight meet security 
                standards comparable to those required under 
                Transportation Worker Identification Credential 
                programs or other relevant Federal security programs; 
                and
            ``(4) submit to periodic revetting not less frequently than 
        once every 2 years.
    ``(b) Application and Approval Process.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall establish a 
        streamlined application process for inclusion on the registry.
            ``(2) Requirement.--The process established under paragraph 
        (1) shall include coordination with existing Department of 
        Defense carrier approval systems.
``Sec. 14004. Use of registry
    ``(a) Prohibition.--Subject to subsection (b), beginning 1 year 
after the date of the enactment of this chapter, a motor carrier may 
not bid on or perform a Department of Defense freight transportation 
contract unless the motor carrier is included in the registry.
    ``(b) Waivers.--The Secretary of Defense may grant waivers from the 
prohibition under subsection (a) for exigent circumstances.''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for subtitle IV of title 49, 
United States Code, is amended by inserting after the item relating to 
chapter 139 the following:

``140. SECURE DEFENSE FREIGHT CARRIER REGISTRY..............   14001''.

SEC. 355. PROTECTION OF PROPERTY OWNED, POSSESSED, OR SHIPPED BY THE 
              DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE FROM LIEN, ARREST, OR SEIZURE 
              DURING SHIPMENT.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 157 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 2655. Property owned, possessed, or shipped by the Department of 
              Defense: protection from lien, arrest, or seizure during 
              shipment
    ``(a) Prohibition.--No carrier, port agent, warehouseman, freight 
forwarder, broker, or other person involved in the transportation of 
cargo owned, possessed, or shipped by the Department of Defense may 
have any lien on, or hold, impound, or otherwise interfere with the 
transportation of, such cargo.
    ``(b) Exemption From Arrest or Seizure.--The following are not 
subject to lien, arrest, or seizure by judicial process in the United 
States:
            ``(1) A vessel, aircraft, motor vehicle, rail car, or other 
        conveyance owned by, possessed by, or operated by or for the 
        Department of Defense.
            ``(2) Cargo owned, possessed, or shipped by the Department 
        of Defense.
    ``(c) Authority to Accomplish Delivery.--The Secretary of Defense 
may take such actions as may be necessary to recoup, recover, arrange 
for, or accomplish transportation and delivery of cargo owned, 
possessed, or shipped by the Department of Defense.
    ``(d) Delay of Shipment for Undeclared, Mispackaged, or Mislabeled 
Hazardous Material.--Nothing in this section shall preclude a carrier 
from stopping the movement of undeclared, mispackaged, mislabeled, or 
otherwise noncompliant hazardous material shipments until the hazardous 
material is properly offered for transportation in accordance with 
section 5103 of title 49 and regulations prescribed under that section.
    ``(e) Arrest or Seizure of Property Pursuant to Federal Criminal or 
Forfeiture Law.--Nothing in this section shall preclude the United 
States from arresting or seizing personal property of a member of the 
armed forces or employee of the Department of Defense pursuant to 
Federal criminal or forfeiture law.
    ``(f) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `broker' means a person, other than a 
        carrier or an employee or agent of a carrier, that as a 
        principal or agent sells, offers for sale, negotiates for, or 
        holds itself out by solicitation, advertisement, or otherwise 
        as selling, providing, or arranging for, transportation by 
        carrier for compensation.
            ``(2) The term `carrier' means a person, including a 
        freight forwarder, that transports passengers or property in 
        commerce by pipeline, rail, motor, air, or water.
            ``(3) The term `freight forwarder' means a person holding 
        such person out to the general public (other than as a 
        pipeline, rail, motor, air, or water carrier) to provide 
        transportation of property for compensation and in the ordinary 
        course of the business of such person--
                    ``(A) assembles and consolidates, or provides for 
                assembling and consolidating, shipments and performs or 
                provides for break-bulk and distribution operations of 
                the shipments; and
                    ``(B) assumes responsibility for the transportation 
                from the place of receipt to the place of 
                destination.''.
    (b) Expansion of Coverage.--Section 453(c)(5) of title 37, United 
States Code, is amended by striking ``baggage and household goods'' and 
inserting ``personal property''.

SEC. 356. ESTABLISHMENT OF UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS MUSEUM SYSTEM.

    Chapter 861 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding 
at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 8617B. United States Marine Corps Museum System
    ``(a) In General.--The Secretary of the Navy shall support a system 
of official Marine Corps museums within the Department of the Navy. 
Such system shall include the National Museum of the United States 
Marine Corps and may contain other museums honoring individual 
installations, units, and branches, as designated by the Secretary of 
the Navy, that meet criteria established under subsection (b).
    ``(b) Criteria for Designation.--The Secretary of the Navy shall 
establish criteria for designating museums of subsection (a) for 
inclusion in the Marine Corps museum system. Such criteria shall 
include--
            ``(1) historical significance to Marine Corps operations, 
        technology, or personnel;
            ``(2) public accessibility and educational outreach 
        programs; and
            ``(3) alignment with the mission of the Marine Corps to 
        preserve the heritage of the Marine Corps.
    ``(c) Criteria for Closure.--The Secretary of the Navy shall 
establish criteria for the closure of museums within the Marine Corps 
museum system. No museum within such system may be closed until--
            ``(1) the Secretary of the Navy submits to the Committees 
        on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the 
        Senate notice that includes--
                    ``(A) a plan for the preservation, storage, or 
                alternate display of historical collections contained 
                in the museum;
                    ``(B) how any issues relating to museum personnel 
                will be resolved;
                    ``(C) an identification of any efforts to maintain 
                museum operations through public-private partnerships; 
                and
                    ``(D) an analysis of the cost to transport, 
                consolidate, and preserve the historical collections 
                contained in the museum; and
            ``(2) period of 90 days has elapsed after the date on which 
        such notice is received by such committees.
    ``(d) Funding and Support.--Consistent with applicable law, the 
Secretary may enter into partnerships, including with nonprofit 
organizations, to enhance the financial sustainability and public 
engagement of the museums in the Marine Corps museum system.''.

SEC. 357. REQUIREMENT FOR FIREGUARD PROGRAM.

    Section 510(a) of title 32, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``may'' and inserting ``shall''.

SEC. 358. PILOT PROGRAM FOR TESTING AND EVALUATION OF COUNTER-FIRE 
              UNMANNED FIRE SUPPRESSION AIRCRAFT SYSTEMS ON MILITARY 
              INSTALLATIONS.

    (a) Establishment.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall commence a three-
year pilot program under which the Secretary shall conduct testing and 
evaluation of counter-fire unmanned fire suppression and remote sensing 
aircraft systems at military installations selected for participation 
in the program. In carrying out the pilot program, the Secretary 
shall--
            (1) evaluate the effectiveness of counter-fire unmanned 
        aircraft systems with respect to suppressing wildfire, 
        improving the safety of prescribed burns, monitoring wildfire, 
        and responding to other fire emergencies on military 
        installations;
            (2) assess the integration of fire suppression drone 
        capabilities with existing fire protection and emergency 
        response systems on military installations;
            (3) determine operational parameters, safety protocols, and 
        certification requirements for counter-fire unmanned aircraft 
        systems;
            (4) for each counter-fire unmanned aircraft system, 
        evaluate--
                    (A) suppression payload delivery accuracy;
                    (B) refill and turnaround time;
                    (C) night operations capabilities;
                    (D) beyond visual line-of-sight flight operations;
                    (E) swarm capabilities; and
                    (F) sustained sortie rates;
            (5) analyze the cost-effectiveness and scalability of 
        counter-fire drone capabilities; and
            (6) develop training curricula and operational procedures 
        for personnel operating counter-fire unmanned aircraft systems.
    (b) Selection of Installations.--The Secretary shall select at 
least one military installation to participate in the pilot program. In 
making such a selection, the Secretary shall consider--
            (1) geographic diversity, including climate zones and fire 
        risk profiles;
            (2) existing fire suppression infrastructure and 
        capabilities;
            (3) airspace availability and compatibility with unmanned 
        aircraft operations;
            (4) proximity to civilian communities that could benefit 
        from enhanced fire response capabilities; and
            (5) availability of qualified personnel and training 
        facilities.
    (c) Reporting Requirements.--
            (1) Interim report.--Not later than 18 months after the 
        date of the commencement of the pilot program, the Secretary 
        shall submit to the congressional defense committees an interim 
        report on the pilot program.
            (2) Final report.--Not later than six months after the date 
        of the completion of the pilot program, the Secretary shall 
        submit to the congressional defense committees a final report 
        on the pilot program.
            (3) Elements of reports.--Each report required under this 
        subsection shall include, for the period covered by the 
        report--
                    (A) a description of each counter-fire unmanned 
                aircraft system tested and the performance metrics for 
                each such system;
                    (B) an assessment of operational effectiveness of 
                each such system in fire detection and suppression 
                scenarios;
                    (C) an analysis of the integration of each such 
                system with existing fire protection systems;
                    (D) an identification of any supplementary mission 
                critical use cases for each such system at military 
                installations;
                    (E) a description of any safety incidents and 
                lessons learned for each such system;
                    (F) a cost analysis and projection of return on 
                investment for each such system;
                    (G) any recommendations for the potential broader 
                implementation of each such system across the 
                Department of Defense; and
                    (H) any recommendations for potential dual-use 
                applications of each such system in support of civilian 
                fire authorities.

SEC. 359. PILOT PROGRAM ON DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS IN CONNECTION 
              WITH ARMY COMBAT TRAINING CENTER ROTATIONS.

    (a) Establishment.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army shall establish a 
pilot program to collect, store, and analyze covered data generated 
during rotations of members of the Armed Forces at combat training 
centers.
    (b) Purposes.--The purposes of the pilot program under subsection 
(a) shall be to improve the realism of training for members of the 
Armed Forces, enhance unit readiness, collect observational data for 
application to efforts of the Department relating to agentic artificial 
intelligence, and support the development of secure systems and 
analytic tools that enable the responsible deployment and 
interoperability of the sensors specified in subsection (c)(2)(A).
    (c) Activities.--In carrying out the pilot program under subsection 
(a), the Secretary of the Army shall--
            (1) designate not fewer than one rotation at a combat 
        training center for the conduct of the pilot program;
            (2) identify and evaluate technologies and processes for 
        the collection, storage, and analysis of covered data from 
        multiple sources during such rotation, including--
                    (A) soldier-borne artificial intelligence small 
                arms weapon sensors and related networked systems; and
                    (B) unmanned systems;
            (3) collect, store, and analyze covered data during such 
        rotation using such technologies and processes;
            (4) analyze how data generated by the sensors specified in 
        paragraph (2)(A) may contribute to improved lethality, 
        survivability, and situational awareness in multi-domain 
        operations; and
            (5) evaluate the cost, feasibility, and operational 
        benefits of permanently establishing a program for the 
        collection, storage, and analysis of covered data generated 
        during rotations of members of the Armed Forces across combat 
        training centers.
    (d) Briefing.--Not later than 180 days after the completion of the 
pilot program under subsection (a), the Secretary of the Army shall 
provide to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House 
of Representatives a briefing on the activities, findings, and 
recommendations resulting from such pilot program, including the 
following:
            (1) An assessment of the effectiveness and security of 
        incorporating data derived from sensors specified in subsection 
        (c)(2)(A) into training and readiness analyses.
            (2) Recommendations regarding the potential expansion or 
        permanent establishment of a program for the collection, 
        storage, and analysis of covered data generated during 
        rotations of members of the Armed Forces across combat training 
        centers and across the Armed Forces.
    (e) Termination.--Not later than three years after the date of 
enactment of this Act, the pilot program under subsection (a) shall 
terminate.
    (f) Covered Data Defined.--In this section, the term ``covered 
data'' means data relating to the tactical performance and decision-
making of, and training effectiveness for, members of the Armed Forces 
(at the individual, team, and unit levels).

SEC. 360. MINIMUM MARITIME FIREFIGHTING CAPABILITY STANDARDS FOR NAVAL 
              INSTALLATIONS THAT BERTH LARGE NAVAL VESSELS.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of the Navy shall establish minimum 
maritime firefighting capability standards for naval installations that 
berth large naval vessels. Such standards shall include each of the 
following:
            (1) The minimum pumping capacity required to support 
        firefighting operations aboard naval vessels moored at piers or 
        within harbor areas.
            (2) Required response times for waterside firefighting 
        assets.
            (3) The availability of firefighting foam systems and 
        hazardous material response capability suitable for aviation 
        fuel and shipboard fires.
            (4) The integration of waterside firefighting assets with 
        shipboard damage control systems.
            (5) The availability of redundant maritime firefighting 
        capability in the event of simultaneous emergencies.
    (b) Implementation Plan.--Not later than one year after the date of 
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall submit to 
the congressional defense committees a plan to implement the standards 
established under subsection (a) and to improve fire prevention at 
private sector repair yards. Such plan shall include each of the 
following:
            (1) An identification of installations that do not meet the 
        standards, as of the date of the submission of the plan.
            (2) Options for addressing capability gaps, including 
        procurement of fireboats, modernization of existing vessels, or 
        agreements with municipal or port authority fire departments.
            (3) Estimated costs associated with implementing the plan.
            (4) Mechanisms to maximize available resources across 
        organizations responsible for fire safety oversight to better 
        ensure contractor fire safety oversight and alleviate the 
        burden on members of the Navy.
            (5) Options to reassess progress payment retention rate for 
        surface ship maintenance contracts based on an assessment of 
        the risk to the Government.
            (6) Options to reassess the ship repair limitation of 
        liability clause.
            (7) The incorporation of safety performance standards into 
        the Quality Assurance Surveillance Plan of the Secretary.

SEC. 361. MINIMUM STAFFING REQUIREMENTS FOR FIRE APPARATUS AT CERTAIN 
              SPACE FORCE INSTALLATIONS.

    The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that at any Space Force 
installation with launch and landing facilities--
            (1) the minimum staffing requirements for firefighters and 
        the requirements relating to structural and aircraft, rescue, 
        and firefighting apparatus pursuant to section 388 of the 
        National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (Public 
        Law 117-263; 10 U.S.C. 2661 note) and section 1110 of the 
        National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2025 (Public 
        Law 118-159; 10 U.S.C. note prec. 9771) apply on a permanent 
        basis;
            (2) all firefighting structural and aircraft, rescue, and 
        firefighting apparatus are maintained at optimum staffing 
        levels and optimum levels of service at all times; and
            (3) the cross-manning of firefighter personnel is not 
        permitted between a first due structural fire engine response 
        apparatus and an aircraft, rescue, and firefighting apparatus.

SEC. 362. ACTIVITIES FOR EVALUATING INTEGRATION AND INTEROPERABILITY OF 
              TECHNOLOGIES FOR SUBTERRANEAN OPERATIONS.

    (a) Requirement.--The Secretary of Defense, in coordination with 
the Secretary of the Army and the Commander of the United States 
Special Operations Command, shall conduct recurring evaluation 
activities in subterranean environments for the purpose of assessing 
the integration and interoperability of technologies supporting 
operations in such environments, including in conditions involving the 
denial or degradation of the Global Positioning System (GPS) or other 
contested communications conditions.
    (b) Activities.--Activities conducted pursuant to subsection (a) 
shall include the evaluation of technologies supporting sensing, 
mapping, navigation, communications, command and control, and 
situational awareness across multiple operational systems and platforms 
in the denied, degraded, and contested conditions described in 
subsection (a).
    (c) Use of Existing Resources.--In carrying out this section, the 
Secretary of Defense shall use existing facilities, authorities, 
training activities, and amounts appropriated or otherwise available 
for the Department of Defense for such purpose. Nothing in this section 
shall be construed to require the construction of a new facility or the 
establishment of a new program office or standalone training activity.
    (d) Briefing.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall provide to the 
congressional defense committees a briefing describing--
            (1) the activities conducted pursuant to subsection (a);
            (2) any operational integration or interoperability 
        challenge identified in the course of conducting such 
        activities; and
            (3) recommendations for improving the integration and 
        interoperability of technologies supporting subterranean 
        operations in denied, degraded, and contested communications 
        environments, including with respect to potential transition 
        pathways for such technologies.

SEC. 363. IMPROVEMENTS TO OSPREY AIRCRAFT SAFETY EFFORTS.

    (a) In General.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall ensure that the 
Secretary of the Navy and the Secretary of the Air Force, in 
coordination with the Chief of Naval Operations, the Chief of Staff of 
the Air Force, and the Commandant of the Marine Corps--
            (1) refine the joint program's process for identifying, 
        analyzing, and responding to all Osprey aircraft safety risks, 
        including incorporating and prioritizing systems and nonsystem 
        safety risks;
            (2) refine existing oversight structures with clearly 
        defined roles and responsibilities for resolving known system 
        and nonsystem safety risks in a timely manner and conduct 
        periodic reviews of efforts to resolve those risks;
            (3) assess safety-related information sharing agreements 
        and update the agreements as needed to ensure that a process 
        exists to proactively share relevant safety information from 
        hazard and accident reporting with Osprey units and unit safety 
        personnel across the Armed Forces and ensure timely receipt of 
        such information;
            (4) establish a routine method, such as a recurring 
        multiservice conference, to share information on Osprey 
        aircraft knowledge and emergency procedures across the joint 
        force; and
            (5) maintain a method to share information, immediately or 
        near-immediately, on essential Osprey aircraft safety of flight 
        information and changes to safety processes across the joint 
        force.
    (b) Certification to Congress.--Not later than 60 days after the 
requirements under subsection (a) have been implemented, the Secretary 
of the Navy and the Secretary of the Air Force shall each provide to 
the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of 
representatives a certification--
            (1) verifying that the requirements have been implemented; 
        and
            (2) identifying any changes made to comply with such 
        requirements by the Armed Forces under the jurisdiction of the 
        certifying Secretary.

SEC. 364. ARMY PILOT PROGRAM ON ELECTRONIC AMMUNITION SIMULATION FOR 
              SMALL ARMS TRAINING.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary of the Army shall carry out a 
pilot program to evaluate the integration of electronic ammunition 
simulation systems into small arms training across the Army.
    (b) Purposes.--The purposes of the pilot program are to--
            (1) improve individual and collective small arms 
        proficiency through increased training repetitions and enhanced 
        training realism;
            (2) enable safe training with assigned weapon systems in a 
        broad range of environments, including non-range locations, as 
        determined appropriate by the Secretary;
            (3) reduce costs and logistics burdens associated with the 
        procurement, storage, distribution, and disposal of blank 
        ammunition;
            (4) reduce safety risks associated with blank ammunition, 
        including negligent discharges and live-blank ammunition mixing 
        incidents; and
            (5) assess the feasibility and scalability of integrating 
        electronic ammunition simulation systems with training 
        environments of the Armed Forces.
    (c) Administration.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of the Army shall designate 
        the Capability Program Executive for Simulation, Training, 
        Test, and Threat as the lead actor responsible for carrying out 
        the pilot program.
            (2) Oversight.--The Secretary of the Army shall designate a 
        senior official within the Office of the Assistant Secretary of 
        the Army for Acquisition, Logistics, and Technology as the lead 
        actor responsible for providing oversight of the pilot program.
    (d) Selection of Training Environments.--The Secretary of the Army 
shall select not fewer than four training environments with respect to 
which the Secretary shall carry out the pilot program under subsection 
(a), which shall include, at a minimum--
            (1) one Advanced Camp training event, regional training 
        event, or other training event carried out at a Reserve 
        Officers' Training Corps training site;
            (2) one rotation at a combat training center;
            (3) one basic combat training activity; and
            (4) one brigade-level or battalion-level collective 
        training event carried out at an operational military 
        installation.
    (e) Activities.--In carrying out the pilot program, the Secretary 
of the Army shall--
            (1) integrate electronic ammunition simulation systems into 
        training for legacy and next-generation small arms provided 
        through the training environments selected under subsection 
        (d), including in connection with qualification ranges and 
        force-on-force exercises;
            (2) evaluate the interoperability of electronic ammunition 
        simulation systems with legacy and successor systems for 
        simulated engagement, including the Multiple Integrated Laser 
        Engagement System and synthetic training environments;
            (3) assess the integrated training carried out pursuant to 
        paragraph (1) with respect to effectiveness, cost savings, 
        safety improvements, and scalability across training 
        environments of the Armed Forces, including the Reserve 
        Officers' Training Corps of the Armed Forces; and
            (4) develop and validate associated training tactics, 
        procedures, and sustainment requirements for potential 
        expansion of such integrated training.
    (f) Coordination of Efforts.--The pilot program under subsection 
(a) shall supplement, and neither supplant nor duplicate, modernization 
efforts relating to synthetic training environments and other 
activities for the modernization of force-on-force training.
    (g) Briefings.--
            (1) Interim briefing.--Not later than 180 days after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army 
        shall provide to the congressional defense committees an 
        interim briefing on the pilot program under subsection (a) that 
        includes--
                    (A) evaluation metrics for the pilot program;
                    (B) an identification of the training environments 
                selected under subsection (d); and
                    (C) the plan of the Secretary for the integration 
                of activities under the pilot program with respect to 
                such selected training environments.
            (2) Final briefing.--Not later than March 1, 2028, the 
        Secretary of the Army shall provide to the congressional 
        defense committees a final briefing on the pilot program under 
        subsection (a) that includes--
                    (A) the results of the assessment required under 
                subsection (e)(3), including, with respect to cost 
                savings, a comparison between the cost of the 
                integrated training provided pursuant to the pilot 
                program with the cost of training using blank 
                ammunition; and
                    (B) recommendations regarding--
                            (i) the continuation, expansion, or 
                        termination of the pilot program; and
                            (ii) with respect to such potential 
                        continuation or expansion, recommendations for 
                        the transition to acquisition of electronic 
                        ammunition simulation systems.
    (h) Termination.--The authority to carry out the pilot program 
under subsection (a) shall terminate on September 30, 2031.

SEC. 365. PILOT PROGRAM ON HYDROPHOBIN-BASED BIOMANUFACTURED TREATMENT 
              AS FLAME-RESISTANT AND WATER-REPELLENT TREATMENTS FOR 
              MILITARY UNIFORMS.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary of the Army shall establish a 
pilot program, to be carried out through the United States Army Combat 
Capabilities Development Command Soldier Center, to evaluate the 
feasibility, performance, and scalability of hydrophobin-based 
biomanufactured treatments as flame-resistant and water-repellent 
treatments for military textile systems, including as potential 
alternatives to conventional chemical treatments currently used in 
Department of Defense uniforms.
    (b) Selection of Contractors.--In carrying out the pilot program, 
the Secretary shall prioritize partnerships with entities that--
            (1) demonstrate domestic biomanufacturing capability within 
        the United States;
            (2) use advanced biotechnology to produce hydrophobin 
        proteins or related bioderived compounds suitable for textile 
        performance applications; and
            (3) possess the capability to transition successful pilot 
        outcomes into large-scale textile finishing or coating 
        processes supporting Department of Defense procurement.
    (c) Report to Congress.--Not later than three years after the date 
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army shall submit to 
the congressional defense committees a report on the results of the 
pilot program, including recommendations regarding potential 
integration of hydrophobin-based biomanufactured treatments into 
Department of Defense military textile systems.
    (d) Duration.--The authority to carry out a pilot program under 
this section shall terminate four years after the date of the enactment 
of this Act.

              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, 2027, as follows:
            (1) The Army, 469,000.
            (2) The Navy, 356,600.
            (3) The Marine Corps, 173,700.
            (4) The Air Force, 330,400.
            (5) The Space Force, 13,200.

                       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, 2027, as follows:
            (1) The Army National Guard of the United States, 331,300.
            (2) The Army Reserve, 172,000.
            (3) The Navy Reserve, 56,500.
            (4) The Marine Corps Reserve, 34,700.
            (5) The Air National Guard of the United States, 107,400.
            (6) The Air Force Reserve, 67,400.
            (7) The Coast Guard Reserve, 8,500.
    (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, 
2027, 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, 31,154.
            (2) The Army Reserve, 16,511.
            (3) The Navy Reserve, 10,409.
            (4) The Marine Corps Reserve, 2,400.
            (5) The Air National Guard of the United States, 25,533.
            (6) The Air Force Reserve, 6,278.

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

    The minimum number of military technicians (dual status) as of the 
last day of fiscal year 2027 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, 
        21,294.
            (2) For the Army Reserve, 6,258.
            (3) For the Air National Guard of the United States, 
        10,405.
            (4) For the Air Force Reserve, 6,455.

SEC. 414. MAXIMUM NUMBER OF RESERVE PERSONNEL AUTHORIZED TO BE ON 
              ACTIVE DUTY FOR OPERATIONAL SUPPORT.

    During fiscal year 2027, 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: SENIOR ENLISTED MEMBERS ON ACTIVE DUTY 
              OR ON FULL-TIME NATIONAL GUARD DUTY FOR ADMINISTRATION OF 
              THE MARINE CORPS RESERVE.

    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:


1,100.......................................           68            18
1,200.......................................           75            20
1,300.......................................           81            21
1,400.......................................           87            23
1,500.......................................           93            24
1,600.......................................           99            26
1,700.......................................          106            28
1,800.......................................          112            29
1,900.......................................          118            31
2,000.......................................          124            33
2,100.......................................          130            34
2,200.......................................          137            36
2,300.......................................          143            37
2,400.......................................          149            39
2,500.......................................          155            41
2,600.......................................          161            42
2,700.......................................          168            44
2,800.......................................          174            46
2,900.......................................          180            47
3,000.......................................          186         49''.
 

              Subtitle C--Authorization of Appropriations

SEC. 421. MILITARY PERSONNEL.

    (a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby authorized 
to be appropriated for fiscal year 2027 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 the subsection (a) supersedes any other authorization 
of appropriations (definite or indefinite) for such purpose for fiscal 
year 2027.

                   TITLE V--MILITARY PERSONNEL POLICY

      Subtitle A--Officer Policy and Reserve Component Management

SEC. 501. FLEXIBILITY IN REQUIREMENTS OF SELECTION BOARDS: COMPOSITION; 
              CONVENING.

    (a) Consideration of Temporary Appointments of Officers of the 
Department of the Navy Designated for Limited Duty.--Section 612(a)(2) 
of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subparagraph (A), by inserting ``and (C)'' after 
        ``subparagraph (B)''; and
            (2) by inserting a new subparagraph (C):
    ``(C) A selection board need not include an officer from a 
competitive category to be considered by the board when considering 
officers designated for limited duty under section 8146 of this 
title.''.
    (b) Selection of Officers for Continuation on Active Duty.--
            (1) Officers in the grade of o-3 or o-4.--Section 637 of 
        title 10, United States Code, is amended, in subsection 
        (a)(1)--
                    (A) by striking ``he is selected for continuation 
                on active duty by a selection board convened under 
                section 611(b) of this title.'' and inserting an em 
                dash; and
                    (B) by adding at the end the following new 
                subparagraphs:
            ``(A) the officer is selected for continuation on active 
        duty by a selection board convened under section 611(b) of this 
        title; or
            ``(B) the Secretary concerned recommends all officers, whom 
        the Secretary finds to be fully qualified, for continuation on 
        active duty.''
            (2) Regular officers in the grade of o-5 or o-6.--Such 
        section is further amended, in subsection (b)(1)--
                    (A) by striking ``he is selected for continuation 
                on active duty by a selection board convened under 
                section 611(b) of this title.'' and inserting an em 
                dash; and
                    (B) by adding at the end the following new 
                subparagraphs:
            ``(A) the officer is selected for continuation on active 
        duty by a selection board convened under section 611(b) of this 
        title; or
            ``(B) the Secretary concerned recommends all officers, whom 
        the Secretary finds to be fully qualified, for continuation on 
        active duty.''.

SEC. 502. REQUIREMENTS FOR REMOVAL OF CERTAIN GENERAL AND FLAG 
              OFFICERS.

    Chapter 49 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by inserting 
after section 974 the following new section:
``Sec. 975. Notice of removal of certain general and flag officers
    ``Not later than five days after the date on which an officer in a 
grade above O-8 is removed from, transferred from, or relieved of duty 
in, a position designated under section 601(a) of this title or by law 
to carry such grade, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of 
Representatives a report in writing that describes the performance 
concerns, actions, or inactions of that officer that are cause for such 
removal, transfer, or relief of duty.''.

SEC. 503. RANKS OF JUDGE ADVOCATES GENERAL.

    (a) Army.--Section 7037(a) of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following: ``The Judge Advocate 
General, while so serving, has the grade of lieutenant general. An 
officer appointed as Deputy Judge Advocate General who holds a lower 
regular grade shall be appointed in the regular grade of major 
general.''.
    (b) Marine Corps.--Section 8046(a) of title 10, United States Code, 
is amended by adding at the end the following: ``If the officer to be 
appointed as the Staff Judge Advocate to the Commandant of the Marine 
Corps holds a grade lower than the grade of lieutenant general 
immediately before the appointment, the officer shall be appointed in 
the grade of lieutenant general.''.
    (d) Navy.--
            (1) The judge advocate general.--Section 8088(b) of title 
        10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the 
        following: ``The Judge Advocate General, while so serving, has 
        the grade of vice admiral or lieutenant general, as 
        appropriate.''.
            (2) The deputy judge advocate general.--Section 8089(a)(1) 
        of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the 
        end the following: ``If an officer appointed as the Deputy 
        Judge Advocate General holds a lower regular grade, the officer 
        shall be appointed in the regular grade of rear admiral or 
        major general, as appropriate.''.
    (f) Air Force.--
            (1) The judge advocate general.--Section 9037(a) of title 
        10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the 
        following: ``The Judge Advocate General, while so serving, has 
        the grade of lieutenant general.''.
            (2) The deputy judge advocate general.--Section 9037(d)(1) 
        of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the 
        end the following: ``An officer appointed as Deputy Judge 
        Advocate General who holds a lower regular grade shall be 
        appointed in the regular grade of major general.''.

SEC. 504. GRADES OF CERTAIN CHIEFS OF RESERVE COMPONENTS.

    (a) In General.--
            (1) Chief of army reserve.--Section 7038(b) of title 10, 
        United States Code, is amended by striking paragraph (4) and 
        inserting the following new paragraph:
    ``(4) The Chief of Army Reserve, while so serving, holds the grade 
of lieutenant general.''.
            (2) Chief of navy reserve.--Section 8083(b) of such title 
        is amended by striking paragraph (4) and inserting the 
        following new paragraph:
    ``(4) The Chief of Navy Reserve, while so serving, holds the grade 
of vice admiral. ''.
            (3) Commander, marine forces reserve.--Section 8084(b) of 
        such title is amended by striking paragraph (4) and inserting 
        the following new paragraph:
    ``(4) The Commander, Marine Forces Reserve, while so serving, holds 
the grade of lieutenant general. ''.
            (4) Chief of air force reserve.--Section 9038(b) of such 
        title is amended by striking paragraph (4) and inserting the 
        following new paragraph:
    ``(4) The Chief of Air Force Reserve, while so serving, holds the 
grade of lieutenant general.''.
    (b) Effective Date.--The amendments made by subsection (a) shall 
take effect on the day that is one year after the date of the enactment 
of this Act and shall apply to appointments made on or after such day.

SEC. 505. GRADE OF CHIEF OF THE VETERINARY CORPS OF THE ARMY.

    Section 7084 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``The Chief'' and inserting ``(a) 
        Appointment.--The Chief''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(b) Grade.--The Chief of the Veterinary Corps of the Army, while 
so serving, holds the grade of brigadier general.''.

SEC. 506. LIMITATION ON THE TRANSFER TO THE SPACE FORCE OF CERTAIN 
              FUNCTIONS OF THE AIR NATIONAL GUARD.

    Section 514 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2025 (Public Law 118-159; 10 U.S.C. 20001 note) is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsection (k) as subsection (l); and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (j) the following new 
        subsection (k):
    ``(k) Rules of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to--
            ``(1) authorize the transfer of a member of the Air 
        National Guard of the United States more than once under 
        subsection (c); or
            ``(2) establish a waiver of the applicability of any 
        provision of section 104 of title 32, United States Code, or of 
        section 18238 of title 10, United States Code.''.

SEC. 507. INCLUSION OF JUDGE ADVOCATES IN GLOBAL FORCE MANAGEMENT 
              PROCESSES.

    Not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, 
the Secretary of Defense shall ensure that Global Force Management 
plans and processes--
            (1) specifically address the assignment and allocation of 
        active duty and reserve judge advocates; and
            (2) convey information on the staffing availability of 
        judge advocates in a manner that enables combatant commanders 
        to readily determine the number of judge advocates who are 
        available for permanent assignment to the combatant commands in 
        the event of an armed conflict.

SEC. 508. ROLE OF MILITARY CHAPLAINS.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall ensure--
            (1) a covered military chaplain is able to provide pastoral 
        counseling, including emotional, moral, or behavioral 
        assistance counseling;
            (2) a covered military chaplain is able to provide pastoral 
        counseling with respect to matters not strictly related to 
        spiritual counseling; and
            (3) that privileged communications between covered military 
        chaplains and members of the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine 
        Corps, or Space Force are protected.
    (b) Covered Military Chaplain Defined.--In this section, the term 
``covered military chaplain'' means a chaplain in the Army, Navy, Air 
Force, Marine Corps, or Space Force.

Subtitle B--Recruitment, General Service Authorities and Prohibitions, 
                          and Military Records

SEC. 511. RECRUITMENT: IMPROVEMENTS RELATING TO SECONDARY SCHOOLS.

    Section 503(c)(1)(A) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in clause (ii), by striking ``; and'' and inserting a 
        semicolon;
            (2) in clause (iii)--
                    (A) by inserting ``academic grades, sexes,'' after 
                ``student names,''; and
                    (B) by striking the period at the end and inserting 
                ``; and''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new clause:
            ``(iv) in addition to the requirement under clause (ii), 
        shall, upon the request of a military recruiter for the purpose 
        described in clause (i), provide at least four visits to each 
        secondary school across each academic year, between classes, 
        when students are physically present, and in a manner that does 
        not interfere with class attendance and, after reasonable 
        notice, in meeting spaces (including auditoriums), at athletic 
        functions, and at other group or social activities.''.

SEC. 512. PROHIBITION ON REDUCTION IN PERSONNEL ASSIGNED TO DUTY WITH A 
              SERVICE REVIEW AGENCY; REPORT ON REVIEWS OF CERTAIN 
              DISCHARGES RELATED TO PTSD.

    (a) Prohibition on Reduction in Personnel Assigned to Duty With a 
Service Review Agency.--Section 1559(a) of title 10, United States 
Code, is amended by striking ``Before December 31, 2025'' and inserting 
``During the period beginning on the date of the enactment of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2027 and ending on 
December 31, 2030''.
    (b) Report on Time Required for a Board to Consider a Review of a 
Discharge or Dismissal From the Armed Forces Based on Matters Relating 
to Post-traumatic Stress Disorder or Traumatic Brain Injury.--
            (1) Report required.--
                    (A) 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 Personnel and Readiness, in coordination with the 
                Secretaries of the military departments, shall submit 
                to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and 
                House of Representatives a report regarding the periods 
                required for a board established under section 1552 or 
                1553 of title 10, United States Code, to make a 
                determination in a case involving liberal 
                consideration.
                    (B) Elements.--The report shall include the 
                following:
                            (i) An analysis of the time such periods, 
                        disaggregated by military department.
                            (ii) An explanation of the differences 
                        between such periods, disaggregated by military 
                        department.
                            (iii) The number of personnel assigned to 
                        review, process, and consider such cases.
                            (iv) Recommendations of the Secretary of 
                        Defense to expedite the consideration of such 
                        cases.
                    (C) Form.--The report shall be submitted in 
                unclassified form.
                    (D) Publication.--The executive summary of the 
                report shall be published on a publicly accessible 
                website of the Department of Defense.
            (2) Briefing.--Not later than 30 days after submitting the 
        report, the Secretary of Defense shall provide to the 
        Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and House of 
        Representatives a briefing on the findings, conclusions, and 
        recommendations of such report.
            (3) Liberal consideration defined.--In this section, the 
        term ``liberal consideration'' is used as such term is used in 
        section 1552(h) and 1553(d) of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 513. SELECTIVE SERVICE SYSTEM: OMISSION OF DECEASED PERSONS FROM 
              REGISTRATION.

    (a) In General.--Section 3 of the Military Selective Service Act 
(50 U.S.C. 3802), as amended by section 535 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60), is further 
amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(c) In carrying out subsection (a), the Director shall not 
register a person whose name appears in the Death Master File (as such 
term is defined in section 203 of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 
(Public Law 113-167; 42 U.S.C. 1306c)).''.
    (b) Effective Date.--The amendment made by this section shall take 
effect as if included in the enactment of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026.

SEC. 514. REQUIREMENT OF EQUAL OPPORTUNITY, RACIAL NEUTRALITY, AND 
              EXCLUSIVE USE OF MERIT IN MILITARY PERSONNEL ACTIONS.

    (a) Merit Requirement.--Any Department of Defense military 
personnel action related to accessions, promotions, nominative 
assignments, command selection, and military and civil schooling 
selection and training shall be based exclusively on individual merit, 
fitness, capability, and performance.
    (b) Consideration of Race Prohibited.--Consideration of an 
individual's race, ethnicity, or national origin in any military 
personnel action is prohibited throughout the Department of Defense.
    (c) Limited Exception for Tasking of Specific Missions.--
            (1) In general.--This section shall not be construed to 
        prohibit tasking for specific, unconventional missions in 
        foreign countries, where the anticipated ground operating 
        environment of indigenous populations may justify consideration 
        of race, ethnicity, or national origin when tasking for the 
        mission to optimize mission success.
            (2) Combatant commander approval required.--Any tasking 
        pursuant to the exception described in paragraph (1) shall 
        require the approval of the combatant commander concerned.
            (3) Reporting requirement.--Not later than 60 days after a 
        tasking pursuant to the exception described in paragraph (1), 
        the Secretary of Defense shall report the tasking to the 
        Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of 
        Representatives. The report shall describe--
                    (A) the mission, including location and duration;
                    (B) the staffing of the mission;
                    (C) the demographic factors warranting the tasking;
                    (D) the number of personnel involved, including 
                their rank, position, and race, ethnicity, and national 
                origin; and
                    (E) the rationale for the tasking.

SEC. 515. PROHIBITION OF HATE SYMBOLS: REGULATIONS; GUIDANCE; TRAINING.

    (a) Prohibition.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall prescribe in 
regulations--
            (1) a policy of the Department of Defense that prohibits 
        the display, possession for display, or use of a hate symbol in 
        the workplace or in connection with official duties, including 
        on the body, uniform, civilian work attire, personal equipment, 
        government property, or digital work platforms, including 
        through a tattoo, brand, insignia, patch, apparel, or 
        electronic imagery;
            (2) standards for identifying and addressing prohibited 
        hate symbols; and
            (3) procedures to review a determination under such policy, 
        order the removal of a symbol determined to be a hate symbol, 
        or other remediation consistent with applicable law.
    (b) Exception.--The policy under subsection (a) shall not prohibit 
the good-faith display or use of a symbol for a legitimate religious, 
educational, intelligence, law enforcement, or investigative purpose. 
To determine whether such display or use is subject to an exception 
under this subsection, the Secretary shall consider--
            (1) the historical and cultural meaning of the symbol;
            (2) the manner, context, and location in which the symbol 
        is displayed;
            (3) whether the symbol is associated with an extremist 
        organization or ideology;
            (4) whether the display would reasonably be interpreted as 
        communicating support for hatred, discrimination, or violent 
        extremism;
            (5) applicable constitutional and statutory law; and
            (6) religious accommodations.
    (c) Guidance.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall--
            (1) issue guidance and reference materials, developed in 
        consultation with subject matter experts, to assist commanding 
        officers, supervisors, human resources personnel, and 
        investigators, regarding the identification of hate symbols; 
        and
            (2) review, in consultation with civil rights experts and 
        organizations with recognized expertise in hate and extremist 
        symbols, and update such guidance not less than once every 36 
        months after such issuance.
    (d) Training.--The Secretary shall incorporate instruction on the 
policy and guidance under this section into existing training programs 
for members of the covered Armed Forces and civilian employees of the 
Department of Defense.
    (e) Certification.--Not later than 180 days after the Secretary 
prescribes regulations under subsection (a), the Secretary of a 
military department or head of a Defense agency shall certify to the 
Secretary of Defense whether their subordinate members of the covered 
Armed Forces or civilian employees subordinate have implemented the 
regulations. guidance, and training under this section.
    (f) Briefing.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and House of Representatives 
a briefing detailing the implementation of this section.
    (g) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``hate symbol'' means any symbol, image, 
        insignia, emblem, tattoo, sign, coded designation, or other 
        visual representation that, in context, would be reasonably 
        understood to promote violence or unlawful discrimination 
        against a person or group based on a protected identity 
        characteristic.
            (2) The term ``covered Armed Force'' means the Army, Navy, 
        Marine Corps, Air Force, or Space Force.

SEC. 516. TIMELY RESOLUTION OF CAREER-IMPACTING ADMINISTRATIVE 
              INVESTIGATIONS.

    (a) Policy Required.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall prescribe a 
policy applicable to covered administrative investigations. Such policy 
shall include--
            (1) standard timelines for initiation, investigation, legal 
        review, command action, and final disposition of covered 
        administrative investigations;
            (2) a requirement that an extension of a standard timeline 
        described in paragraph (1) be approved by an appropriate 
        official in writing that includes an explanation of the reasons 
        for the extension, an identification of the investigative steps 
        remaining, and an expected date of completion of those steps;
            (3) a requirement that any covered administrative 
        investigation of a member of the Armed Forces that includes the 
        suspension of a favorable personnel action for such member 
        during the period of investigation--
                    (A) that is open for 90 days or more may only 
                continue if the investigation is approved by the first 
                general officer, flag officer, or member of the Senior 
                Executive Service in the chain of command of the member 
                of the Armed Forces that is the subject of such 
                investigation; and
                    (B) is reviewed not less than once every 30 days 
                during the period of investigation to determine whether 
                such suspension is necessary and narrowly tailored to 
                address the particular concern being investigated;
            (4) a requirement that prior to initiation of a covered 
        administrative investigation, or continuation of a closed 
        covered administrative investigation, based substantially on 
        allegations occurring outside of an applicable reporting 
        period, the investigating authority make a determination in 
        writing as to--
                    (A) the reason for the delay in reporting such 
                allegations;
                    (B) the availability and reliability of witnesses;
                    (C) the availability of documentary or electronic 
                evidence;
                    (D) whether a complete and fair inquiry can be 
                conducted; and
                    (E) whether an alternative to an investigation is 
                more appropriate;
            (5) a requirement that a member who is the subject of a 
        covered administrative investigation be given reasonable 
        opportunity to provide evidence and identify witnesses;
            (6) a requirement that a member who is the subject of a 
        covered administrative investigation be given written notice of 
        proposed actions, findings, recommendations, and supporting 
        evidence prior to a final adverse administrative action;
            (7) a requirement that investigators assigned to a covered 
        administrative investigation be screened for potential 
        conflicts of interest prior to being so assigned;
            (8) a requirement that a member who is the subject a 
        covered administrative investigation be given an opportunity to 
        request relief from a suspension of a favorable personnel 
        action for purposes of a permanent change of station, 
        reassignment, military schooling, retirement, or other 
        personnel action when no derogatory finding has been made 
        within the standard timelines required by paragraph (1); and
            (9) a requirement that the Secretaries of the military 
        departments regularly review policy and practices with respect 
        to covered administrative investigations to ensure such 
        investigations comply with the requirements of this section and 
        other applicable laws and policies.
    (b) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report on the implementation of the 
policy required by subsection (a), including--
            (1) the number of covered administrative investigations 
        initiated during the preceding fiscal year;
            (2) the number of such investigations exceeding 30, 60, 90, 
        and 180 days in length;
            (3) the number of such investigations that included a 
        suspension of favorable personnel action during the period of 
        the investigation;
            (4) the number of such investigations that resulted in a 
        delay of a permanent change of station, reassignment, military 
        schooling, retirement, or other personnel action;
            (5) the number of such investigations resulting in 
        substantiated, partially substantiated, unsubstantiated, or 
        dismissed findings;
            (6) the average and median duration of covered 
        administrative investigations by military department;
            (7) the number of such investigations based substantially 
        on allegations reported outside an applicable regulatory 
        reporting period;
            (8) the number of covered administrative investigations 
        reviewed for consistency with this section and other applicable 
        laws and policies; and
            (9) recommendations for legislative or administrative 
        action.
    (c) Covered Administrative Investigation Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``covered administrative investigation'' means any non-
criminal inquiry or investigation that results in or is reasonably like 
to result in--
            (1) suspension of a favorable personnel action during the 
        period of investigation or as a result of the investigation;
            (2) delay or denial of permanent change of station, 
        reassignment, military schooling, retirement, or other 
        personnel action;
            (3) adverse administrative action;
            (4) filing of adverse information in the personnel file of 
        the member; or
            (5) other material career impact, as determined by the 
        Secretary concerned.

SEC. 517. PROHIBITION ON USE OF PREDICTION MARKETS BY PERSONNEL OF THE 
              DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.

    (a) Regulations Required.--Not later than 180 days after the date 
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in consultation 
with the Secretaries of the military departments, shall issue 
regulations prohibiting members of the covered Armed Forces and 
civilian employees of the Department of Defense from entering into 
transactions on prediction markets in cases in which the member or 
employee--
            (1) at the time of the transaction, possesses material 
        nonpublic information relevant to such transaction; or
            (2) may reasonably obtain such material nonpublic 
        information in the course of performing official duties, 
        including when such information would not otherwise be 
        available to a member of the public exercising reasonable 
        diligence.
    (b) Enforcement.--The regulations under subsection (a) shall 
specify a range of punishments for the use of prediction markets in 
violation of the regulations.
    (c) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered Armed Forces'' means the Army, Navy, 
        Air Force, Marine Corps, and Space Force.
            (2) Term ``material nonpublic information'' means 
        information--
                    (A) that a reasonable investor would consider 
                important in making an investment decision; and
                    (B) that is not publicly available.

SEC. 518. PILOT PROGRAM ON MODERNIZATION OF DRUG TESTING USING VOICE-
              BASED RISK ASSESSMENT.

    (a) Pilot Program.--The Secretary of Defense may carry out a pilot 
program to evaluate the use of automated, voice-based risk assessment 
technology to support targeted drug testing of members of the Armed 
Forces to determine if such technology can improve the efficiency, 
cost-effectiveness, and operational readiness of the drug testing 
programs of the Department of Defense by enabling risk-informed testing 
in place of universal urinalysis.
    (b) Elements.--If the Secretary of Defense carries out the pilot 
program under subsection (a), such pilot program shall--
            (1) make use of automated, voice-based risk assessment 
        technology;
            (2) be executed as part of the Drug Demand Reduction 
        Program of the Department of Defense;
            (3) be conducted consistent with the goals of the drug 
        testing program, including deterrence and to assess the 
        security, military fitness, readiness, good order, and 
        discipline of commands;
            (4) be conducted in a manner that allows the results to be 
        used for punitive or other appropriate actions; and
            (5) be conducted in a manner that protects individual 
        privacy and complies with applicable law and Department policy.
    (c) Report.--If the Secretary of Defense carries out the pilot 
program under subsection (a), not later than one year after the date on 
which the Secretary of Defense establishes such pilot, the Secretary 
shall submit to the congressional defense committees an assessment of 
such pilot program, including the impact of the use of automated, 
voice-based risk assessment technology as described in subsection (a) 
on testing volume, cost savings, personnel time, and operational 
readiness.
    (d) Termination.--If the Secretary of Defense carries out the pilot 
program under subsection (a), such pilot program shall terminate on the 
date that is three years after the date on which such pilot program is 
established.

SEC. 519. SOLDIER DIGITAL LIFECYCLE MODERNIZATION INITIATIVE.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of the Army shall carry out a pilot 
program to design, develop, and implement an initiative to be known as 
the ``Soldier Digital Lifecycle Modernization Initiative'' to provide 
members of the Army, prospective recruits to the Army, and veterans of 
the Army with a secure, digital experience through the lifecycle of a 
member of the Army, including during recruitment and after separation.
    (b) Elements.--The pilot program under subsection (a) shall--
            (1) be carried out consistent with Executive Order 14338 
        (90 Fed. Reg. 163, relating to Improving Our Nation Through 
        Better Design) and Office of Management and Budget Memorandum 
        M-23-22 relating to Delivering a Digital-First Public 
        Experience or any successor Executive order or Office of 
        Management and Budget memorandum;
            (2) make use of existing digital infrastructure and systems 
        of the Army;
            (3) include establishment a secure digital identity record 
        enabling continuity of data from recruitment into the Army 
        through separation and transition to being a veteran;
            (4) include development of a unified experience platform 
        for members of the Army that provides integrated, role-based, 
        and personalized digital services;
            (5) include modernization of routine administrative 
        workflows to reduce manual processing and data reentry;
            (6) include deployment of analytics and decision-support 
        tools to inform readiness and retention decisions; and
            (7) include enhancement of digital transition pathways to 
        support separation from the Armed Forces and continued 
        engagement with veterans.
    (c) Commercial Best Practices.--In carrying out the pilot program 
required by subsection (a), the Secretary shall, to the maximum extent 
practicable and cost-effective, make use of commercially available 
technologies, modular architectures, and open standards to accelerate 
delivery and improve user experience.
    (d) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report describing--
            (1) the implementation plan for the initiative;
            (2) key design and integration milestones;
            (3) estimated costs by fiscal year;
            (4) performance metrics to measure improvements in user 
        experience, administrative burden reduction, retention 
        indicators, and transition outcomes; and
            (5) any additional authorities the Secretary determines are 
        required.
    (e) Termination.--The pilot program required by subsection (a) 
shall terminate on the date that is three years after the date of the 
establishment of such pilot program.

SEC. 519A. AUTHORITY TO STUDY THE PROPENSITY OF CERTAIN STUDENTS TO 
              SERVE IN THE ARMED FORCES.

    (a) Study.--
            (1) Agreement.--The Secretary of Defense shall seek to 
        enter into an agreement--
                    (A) with an entity described in paragraph (2) 
                pursuant to which such entity shall conduct a 
                comprehensive study on the propensity to serve of 
                military-connected students; and
                    (B) not later than year after the date of the 
                enactment of this Act.
            (2) Eligible entity.--An entity described in this paragraph 
        is a national nonprofit organization that--
                    (A) focuses on the educational environment of 
                military-connected youth;
                    (B) is a partner to an institution of higher 
                education; and
                    (C) has demonstrated expertise in research, mixed-
                methods methodology, or adolescent development.
            (3) Scope.--Such study shall--
                    (A) examine the relationship between family 
                military tradition and legacy, including generational 
                service, parental attitudes toward service in the Armed 
                Forces, and household military culture, and a student's 
                propensity to serve in the Armed Forces;
                    (B) assess the relationship between academic 
                environmental factors (including participation in 
                JROTC, access to military-affiliated mentors and 
                counselors, and type of school) and the propensity to 
                serve;
                    (C) evaluate the role of peer support programming 
                in shaping plans after secondary school among military-
                connected students;
                    (D) catalog factors that enhance or detract from 
                the propensity to serve identified by military-
                connected students, their parents or guardians, and 
                school personnel; and
                    (E) aggregate findings by subgroup, including by 
                grade level, gender, race, ethnicity, geographic 
                region, and school type.
            (4) Methodology.--Study shall be conducted--
                    (A) using mixed methods, including--
                            (i) a quantitative survey administered to a 
                        nationally representative sample of not fewer 
                        than 1,500 military-connected students, using a 
                        purpose-built and validated instrument 
                        measuring the propensity to serve, family 
                        military legacy, JROTC participation, and 
                        school environment; and
                            (ii) semi-structured qualitative interviews 
                        with not fewer than 60 participants, including 
                        military-connected students, their parents or 
                        guardians, JROTC instructors, school 
                        counselors, school liaison officers, and 
                        program coordinators; and
                    (B) in accordance with--
                            (i) the Federal Policy for the Protection 
                        of Human Subjects (part 46 of title 45, Code of 
                        Federal Regulations including provisions 
                        applicable to research involving minors;
                            (ii) the Family Educational Rights and 
                        Privacy Act (Public Law 93-380; 20 U.S.C. 
                        1232g); and
                            (iii) applicable guidance of the Department 
                        of Defense governing the conduct of research on 
                        human subjects.
            (5) Optional participation.--Participation in the study 
        shall be voluntary. A military-connected student who is under 
        18 years of age may not participate without the informed 
        written consent of a parent or legal guardian.
    (b) Reports.--
            (1) Interim report.--Not later than one year after the date 
        of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the 
        Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of 
        Representatives an interim report on such a study, including--
                    (A) whether the Secretary has entered into an 
                agreement under subsection (a);
                    (B) whether such study has begun; and
                    (C) any preliminary findings available at the time 
                of the report.
            (2) Final report.--Not later than two years after the 
        Secretary enters into an agreement under subsection (a), the 
        Secretary shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services of 
        the Senate and the House of Representatives a final report on 
        the results of the study. Such a final report shall include--
                    (A) a detailed description of the study 
                methodology, sample characteristics, and data 
                collection procedures;
                    (B) the quantitative findings, including 
                statistical analyses of the relationship between family 
                military legacy, school environment, JROTC 
                participation, peer-to-peer program participation, and 
                the propensity to serve;
                    (C) the qualitative findings, including key themes 
                derived from interviews with military-connected 
                students, their parents or guardians, and school 
                personnel;
                    (D) an integrated analysis of quantitative and 
                qualitative findings;
                    (E) findings disaggregated by grade level, gender, 
                race, ethnicity, geographic region, and school type;
                    (F) recommendations for the Secretary regarding 
                military recruitment strategy, development of JROTC 
                programs, and support services for military-connected 
                students; and
                    (G) recommendations to Congress regarding 
                legislative action based on such findings.
            (3) Form.--The reports required under this subsection shall 
        be submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified 
        annex if the Secretary determines such annex is necessary.
    (c) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``military-connected student'' means a 
        secondary school student--
                    (A) enrolled in grade 11 or 12; and
                    (B) who has at least one parent or guardian who is 
                currently serving, or who previously served, in the 
                Armed Forces.
            (2) The term ``propensity to serve'' means a student's 
        self-reported likelihood of joining the Armed Forces after 
        graduation from secondary school.
            (3) The term ``JROTC'' means the Junior Reserve Officers 
        Training Corps program authorized under chapter 102 of title 
        10, United States Code.

                      Subtitle C--Member Training

SEC. 521. INELIGIBILITY OF A NATIONAL OF A NON-ALLIED FOREIGN NATION TO 
              ATTEND A SERVICE ACADEMY.

    Section 347 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) Ineligibility of Foreign Nationals From Certain Countries.--
(1) A person who is a foreign national of a covered nation may not 
receive instruction at or otherwise attend a Service Academy pursuant 
to this section.
    ``(2) In this subsection, the term `covered nation' has the meaning 
given such term in section 4872 of this title.''.

SEC. 522. SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ENGINEERING, AND MATHEMATICS PROGRAM FOR 
              JUNIOR RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 102 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 2037. Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics program
    ``(a) Program.--The Secretary of Defense shall develop and 
implement a program to assist units of the Junior Reserve Officers' 
Training Corps in providing participants opportunities in STEM fields.
    ``(b) Elements.--The program required by subsection (a) shall 
include--
            ``(1) the provision of guidance and best practices for 
        identifying, evaluating, formalizing, and managing partnerships 
        with local educational agencies, community colleges and trade 
        schools, institutions of higher education, private-sector 
        entities (including non-profit organizations) with expertise in 
        STEM field programming and career and technical education, the 
        defense industrial base, and any other entities with capacity 
        and capability to support learning and development in STEM 
        fields;
            ``(2) the provision of templates for agreements to 
        facilitate the establishment of such partnerships;
            ``(3) the establishment of a national directory of 
        prospective partners for opportunities in STEM fields; and
            ``(4) the establishment of a directory of opportunities in 
        STEM fields for participants in the Junior Reserve Officers' 
        Training Corps.
    ``(c) Continuation of Effective Programs.--In carrying out this 
section, the Secretary of Defense shall continue and maintain any 
Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps STEM field program that existed 
before the enactment of this section if such program demonstrates 
satisfactory participation and learning outcomes.
    ``(d) STEM Field Defined.--In this section, the term `STEM field' 
means the fields of science, technology, engineering, or 
mathematics.''.
    (b) Briefing.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall provide to the 
Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the 
Senate a briefing on the development, implementation, and initial 
outcomes of the program required by section 2037 of title 10, United 
States Code, as added by subsection (a).

SEC. 523. ADDITIONAL NOMINEES TO THE SERVICE ACADEMIES FROM THE 
              COMMONWEALTH OF THE NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS.

    (a) United States Military Academy.--Section 7442 of title 10 is 
amended, in subsection (a)(10), by striking ``Three'' and inserting 
``Four''.
    (b) United States Naval Academy.--Section 8454 of title 10, United 
States Code is amended, in subsection (a)(10), by striking ``Three'' 
and inserting ``Four''.
    (c) United States Air Force Academy.--Section 9442 of title 10, 
United States Code is amended, in subsection (a)(10), by striking 
``Three'' and inserting ``Four''.

SEC. 524. ELIMINATION OF CAP ON THE NUMBER OF CADETS OR MIDSHIPMEN WHO 
              MAY RECEIVE ALTERNATIVE SERVICE OBLIGATIONS TO BECOME 
              PROFESSIONAL ATHLETES.

    (a) United States Military Academy.--Section 7448(b)(4) of title 
10, United States Code, is amended by striking ``not more than five 
cadets, who obtain'' and inserting ``a cadet who obtains''.
    (b) United States Naval Academy.--Section 8459(b)(4) of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended by striking ``not more than five 
midshipmen, who obtain'' and inserting ``a midshipman who obtains''.
    (c) United States Air Force Academy.--Section 9448(b)(4) of title 
10, United States Code, is amended by striking ``not more than five 
cadets, who obtain'' and inserting ``a cadet who obtains''.

SEC. 525. ELIMINATION OF THE RIGHT OF CADETS TO AUTOMATIC 
              REEXAMINATION.

    (a) United States Military Academy.--Section 7451 of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in the heading, by inserting ``failure of an 
        examination;'' before ``effect'';
            (2) in subsection (a), by striking ``studies and 
        recommended'' and inserting ``studies, or who fails to pass a 
        required examination, and is recommended'';
            (3) by striking subsection (b); and
            (4) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (b).
    (b) United States Air Force Academy.--Section 9451 of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in the heading, by inserting ``failure of an 
        examination;'' before ``effect'';
            (2) in subsection (a), by striking ``studies and 
        recommended'' and inserting ``studies, or who fails to pass a 
        required examination, and is recommended'';
            (3) by striking subsection (b); and
            (4) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (b).
    (c) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section shall 
apply to the first academic year beginning after the date of the 
enactment of this Act.

SEC. 526. CONGRESSIONAL COMMUNICATIONS OFFICIALS OF THE SERVICE 
              ACADEMIES.

    (a) United States Military Academy.--Chapter 753 of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended by inserting after section 7455 the 
following new section:
``Sec. 7455a. Congressional communications official
    ``(a) Appointment.--The Secretary of Defense, in coordination with 
the Secretary of the Army, shall appoint a civilian employee of the 
Department of the Army to serve as the congressional communications 
official of the Board of Visitors under section 7455 of this title.
    ``(b) Duties.--(1) The congressional communications official shall 
communicate directly with a Member of Congress, congressional defense 
committee, or covered congressional employee regarding the activities 
of such Board of Visitors.
    ``(2) The Secretary of Defense may not require the congressional 
communications official to obtain approval, clearance, or review of a 
communication under paragraph (1) before submitting such communication 
to a Member of Congress, congressional defense committee, or covered 
congressional employee.
    ``(c) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `covered congressional employee' means an 
        employee of a Member of Congress, or of a congressional defense 
        committee, without regard to--
                    ``(A) whether such employee serves on a full-time 
                or part-time basis; or
                    ``(B) where such employee so serves.
            ``(2) The term `Member of Congress' has the meaning given 
        such term in section 1563 of this title.''.
    (b) United States Naval Academy.--Chapter 853 of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended by inserting after section 8468 the following 
new section:
``Sec. 8468a. Congressional communications official
    ``(a) Appointment.--The Secretary of Defense, in coordination with 
the Secretary of the Navy, shall appoint a civilian employee of the 
Department of the Navy to serve as the congressional communications 
official of the Board of Visitors under section 7455 of this title.
    ``(b) Duties.--(1) The congressional communications official shall 
communicate directly with a Member of Congress, congressional defense 
committee, or covered congressional employee regarding the activities 
of such Board of Visitors.
    ``(2) The Secretary of Defense may not require the congressional 
communications official to obtain approval, clearance, or review of a 
communication under paragraph (1) before submitting such communication 
to a Member of Congress, congressional defense committee, or covered 
congressional employee.
    ``(c) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `covered congressional employee' means an 
        employee of a Member of Congress, or of a congressional defense 
        committee, without regard to--
                    ``(A) whether such employee serves on a full-time 
                or part-time basis; or
                    ``(B) where such employee so serves.
            ``(2) The term `Member of Congress' has the meaning given 
        such term in section 1563 of this title.''.
    (c) United States Air Force Academy.--Chapter 953 of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended by inserting after section 9455 the 
following new section:
``Sec. 9455a. Congressional communications official
    ``(a) Appointment.--The Secretary of Defense, in coordination with 
the Secretary of the Air Force, shall appoint a civilian employee of 
the Department of the Air Force to serve as the congressional 
communications official of the Board of Visitors under section 9455 of 
this title.
    ``(b) Duties.--(1) The congressional communications official shall 
communicate directly with a Member of Congress, congressional defense 
committee, or covered congressional employee regarding the activities 
of such Board of Visitors.
    ``(2) The Secretary of Defense may not require the congressional 
communications official to obtain approval, clearance, or review of a 
communication under paragraph (1) before submitting such communication 
to a Member of Congress, congressional defense committee, or covered 
congressional employee.
    ``(c) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `covered congressional employee' means an 
        employee of a Member of Congress, or of a congressional defense 
        committee, without regard to--
                    ``(A) whether such employee serves on a full-time 
                or part-time basis; or
                    ``(B) where such employee so serves.
            ``(2) The term `Member of Congress' has the meaning given 
        such term in section 1563 of this title.''.

SEC. 527. REVISION TO DECISION TIMEFRAME FOR EXPEDITED TRANSFERS AT THE 
              MILITARY SERVICE ACADEMIES.

    (a) United States Military Academy.--Section 7461(e) of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended by striking ``72 hours'' each place it 
appears and inserting ``five days''.
    (b) United States Naval Academy.--Section 8480(e) of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended by striking ``72 hours'' each place it 
appears and inserting ``five days''.
    (c) United States Air Force Academy.--Section 9461(e) of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended by striking ``72 hours'' each place it 
appears and inserting ``five days''.

SEC. 528. JUNIOR RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS INSTRUCTOR PAY.

    (a) Non-foreign Area COLA.--Not later than July 1, 2027, the 
Secretary of Defense shall revise the Junior Reserve Officers' Training 
Corps Standardized Instructor Pay Scale to increase the otherwise 
applicable minimum instructor pay for instructors located outside of 
the continental United States or in Alaska by the amount of the non-
foreign area cost-of-living allowance rate pursuant to section 5941 of 
title 5, United States Code, or the post allowance rate pursuant to 
section 5924 of title 5, United States Code, as appropriate for the 
area in which the instructor is located and as would be applicable if 
the instructor were an employee eligible for such allowance.
    (b) Report.--Not later than April 1, 2027, the Secretary of Defense 
shall complete an analysis of the impact of the Junior Reserve 
Officers' Training Corps Standardized Instructor Pay Scale on 
recruitment and retention of Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps 
instructors and submit to the congressional defense committees a report 
containing such analysis. Such report shall include--
            (1) the total number of authorized Junior Reserve Officers' 
        Training Corps instructor positions, disaggregated by Armed 
        Force, as of--
                    (A) January 31, 2027;
                    (B) January 31, 2026; and
                    (C) January 31, 2025;
            (2) the total number of such instructor positions, 
        disaggregated by Armed Force, that were vacant as of each of 
        the dates specified in paragraph (1);
            (3) a description of the efforts of the Department of 
        Defense to fill such instructor positions; and
            (4) any recommendations of the Secretary to address issues 
        identified in such analysis.

SEC. 529. ESTABLISHMENT OF PROGRAM TO PROMOTE PARTICIPATION OF FOREIGN 
              STUDENTS IN THE SENIOR RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS.

    (a) Establishment.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than January 1, 2028, the 
        Secretary of Defense shall establish a program using the 
        authority provided under section 2103(b) of title 10, United 
        States Code, to promote the participation of foreign students 
        in the Senior Reserve Officers' Training Corps (in this section 
        referred to as the ``Program'').
            (2) Organization.--The Secretary of Defense, in 
        consultation with the Director of the Defense Security 
        Cooperation Agency, the Secretaries of the military 
        departments, the commanders of the combatant commands, the 
        participant institutions in the Senior Reserve Officers' 
        Training Corps program, and any other individual the Secretary 
        of Defense considers appropriate, shall be responsible for, and 
        shall oversee, the Program.
    (b) Objective.--The objective of the Program is to promote the 
readiness and interoperability of the United States Armed Forces and 
the military forces of partner countries by providing a high-quality, 
cost effective military-based educational experience for foreign 
students in furtherance of the military-to-military program objectives 
of the Department of Defense and to enhance the educational experience 
and preparation of future United States military leaders through 
increased, extended interaction with highly qualified potential foreign 
military leaders.
    (c) Activities.--
            (1) In general.--Under the Program, the Secretary of 
        Defense shall--
                    (A) identify to the military services' Senior 
                Reserve Officers' Training Corps program the foreign 
                students who, based on criteria established by the 
                Secretary, the Secretary recommends be considered for 
                admission under the Program;
                    (B) coordinate with partner countries to evaluate 
                interest in and promote awareness of the Program;
                    (C) establish a mechanism for tracking an alumni 
                network of foreign students who participate in the 
                Program; and
                    (D) to the extent practicable, work with the 
                participant institutions in the Senior Reserve 
                Officers' Training Corps program and partner countries 
                to identify academic institutions and programs that--
                            (i) have specialized academic programs in 
                        areas of study of interest to participating 
                        countries; or
                            (ii) have high participation from or 
                        significant diaspora populations from 
                        participating countries.
    (d) Strategy.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than September 30, 2027, the 
        Secretary of Defense shall submit to the Committee on Armed 
        Services of the Senate and the Committee on Armed Services of 
        the House of Representatives a strategy for the implementation 
        of the Program.
            (2) Elements.--The strategy required by paragraph (1) shall 
        include the following elements:
                    (A) A governance structure for the Program, 
                including--
                            (i) the officials tasked to oversee the 
                        Program;
                            (ii) the format of the governing body of 
                        the Program;
                            (iii) the functions and duties of such 
                        governing body with respect to establishing and 
                        maintaining the Program; and
                            (iv) mechanisms for coordinating with 
                        partner countries whose students are selected 
                        to participate in the Program.
                    (B) A list of additional authorities, 
                appropriations, or other congressional support 
                necessary to ensure the success of the Program.
                    (C) A description of targeted partner countries and 
                participant institutions in the Senior Reserve 
                Officers' Training Corps for the first three fiscal 
                years of the Program, including a rationale for 
                selecting such initial partners.
                    (D) A description of opportunities and potential 
                timelines for future Program expansion, as appropriate.
                    (E) A description of the mechanism for tracking the 
                alumni network of participants of the Program.
                    (F) Any other information the Secretary of Defense 
                considers appropriate.
    (e) Report.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than September 20, 2028, and 
        annually thereafter, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to 
        the congressional defense committees (as that term is defined 
        in section 101 of title 10, United States Code) a report on the 
        Program.
            (2) Elements.--Each report required by paragraph (1) shall 
        include the following elements:
                    (A) A narrative summary of activities conducted as 
                part of the Program during the preceding fiscal year.
                    (B) An overview of participant Senior Reserve 
                Officers' Training Corps programs, individuals, and 
                countries, to include a description of the areas of 
                study entered into by the students participating in the 
                Program.
                    (C) A description of opportunities and potential 
                timelines for future Program expansion, as appropriate.
                    (D) Any other information the Secretary of Defense 
                considers appropriate.
    (f) Limitation on Authority.--The Secretary of Defense may not use 
the authority provided under this section to pay for tuition or room 
and board for foreign students who participate in the Program.
    (g) Termination.--The Program shall terminate on December 31, 2032.

SEC. 529A. ESTABLISHMENT OF THE MILITARY SERVICE ACADEMY PANEL ON 
              ATHLETICS.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish within 
the Department of Defense a panel to be known as the ``Military Service 
Academy Panel on Athletics'' (referred to in this section as the 
``Panel'').
    (b) Review.--The Panel shall conduct a comprehensive review and 
analysis of the effects of the following on athletics at the Service 
Academies:
            (1) Rules of the NCAA regarding the compensation of a 
        collegiate athlete for use of the name, image, and likeness of 
        such athlete.
            (2) The transfer portal of the NCAA.
    (c) Report.--
            (1) Report required.--Not later than December 31, 2027, the 
        Panel shall submit to the congressional defense committees a 
        written report regarding the review under subsection (b).
            (2) Elements.--The report shall include the following 
        elements:
                    (A) The evaluation of the Panel of the effects 
                described in subsection (b) on the recruitment, 
                retention, and military readiness of cadets and 
                midshipmen at the Service Academies who are collegiate 
                athletes.
                    (B) The legal and ethical implications identified 
                by the Panel, including with regards to the Uniform 
                Code of Military Justice and regulations of the 
                Department, of receipt of compensation described in 
                subsection (b) by a member of a covered Armed Force on 
                active duty or a cadet or midshipman subject to a 
                commissioned service obligation.
                    (C) The effect of the transfer portal on the 
                rosters and cohesion of athletic teams at the Service 
                Academies, given the unique attrition challenges faced 
                by the Service Academies.
            (3) Publication.--The Secretary shall publish the report on 
        a publicly accessible website of the Department. The report--
                    (A) shall be in unclassified form; and
                    (B) may not contain any personally identifiable 
                information of a cadet, midshipman, or member of a 
                covered Armed Force.
    (d) Termination.--The Panel shall terminate upon submission of the 
report under subsection (c).
    (e) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``commissioned service obligation'' has the 
        meaning given such term in section 7448, 8459, or 9448 of title 
        10, United States Code, as applicable.
            (2) The term ``covered Armed Force'' means the Army, Navy, 
        Marine Corps, Air Force, or Space Force.
            (3) The term ``NCAA'' means the National Collegiate 
        Athletic Association.
            (4) The term ``Service Academy'' has the meaning given such 
        term in section 347 of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 529B. LIMITATION ON AUTHORITY TO ELIMINATE THE 70TH FLYING 
              TRAINING SQUADRON OF THE UNITED STATES AIR FORCE ACADEMY.

    (a) Limitation.--The Secretary of the Air Force may not perform a 
covered action regarding the 70th Flying Training Squadron of the USAFA 
until the earlier of the following:
            (1) October 1, 2031.
            (2) The day that is 90 days after the day that the 
        Secretary submits, to the congressional defense committees and 
        the Board of Visitors to USAFA, a report described in 
        subsection (b).
    (b) Report.--A report described in this subsection is a report on 
covered action regarding the 70th Flying Training Squadron of USAFA. 
Such a report includes the following elements:
            (1) An assessment of the effect of such covered action on 
        the capacity to train cadets at USAFA, including the number of 
        cadets so affected annually.
            (2) A plan to maintain capacity described in paragraph (1) 
        provided by the 70th Flying Training Squadron, including the 
        retention of advanced mission sets, simulator training, and 
        evaluator pilot functions.
            (3) An analysis of alternatives to such covered action, 
        including the reallocation of chronically vacant billets within 
        Air Force Reserve Command.
            (4) An assessment of the cost differential between 
        continued operation of the 70th Flying Training Squadron and 
        replacement of its functions by active-duty personnel.
            (5) A plan to preserve the institutional knowledge and 
        instructional capacity currently provided by aviators assigned 
        to the 70th Flying Training Squadron.
    (c) Plan Required.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees a plan to sustain the 70th Flying Training Squadron 
until the earlier day under subsection (a).
    (d) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered action'' includes eliminating, 
        deactivating, defunding, reducing the number of personnel, and 
        reducing the number of aircraft.
            (2) The term ``USAFA'' means the United States Air Force 
        Academy.

                      Subtitle D--Member Education

SEC. 531. ESTABLISHMENT OF A DOCTOR OF PSYCHOLOGY PROGRAM AND A MASTER 
              OF SOCIAL WORK PROGRAM AT THE UNIFORMED SERVICES 
              UNIVERSITY OF THE HEALTH SCIENCES.

    (a) In General.--Section 2113 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(h) Establishment of a Doctor of Psychology Program and a Master 
of Social Work Program.--(1) The Secretary shall establish at the 
University a doctor of psychology program and a master of social work 
program.
    ``(2) A doctor of philosophy in clinical psychology shall not be 
considered to satisfy the requirement of paragraph (1).''.
    (b) Establishment Date.--The Secretary shall establish the programs 
required by subsection (h) of section 2113 of title 10, United States 
Code, as added by subsection (a), not later than five years after the 
date of the enactment of this Act.
    (c) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to Congress a report 
on the programs required by subsection (h) of section 2113 of title 10, 
United States Code, as added by subsection (a), including--
            (1) the estimated date of matriculation for the first class 
        of students for each such program;
            (2) the estimated graduation date for the first class from 
        each such program;
            (3) the expected class size of each such program during the 
        10-year period following the submission of the report;
            (4) the estimated number of faculty needed to operate each 
        such program during the 10-year period following the submission 
        of the report;
            (5) an estimate of facilities needs for each such program; 
        and
            (6) the estimated cost to establish and operate each such 
        program during the 10-year period following the submission of 
        the report, categorized by--
                    (A) personnel;
                    (B) facilities; and
                    (C) other costs, as determined by the Secretary.

SEC. 532. ARMED FORCES HEALTH PROFESSIONS SCHOLARSHIP AND FINANCIAL 
              ASSISTANCE PROGRAM: ELIGIBLE INSTITUTIONS; CONTINUITY OF 
              PAYMENTS.

    Section 2127 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding 
at the end the following new subsections:
    ``(f) The Secretary of Defense shall consider an accredited 
civilian educational institution eligible for a payment, contract, or 
determination under this section unless the Secretary determines that 
the accreditation of such institution is under review for potential 
adverse action.
    ``(g)(1) The Secretary of Defense may cease payments described in 
paragraph (2) only if--
            ``(A) the Secretary makes a determination described in 
        subsection (f); or
            ``(B) the member of the program is dropped from the program 
        as described in subsection (c) of section 2123 of this title.
    ``(2) Payments described in this paragraph are payments--
            ``(A) under this section;
            ``(B) to an accredited civilian educational institution;
            ``(C) for educational expenses of a member of the program; 
        and
            ``(D) incurred in the course of study of such member of the 
        program.''.

SEC. 533. INCLUSION OF NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE COLLEGE AS PART OF THE 
              NATIONAL DEFENSE UNIVERSITY.

    Section 2165(b) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating paragraph (7) as paragraph (8); and
            (2) by inserting after paragraph (6) the following new 
        paragraph:
            ``(7) The National Intelligence College.''.

SEC. 534. DEFENSE INFORMATION SCHOOL: AUTHORITY TO GRANT ASSOCIATE'S 
              DEGREE IN COMMUNICATIONS.

    (a) Authority.--Chapter 108 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 2169a Defense Information School: degree of associate of arts
    ``(a) Degree Granting Authority.--Pursuant to regulations 
prescribed by the Secretary of Defense, the Commandant of the Defense 
Information School may confer upon a student of the Defense Information 
School an associate of arts degree in communications.
    ``(b) Limitation.--A degree may be conferred upon a student under 
this section only after the Provost of the Defense Information School 
certifies to the Commandant that the student has satisfied all the 
requirements prescribed for the degree.''.
    (b) Reporting.--
            (1) Report required.--Not later than one year after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act, and annually thereafter, 
        subject to termination under paragraph (3), the Secretary of 
        Defense shall submit to the congressional defense committees a 
        report regarding the implementation of section 2169a of such 
        title, as added by subsection (a).
            (2) Elements.--A report under this subsection shall include 
        the plan and timeline of the Secretary to carry out such 
        implementation.
            (3) Termination.--The report under this subsection shall 
        terminate on the day that the Commandant of the Defense 
        Information School first confers a degree under such section.

SEC. 535. ELIGIBILITY OF AN ENLISTED MEMBER TO RECEIVE A DEGREE FROM 
              THE NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL.

    Section 8545 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking subsection (d).

                      Subtitle E--Military Justice

SEC. 541. CLARIFICATION OF QUALIFICATIONS FOR JUDGE ADVOCATES.

    Section 806(a)(1)(B) of title 10, United States Code (article 
6(a)(1)(B) of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), is amended by 
striking ``license status that provides current eligibility to actively 
practice law before such court'' and inserting ``license status, in 
good standing, that provides eligibility to practice law''.

SEC. 542. AUTHORITY OF SPECIAL TRIAL COUNSEL TO ENTER INTO PRETRIAL 
              AGREEMENTS WITH RESPECT TO CERTAIN OFFENSES.

    Section 824a(c) of title 10, United States Code (article 24a(c) of 
the Uniform Code of Military Justice), is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (3)--
                    (A) in the matter preceding subparagraph (A), by 
                striking ``paragraph (5)'' and inserting ``paragraphs 
                (4) and (6)''; and
                    (B) in subparagraph (C), by inserting ``or pretrial 
                agreement'' after ``plea agreement'';
            (2) by redesignating paragraphs (4) and (5) as paragraphs 
        (5) and (6), respectively; and
            (3) by inserting after paragraph (3) the following new 
        paragraph:
            ``(4) Pretrial agreements.--If a special trial counsel 
        exercises authority pursuant to subsection (d) over an offense 
        that occurred before January 1, 2019, the special trial counsel 
        may enter into a pretrial agreement with the accused in 
        accordance with regulations prescribed by the President. Upon 
        acceptance of such an agreement by the military judge of a 
        general or special court-martial, the agreement shall bind the 
        parties and the convening authority.''.

SEC. 543. CLARIFYING AMENDMENT TO COMPLETION OF APPELLATE REVIEW UNDER 
              ARTICLE 57 OF THE UNIFORM CODE OF MILITARY JUSTICE.

    Section 857(c) of title 10, United States Code (article 57(c) of 
the Uniform Code of Military Justice), is amended--
            (1) by redesignating paragraph (2) as paragraph (3);
            (2) in paragraph (1)(B), by striking ``Appeals and--'' and 
        all that follows and inserting ``Appeals and the review and 
        time requirements described in paragraph (2) are satisfied.''; 
        and
            (3) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following new 
        paragraph:
            ``(2) Review and time requirements.--The review and time 
        requirements referred to in paragraph (1)(B) are satisfied if 
        any of the following applies:
                    ``(A) The time for the accused to file a petition 
                for review by the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces 
                has expired and the accused has not filed a petition 
                for such review in a timely manner and the case is not 
                otherwise under review by that Court.
                    ``(B) A petition for review by the Court of Appeals 
                for the Armed Forces is withdrawn by the accused.
                    ``(C) In the case of a petition for review by the 
                Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces that has been 
                timely filed and not withdrawn, the petition--
                            ``(i)(I) is denied or otherwise rejected by 
                        the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces; or
                            ``(II) the review requested by the petition 
                        is completed in accordance with the judgment of 
                        the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces; and
                            ``(ii) with respect to subsequent review by 
                        the Supreme Court--
                                    ``(I) a petition for a writ of 
                                certiorari as provided in section 1259 
                                of title 28 is not filed within the 
                                time limits prescribed by the Supreme 
                                Court;
                                    ``(II) such a petition for a writ 
                                of certiorari is rejected by the 
                                Supreme Court;
                                    ``(III) such a petition for a writ 
                                of certiorari is withdrawn by the 
                                petitioner; or
                                    ``(IV) review is otherwise 
                                completed in accordance with the 
                                judgment of the Supreme Court.''.

SEC. 544. REVIEW OF COURTS-MARTIAL RECORDS.

    (a) Review When Direct Appeal Is Waived, Withdrawn, or Not Filed.--
Section 865(d) of title 10, United States Code (article 65(d) of the 
Uniform Code of Military Justice), is amended--
            (1) by striking paragraph (2);
            (2) by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph (2); and
            (3) in paragraph (2), as so redesignated--
                    (A) in subparagraph (A)(ii), by striking 
                ``subparagraph (A), (B), or (C)'' and inserting 
                ``subparagraph (A) or (B)''; and
                    (B) in subparagraph (B), by striking 
                ``conclusions'' and all that follows and inserting ``a 
                conclusion on each of the following matters:
                            ``(i) Whether the court had jurisdiction 
                        over the accused and the offense.
                            ``(ii) Whether the charge and specification 
                        stated an offense.
                            ``(iii) Whether the sentence was within the 
                        limits prescribed as a matter of law.''.
    (b) Technical Correction.--Section 869(c)(2) of title 10, United 
States Code (article 69(c)(2) of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), 
is amended by striking ``section 865(b) of this title (article 65(b))'' 
and inserting ``section 865(d) of this title (article 65(d))''.

SEC. 545. UNIFORM CODE OF MILITARY JUSTICE: PROHIBITION OF REVIEW OF 
              FACTUAL SUFFICIENCY IN CERTAIN APPEALS BEFORE A COURT OF 
              CRIMINAL APPEALS.

    Section 866 of title 10, United States Code (article 66 of the 
Uniform Code of Military Justice), is amended in subsection (d)(1)(B)--
            (1) in clause (i)--
                    (A) by striking ``(i)'';
                    (B) by striking ``may consider'' and inserting 
                ``may not consider''; and
                    (C) by striking ``upon request of the accused if 
                the accused makes a specific showing of a deficiency in 
                proof''; and
            (2) by striking clauses (ii) and (iii).

SEC. 546. CLARIFICATION OF COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS REVIEW OF 
              SENTENCING.

    Section 866(e)(1) of title 10, United States Code (article 66(e)(1) 
of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), is amended--
            (1) by amending subparagraph (B) to read as follows:
                    ``(B) whether the portion of the sentence extending 
                to confinement is inappropriately severe, except that 
                in the case of an offense for which the President has 
                established a sentencing parameter for such portion 
                pursuant to section 539E(e) of the National Defense 
                Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2022, the Court may 
                not consider such portion inappropriately severe if 
                such portion is at or below the upper range of such 
                sentencing parameter;''; and
            (2) in subparagraph (C), by striking ``the sentence'' and 
        inserting ``the portion of the sentence extending to 
        confinement''.

SEC. 547. EXPANSION OF VICTIM ACCESS TO COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ARMED 
              FORCES.

    (a) Review by Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces.--Section 867 
of title 10, United States Code (article 67 of the Uniform Code of 
Military Justice), is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsections (c) through (e) as 
        subsections (d) through (f), respectively; and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(c)(1) The Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces may review all 
decisions taken by a Court of Criminal Appeals pursuant to a petition 
filed by a victim of an offense under this chapter under section 
806b(e) of this title (article 6b(e)) and on good cause shown.
    ``(3) The victim of an offense under this chapter may petition the 
Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces for review pursuant to paragraph 
(1) not later than 60 days after the earlier of--
            ``(A) the date on which the victim is notified of the 
        decision of the Court of Criminal Appeals on a petition 
        pursuant to section 806b(e) of this title (article 6b(e)); or
            ``(B) the date on which a copy of the decision of the Court 
        of Criminal Appeals, after being served on counsel for the 
        victim (if the victim has counsel), is deposited into the 
        United States mails for delivery by first-class certified mail 
        to the victim at an address provided by the victim or at the 
        latest address listed for the victim in the record of any 
        proceedings held pursuant to section 830a or 832 of this title 
        (article 30a or 32) or during trial.
    ``(4) Review of any decision of a Court of Criminal Appeals on a 
petition for writ of mandamus described in section 806b(e) of this 
title (article 6b(e)) shall have priority in the Court of Appeals for 
the Armed Forces, as determined under the rules of the Court of Appeals 
for the Armed Forces.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--Section 806b(e)(3) of title 10, United 
States Code (article 6b(e)(3) of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), 
is amended by striking subparagraph (C).

SEC. 548. MODIFICATIONS TO OFFENSE OF WRONGFUL BROADCAST OR 
              DISTRIBUTION OF INTIMATE VISUAL IMAGES UNDER THE UNIFORM 
              CODE OF MILITARY JUSTICE.

    Section 917a of title 10, United States Code (article 117a of the 
Uniform Code of Military Justice) is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 917a. Art. 117a. Wrongful broadcast, distribution, or 
              publication of intimate visual images
    ``(a) Prohibition.--Any person subject to this chapter who--
            ``(1) knowingly and wrongfully broadcasts, distributes, or 
        publishes a covered image involving a person who--
                    ``(A) is at least 18 years of age at the time the 
                image was created;
                    ``(B) is identifiable from the image, or from 
                information displayed or provided in connection with 
                the image;
                    ``(C) did not consent to the broadcast, 
                distribution, or publication of the image; and
                    ``(D) did not, in a public or commercial setting, 
                voluntarily--
                            ``(i) display the private area depicted in 
                        the image; or
                            ``(ii) engage in the sexually explicit 
                        conduct depicted in the image;
            ``(2) knowingly and wrongfully broadcasts, distributes, or 
        publishes an authentic covered image and knows or reasonably 
        should have known that the image was made under circumstances 
        in which the identifiable individual in the image retained a 
        reasonable expectation of privacy regarding any broadcast, 
        distribution, or publication of the image; or
            ``(3) knowingly and wrongfully broadcasts, distributes, or 
        publishes a covered image and knows or reasonably should have 
        known that the broadcast, distribution, or publication of the 
        covered image is likely--
                    ``(A) to cause harm, harassment, intimidation, 
                emotional distress, or financial loss for the 
                identifiable individual in the image; or
                    ``(B) to harm substantially the identifiable 
                individual with respect to that person's health, 
                safety, business, calling, career, financial 
                conduction, reputation, or personal relationships,
is guilty of an offense under this section (article) and shall be 
punished as a court-martial may direct.
    ``(b) Definitions.--In this section (article):
            ``(1) Authentic.--The term `authentic', when used with 
        respect to an image, means a visual image of an identifiable 
        individual that accurately represents the individual, and has 
        not been created, altered, manipulated, or generated through 
        the use of machine learning or artificial intelligence in a 
        manner that would cause a reasonable person to perceive the 
        authentic visual image as anything other than a genuine, 
        unmodified, or not digitally forged visual image.
            ``(2) Broadcast.--The term `broadcast' means to 
        electronically transmit a visual image with the intent that it 
        be viewed by a person.
            ``(3) Covered image.--The term `covered image' means an 
        authentic or digitally forged visual image of--
                    ``(A) the private area of a person; or
                    ``(B) sexually explicit conduct involving a person.
            ``(4) Digitally forged.--The term `digitally forged', when 
        used with respect to an image, means any visual image of an 
        identifiable individual created through the use of software, 
        machine learning, artificial intelligence, or any other 
        computer-generated or technological means, including by 
        adapting, modifying, manipulating, or altering an authentic 
        visual image, that, when viewed as a whole by a reasonable 
        person, is indistinguishable from an authentic visual image of 
        the individual and does not accurately reflect the original 
        source or reality.
            ``(5) Distribute.--The term `distribute' means to deliver 
        to the actual or constructive possession of another person, 
        including transmission by mail or electronic means.
            ``(6) Identifiable individual.--The term `identifiable 
        individual' means an individual whose face, likeness, other 
        distinguishing characteristic (including a unique birthmark or 
        other recognizable feature), or other personally identifiable 
        information is displayed in connection with a covered image.
            ``(7) Private area.--The term `private area' means the 
        naked or underwear-clad genitalia, anus, buttocks, or female 
        areola or nipple.
            ``(8) Publish.--The term `publish' means to display, 
        exhibit, present, or otherwise make a covered image available 
        for viewing by another person in any medium without regard to 
        whether such image is--
                    ``(A) directly shown to another person; or
                    ``(B) broadcast or distributed.
            ``(9) Reasonable expectation of privacy.--The term 
        `reasonable expectation of privacy' means circumstances in 
        which a reasonable person would believe that a private area of 
        the person, or sexually explicit conduct involving the person, 
        would not be visible to the public.
            ``(10) Sexually explicit conduct.--The term `sexually 
        explicit conduct' means actual or simulated--
                    ``(A) genital-genital contact, oral-genital 
                contact, anal-genital contact, oral-anal contact, or 
                the transfer of bodily sexual fluids on to any part of 
                the body of an identifiable individual, whether between 
                persons of the same or opposite sex;
                    ``(B) bestiality;
                    ``(C) masturbation; or
                    ``(D) sadistic or masochistic abuse.
            ``(11) Visual image.--The term `visual image' means--
                    ``(A) any developed or undeveloped photograph, 
                picture, film, or video;
                    ``(B) any digital or computer image, picture, film, 
                or video made by any means, including those transmitted 
                by any means, even if not stored in a permanent format;
                    ``(C) any digital or electronic data capable of 
                conversion into a visual image; or
                    ``(D) any visual image that is digitally forged.''.

SEC. 549. AUTHORIZATION OF DEATH PENALTY FOR OFFENSE OF RAPE OF A CHILD 
              UNDER THE UNIFORM CODE OF MILITARY JUSTICE.

    Section 920b(a) of title 10, United States Code (article 120b(a) of 
the Uniform Code of Military Justice), is amended by inserting ``by 
death, or such other punishment'' after ``shall be punished''.

SEC. 549A. PUNITIVE ARTICLE ON RETALIATION FOR REPORTING OF SEXUAL 
              HARASSMENT UNDER THE UNIFORM CODE OF MILITARY JUSTICE.

    (a) In General.--Subchapter X of chapter 47 of title 10, United 
States Code (the Uniform Code of Military Justice), is amended by 
inserting after section 932 (article 132) the following new section 
(article):
``Sec. 932a. Art. 132a. Retaliation for reporting of sexual harassment
    ``(a) In General.--Any person subject to this chapter who, with the 
intent to retaliate against any person for reporting or planning to 
report sexual harassment or with the intent to discourage any person 
from reporting sexual harassment--
            ``(1) wrongfully takes or threatens to take an adverse 
        personnel action against any person; or
            ``(2) wrongfully withholds or threatens to withhold a 
        favorable personnel action with respect to any person;
shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
    ``(b) Sexual Harassment Defined.--In this section, the term `sexual 
harassment' has the meaning given that term in section 1561 of this 
title.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--The heading of section 932 of title 10, 
United States Code (article 132 of the Uniform Code of Military 
Justice) is amended by striking ``Retaliation'' and inserting 
``Retaliation generally''.

SEC. 549B. REVISION OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE INSTRUCTION REGARDING 
              EARLY RELEASE ELIGIBILITY FOR OFFENDERS CONVICTED OF 
              CERTAIN SEXUAL OFFENSES UNDER THE UNIFORM CODE OF 
              MILITARY JUSTICE.

    (a) Revision Required.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall revise 
Department of Defense Instruction 1325.07, or any successor 
instruction, to provide that an individual serving a sentence of 
confinement imposed pursuant to a conviction by a general or special 
court-martial for an offense described in subsection (b) is ineligible 
for any reduction in the term of confinement based on good-conduct 
time.
    (b) Covered Offenses.--An individual is ineligible for any 
reduction in the term of confinement based on good-conduct time as 
described in subsection (a) if the individual is serving a sentence for 
a conviction under--
            (1) section 920 of title 10, United States Code (article 
        120 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), relating to rape 
        and sexual assault;
            (2) 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;
            (3) section 920c of title 10, United States Code (article 
        120c of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), relating to 
        abusive sexual contact;
            (4) section 918 of title 10, United States Code (article 
        118 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), relating to 
        murder, if the offense was committed in the course of conduct 
        involving a sexual act or sexual contact as defined in section 
        920 of that title (article 120);
            (5) section 919 of title 10, United States Code (article 
        119 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), relating to 
        manslaughter, if the offense was committed in the course of 
        conduct involving a sexual act or sexual contact as defined in 
        section 920 of that title (article 120);
            (6) section 925 of title 10, United States Code (article 
        125 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), relating to 
        kidnapping, if the victim was a minor;
            (7) section 928 of title 10, United States Code (article 
        128 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), relating to 
        assault, if the offense involved a sexual act or sexual contact 
        as defined in section 920 of that title (article 120);
            (8) section 930 of title 10, United States Code (article 
        130 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), relating to 
        stalking, if the offense involved a sexual motive or the victim 
        was a minor;
            (9) section 934 of title 10, United States Code (article 
        134 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), relating to 
        indecent conduct or indecent acts with another person;
            (10) section 934 of title 10, United States Code (article 
        134 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), relating to the 
        possession, distribution, or production of child pornography;
            (11) section 880 of title 10, United States Code (article 
        80 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), relating to 
        attempts, if the offense attempted is an offense described in 
        paragraphs (1) through (10) of this subsection; or
            (12) section 881 of title 10, United States Code (article 
        81 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), relating to 
        conspiracy, if the offense that is the object of the conspiracy 
        is an offense described in paragraphs (1) through (10) of this 
        subsection.
    (c) Applicability.--The revision required by subsection (a) shall 
apply to sentences imposed after the date on which the revision takes 
effect. Nothing in this section shall be construed to affect a sentence 
imposed before the effective date of such revision.
    (d) Preservation of Victim Rights.--Nothing in this section shall 
be construed to limit the rights of a victim under section 806b of 
title 10, United States Code (article 6b of the Uniform Code of 
Military Justice). The Secretary of the military department concerned 
shall ensure that a victim retains the right to be reasonably heard at 
any clemency proceeding conducted outside the standard annual review 
cycle with respect to an individual described in subsection (a).
    (e) Certification.--Not later than 30 days after completing the 
revision required by subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense shall 
certify to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House 
of Representatives that Department of Defense Instruction 1325.07 has 
been revised in accordance with this section.

SEC. 549C. NOTIFICATION REQUIRED TO IMPLEMENT CHANGES TO MILITARY LEGAL 
              SYSTEM RECOMMENDED BY SPECIAL REVIEW PANEL ACTIVITIES.

    (a) Prohibition.--The Secretary of Defense may not implement a 
recommendation of the Special Review Panel until a period of 180 days 
has elapsed following the date on which the Secretary submits to the 
congressional defense committees all documentation required under 
subsection (b).
    (b) Documentation Required.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall submit to 
        the congressional defense committees all recommendations and 
        analysis delivered by the Special Review Panel to the Secretary 
        of Defense.
            (2) Timing of submissions.--
                    (A) Any documentation described in paragraph (1) 
                that was delivered to the Secretary of Defense before 
                the date of the enactment of this Act, shall be 
                submitted to the congressional defense committees not 
                later than 30 days after such date of enactment.
                    (B) Any documentation described in paragraph (1) 
                that is delivered to the Secretary of Defense on or 
                after the date of the enactment of this Act, shall be 
                submitted to the congressional defense committees not 
                later than five days after the date of delivery to the 
                Secretary.
    (c) Special Review Panel Defined.--In this section, the term 
``Special Review Panel'' means the Special Review Panel established 
pursuant to the memorandum of the Secretary of Defense dated May 8, 
2026, titled ``Departmental Review of the Military Legal System and Its 
Impact on Service Members''.

SEC. 549D. ANALYSIS OF POTENTIAL ESTABLISHMENT OF SEPARATE PUNITIVE 
              ARTICLE ON HAZING UNDER THE UNIFORM CODE OF MILITARY 
              JUSTICE.

    (a) Analysis Required.--The Secretary of Defense, in coordination 
with the Joint Service Committee on Military Justice, shall analyze the 
feasibility and advisability of, and develop recommendations with 
respect to, modifying chapter 47 of title 10, United States Code (the 
Uniform Code of Military Justice), to establish a separate punitive 
article on hazing. As part of such analysis, the Secretary shall 
develop a proposed definition of the term ``hazing'' for purposes of 
such article.
    (b) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of 
Representatives a report on the results of the analysis under 
subsection (a).

           Subtitle F--Investigations and Other Legal Matters

SEC. 551. EXTENSION OF SPECIAL VICTIMS' COUNSEL SERVICES TO DOMESTIC 
              VIOLENCE VICTIMS.

    (a) Amendments.--Section 1044e of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) in the section heading, by inserting ``domestic 
        violence and'' before ``sex-related offenses'';
            (2) by inserting ``domestic violence or'' before ``sex-
        related offense'' each place it appears;
            (3) in subsection (b)(3), by striking ``domestic abuse 
        advocate'' and inserting ``domestic abuse victim advocate'';
            (4) in subsection (f)(1), by inserting ``domestic abuse 
        victim advocate,'' after ``healthcare provider,''; and
            (5) in subsection (h)--
                    (A) in the subsection heading, by inserting 
                ``Domestic Violence or'' before ``Sex-related 
                Offense''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (1), by striking ``or 930 of this 
                title (article 120, 120b, 120c,'' and inserting ``928b, 
                or 930 of this title (article 120, 120b, 120c, 128b,''.
    (b) Effective Date.--The amendments made by subsection (a) shall 
take effect two years after the date of the enactment of this Act.
    (c) Briefing.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall provide to the 
Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of 
Representatives a briefing on the implementation of policies and 
procedures to carry out the changes required pursuant to subsection 
(a).

SEC. 552. POLICIES REGARDING THE REPORTING OF MISSING MEMBERS OF THE 
              ARMED FORCES.

    (a) Policies Required.--Chapter 80 of title 10, United States Code, 
is amended by adding at the end the following new section.
``Sec. 1568. Policies regarding the reporting of missing members of the 
              Armed Forces
    ``The Secretary of Defense shall prescribe policies for the 
Department of Defense that establish minimum standards with respect to 
reporting the discovery that a member of the armed forces is missing. 
Such policies shall include--
            ``(1) standards for the categorization of absences of 
        members of the armed forces;
            ``(2) a requirement that the appropriate military criminal 
        investigative organization be notified not later than three 
        hours after a member of the armed forces is discovered to be 
        missing; and
            ``(3) a requirement that the primary next of kin of the 
        member (as defined in section 1513 of this title) be notified 
        not later than eight hours after a member of the armed forces 
        is discovered to be missing.''.
    (b) Implementation.--The Secretary of Defense shall prescribe 
policies required by section 1568 of title 10, United States Code, as 
added by subsection (a) of this section, not later than 180 days after 
the date of the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 553. AUTHORITY OF NAVAL CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIVE SERVICE TO 
              INVESTIGATE SEXUAL HARASSMENT.

    Chapter 871 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding 
at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 8750a. Naval Criminal Investigative Service: authority to 
              investigate sexual harassment.
    ``(a) In General.--The Naval Criminal Investigative Service shall 
be the entity within the Department of the Navy with the sole and 
exclusive authority to conduct investigations of alleged sexual 
harassment by members of the Navy or Marine Corps.
    ``(b) Sexual Harassment Defined.--In this section, the term `sexual 
harassment' means conduct that constitutes the offense of sexual 
harassment as punishable under section 934 of this title (article 134 
of the Uniform Code of Military Justice) pursuant to the regulations 
prescribed by the Secretary of Defense for purposes of such section 
(article).''.

SEC. 554. CROSS-SERVICE DATA SHARING REGARDING SUBSTANTIATED 
              ALLEGATIONS OF SEXUAL MISCONDUCT.

    The Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the Secretaries of 
the military departments, shall establish a data sharing arrangement 
pursuant to which each Armed Force shall be required to collect and 
make available to the other Armed Forces data concerning substantiated 
allegations of sexual misconduct by members of that Armed Force.

SEC. 555. INCLUSION OF SEXUAL HARASSMENT IN CATCH A SERIAL OFFENDER 
              PROGRAM.

    (a) Participation and Notice.--Not later than 60 days after the 
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall--
            (1) modify the policies, procedures, and forms necessary to 
        permit individuals who are members of the Armed Forces, adult 
        dependents of such members, or employees of the Department of 
        Defense to participate in the Catch a Serial Offender Program 
        of the Department of Defense if the individual submits a 
        confidential complaint or report of sexual harassment or an 
        unrestricted report or informal complaint of sexual harassment 
        without disclosing the name of the subject to a military 
        criminal investigative organization; and
            (2) such individuals are notified of whether such 
        individuals may participate in the Catch A Serial Offender 
        Program when submitting a confidential complaint or report of 
        sexual harassment or an unrestricted report or informal 
        complaint of sexual harassment.
    (b) Applicability to Existing Reports.--The Secretary of Defense 
shall ensure that individuals who submitted a confidential complaint or 
report of sexual harassment or an unrestricted report or informal 
complaint of sexual harassment before the effective date of the 
modifications to policies, procedures, and forms in accordance with 
subsection (a)(1)--
            (1) are eligibility to participate in the Catch a Serial 
        Offender Program in the same manner and under the same 
        conditions as an individual who submits such a complaint or 
        report after such effective date; and
            (2) are notified of such eligibility.

SEC. 556. MILITARY DOMESTIC VIOLENCE EMERGENT HOUSING POLICY.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish and 
implement a policy under which unit level commanders in the covered 
Armed Forces, in response to domestic violence reports or complaints, 
shall be required to--
            (1) move alleged offenders into military housing separate 
        from the victim; and
            (2) maintain emergent housing entitlements to basic 
        allowance for housing or military housing units in support of 
        domestic violence victims for up to one year.
    (b) Amendment of DD Form 2873.--Not later than 90 days after the 
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall amend 
the Military Protective Order form, DD Form 2873, to incorporate the 
changes implemented pursuant to this section.
    (c) Covered Armed Forces Defined.--In this section, the term 
``covered Armed Forces'' means the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, 
and Space Force.

SEC. 557. REQUIREMENT FOR STANDARDIZED POLICIES AND PROCESSES TO ENSURE 
              THE TIMELY REVIEW, DOCUMENTATION, AND RESOLUTION OF 
              REQUESTS FOR MILITARY PROTECTIVE ORDERS.

    (a) In General.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with 
the Secretary of the department in which the Coast Guard is operating 
when not operating as a service in the Navy with respect the Coast 
Guard, shall establish standardized policies and processes to ensure 
the timely review, documentation, and resolution of requests for 
military protective orders submitted to commanding officers of the 
Armed Forces.
    (b) Purposes.--The purposes of this section are--
            (1) to ensure prompt, consistent, and transparent decision 
        making regarding requests for military protective orders;
            (2) to enhance the safety of individuals affected by such 
        orders; and
            (3) to improve accountability in command actions related to 
        such orders.
    (c) Requirements.--In establishing the policies and processes under 
subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense shall--
            (1) require that any commanding officer of the Armed Forces 
        who receives a request for a military protective order from an 
        individual who is eligible to request such order--
                    (A) make a determination as to whether to issue 
                such order not later than three calendar days after 
                receipt of the request, unless the officer certifies to 
                the Secretary that extraordinary circumstances prevent 
                the officer from meeting that deadline;
                    (B) before making such determination, seek counsel 
                and legal review from a Staff Judge Advocate or other 
                qualified judge advocate to inform the decision-making 
                process; and
                    (C) in the event the commander denies the request 
                for a military protective order, provide written 
                notification of such denial to the individual who 
                requested the order not later than two calendar days 
                after making the denial decision;
            (2) update Department of Defense Form 2873 (or any 
        successor form) to reflect enhanced documentation requirements 
        for approved and denied military protective order requests; and
            (3) require that such form be completed, maintained, and 
        retained in accordance with applicable records management and 
        privacy policies of the Department of Defense.
    (d) Implementation Plan.--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, and the Committee on Transportation 
and Infrastructure of the House of Representatives and the Committee on 
Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate with respect to the 
Coast Guard, a report that includes--
            (1) a summary of the standardized policies and processes 
        established under subsection (a);
            (2) a plan for the implementation of such policies and 
        processes; and
            (3) a description of--
                    (A) any revisions to Department of Defense Form 
                2873 and other changes to documentation procedures made 
                as result of such policies and process; and
                    (B) measures that will be implemented to ensure 
                compliance with decision-making timelines and legal 
                guidance requirements specified in subsection (c).
    (e) Oversight and Reporting.--Not later than two years after the 
date of the enactment of this Act, and annually thereafter for seven 
years, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees, and the Committee on Transportation and 
Infrastructure of the House of Representatives and the Committee on 
Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate with respect to the 
Coast Guard, a report that includes, with respect to the year preceding 
the date of the report--
            (1) the number of military protective order requests 
        received by commanding officers of the Armed Forces;
            (2) the number of military protective order requests that 
        were approved and denied;
            (3) the average processing times for such approvals and 
        denials; and
            (4) a description of any barriers to the timely review, 
        documentation, and resolution of requests for military 
        protective orders.

SEC. 558. REESTABLISHMENT OF 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 of Defense 
        shall establish the Advisory Committee not later than 90 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 of Defense 
        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 adverse behaviors, including the 
                prevention of suicide and the prevention of substance 
                abuse.
                    (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 of Defense 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 of Defense 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 of Defense pursuant to this 
        subsection, the Advisory Committee shall review, on an ongoing 
        basis, the following:
                    (A) Closed 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 of Defense 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 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 of Defense 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 Defined.--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.
    (f) Termination.--
            (1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), the 
        Advisory Committee shall terminate on the date that is five 
        years after the date of the establishment of the Advisory 
        Committee pursuant to subsection (a).
            (2) Continuation.--The Secretary of Defense may continue 
        the Advisory Committee after the termination date applicable 
        under paragraph (1) if the Secretary determines that 
        continuation of the Advisory Committee after that date is 
        advisable and appropriate. If the Secretary determines to 
        continue the Advisory Committee after that date, the Secretary 
        shall notify the Committees on the Armed Services of the Senate 
        and House of Representatives.
    (g) Conforming Repeal.--Section 550B of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (Public Law 116-92; 10 U.S.C. 
1561 note) is repealed.

SEC. 559. PILOT PROGRAM ON USE OF ADVANCED MONITORING AND 
              REHABILITATIVE TECHNOLOGIES IN ARMY CORRECTIONAL 
              FACILITIES.

    (a) In General.--Beginning not later than one year after the date 
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army, acting through 
the Commanding General of the Army Corrections Command, shall carry out 
a pilot program (referred to in this section as the ``Pilot Program'') 
to evaluate the use of advanced monitoring and rehabilitative 
technologies in Army correctional facilities to improve safety, 
accountability, rehabilitation outcomes, and operational efficiency.
    (b) Locations.--The Secretary of the Army shall select one or more 
correctional facilities of the Army in which to implement the Pilot 
Program.
    (c) Additional Requirements.--In carrying out the Pilot Program, 
the Secretary of the Army shall--
            (1) ensure that personnel participating in the Program 
        receive appropriate training;
            (2) establish safeguards to protect privacy and civil 
        liberties; and
            (3) develop performance metrics to measure the 
        effectiveness of the technologies evaluated under the Program 
        in reducing misconduct, improving compliance, enhancing 
        rehabilitation outcomes, and supporting reintegration efforts.
    (d) Reports.--
            (1) Initial report.--Not later than one year after the date 
        on which of the Pilot Program commences, the Secretary of the 
        Army shall submit to the congressional defense committees a 
        initial report on the progress of the Program.
            (2) Final report.--Not later than 30 days after the date on 
        which the Pilot Program terminates under subsection (e), the 
        Secretary of the Army shall submit to the congressional defense 
        committees a final report on the Program.
            (3) Elements.--Each of the reports under paragraphs (1) and 
        (2) shall include--
                    (A) an evaluation of the costs of the Program as of 
                the date of the report, including the costs of the 
                technologies evaluated under the Program;
                    (B) any measurable outcomes achieved by the program 
                as of such date;
                    (C) recommendations as to whether any technologies 
                evaluated under the Program are suitable for 
                implementation across the Army Corrections Command; and
                    (D) such other information as the Secretary of the 
                Army determines appropriate.
    (e) Termination.--The authority to carry out the Pilot Program 
shall terminate five years after the date of the enactment of this Act.
    (f) Definition.--In this section, the term ``advanced monitoring 
and rehabilitative technologies'' means emerging technologies 
appropriate for correctional environments such as secure digital 
platforms, biometric identification systems, data analytics, or other 
such technologies.

                     Subtitle G--Career Transition

SEC. 561. ESTABLISHMENT OF SEPARATION OATH FOR MEMBERS OF THE ARMED 
              FORCES.

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

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

SEC. 562. DESIGNATION OF SENIOR OFFICIAL FOR MILITARY-TO-CIVILIAN 
              TRANSITION.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 58 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 1156. Senior official for military-to-civilian transition
    ``(a) Designation.--The Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel 
and Readiness shall designate a senior official of the Department of 
Defense to oversee policy and programs related to the transition of 
members of the armed forces from active duty to civilian life or 
reserve components.
    ``(b) Qualifications.--The official designated under paragraph (1) 
shall be designated from among individuals with extensive experience 
with veterans services and knowledge of the transition from active duty 
to civilian life and reserve components..
    ``(c) Role, Responsibility, and Authority.--(1) Subject to 
paragraph (2), the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and 
Readiness shall prescribe the roles, responsibilities, and authorities 
of the official designated under subsection (a).
    ``(2) The roles, responsibilities, and authorities prescribed under 
paragraph (1) shall include, with respect to the transition of members 
of the armed forces from active duty to civilian life and reserve 
components and the families of such members experiencing such 
transition--
            ``(A) serving as the principal advisor to the Secretary of 
        Defense, the Deputy Secretary of Defense, and the Under 
        Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness on policies, 
        operations, and programs and activities relating to the 
        transition of members;
            ``(B) assisting the Secretary of Defense, the Deputy 
        Secretary of Defense, and the Under Secretary of Defense for 
        Personnel and Readiness with policies, operations, and programs 
        and activities relating to the transition of members;
            ``(C) working, in consultation with the Secretary of 
        Veterans Affairs, the Secretary of Labor, and the Secretary of 
        Education, to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of all 
        activities relating to the transition of members;
            ``(D) serving as the chief transition officer of the 
        Department of Defense, with the mission of coordinating and 
        overseeing the effectiveness of transition programs of the 
        Department of Defense and ensuring all members of the armed 
        forces are well equipped for civilian life or the reserve 
        components, as the case may be;
            ``(E) overseeing the implementation of transition programs 
        in the Department of Defense;
            ``(F) conducting a review and assessment of all transition 
        programs and services offered by the Department of Defense, 
        including the programs under this chapter, and proposing 
        legislative or administrative action--
                    ``(i) to improve the efficacy and efficiency of the 
                programs; and
                    ``(ii) to ensure compliance with all legal 
                requirements related to transition assistance; and
            ``(G) working with Federal agencies, State and local 
        governments, and nongovernmental organizations to improve the 
        delivery of transition support services to members and families 
        of members.''.
    (b) Implementation and Briefing.--
            (1) Implementation.--The Under Secretary of Defense for 
        Personnel and Readiness shall designate a senior official under 
        section 1156(a) of title 10, United States Code, as added by 
        subsection (a) of this section, not later than 90 days after 
        the date of the enactment of this Act.
            (2) Briefing.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall provide a 
        briefing to the congressional defense committees on--
                    (A) the status of the designation of the official 
                under subsection (a); and
                    (B) the implementation of the roles, 
                responsibilities, and authorities of the official under 
                subsection (b).

SEC. 563. AUTHORIZATION OF PILOT PROGRAM TO HELP MEMBERS SEPARATING 
              FROM CERTAIN ARMED FORCES OBTAIN EMPLOYMENT AS TEACHERS.

    (a) Authority.--The Secretary of Defense may carry out a pilot 
program to refer covered members for employment as teachers in 
elementary and secondary schools that elect to participate in the pilot 
program.
    (b) Priority.--Under such a pilot program, the Secretary shall give 
priority to participating schools that need teachers of subjects in 
greater demand, including special education and STEM.
    (c) Report.--Under such a pilot program, the Secretary shall submit 
to the appropriate congressional committees an annual report regarding 
such a pilot program. Elements of such a report include the following:
            (1) The number of covered members who apply for the pilot 
        program, disaggregated by covered Armed Force and rank.
            (2) The number of covered members who obtain such 
        employment under the pilot program, disaggregated by covered 
        Armed Force and rank.
            (3) The locations of participating schools.
            (4) The percentages of participating covered members who 
        teach in subjects described in subsection (b).
            (5) The number and percentages of participating covered 
        members who--
                    (A) obtain required teaching credentials by 
                expedited means; or
                    (B) receive exemptions from such requirements.
            (6) The results of a satisfaction survey of participating 
        schools.
            (7) A summary of interviews with participating covered 
        members who obtain such employment, including such covered 
        members who do not complete an academic year of such 
        employment.
    (d) Termination.--This section shall cease to have any effect on 
the day that is five years after the date of the enactment of this Act.
    (e) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered member'' means a member--
                    (A) separating from a covered Armed Force; and
                    (B) who wishes to obtain employment as a teacher in 
                an elementary or secondary school.
            (2) The term ``appropriate congressional committee'' 
        means--
                    (A) the Committee on Armed Services of the House of 
                Representatives;
                    (B) the Committee on Armed Services of the Senate;
                    (C) the Committee on Education and Workforce of the 
                House of Representatives; or
                    (D) the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and 
                Pensions of the Senate.
            (3) The term ``covered Armed Force'' means the Army, Navy, 
        Marine Corps, Air Force, or Space Force.
            (4) The term ``STEM'' means science, technology, 
        engineering, and mathematics.

SEC. 564. STUDY ON SEPARATION OF MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES DUE TO THE 
              MANDATE TO RECEIVE THE COVID-19 VACCINE AND THE TRANSFER 
              OF EDUCATION BENEFITS BY SUCH MEMBERS.

    (a) Study.--The Secretary of Defense shall conduct a study on 
covered individuals and the transfer of education benefits by covered 
individuals to covered dependents.
    (b) Report.--
            (1) Requirement.--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 House of 
        Representatives and the Senate a report containing the results 
        of the study required by subsection (a). Such report shall 
        include--
                    (A) the number of covered individuals;
                    (B) the number of covered individuals who initiated 
                a transfer of education benefits to a dependent in 
                accordance with section 3319 of title 38, United States 
                Code, before separation;
                    (C) the number of covered individuals who initiated 
                such a transfer and did not complete the years of 
                service in the Armed Forces necessary for such 
                dependent to commence use of such education benefits in 
                accordance with such section before separation;
                    (D) the number of members of the Armed Forces who 
                were denied a religious exemption from the mandate to 
                receive the COVID-19 vaccine during the period 
                beginning on August 24, 2021, and ending on January 10, 
                2023;
                    (E) the number of covered individuals who were 
                denied such a religious exemption;
                    (F) the number of covered individuals who returned 
                to service in accordance with the terms of Executive 
                Order 14184 (relating to reinstating service members 
                discharged under the military's COVID-19 vaccination 
                mandate);
                    (G) the number of covered individuals who returned 
                to service in accordance with the terms of Executive 
                Order 14184 (relating to reinstating service members 
                discharged under the military's COVID-19 vaccination 
                mandate) who initiated a transfer of education benefits 
                to a dependent in accordance with section 3319 of title 
                38, United States Code, before separation and return to 
                service;
                    (H) the number of covered individuals who returned 
                to service in accordance with the terms of Executive 
                Order 14184 (relating to reinstating service members 
                discharged under the military's COVID-19 vaccination 
                mandate) who initiated a transfer of education benefits 
                to a dependent in accordance with section 3319 of title 
                38, United States Code, before separation and return to 
                service and completed the years of service in the Armed 
                Forces necessary for such dependent to commence use of 
                such education benefits;
                    (I) the number of covered dependents;
                    (J) an analysis of the budgetary impact of allowing 
                each covered dependent to commence use of education 
                benefits that were transferred to such covered 
                dependent in accordance with section 3319 of title 38, 
                United States Code, without regard to whether the 
                covered individual who transferred such education 
                benefits to such covered dependent completed the years 
                of service in the Armed Forces necessary for such 
                covered dependent to commence such use; and
                    (K) any recommendations of the Secretary to address 
                the separation of covered individuals and to ensure 
                covered individuals receive appropriate benefits as 
                veterans of the Armed Forces.
            (2) Disaggregation.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
        disaggregate the elements of the report required by paragraph 
        (1) that are described in subparagraphs (A) through (J) of such 
        paragraph by--
                    (A) Armed Force in which the covered individual 
                served;
                    (B) whether the covered individual served in an 
                active component or a reserve component;
                    (C) the grade of the covered individual;
                    (D) the years of service in the Armed Forces of the 
                covered individual at the time of separation; and
                    (E) the characterization of the discharge of the 
                covered individual.
    (c) Public Availability.--Not later than 60 days after the 
Secretary of Defense submits the report required by subsection (b), the 
Secretary shall make such report publicly available on the website of 
the Department of Defense.
    (d) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered dependent'' means a dependent of an 
        individual who--
                    (A) is a covered individual;
                    (B) initiated a transfer of education benefits to 
                such dependent in accordance with section 3319 of title 
                38, United States Code; and
                    (C) did not complete the years of service in the 
                Armed Forces necessary for such dependent to commence 
                use of such benefits in accordance with such section.
            (2) The term ``covered individual'' means an individual 
        who, during the period beginning on August 24, 2021, and ending 
        on January 10, 2023, was involuntarily or voluntarily separated 
        from an Armed Force solely on the basis of the refusal of such 
        individual to receive a vaccination against COVID-19.

    Subtitle H--Family Programs, Child Care, and Dependent Education

SEC. 571. EXTENSION OF NON-MEDICAL COUNSELING SERVICES PROGRAM FOR 
              MILITARY FAMILIES.

    Section 1781(d)(4) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``three years after the date of the enactment of this 
subsection'' and inserting ``December 22, 2029''.

SEC. 572. PILOT PROGRAM TO INCREASE PAYMENTS FOR CHILD CARE SERVICES IN 
              HIGH-COST AREAS.

    Section 1798 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsections (c) and (d) as subsection 
        (d) and (e), respectively; and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(c) Pilot Program for Grants to Increase Infant and Toddler 
Capacity in High-cost Areas.--(1) The Secretary of Defense may 
establish a pilot program to provide grants to eligible providers 
seeking to expand the capacity of such providers to provide care for 
infants and toddlers.
    ``(2) A grant awarded under the pilot program established under 
paragraph (1) shall--
            ``(A) be in an amount determined by the Secretary, but in 
        no case more than 75 percent of the estimated cost of the 
        expansion for which the grant is provided; and
            ``(B) require the recipient of a grant to--
                    ``(i) make available not less than half of any 
                additional capacity for infants and toddlers to 
                children of members of the armed forces that results 
                from the expansion for which a grant is awarded for the 
                10-year period that begins on the date on which such 
                expansion is completed; and
                    ``(ii) certify that the recipient will not displace 
                children enrolled on the date described in clause (i) 
                who are not children of members of the armed forces to 
                meet the requirement of clause (i).
    ``(3) The Secretary--
            ``(A) shall award grants under the pilot program 
        established under paragraph (1) to not less than 10 eligible 
        providers located in areas with high child care services costs 
        or a significant lack of accessible child care services, as 
        determined by the Secretary; and
            ``(B) may award grants under the pilot program established 
        under paragraph (1) to eligible providers located in other 
        areas as the Secretary considers appropriate.
    ``(4) Not later than one year after the establishment of the pilot 
program under this subsection, and semiannually thereafter until the 
date of the termination of the pilot program, the Secretary shall 
submit to the appropriate congressional committees a report on the 
pilot program that includes--
            ``(A) the number of eligible providers participating in the 
        pilot program, disaggregated by location;
            ``(B) the number of additional infant and toddler 
        enrollments at eligible providers made available under the 
        pilot program, disaggregated by loacation;
            ``(C) the determination of the Secretary as to whether 
        grants provided under the pilot program--
                    ``(i) helped reduce child care costs for applicable 
                military families;
                    ``(ii) increased child care provider participation 
                in the financial assistance available under this 
                section; and
                    ``(iii) increased access to infant and toddler care 
                for military families;
            ``(D) the determination of the Secretary with respect to 
        the feasibility of expanding the pilot program to all 
        communities;
            ``(E) any challenges identified by the Secretary in 
        carrying out the pilot program;
            ``(F) legislation or administrative action that the 
        Secretary determines necessary to make the pilot program 
        permanent; and
            ``(G) any other information the Secretary determines 
        appropriate.
    ``(5) Not later than 90 days after the date of the termination of 
the pilot program, the Secretary shall submit to the appropriate 
congressional committees a report that includes--
            ``(A) the elements specified in subparagraphs (A) through 
        (G) of paragraph (4); and
            ``(B) the recommendation of the Secretary as to whether to 
        make the pilot program permanent.
    ``(6) The pilot program established under this subsection shall 
terminate on the date that is five years after the date on which such 
program is established.
    ``(7) In this subsection, the term `appropriate congressional 
committees' means--
            ``(A) the congressional defense committees;
            ``(B) the Committee on Commerce, Science, and 
        Transportation of the Senate; and
            ``(C) the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of 
        the House of Representatives.''.

SEC. 573. PILOT PROGRAM TO PROVIDE FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE TO MEMBERS OF 
              THE ARMED FORCES FOR IN-HOME CHILD CARE: INCLUSION OF AU 
              PAIRS.

    Section 589 of the William M. (Mac) Thornberry National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (10 U.S.C. 1791 note) is 
amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)(4), by striking ``subsection (b)'' 
        and inserting ``subsection (c)'';
            (2) by redesignating subsections (b) through (e) as 
        subsections (c) through (f), respectively; and
            (3) by inserting after subsection (a) the following new 
        subsection (b):
    ``(b) Au Pairs.--(1) The Secretary shall treat an au pair who is 
participating in the Au Pair program of the Department of State as an 
in-home child care provider who meets qualifications determined under 
subsection (a)(3)(B).
    ``(2) No State or local government may enact or enforce a law, 
regulation, rule, or requirement related to such Au Pair program that 
would impose an additional or different term or condition on a military 
family that is the host family for an au pair.''.

SEC. 574. MODIFICATIONS TO PILOT PROGRAM TO PROVIDE FINANCIAL 
              ASSISTANCE TO MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES FOR IN-HOME 
              CHILD CARE.

    (a) In General.--Section 589 of the William M. (Mac) Thornberry 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (Public Law 
116-283; 10 U.S.C. 1791 note) is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsections (c), (d), and (e) as 
        subsections (d), (e), and (f), respectively; and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(c) Direct Payments.--
            ``(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), the 
        Secretary of Defense shall provide financial assistance under 
        the pilot program required by subsection (a) to members of the 
        Armed Forces through monthly pay, direct deposit, or other form 
        of direct payment to such members.
            ``(2) Payment to eligible providers.--The Secretary of 
        Defense may provide financial assistance under the pilot 
        program required by subsection (a) directly to an in-home child 
        care provider with the written consent of the member of the 
        Armed Forces receiving such financial assistance.''.
    (b) Implementation Date.--The requirements of subsection (c) of 
section 589 of the William M. (Mac) Thornberry National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021, as added by subsection (a) of 
this section--
            (1) except as provided in paragraph (2), shall apply to 
        financial assistance under the pilot program established 
        pursuant to such section provided on or after the date that is 
        180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act; and
            (2) shall not apply to financial assistance under such 
        pilot program provided to an in-home child care provider 
        pursuant to an agreement between the Secretary of Defense until 
        the end of the term of such agreement if--
                    (A) the agreement is in effect on the date of the 
                enactment of this Act; and
                    (B) the agreement provides that the Secretary will 
                make direct payments to such provider.

SEC. 575. CERTAIN ASSISTANCE TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES THAT BENEFIT 
              DEPENDENTS OF MILITARY AND CIVILIAN PERSONNEL.

    (a) Continuation of Authority to Assist Local Educational Agencies 
That Benefit Dependents of Members of the Armed Forces and Department 
of Defense Civilian Employees.--
            (1) Assistance to schools with significant numbers of 
        military dependent students.--Of the amount authorized to be 
        appropriated for fiscal year 2027 by section 301 and available 
        for operation and maintenance for Defense-wide activities as 
        specified in the funding table in section 4301, $50,000,000 
        shall be available only for the purpose of providing assistance 
        to local educational agencies under subsection (a) of section 
        572 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
        2006 (Public Law 109-163; 20 U.S.C. 7703b).
            (2) Local educational agency defined.--In this subsection, 
        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)).
    (b) Impact Aid for Children With Severe Disabilities.--
            (1) In general.--Of the amount authorized to be 
        appropriated for fiscal year 2027 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).
            (2) Additional amount.--Of the amount authorized to be 
        appropriated for fiscal year 2027 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 use by the Secretary of 
        Defense to make payments to local educational agencies 
        determined by the Secretary to have higher concentrations of 
        military children with severe disabilities.
            (3) Briefing.--Not later than March 31, 2027, the Secretary 
        of Defense shall provide to the Committees on Armed Services of 
        the Senate and the House of Representatives a briefing on the 
        Department of Defense's evaluation of each local educational 
        agency with higher concentrations of military children with 
        severe disabilities and subsequent determination of the amounts 
        of impact aid each such agency shall receive.

SEC. 576. POLICIES TO SUPPORT MILITARY FAMILIES SUBJECT TO COURT-
              ORDERED CHILD CUSTODY ARRANGEMENTS.

    (a) Policies Required.--Beginning not later than one year after the 
date of the enactment of this Act, each Secretary concerned shall 
maintain a policy pursuant to which a member of an Armed Force under 
the jurisdiction of the Secretary who is a party to a court-ordered 
child custody arrangement may, at the discretion of the Secretary, 
receive--
            (1) an exemption from orders for a permanent change of 
        station or similar orders for a period of up to 24 months to 
        enable that member to remain in geographic proximity to their 
        child; and
            (2) such other accommodations as the Secretary determines 
        appropriate to promote family stability.
    (b) Report to Congress.--Not later than one year after the date of 
the enactment of this Act, each Secretary concerned shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report on the policy required under 
subsection (a). The report shall include--
            (1) a summary of the policy;
            (2) the Secretary's plan for implementation of the policy; 
        and
            (3) an explanation of how policy meets the requirements of 
        subsection (a) and otherwise promotes family stability among 
        members of the Armed Forces.
    (c) Secretary Concerned Defined.--In this section, the term 
``Secretary concerned'' has the meaning given that term in section 
101(a) of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 577. AUTHORITY FOR PILOT PROGRAM FOR CERTAIN MILITARY SPOUSES TO 
              BECOME SPECIAL EDUCATION TEACHERS IN DODEA SCHOOLS.

    (a) Authority.--The Secretary of Defense may carry out a pilot 
program under which certain military spouses may become special 
education teachers in schools operated by the Department of Defense 
Education Activity.
    (b) Eligibility.--A military spouse eligible to participate in such 
a pilot program is a military spouse who--
            (1) is eligible for assistance under section 1784a of title 
        10, United States Code; and
            (2) has a bachelor's or graduate degree from an institution 
        of higher education.
    (c) Assistance.--Under such a pilot program, the Secretary shall 
provide assistance under section 1784a of title 10, United States Code, 
to a participating military spouse to seek a certification or other 
credential as a special education teacher in the State in which the 
military spouse resides.
    (d) Service Obligation.--As a condition of receiving assistance 
under subsection (c), a military spouse who participates in such a 
pilot program shall agree to serve as a special education teacher in a 
school operated by the Department of Defense Education Activity for a 
period of three years.
    (e) State Agreements.--The Secretary may seek to enter into an 
agreement with a State government (or licensing body sanctioned by a 
State government) to expedite certification described in subsection 
(c).
    (f) Report.--Not later than one year before the termination under 
subsection (g) of the authority to carry out a pilot program under this 
section, the Secretary shall submit to the appropriate congressional 
committees a report regarding such pilot program. Such report shall 
include the recommendation of the Secretary whether such authority 
should be extended or made permanent.
    (g) Termination.--The authority under this section shall terminate 
five years after the date of the enactment of this Act.
    (h) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``appropriate congressional committee'' means 
        the following:
                    (A) The Committee on Armed Services of the House of 
                Representatives.
                    (B) The Committee on Armed Services of the Senate.
                    (C) The Committee on Education and Workforce of the 
                House of Representatives.
            (2) The term ``institution of higher education'' has the 
        meaning given such term in section 102 of the Higher Education 
        Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1002).
            (3) The term ``special education teacher'' has the meaning 
        given such term in section 103 of the Higher Education Act of 
        1965 (20 U.S.C. 1003).

SEC. 578. PILOT PROGRAM FOR PUSH-TEXT NOTIFICATIONS TO MEMBERS AND 
              DEPENDENTS.

    (a) Establishment.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall establish a pilot 
program to be known as the ``Push-Text Initiative'' (in this section 
referred to as the ``pilot program'') to provide members of the Armed 
Forces, assigned to one or more military installations located outside 
of the United States, and the adult dependents of such members, with 
timely and relevant information via text message.
    (b) Implementation.--Under the pilot program--
            (1) a member of the Armed Forces assigned to a location 
        participating in the pilot program, or the dependent of such a 
        member, may elect to receive such information using all 
        available text messaging contact information provided by such a 
        member or dependent; and
            (2) a member or dependent who elects to receive information 
        under paragraph (1) may opt out of receiving text messages 
        under the pilot program at any time.
    (c) Covered Information.--Text messages transmitted under the pilot 
program shall include--
            (1) information on employment opportunities for military 
        spouses, career counseling, and related support programs;
            (2) updates with respect to child care services available 
        both on and off the installation, availability of child care, 
        and child care fee assistance programs;
            (3) information regarding general TRICARE program benefits, 
        enrollment deadlines, and other health-related resources;
            (4) notifications of changes in Department of Defense 
        policies, regulations, or Federal laws that affect members or 
        dependents of members; and
            (5) any other information or resources that the Secretary 
        considers relevant to the well-being of members and dependents 
        of members.
    (d) Report.--Not later than October 1, 2027, the Secretary of 
Defense shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report 
on the pilot program. Such report shall include--
            (1) a description of how the pilot program was implemented, 
        including the timeline, execution plan, and the official 
        managing the pilot program;
            (2) data on participation and usage, including the number 
        of individuals who elected to participate, the rates of 
        enrollment and disenrollment, and the frequency and types of 
        messages transmitted;
            (3) any observed benefits or outcomes of the pilot program, 
        including feedback from participants;
            (4) an analysis of the costs of operating the pilot program 
        and any cost savings or efficiencies achieved by consolidating 
        or scaling back other outreach efforts with respect to issues 
        addressed by the pilot program; and
            (5) the recommendations of the Secretary with respect to 
        the feasibility and advisability of continuing or expanding the 
        pilot program to the entire Department of Defense, including 
        any proposed modifications to the program and an assessment of 
        the anticipated costs, resource requirements, and potential 
        benefits of Department-wide implementation.
    (e) Termination.--The pilot program shall terminate on the day that 
is three years after the date on which the pilot program is 
established.

                   Subtitle I--Decorations and Awards

SEC. 581. GOLD STAR SURVIVOR: DEFINITION PRESCRIBED BY SECRETARY OF 
              DEFENSE.

    (a) Definition Prescribed by Secretary of Defense.--Section 1126 of 
title 10, United States Code, is amended, in subsection (d)(1), by 
striking ``as the Secretaries concerned shall jointly specify in 
regulations for purposes of this section'' and inserting ``as the 
Secretary of Defense prescribes in regulations''.
    (b) Reference.--Subsection (b) of such section is amended--
            (1) by inserting ``(1)'' before ``Under regulations''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(2)(A) An individual eligible for a gold star lapel button under 
paragraph (1) may be referred to as a `gold star survivor', `member of 
a gold star family', or `gold star family member'.
    ``(B) All of the individuals eligible for a gold star lapel button 
under paragraph (1) because of the loss of the life of one member under 
any circumstances prescribed in subsection (a) may be referred to as a 
`gold star family'.''.
    (c) Conforming Amendment.--Section 626 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2022 (Public Law 117-81; 10 U.S.C. 
101 note) is amended by striking subsection (c).

SEC. 582. MEDAL OF HONOR RECIPIENTS: ACCESS TO ANY MILITARY 
              INSTALLATION; LIAISON.

    (a) Access.--Section 1134a of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(e) Access.--A person whose name is entered on the Army, Navy, 
Air Force, and Coast Guard Medal of Honor Roll shall be issued a common 
access card (or successor identification) that grants such person 
unaccompanied access to any military installation and the Pentagon.''.
    (b) Liaison.--Chapter 57 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by inserting after section 1134a the following new section:
``Sec. 1134b. Medal of honor liaison
    ``(a) Establishment.--There is in the Department of Defense a Medal 
of Honor Liaison, appointed by the Secretary of Defense, who shall 
serve as liaison to MOH recipients.
    ``(b) Duties.--The duties of the Medal of Honor Liaison include the 
following:
            ``(1) To serve as a primary point of contact in the 
        Department for MOH recipients and their families.
            ``(2) To coordinate efforts within the Department, across 
        the armed forces, and with the Secretary of Veterans Affairs 
        and other Federal entities regarding MOH recipients.
            ``(3) To coordinate replacement of military decorations 
        under section 1135 of this title for MOH recipients.
            ``(4) To standardize protocol regarding MOH recipients 
        across the armed forces.
            ``(5) To perform public affairs outreach regarding MOH 
        recipients.
            ``(6) To make recommendations to the Secretary of Defense 
        regarding service on active duty by MOH recipients, including 
        in combat.
    ``(c) MOH Recipient Defined.--In this section, the term `MOH 
recipient' means a person whose name is entered on the Army, Navy, Air 
Force, and Coast Guard Medal of Honor Roll under section 1134a of this 
title.''.

SEC. 583. TECHNICAL CORRECTION TO AUTHORIZATION TO AWARD THE 
              DISTINGUISHED-SERVICE CROSS TO ISAAC ``IKE'' CAMACHO.

    Section 592 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60) is amended, in the section heading, by 
striking the third word.

SEC. 584. AUTHORIZATION OF SERVICE RIBBON FOR A MEMBER OF THE NATIONAL 
              GUARD WHO PERFORMS HOMELAND DEFENSE DUTY.

    (a) Ribbon Authorized.--The Secretary of the military department 
concerned may award a service ribbon to a member of the National Guard 
who performs duty in support of a homeland defense activity, as such 
term is defined in section 901 of title 32, United States Code.
    (b) Design.--The ribbon shall be of an appropriate design approved 
by the Secretary of Defense.
    (c) Issuance to Next-of-kin.--If the member is deceased, the 
Secretary of the military department concerned may issue such a ribbon 
to the next-of-kin of the member.
    (d) Regulations.--The award of a ribbon under this section shall be 
subject to such regulations as the Secretaries of the military 
departments concerned shall prescribe for purposes of this section. The 
Secretary of Defense shall ensure that any regulations prescribed under 
this subsection are uniform to the extent practicable.

SEC. 585. AUTHORIZATION FOR POSTHUMOUS AWARD OF MEDAL OF HONOR TO 
              RAFAEL PERALTA FOR ACTS OF VALOR.

    (a) Authorization.--Notwithstanding the time limitations specified 
in sections 8298(a) and 8300 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 is authorized to 
award the Medal of Honor, under section 8291 of such title, to Rafael 
Peralta for the acts of valor described in subsection (b).
    (b) Acts of Valor Described.-- The acts of valor described in this 
subsection are the actions of Rafael Peralta as a member of the Marine 
Corps on November 15, 2004, for which he was previously awarded the 
Navy Cross.

SEC. 586. AUTHORIZATION FOR POSTHUMOUS AWARD OF MEDAL OF HONOR TO 
              ROBERT A. LODGE FOR ACTS OF VALOR.

    (a) Authorization.--Notwithstanding the time limitations specified 
in section 9274 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 9271 of such title to Robert A. Lodge for the acts 
of valor described in subsection (b).
    (b) Acts of Valor Described.--The acts of valor described in this 
subsection are the actions of Robert A. Lodge as a Major in the Air 
Force on May 10, 1972.

SEC. 587. AUTHORIZATION FOR AWARD OF THE DISTINGUISHED-SERVICE CROSS 
              FOR JAMES O. RATLIFF FOR ACTS OF VALOR DURING THE VIETNAM 
              WAR.

    (a) Waiver of Time Limitations.--Notwithstanding the time 
limitations specified in section 7274 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 a Distinguished-Service Cross under section 7272 of such title to 
James O. Ratliff for the acts of valor described in subsection (b).
    (b) Acts of Valor Described.--The acts of valor described in this 
subsection are the actions of James O. Ratliff on June 18, 1968, as a 
member of the Army during a combat mission near the village of Ap Go 
Cong during the Vietnam War.

SEC. 588. AUTHORIZATION TO AWARD THE DISTINGUISHED-SERVICE CROSS TO 
              JOSEPH P. LYNCH FOR ACTS OF VALOR AS A MEMBER OF THE ARMY 
              DURING THE VIETNAM WAR.

    (a) Waiver of Time Limitations.--Notwithstanding the time 
limitations specified in section 7274 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 Secretary of the 
Army may award the Distinguished-Service Cross under section 7272 of 
such title to Joseph P. Lynch for the acts of valor in described in 
subsection (b).
    (b) Acts of Valor Described.--The acts of valor described in this 
subsection are the actions of Joseph P. Lynch on April 17, 1968, as a 
member of the Army, during a combat mission near Khe Sanh, Republic of 
Vietnam, for which he was previously awarded the Silver Star.

SEC. 589. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING AWARD OF MEDAL OF HONOR TO THOMAS 
              J. GRASSO FOR ACTS OF VALOR DURING OPERATION FREEDOM'S 
              SENTINEL.

    It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the Secretary of Defense should review the acts of 
        valor of Thomas J. Grasso as a Sergeant First Class in the Army 
        during Operation Freedom's Sentinel to determine whether to 
        recommend to the President to award Thomas J. Grasso the Medal 
        of Honor for such acts of valor; and
            (2) subject to the enactment of legislation to waive the 
        time limitations in section 7274 of title 10, United States 
        Code, the President should award the Medal of Honor to Thomas 
        J. Grasso for such acts of valor if the Secretary so 
        recommends.

SEC. 589A. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING AWARD OF MEDAL OF HONOR TO 
              RETIRED COLONEL PHILIP J. CONRAN FOR ACTS OF VALOR IN 
              LAOS DURING THE VIETNAM WAR.

    It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the Secretary of Defense should review the acts of 
        valor of Philip J. Conran on October 6, 1969, as a member of 
        the Air Force, during a combat mission in the Savannakhet 
        Province of Laos to determine whether to recommend to the 
        President to award Philip J. Conran the Medal of Honor for such 
        acts of valor; and
            (2) subject to the enactment of legislation to waive the 
        time limitations specified in section 9274 of title 10, United 
        States Code, the President should award the Medal of Honor to 
        Philip J. Conran for such acts of valor if the Secretary so 
        recommends.

          Subtitle J--Other Matters and Miscellaneous Reports

SEC. 591. EXPANSION OF ELIGIBILITY OF VETERANS FOR CERTAIN MILITARY 
              ADAPTIVE SPORTS PROGRAM.

    Section 2564a of title 10, United States Code, is amended, in 
subsection (a)(1)(B), in the matter preceding clause (i), by striking 
``, during the one-year period following the veteran's date of 
separation,''.

SEC. 592. EXPANDED GOALS OF AUTHORIZED PROGRAM REGARDING THE NATIONAL 
              SEPTEMBER 11 MEMORIAL AND MUSEUM.

    The Secretary of Defense shall seek to amend any agreement entered 
into by the Secretary pursuant to section 539 of the Servicemember 
Quality of Life Improvement and National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2025 (Public Law 118-159) to include promoting security at 
the National September 11 Memorial and Museum.

SEC. 593. LOCAL AGRICULTURAL PROCUREMENT IN GUAM COMMISSARIES.

    (a) Designation of Liaison.--The Director of the Defense Commissary 
Agency shall designate an official within the Defense Commissary Agency 
responsible for liaising with farmers, ranchers, fishermen, and food 
producers in Guam for the purpose of assisting those persons in doing 
business with the Defense Commissary Agency and increasing the 
availability of locally produced food products in commissaries located 
in Guam.
    (b) Plan to Increase Local Procurement.--
            (1) Plan required.--Not later than 180 days after the date 
        of the enactment of this Act, the Director of the Defense 
        Commissary Agency shall submit to the congressional defense 
        committees a plan to increase the volume of locally grown 
        produce sold in commissaries located in Guam.
            (2) Elements.--The plan required under paragraph (1) 
        shall--
                    (A) identify barriers to procuring locally grown 
                produce from producers in Guam;
                    (B) describe steps the Defense Commissary Agency 
                will take to improve outreach, contracting, 
                distribution, and procurement opportunities for 
                producers in Guam;
                    (C) establish measurable benchmarks and timelines 
                for increasing the amount of locally grown produce sold 
                in commissaries located in Guam; and
                    (D) include a goal that not less than 15 percent of 
                all produce sold in commissaries located in Guam be 
                locally sourced from Guam producers.
    (c) Report on Implementation.--Not later than two years after the 
date of the submission of the plan required under subsection (b), the 
Director of the Defense Commissary Agency shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report on the implementation of the 
plan, including--
            (1) the percentage of produce sold in commissaries located 
        in Guam that is locally sourced;
            (2) a description of progress made toward achieving the 
        goal described in subsection (b)(2)(D);
            (3) any challenges encountered in implementing the plan; 
        and
            (4) recommendations for legislative or administrative 
        action to further increase procurement from producers in Guam.

SEC. 594. SUBMISSION OF REVIEW OF OPERATIONAL EFFECTIVENESS OF ARMY AND 
              MARINE CORPS GROUND COMBAT UNITS.

    (a) Submission to Congress.--Not later than seven days after the 
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall 
submit to Congress the complete, unredacted review of operational 
effectiveness of Army and Marine Corps ground combat units that is the 
subject of the memorandum issued by the Under Secretary of Defense for 
Personnel and Readiness on December 18, 2025, relating to ``Review of 
the Operational Effectiveness of Army and Marine Corps Ground Combat 
Units''.
    (b) Comptroller General Review.--Not later than 180 days after the 
date of the date of the enactment of this Act, the Comptroller General 
of the United States shall submit to the congressional defense 
committees a report reviewing--
            (1) the review submitted to Congress under subsection (a); 
        and
            (2) any actions taken by the Secretary of Defense in 
        response to the review.

           TITLE VI--MILITARY COMPENSATION AND OTHER BENEFITS

                  Subtitle A--Bonus and Incentive Pays

SEC. 601. 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, 2026'' and inserting ``December 31, 2027''.
    (b) Title 10 Authorities Relating to Health Care Professionals.--
The following sections of title 10, United States Code, are amended by 
striking ``December 31, 2026'' and inserting ``December 31, 2027'':
            (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, 
2026'' and inserting ``December 31, 2027''.
    (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, 2026'' 
and inserting ``December 31, 2027'':
            (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) of title 37, United States Code, 
is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (7)(E), relating to an area covered by a 
        major disaster declaration or containing an installation 
        experiencing an influx of military personnel, by striking 
        ``December 31, 2026'' and inserting ``December 31, 2027''; and
            (2) in paragraph (8)(C), relating to an area where actual 
        housing costs differ from current rates by more than 20 
        percent, by striking ``December 31, 2026'' and inserting 
        ``December 31, 2027''.

SEC. 602. AUTHORIZING BOARD CERTIFICATION INCENTIVE PAY FOR MEDICAL 
              OFFICERS WITH DOCTORAL DEGREES.

    Section 335(c)(2) of title 37, United States Code, is amended by 
inserting ``, or holds a doctoral degree that the Secretary concerned 
determines appropriate,'' after ``is board certified''.

SEC. 603. ONE-TIME CORRECTIVE INCREASE AND ANNUAL ADJUSTMENTS FOR 
              CERTAIN SPECIAL AND INCENTIVE PAYS FOR MEMBERS OF THE 
              ARMED FORCES; CLARIFICATION OF SPECIAL AND INCENTIVE PAY 
              AUTHORITIES FOR MEMBERS OF RESERVE COMPONENTS.

    (a) Adjustments.--
            (1) In general.--Chapter 19 of title 37, United States 
        Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
        section:
``Sec. 1017. Adjustments to amounts of special and incentive pays
    ``(a) Initial Increase.--Effective on January 1 of the first year 
that begins after the date of the enactment of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2027, the Secretary of Defense shall 
increase the amount of each covered special and incentive pay (rounded 
to the nearest dollar) for members of the armed forces by the greater 
of--
            ``(1) the percentage by which the CPI for the base quarter 
        of the preceding year exceeds the CPI for the base quarter 
        preceding the last statutory or administrative increase date 
        for such covered special and incentive pay; and
            ``(2) the percentage by which the average rate of basic pay 
        for members of the armed forces under section 203(a) of this 
        title in effect on such January 1 exceeds the average rate of 
        basic pay for members of the armed forces under such section 
        203(a) that was in effect on the last statutory or 
        administrative increase date for such covered special and 
        incentive pay.
    ``(b) Recurring Increase.--Effective on January 1 of the second 
year that begins after the date of the enactment of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2027, and each January 1 
thereafter, the Secretary of Defense shall increase the amount of each 
covered special and incentive pay (rounded to the nearest dollar) for 
members of the armed forces by the greater of--
            ``(1) the percentage by which the CPI for the base quarter 
        of the preceding year exceeds the CPI for the base quarter of 
        the year before the preceding year; and
            ``(2) the percentage by which the rate of basic pay for 
        members of the armed forces under section 203(a) of this title 
        is increased on such January 1 from the rate of basic pay for 
        such members in effect the preceding year.
    ``(c) Relationship to Limits of Amounts in Law.--The Secretary 
shall increase the amount of each covered special and incentive pay in 
accordance with subsection (a) or (b) notwithstanding any limitation on 
the maximum amount of such pay specified in any other provision of law.
    ``(d) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `base quarter' for any year is the three-
        month period ending on September 30 of such year.
            ``(2) The term `covered special and incentive pay' means--
                    ``(A) a bonus, incentive, or special pay payable 
                under chapter 5 of this title; and
                    ``(B) the allowance payable under section 427 of 
                this title.
            ``(3) The term `CPI' means the Consumer Price Index for All 
        Urban Consumers published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of 
        the Department of Labor.
            ``(4) The term `last statutory or administrative increase 
        date' means the date of the most recent adjustment to an amount 
        of pay that--
                    ``(A) reflects a revision based on objective 
                economic indicators or an increase to basic pay for 
                members of the armed forces; or
                    ``(B) was made by Act of Congress.''.
            (2) Publication of one-time adjustments.--Not later than 
        December 31 of the year of the enactment of this Act, the 
        Secretary of Defense shall publish in the Federal Register a 
        table that identifies--
                    (A) each covered special and incentive pay (as 
                defined in section 1017 of title 37, United States 
                Code, as added by subsection (a) of this section);
                    (B) the last statutory or administration increase 
                date (as defined in such section 1017) of each such 
                pay;
                    (C) the amount of increase of such pay after the 
                application of subsection (a) of such section 1017; and
                    (D) the total amount of such pay after the 
                application of such subsection (a).
    (b) Clarification of Special and Incentive Pay Authorities for 
Members of Reserve Components.--Section 357 of title 37, United States 
Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``special or incentive pay'' and inserting 
        ``bonus, incentive, or special pay''; and
            (2) by striking ``if the Secretary concerned'' and all that 
        follows and inserting a period.

SEC. 604. PAYMENT OF MAXIMUM AMOUNT OF AVIATION INCENTIVE PAY TO 
              AVIATION OFFICERS WITH MORE THAN 8 YEARS OF AVIATION 
              SERVICE; ENHANCEMENT OF RETENTION INCENTIVES AVAILABLE TO 
              AVIATION OFFICERS.

    (a) Payment of Maximum Amount of Aviation Incentive Pay to Officers 
With More Than 8 Years of Aviation Service.--Section 334(c) of title 
37, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)(A), by inserting ``subject to 
        paragraph (5),'' before ``aviation incentive''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
            ``(5) Maximum amount for officers with more than 8 years of 
        aviation service.--An officer of the Army, Navy, Air Force, 
        Marine Corps, or Space Force who is entitled to aviation 
        incentive pay under subsection (a) and has completed more than 
        8 years of aviation service shall receive the maximum monthly 
        amount of such pay under paragraph (1)(A).''.
    (b) Enhancement of Air Force Rated Officer Retention Demonstration 
Program.--
            (1) Eligible officers.--Subsection (b)(2) of section 604 of 
        the James M. Inhofe National Defense Authorization Act for 
        Fiscal Year 2023 (Public Law 117-263; 37 U.S.C. 301b note) is 
        amended--
                    (A) by striking ``and not less than one year''; and
                    (B) by striking ``under section 653 of title 10, 
                United States Code''.
            (2) Written agreements.--Subsection (c)(1) of such section 
        is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``four years'' and inserting ``one 
                year''; and
                    (B) by striking ``under section 653 of title 10, 
                United States Code''.
            (3) Retention incentives.--Subsection (d) of such section 
        is amended--
                    (A) by striking paragraph (1) and inserting the 
                following new paragraph (1):
            ``(1) Flexibility of assignment and duty locations.--Under 
        the demonstration program required under subsection (a), the 
        Secretary shall offer to a rated officer described in 
        subsection (b), to the maximum extent practicable (as 
        determined by the Secretary)--
                    ``(A) assignment to the duty location of the rated 
                officer's preference, including consecutive assignments 
                to the same duty location;
                    ``(B) the opportunity to perform a staff assignment 
                that does not require flying remotely, such that the 
                officer may avoid relocation or remain in active flying 
                status; and
                    ``(C) the opportunity to transition indefinitely to 
                a non-combat aviation service position.'';
                    (B) by striking paragraph (2) and inserting the 
                following new paragraph (2):
            ``(2) Aviation bonus.--
                    ``(A) In general.--Under the demonstration program 
                required under subsection (a), notwithstanding section 
                334(c) of title 37, United States Code, the Secretary 
                may pay to a rated officer described in subsection (b) 
                an aviation bonus not to exceed an average annual 
                amount of $100,000.
                    ``(B) Payment of maximum amount.--The Secretary--
                            ``(i) shall ensure the maximum amount 
                        payable under subparagraph (A) is offered to 
                        any rated officer described in subsection (b) 
                        who executes a written agreement under 
                        subsection (c) to remain on active duty for one 
                        or more years after the completion of the 
                        active duty service obligation of the officer; 
                        and
                            ``(ii) may not vary the amount of an 
                        aviation bonus offered to an officer based on 
                        the active duty service commitment the officer 
                        has remaining at the time of offer.''; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following new 
                paragraph:
            ``(4) Aligning total force incentives.--The Secretary shall 
        ensure that an offer under this subsection to a rated officer 
        described in subsection (b) includes--
                    ``(A) contract length options equal to or shorter 
                than contract length options offered by the Air 
                National Guard and the Air Force Reserve; and
                    ``(B) an aviation bonus under paragraph (2) in an 
                amount that is equal to or exceeds the amounts offered 
                by the Air National Guard and the Air Force Reserve.''.
            (4) Extension of demonstration project.--Subsection (g) of 
        such section is amended by striking ``2028'' and inserting 
        ``2031''.

SEC. 605. EXPANSIONS OF AUTHORITIES TO CONTRACT WITH MEMBERS OF THE 
              SENIOR RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS.

    (a) Expansion of Authority to Contract With Members Ineligible for 
Advanced Training.--Section 2103a(a) of title 10, United States Code is 
amended in the matter preceding paragraph (1) by striking ``who has 
completed successfully the first year of a four-year Senior Reserve 
Officers' Training Corps course and''.
    (b) Contracting Bonus: Increased Maximum Bonus; Expansion of 
Training Covered by Contract.--Section 336 of title 37, United States 
Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (b), by striking ``$5,000'' and inserting 
        ``$15,000''; and
            (2) in subsection (c)(1), by striking ``field training or a 
        practice cruise under section 2104(b)(6)(A)(ii) of title 10'' 
        and inserting ``training requirements prescribed by the 
        Secretary concerned''.

SEC. 606. RETROACTIVE GRANTING OF WAIVERS FOR AVIATION INCENTIVE PAY.

    (a) Mandatory Waiver.--Subject to subsection (c), the Secretary of 
the Navy shall--
            (1) waive the requirements relating to months of 
        operational flight for the receipt of aviation incentive pay 
        under section 334 or 357 of title 37, United States Code, for 
        any officer who--
                    (A) was assigned to a tactical air control squadron 
                during the period beginning on September 1, 2018, and 
                ending on January 1, 2025;
                    (B)(i) submitted a request to waive such 
                requirements during such period that was denied; or
                    (ii) did not submit a request for a waiver of such 
                requirements during such period; and
                    (C) who the Secretary of the Navy determines would 
                have qualified for a waiver of such requirements under 
                the criteria applicable to requests for such a waiver 
                at that time, provided that the Secretary shall 
                consider as qualified for a waiver an officer who 
                accumulated not less than 72 months of creditable 
                operational or proficiency flying duty as of--
                            (i) in the case of an officer described in 
                        paragraph (1)(B)(i), the date of the submission 
                        of a request for such a waiver; and
                            (ii) in the case of an officer described in 
                        paragraph (1)(B)(ii), the date on which such 
                        officer was determined ineligible for aviation 
                        incentive pay under section 334 or 357 of title 
                        37, United States Code, due to the failure to 
                        meet the requirements relating to months of 
                        operational flight;
            (2) apply the waiver required by paragraph (1) for each 
        officer as of--
                    (A) in the case of an officer described in 
                paragraph (1)(B)(i), the date of such request; and
                    (B) in the case of an officer described in 
                paragraph (1)(B)(ii), the date on which such officer 
                was determined ineligible for aviation incentive pay 
                under section 334 or 357 of title 37, United States 
                Code, due to the failure to meet the requirements 
                relating to months of operational flight; and
            (3) provide each such officer aviation incentive pay under 
        those sections in the amounts such officer would have received 
        had the waiver been granted and applied on such date.
    (b) Review of Flying Duty Policies.--
            (1) In general.--Subject to subsection (c), if the 
        Secretary of the Navy has reason to believe that the process 
        for certifying operational or proficiency flying duty for 
        members of the Navy or Marine Corps is not being carried out 
        correctly, the Secretary shall conduct a review of such 
        process, including all flying duty policies, procedures, and 
        determinations, and take such corrective actions as the 
        Secretary considers appropriate.
            (2) Status of aviation incentive pay.--If the Secretary 
        conducts a review under paragraph (1), the Secretary may not 
        make a determination that an officer is ineligible for aviation 
        incentive pay under section 334 or 357 of title 37, United 
        States Code, due to failure to meet the requirements relating 
        to months of operational flight until the completion of such 
        review.
            (3) Submission.--If the Secretary conducts a review under 
        paragraph (1), the Secretary shall submit to the congressional 
        defense committees the results of the review.
    (c) Limitations.--
            (1) Appropriations required.--Payments under subsection (a) 
        and corrective action under subsection (b) in a fiscal year may 
        only be made using amounts appropriated in advance specifically 
        for such payments or such corrective action under such 
        subsection in such fiscal year.
            (2) Matter of payments.--Payments under subsection (a) and 
        corrective action under subsection (b) shall be made on a pro 
        rata basis if the amounts appropriated for such payments or 
        such corrective action are less than the total amount that 
        would be paid for such payments or such corrective action.
            (3) Amounts of payments.--The total amount of funding 
        obligated for payments under subsection (a) and corrective 
        action under subsection (b) may not exceed the amount 
        specifically appropriated for providing payments or taking such 
        corrective action during the period of availability of such 
        amount.

                         Subtitle B--Allowances

SEC. 611. BASIC NEEDS ALLOWANCE: EXCLUSION OF BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR 
              HOUSING FROM THE CALCULATION OF GROSS HOUSEHOLD INCOME OF 
              AN ELIGIBLE MEMBER OF THE ARMED FORCES.

    Section 402b(k)(1)(B) of title 37, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``in'' and all that follows through 
        ``portion of''; and
            (2) by striking ``that the Secretary concerned elects to 
        exclude'' and inserting ``paid to such member''.

SEC. 612. BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR HOUSING: PERMANENT AUTHORITY TO MAKE 
              CERTAIN TEMPORARY INCREASES.

    (a) Area Covered by a Major Disaster Declaration or Containing an 
Installation Experiencing an Influx of Military Personnel.--Subsection 
(b) of section 403 of title 37, United States Code, is amended, in 
paragraph (7)--
            (1) in subparagraph (D), by striking ``Subject to 
        subparagraph (E), an'' and inserting ``An''; and
            (2) by striking subparagraph (E).
    (b) Area Where Actual Housing Costs Differ From Current Rates by 
More Than 20 Percent.--Such subsection is further amended, in paragraph 
(8), by striking subparagraph (C).

SEC. 613. TEMPORARY ADJUSTMENT TO A RATE OF THE BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR 
              HOUSING FOR MEMBERS OF THE UNIFORMED SERVICES: LOWER 
              THRESHOLD; PERMANENT AUTHORITY.

    Section 403(b)(8) of title 37, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``20 percent'' and 
        inserting ``15 percent''; and
            (2) by striking subparagraph (C).

SEC. 614. MODIFICATIONS TO COST-OF-LIVING ALLOWANCE IN THE CONTINENTAL 
              UNITED STATES FOR MEMBERS OF THE ARMY, NAVY, AIR FORCE, 
              MARINE CORPS, AND SPACE FORCE.

    Section 403b of title 37, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsection (i) as subsection (j); and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (h) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(i) Special Rule for Members of the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine 
Corps, and Space Force.--This section shall be applied for members of 
the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, and Space Force as follows:
            ``(1) Subsection (a) shall be applied by substituting 
        `shall pay' for `may pay'.
            ``(2) Subsection (c) shall be applied by substituting for 
        the second and third sentences the following: `The threshold 
        percentage shall be three percent, except that the 
        administering Secretaries may prescribe a higher threshold 
        percentage to be applied for a fiscal year when it is necessary 
        to do so in order to ensure that the total amount of the 
        payments of the cost-of-living allowance made to members of the 
        uniformed services under this section for such fiscal year does 
        not exceed the total amount available to all uniformed services 
        for that fiscal year for paying such allowance.'
            ``(3) The Secretary concerned may exclude general officers 
        (as defined in section 101(b) of title 10) and flag officers 
        (as defined in such section) from members who are eligible to 
        receive a cost-of-living allowance under this section.''.

SEC. 615. PAYMENT OF COSTS TO SHIP BREAST MILK OF A MEMBER PERFORMING 
              CERTAIN DUTY.

    (a) Authority.--Section 453 of title 37, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(j) Costs to Ship Breast Milk.--(1) The Secretary concerned shall 
pay directly, or reimburse a covered member for, the costs for shipping 
expressed breast milk of the covered member to be used by the infant 
child of such member because the infant is separated from the member by 
reason of a qualifying circumstance.
    ``(2) The costs paid or reimbursed by the Secretary concerned with 
respect to a covered member for a single qualifying event may not 
exceed $1,000.
    ``(3) A covered member shall be eligible for a payment or 
reimbursement under paragraph (1) during the period in which the member 
is eligible for breastfeeding support pursuant to chapter 55 of title 
10.
    ``(4) In this subsection:
            ``(A) The term `covered member' means a member of the armed 
        forces serving on active duty or inactive duty training.
            ``(B) The term `qualifying circumstance' means, with 
        respect to a covered member, any of the following:
                    ``(i) The covered member is performing temporary 
                duty pursuant to orders.
                    ``(ii) The covered member is undergoing a permanent 
                change of station, regardless of whether the tour of 
                duty is an accompanied or unaccompanied tour of duty.
                    ``(iii) The covered member is performing annual 
                training duty.
                    ``(iv) The covered member is performing inactive-
                duty training.''.
    (b) Regulations.--The Secretary of Defense shall--
            (1) prescribe regulations to carry out subsection (j) of 
        section 453 of title 37, United States Code, as added by 
        subsection (a) of this section, in a manner that ensures parity 
        with relevant existing programs of the Department of Defense; 
        and
            (2) issue implementing guidance by not later than 180 days 
        after the date of the enactment of this Act.

                           Subtitle C--Leave

SEC. 621. ACCRUAL OF LEAVE FOR MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES.

    Section 701(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``2\1/2\ calendar days'' and inserting ``3\1/2\ calendar 
days''.

SEC. 622. ACCUMULATION OF LEAVE FOR MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES.

    (a) Accumulation of Leave for Members of the Armed Forces.--Section 
701 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking subsections (b), (e), and (g);
            (2) by redesignating subsections (c), (d), (f), (h), (i), 
        (j), (k), (l), and (m) as subsections (b) through (j), 
        respectively;
            (3) in subsection (d), as redesignated by paragraph (2), by 
        striking ``without regard to the limitations in subsections (b) 
        and (e)''; and
            (4) in subsection (f) (as so redesignated), by striking ``, 
        subject to the accumulation limits in subsections (b) and 
        (e),''.
    (b) Conforming Amendments.--
            (1) Cadets and midshipmen.--Section 702(c) of title 10, 
        United States Code, is amended by striking ``section 701(m)'' 
        and inserting ``section 701(j)''.
            (2) Emergency leave retention authority.--
                    (A) In general.--Section 2508 of title 14, United 
                States Code, is repealed.
                    (B) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at 
                the beginning of chapter 25 of title 14, United States 
                Code, is amended by striking the item relating to 
                section 2508.
            (3) Payments for unused accrued leave.--Section 501 of 
        title 37, United States Code, is amended--
                    (A) in subsection (b), by striking paragraph (6); 
                and
                    (B) in subsection (h), by striking ``section 
                701(f)'' and inserting ``section 701(d)''.
            (4) Absences due to sickness, wounds, and certain other 
        causes.--Section 502(b) of title 37, United States Code, is 
        amended by striking ``and section 701(g) of title 10''.

SEC. 623. BEREAVEMENT LEAVE FOR A MEMBER OF THE ARMED FORCES IN THE 
              CASE OF A LOSS OF PREGNANCY OR STILLBIRTH.

    Subsection (l)(1)(A) of section 701 of title 10, United States 
Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``the death of an immediate family 
        member.'' and inserting an em dash; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new clauses:
            ``(i) the death of an immediate family member; or
            ``(ii) the loss of a pregnancy or a stillbirth by such 
        member or the spouse of such member.''.

                Subtitle D--Family and Survivor Benefits

SEC. 631. PAYMENT TO PARTICIPANT IN SURVIVOR BENEFIT PLAN WHOSE SPOUSE 
              DIES BEFORE THE PARTICIPANT.

    (a) Establishment.--Subchapter II of chapter 73 of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended by inserting, after section 1448a, the 
following new section:
``Sec. 1448b. Payment to participant whose spouse dies before the 
              participant
    ``(a) Payment Required.--The Secretary concerned shall make a one-
time payment of $1,000 to a participant described in subsection (b).
    ``(b) Eligible Participant.--A participant described in this 
subsection is a person--
            ``(1) who becomes a participant in the Plan on or after 
        July 1, 2027;
            ``(2) whose beneficiary under the Plan is the spouse of 
        such person; and
            ``(3) whose spouse dies before such person.''.
    (b) Conforming Reduction in Retired Pay.--Section 1452(a)(1) of 
such title is amended by adding at the end the following new 
subparagraph:
                    ``(C) Additional reduction for payment to 
                participant whose spouse dies before the participant.--
                The reduction under subparagraph (A) or (B) for a 
                participant in the Plan who elects to provide spouse 
                coverage on or after July 1, 2027, shall be increased 
                by an amount prescribed in regulations by the Secretary 
                of Defense as a premium for coverage under section 
                1448b of this title.''.

SEC. 632. INCREASE IN AND COST-OF-LIVING ADJUSTMENT OF DEATH GRATUITY.

    (a) Increase in Death Gratuity.--
            (1) Increase.--Section 1478(a) of title 10, United States 
        Code, is amended by striking ``$100,000'' and inserting 
        ``$165,000''.
            (2) Applicability.--The amendment made by paragraph (1) 
        shall apply with respect to deaths occurring on or after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act.
    (b) Cost-of-living Adjustment of Death Gratuity.--
            (1) Adjustment.--Section 1478 of title 10, United States 
        Code, as amended by subsection (a) of this section, is further 
        amended by inserting after subsection (b) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(c) Annual Adjustment to Death Gratuity.--(1) On January 1 of 
each year, the amount of the death gratuity payable under subsection 
(a) shall be increased by the percentage (if any) by which the Consumer 
Price Index for All Urban Consumers, published by the Bureau of Labor 
Statistics, during the preceding calendar year exceeds such Consumer 
Price Index for the calendar year before such preceding calendar year, 
rounded to the nearest $100.
            ``(2) The Secretary of Defense shall annually publish the 
        amount of the death gratuity payable under subsection (a), as 
        adjusted by paragraph (1), in the Federal Register.''.
            (2) Applicability.--The amendment made by paragraph (1) 
        shall apply beginning on January 1, 2027.

                   Subtitle E--Defense Resale Matters

SEC. 641. USE OF COMMISSARY STORES BY EMPLOYEES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF 
              DEFENSE EDUCATION ACTIVITY AND MILITARY CHILD DEVELOPMENT 
              CENTERS.

    Section 1066(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(3) An employee of the Department of Defense Education Activity 
or a military child development center may be permitted to use 
commissary stores and MWR retail facilities on the same basis as 
members of the armed forces on active duty.''.

SEC. 642. SINGLE-USE SHOPPING BAGS IN COMMISSARY STORES.

    Section 2485 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding 
at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(j) Single-use Shopping Bags.--The Defense Commissary Agency may 
not prohibit the use of, or charge a fee for, single-use shopping bags 
in a commissary store.''.

SEC. 643. LIMITATION ON IMPLEMENTATION OF SUPPLY CHAIN TRANSFORMATION 
              INITIATIVE OF THE DEFENSE COMMISSARY AGENCY.

    No funds authorized to be appropriated or otherwise made available 
to the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2027 may be obligated or 
expended to implement, award contracts in furtherance of, or change 
commissary supply chain operations pursuant to the two-wholesaler 
national supply model of the Supply Chain Transformation Initiative of 
the Defense Commissary Agency until 180 days after the day when the 
Secretary of Defense submits to the congressional defense committees 
the report regarding the Defense Commissary Agency required by the 
conference report accompanying the National Defense Authorization Act 
for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60).

           Subtitle F--Other Benefits, Reports, and Briefings

SEC. 651. CAREER FLEXIBILITY PROGRAMS: ELIGIBILITY OF A MEMBER ALREADY 
              SUBJECT TO A PERIOD OF OBLIGATED SERVICE; MINIMUM LENGTH 
              OF PROGRAM.

    (a) Eligibility of a Member Already Subject to a Period of 
Obligated Service.--Section 710 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended, in subsection (a), by adding at the end the following new 
paragraph:
            ``(3) The Secretary of a military department may not 
        prohibit a member from inactivation under this section solely 
        on the basis that such member is subject to a period of 
        obligated service on active duty other than a period of service 
        under subsection (c)(3).''.
    (b) Minimum Length of Program.--Such section is further amended, in 
subsection (b)(1), by inserting ``and the minimum period shall be one 
month'' after ``may not exceed three years''.

SEC. 652. PROVISION OF INFORMATION REGARDING FOOD ACCESS AND CHILD CARE 
              FOR MEMBERS RECEIVING ORDERS FOR A CHANGE OF PERMANENT 
              STATION.

    Section 1056(b)(2)(F) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in clause (v), by striking ``; and'' and inserting a 
        semicolon;
            (2) by redesignating clause (vi) as clause (viii); and
            (3) by inserting after clause (v) the following new 
        clauses:
                    ``(vi) resources regarding food access and 
                assistance, including the supplemental nutrition 
                assistance program (as such term is defined in section 
                3 of the Food and Nutrition Act of 2008 (Public Law 88-
                525; 7 U.S.C. 2012)), State requirements for 
                eligibility for the special supplemental nutrition 
                program for women, infants, and children established by 
                section 17 of the Child Nutrition Act of 1966 (42 
                U.S.C. 1786), and local support services;
                    ``(vii) available child care services, including 
                child care furnished under subchapter II of chapter 88 
                of this title, other assistance furnished by the 
                Secretary of Defense, community-based partner programs, 
                and other resources; and''.

SEC. 653. RESERVES AND RETIRED MEMBERS: ACCEPTANCE OF EMPLOYMENT, 
              PAYMENTS, AND AWARDS FROM FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS THROUGH 
              PRIVATE ENTITIES.

    Section 908(a) of title 37, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) as 
        subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C), respectively, and adjusting 
        the margins accordingly;
            (2) by inserting ``(1)'' before ``Subject to''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(2)(A) The Secretary of the military department concerned shall 
apply the provisions of this section to the acceptance, by a person 
described in subparagraph (B) who is under the jurisdiction of such 
Secretary, of employment (and compensation related to that employment) 
or payments or awards indirectly from a foreign government through a 
private entity to the same extent and in the same manner as such 
provisions apply to employment (and compensation related to that 
employment) and payments and awards described in paragraph (1).
    ``(B) A person described in this subparagraph is--
            ``(i) a retired member of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air 
        Force, or Space Force; or
            ``(ii) a member--
                    ``(I) of a reserve component of an armed force 
                specified in subclause (i); and
                    ``(II) who is not serving on active duty under a 
                call or order to active duty for a period in excess of 
                30 days.''.

SEC. 654. PROGRAM TO PROVIDE TO CERTAIN PATRONS A DISCOUNT ON MOTOR 
              FUEL SOLD AT EXCHANGE STORES.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense may, if there is a tax 
described in subsection (b) applicable to motor fuel, carry out a 
program to provide to eligible patrons a discount on such motor fuel--
            (1) sold at an exchange store; and
            (2) dispensed directly into a vehicle owned by an eligible 
        patron.
    (b) Amount of Discount.--
            (1) Base discount.--A discount provided under subsection 
        (a) shall be an amount not less than--
                    (A) the rate of tax applicable to gasoline under 
                section 4081 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (26 
                U.S.C. 4081), except that such discount may not be less 
                than 18.4 cents per gallon; and
                    (B) the rate of tax applicable to diesel fuel under 
                such section 4081, except that such discount may not be 
                less than 24.4 cents per gallon.
            (2) Authorization of supplemental discount.--The Secretary 
        of Defense may, if there is a State or local tax applicable to 
        such motor fuel, provide an additional discount to an eligible 
        patron, with respect to each gallon of motor fuel sold at an 
        exchange store, of such amount as the Secretary of Defense 
        determines appropriate.
    (c) Automatic Application.--The Secretary of Defense shall, to the 
maximum extent practicable, ensure that a discount provided under this 
section is applied upon the sale of motor fuel at an exchange store to 
an eligible patron.
    (d) Regulations.--The Secretary of Defense shall update any 
appropriate regulations to prevent--
            (1) fraud or abuse of a program carried out under this 
        section; and
            (2) the resale or commercial use of motor fuel purchased at 
        a discount under this section.
    (e) Termination.--The authority of the Secretary of Defense to 
provide a discount under this section shall terminate on September 30, 
2029.
    (f) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date on which the 
Secretary of Defense carries out a program under this section, and 
annually thereafter until the termination under subsection (e), the 
Secretary of Defense shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services 
of the House of Representatives and the Senate a report on such a 
program, including--
            (1) the number of exchange stores, disaggregated by 
        exchange system, that sold motor fuel subject to a discount 
        under subsection (b)(1);
            (2) the total gallons of such motor fuel sold annually by--
                    (A) each exchange store;
                    (B) all exchange stores; and
                    (C) all exchange stores, disaggregated by exchange 
                system;
            (3) the total annual cost of the discount under subsection 
        (b)(1)(A);
            (4) the total annual cost of any additional discount under 
        subsection (b)(1)(B);
            (5) the average amount of motor fuel sold annually by each 
        exchange store before the date of the enactment of this Act;
            (6) any identified fraud, abuse, or issues with 
        implementation with respect to such program; and
            (7) any recommendations with respect to continuing or 
        modifying such program.
    (g) Coordination.--Nothing in this section shall be construed to 
prohibit the Secretary of Defense from coordinating with the heads of 
other Federal departments or agencies to encourage the adoption of 
similar policies with respect to discounts on motor fuel--
            (1) for members of the uniformed services; or
            (2) other persons served by exchange systems outside the 
        Department of Defense.
    (h) Eligible Patron Defined.--The term ``eligible patron'' means a 
person who is authorized under Federal law and applicable regulations 
to purchase motor fuel from a fuel station operated by an exchange 
store.

                   TITLE VII--HEALTH CARE PROVISIONS

             Subtitle A--TRICARE and Other Health Benefits

SEC. 701. DENTAL READINESS FOR CERTAIN MEMBERS OF SELECTED RESERVE.

    Section 1076a of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``A dental 
                insurance plan'' and inserting ``Except as provided by 
                paragraph (5), a dental insurance plan'';
                    (B) in paragraph (2), in the header, by inserting 
                ``individual ready'' after ``other''; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following new 
                paragraph:
            ``(5) Plan for certain selected reserve.--A dental benefits 
        plan for members of the Selected Reserve of the Ready Reserve 
        in pay grade E-1, E-2, E-3, or E-4.'';
            (2) in subsection (d)--
                    (A) by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph 
                (4); and
                    (B) by inserting after paragraph (2) the following 
                new paragraph:
            ``(3) No premium plans.--(A) The dental insurance plan 
        established under subsection (a)(5) is a no premium plan.
            ``(B) Members enrolled in a no premium plan may not be 
        charged a premium for benefits provided under the plan.'';
            (3) by redesignating subsections (f) through (l) as 
        subsections (g) through (m), respectively;
            (4) by inserting after subsection (e) the following new 
        subsection (f):
    ``(f) Copayments Under No Premium Plans.--A member who receives 
dental care under a no premium plan referred to in subsection (d)(3) 
shall pay no charge for any care described in subsection (c).''; and
            (5) in subsection (i), as redesignated by paragraph (4), by 
        striking ``subsection (k)(2)'' and inserting ``subsection 
        (l)(2)''.

SEC. 702. EXPANDED ACCESS TO DENTAL CARE FOR CERTAIN DEPENDENTS.

    Paragraph (2) of section 1077(c) of title 10, United States Code, 
is amended to read as follows:
    ``(2) Dependents who are covered by a dental plan established under 
section 1076a of this title may be treated on a space available basis 
by postgraduate dental residents in a dental treatment facility of the 
uniformed services under a graduate dental education program accredited 
by the American Dental Association if the Secretary of Defense 
determines that adequate resources exist to provide such treatment.''.

SEC. 703. FERTILITY TREATMENT FOR CERTAIN MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES 
              AND DEPENDENTS.

    (a) Fertility Treatment.--Chapter 55 of title 10, United States 
Code, is amended by inserting after section 1074o the following new 
section:
``Sec. 1074p. Fertility treatment for certain active duty members of 
              the armed forces and dependents
    ``(a) Coverage.--The Secretary shall ensure that fertility-related 
care for a covered member (or a dependent of such a member) shall be 
covered under TRICARE Prime and TRICARE Select.
    ``(b) In Vitro Fertilization.--In the case of in vitro 
fertilization treatment furnished to an individual pursuant to 
subsection (a)--
            ``(1) three completed oocyte retrievals may be furnished 
        per calendar year; and
            ``(2) single embryo transfers shall be provided unless 
        otherwise medically indicated in accordance with the guidelines 
        of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine.
    ``(c) Cost Sharing and Other Limitations.--The Secretary shall 
ensure that cost-sharing amounts for an individual who receives 
fertility-related care under this section are determined under section 
1075, 1075a, or other applicable provision of this chapter in 
accordance with the kind of care provided (such as an in-network 
inpatient visit) and without regard to whether the care is fertility-
related care. The Secretary may not impose any waiting periods or other 
limitations once the individual has received a medical diagnosis of 
infertility.
    ``(d) Prohibitions.--Funds available to the Department of Defense 
may not be used for preimplantation genetic screening, human cloning, 
international surrogacy, or artificial womb technology.
    ``(e) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `covered member' means--
                    ``(A) a member of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air 
                Force, or Space Force, serving on active duty; and
                    ``(B) does not include a former member of the armed 
                forces.
            ``(2) The term `infertility' means a disease, condition, or 
        status characterized by--
                    ``(A) the failure to establish a pregnancy or to 
                carry a pregnancy to live birth after regular, 
                unprotected sexual intercourse in accordance with the 
                guidelines of the American Society for Reproductive 
                Medicine;
                    ``(B) the inability of an individual to reproduce 
                without medical intervention either as a single 
                individual or with the partner of the individual; or
                    ``(C) the findings of a licensed physician based on 
                the medical, sexual, and reproductive history, age, 
                physical findings, or diagnostic testing, of the 
                individual.
            ``(3) The term `fertility-related care' means--
                    ``(A) the diagnosis of infertility; and
                    ``(B) fertility treatment.
            ``(4) The term `fertility treatment' includes the 
        following:
                    ``(A) In vitro fertilization or other treatments or 
                procedures in which human oocytes, embryos, or sperm 
                are handled when clinically appropriate.
                    ``(B) Sperm retrieval.
                    ``(C) Egg retrieval.
                    ``(D) Preservation of human oocytes, embryos, or 
                sperm.
                    ``(E) Artificial insemination, including 
                intravaginal insemination, intracervical insemination, 
                and intrauterine insemination.
                    ``(F) Transfer of reproductive genetic material.
                    ``(G) Medications as prescribed or necessary for 
                fertility.
                    ``(H) Fertility treatment coordination.
                    ``(I) Such other information, referrals, 
                treatments, procedures, testing, medications, 
                laboratory services, technologies, and services 
                facilitating reproduction as determined appropriate by 
                the Secretary of Defense.''.
    (b) Program on Fertility Treatment Coordination.--Chapter 55 of 
title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the 
following new section:
``Sec. 1110c. Program on fertility-related care coordination
    ``(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish a 
program on the coordination of fertility-related care by the Secretary 
for purposes of ensuring patients receive timely fertility-related 
care.
    ``(b) Training and Support.--In carrying out the program 
established under subsection (a), the Secretary shall provide to 
community health care providers training and support with respect to 
the unique needs of members of the armed forces and the dependents of 
such members.''.
    (c) Conforming Amendment.--Section 1079(a) of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
paragraph:
            ``(21) Fertility-related care shall be provided in 
        accordance with section 1074p of this title.''.
    (d) Exclusion From Contracts for Former Members and Their 
Dependents.--Section 1086(a) of such title is amended by striking ``eye 
examinations and'' and inserting ``eye examinations, fertility-related 
care pursuant to paragraph (21) of such section, and''.
    (e) Application.--The amendments made by this section shall apply 
with respect to services provided on or after October 1, 2028.

SEC. 704. LIMITATION ON ABILITY OF SECRETARY OF DEFENSE TO MODIFY SCOPE 
              OF MEDICAL SERVICES.

    (a) Limitation.--Section 1073d(f) of title 10, United States Code, 
is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)(A), by striking ``a notification of'' 
        and inserting ``a notification under paragraph (2) and a report 
        under paragraph (3) regarding''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(3) Each report under paragraph (1) shall contain the following:
            ``(A) A budget that is consistent with the requirements 
        under this chapter regarding access to medical care and the 
        quality of such care.
            ``(B) A description of how the Secretary uses enhanced 
        appointment and compensation authorities, including under 
        section 1599c of this title, to recruit and retain civilian 
        employees.
            ``(C) An analysis of the effects to services at a military 
        medical treatment facility when any medical provider who is a 
        member of the armed forces permanently changes station and the 
        position of such member is not filled (whether by a member, a 
        civilian, or a contractor).
            ``(D) The number of positions required to fully staff the 
        current military health system, as of the date of the report, 
        and the number of such unfilled positions, including with 
        respect to whether such positions would be filled by a member, 
        a civilian, or a contractor.
            ``(E) An analysis of the ability of the managed care 
        network to absorb a member or covered beneficiary that cannot 
        be provided care at a military medical treatment facility, 
        including an explanation of the exact elements used in 
        developing a cost analysis between such providing care through 
        such network and such facilities.
            ``(F) An analysis of the ability of the Defense Health 
        Agency to encourage members and covered beneficiaries to use 
        military medical treatment facilities over the managed care 
        network.
            ``(G) The status of efforts to close all recommendations by 
        the Comptroller General of the United States contained in the 
        July 2025 report titled `Defense Health Care: Information 
        Needed to Improve Monitoring of Military Personnel Staffing at 
        Medical Facilities' and numbered GAO-25-106988.
            ``(H) The status of efforts to close all recommendations by 
        the Comptroller General contained in the April 2025 report 
        titled `Defense Healthcare Actions Needed to Address Long-
        Standing Management Challenges with Medical Facilities' and 
        numbered GAO-25-107432.
            ``(I) The status of efforts to close all recommendations by 
        the Inspector General of the Department of Defense contained in 
        the December 2025 report titled `Audit of the Defense Health 
        Agency's Management of Military Medical Treatment Facilities 
        Outside the Continental United States in Meeting Access to 
        Primary Care Standards' and numbered DODIG-2026-025.''.
    (b) Application.--The amendments made by subsection (a) shall apply 
with respect to any modification of the scope of medical care proposed 
by the Secretary of Defense on or after January 1, 2026, including such 
proposals submitted by the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and 
Readiness to the Committees on Armed Services of the House of 
Representatives and the Senate on March 4, 2026.

SEC. 705. PROHIBITION ON AND REVERSAL OF ACTIONS TO MODIFY SCOPE OF 
              MEDICAL SERVICES PROVIDED AT CERTAIN MILITARY MEDICAL 
              TREATMENT FACILITIES.

    (a) Prohibition.--The Secretary of Defense may not take any action 
to carry out a service change described in subsection (c).
    (b) Reversal and Restoration.--Not later than 30 days after the 
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall carry 
out the following actions:
            (1) Reverse any steps taken to carry out a service change 
        described in subsection (c).
            (2) Restore personnel and clinical services affected by any 
        such service change to the level existing as of March 3, 2026 
        (unless such level is otherwise modified by a provision of law 
        enacted on or after such date).
    (c) Service Change Described.--A service change described in this 
subsection is a service change specified in the notification of service 
changes submitted by the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and 
Readiness to the Committees on Armed Services of the House of 
Representatives and the Senate on March 4, 2026, pursuant to section 
1073d(f) of title 10, United States Code, including the following:
            (1) Eisenhower army medical center, fort gordon, georgia.--
        With respect to the Eisenhower Army Medical Center, Fort 
        Gordon, Georgia--
                    (A) converting the military medical treatment 
                facility from an inpatient hospital to an outpatient 
                ambulatory care center;
                    (B) discontinuing inpatient, operating, and 
                emergency room services; and
                    (C) realigning medical manpower to other military 
                medical treatment facilities.
            (2) 88th medical group, wright-patterson air force base, 
        ohio.--With respect to the 88th Medical Group, Wright-Patterson 
        Air Force Base, Ohio--
                    (A) converting the military medical treatment 
                facility from an inpatient hospital to an outpatient 
                ambulatory care center with surgical capabilities;
                    (B) discontinuing inpatient, operating, and 
                emergency room services;
                    (C) realigning medical manpower to other military 
                medical treatment facilities;
                    (D) closing pediatric cardiology services; and
                    (E) discontinuing contracts for chiropractic 
                services.
            (3) Naval hospital beaufort, south carolina.--With respect 
        to the Naval Hospital Beaufort, South Carolina--
                    (A) converting the military medical treatment 
                facility from an inpatient hospital to an outpatient 
                ambulatory care center;
                    (B) discontinuing inpatient, operating, and 
                emergency room services;
                    (C) realigning medical manpower to other military 
                medical treatment facilities; and
                    (D) discontinuing contracts for chiropractic 
                services.
            (4) 22d medical group, mcconnell air force base, kansas.--
        With respect to the 22d Medical Group, McConnell Air Force 
        Base, Kansas, limiting access to the military medical treatment 
        facility only to members of the Armed Forces serving on active 
        duty and the dependents of such members.
            (5) 19th medical group, little rock air force base, 
        arkansas.--With respect to the 19th Medical Group, Little Rock 
        Air Force Base, Arkansas--
                    (A) limiting access to the military medical 
                treatment facility only to members of the Armed Forces 
                serving on active duty and the dependents of such 
                members; and
                    (B) discontinuing contracts for nutrition services.
            (6) 341st medical group, malmstrom air force base, 
        montana.--With respect to the 341st Medical Group, Malmstrom 
        Air Force Base, Montana, limiting access to the military 
        medical treatment facility only to members of the Armed Forces 
        serving on active duty and the dependents of such members.
            (7) 28th medical group, ellsworth air force base, south 
        dakota.--With respect to the 28th Medical Group, Ellsworth Air 
        Force Base, South Dakota, limiting access to the military 
        medical treatment facility only to members of the Armed Forces 
        serving on active duty and the dependents of such members.
            (8) 92d medical group, fairchild air force base, 
        washington.--With respect to the 92d Medical Group, Fairchild 
        Air Force Base, Washington, limiting access to the military 
        medical treatment facility only to members of the Armed Forces 
        serving on active duty and the dependents of such members.
            (9) 90th medical group, francis e. warren air force base, 
        wyoming.--With respect to the 90th Medical Group, Francis E. 
        Warren Air Force Base, Wyoming, limiting access to the military 
        medical treatment facility only to members of the Armed Forces 
        serving on active duty and the dependents of such members.
            (10) 355th medical group, davis-monthan air force base, 
        arizona.--With respect to the 355th Medical Group, Davis-
        Monthan Air Force Base, Arizona, limiting access to the 
        military medical treatment facility only to members of the 
        Armed Forces serving on active duty and the dependents of such 
        members.
            (11) 9th medical group, beale air force base, california.--
        With respect to the 9th Medical Group, Beale Air Force Base, 
        California, limiting access to the military medical treatment 
        facility only to members of the Armed Forces serving on active 
        duty and the dependents of such members.
            (12) 45th medical group, patrick space force base, 
        florida.--With respect to the 45th Medical Group, Patrick Space 
        Force Base, Florida, limiting access to the military medical 
        treatment facility only to members of the Armed Forces serving 
        on active duty and the dependents of such members.
            (13) 4th medical group, seymour johnson air force base, 
        north carolina.--With respect to the 4th Medical Group, Seymour 
        Johnson Air Force Base, North Carolina, limiting access to the 
        military medical treatment facility only to members of the 
        Armed Forces serving on active duty and the dependents of such 
        members.
            (14) 20th medical group, shaw air force base, south 
        carolina.--With respect to the 20th Medical Group, Shaw Air 
        Force Base, South Carolina--
                    (A) limiting access to the military medical 
                treatment facility only to members of the Armed Forces 
                serving on active duty and the dependents of such 
                members; and
                    (B) discontinuing contracts for nutrition services.
            (15) 460th medical group, buckley space force base, 
        colorado.--With respect to the 460th Medical Group, Buckley 
        Space Force Base, Colorado, limiting access to the military 
        medical treatment facility only to members of the Armed Forces 
        serving on active duty and the dependents of such members.
            (16) 27th special operations medical group, cannon air 
        force base, new mexico.--With respect to the 27th Special 
        Operations Medical Group, Cannon Air Force Base, New Mexico, 
        limiting access to the military medical treatment facility only 
        to members of the Armed Forces serving on active duty and the 
        dependents of such members.
            (17) 412th medical group, edwards air force base, 
        california.--With respect to the 412th Medical Group, Edwards 
        Air Force Base, California, limiting access to the military 
        medical treatment facility only to members of the Armed Forces 
        serving on active duty and the dependents of such members.
            (18) 30th medical group, vandenberg space force base, 
        california.--With respect to the 30th Medical Group, Vandenberg 
        Space Force Base, California, limiting access to the military 
        medical treatment facility only to members of the Armed Forces 
        serving on active duty and the dependents of such members.
            (19) Naval health clinic corpus christi, texas.--With 
        respect to Naval Health Clinic Corpus Christi, Texas, limiting 
        access to the military medical treatment facility only to 
        members of the Armed Forces serving on active duty and the 
        dependents of such members.
            (20) 23d medical group, moody air force base, georgia.--
        With respect to the 23d Medical Group, Moody Air Force Base, 
        Georgia, limiting access to the military medical treatment 
        facility only to members of the Armed Forces serving on active 
        duty and the dependents of such members living on base.
            (21) 366th medical group, mountain home air force base, 
        idaho.--With respect to the 366th Medical Group, Mountain Home 
        Air Force Base, Idaho, limiting access to the military medical 
        treatment facility only to members of the Armed Forces serving 
        on active duty and the dependents of such members living on 
        base.
            (22) 319th medical group, grand forks air force base, north 
        dakota.--With respect to the 319th Medical Group, Grand Forks 
        Air Force Base, North Dakota, limiting access to the military 
        medical treatment facility only to members of the Armed Forces 
        serving on active duty and the dependents of such members 
        living on base.
            (23) 61st medical squadron, los angeles space force base, 
        california.--With respect to the 61st Medical Squadron, Los 
        Angeles Space Force Base, California, limiting access to the 
        military medical treatment facility only to members of the 
        Armed Forces serving on active duty and the dependents of such 
        members living on base.
            (24) 78th medical group, robins air force base, georgia.--
        With respect to the 78th Medical Group, Robins Air Force Base, 
        Georgia, limiting access to the military medical treatment 
        facility only to members of the Armed Forces serving on active 
        duty.
            (25) 72d medical group, tinker air force base, oklahoma.--
        With respect to the 72d Medical Group, Tinker Air Force Base, 
        Oklahoma, limiting access to the military medical treatment 
        facility only to members of the Armed Forces serving on active 
        duty.
            (26) 75th medical group, hill air force base, utah.--With 
        respect to the 75th Medical Group, Hill Air Force Base, Utah, 
        limiting access to the military medical treatment facility only 
        to members of the Armed Forces serving on active duty.
            (27) 66th medical squadron, hanscom air force base, 
        massachusetts.--With respect to the 66th Medical Squadron, 
        Hanscom Air Force Base, Massachusetts, limiting access to the 
        military medical treatment facility only to members of the 
        Armed Forces serving on active duty.
            (28) David grant medical center, travis air force base, 
        california.--With respect to the David Grant Medical Center, 
        Travis Air Force Base, California, closing the labor and 
        delivery services.
            (29) 42d medical group, maxwell air force base, alabama.--
        With respect to the 42d Medical Group, Maxwell Air Force Base, 
        Alabama, discontinuing educational and developmental 
        intervention services.
            (30) Vilseck army health clinic, germany.--With respect to 
        the Vilseck Army Health Clinic, Germany, discontinuing physical 
        medicine and rehabilitation services.
            (31) Desert sage community based medical home, william 
        beaumont army medical center, fort bliss, texas.--With respect 
        to the Desert Sage Community Based Medical Home, William 
        Beaumont Army Medical Center, Fort Bliss, Texas, closing such 
        home.
            (32) Naval health clinic patuxent river, branch health 
        clinic dahlgren, virginia.--With respect to Naval Health Clinic 
        Patuxent River, Branch Health Clinic Dahlgren, Virginia, 
        discontinuing radiology services.
            (33) Army health clinic munson, fort leavenworth, kansas.--
        With respect to Army Health Clinic Munson, Fort Leavenworth, 
        Kansas, discontinuing mammography services.
            (34) Naval health clinic lemoore, california.--With respect 
        to Naval Health Clinic Lemoore, California, discontinuing 
        operating room services.
            (35) 55th medical group, offutt air force base, nebraska.--
        With respect to the 55th Medical Group, Offutt Air Force Base, 
        Nebraska--
                    (A) discontinuing contracts for nutrition services; 
                and
                    (B) discontinuing contracts for chiropractic 
                services.
            (36) 7th medical group, dyess air force base, texas.--With 
        respect to the 7th Medical Group, Dyess Air Force Base, Texas, 
        discontinuing contracts for nutrition services.
            (37) 2d medical group, barksdale air force base, 
        louisiana.--With respect to the 2d Medical Group, Barksdale Air 
        Force Base, Louisiana--
                    (A) discontinuing contracts for nutrition services; 
                and
                    (B) discontinuing contracts for chiropractic 
                services.
            (38) 87th medical group, joint base mcguire-dix-lakehurst, 
        new jersey.--With respect to the 87th Medical Group, Joint Base 
        McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, New Jersey--
                    (A) discontinuing contracts for nutrition services; 
                and
                    (B) discontinuing contracts for chiropractic 
                services.
            (39) 1st special operations medical group, hurlburt field, 
        florida.--With respect to 1st Special Operations Medical Group, 
        Hurlburt Field, Florida, discontinuing contracts for 
        chiropractic services.
            (40) 10th medical group, united states air force academy, 
        colorado.--With respect to 10th Medical Group, United States 
        Air Force Academy, Colorado, discontinuing contracts for 
        chiropractic services.
            (41) 96th medical group, eglin air force base, florida.--
        With respect to 96th Medical Group, Eglin Air Force Base, 
        Florida, discontinuing contracts for chiropractic services.
    (d) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the Committees on 
Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the Senate a report 
on each action taken under subsection (b).
    (e) Service Change Defined.--The term ``service change'' means, 
with respect to a military medical treatment facility, an action by the 
Secretary of Defense to modify the scope of medical care provided at 
the facility, or the beneficiary population served at the facility, as 
described in section 1073d(f) of title 10, United States Code, 
including with respect to reducing or transferring personnel, 
converting an inpatient hospital to an outpatient ambulatory care 
center, and restricting the type of beneficiary that can access the 
facility.

SEC. 706. TRICARE COVERAGE FOR INCREASED SUPPLY FOR CONTRACEPTION.

    (a) In General.--Beginning not less than 180 days after the date of 
the enactment of the Act, contraceptive supplies of up to 365 days 
shall be covered for any eligible covered beneficiary to obtain, 
including in a single fill or refill, at the option of such 
beneficiary, the total days of supply (not to exceed a 365-day supply) 
for a contraceptive on the uniform formulary provided through a 
military treatment facility pharmacy, retail pharmacy described in 
section 1074g(a)(2)(E)(ii) of title 10, United States Code, or through 
the national mail-order pharmacy program of the TRICARE Program.
    (b) Outreach.--Beginning not later than 90 days after the 
implementation of coverage under subsection (a), the Secretary shall 
conduct such outreach activities as are necessary to inform health care 
providers and individuals who are enrolled in the TRICARE Program of 
such coverage and the requirements to receive such coverage.
    (c) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered Armed Force'' means the Army, Navy, 
        Marine Corps, Air Force, or Space Force.
            (2) The term ``eligible covered beneficiary'' means an 
        eligible covered beneficiary as such term is used in section 
        1074g of title 10, United States Code, who is--
                    (A) a member of a covered Armed Force serving on 
                active duty; or
                    (B) a dependent of a member described in 
                subparagraph (A).
            (3) The term ``TRICARE Program'' has the meaning given that 
        term in section 1072 of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 707. PILOT PROGRAM TO HELP CERTAIN MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES 
              STOP SMOKING.

    (a) Authority.--Beginning not later than 180 days after the date of 
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense may carry out a 
one-year pilot program to furnish to covered members the alternatives 
to smoking specified in subsection (b)--
            (1) to help such covered members stop smoking; and
            (2) to improve the health of such covered members.
    (b) Alternatives to Smoking.--The alternatives to smoking specified 
in this subsection are--
            (1) counseling;
            (2) nicotine gum;
            (3) nicotine patches;
            (4) electric nicotine delivery systems;
            (5) nicotine pouches; and
            (6) heat-not-burn products.
    (c) Participation.--If the Secretary carries out the pilot program 
under subsection (a), the pilot program shall operate--
            (1) in not less than one covered Armed Force; and
            (2) at not less than one military installation at which 
        covered members serve in numbers that exceed the national 
        average for--
                    (A) smoking cigarettes or other combustible tobacco 
                products;
                    (B) the population of Black Americans;
                    (C) the population of Asian and Pacific Islander 
                Americans;
                    (D) the population of Hispanic Americans; and
                    (E) the population of Appalachian Americans.
    (d) Report.--Not later than one year after the date on which the 
pilot program under subsection (a) is completed, the Secretary shall 
submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and House of 
Representatives a report regarding the results of the pilot program, 
including the determination of the Secretary regarding--
            (1) whether the pilot program helped covered members stop 
        smoking;
            (2) the alternatives specified in subsection (b) that are 
        most effective in helping covered members to stop smoking;
            (3) gaps in health care services available to covered 
        members who belong to the populations described in subsection 
        (c)(2); and
            (4) the recommendation of the Secretary whether to expand, 
        extend, or make permanent the pilot program.
    (e) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered Armed Force'' means the Army, Navy, 
        Marine Corps, Air Force, or Space Force.
            (2) The term ``covered member'' means a member of a covered 
        Armed Force--
                    (A) serving on active duty; and
                    (B) who smokes at least one cigarette (or other 
                combustible tobacco product) per week.

                 Subtitle B--Health Care Administration

SEC. 721. IMPROVEMENTS TO DEFENSE HEALTH AGENCY.

    (a) Administration of Military Medical Treatment Facilities.--
Subsection (b) of section 1073c of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)--
                    (A) in subparagraph (H), by striking ``; and'' and 
                inserting a semicolon;
                    (B) by redesignating subparagraph (I) as 
                subparagraph (J); and
                    (C) by inserting after subparagraph (H) the 
                following new subparagraph (I):
            ``(I) civilian personnel; and''; and
            (2) in paragraph (2)--
                    (A) by striking subparagraph (C) and inserting the 
                following new subparagraph:
            ``(C) to determine, in coordination with the senior 
        military operational commander of each military installation 
        with a military medical treatment facility, the scope of 
        medical care provided at each such facility to meet--
                    ``(i) the military personnel readiness requirements 
                of such commander; and
                    ``(ii) the health care requirements of members of 
                the armed forces and covered beneficiaries, as 
                determined by such commander;'';
                    (B) in subparagraph (D), by striking ``or the 
                Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs'';
                    (C) in subparagraph (F), by striking ``joint 
                manning'' and inserting `` uniformed, joint, civilian, 
                and contractor manning'';
                    (D) by striking subparagraph (G);
                    (E) by redesignating subparagraphs (H) and (I) as 
                subparagraphs (G) and (H), respectively; and
                    (F) in subparagraph (G), as so redesignated, by 
                inserting ``civilian and contractor'' after 
                ``address''.
    (b) Assistant Director.--Subsection (c)(1)(A) of such section is 
amended by inserting ``or an officer of the armed forces'' before the 
semicolon.
    (c) Deputy Assistant Director for Financial Operations.--
Subparagraph (B) of subsection (d)(2) of such section is amended to 
read as follows:
    ``(B) The Deputy Assistant Director for Financial Operations shall 
be responsible for the policy, procedures, and direction of budgeting 
matters and financial management with respect to the following:
            ``(i) The provision of direct care at military medical 
        treatment facilities.
            ``(ii) The TRICARE program.
            ``(iii) Certain medical readiness activities and 
        expeditionary medical capabilities (as determined by the 
        commanders of the combatant commands, in consultation with the 
        Surgeons General of the armed forces and the Joint Staff 
        Surgeon).
            ``(iv) Education and training programs.
            ``(v) Research, development, test, and evaluation.
            ``(vi) Management and headquarters activities.
            ``(vii) Facilities sustainment.
            ``(viii) Procurement.
            ``(ix) Civilian and contractor personnel.''.
    (d) Certain Responsibilities of Director.--Subsection (e)(2) of 
such section is amended--
            (1) in subparagraph (A)--
                    (A) by striking ``Ensuring that'' and inserting 
                ``Coordinating with the commanders of the combatant 
                commands to ensure''; and
                    (B) by striking ``the commanders of the combatant 
                commands.'' and inserting ``such commanders.''; and
            (2) in subparagraph (C)--
                    (A) by striking ``Ensuring that'' and inserting 
                ``Coordinating with the senior military operational 
                commander of each military installation with a military 
                medical treatment facility to ensure''; and
                    (B) by striking ``the senior military operational 
                commanders of the military installations.'' and 
                inserting ``such commanders.''.
    (e) Consultations on the Military Health System Budget.--Subsection 
(h) of such section is amended--
            (1) in the heading, by striking ``Medical Research of 
        Military Departments'' and inserting ``Certain Matters'';
            (2) by striking ``In establishing'' and inserting ``(1) In 
        establishing''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(2) On a basis that is not less frequent than semiannually, the 
Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the Under Secretary of 
Defense for Personnel and Readiness, shall carry out recurring 
consultations with each military department and the Surgeons General of 
each armed force regarding the budgetary requirements for each military 
department, including with respect to each matter specified in 
subsection (d)(2)(B).''.
    (f) Definition of Health Care Administration.--Subsection (k) of 
such section is amended by adding at the end the following:
            ``(4) The term `health care administration' means the 
        administration and management of the following:
                    ``(A) Health information technology.
                    ``(B) Pharmacy operations.
                    ``(C) Medical logistics.
                    ``(D) Facility planning.
                    ``(E) The health plan options of the TRICARE 
                program.''.
    (g) Submission of Organizational Chart.--Not later than 60 days 
after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Assistant Secretary of 
Defense for Health Affairs shall submit to the Committees on Armed 
Services of the House of Representatives and the Senate an 
organizational chart of the Defense Health Agency, including an 
analysis of how the organization of the Defense Health Agency meets the 
requirements of section 1073c of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 722. IMPROVEMENTS TO ADMINISTRATION OF MILITARY MEDICAL TREATMENT 
              FACILITIES.

    (a) Support Provided by MTFs.--Subsection (a) of section 1073d of 
title 10, United States Code, is amended by striking ``and the 
readiness of medical personnel,'' and inserting ``, the readiness of 
medical personnel, and the health care services available for covered 
beneficiaries,''.
    (b) Medical Centers.--Subsection (b) of such section is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (2), by striking ``that support medical 
        readiness'';
            (2) in paragraph (4)(C)(ii), by striking ``improving'' and 
        inserting ``ensuring''; and
            (3) in paragraph (5)(C)(ii)--
                    (A) by striking ``may'' and inserting ``shall''; 
                and
                    (B) by inserting ``or contractors'' after 
                ``civilian employees''.
    (c) Hospitals.--Subsection (c) of such section is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (2)--
                    (A) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``; and'' and 
                inserting a semicolon;
                    (B) by redesignating subparagraph (B) as 
                subparagraph (C); and
                    (C) by inserting after subparagraph (A) the 
                following new subparagraph:
            ``(B) inpatient and outpatient health services with limited 
        speciality care to provide medical care to all eligible 
        beneficiaries; and''; and
            (2) in paragraph (3)--
                    (A) by redesignating subparagraphs (A) and (B) as 
                subparagraphs (B) and (C), respectively; and
                    (B) by inserting before subparagraph (B), as so 
                redesignated, the following new subparagraph:
            ``(A) is necessary for medical readiness;''.
    (d) Ambulatory Care Centers.--Subsection (d)(3) of such section is 
amended--
            (1) by redesignating subparagraphs (A) and (B) as 
        subparagraphs (B) and (C), respectively; and
            (2) by inserting before subparagraph (B), as so 
        redesignated, the following new subparagraph:
            ``(A) is necessary for medical readiness;''.
    (e) Maintenance of Inpatient Capabilities at Military Medical 
Treatment Facilities Located Outside the United States.--Subsection 
(e)(2) of such section is amended--
            (1) in the matter preceding subparagraph (A), by striking 
        ``180 days'' and inserting ``one year''; and
            (2) by redesignating subparagraph (C) as subparagraph (D);
            (3) by inserting after subparagraph (B) the following new 
        subparagraph:
            ``(C) The Secretary has consulted with the relevant 
        operational commander or installation commander, as 
        appropriate, to ensure that the proposed elimination would have 
        no impact on access by eligible beneficiaries to health 
        care.''; and
            (4) in subparagraph (D), as so redesignated, by striking 
        ``Before'' and inserting ``At least one year before''.
    (f) Notification Required to Modify Scope of Services Provided at 
Military Medical Treatment Facilities.--Subsection (f) of such section 
is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)(B), by striking ``180 days'' and 
        inserting ``one year''; and
            (2) in paragraph (2), by adding at the end the following 
        new subparagraph:
            ``(D) An analysis of the capability of the local community 
        to absorb patients and the anticipated cost to the managed care 
        support contract.''.

SEC. 723. DESIGNATION OF DEFENSE HEALTH AGENCY AS COMBAT SUPPORT 
              AGENCY.

    Section 193(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) The Defense Health Agency.''.

SEC. 724. ACCOUNTS FOR MEDICAL AND HEALTH CARE PROGRAMS OF THE 
              DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.

    (a) In General.--Section 1100 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 1100. Accounts for medical and health care programs of the 
              Department of Defense
    ``(a) Combat And Operational Medicine Program Account.--(1) There 
is hereby established in the Treasury of the United States an account 
to be known as the `Combat and Operational Medicine Program Account'. 
All sums appropriated to carry out the functions of the Secretary of 
Defense with respect to the military medical and health care programs 
of the Department of Defense shall be appropriated to this account.
    ``(2) Of the total amount appropriated for a fiscal year for the 
military medical and health care programs of the Department of Defense, 
the amount equal to three percent of such total amount shall remain 
available for obligation until the end of the following fiscal year.
    ``(b) Private Sector Care Program Account.--(1) There is hereby 
established in the Treasury of the United States an account to be known 
as the `Private Sector Care Program Account'. All sums appropriated to 
carry out the functions of the Secretary of Defense with respect to 
private sector medical and health care programs of the Department of 
Defense shall be appropriated to this account.
    ``(2) Of the total amount appropriated for a fiscal year for the 
private sector health care programs of the Department of Defense, the 
amount equal to three percent of such total amount shall remain 
available for obligation until the end of the following fiscal year.
    ``(c) Obligation of Amounts From Accounts by Secretary of 
Defense.--The Secretary of Defense may obligate or expend funds from 
the accounts under subsection (a) and (b) for purposes of the military 
medical and health care programs of the Department of Defense and the 
private sector health care programs of the Department of Defense, 
respectively, to the extent amounts are available in the accounts.
    ``(d) Regulations.--The Secretary of Defense shall prescribe 
regulations to carry out this section.
    ``(e) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `military medical and health care programs 
        of the Department of Defense' means the medical and health care 
        programs of the Department of Defense that are not private 
        sector health care programs of the Department of Defense.
            ``(2) The term `private sector health care programs of the 
        Department of Defense' means the programs and activities 
        carried out by the Secretary of Defense under this chapter and 
        any other provision of law providing for the furnishing of 
        medical and dental care and health benefits by the private 
        sector, including pursuant to contracts entered into under 
        section 1079, 1086, 1092, or 1097 of this title.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendments.--
            (1) Title 10.--Title 10, United States Code, is amended as 
        follows:
                    (A) Section 1076d(d)(5) is amended by striking 
                ``the Defense Health Program Account'' and inserting 
                ``the Private Sector Care Program Account''.
                    (B) Section 1076e(d)(5) is amended by striking 
                ``the Defense Health Program Account'' and inserting 
                ``the Private Sector Care Program Account''.
                    (C) Section 1076f(b)(2) is amended by striking 
                ``the Defense Health Program Account'' and inserting 
                ``the Private Sector Care Program Account''.
                    (D) Section 1110b(c)(4) is amended by striking 
                ``the Defense Health Program Account'' and inserting 
                ``the Private Sector Care Program Account''.
            (2) National defense authorization act for fiscal year 
        2024.--Section 1004(b)(2) of the National Defense Authorization 
        Act for Fiscal Year 2024 (Public Law 118-81; 10 U.S.C. 240d 
        note) is amended by striking ``Defense Health Program account'' 
        and inserting ``Combat and Operational Medicine Program and 
        Private Sector Care Program Accounts''.
            (3) National defense authorization act for fiscal year 
        1997.--Section 742(c)(3) of the National Defense Authorization 
        Act for Fiscal Year 1997 (Public Law 104-201; 10 U.S.C. 1071 
        note) is amended by striking ``the Defense Health Program 
        account'' and inserting ``the Combat and Operational Medicine 
        Program account''.
    (c) References.--Any reference in law, regulation, document, paper, 
or other record of the United States to the ``Defense Health Program'' 
shall be deemed to be a reference to the ``Combat and Operational 
Medicine Program'' or the ``Private Sector Care Program'', as the case 
may be based on the nature of the obligation.
    (d) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section shall take 
effect on October 1, 2026, and shall apply with respect to fiscal years 
beginning on or after that date.

SEC. 725. AVAILABILITY OF COMBAT AND OPERATIONAL MEDICINE PROGRAM 
              ACCOUNT AND OTHER FUNDS FOR CERTAIN MEDICAL 
              COUNTERMEASURES.

    (a) Availability.--Chapter 55 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by inserting after section 1100 the following new section:
``Sec. 1100a. Availability of Combat and Operational Medicine Program 
              Account and other funds for certain medical 
              countermeasures
    ``(a) Authority.--Subject to the availability of appropriations for 
such purpose, amounts available under the Combat and Operational 
Medicine Program Account established under section 1100 of this title, 
and amounts available under the Operation and Maintenance, Army, 
account for medical readiness, may be obligated or expended by the 
Director of the Defense Health Agency to conduct the activities 
described in subsection (b) for the protection and sustainment of 
deployed forces across the roles of medical care.
    ``(b) Activities Described.--The activities described in this 
subsection are the following:
            ``(1) The procurement or pre-positioning of a medical 
        countermeasure for forward deployment.
            ``(2) The forward deployment of a medical countermeasure.
            ``(3) Any associated logistics, storage, or sustainment 
        activity necessary to ensure the availability or readiness of a 
        forward-deployed medical countermeasure.
    ``(c) Coordination.--The Director of the Defense Health Agency 
shall coordinate with the Secretaries of the military departments and 
the commanders of the combatant commands with respect to any obligation 
or expenditure of funds under subsection (a).
    ``(d) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `medical countermeasure' includes--
                    ``(A) a vaccine, therapeutic, prophylactic, or 
                diagnostic; and
                    ``(B) an advanced wound care product, including 
                antimicrobial and barrier-protective dressings, such as 
                silver-plated bandages.
            ``(2) The term `roles of medical care' has the meaning 
        given such term in the publication of the Chairman of the Joint 
        Chiefs of Staff titled `Joint Publication 4-02: Joint Health 
        Service', dated December 11, 2017, or such successor 
        publication.''.
    (b) Reports.--Not later than 120 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, and annually thereafter for three years, the 
Secretary of Defense shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services 
of the House of Representatives and the Senate a report describing--
            (1) the categories of medical countermeasures procured and 
        forward-deployed using funds authorized to be obligated or 
        expended under section 1100a of title 10, United States Code, 
        as added by subsection (a);
            (2) the locations supported by any such use of funds; and
            (3) any gaps or shortfalls identified in connection with 
        the provision of such medical countermeasures to deployed 
        forces.

SEC. 726. INCLUSION OF DEFENSE HEALTH AGENCY IN REPORTING REQUIREMENTS 
              RELATING TO UNFUNDED PRIORITIES.

    Section 222a of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a), by striking ``the armed force or 
        forces or combatant command'' and inserting ``the armed force 
        or forces, combatant command, or combat support agency''; and
            (2) in subsection (b), by adding at the end the following 
        new paragraph:
            ``(8) The Director of the Defense Health Agency.''.

SEC. 727. JOINT TRAUMA SYSTEM.

    Chapter 55 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by inserting 
after section 1073f the following new section:
``Sec. 1073g. Joint trauma system
    ``(a) Requirement.--The Secretary of Defense shall maintain the 
Joint Trauma System established pursuant to section 707 of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328) as 
a permanent operational element of the Defense Health Agency to support 
the readiness of the armed forces with respect to providing combat 
casualty care in support of military operations.
    ``(b) Elements.--In addition to the requirements of section 707(b) 
of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public 
Law 114-328), in carrying out the Joint Trauma System, the Secretary 
shall--
            ``(1) develop and maintain evidence-based clinical practice 
        guidelines for combat casualty care across the continuum of 
        care, from point of injury through definitive treatment;
            ``(2) establish standards for, and support the 
        certification of, predeployment medical readiness for military 
        surgeons;
            ``(3) maintain and integrate trauma registries and data 
        systems of the Department of Defense to support performance 
        improvement, research, and operational planning;
            ``(4) conduct system-wide performance improvement and 
        lessons-learned analysis for combat casualty care, including 
        dissemination of best practices across the armed forces; and
            ``(5) support the integration of military and civilian 
        trauma systems to enhance readiness and improve trauma care 
        outcomes during military operations.
    ``(c) Combatant Command Trauma Systems.--(1) Each commander of a 
combatant command shall establish and maintain a Combatant Command 
Trauma System to support operational planning, exercises, and military 
operations across the continuum of combat casualty care, from point of 
injury through definitive care and rehabilitation.
    ``(2) The Secretaries of the military departments shall assign 
clinically active and operationally experienced trauma personnel, as 
required, to support the establishment, sustainment, and operation of 
each Combatant Command Trauma System in accordance with the 
requirements outlined in Department policy and implementation guidance 
with the developmental guidance, operational support, and clinical 
oversight of the Joint Trauma System.
    ``(3) Each Combatant Command Trauma System shall--
            ``(A) integrate trauma care data into the Department of 
        Defense Trauma Registry;
            ``(B) implement clinical practice guidelines and 
        performance improvement processes of the Joint Trauma System;
            ``(C) support theater-specific trauma training and 
        readiness requirements; and
            ``(D) enable operational performance assessment and lessons 
        learned across the continuum of combat casualty care.
    ``(d) Coordination.--In carrying out this section, the Secretary of 
Defense shall ensure coordination between the Director of the Defense 
Health Agency and the Surgeons General of the armed forces, the 
commanders of the combatant commands, and other elements of the 
military health system as required.
    ``(e) Annual Briefing.--Not later than March 1 of each year, the 
Secretary of Defense shall provide a briefing to the congressional 
defense committees on the activities, readiness posture, and 
performance of the Joint Trauma System and the Combatant Command Trauma 
System, including--
            ``(1) a summary of Department-wide combat casualty care 
        readiness across the Defense Trauma Enterprise, including 
        findings derived from the performance improvement activities, 
        clinical practice guideline implementation, trauma registry 
        data, and other trauma system analyses of the Joint Trauma 
        System supporting readiness oversight;
            ``(2) the status of establishment, staffing, and 
        operational capability of each Combatant Command Trauma System, 
        including personnel assigned by the Secretaries of the military 
        departments to support such systems;
            ``(3) identified gaps in combat casualty care readiness 
        affecting the Combatant Command Trauma System;
            ``(4) actions taken, planned, or resourced to address such 
        gaps; and
            ``(5) such additional matters relating to the Joint Trauma 
        System or Combatant Command Trauma System as the Secretary of 
        Defense determines appropriate.
    ``(f) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `combat casualty care' means the provision 
        of medical care to wounded members of the armed forces in 
        operational environments, including prehospital care, damage-
        control resuscitation, and surgical intervention.
            ``(2) The term `Joint Trauma System' means the Department 
        of Defense's system for improving trauma care through data 
        collection, analysis, performance improvement, and 
        dissemination of best practices.''.

SEC. 728. CLARIFICATION OF CONSISTENT EVALUATIONS OF MEDICAL 
              MALPRACTICE CLAIMS.

    (a) Uniform Evaluations.--Section 2733a(h)(2)(B) of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in the matter preceding clause (i), by inserting 
        ``applicable to each uniformed service'' before ``consistent 
        with generally''; and
            (2) in clause (iv), by inserting ``consistent criteria used 
        in the'' before ``calculation''.
    (b) Application.--The amendments made by subsection (a) shall apply 
with respect to claims filed under section 2733a of title 10, United 
States Code, on or after the date that is 180 days after the date of 
the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 729. CHAPERONES FOR CERTAIN SENSITIVE EXAMINATIONS AT MILITARY 
              MEDICAL TREATMENT FACILITIES.

    Section 1074d of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsection (b) as subsection (c); and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (a) the following new 
        subsection (b):
    ``(b) Chaperone.--(1) The Secretary shall ensure that a chaperone 
is present at any sensitive examination performed by an obstetrician-
gynecologist at a military medical treatment facility.
    ``(2) In carrying out paragraph (1), the Secretary shall--
            ``(A) establish qualifications for a covered individual to 
        serve as a chaperone;
            ``(B) provide appropriate training to chaperones;
            ``(C) require chaperones to maintain patient 
        confidentiality except with respect to mandatory reporting of 
        any suspected inappropriate activity under processes 
        established by the Secretary; and
            ``(D) ensure a patient may request a different chaperone 
        for any reason (and reschedule the sensitive examination if no 
        other chaperone is available).
    ``(3) In this subsection:
            ``(A) The term `covered individual' means--
                    ``(i) a member of the armed forces or a civilian 
                employee who is a health-care professional (as defined 
                in section 1094 of this title);
                    ``(ii) a resident or student covered under a formal 
                training agreement;
                    ``(iii) a technician, a health care para-
                professional, or medical support assistant; or
                    ``(iv) a volunteer at a military medical treatment 
                facility.
            ``(B) The term `sensitive examination' means a medical 
        examination, treatment, or procedure of the genitalia, rectum, 
        or female breasts, or a forensic health care examination.''.

SEC. 730. REQUIREMENT TO OFFER MEDICAL CHAPERONES DURING SENSITIVE 
              MEDICAL EXAMINATIONS.

    The Secretary of Defense shall establish and implement a policy 
throughout the Department of Defense to require that a medical 
chaperone be offered and available to be present with a patient during 
any sensitive medical examination, as determined by the Secretary, 
conducted at a military medical treatment facility.

SEC. 731. UNIFORM PROTOCOLS ON SCREENING FOR UNWANTED SEXUAL BEHAVIOR.

    (a) Guidance.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Director of the Defense Health Agency, in 
coordination with the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs 
and the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness, shall 
develop comprehensive written guidance establishing uniform protocols 
for providing a screening for unwanted sexual behavior to patients at 
military medical treatment facilities.
    (b) Report.--Not later than one year after the date on which the 
Director issues the guidance under subsection (a), the Director shall 
submit to the congressional defense committees a report containing the 
following:
            (1) An assessment of the extent to which each military 
        medical treatment facility has implemented the guidance.
            (2) Aggregate, de-identified data on screening rates, 
        positive-screen rates, and referral follow-through.
            (3) Any planned revisions to the guidance.
    (c) Screening for Unwanted Sexual Behavior Defined.--In this 
section, the term ``screening for unwanted sexual behavior'' means the 
use of standardized, evidence-based questions or instruments to detect 
whether an individual has been subject to any sexual contact or 
interaction to which the individual did not or could not freely 
consent, including harassment, coercion, assault, or abuse.

SEC. 732. REQUIREMENT TO NOTIFY COMMITTEES ON ARMED SERVICES OF 
              HOSPITALIZATION OF COMBAT WOUNDED MEMBERS OF THE ARMED 
              FORCES.

    Section 1074l of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding 
at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(d) Other Notifications.--(1) The Secretary concerned shall 
notify the Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives 
and the Senate of the occurrence of a hospitalization of a member of 
the armed forces who is--
            ``(A) seriously or very seriously wounded in action 
        resulting from the conduct of combat operations; and
            ``(B) evacuated from a theater of combat and admitted to 
        any military medical treatment facility or civilian medical 
        treatment facility, regardless of location.
    ``(2) The notifications under paragraph (1)--
            ``(A) may be made on an aggregate basis; and
            ``(B) may not include personally identifying information of 
        the hospitalized members.''.

SEC. 733. AUTHORITY TO PROVIDE RESIDENCIES, INTERNSHIPS, AND SIMILAR 
              POSTGRADUATE PROGRAMS FOR CIVILIAN HEALTH CARE 
              PROFESSIONALS OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.

    (a) Authority.--Section 1599c of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) in the heading, by striking ``and compensation'' and 
        inserting ``, compensation, and training''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(c) Residencies and Internships.--(1) The Secretary may establish 
residencies, internships, and similar postgraduate programs at military 
medical treatment facilities to train individuals whom the Secretary 
has appointed to civilian health care positions, including physicians, 
nurses, physician assistants, nurse practitioners and behavioral health 
providers.
    ``(2) The Secretary may require that an individual who participates 
in a residency, internship, or similar postgraduate program under 
paragraph (1) agrees to perform civilian Federal service at a military 
medical treatment facility for a specific period determined by the 
Secretary following the completion of such residency, internship, or 
similar postgraduate program.''.
    (b) Report.--
            (1) Requirement.--Not later than one year after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall 
        submit to the congressional defense committees a report on the 
        implementation of subsection (c) of section 1599c of title 10, 
        United States Code, as added by subsection (a).
            (2) Matters included.--The report under paragraph (1) shall 
        include the following:
                    (A) A plan to establish residencies, internships, 
                and similar postgraduate programs under subsection (c) 
                of such section 1599c, including a timeline to 
                implement such subsection.
                    (B) The anticipated cost of carrying out such 
                subsection.
                    (C) The number of each type of health care provider 
                the Secretary expects to participate in such 
                residencies, internships, and similar postgraduate 
                programs.
                    (D) An explanation for how the Secretary--
                            (i) will fund such residencies, 
                        internships, and similar postgraduate programs; 
                        and
                            (ii) supervise individuals participating in 
                        such residencies, internships, and similar 
                        postgraduate programs.
                    (E) An analysis of how the residencies, 
                internships, and similar postgraduate programs would 
                help meet the medical workforce needs of the military 
                health system.
                    (F) Any additional information that the Secretary 
                determines appropriate.

SEC. 734. NOTIFICATION TO TRICARE BENEFICIARIES OF COVERAGE TRANSITION 
              REQUIREMENTS.

     Chapter 55 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
inserting after section 1097d the following:

``SEC. 1097E. TRICARE PROGRAM: NOTICE OF COVERAGE TRANSITION 
              REQUIREMENTS.

    ``(a) Provision of Notice.--(1) The administering Secretaries shall 
provide each covered beneficiary with notices of a TRICARE coverage 
transition requirement that affects the individual.
    ``(2) The administering Secretaries shall provide notice under 
paragraph (1) through electronic means.
    ``(b) Timing of Notice.--The administering Secretaries shall 
provide notices to a covered beneficiary under subsection (a)(1) as 
follows:
            ``(1) On the date that is one year before the covered 
        beneficiary will experience a TRICARE coverage transition 
        requirement.
            ``(2) On the date that is 180 days before the covered 
        beneficiary will experience a TRICARE coverage transition 
        requirement.
            ``(3) On the date that is 30 days before the covered 
        beneficiary will experience a TRICARE coverage transition 
        requirement.
    ``(c) Outreach.--The administering Secretaries shall conduct an 
outreach and public awareness campaign to inform covered beneficiaries 
of TRICARE coverage transition requirements, including through the 
TRICARE internet website, social media, and through family readiness 
groups.
    ``(d) Reports.--On an annual basis the Secretary of Defense, in 
consultation with the other administering Secretaries, shall submit to 
the appropriate congressional committees a report on the implementation 
of this section, including metrics relating to the outreach and public 
awareness campaign under subsection (c) and any recommendations to 
improve making covered beneficiaries aware of TRICARE coverage 
transition requirements.
    ``(e) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `appropriate congressional committees' means 
        the following:
                    ``(A) The congressional defense committees.
                    ``(B) With respect to matters concerning members 
                and former members of the Coast Guard and dependents of 
                such members and former members, the Committee on 
                Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of 
                Representatives and the Committee on Commerce, Science, 
                and Transportation of the Senate.
            ``(2) The term `TRICARE coverage transition requirement' 
        means a requirement under this chapter for a covered 
        beneficiary to make a different election under the TRICARE 
        program to continue enrollment in the TRICARE program, 
        including by reason of attaining a certain age as described in 
        section 1086(d) or 1110b of this title.''.

SEC. 735. WAIVER OF REFERRAL REQUIREMENT UNDER TRICARE PRIME FOR 
              CERTAIN PHYSICAL THERAPY.

    Section 1095f(a)(2) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
    ``(C) In addition to the requirements under subparagraph (B), the 
Secretary shall waive the referral requirement in paragraph (1) in the 
case of a member of the armed forces serving on active duty who seeks 
to obtain an appointment for physical therapy provided by a licensed 
provider under TRICARE Prime if the provider is located in a State in 
which the law of that State does not require a referral for that 
specific appointment.''.

SEC. 736. RATES OF PAY FOR A PROVIDER OF CARE OR SERVICES FURNISHED 
              UNDER TRICARE PROGRAM.

    (a) Rates.--Section 1097b(a) of title 10, United States Code is 
amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1), by inserting ``and paragraph (3)(A)'' 
        after ``Subject to paragraph (2)''; and
            (2) in paragraph (3), by striking ``In establishing'' and 
        inserting the following
    ``(A) The Secretary shall establish rates for payments to providers 
of care or services under the TRICARE program that are specific with 
respect to the following sites of service at which the care or service 
is actually provided (regardless of the physical location of the 
headquarters of the provider):
            ``(i) A hospital outpatient department.
            ``(ii) An ambulatory surgical center.
            ``(iii) The office of a physician.
            ``(iv) Such other sites as the Secretary determines 
        appropriate in carrying out this paragraph.
    ``(B) The Secretary shall ensure that--
            ``(i) each site specified in subparagraph (A) obtains a 
        National Provider Identifier pursuant to section 1833(t) of the 
        Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1395l(t)(23)) that is separate 
        and unique from such identifier for such provider; and
            ``(ii) no payment for care or services under any provision 
        of this chapter may be made unless the claim for such payment 
        includes the National Provider Identifier for the site at which 
        such hospital care, medical services, or extended care services 
        were furnished.
    ``(C) In the case of covered OPD services (as defined in section 
1833(t)(1)(B) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1395l(t)(1)(B)) 
that are provided by a provider that is an off-campus outpatient 
department of a provider (as defined in section 1833(t)(21)(B) of the 
Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1395l(t)(21)(B)), disregarding clauses 
(ii) and (iv) thereof, as if such clauses did not exist), the Secretary 
shall ensure that such department is treated as a subpart of such 
provider and assigned a unique health identifier pursuant to 
subparagraph (B) of this paragraph, and that such provider includes 
such identifier on any claim form it submits under this subsection, and 
that such provider may not hold a member of the uniformed services or 
covered beneficiary liable for such item or service unless such care or 
services are billed using the separate unique health identifier 
established for such department under this paragraph.
    ``(D) Nothing in this paragraph may be construed to--
            ``(i) prevent the Secretary from determining the 
        appropriate amount of a facility fee;
            ``(ii) require the Secretary to pay, for the same item or 
        service--
                    ``(I) an independent physician the same amount as 
                the Secretary would pay a hospital-based physician; or
                    ``(II) a hospital-based physician less than the 
                Secretary would pay an independent physician; or
            ``(iii) affect the authority of the Secretary under 
        paragraph (2).
    ``(E) In establishing''.
    (b) Effective Date.--The amendments made by subsection (a) shall 
take effect on January 1, 2028.

SEC. 737. PLANS ON MILITARY HEALTH SYSTEM.

    (a) Requirement.--Section 1073b of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) in the heading, by inserting ``plans and'' before 
        ``reports'';
            (2) by redesignating subsections (a) and (b) as subsections 
        (b) and (c), respectively; and
            (3) by inserting before subsection (b), as so redesignated, 
        the following new subsection:
    ``(a) Long-term Plans.--(1) During each year, the Secretary shall 
develop a long-term plan on the stabilization of health care delivered 
through the Defense Health Agency.
    ``(2) Each plan under paragraph (1) shall include information 
regarding the following with respect to each military medical treatment 
facility:
            ``(A) Milestones necessary to implement the plan.
            ``(B) Definable goals for personnel, budget, supplies, and 
        readiness.
            ``(C) Cost estimates for personnel, supplies, and other 
        items necessary to manage and operate the military medical 
        treatment facility.
            ``(D) The number of current (as of the time of the plan) 
        and the projection of vacancies with respect to--
                    ``(i) military medical personnel;
                    ``(ii) civilian and contractor medical personnel; 
                and
                    ``(iii) health care administration personnel.
            ``(E) Projected modifications of the scope of medical care 
        provided at military medical treatment facilities.
            ``(F) Budget requirements.
    ``(3) Each plan under paragraph (1) shall cover the same period 
covered by the future-years defense program submitted under section 221 
of this title during the year in which the plan is developed.
    ``(4)(A) On a quarterly basis, the Secretary shall provide to the 
Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the 
Senate a briefing on the most recent plan under paragraph (1).
    ``(B) Any information included in a briefing under subparagraph (A) 
with respect to a projected modification of the scope of medical care 
provided at a military medical treatment facility may not be treated as 
a notification under section 1073d(f) of this title.
    ``(5) The Secretary shall submit to the Committees on Armed 
Services of the House of Representatives and the Senate each plan under 
paragraph (1).''.
    (b) Limitation on Modifications of Scope of Medical Care.--Section 
1073d(f)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``; and'' and 
        inserting a semicolon;
            (2) in subparagraph (C), by striking the period and 
        inserting ``; and''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
            ``(D) the Secretary has developed the long-term plan under 
        section 1073b(a) of this title during the year in which the 
        Secretary submits such notification.''.

SEC. 738. MODIFICATION TO QUALIFICATION WAIVER AUTHORITY FOR APPLICANTS 
              FOR NURSING OR PRACTICAL NURSE POSITIONS IN THE 
              DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.

    Section 716(a) of the Servicemember Quality of Life Improvement and 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2025 (Public Law 
118-159; 10 U.S.C. 1073c note), is amended by striking ``who--'' and 
all that follows through the period at the end and inserting ``who 
holds a bachelor's degree or graduate degree from an accredited 
professional nursing educational program and a current, unrestricted 
license to practice as a registered nurse or practical nurse.''.

SEC. 739. AERIAL TRANSPORT AND DEPARTMENT-WIDE CAPABILITY FOR HIGH-
              CONSEQUENCE INFECTIOUS DISEASES.

    (a) Requirement.--Beginning not later than October 1, 2027, the 
Secretary of the Air Force, in coordination with the Assistant 
Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, the Secretaries of the other 
military departments, and the Director of the Defense Health Agency, 
shall carry out a program to provide for the safe, long-range aerial 
transport of individuals known to be or suspected of infection by high-
consequence infectious diseases.
    (b) Aerial Transport Component.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
ensure that the program under subsection (a) serves as the component of 
the Department of Defense that--
            (1) provides the Department with aerial transport of 
        patients with high-consequence infectious diseases; and
            (2) provides support to other departments and agencies of 
        the Federal Government, State and local governments, and 
        civilian and academic partners, as determined appropriate by 
        the Secretary.
    (c) Program Requirements.--In carrying out the program under 
subsection (a), the Secretary of the Air Force shall--
            (1) develop and maintain a curriculum, and identify 
        qualified instructors to train and certify military and 
        civilian medical personnel, on procedures associated with the 
        safe, long-range aerial transport of patients with high-
        consequence infectious diseases;
            (2) establish, and periodically update, medical care 
        standards, infection prevention and control measures, and 
        operational safety protocols necessary to maximize patient 
        survival and minimize infection risk to aircrew, medical 
        personnel, and support personnel;
            (3) serve as the joint force advocate and executive agent 
        within the Department of Defense for aerial transport of 
        individuals with high-consequence infectious diseases;
            (4) establish standards, sustainment requirements, and 
        lifecycle management processes for personal protective 
        equipment, transport isolation systems, and associated medical 
        equipment used in transporting infected patients;
            (5) develop, in coordination with the Joint Staff, joint 
        doctrine, concepts of operation, and medical force requirements 
        necessary to support a Department of Defense-wide high-
        consequence infectious disease capability, including patient 
        movement, definitive care, and integration across the continuum 
        of care;
            (6) coordinate with the other Secretaries of the military 
        departments and the Director of the Defense Health Agency to 
        inform the organization, training, and equipping of 
        specialized, organized teams capable of conducting high-
        consequence infectious disease patient movement and care in 
        operational, austere, and strategic environments;
            (7) support interoperability and operational integration 
        with other departments and agencies of the Federal Government, 
        State and local governments, and civilian and academic partners 
        to enable coordinated response to tactical incidents, large-
        scale contingencies, and research activities related to 
        emerging and future infectious disease threats; and
            (8) identify capability gaps and support research, 
        development, testing, and evaluation of medical 
        countermeasures, transport systems, protective equipment, and 
        operational procedures necessary to improve survivability, 
        safety, and mission effectiveness in high-consequence 
        infectious disease operations.
    (d) Enterprise Doctrine and Oversight.--The Secretary of Defense 
shall develop and maintain Department of Defense-wide doctrine and 
policy to guide the development, fielding, sustainment, and employment 
of high-consequence infectious disease response capabilities across the 
Department.

SEC. 740. AVAILABILITY OF OBSTETRICIAN-GYNECOLOGISTS AND CERTIFIED 
              NURSE-MIDWIFES AT MILITARY MEDICAL TREATMENT FACILITIES.

    (a) Requirement.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall ensure that each 
military medical treatment facility maintains, at all times, the 
continuous availability of at least one obstetrician-gynecologist or 
certified nurse-midwife.
    (b) Use of Contracts to Meet Requirement.--The Secretary may 
satisfy the requirement in subsection (a) with respect to a military 
medical treatment facility if the Secretary enters into a contract or 
other agreement with a private provider under which the provider 
ensures the continuous availability of an obstetrician-gynecologist or 
certified nurse-midwife to provide services at that facility. In 
entering into such a contract or other agreement, the Secretary shall 
ensure the following:
            (1) An obstetrician-gynecologist or certified nurse-midwife 
        is on call 24 hours per day and will arrive at the facility not 
        later than two hours after being called.
            (2) The obstetrician-gynecologist or certified nurse-
        midwife is located--
                    (A) not more than 25 miles by road from the 
                facility; or
                    (B) within a 30-minute emergency response travel 
                time under normal conditions from the facility.
            (3) The obstetrician-gynecologist or certified nurse-
        midwife meet or exceed all credentialing, training, and 
        certification standards that the Secretary would otherwise 
        apply to an obstetrician-gynecologist or certified nurse-
        midwife employed directly by the Department of Defense.
    (c) Information.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall--
            (1) issue updated policy guidance of the Department of 
        Defense with respect to implementing the requirements of 
        subsections (a) and (b), including standard language for 
        contracts or other agreements under subsection (b); and
            (2) submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the House 
        of Representatives and the Senate a report detailing--
                    (A) the status of obstetrician-gynecologist and 
                certified nurse-midwife staffing at each military 
                medical treatment facility;
                    (B) any contracts or other agreements entered into 
                under subsection (b), including the names and locations 
                of providers;
                    (C) the average response times for obstetrician-
                gynecologists or certified nurse-midwives and any gaps 
                in coverage experienced during the one-year period 
                preceding the report; and
                    (D) plans to address any identified shortfalls in 
                service availability.
    (d) Military Medical Treatment Facility Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``military medical treatment facility'' has the meaning given 
that term in section 1073c of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 741. AVAILABILITY OF SEXUAL ASSAULT NURSE EXAMINER SERVICES AT 
              MILITARY MEDICAL TREATMENT FACILITIES.

    (a) Requirement.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall ensure that each 
military medical treatment facility maintains, at all times, the 
continuous availability of at least one qualified sexual assault nurse 
examiner to provide forensic medical examinations and related care to 
sexual assault survivors.
    (b) Use of Contracts to Meet Requirement.--The Secretary may 
satisfy the requirement in subsection (a) with respect to a military 
medical treatment facility if the Secretary enters into a contract or 
other agreement with a private provider under which the provider 
ensures the continuous availability of a qualified sexual assault nurse 
examiner to provide services at that facility. In entering into such a 
contract or other agreement, the Secretary shall ensure the following:
            (1) A qualified sexual assault nurse examiner is on call 24 
        hours per day and will arrive at the facility not later than 
        two hours after being called.
            (2) The qualified sexual assault nurse examiners are 
        located--
                    (A) not more than 25 miles by road from the 
                facility; or
                    (B) within a 30-minute emergency response travel 
                time under normal conditions from the facility.
            (3) The qualified sexual assault nurse examiners meet or 
        exceed all credentialing, training, and certification standards 
        that the Secretary would otherwise apply to a sexual assault 
        nurse examiner employed directly by the Department of Defense.
    (c) Information.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall--
            (1) issue updated policy guidance of the Department 
        implementing the requirements of subsections (a) and (b), 
        including standard language for contracts or other agreements 
        under subsection (b); and
            (2) submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the House 
        of Representatives and the Senate a report detailing--
                    (A) the status of sexual assault nurse examiner 
                staffing at each military medical treatment facility;
                    (B) any contracts or other agreements entered into 
                under subsection (b), including the names and locations 
                of providers;
                    (C) the average response times for sexual assault 
                nurse examiners and any gaps in coverage experienced 
                during the one-year period preceding the report; and
                    (D) plans to address any identified shortfalls in 
                service availability.
    (d) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``military medical treatment facility'' has 
        the meaning given that term in section 1073c of title 10, 
        United States Code.
            (2) The term ``sexual assault nurse examiner'' means a 
        registered nurse who has received specialized training and 
        certification in the forensic examination of sexual assault 
        survivors and the collection of forensic evidence, in 
        accordance with standards established by the International 
        Association of Forensic Nurses or an equivalent certifying 
        body.

SEC. 742. IMPROVEMENT OF PROCESS FOR FILING OF COMPLAINTS AND REPORTING 
              OF ISSUES UNDER TRICARE PROGRAM.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall issue guidance to 
set forth the process and timeline for covered beneficiaries, direct 
care providers, and authorized providers under the TRICARE program to 
file complaints and report issues that have not been resolved through 
existing channels, including complaints regarding coverage, access to 
care, denials, incorrect provider directory listings, network adequacy, 
access to specialized care within a reasonable distance from their 
homes, overdue or consistently inaccurate payments, and other related 
issues.
    (b) Elements of Guidance.--The guidance required under subsection 
(a) shall set forth--
            (1) the details and effective date of a reporting tool that 
        follows a simple flow chart for filing complaints and reporting 
        issues; and
            (2) the timelines and protocols that the Department of 
        Defense will use to monitor and address complaints filed and 
        issues reported that are appropriate to the level of acuity or 
        urgency of such complaint or issue, including responses to the 
        covered beneficiary or provider that include--
                    (A) steps that have been taken by the Department of 
                Defense to respond to the complaint or issue;
                    (B) any responses received by relevant parties in 
                investigating the complaint or issue; and
                    (C) follow-up actions or planned follow-up actions 
                by the Department of Defense in response to the 
                complaint or issue.
    (c) Application to Providers.--The guidance required under 
subsection (a) shall apply to all agreements with authorized providers 
under the TRICARE program entered into on or after the date of the 
enactment of this Act.
    (d) Annual Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, and annually thereafter, the Secretary of 
Defense shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate 
and the House of Representatives a report that includes the following:
            (1) The number of complaints filed or issues reported that 
        are covered by subsection (a), disaggregated by category of 
        complaint or issue, beneficiary complaint or issue, or provider 
        complaint or issue.
            (2) A description of steps that were taken to respond to 
        such complaints or issues.
            (3) A description of any follow-up actions or planned 
        follow-up actions by the Department of Defense in response to 
        such complaints or issues.
    (e) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered Armed Force'' means the Army, Navy, 
        Air Force, Marine Corps, and Space Force.
            (2) The term ``covered beneficiary'' means a covered 
        beneficiary, as defined in section 1072 of title 10, United 
        States Code, who is a beneficiary by reason of the service by 
        an individual in a covered Armed Force.
            (3) The term ``TRICARE program'' has the meaning given that 
        term in section 1072 of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 743. PILOT PROGRAM ON FILLING PRIMARY CARE MANAGEMENT POSITIONS AT 
              REMOTE MILITARY MEDICAL TREATMENT FACILITIES.

    (a) Pilot Program.--Beginning not later than 180 days after the 
date of the enactment of this Act, each Secretary of a military 
department shall carry out a pilot program under which the Secretary 
may--
            (1) appoint individuals to primary care management 
        positions at a remote military medical treatment facility 
        selected under subsection (d); and
            (2) provide incentives for highly qualified applicants to 
        such positions.
    (b) Duration.--Each Secretary of a military department shall carry 
out the pilot program under subsection (a) for a period not to exceed 
five years.
    (c) Personnel Authorities.--In carrying out subsection (a), for the 
purposes of hiring qualified candidates for the pilot program, each 
Secretary of a military department may use the authorities provided 
under--
            (1) section 1599c of title 10, United States Code (relating 
        to appointment and rates of pay);
            (2) section 5379 of title 5, United States Code (relating 
        to student loan repayments); and
            (3) sections 5753 and 5754 of such title 5 (relating to 
        recruitment and relocation bonuses and retention bonuses, 
        respectively).
    (d) Remote Military Medical Treatment Facilities.--
            (1) Selection.--Not later than 60 days after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, each Secretary of a military 
        department shall select not fewer than five remote military 
        medical treatment facilities at which to carry out the pilot 
        program under subsection (a).
            (2) Notification.--Each Secretary of a military department 
        shall notify the Committees on Armed Services of the House of 
        Representatives and the Senate of each remote military medical 
        treatment facility selected under paragraph (1).
    (e) Reimbursement.--
            (1) Requirement.--Subject to the availability of 
        appropriations, the Director of the Defense Health Agency shall 
        reimburse the relevant Secretary of a military department for 
        the actual, reasonable, and allocable cost of the salary and 
        expenses (including with respect to travel, training, 
        equipment, and facility support) of any individual appointed to 
        a primary care management position under the pilot program 
        under subsection (a) during the period in which the employee is 
        employed in the position for which the employee was so 
        appointed (regardless of whether such period exceeds the 
        duration of the pilot program). The Director and the Secretary 
        shall ensure that such costs are tracked using a detailed work 
        breakdown structure to ensure granular tracking and financial 
        accountability.
            (2) Memorandum of understanding.--The Director and each 
        Secretary of a military department shall enter into a 
        memorandum of understanding to carry out reimbursements under 
        paragraph (1). Such memorandum shall specify--
                    (A) the scope of services provided by the 
                individuals appointed to a primary care management 
                position;
                    (B) the allowable cost categories;
                    (C) billing and accounting procedures;
                    (D) quality and performance metrics; and
                    (E) dispute resolution procedures.
    (f) Reports.--Not later than 18 months after the date on which each 
Secretary of a military department commences the pilot program under 
subsection (a), and annually thereafter during the life of the pilot 
program, the Secretary shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services 
of the House of Representatives and the Senate a report on the pilot 
program, including with respect to the feasibility of carrying out the 
pilot program on a long-term basis.
    (g) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``primary care management position'' means a 
        physician, nurse practitioner, physician assistant, registered 
        nurse, mental health nurse practitioner, licensed practical 
        nurse, or medical assistant.
            (2) The term ``remote military medical treatment facility'' 
        means a military medical treatment facility (as defined in 
        section 1073c of title 10, United States Code) for which 
        medical personnel assigned to the facility may reside at a 
        location that is either--
                    (A) not more than 50 miles from the military 
                medical facility; or
                    (B) a distance that on average takes at least one 
                hour to travel by car.

SEC. 744. ESTABLISHMENT OF PILOT PROGRAM ON USE OF HEALTH CARE 
              ASSESSMENTS OTHER THAN PERIODIC HEALTH ASSESSMENTS.

    (a) Requirement.--The Secretary of the Army shall carry out a pilot 
program to evaluate the effectiveness of different health care 
assessment methods for members of the Army serving on active duty, as 
compared to the periodic health assessment of the Army.
    (b) Locations.--The Secretary shall--
            (1) carry out the pilot program under subsection (a) at 
        Fort Hood, Texas; and
            (2) select at least one more installation of the Army at 
        which to carry out the pilot program.
    (c) Participant Selection.--The Secretary shall select not fewer 
than 100 members of the Army to participate in the pilot program under 
subsection (a). Such members may not be in a high-risk population, as 
determined by the Secretary.
    (e) Health Care Assessments.--In carrying out the pilot program 
under subsection (a), the Secretary shall provide members of the Army 
participating in the pilot program with the following instead of the 
periodic health assessment:
            (1) An in-person physical examination.
            (2) Blood work that includes comprehensive metabolic panel 
        and complete blood count conducted by qualified medical 
        personnel.
            (3) Any other test or evaluation as determined appropriate 
        by the Secretary.
    (f) Baseline.--The Secretary shall use health care assessments 
provided to a member of the Army under the pilot program under 
subsection (a) as a baseline for the purposes of ongoing regular 
monitoring of the member.
    (g) Duration.--The Secretary shall carry out the pilot program for 
a two-year period beginning on the date of the enactment of this Act, 
but the Secretary may extend such period.
    (h) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date on which the 
pilot program under subsection (a) concludes, the Secretary shall 
submit to the congressional defense committees a report on the pilot 
program, including findings relating to--
            (1) health care outcomes;
            (2) satisfaction of members of the Army; and
            (3) any recommendations for broader implementation.

            Subtitle C--Studies, Reports, and Other Matters

SEC. 751. QUARTERLY BRIEFING ON MILITARY TREATMENT FACILITIES.

    (a) In General.--Section 1073c of title 10, United States Code, as 
amended by section 721, is further amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsection (k) as subsection (l); and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (j) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(k) Quarterly Briefing on Military Medical Treatment 
Facilities.--(1) Not less frequently than once every 90 days, the 
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs shall provide to the 
Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the 
Senate a briefing on military medical treatment facilities.
    ``(2) Each briefing under paragraph (1) shall include, for each 
military medical treatment facility and with respect to the 90-day 
period preceding the date of the provision of the briefing, the 
following information:
            ``(A) Of the members of the armed forces and covered 
        beneficiaries who received health care services at the military 
        medical treatment facility during such period, the percentage 
        for whom access standards were met.
            ``(B) An assessment of the clinical readiness of the 
        members of the armed forces staffing the military medical 
        treatment facility.
            ``(C) An assessment of the unit readiness of members of the 
        armed forces who receive health care services at the military 
        medical treatment facility.
            ``(D) The number of members of the armed forces and covered 
        beneficiaries enrolled in TRICARE Prime, disaggregated by 
        category of enrollee, that received health care services at the 
        military medical treatment facility during such period.
            ``(E) The number of members of the armed forces and covered 
        beneficiaries enrolled in TRICARE Prime, disaggregated by 
        category of enrollee, that received referrals under the TRICARE 
        program from providers at the military medical treatment 
        facility to specialty care providers outside the military 
        medical treatment facility during such period.
            ``(F) The composition of the workforce at the military 
        medical treatment facility, including the number of members of 
        the armed forces, civilian employees of the Department of 
        Defense, and contractors of the Department.
            ``(G) With respect to personnel staffing at the military 
        medical treatment facility, the following:
                    ``(i) The number of unfilled billets, disaggregated 
                by type of profession, including clinicians, nurses, 
                hospital administrators, and administrative personnel.
                    ``(ii) The average amount of time for an unfilled 
                billet to be filled, disaggregated in accordance with 
                clause (i).
            ``(H) A description of any deficiencies or shortages with 
        respect to the budget, medical supplies and equipment, or 
        personnel necessary to meet metrics relating to access to 
        healthcare services provided at the military medical treatment 
        facility and applicable standards of care relating to such 
        services.
            ``(I) A plan to remedy any such deficiencies.''.
    (b) Deadline for Initial Briefing.--Not later than 60 days after 
the date of the enactment of this section, the Assistant Secretary of 
Defense for Health Affairs shall submit the first briefing required 
under section 1073c(k) of title 10, United States Code, as amended by 
subsection (a).

SEC. 752. ENHANCED MEDICAL COVERAGE FOR CIVILIAN EMPLOYEES OF THE 
              DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE AND DEPENDENTS IN CERTAIN 
              LOCATIONS.

    (a) Enhanced Medical Coverage.--Section 1599b of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsection (e) as subsection (f); and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (d) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(e) Enhanced Medical Coverage.--(1) Not later than July 1, 2027, 
the Secretary of Defense shall seek to enter into a contract to provide 
each covered individual in a location specified in paragraph (2) with 
enhanced medical coverage for services that are not covered by the 
health care plan for which the covered individual is enrolled under the 
Federal Employees Health Benefits Plan.
    ``(2) The locations specified in this paragraph are the following:
            ``(A) Japan.
            ``(B) Guam.
            ``(C) Any location the Secretary determines appropriate 
        under a mitigation plan carried out under paragraph (5)(C).
    ``(3)(A) With respect to covered individuals living in Japan, the 
Secretary shall ensure that the enhanced medical coverage under 
subsection (a) includes the following:
            ``(i) Assistance in finding health care providers with the 
        capacity to meet the health care needs of the individuals.
            ``(ii) Language translation services to assist in accessing 
        health care.
            ``(iii) Assistance in making prepayments for health care 
        services if such prepayments are required by the health care 
        provider.
            ``(iv) Any other supplemental services the Secretary 
        determines appropriate.
    ``(B) With respect to covered individuals living in Guam, the 
Secretary shall ensure that the enhanced medical coverage under 
subsection (a) includes the following:
            ``(i) Assistance in finding health care providers with the 
        capacity to meet the health care needs of the individuals.
            ``(ii) Medical evacuation coverage if needed health care 
        services are not available on Guam or are only available in a 
        facility that is not accredited.
            ``(iii) Any other supplemental services the Secretary 
        determines appropriate.
    ``(4)(A) On an annual basis, the Secretary shall conduct a review 
of the availability of health care services for civilian employees of 
the Department of Defense employed in a position outside the 
continental United States and accompanying dependents of such 
employees. Each review shall assess the availability of the following:
            ``(i) Ambulatory patient services, including outpatient 
        surgery.
            ``(ii) Emergency services.
            ``(iii) Inpatient care, including trauma care and intensive 
        care.
            ``(iv) Maternity and newborn care, including neonatal 
        intensive care.
            ``(v) Mental health and substance use disorder services.
            ``(vi) Rehabilitative and habilitative services.
            ``(vii) Laboratory services.
            ``(viii) Preventive services.
            ``(ix) Pediatric services.
    ``(B) If the Secretary determines in a review under subparagraph 
(A) that health care services specified in such subparagraph are not 
available, or do not meet the standards of care for such services 
provided in the United States, with respect to a specific State, 
territory or possession of the United States, or foreign country, the 
Secretary shall--
            ``(i) carry out a mitigation plan under subparagraph (C); 
        and
            ``(ii) notify each civilian employee of the Department 
        employed in a position at such location, and any applicant for 
        such a position, of the determination and mitigation plan.
    ``(C) With respect to each location covered by a determination 
under subparagraph (B), the Secretary shall carry out a mitigation plan 
under which the Secretary may--
            ``(i) include such location in the enhanced medical 
        coverage made available under paragraph (1), including with 
        respect to assistance in finding health care providers, 
        providing medical travel benefits, and medical evacuation 
        coverage;
            ``(ii) designate civilian positions at such location as 
        being unaccompanied; or
            ``(iii) take such other actions as the Secretary determines 
        appropriate to increase access to health care for civilian 
        employees of the Department employed in a position at such 
        location and accompanying dependents of such employees.
    ``(5) Not later than February 1, 2028, and annually thereafter, the 
Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report 
on--
            ``(A) the findings of each review under subparagraph (A) of 
        paragraph (5); and
            ``(B) a summary of each mitigation plan carried out by the 
        Secretary under subparagraph (C) of such paragraph.
    ``(6) In this subsection:
            ``(A) The term `covered individual' means an individual who 
        is--
                    ``(i) a civilian employee of the Department of 
                Defense employed in a position at a location specified 
                in paragraph (2) or an accompanying dependent of such 
                an employee; and
                    ``(ii) enrolled in a health care plan under the 
                Federal Employees Health Benefits Plan.
            ``(B) The term `Federal Employees Health Benefits Plan' 
        means the health insurance program under chapter 89 of title 
        5.''.
    (b) Current Pilot Program.--The contract awarded by the Secretary 
of Defense to carry out the pilot program titled ``Pilot Health 
Insurance Enhancement for Department of Defense Civilian Employees in 
Japan'' may continue without interruption, and with the necessary 
modifications, in implementing subsection (e) of section 1599b of title 
10, United States Code, as added by subsection (a).
    (c) Conforming Amendment.--Subsection (f) of section 1599b of title 
10, United States Code, as redesignated by subsection (a)(1), is 
amended by striking ``In this section'' inserting ``Except as provided 
by subsection (e), in this section''.

SEC. 753. MODIFICATIONS TO PILOT PROGRAM TO ASSIST CERTAIN MEMBERS OF 
              THE ARMED FORCES AND DEPENDENTS WITH ADDITIONAL 
              SUPPLEMENTAL COVERAGE RELATING TO CANCER.

    (a) Agreement.--Subsection (b) of section 734 of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60; 10 
U.S.C. 1071 note) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)--
                    (A) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``; and'' and 
                inserting a semicolon;
                    (B) by redesignating subparagraph (C) as 
                subparagraph (D); and
                    (C) by inserting after subparagraph (B) the 
                following new subparagraph:
                    ``(C) provide no coordination with any other health 
                benefit plan; and''.
            (2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``a period of not more 
        than three years, and may not be renewed'' and inserting ``a 
        period of not less than three years''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
            ``(3) Requirements.--In entering into an agreement under 
        paragraph (1) with a company, the Secretary--
                    ``(A) may not select such company to provide 
                coverage in a State, the District of Columbia, the 
                Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or any territory or 
                possession of the United States in which such company--
                            ``(i) is not licensed; and
                            ``(ii) does not meet solvency requirements 
                        applicable to such State;
                    ``(B) shall award the agreement based on the 
                expertise of such company;
                    ``(C) shall negotiate the terms and conditions of 
                the fixed indemnity supplemental benefit plan provided 
                under the agreement;
                    ``(D) shall negotiate the cost of coverage with the 
                company that will cover the participants who elect to 
                enroll in such plan;
                    ``(E) shall provide a method for verification of 
                the eligibility of applicants and procedures for 
                determination of eligibility; and
                    ``(F) shall provide a method for payroll deduction 
                of premiums.''.
    (b) Provision of Information.--Subsection (c) of such section is 
amended by striking ``website'' and inserting ``website, as determined 
by the Secretary,''.
    (c) Preemption.--Such section is further amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsection (f) as subsection (g); and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (e) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(f) Preemption.--An agreement entered into under this section 
shall be deemed to be a contract for which the Secretary of Defense has 
determined to preempt State or local laws pursuant to section 1103 of 
title 10, United States Code, as administered under section 
199.17(a)(7)(i) of title 32, Code of Federal Regulations, as in effect 
on the date of the enactment of this Act.''.

SEC. 754. MODIFICATIONS TO EVALUATION AND REPORT ON TRICARE PROGRAM 
              EFFECTIVENESS.

    (a) Evaluation.--Subsection (a) of section 717 of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1996 (Public Law 104-106; 10 
U.S.C. 1073 note) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (2), by striking ``; and'' and inserting a 
        semicolon;
            (2) in paragraph (3)(B)(v), by striking the period and 
        inserting a semicolon; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new paragraphs:
            ``(4) examine trends with respect to--
                    ``(A) the demographics of members of the Armed 
                Forces and covered beneficiaries;
                    ``(B) the use of the TRICARE program by such 
                members and beneficiaries;
                    ``(C) the costs incurred by the Government relating 
                to such use; and
                    ``(D) the satisfaction of such members and 
                beneficiaries with respect to the TRICARE program and 
                other metrics relating to the performance of the 
                military health system;
            ``(5) compare the trends examined under paragraph (4) with 
        trends on similar matters experienced by civilian health care 
        programs;
            ``(6) identify possible determining factors that could 
        cause changes in the use of the TRICARE program or the costs 
        incurred by the Government relating to such use; and
            ``(7) determine the impacts of cost-sharing amounts under 
        the TRICARE program on members of the Armed Forces and covered 
        beneficiaries.''.
    (b) Annual Report.--
            (1) Revival.--Subsection (c) of such section is amended by 
        striking ``March 1, 1997'' and inserting ``March 1, 2027''.
            (2) Conforming amendment.--Section 1061(i) of the National 
        Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-
        328; 10 U.S.C. 111 note) is amended by striking paragraph (3).

SEC. 755. EXTENSION OF EXTRAMEDICAL MATERNAL HEALTH PROVIDERS 
              DEMONSTRATION PROJECT.

    Section 746 of the William M. (Mac) Thornberry National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (Public Law 116-283; 10 U.S.C. 
1073 note) is amended--
            (1) in subsection (d), by striking ``five years'' and 
        inserting ``eight years''; and
            (2) in subsection (f)--
                    (A) in the heading, by inserting ``and Briefing'' 
                after ``Reports''; and
                    (B) by adding at the end the following new 
                paragraph:
            ``(3) Briefing.--Not later than June 30, 2027, the 
        Secretary shall provide to the Committees on Armed Services of 
        the House of Representatives and the Senate a briefing on the 
        feasibility of the Department of Defense hiring doulas to 
        provide services to members of the Armed Forces and covered 
        beneficiaries at military medical treatment facilities that are 
        located in the United States and such facilities that are 
        located outside the United States.''.

SEC. 756. MODIFICATION OF TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY OVERSIGHT STRATEGY AND 
              ACTION PLAN OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.

    (a) Clarification of Strategy and Plan Requirements.--Section 724 
of the Servicemember Quality of Life Improvement and National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2025 (Public Law 118-159; 10 U.S.C. 
1071 note) is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsections (b) through (d) as 
        subsections (c) through (e), respectively; and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (a) the following new 
        subsection (b):
    ``(b) Requirements; Implementation.--
            ``(1) Requirements.--The oversight strategy and action plan 
        under subsection (a) shall include the following requirements:
                    ``(A) Establishment of a baseline neurocognitive 
                assessment to be conducted during the accession process 
                of all members of the covered Armed Forces before the 
                beginning of training.
                    ``(B) Establishment of annual neurocognitive 
                assessments to monitor the cognitive function of such 
                members to be conducted--
                            ``(i) at least every three years as part of 
                        the periodic health assessment of such members, 
                        and yearly for members determined to be at a 
                        high risk, as determined by the Under Secretary 
                        of Defense for Personnel and Readiness; and
                            ``(ii) as part of the post-deployment 
                        health assessment of such members.
                    ``(C) Establishment of standards for recurrent and 
                prolonged exposure.
                    ``(D) Ensuring that all neurocognitive assessments 
                of such members, including those required under 
                subparagraphs (A) and (B), are maintained in the 
                electronic medical record of such member.
                    ``(E) Establishment and maintenance of blast 
                overpressure exposure logs and traumatic brain injury 
                logs for every member of the covered Armed Forces.
            ``(2) Implementation.--Not later than one year after the 
        date of the enactment of this subsection, the Secretary shall 
        implement each requirement under paragraph (1).''.
    (b) Modification of Reports on Suicide.--Section 741(a)(2) of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (Public Law 
116-92; 133 Stat. 1467), as amended by section 736(2)(B) of the 
Servicemember Quality of Life Improvement and National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2025 (Public Law 118-159; 138 Stat. 
1959), is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subparagraphs (I) through (M) as 
        subparagraphs (J) through (N), respectively; and
            (2) by inserting after subparagraph (H) the following new 
        subparagraph (I):
                    ``(I) The number of suicides identified under 
                subparagraph (A), as a whole and disaggregated by the 
                military occupational specialty (or other similar 
                classification, rating, or specialty code) of the 
                member, excluding such specialities that the Secretary 
                determines would not provide statistically valid data, 
                with respect to which the member had a history of one 
                of the following:
                            ``(i) Concussive or subconcussive brain 
                        injuries, including traumatic brain injuries.
                            ``(ii) Exposure to blast overpressure.
                            ``(iii) Other head trauma, regardless of 
                        whether it required the treatment of a medical 
                        provider.''.

SEC. 757. EXPANSION OF PROHIBITION ON PAINFUL RESEARCH ON CERTAIN 
              ANIMALS.

    Section 732 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60; 10 U.S.C. 4001 note) is amended--
            (1) in the section heading, by striking ``on domestic cats 
        and dogs'' and inserting ``on certain animals''; and
            (2) in subsection (a), by striking ``a domestic cat (Felis 
        catus) or a domestic dog (Canis familiaris)'' and inserting ``a 
        domestic cat (Felis catus), a domestic dog (Canis familiaris), 
        or a nonhuman member of the order Primates''.

SEC. 758. PILOT PROGRAM TO TREAT PREGNANCY AS A QUALIFYING EVENT FOR 
              ENROLLMENT IN TRICARE SELECT.

    (a) Establishment.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall commence a five-
year pilot program under which--
            (1) the Secretary shall treat pregnancy as a qualifying 
        event under section 1099(b)(1)(B) of title 10, United States 
        Code, for enrollment in TRICARE Select by an eligible 
        beneficiary; and
            (2) a member of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, or 
        Space Force on active duty may enroll in TRICARE Select under 
        paragraph (1) for a period that ends not later than 180 days 
        after the end of pregnancy.
    (b) Initial Briefing.--Not later than one year after the date of 
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall provide to the 
Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the 
Senate a briefing on the status of the pilot program under subsection 
(a).
    (c) Annual Report.--Not later than one year after the Secretary 
commences the pilot program under subsection (a), and annually 
thereafter for the next four years, the Secretary shall provide to the 
Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the 
Senate a report on the pilot program. Each such report shall include 
the number of covered enrollment changes, disaggregated by--
            (1) month, beginning with January 2027; and
            (2) whether the eligible beneficiary made such covered 
        enrollment change--
                    (A) because the eligible beneficiary is a member of 
                the covered Armed Forces on active duty who may enroll 
                in TRICARE Select under the pilot program;
                    (B) because the eligible beneficiary is a member of 
                the covered Armed Forces who separated from active 
                duty;
                    (C) because the eligible beneficiary is a member of 
                the covered Armed Forces who returned to active duty;
                    (D) because the eligible beneficiary is a dependent 
                of a member of the covered Armed Forces who separated 
                from active duty;
                    (E) because the eligible beneficiary is a dependent 
                of a member of the covered Armed Forces who returned to 
                active duty; or
                    (F) based on the treatment, under the pilot 
                program, of pregnancy as a qualifying event for 
                enrollment in TRICARE Select.
    (d) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered Armed Forces'' means the Army, Navy, 
        Marine Corps, Air Force, and Space Force.
            (2) The term ``covered enrollment change'' means a change 
        to a previous election by an eligible beneficiary under 
        subsection (b)(1) of section 1099 of title 10, United States 
        Code, to enroll in a health care plan designated under 
        subsection (c) of such section.
            (3) The term ``eligible beneficiary'' means an individual--
                    (A) eligible to enroll in TRICARE Select under 
                section 1075(b) of title 10, United States Code, by 
                reason of being a member or former member of the 
                covered Armed Forces, or a dependent of such a member 
                or former member; or
                    (B) a member of the covered Armed Forces on active 
                duty.
            (4) The terms ``TRICARE program'' and ``TRICARE Select'' 
        have the meanings given such terms in section 1072 of title 10, 
        United States Code.

SEC. 759. ACCESS TO AUTOMATED EXTERNAL DEFIBRILLATORS DURING MILITARY 
              PHYSICAL TRAINING.

    (a) Access to AEDs.--Beginning not later than one year after the 
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall 
ensure that, for any covered physical training event, an automated 
external defibrillator (in this section referred to as an ``AED'') is 
available and accessible at a distance that ensures a three-minute 
response time calculated under subsection (c).
    (b) Requirements.--In carrying out subsection (a), the Secretary 
shall--
            (1) require that AEDs be staged at the immediate site of 
        any covered physical training event;
            (2) ensure that at least one individual present at covered 
        physical training event site is certified (as of the date of 
        the event) in the use of an AED and cardiopulmonary 
        resuscitation (commonly known as ``CPR''); and
            (3) establish a standardized protocol for regular quarterly 
        inspections and maintenance of all AED units to ensure 
        operational readiness.
    (c) Three-minute Response Time Determination.--The Secretary shall 
determine the three-minute response time under subsection (a) by 
calculating the total elapsed time beginning at the recognition of a 
suspected sudden cardiac arrest and ending at the delivery of the first 
defibrillation shock, including all time required for AED retrieval, 
transport, and device preparation. In making such determinations, the 
Secretary may presume that locating an AED within 100 yards of the site 
of the covered physical training event will meet such response time.
    (d) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees a report outlining--
            (1) the total number of additional AEDs required to achieve 
        Department-wide compliance with this section;
            (2) the estimated cost of procurement and maintenance of 
        such AEDs; and
            (3) a timeline for full implementation across all military 
        installations to comply with this section.
    (e) Covered Physical Training Event Defined.--In this section, the 
term ``covered physical training event'' means a required unit level 
physical training event or high-intensity exercise conducted by the 
Department of Defense.

SEC. 760. PILOT PROGRAM ON REMOTE BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING FOR CERTAIN 
              PREGNANT AND POSTPARTUM TRICARE BENEFICIARIES.

    (a) Establishment.--
            (1) Requirement.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, acting 
        through the Director of the Defense Health Agency, shall 
        establish a pilot program on blood pressure monitoring for 
        pregnant and postpartum TRICARE beneficiaries in order to 
        increase the rate of early detection of a hypertensive disorder 
        of pregnancy.
            (2) Model.--The Secretary may model the pilot program under 
        paragraph (1) on a pilot program for blood pressure self-
        monitoring under the Healthy Start Program of the Health 
        Resources and Services Administration of the Department of 
        Health and Human Services.
    (b) Military Medical Treatment Facilities.--
            (1) Number.--The Secretary shall carry out the pilot 
        program under subsection (a) at not fewer than two military 
        medical treatment facilities of each of the Army, Navy, Marine 
        Corps, Air Force, and Space Force.
            (2) Selection.--In selecting the military medical treatment 
        facilities at which to carry out the pilot program under 
        subsection (a), the Secretary shall--
                    (A) ensure that the military medical treatment 
                facilities are geographically diverse, including 
                locations in rural and urban areas; and
                    (B) give priority to military medical treatment 
                facilities that have a large number of obstetric 
                patients or a history of maternal health programs.
    (c) Participants.--
            (1) Eligibility.--An individual is eligible to participate 
        in the pilot program under subsection (a) if--
                    (A) the individual--
                            (i) is enrolled in the TRICARE program;
                            (ii) is pregnant or postpartum; and
                            (iii) receives health care through a 
                        military medical treatment facility at which 
                        the Secretary is carrying out the pilot 
                        program; and
                    (B) the Secretary determines the individual is at 
                risk (based on evidence and current medical standards 
                and recommendations) of a hypertensive disorder of 
                pregnancy or negative health outcomes as a result of a 
                hypertensive disorder of pregnancy.
            (2) Voluntary.--The Secretary may not require an individual 
        to participate in the pilot program under subsection (a).
    (d) Equipment and Information.--The Secretary shall provide to an 
individual participating in the pilot program under subsection (a)--
            (1) a blood pressure cuff device that--
                    (A) is approved by the Food and Drug Administration 
                for the digital monitoring of blood pressure;
                    (B) is validated for use during pregnancy according 
                to the International Organization for Standardization 
                (as determined by the Secretary);
                    (C) is capable of remote monitoring and data 
                transmission; and
                    (D) has adjustable or alternative cuff sizes; and
            (2) educational materials and instructions on the use of 
        such device from a health care provider of the Department of 
        Defense.
    (e) Providers.--In carrying out the pilot program under subsection 
(a), the Secretary shall use the primary care and obstetric care 
provider of the individual participating in the pilot program, to the 
extent practicable.
    (f) Materials.--The Secretary shall develop supporting materials 
for health care providers who facilitate the pilot program under 
subsection (a), including the following:
            (1) Guidance on how to identify individuals eligible to 
        participate in the pilot program.
            (2) Evidence-based educational materials regarding maternal 
        health best practices for such individuals.
    (g) Term.--The pilot program under subsection (a) shall terminate 
five years after the date on which the Secretary establishes such pilot 
program.
    (h) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
termination of the pilot program, the Secretary shall submit to the 
Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the 
Senate, and make publicly available on the internet website of the 
Department of Defense, a report on the pilot program. The report shall 
include the following elements, disaggregated by the Armed Force, sex, 
age, race, and ethnicity of individuals who participated in the pilot 
program:
            (1) The number of participants.
            (2) The percentage of such participants who used the 
        monitors as prescribed.
            (3) A summary of barriers or challenges participants 
        experienced using the monitors and if such barriers or 
        challenges resulted in the monitors being underused.
            (4) The percentage of participants who had blood pressure 
        readings of concern.
            (5) The percentage of participants described in paragraph 
        (4) who received medical attention based on such readings.
            (6) A summary of provider and participant feedback, 
        including percentages of--
                    (A) providers that found the program influenced 
                patient care; and
                    (B) participants who found the program was helpful 
                in managing the care of the participant.
            (7) Recommendations of the Secretary whether the pilot 
        program should be altered, expanded, or made permanent.

SEC. 761. PILOT PROGRAM ON SECURE, MOBILE PERSONAL HEALTH RECORD FOR 
              MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES.

    (a) Pilot Program.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall commence a pilot 
program under which a member of the Armed Forces serving on active duty 
may use a covered health record platform to collect the health records 
of the member before separating from active duty.
    (b) Selection of Armed Force.--The Secretary shall select not fewer 
than one Armed Force in which to carry out the pilot program under 
subsection (a).
    (c) Contracts.--
            (1) Authority.--The Secretary shall seek to enter into a 
        contract using competitive procedures with an appropriate 
        entity for the provision of the covered health record platform 
        under the pilot program under subsection (a).
            (2) Notice of competition.--
                    (A) Request for proposals.--Not later than 60 days 
                after the date of the enactment of this Act, the 
                Secretary shall issue a request for proposals for the 
                contract described in paragraph (1).
                    (B) Open competition.--A request under subparagraph 
                (A) shall be full and open to any contractor that has 
                an existing covered health record platform.
            (3) Selection.--Not later than 120 days after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall award a contract 
        to an appropriate entity pursuant to the request for proposals 
        under paragraph (2) if the Secretary determines that at least 
        one acceptable offer is submitted.
    (d) Duration of Pilot Program.--
            (1) Period.--The Secretary shall carry out the pilot 
        program under subsection (a) for a period of not less than one 
        year.
            (2) Termination or extension of program.--After carrying 
        out the pilot program under subsection (a) for a period of 180 
        days, the Secretary shall survey all participants in the pilot 
        program and, based on survey results, may--
                    (A) terminate the pilot program;
                    (B) continue the pilot program;
                    (C) expand the pilot program; or
                    (D) implement the use of a covered health record 
                platform in the Defense Health Agency throughout the 
                Armed Forces.
    (e) Prohibition on New Appropriations.--No additional funds are 
authorized to be appropriated to carry out the requirements of this 
section.
    (f) Covered Health Record Platform Defined.--In this section, the 
term ``covered health record platform'' means a secure personal health 
record platform that meets the following requirements:
            (1) Has web-based and native mobile phone application 
        capabilities.
            (2) Has the capability to store and share records with the 
        Department of Veterans Affairs or any other designated care 
        provider.
            (3) Has the capability to store records in the cloud.
            (4) Does not have a requirement for integration to receive 
        or share records.
            (5) Has the capability to instantly share data based on a 
        combination of access key and personal identifier.
            (6) Has the capability to provide secure data storage and 
        records transfer upon separation of a member of the Armed 
        Forces from active duty.
            (7) Does not require a business associate agreement with 
        any parties.
            (8) Has secure data isolation with access controls.
            (9) Has, at a minimum, data security that would require 
        separate encryption for each document, relying on AES256 or 
        better algorithm with keys encryption using RSA2048 or better 
        algorithm, or any successor similar algorithm.

SEC. 762. PILOT PROGRAM TO PROVIDE FOR THE USE OF BLUE-LIGHT 
              DISSIPATING DISPLAYS TO CERTAIN INDIVIDUALS.

    (a) Pilot Program.--The Director of the Defense Health Agency shall 
carry out a pilot program under which the Director provides for the use 
of blue-light dissipating displays by covered individuals in clinical 
and rehabilitative settings.
    (b) Use of Blue-light Dissipating Displays.--The Director shall 
ensure that blue-light dissipating displays provided under the pilot 
program under subsection (a) are used to assist covered individuals 
with screen-mediated tasks associated with rehabilitation, patient 
education, assistive technology, and telehealth appointments.
    (c) Selection of Technology.--In carrying out the pilot program 
under subsection (a), the Director shall select commercially available, 
stand-alone blue-light dissipating displays that do not require 
modifications to the electronic health record systems of the military 
health system.
    (d) Locations.--The Director shall select military medical 
treatment facilities at which to carry out the pilot program under 
subsection (a).
    (e) Briefing.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Director shall provide to the Committees on 
Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the Senate a 
briefing on the design of the pilot program under subsection (a), 
including identification of the military medical treatment facilities 
selected under subsection (d).
    (f) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Director shall submit to the Committees on 
Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the Senate a report 
on the pilot program under subsection (a), including an evaluation of 
each of the following:
            (1) Whether the use of blue-light dissipating displays 
        provided under the pilot program changed the time needed to 
        complete screen-mediated tasks associated with rehabilitation, 
        patient education, assistive technology, and telehealth 
        appointments.
            (2) Whether such use improved the ability of covered 
        individuals to read information relating to such tasks.
            (3) Whether such use improved the glare sensitivity and 
        visual fatigue of covered individuals.
    (g) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``blue-light dissipating display'' means a 
        display technology that is blue-light-dissipating and uses a 
        diffused light-output architecture, including with respect to 
        employing optical-elastomer or diffused light-output 
        nanomaterial light-management layers (or both).
            (2) The term ``covered individual'' means a covered 
        beneficiary (as defined in section 1072 of title 10, United 
        States Code) who is partially blind, legally blind, or 
        otherwise visually impaired.

SEC. 763. EXTENSION AND IMPROVEMENT OF PILOT PROGRAM OF THE UNIFORMED 
              SERVICES UNIVERSITY OF THE HEALTH SCIENCES ON 
              PHARMACEUTICAL SUPPLY CHAIN.

    (a) Extension.--The Secretary of Defense shall carry out the pilot 
program of the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences 
titled ``Assessing the Security and Quality of the U.S. Military Health 
System Pharmaceutical Supply Chain'' for a period of not less than five 
years beginning on the date of the enactment of this Act.
    (b) Elements.--The Secretary shall ensure that the pilot program 
under subsection (a) includes the following:
            (1) Defining the Department Essential Medicine list to 
        consist of not more than 100 medicines that do not have patent 
        exclusivity and are determined by the Secretary as essential 
        for operational capabilities, predeployment, or the military 
        health system (based on the progress of the pilot program 
        before the date of the enactment of this Act).
            (2) To the extent practicable, harmonizing such Department 
        Essential Medicine list with a list of defense-relevant generic 
        drugs based on the risk management framework developed under 
        section 860 of the James M. Inhofe National Defense 
        Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (Public Law 117-263; 10 
        U.S.C. 3241 note prec.).
            (3) Refreshing and expanding chemical testing data from the 
        pilot program as carried out before the date of the enactment 
        of this Act to include all medicines listed on the Department 
        Essential Medicine List and creating National Drug Code-
        specific categorizations of high-risk, moderate-risk, or low-
        risk based on objective indicators for relative chemical 
        quality and safety risk.
            (4) Adding to the objective risk-categorization framework 
        assessment of location of manufacturing, including flagging 
        entities in China and other countries that are not compliant 
        with the Trade Agreements Act of 1979 (19 U.S.C. 2501 et seq.) 
        and creating National Drug Code-specific, objective 
        categorizations of high-risk, moderate-risk, or low-risk based 
        on independently derived indicators for true country of origin, 
        that includes countries of concern, including China, being 
        classified under the highest-risk category.
            (5) Making recommendations for the continuation of the 
        scoring framework at the conclusion of the pilot program.
    (c) Independent Testing.--The Secretary shall ensure that, in 
determining the true country of origin (location quality) and relative 
chemical quality and safety risks of medicines under the pilot program 
under subsection (a), the testing for such information is conducted by 
independent laboratories acceptable to the Uniformed Services 
University of the Health Sciences that--
            (1) are accredited under ISO 17025 standards;
            (2) are not registered as a Good Manufacturing Practice 
        facility to ensure no conflicts of interest;
            (3) have experience developing and operating a published 
        quality risk scoring framework applicable to individual 
        National Drug Codes; and
            (4) are duly licensed and demonstrate an ability to conduct 
        ongoing post-market surveillance through procurement of 
        pharmaceutical products from common wholesalers, and not 
        directly from manufacturers.

SEC. 764. WORKING GROUP ON DIGITAL STRATEGY FOR TRAUMATIC BRAIN 
              INJURIES.

    (a) Establishment.--In accordance with the Warfighter Brain Health 
Initiative under section 735 of the James M. Inhofe National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (Public Law 117-263; 10 U.S.C. 
1071 note), not later than July 1, 2027, the Assistant Secretary of 
Defense for Health Affairs shall establish a working group to develop a 
digital health strategy that leverages advances in artificial 
intelligence for the treatment of traumatic brain injuries.
    (b) Membership.--The Assistant Secretary shall appoint to the 
working group under subsection (a) members of the Armed Forces, 
officers and employees of the Department of Defense, and 
nongovernmental experts. Such individuals shall have expertise in 
clinical care of traumatic brain injuries, biomedical informatics, 
biomedical engineering, or biomedical implementation science.
    (c) Strategy.--The strategy under subsection (a) shall include, at 
a minimum, the following:
            (1) Identification of capability gaps in treatment of 
        traumatic brain injuries that could be addressed through 
        artificial intelligence and digital health technologies.
            (2) An analysis of existing research, development, and 
        acquisition efforts leveraging artificial intelligence-based 
        capabilities and digital health, including any applicable 
        commercial off-the-shelf solutions being used by the Department 
        of Defense to support treatment of traumatic brain injuries.
            (3) Expert recommendations on advances required to address 
        identified capability gaps and significantly improve treatment 
        of traumatic brain injuries using artificial intelligence and 
        digital health technologies.
            (4) A recommended investment plan to advance technology and 
        knowledge readiness levels to field digital solutions for 
        treating traumatic brain injuries.

SEC. 765. STUDY ON LONG-TERM EFFECTS OF MILITARY FLIGHT OPERATIONS ON 
              BRAIN HEALTH AND MENTAL HEALTH.

    (a) Study.--The Secretary of Defense shall conduct a comprehensive, 
longitudinal study to assess the long term physiological and 
psychological effects of military aviation, including with respect to 
high-performance flight and G-force exposure, on military aviators.
    (b) Elements.--The study under subsection (a) shall examine, at a 
minimum--
            (1) the relationship between cumulative flight hours and 
        exposure to G-forces and incidents of traumatic brain injury, 
        subconcussive trauma, or cognitive impairment;
            (2) long-term mental health outcomes, including with 
        respect to incidence of depression, anxiety disorders, and 
        post-traumatic stress disorder, in military aviators compared 
        to other members of the Armed Forces;
            (3) the correlation between aviation-related physiological 
        stress and suicide risk among aviators;
            (4) the prevalence of neurodegenerative conditions 
        (including chronic traumatic encephalopathy, amyotrophic 
        lateral sclerosis, and Parkinson's disease) in current and 
        former military aviators;
            (5) the effect of helmet design, oxygen systems, flight 
        suit pressurization, and other cockpit environmental factors on 
        neurocognitive health;
            (6) current screening and diagnostic procedures used to 
        detect early signs of neurological injury or psychological 
        distress in military aviators; and
            (7) recommended improvements in the monitoring, prevention, 
        and treatment of aviation-related brain trauma and mental 
        health challenges.
    (c) Consultation.--In conducting the study under subsection (a), 
the Secretary shall consult with--
            (1) the Surgeons General of the military departments;
            (2) the Director of the Defense Health Agency;
            (3) the Secretary of Veterans Affairs; and
            (4) relevant academic institutions and federally funded 
        research and development centers with expertise in aviation 
        medicine, neuroscience, and psychiatry.
    (d) Pilot Health Registry.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
establish and maintain a centralized Military Aviator Neurohealth 
Registry that includes--
            (1) anonymized health data of military aviators voluntarily 
        participating in the study under subsection (a);
            (2) flight exposure metrics, including cumulative hours and 
        G-force profiles;
            (3) relevant health outcomes tracked over time; and
            (4) a mechanism for longitudinal follow-up with the 
        military aviators after retirement or separation from the Armed 
        Forces.
    (e) Reports.--
            (1) Interim report.--Not later than one year after the date 
        of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the 
        congressional defense committees an interim report on the study 
        under subsection (a), including any preliminary findings and 
        recommendations.
            (2) Final report.--Not later than three years after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit 
        to the congressional defense committees a report on the study 
        under subsection (a), including findings and recommendations.
    (f) Military Aviator Defined.--In this section, the term ``military 
aviator'' means a member of the Armed Forces, including a commissioned 
officer or a warrant officer, who--
            (1) has been designated as a pilot, naval aviator, or 
        aircrew member by the Secretary of the military department 
        concerned;
            (2) operates, or is regularly assigned as a flight crew 
        member aboard, high-performance, crewed, fixed-wing or rotary-
        wing aircraft designed for tactical, training, or 
        reconnaissance missions, including--
                    (A) fighter aircraft (such as the F-35, F/A-18, F-
                22, and F-16 aircraft);
                    (B) attack aircraft (such as the A-10 and AH-64 
                aircraft);
                    (C) trainer jets (such as the T-7, T-38,and T-45 
                aircraft); and
                    (D) tiltrotor or high-speed rotary aircraft (such 
                as the V-22 aircraft); and
            (3) is subject to sustained or repeated G-forces during the 
        routine execution of flight duties.

SEC. 766. STUDY ON FEASIBILITY OF ESTABLISHING MILITARY MEDICAL 
              TREATMENT FACILITY AT HOMESTEAD AIR RESERVE BASE.

    (a) Study.--The Secretary of Defense, acting through the Director 
of the Defense Health Agency, in coordination with the Secretary of the 
Air Force, shall conduct a feasibility study on establishing a military 
medical treatment facility at Homestead Air Reserve Base, Florida.
    (b) Matters Included.--The study under subsection (a) shall 
evaluate the following:
            (1) The total eligible beneficiary population who would 
        access a military medical treatment facility at Homestead Air 
        Reserve Base, including with respect to members of the Armed 
        Forces (including the reserve components thereof) and covered 
        beneficiaries stationed at such Base or at a different military 
        installation in the proximity of such Base.
            (2) The extent to which reliance by such members and 
        covered beneficiaries on civilian health care providers--
                    (A) meets medical readiness and deployment training 
                requirements;
                    (B) supports or degrades military-unique clinical 
                skill sustainment; and
                    (C) satisfies adequacy standards under the TRICARE 
                network.
            (3) Identified gaps between civilian health care access and 
        military operational medical readiness requirements.
            (4) A cost comparison of--
                    (A) a direct care military medical treatment 
                facility model;
                    (B) a hybrid readiness clinic model; and
                    (C) continued purchased care reliance.
            (5) Opportunities for integration with local civilian 
        health care systems while preserving military-unique readiness 
        competencies.
    (c) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the Committees on 
Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the Senate--
            (1) the findings of the study under subsection (a);
            (2) a recommended course of action;
            (3) estimated cost and manpower requirements;
            (4) an assessment of medical readiness impacts; and
            (5) an analysis of the implications to covered 
        beneficiaries with respect to accessing medical care.
    (d) Covered Beneficiary Defined.--In this section, the term 
``covered beneficiary'' has the meaning given that term in section 1072 
of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 767. STUDY ON FEASIBILITY OF ESTABLISHING DIGITAL SYSTEM RELATING 
              TO ACCESS TO CARE AT MILITARY MEDICAL TREATMENT 
              FACILITIES.

    (a) Study.--Not later than 18 months after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall conduct a study 
to determine the feasibility of establishing a digital system under 
which--
            (1) a covered individual who receives health care at a 
        military medical treatment facility may electronically--
                    (A) file a complaint relating to access to care at 
                such military medical treatment facility; and
                    (B) view the status of such complaint at any time, 
                including the status of any interim or final action 
                taken to address the complaint;
            (2) any complaint filed under paragraph (1)(A) is promptly 
        transmitted to an appropriate patient advocate of the 
        Department of Defense; and
            (3) complaints filed under paragraph (1)(A) with respect to 
        a military medical treatment facility may be automatically 
        aggregated and submitted to the Director of the Defense Health 
        Agency on a quarterly basis.
    (b) Report.--
            (1) Requirement.--Not later than December 1, 2027, the 
        Secretary shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services of 
        the House of Representatives and the Senate a report on the 
        feasibility of establishing the digital system described in 
        subsection (a).
            (2) Elements.--The report under paragraph (1) shall include 
        the following:
                    (A) An identification of the most common complaints 
                relating to access to care filed by covered 
                individuals.
                    (B) A comparison of the number of complaints 
                regarding access to specialty care versus access to 
                primary care.
                    (C) A comparison of the number of complaints 
                regarding access to pediatric care versus nonpediatric 
                care.
                    (D) A comparison of the number of complaints 
                regarding administrative hurdles to access to care 
                versus other issues relating to access to care.
                    (E) A summary of steps taken to reduce complaints 
                relating to access to care.
    (c) Covered Individual Defined.--In this section, the term 
``covered individual'' means an individual enrolled in a health care 
plan under the TRICARE program and eligible to receive care at a 
military medical treatment facility.

SEC. 768. REVIEW BY INSPECTOR GENERAL OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ON 
              EFFORTS TO PREVENT SUICIDE.

    (a) Review.--The Inspector General of the Department of Defense 
shall conduct a review of the efforts of each Secretary of a military 
department to prevent incidents of deaths by suicide, suicide attempts, 
and suicidal ideation among members of the Armed Forces, including with 
respect to--
            (1) efforts to increase public awareness of such 
        prevention; and
            (2) developing unit commanding officer crisis response 
        plans.
    (b) Elements.--The review under subsection (a) shall include an 
assessment of each of the following:
            (1) The extent of data collected regarding incidents of 
        deaths by suicide, suicide attempts, and suicidal ideation 
        among members of the Armed Forces.
            (2) The means used by commanders to prevent and respond to 
        incidents of deaths by suicide, suicide attempts, and suicidal 
        ideation among members.
            (3) Challenges relating to--
                    (A) the prevention of incidents of deaths by 
                suicide, suicide attempts, and suicidal ideation among 
                members deployed; and
                    (B) the development of a response to such 
                incidents.
            (4) The capacity of teams providing mental health services 
        to members to respond to incidents of suicidal ideation or 
        suicide attempts among members in the respective unit each such 
        team serves.
            (5) The means used by such teams to respond to such 
        incidents, including the extent to which post-incident programs 
        are available to members.
            (6) Barriers to providing signage and advertisements for 
        mental health resources in high-traffic areas on installations.
            (7) Current annual training requirements and leadership 
        training programs for each Armed Force, including any 
        enforcement measures.
            (8) Such other matters as the Inspector General determines 
        appropriate.
    (c) Report.--Not later April 30, 2027, the Inspector General of the 
Department of Defense shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services 
of the Senate and House of Representatives a report that includes a 
summary of the results of the review under subsection (a).

SEC. 769. REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO WELLNESS CHECKS FOR HEALTH AND 
              WELFARE OF CERTAIN MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES.

    (a) Wellness Checks.--
            (1) Wellness checks required.--The Secretary of Defense 
        shall issue such regulations, policies, and procedures as may 
        be necessary to require that, whenever appropriate, following a 
        member of the Armed Forces sustaining any significant injury or 
        illness or being on sick call, a wellness check is conducted to 
        account for the health and welfare of such member.
            (2) Methods of contact.--In conducting a wellness check for 
        a member of the Armed Forces pursuant to paragraph (1), if the 
        member does not respond to such check conducted via an 
        electronic or telephone communication method, the individual 
        conducting the check shall progress to an in-person method of 
        contact.
            (3) Result of failure to locate.--If, as a result of a 
        wellness check conducted pursuant to paragraph (1) for a member 
        of the Armed Forces, the individual conducting such check is 
        unable to locate such member, the individual shall refer to the 
        applicable regulations, policies, and procedures of the 
        Department of Defense regarding the determination and reporting 
        of such member as missing, absent unknown, absent without 
        leave, or duty status whereabouts unknown.
    (b) Implementation by Unit Commanders.--In carrying out subsection 
(a), the Secretary of Defense shall ensure that each unit commander 
coordinates with the judge advocates assigned or attached to, or 
performing duty with, the unit under the command of such commander for 
assistance in the implementation of any regulation, policy, or 
procedure required under subsection (a) with respect to such unit.
    (c) Additional Actions by Unit Commanders.--On a routine basis, 
each unit commander shall--
            (1) review the requirements contained in the document 
        titled ``Commander's Critical Information Requirements'', dated 
        January 2020, or such successor document, to ensure such 
        requirements--
                    (A) have been issued or updated during the three-
                year period preceding any such review;
                    (B) reflect such medical issues or safety incidents 
                of members of the Armed Forces that the commander deems 
                sufficiently significant; and
                    (C) have been distributed to the unit under the 
                command of such commander; and
            (2) host confidential wellness meetings with subordinate 
        commanders at which such commanders may discuss with one or 
        more medical officers assigned to such unit any significant 
        injuries or illnesses affecting members of the Armed Forces 
        serving in or with such unit.
    (d) Training Courses.--Each Secretary concerned, and the Secretary 
of Defense with respect to civilian personnel of the Department of 
Defense, shall develop and implement training courses to ensure each 
member of an Armed Forces under the jurisdiction of that Secretary (or 
each civilian employee of the Department of Defense, respectively) is 
aware of the importance of accountability with respect to health and 
welfare and of the significant negative outcomes that may occur when 
accountability procedures fail. Such courses shall be offered at 
leadership and supervisor trainings and shall include content relating 
to the conduct of wellness checks in accordance with subsection (a) and 
other related actions.
    (e) Secretary Concerned Defined.--In this section, the term 
``Secretary concerned'' has the meaning given such term in section 
101(a) of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 770. REPORTS ON DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE COMPREHENSIVE AUTISM CARE 
              DEMONSTRATION PROGRAM.

    (a) Report on Implementation of Recommendations.--Not later than 
February 1, 2027, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the 
Senate a report on the plan by the Secretary to implement the 
recommendations made by the National Academies of Sciences, 
Engineering, and Medicine in the report on the Department of Defense 
Comprehensive Autism Care Demonstration program submitted under section 
737 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2022 
(Public Law 117-81; 135 Stat. 1800).
    (b) Semiannual Reports.--On a semiannual basis, the Secretary shall 
submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the House of 
Representatives and the Senate a report on the Department of Defense 
Comprehensive Autism Care Demonstration program, including the 
following with respect to the period covered by the report:
            (1) The total number of children receiving applied behavior 
        analysis services under the program.
            (2) The total average wait time for such children, listed 
        by the State in which such services are provided and calculated 
        based on the date of the diagnosis of autism and the date on 
        which such services are first provided.
            (3) The number of new referrals for such services.
            (4) The number of providers accepting new patients for such 
        services.
            (5) The number of providers who no longer accept new 
        patients for such services.
            (6) The average number of treatment sessions required by 
        such children.

SEC. 771. TRANSITION OF MEDICS TO CIVILIAN WORKFORCE.

    (a) Recommendations.----
            (1) Requirement.--Each Secretary concerned shall develop 
        recommendations to improve the transition of medics under the 
        jurisdiction of the Secretary concerned into the civilian 
        workforce in health care occupations, including as certified 
        nurse aides, licensed practical nurses, or medical assistants.
            (2) Considerations.--In carrying out paragraph (1), the 
        Secretary concerned shall--
                    (A) identify any barriers--
                            (i) to improving the ability of the 
                        Secretary concerned to determine and 
                        communicate how the military medic credentials 
                        and experience of a medic separating from the 
                        Armed Forces translate to credentialed civilian 
                        employment in health care occupations;
                            (ii) that exist to the standardization 
                        among the Armed Forces of military medic 
                        credentials and experience and the alignment of 
                        such credentials and experience to credentialed 
                        civilian employment in health care occupations;
                            (iii) that exist to ensuring members of the 
                        Armed Forces with military medic credentials 
                        and experience have earned the equivalent 
                        civilian credential prior to separation from 
                        the Armed Forces in addition to receiving their 
                        military credentials;
                            (iv) to the increased establishment and 
                        uptake of accelerated or bridge programs to 
                        assist separating members of the Armed Forces 
                        in translating military credentials and 
                        experience into civilian health care 
                        credentials and employment;
                            (v) to increasing the availability and 
                        accessibility of preparatory activities under 
                        the SkillBridge program established under 
                        section 1143(e) of title 10, United States 
                        Code, in the health care sector for members of 
                        the Armed Forces preparing for separation, to 
                        include--
                                    (I) the approval timeline for 
                                separating members to participate in 
                                SkillBridge programs in the health care 
                                sector; and
                                    (II) requirements to return to 
                                their duty station for out-processing; 
                                and
                            (vi) to providing information on civilian 
                        health care credentials and employment under 
                        the Transition Assistance Program to medics 
                        separating from the Armed Forces, including 
                        information on State-by-State licensing and 
                        credentialing; and
                    (B) consider the potential effects of--
                            (i) clarification by States through 
                        legislation, actions of State licensing boards, 
                        or actions of State credentialing boards of the 
                        civilian equivalents of certain military 
                        credentials and experience in health care;
                            (ii) implementation, including through 
                        State-provided incentives, of accelerated 
                        programs to bridge military medic credentials 
                        and experience with civilian health care 
                        credentials and licenses;
                            (iii) financial support or incentives by 
                        States to increase the availability and 
                        accessibility of such programs;
                            (iv) requiring the military departments to 
                        align military health care credentials with 
                        civilian equivalents; and
                            (v) requiring the Department of Veterans 
                        Affairs and the Department of Labor to track 
                        and report the number of separated members of 
                        the Armed Forces with health care-related 
                        military credentials and experience who 
                        continue in the civilian health care sector, 
                        including the type of employment they pursue.
            (3) Consultation.--The Secretaries concerned shall carry 
        out paragraph (1) in consultation with each of the States 
        (through the Defense-State Liaison Office of the Department of 
        Defense), the Secretary of Veterans Affairs, the Secretary of 
        Health and Human Services, and the Secretary of Labor.
    (b) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary concerned shall submit to the 
appropriate congressional committees a report containing--
            (1) the recommendations developed under subsection (a); and
            (2) a plan to implement those recommendations.
    (c) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means 
        the following:
                    (A) The Committee on Armed Services, the Committee 
                on Education and the Workforce, the Committee on 
                Transportation and Infrastructure, and the Committee on 
                Veterans' Affairs of the House of Representatives.
                    (B) The Committee on Armed Services, the Committee 
                on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, the Committee 
                on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions, and the 
                Committee on Veterans' Affairs of the Senate.
            (2) The term ``medic'' means a member of the Armed Forces 
        acting in a clinical health care-related occupation while 
        serving in the Armed Forces.
            (3) The term ``Secretary concerned'' means--
                    (A) the Secretary of Defense, with respect to 
                matters concerning the Department of Defense; and
                    (B) the Secretary of Homeland Security, with 
                respect to matters concerning the Coast Guard when it 
                is not operating as a service in the Department of the 
                Navy.
            (4) The term ``State'' means each of the several States, 
        the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the 
        United States Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, or the 
        Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands that have a 
        Defense-State Liaison Office.
            (5) The term ``Transition Assistance Program'' means the 
        program of the Department of Defense for pre-separation 
        counseling, employment assistance, and other transitional 
        services provided under sections 1142 and 1144 of title 10, 
        United States Code.

SEC. 772. STRATEGIC PLAN TO ADDRESS MENTAL HEALTH OF CERTAIN MEMBERS OF 
              THE ARMED FORCES.

    (a) Plan.--The Secretary of Defense, in coordination with each 
Secretary of a military department and the Director of the Defense 
Health Agency, shall develop a strategic plan to address suicide by 
members of the covered Armed Forces and the mental health services 
provided to such members.
    (b) Elements.--The plan under subsection (a) shall include the 
following:
            (1) Developing and enforcing uniform protocols with respect 
        to--
                    (A) the regulations prescribed for the self-
                initiated referral process under section 1090b(e) of 
                title 10, United States Code, for members of the 
                covered Armed Forces seeking mental health evaluations;
                    (B) the provision of information, including through 
                workplace posters, flyers, and advertisements, to 
                ensure members are aware of such referral process.
            (2) Standardized mental health training for members of the 
        covered Armed Forces, including--
                    (A) specialized training for commanders, senior 
                enlisted leaders, and medical personnel on identifying 
                and addressing mental health concerns;
                    (B) the development of a certification process 
                based on completion of training with documented proof 
                of compliance;
                    (C) how to respond when a member initiates the 
                referral process under section 1090b(e) of title 10, 
                United States Code; and
                    (D) how to recognize signs indicating mental health 
                distress.
    (c) Covered Armed Forces Defined.--In this section, the term 
``covered Armed Forces'' means the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, 
and Space Force.

SEC. 773. BRIEFING ON PROSTATE CANCER INCIDENCE AND EMERGING DIAGNOSTIC 
              TECHNOLOGIES.

    Not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, 
the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the Secretary of 
Veterans Affairs, shall provide to the Committees on Armed Services of 
the House of Representatives and the Senate and the Committees on 
Veterans' Affairs of the House of Representatives and the Senate a 
briefing on--
            (1) the status and any preliminary findings of ongoing 
        studies on cancer incidence rates among members of the Armed 
        Forces and veterans, including--
                    (A) the results of and remedial actions taken 
                following the study conducted by the Secretary of 
                Defense on aircrew members of rotary-wing aircraft 
                under section 736 of the National Defense Authorization 
                Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 
                935); and
                    (B) the results of and remedial actions taken 
                following the completion of the study conducted by the 
                Secretary of Veterans Affairs relating to fixed-wing 
                aviators and associated ground crew pursuant to title V 
                of the Sergeant First Class Heath Robinson Honoring our 
                Promise to Address Comprehensive Toxics Act of 2022 
                (Public Law 117-168) and subsequent related directives;
            (2) the incidence and prevalence of prostate cancer among 
        members of the Armed Forces and veterans, including any 
        identified elevated risks within specific occupational 
        specialties;
            (3) an assessment of emerging and advanced prostate cancer 
        screening, diagnostic, and prognostic technologies, including 
        those that are less invasive and capable of determining cancer 
        aggressiveness;
            (4) the extent to which such technologies are currently 
        available within the military health system and the health care 
        system of the Department of Veterans Affairs; and
            (5) a plan, including timelines and resource requirements, 
        to evaluate and, as appropriate, implement such technologies 
        within the military health system and the health care system of 
        the Department of Veterans Affairs.

SEC. 774. ASSESSMENT OF ACCESS, FAIRNESS, AND TRANSPARENCY UNDER 
              TRICARE PHARMACY BENEFITS PROGRAM.

    (a) Comptroller General Audits.--
            (1) Requirement.--Not later than one year after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Comptroller General of the 
        United States shall conduct audits of--
                    (A) data reported by the contractor responsible for 
                the administration of the pharmacy benefits program 
                relating to--
                            (i) rates of reimbursement and any price 
                        concessions;
                            (ii) any discrepancies between average 
                        reimbursements to various types of pharmacies 
                        disaggregated by retail, mail order, specialty 
                        pharmacies, and any pharmacy owned by or 
                        affiliated with such contractor; and
                            (iii) the difference between what the 
                        contractor charges the TRICARE program for a 
                        pharmaceutical agent and what the contractor 
                        pays to pharmacies for the same pharmaceutical 
                        agent, disaggregated by retail, mail order, and 
                        specialty pharmacies;
                    (B) prior authorizations required by the TRICARE 
                program for prescription drug treatments and services;
                    (C) the timeliness of dispensing prescription drugs 
                from the various types of pharmacies, disaggregated by 
                retail, mail order, and specialty pharmacies; and
                    (D) the adequacy of the retail pharmacy network 
                under the TRICARE program and access by eligible 
                covered beneficiaries to such network, including with 
                respect to continuity of care, geographic accessibility 
                (taking into account factors in addition to travel time 
                to and from a pharmacy, with special consideration for 
                rural and underserved areas), and the extent to which 
                elections by such beneficiaries reflect personal 
                preference; and
            (2) Briefing.--Not later than one year after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Comptroller General shall 
        provide to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and 
        the House of Representatives a briefing on the audits under 
        paragraph (1).
            (3) Report.--Not later than 18 months after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Comptroller General shall submit to 
        the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of 
        Representatives a report with the results the audits under 
        paragraph (1).
    (b) Access to Information.--
            (1) In general.--As a condition of administering the 
        pharmacy benefits program on and after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, and notwithstanding any other provision 
        of law, or any contract, subcontract, agreement, or 
        confidentiality provision to the contrary, the contractor 
        responsible for administering the pharmacy benefits program 
        shall agree to make available to the Comptroller General any 
        information the Comptroller General determines necessary to 
        conduct the audits under subsection (a)(1) not later than 30 
        days after the request for such information by the Comptroller 
        General.
            (2) Information to be included.--Information required under 
        paragraph (1) shall include the following:
                    (A) Claims-level data.
                    (B) Information on reimbursement methodologies and 
                payment rates.
                    (C) An identification of all price concessions, 
                including rebates, fees, discounts, and remuneration of 
                any kind from manufacturers, pharmacies, or other 
                entities.
                    (D) Information on amounts charged to the 
                Department of Defense and amounts paid to pharmacies 
                for the same drug.
                    (E) Contracts, subcontracts, and other arrangements 
                with manufacturers, pharmacies, or third parties 
                relevant to the administration of the pharmacy benefits 
                program.
            (3) Prohibition on withholding of information.--Information 
        required to be provided under this paragraph may not be 
        withheld, redacted, or limited on the basis of claims relating 
        to proprietary information, trade secrets, or confidential 
        commercial information, except that the Comptroller General 
        shall protect such information from public disclosure in 
        accordance with applicable law.
            (4) Form, detail, and frequency.--The Comptroller General 
        may determine the form, level of detail, and frequency of data 
        submissions required under paragraph (1).
    (c) Assessment of Impact.--If any audit conducted under subsection 
(a)(1) finds that reimbursement rates paid to retail pharmacies under 
the pharmacy benefits program are, on average or in a systemic manner, 
less than the documented acquisition cost to such pharmacies for 
outpatient prescription drugs covered by such audit, the Comptroller 
General shall include in the report on such audit under subsection 
(a)(2) an assessment of the impact of such reimbursement rates on 
retail pharmacy participation, beneficiary access, network adequacy, 
and continuity of care.
    (d) Access Metrics.--In conducting oversight of the pharmacy 
benefit program, the Secretary of Defense shall ensure that measures of 
access to such program include--
            (1) continuity of care and beneficiary preference, 
        including the ability of beneficiaries to remain with their 
        pharmacy of choice; and
            (2) meaningful geographic access standards beyond drive-
        time calculations, with special consideration for rural and 
        underserved areas.
    (e) 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 plan for the implementation of this section.
    (f) Applicability to Existing Contracts.--This section shall apply 
to any contract, agreement, or other arrangement in effect on or after 
the date of the enactment of this Act, including any contract, 
agreement, or arrangement entered into before such date.
    (g) Relationship to Existing Authority.--Nothing in this section 
shall be construed to limit, amend, supersede, or restrict in any 
manner any existing authority of the Comptroller General.
    (h) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The terms ``eligible covered beneficiary'', 
        ``pharmaceutical agent'', and ``prescription drug'' have the 
        meanings given those terms in section 1074g of title 10, United 
        States Code.
            (2) The term ``pharmacy benefits program'' means the 
        pharmacy benefit program of the TRICARE program under section 
        1074g of title 10, United States Code.
            (3) The term ``TRICARE program'' has the meaning given that 
        term in section 1072 of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 775. REPORT ON FEASIBILITY OF PILOT PROGRAM ON BEHAVIORAL 
              NEUROLOGY FELLOWSHIPS.

    (a) Report.--Not later than 270 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Director of the Defense Health Agency shall 
submit to the congressional defense committees a report on the 
feasibility of establishing a pilot program that establishes a 
behavioral neurology fellowship program to provide training 
opportunities with respect to treating members of the Armed Forces and 
veterans with traumatic brain injuries, particularly regarding the 
intersection of behavior and traumatic brain injury.
    (b) Matters Included.--The report on the potential pilot program 
under subsection (a) shall include the following:
            (1) The feasibility of the pilot program meeting the 
        requirements described in subsection (c).
            (2) An evaluation of potential locations at which to carry 
        out the pilot program.
    (c) Requirements Described.--The requirements described in this 
subsection are the following:
            (1) The pilot program would include two individuals 
        selected for a one-year clinical fellowship program under the 
        pilot program.
            (2) An individual may hold a fellowship under the pilot 
        program if the individual--
                    (A) holds a Doctor of Medicine or Doctor of 
                Osteopathy from any medical school accredited by the 
                Liaison Committee on Medical Education; and
                    (B) before participating in the fellowship program, 
                has completed a residency program in neurology or 
                psychiatry at an institution accredited by the 
                Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education.
            (3) An individual would not be required to be board 
        certified to hold a fellowship under the pilot program.
            (4) The pilot program would be carried out in a manner that 
        seeks to allow an individual, upon completion of the fellowship 
        program, to sit for board certification in behavioral neurology 
        and neuropsychiatry offered by the United Council for 
        Neurologic Subspecialties.
            (5) The fellowship program would be accredited.

SEC. 776. GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE STUDY ON RESERVE COMPONENT 
              DENTAL READINESS AND BENEFIT SUFFICIENCY.

    (a) Study.--The Comptroller General of the United States shall 
conduct a study on the sufficiency of the Department of Defense Reserve 
Component dental program in supporting the medical readiness and 
deployability of members of the reserve components.
    (b) Elements.--The study under subsection (a) shall include, at a 
minimum, the following:
            (1) An assessment of the extent to which current annual 
        benefit caps, including the $1,500 coverage limit under the 
        TRICARE Dental Program, contribute to dental nondeployability 
        among members of the reserve components.
            (2) An evaluation of the relationship between out-of-pocket 
        dental costs and delays in obtaining necessary dental care 
        required for deployment readiness.
            (3) An analysis of the extent to which dental readiness 
        requirements impose a financial burden on members of the 
        reserve components, including whether such requirements 
        function as an unfunded mandate on individual members.
            (4) A review of the findings of section 707 of the James M. 
        Inhofe National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 
        (Public Law 117-263; 136 Stat. 2652) and an assessment of 
        remaining gaps in data regarding dental readiness and benefit 
        sufficiency.
            (5) An identification and evaluation of targeted, cost-
        effective policy options to improve dental readiness among 
        members of the reserve components, including--
                    (A) adjustments to annual benefit caps;
                    (B) coverage of readiness-related dental procedures 
                not currently included under existing plans;
                    (C) alternative models for delivering dental care 
                to reservists; and
                    (D) any other mechanisms the Comptroller General 
                determines appropriate to reduce cost-related barriers 
                to deployability.
            (6) An assessment of the potential effects of such policy 
        options on--
                    (A) overall force readiness and deployability;
                    (B) recruitment and retention within the reserve 
                components; and
                    (C) cost to the Department of Defense.
    (c) Briefing.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Comptroller General shall provide to the 
congressional defense committees a briefing on the preliminary 
observations and emerging findings of the study under subsection (a).

SEC. 777. REVIEW OF THE OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH AND SAFETY CONDITIONS OF 
              OPERATIONAL FACILITIES ASSOCIATED WITH THE LGM-30G 
              MINUTEMAN III INTERCONTINENTAL BALLISTIC MISSILE SYSTEM.

    (a) In General.--The Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health 
Affairs, in consultation with the Assistant Secretary of Defense for 
Nuclear Deterrence, Chemical, and Biological Defense Policy and 
Programs, shall seek to enter into an agreement with the Executive 
Officer of the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine 
for a review of the occupational health and safety conditions of 
covered operational facilities.
    (b) Elements.--The review required by subsection (a) shall include 
the following:
            (1) An independent review of the methodology and findings 
        of the Missile Community Cancer Study conducted by the Air 
        Force Medical Service and Air Force Global Strike Command.
            (2) An independent assessment of occupational hazards, 
        covered toxic substances, and operational activities associated 
        with the LGM-30G Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic 
        missile system that accounts for--
                    (A) enclosed space dynamics;
                    (B) ventilation inefficiencies; and
                    (C) limited fresh air exchange rates.
            (3) An independent case-controlled retrospective study of 
        cancer incidence rates among--
                    (A) Minuteman III missile launch officers and 
                support personnel; compared to
                    (B) a group of members of the Air Force with--
                            (i) a substantially similar demographic 
                        makeup to the group of launch officers and 
                        support personnel included in the study;
                            (ii) responsibilities that are not 
                        associated with the Minuteman III system; and
                            (iii) a low potential for occupational 
                        exposure to covered toxic substances, as 
                        determined by Air Force Specialty Code and 
                        occupational duties.
            (4) A comparative evaluation of the suitability and 
        effectiveness of historic versus current year environmental 
        surveillance policies, procedures, and technologies of the 
        Department of the Air Force for covered operational facilities 
        used to detect exposure to covered toxic substances and 
        occupational hazards, including--
                    (A) air quality;
                    (B) groundwater and drinking water contamination;
                    (C) ventilation systems and particulate matter 
                accumulation; and
                    (D) residual contamination associated with confined 
                operational environments.
            (5) An evaluation of the suitability and effectiveness of 
        policies, procedures, and technologies of the Department of the 
        Air Force to prevent occupational hazards, and reduce exposure 
        to covered toxic substances, associated with the Minuteman III 
        system including--
                    (A) personal protective equipment;
                    (B) engineering controls;
                    (C) environmental surveillance; and
                    (D) other policies, procedures, and technologies 
                deemed relevant.
            (6) An evaluation of the suitability and effectiveness of 
        policies, procedures, and technologies of the Department of the 
        Air Force and the Department of Defense for reporting and 
        periodic medical screening, testing, and evaluations for 
        potential exposure to occupational hazards and covered toxic 
        substances for personnel associated with the Minuteman III 
        system.
            (7) Recommendations of the Executive Officer with respect 
        to--
                    (A) Department of Defense actions to ensure that 
                occupational health and safety conditions of covered 
                operational facilities--
                            (i) meet current occupational safety and 
                        national security requirements in effect as of 
                        the date of the enactment of this Act; and
                            (ii) are applied to the LGM-35A Sentinel 
                        intercontinental ballistic missile system; and
                    (B) potential modifications to--
                            (i) the current design and operation of the 
                        LGM-30G Minuteman III intercontinental 
                        ballistic missile system; and
                            (ii) the future design and operation of the 
                        Sentinel system.
    (c) Information and Clearances.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
ensure that personnel of the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering, 
and Medicine supervising the implementation of the agreement required 
by subsection (a), or conducting the review required by such 
subsection, are granted, in a timely manner, access to the information 
and security clearances necessary to carry out such review.
    (d) Report Required.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 18 months after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Executive Officer of the 
        National Academy of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine shall 
        submit to the congressional defense committees a report that 
        includes the findings of the review required by subsection (a).
            (2) Form.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall be 
        submitted in unclassified form but may include a classified 
        annex.
    (e) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered operational facilities'' mean 
        physical structures and work environments associated with the 
        LGM-30G Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile 
        system, including--
                    (A) launch control facilities;
                    (B) launch facilities;
                    (C) missile alert facilities; and
                    (D) other associated facilities.
            (2) The term ``covered toxic substances'' means 
        contaminants and other risk factors that pose a significant 
        health risk to an individual when inhaled, ingested, absorbed 
        by, or in close proximity to, the individual, including--
                    (A) asbestos;
                    (B) radiation;
                    (C) polychlorinated biphenyls;
                    (D) combustion byproducts associated with burning 
                classified materials, accelerants, and industrial 
                solvents;
                    (E) volatile organic compounds (VOCs), including 
                VOCs from cleaning and maintenance chemicals;
                    (F) radon and naturally occurring radioactive 
                materials in subterranean facilities;
                    (G) hydrogen cyanide, hydrazine, ethylene glycol, 
                and sodium chromate;
                    (H) pesticides and herbicides from facility 
                perimeters and surrounding agricultural runoff;
                    (I) noise; and
                    (J) other chemical compounds or elements associated 
                with the LGM-30G Minuteman III intercontinental 
                ballistic missile system or covered operational 
                facilities.

SEC. 778. CONTINUED EVALUATION OF THE TRICARE PROGRAM THROUGH 
              BENEFICIARY EXPERIENCE SURVEYS.

    (a) Continued Evaluation Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
ensure the sustained collection and analysis of beneficiary experience 
data necessary to support the ongoing evaluation of the TRICARE program 
in meeting the goals of--
            (1) increasing access to health care for covered 
        beneficiaries under chapter 55 of title 10, United States Code;
            (2) improving the quality of health care provided to 
        covered beneficiaries; and
            (3) informing oversight of the performance of the military 
        health system.
    (b) Elements of Evaluation.--The evaluation under subsection (a) 
shall include an assessment of each of the following:
            (1) The impact of the TRICARE program on members of the 
        covered Armed Forces and the dependents of such members, 
        retirees of the covered Armed Forces and the dependents of such 
        retirees, and dependents with severe disabilities and chronic 
        health care needs of members of the covered Armed Forces 
        serving on active duty regarding access, costs, quality, and 
        beneficiary experience.
            (2) Barriers affecting beneficiary utilization of military 
        medical treatment facilities and factors influencing the use of 
        purchased care in lieu of direct care.
            (3) Patient safety, quality of care, and access to care at 
        military medical treatment facilities, including appointment 
        wait times, beneficiary satisfaction, and comparison to the 
        access standards of the Department of Defense.
            (4) Trends in beneficiary experience and access to care 
        over time through the use of longitudinal population-level data 
        collection methodologies.
    (c) Submission.--The Secretary shall submit to the Committees on 
Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the Senate the 
results of each evaluation under subsection (a).
    (d) Continuity of Data Collection.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
ensure that any transition or modification to beneficiary experience 
survey methodologies does not result in a lapse in the collection, 
analysis, or reporting of population-level beneficiary experience data 
necessary to support the evaluation, performance assessment, and 
reporting requirements, of the military health system.
    (e) Covered Armed Force.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered Armed Force'' means the Army, Navy, 
        Air Force, Marine Corps, and Space Force.
            (2) The term ``covered beneficiary'' means a covered 
        beneficiary, as defined in section 1072 of title 10, United 
        States Code, who is a beneficiary by reason of the service by 
        an individual in a covered Armed Force.
            (3) The term ``TRICARE program'' has the meaning given that 
        term in section 1072 of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 779. REMOVAL OF PEPTIDES FROM PROHIBITED PERFORMANCE ENHANCING 
              SUBSTANCES LIST.

    The Secretary of Defense may not include legally available peptides 
on the prohibited dietary supplement ingredients list established 
pursuant to Department of Defense Instruction 6130.06, or any other 
similar list of substances that are prohibited for use by a member of 
the Armed Forces without a medical exemption, if the member of the 
Armed Forces obtains and uses such peptides in a manner that is lawful 
in the location of the member.

SEC. 780. STUDY ON LONG-TERM EFFECTS OF EXPOSURE TO TOXIC SUBSTANCES ON 
              REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH AND FERTILITY.

    (a) Study.--The Secretary of Defense shall conduct a comprehensive, 
longitudinal study to assess the long-term effects of exposure to toxic 
substances on the reproductive health and fertility of members of the 
covered Armed Forces.
    (b) Elements.--The study under subsection (a) shall include the 
following:
            (1) The relationship between service in the covered Armed 
        Forces and exposure to toxic substances.
            (2) The resultant effect of exposure to toxic substances on 
        the reproductive health and fertility of covered members of the 
        Armed Forces.
            (3) Whether certain career fields in the covered Armed 
        Forces have a higher chance of damaging fertility.
            (4) The effects of exposure to toxic substances and other 
        mechanism on the health of children of such members.
            (5) The effects of exposure to toxic substances and other 
        mechanisms on the sex of the children of such members.
            (6) The rates of infertility and reduced fertility among 
        such members.
            (7) The rates of congenital disabilities and birth defects 
        in the children of such members.
    (c) Consultation.--In conducting the study subsection (a), the 
Secretary shall consult with--
            (1) the Surgeons General of the covered Armed Forces;
            (2) the Director of the Defense Health Agency; and
            (3) relevant academic institutions and federally funded 
        research and development centers with expertise in fertility 
        and reproductive health.
    (d) Report.--
            (1) Initial report.--Not later than one year after the date 
        of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the 
        Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives 
        and the Senate an interim report on the study under subsection 
        (a), including any preliminary findings and recommendations.
            (2) Final report.--Not later than three years after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit 
        to the Committees on Armed Services of the House of 
        Representatives and the Senate a report on the study under 
        subsection (a), including the following:
                    (A) Findings.
                    (B) Identification of the categories of toxic 
                substances most commonly associated with reproductive 
                harm among members of the covered Armed Forces.
                    (C) A description of current research programs 
                within the Department of Defense examining the 
                relationship between such exposures and reproductive 
                health.
                    (D) An evaluation of the extent to which members of 
                the covered Armed Forces have access to fertility 
                preservation services, assisted reproductive 
                technology, and fertility services, and any gaps in 
                access to such services, including with respect to 
                members of the reserve components.
                    (E) Recommendations regarding--
                            (i) improvements to screening and 
                        monitoring protocols for reproductive health 
                        outcomes related to toxic exposure;
                            (ii) expanded access to reproductive health 
                        services and fertility treatments for members 
                        of the covered Armed Forces affected by toxic 
                        exposure; and
                            (iii) legislative or regulatory actions to 
                        address reproductive health effects of such 
                        exposure.
    (e) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered Armed Forces'' means the Army, Navy, 
        Air Force, Marine Corps, and Space Force.
            (2) The term ``toxic substances'' means any substance known 
        to the Department of Defense to be toxic, hazardous, or 
        otherwise cause negative health outcomes.

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

             Subtitle A--Acquisition Policy and Management

SEC. 801. RESPONSIBILITIES AND AUTHORITIES OF PORTFOLIO ACQUISITION 
              EXECUTIVES WITH RESPECT TO CONTRACTORS.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 205 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by inserting after section 3105 the following new sections:
``Sec. 3105a. Portfolio acquisition executives: performance management 
              authorities with respect to contractors
    ``(a) Performance Management Authorities.--Each portfolio 
acquisition executive shall, with respect to contractors under the 
defense acquisition programs assigned to such executive, have the 
following authorities:
            ``(1) To issue a performance improvement notice to any 
        contractor that, as documented in any contractor past 
        performance database used by the Department of Defense, has 
        received a rating indicating a deficiency (such as marginal or 
        unsatisfactory) in two or more consecutive assessment periods, 
        or in three or more assessment periods within a period of five 
        years. Such a notice shall specify, with particularity, the 
        deficiencies identified in such ratings and shall establish 
        measurable corrective action benchmarks and a remediation 
        period not to exceed 180 days. The portfolio acquisition 
        executive shall ensure that the notice is provided 
        contemporaneously to the contractor and the component 
        acquisition executive or service acquisition executive of the 
        military department concerned, as applicable, and is documented 
        in any contractor past performance database used by the 
        Department.
            ``(2) To initiate a contract restructuring action, 
        including an action to adjust a performance metric, milestone 
        schedule, deliverable specification, or associated incentive 
        fee structure, without the prior approval of the component 
        acquisition executive or the service acquisition executive of 
        the military department concerned, as long as the total value 
        of the restructured contract does not exceed any applicable 
        threshold. The portfolio acquisition executive shall provide 
        written notification to the component acquisition executive or 
        service acquisition executive, as applicable, not later than 15 
        days after initiating such an action.
            ``(3) To recommend to the component acquisition executive 
        or the service acquisition executive of the military department 
        concerned that a contract be terminated for cause. The service 
        acquisition executive shall act on such recommendation, or 
        determine not to act on such recommendation, not later than 30 
        days after receiving the recommendation.
    ``(b) Responsibilities of Component Acquisition Executive or 
Service Acquisition Executive.--In a case in which the component 
acquisition executive or service acquisition executive, as applicable, 
overrides the issuance of a performance improvement notice under 
subsection (a)(1), overrides a contract restructuring action under 
subsection (a)(2), or determines not to act on a recommendation under 
subsection (a)(3), the component acquisition executive or service 
acquisition executive, as applicable, shall--
            ``(1) not later than 15 days after such override or 
        determination, make a written documentation of the override or 
        determination that cites the specific statutory, regulatory, or 
        policy basis for the override or determination; and
            ``(2) provide a copy of such written documentation to the 
        portfolio acquisition executive and the Under Secretary of 
        Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment.
    ``(c) Limitation.--This section does not--
            ``(1) authorize a portfolio acquisition executive to 
        terminate a contract for cause without the approval of the 
        component acquisition executive or service acquisition 
        executive, as applicable; or
            ``(2) supersede any right of the contractor to notice and 
        opportunity to respond under applicable provisions of law or 
        regulation.
    ``(d) Guidance.--The Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and 
Sustainment shall issue guidance for the implementation of this 
section.
    ``(e) Annual Report.--On an annual basis, the Under Secretary of 
Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment, in consultation with each 
component acquisition executive and service acquisition executive, 
shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report on the 
exercise of authorities under this section. The report shall include--
            ``(1) a consolidated list of all actions taken by a 
        portfolio acquisition executive under paragraphs (1), (2), and 
        (3) of subsection (a);
            ``(2) a consolidated list of all overrides and 
        determinations by a component acquisition executive or service 
        acquisition executive under subsection (b); and
            ``(3) an assessment of the effectiveness of the actions 
        taken under paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of subsection (a).
``Sec. 3105b. Portfolio acquisition executives: defense-wide framework 
              of contractor performance metrics
    ``(a) Framework Required.--The Under Secretary of Defense for 
Acquisition and Sustainment, in consultation with each component 
acquisition executive and service acquisition executive, shall 
establish a framework of contractor performance metrics to be used by 
all portfolio acquisition executives of the Department of Defense. The 
framework shall--
            ``(1) specify metrics that must be used by each portfolio 
        acquisition executive to assess each defense acquisition 
        program assigned to such executive;
            ``(2) for each such metric, establish minimum thresholds 
        for reporting; and
            ``(3) provide for consistency and comparability of 
        contractor performance data across the Department while 
        preserving the flexibility of each portfolio acquisition 
        executive to tailor specific indicators and thresholds to the 
        defense acquisition programs assigned to such executive.
    ``(b) Categories Required.--The framework required by subsection 
(a) shall include metrics in each of the following categories:
            ``(1) Cost performance.--Metrics relating to variance from 
        the approved cost baseline, including estimate at completion 
        versus budget at completion, undefinitized contract action 
        definitization rate, and cost overrun recurrence.
            ``(2) Schedule performance.--Metrics relating to adherence 
        to milestones, including delivery delays measured in days 
        against the approved program baseline and frequency of approved 
        re-baselining.
            ``(3) Technical performance.--Metrics relating to 
        achievement of key performance parameters at applicable program 
        milestones and deficiency closure rates.
            ``(4) Sustainment readiness.--Metrics relating to mission 
        capable rate contribution, mean time between failures relative 
        to contractual specifications, and materiel backorder rate.
            ``(5) Contract management.--Metrics relating to the 
        assignment and distribution of ratings in the contractor past 
        performance database used by the Department, rates of 
        compliance with corrective action plans, and competitive re-
        compete rates.
            ``(6) Other categories.--Any other categories that the 
        Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment 
        considers appropriate.
    ``(c) Additional Tailored Metrics.--Each portfolio acquisition 
executive shall--
            ``(1) for each category established under subsection (b), 
        develop additional metrics and thresholds tailored to the 
        defense acquisition programs assigned to such portfolio 
        acquisition executive;
            ``(2) submit such additional metrics and thresholds to the 
        Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment; and
            ``(3) upon approval of the Under Secretary of Defense for 
        Acquisition and Sustainment, file such additional metrics and 
        thresholds with the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense 
        for Acquisition and Sustainment.
    ``(d) Submission to Committees and Comptroller General.--The Under 
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment shall submit any 
metrics and thresholds approved under subsection (c)(3)--
            ``(1) to the Committee on Armed Services of the Senate and 
        the Committee on Armed Services of the House of Representatives 
        not later than 30 days after approving such metrics and 
        thresholds; and
            ``(2) to the Comptroller General upon request.
    ``(e) Annual Review.--The Under Secretary of Defense for 
Acquisition and Sustainment shall review the framework under subsection 
(a) not less frequently than annually and shall update the framework as 
necessary to reflect changes in acquisition policy, program structure, 
or operational requirements.
    ``(f) Relationship to Acquisition Workforce Performance 
Objectives.--(1) The Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and 
Sustainment shall ensure that the metrics and thresholds under this 
section--
            ``(A) are distinct from, and shall be administered 
        consistent with and separately from, the key performance 
        objectives established under section 826 of the National 
        Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (10 U.S.C. 1722b 
        note) for evaluating the performance of civilian members of the 
        acquisition workforce; and
            ``(B) complement, and do not conflict with, the integration 
        of such key performance objectives into performance management 
        systems of the Department.
    ``(2) This section does not require the assessment of the 
individual performance of any member of the acquisition workforce.
``Sec. 3105c. Portfolio acquisition executives: authority to designate 
              contractors for high performer preference
    ``(a) Authority to Designate.--Each portfolio acquisition executive 
shall, with respect to contractors under the defense acquisition 
programs assigned to such executive, have the authority to designate a 
contractor for the high performer preference for purposes of this 
section if the contractor--
            ``(1) as documented in the contractor past performance 
        database used by the Department of Defense, has received a 
        rating of exceptional or very good for not fewer than three 
        consecutive assessment periods under the defense acquisition 
        programs assigned to such executive; and
            ``(2) has met or exceeded all key performance parameters 
        applicable to such programs during such period.
    ``(b) Documentation.--The portfolio acquisition executive shall 
make a designation under subsection (a) in writing, ensure that it is 
documented in any contractor past performance database used by the 
Department, and report the designation not later than 30 days after 
making the designation to the Under Secretary of Defense for 
Acquisition and Sustainment and the component acquisition executive or 
service acquisition executive of the military department concerned, as 
applicable.
    ``(c) Duration; Revocation.--(1) Except as provided in paragraph 
(2), a designation under subsection (a) shall remain in effect for a 
period not to exceed three years from the date on which the designation 
is made, at which time a new designation under subsection (a) may be 
made if the requirements of subsection (a) are met.
    ``(2) A portfolio acquisition executive may revoke a designation 
under subsection (a) at any time upon a determination that the 
contractor no longer satisfies a requirement in subsection (a). The 
portfolio acquisition executive shall make the revocation in writing, 
ensure that it is documented in any contractor past performance 
database used by the Department, and report the revocation not later 
than 30 days after making the revocation to the Under Secretary of 
Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment and the component acquisition 
executive or service acquisition executive of the military department 
concerned, as applicable.
    ``(d) Effect of Designation.--In any competitive source selection 
conducted under the defense acquisition programs assigned to a 
portfolio acquisition executive that has made a designation under 
subsection (a) that remains in effect, the contracting officer shall 
assign to any offeror with such a designation a past performance 
confidence rating of substantial confidence, except in a case in which 
the contracting officer determines, for specific documented reasons 
supported by specific performance data, to assign a lower past 
performance rating. In such a case, the contracting officer shall 
document in writing such determination, such reasons, and such data.
    ``(e) Limitations.--A designation under subsection (a) shall not--
            ``(1) constitute a sole-source justification or otherwise 
        relieve the contracting officer of the obligation to conduct 
        full and open competition as required by applicable law, 
        regulation, and policy; or
            ``(2) be used to evaluate the past performance of an 
        offeror in a source selection under a defense acquisition 
        program not assigned to the portfolio acquisition executive 
        that made the designation, except with the prior written 
        concurrence of the porfolio acquisition executive to whom the 
        defense acquisition program is assigned.''.
    (b) Implementation.--
            (1) Guidance.--The guidance required by section 3105a of 
        title 10, United States Code, as added by this section, shall 
        be issued not later than 180 days after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act.
            (2) Applicability.--The authorities provided by sections 
        3105a, 3105b, and 3105c of such title, as added by this 
        section, shall apply on and after the date on which such 
        guidance is issued, except as provided in paragraphs (3) and 
        (4).
            (3) Reports.--The first report required by section 3105a of 
        such title shall be submitted not later than one year after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act.
            (4) Additional tailored metrics.--The first set of 
        additional tailored metrics required by section 3105b of such 
        title shall be submitted not later than 270 days after the date 
        of the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 802. ENSURING BEST VALUE IN PROCUREMENT.

    (a) Codification of Use of Lowest Price Technically Acceptable 
Source Selection Process.--
            (1) Title 10.--Chapter 223 of title 10, United States Code, 
        is amended by inserting after section 3243 the following new 
        section:
``Sec. 3244. Use of lowest price technically acceptable source 
              selection process
    ``(a) Statement of Policy.--It shall be the policy of the 
Department of Defense to avoid using lowest price technically 
acceptable source selection criteria in circumstances that would deny 
the Department the benefits of cost and technical tradeoffs in the 
source selection process.
    ``(b) Regulations.--The Secretary of Defense shall ensure the 
Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement requires that lowest 
price technically acceptable source selection criteria are used only in 
situations in which--
            ``(1) the Department of Defense is able to comprehensively 
        and clearly describe the minimum requirements expressed in 
        terms of performance objectives, measures, and standards that 
        will be used to determine acceptability of offers;
            ``(2) the Department of Defense would realize no, or 
        minimal, value from a contract proposal exceeding the minimum 
        technical or performance requirements set forth in the request 
        for proposal;
            ``(3) the proposed technical approaches will require no, or 
        minimal, subjective judgment by the source selection authority 
        as to the desirability of one offeror's proposal versus a 
        competing proposal;
            ``(4) the source selection authority has a high degree of 
        confidence that a review of technical proposals of offerors 
        other than the lowest bidder would not result in the 
        identification of factors that could provide value or benefit 
        to the Department;
            ``(5) the contracting officer has included a justification 
        for the use of a lowest price technically acceptable evaluation 
        methodology in the contract file;
            ``(6) the Department of Defense has determined that the 
        lowest price reflects full life-cycle costs, including for 
        operations and support;
            ``(7) the Department of Defense would realize no, or 
        minimal, additional innovation or future technological 
        advantage by using a different methodology; and
            ``(8) with respect to a contract for procurement of goods, 
        the goods procured are predominantly expendable in nature, 
        nontechnical, or have a short life expectancy or short shelf 
        life.
    ``(c) Avoidance of Use of Lowest Price Technically Acceptable 
Source Selection Criteria in Certain Procurements.--To the maximum 
extent practicable, the use of lowest price technically acceptable 
source selection criteria shall be avoided in the case of a procurement 
that is predominately for the acquisition of--
            ``(1) information technology services, cybersecurity 
        services, systems engineering and technical assistance 
        services, advanced electronic testing, audit or audit readiness 
        services, or other knowledge-based professional services;
            ``(2) personal protective equipment; or
            ``(3) knowledge-based training or logistics services in 
        contingency operations or other operations outside the United 
        States.''.
            (2) Title 41.--
                    (A) In general.--Chapter 47 of title 41, United 
                States Code, is amended by inserting after section 4714 
                the following new section:
``Sec. 4715. Use of lowest price technically acceptable source 
              selection process
    ``(a) Statement of Policy.--It shall be the policy of the United 
States Government to avoid using lowest price technically acceptable 
source selection criteria in circumstances that would deny the 
Government the benefits of cost and technical tradeoffs in the source 
selection process.
    ``(b) Regulations.--The Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council 
shall ensure the Federal Acquisition Regulation requires that lowest 
price technically acceptable source selection criteria are used only in 
situations in which--
            ``(1) an executive agency is able to comprehensively and 
        clearly describe the minimum requirements expressed in terms of 
        performance objectives, measures, and standards that will be 
        used to determine acceptability of offers;
            ``(2) the executive agency would realize no, or minimal, 
        value from a contract proposal exceeding the minimum technical 
        or performance requirements set forth in the request for 
        proposal;
            ``(3) the proposed technical approaches will require no, or 
        minimal, subjective judgment by the source selection authority 
        as to the desirability of one offeror's proposal versus a 
        competing proposal;
            ``(4) the executive agency has a high degree of confidence 
        that a review of technical proposals of offerors other than the 
        lowest bidder would not result in the identification of factors 
        that could provide value or benefit to the executive agency;
            ``(5) the contracting officer has included a justification 
        for the use of a lowest price technically acceptable evaluation 
        methodology in the contract file; and
            ``(6) the executive agency has determined that the lowest 
        price reflects full life-cycle costs, including for operations 
        and support.
    ``(c) Avoidance of Use of Lowest Price Technically Acceptable 
Source Selection Criteria in Certain Procurements.--To the maximum 
extent practicable, the use of lowest price technically acceptable 
source selection criteria shall be avoided in the case of a procurement 
that is predominately for the acquisition of--
            ``(1) information technology services, cybersecurity 
        services, systems engineering and technical assistance 
        services, advanced electronic testing, audit or audit readiness 
        services, health care services and records, telecommunications 
        devices and services, munitions response services, or other 
        knowledge-based professional services;
            ``(2) personal protective equipment; or
            ``(3) knowledge-based training or logistics services in 
        contingency operations or other operations outside the United 
        States.
    ``(d) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) Executive agency.--The term `executive agency' has 
        the meaning given that term in section 102 of title 40, except 
        that the term does not include the Department of Defense.
            ``(2) Contingency operation.--The term `contingency 
        operation' has the meaning given that term in section 101 of 
        title 10.''.
                    (B) Clerical amendment.--The table of contents for 
                such chapter is amended by inserting after the item 
                relating to section 4714 the following new item:

``4715. Use of lowest price technically acceptable source selection 
                            process.''.
    (b) Ensuring Best Value in Procurement.--Section 152(3)(B) of title 
41, United States Code, is amended by striking ``lowest overall cost 
alternative'' and inserting ``best value''.
    (c) Conforming Repeals.--
            (1) Department of defense requirement.--Section 813 of the 
        National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (10 
        U.S.C. note prec. 3241) is repealed.
            (2) Government-wide requirement.--Section 880 of the John 
        S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
        2019 (41 U.S.C. 3701 note) is repealed.

SEC. 803. LIMITATION ON CERTAIN CONTRACT CLAUSES FOR COMMERCIAL 
              PRODUCTS OR COMMERCIAL SERVICES.

    Section 3452 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding 
at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(f) Limitations.--The Secretary of Defense may not--
            ``(1) include in the lists required by subsections (b) and 
        (c)(1) any contract clause that is substantially similar to a 
        contract clause for commercial products or commercial services 
        that is required by the Federal Acquisition Regulation or 
        otherwise required by the Department of Defense Supplement to 
        the Federal Acquisition Regulation; and
            ``(2) include in a contract for the procurement of 
        commercial products or commercial services a contract clause 
        from the Department of Defense Supplement to the Federal 
        Acquisition Regulation or Federal Acquisition Regulation that 
        is not included on such lists.''.

SEC. 804. ELIMINATION OF LATE COST AND PRICING DATA SUBMISSION DEFENSE.

    Section 3706(c) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (3) by striking ``or'' at the end;
            (2) in paragraph (4) by striking the period and inserting 
        ``; or''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(5) updates to cost or pricing data submitted by the 
        prime contractor or subcontractor after the date of agreement 
        on the price of the contract (or price of the modification) or, 
        if applicable and if consistent with subsection (a)(2), such 
        other date agreed upon between the parties, were based on data 
        that was more than 30 days old.''.

SEC. 805. REPORTING OF PRICE INCREASES.

    Chapter 271 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding 
at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 3710. Reporting of increases above specified prices
    ``(a) In General.--An offeror shall be required to submit to the 
relevant contracting officer a report, not later than 30 days after the 
offeror becomes aware that the price of a product or service under a 
covered contract reaches or exceeds an amount equal to--
            ``(1) 25 percent more than the price specified in the 
        covered contract bid;
            ``(2) 25 percent more than the price the Government paid 
        for such product or service during the calendar year 
        immediately preceding the date on which the covered contract is 
        entered into; or
            ``(3) 50 percent more than the price the Government paid 
        for such product or service at any time before the 5-year 
        period preceding the date on which the covered contract is 
        entered into.
    ``(b) Noncompliance.--With respect to an offeror who fails to 
submit the report required under this section, the Director of the 
Defense Contract Audit Agency or the relevant service acquisition 
executive shall include in the Federal Awardee Performance and 
Integrity Information System (or any successor system) the following 
information:
            ``(1) An identification of such offeror and the specific 
        product or service to which such report should relate.
            ``(2) The National Stock Number of such product or service 
        and the order quantity, unit cost, total cost, purchasing or 
        reimbursing entity, and date of the order for such product or 
        service.
    ``(c) Covered Contract Defined.--In this section, the term `covered 
contract' means a contract awarded using procedures other than 
competitive procedures under section 3204 of this title or pursuant to 
section 6.302 of the Federal Acquisition Regulation.''.

SEC. 806. LIMITATION ON SUSPENSION OF PROGRESS PAYMENTS.

    (a) Conditions for Progress Payments.--Section 3804 of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) in the subsection heading, by striking 
                ``Commensurate With Work'';
                    (B) by inserting ``(1)'' before ``The Secretary of 
                Defense''; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following new 
                paragraphs:
    ``(2) After finding substantial evidence that a covered condition 
applies for a contract, the Secretary of Defense may reduce a progress 
payment, increase the rate of liquidation, or both for such contract.
    ``(3) After finding substantial evidence that a covered condition 
applies for a contract, the Secretary of Defense may suspend a progress 
payment for such contract only if--
            ``(A) the relevant contracting officer submits to the prime 
        contractor for such contract a written statement of the 
        substantial evidence that a covered condition applies and 
        provides the prime contractor ten calendar days to submit a 
        written rebuttal;
            ``(B) the head of the contracting activity reviews such 
        statement and any rebuttal and recommends the suspension of the 
        progress payment for such contract; and
            ``(C) the service acquisition executive notifies the 
        Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives 
        and the Senate in writing of the suspension of progress 
        payments for such contract and of the substantial evidence that 
        a covered condition applies.
    ``(4)(A) Any suspension of progress payments under paragraph (3) 
shall last not more than 60 calendar days if--
    ``(i) the prime contractor submits to the relevant contracting 
officer a written corrective action plan addressing the covered 
condition that was the basis for the suspension;
    ``(ii) the prime contractor initiates corrective action consistent 
with the submitted written plan within such 60-day period; and
    ``(iii) the service acquisition executive or portfolio acquisition 
executive, as applicable, after consultation with the head of the 
contracting activity and the relevant contracting officer, determines 
that both the corrective action plan and the initiated corrective 
action are sufficient to address the covered condition and meet the 
cost, schedule, performance, delivery, quality, readiness, sustainment, 
and financial-interest objectives of the Department.
    ``(B) The 60-day limitation in subparagraph (A) shall not apply if 
the service acquisition executive or portfolio acquisition executive, 
as applicable, determines such limitation would materially impair the 
ability of the Department to protect the interests of the Government 
interests or would create a material risk to the Department.''.
            (2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(d) Covered Condition Defined.--In this section, the term 
`covered condition' means any of the conditions listed in section 
52.232-16(c) of the Federal Acquisition Regulation (or successor 
regulation).''.
    (b) Conforming Regulations.--Not later than 120 days after the date 
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall revise the 
Department of Defense Supplement to the Federal Acquisition Regulation 
carry out the amendments made by this section.
    (c) Technical Amendment.--Section 3804 of title 10, United States 
Code, is amended by striking ``defense contract'' each place it appears 
and inserting ``contract''.

SEC. 807. UNIFORM REQUIREMENTS FOR ELECTRONIC CONTRACT WRITING SYSTEMS 
              AND ACQUISITION MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS.

    (a) Uniform Requirements for the Department of Defense.--Chapter 
367 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by inserting after 
section 4754 the following new section:
``Sec. 4755. Requirements for electronic contract writing systems and 
              acquisition management systems
    ``The Secretary shall--
            ``(1) establish, maintain, and make publicly available 
        uniform data standards, internal control requirements, and 
        independent verification and validation requirements for 
        processing procurement requests, contracts, receipts, and 
        invoices by the Department; and
            ``(2) establish policy to ensure that each electronic 
        contract writing system and acquisition management system of 
        the Department--
                    ``(A) substantially conforms with the standards, 
                requirements, and rules established pursuant to 
                paragraph (1); and
                    ``(B) is a commercial product or commercial 
                service, as required by section 3453 of this title, 
                unless the head of the agency makes the determination 
                required by section 3453(d) of this title regarding 
                non-availability of commercial products or commercial 
                services.''.
    (b) Implementation.--The initial standards, requirements, and 
policies required by section 4755 of title 10, United States Code, as 
added by subsection (a), shall be established not later than 180 days 
after the date of the enactment of this Act.
    (c) Assessment and Phased Implementation Strategy.--
            (1) Requirement for strategy.--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 setting forth the strategy of the Secretary to 
        transition the electronic contract writing systems and 
        acquisition management systems of the Department of Defense to 
        full implementation of the policy established as required by 
        section 4755(2) of title 10, United States Code, as added by 
        subsection (a).
            (2) Assessment to inform strategy.--The strategy shall 
        include, and be based on, an assessment of the current state, 
        including--
                    (A) an inventory identifying each such system in 
                use, in development, or in deployment within the 
                Department; and
                    (B) for each system identified under subparagraph 
                (A)--
                            (i) an identification of the offices and 
                        officials responsible for the system;
                            (ii) a cost benefit analysis, including an 
                        assessment of the criticality of the system and 
                        impact on the mission, and an identification of 
                        the system as a commercially available of-the-
                        shelf item, an item developed by the 
                        Government, or a Government-off-the-shelf item, 
                        as applicable; and
                            (iii) an identification of the annual 
                        spending on the system, from inception and 
                        estimated remaining cost to complete 
                        application baselines and expected annual 
                        support and maintenance costs once complete, 
                        broken down by--
                                    (I) Government labor and expense;
                                    (II) contracted costs (such as the 
                                costs of software licenses and 
                                contractor support); and
                                    (III) costs associated with the 
                                current hosting approach on the current 
                                platform, including identification of 
                                the Government's cost of maintaining 
                                infrastructure and associated 
                                sustainment costs.
            (3) Matters included in strategy.--The strategy shall 
        include--
                    (A) a description of the coordination necessary 
                within and among the military departments, the Defense 
                Agencies, and other elements of the Department to 
                enable successful transition;
                    (B) for each system identified under paragraph 
                (2)(A) that is not in compliance with the policy 
                described in paragraph (1), a timeline for 
                transitioning from that system, including an estimate 
                of anticipated reductions in deployment timelines for 
                the system to reach full operating capability;
                    (C) for each system identified under paragraph 
                (2)(A), a strategy for hosting the system on a platform 
                in compliance with the policy described in paragraph 
                (1), including an evaluation of opportunities to 
                leverage existing commercially available or commercial 
                off-the-shelf products and services to reduce the 
                Government's cost of maintaining infrastructure and 
                associated sustainment costs;
                    (D) a recommended approach to speed the adoption of 
                secure artificial intelligence (``AI'') services for 
                such systems, including how best to prioritize the 
                adoption of commercially available or commercial off-
                the-shelf products and services with AI technology to 
                help prevent the proliferation of redundant and 
                disconnected AI tools;
                    (E) an identification of funding, staffing, and 
                resource requirements associated with implementation of 
                such systems;
                    (F) an identification of any challenges, barriers, 
                or risks affecting implementation of such systems and 
                recommended approaches to addressing or mitigating such 
                challenges, barriers, or risks; and
                    (G) a cost estimate associated with the transition 
                from the current state to full implementation of the 
                policy described in paragraph (1), including any cost 
                savings associated with the reduction or elimination of 
                continued use and development of systems that are not 
                commercial products or commercial services.
    (d) Applicability to Current Vendors.--For each system identified 
under paragraph (2)(A) that is a commercial product or commercial 
service as of the date on which the policy described in paragraph (1) 
is established, if the vendor of the system reasonably demonstrates 
that the system has the capability to meet a preponderance of the 
Department's requirements, the Secretary shall ensure that the vendor 
is given a reasonable opportunity to address any unmet requirements, as 
long as the unmet requirements can be delivered not later than the date 
that is 270 days after the date of the enactment of this Act and at no 
development cost to the Department.
    (e) Uniform Requirements for Certain Executive Agencies.--
Subchapter II of chapter 11 of title 41, United States Code, is amended 
by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 1132. Requirements for electronic contract writing systems and 
              acquisition management systems
    ``(a) The Administrator for Federal Procurement Policy, with 
respect to the executive agencies other than the Department of Defense, 
shall--
            ``(1) establish or update, as necessary, uniform data 
        standards, internal control requirements, independent 
        verification and validation requirements, and business process 
        rules for processing procurement requests, contracts, receipts, 
        and invoices by the Department of Defense or other executive 
        agencies, as applicable;
            ``(2) establish or update, as necessary, and maintain one 
        or more approved electronic contract writing systems that 
        conform with the standards, requirements, and rules established 
        pursuant to paragraph (1); and
            ``(3) require the use of electronic contract writing 
        systems approved in accordance with paragraph (2) for all 
        contracts entered into by executive agencies other than the 
        Department of Defense, as applicable.
    ``(b) Relation to Existing Contract Writing Systems and Acquisition 
Management Systems.--Notwithstanding subsection (a), the head of an 
executive agency other than the Department of Defense shall meet the 
requirements of subsection (a)(2) with respect to approved electronic 
contract writing systems if they were in compliance with the 
requirements established pursuant to section 862 of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013 (41 U.S.C. prec. 3101 
note) on the date of enactment of this section until such time as those 
requirements are updated pursuant to subsection (a).''.
    (f) Repeal of Prior Related Provision.--Section 862 of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013 (41 U.S.C. 3101 note 
prec.) is repealed.

SEC. 808. RISK-BASED APPROACH TO MONITORING CONTRACTOR BUSINESS 
              SYSTEMS.

    (a) Requirement for Risk-based Approach.--Section 3843 of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 3843. Contractor business systems: monitoring and surveillance 
              standards
    ``(a) Requirement for Risk-based Approach.--The Secretary shall 
implement an agile, streamlined risk-based approach to surveillance of 
contractor business systems that--
            ``(1) minimizes the requirements for the surveillance of 
        contractor business systems to only those that are necessary to 
        conform with commercial best practices or industry standards, 
        as applicable;
            ``(2) integrates the surveillance of contractor business 
        systems into the Defense Contract Management Agency's standard 
        surveillance framework, and requires that any additional 
        reviews be risk-based and informed by the results of those 
        standard surveillance activities; and
            ``(3) allows a contractor to provide internal reports in 
        connection with such standard surveillance activities and 
        targeted reviews, and ensures that any such report is 
        considered in the course of reviewing the contractor's business 
        systems.
    ``(b) Minimum Requirements for Surveillance.--In establishing the 
minimum requirements for surveillance under subsection (a)(1) for each 
type of contractor business system, the Secretary shall ensure that 
such requirements do not exceed the minimum requirements that are 
necessary to conform with commercial best practices or industry 
standards, as applicable, for that type of system.
    ``(c) Surveillance and Review.--(1) Except as provided in 
paragraphs (2) and (3), in implementing the requirements of this 
section, the Secretary shall ensure that the frequency of review of a 
contractor business system shall be not more than once every three 
years, unless the standard surveillance activities under subsection 
(a)(2) indicate that the system has or may have a material weakness.
    ``(2) In a case in which the contractor is a company that is 
subject to the securities laws, if a registered public accounting firm 
attests to the internal control assessment of the contractor, pursuant 
to section 404(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (15 U.S.C. 
7262(b)), and certified documentation from such registered public 
accounting firm reflects--
            ``(A) the unqualified opinion of such firm with respect to 
        the contractor business system, such documentation shall 
        eliminate the need for further review of the contractor 
        business system by the Secretary;
            ``(B) a qualified opinion of such firm with respect to the 
        contractor business system, the Secretary shall review only 
        those aspects of the contractor business system as to which the 
        opinion was qualified rather than unqualified; and
            ``(C) an adverse opinion of such firm with respect to the 
        contractor business system, the Secretary shall take action 
        under paragraph (1) or (2), or both, of subsection (d).
    ``(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), the Secretary may establish a 
profit-based exemption for cases in which the contractor is a company 
that is subject to the securities laws. Under the exemption, the 
contractor business system of such a contractor may be exempt from 
further review by the Secretary if the level of profit of the 
contractor, taking into account all contracts of the contractor with 
the Department, is below a threshold level established by the 
Secretary.
    ``(d) Corrective Actions and Remedies.--The approach implemented 
under subsection (a) shall ensure the following:
            ``(1) If the Secretary determines under subsection (c) that 
        a contractor business system has a material weakness, 
        appropriate officials of the Department will be available to 
        work with the contractor to develop a corrective action plan 
        defining specific actions to be taken to address the material 
        weakness and a schedule for the implementation of such actions.
            ``(2) The Secretary may pursue any other remedies that may 
        be available under the contract or under any other applicable 
        law and regulation.
    ``(e) Guidance and Training.--The approach implemented under 
subsection (a) shall provide guidance and training to appropriate 
Government officials on the approach, the requirements and limitations 
in subsection (c) that apply to companies that are subject to the 
securities laws, the data that is produced by contractor business 
systems, and the manner in which such data should be used to 
effectively manage Department programs.
    ``(f) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `contractor business system' means an 
        integrated set of internal controls, processes, procedures, 
        personnel, and information capabilities that a contractor uses 
        to plan, execute, monitor, and report on its performance of 
        Government contracts in a manner that is accurate, consistent, 
        auditable, and compliant with clear and specific business 
        system requirements that are identified and made publicly 
        available.
            ``(2) The term `material weakness' means a deficiency or 
        combination of deficiencies in the internal control over 
        information in contractor business systems, such that there is 
        a reasonable possibility that a material misstatement of such 
        information will not be prevented, or detected and corrected, 
        on a timely basis. For purposes of this paragraph, a reasonable 
        possibility exists when the likelihood of an event occurring--
                    ``(A) is probable; or
                    ``(B) is more than remote but less than likely.''.
    (b) Implementation.--The initial approach required by section 3843 
of title 10, United States Code, as added by subsection (a), shall be 
implemented not later than December 1, 2027.
    (c) Report on Implementing Approach and Defining Minimum 
Requirements.--
            (1) Agreement.--Not later than 90 days after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall enter 
        into an agreement with the acquisition research organization 
        described in section 4142(a) of title 10, United States Code, 
        requiring the organization to--
                    (A) document and evaluate commercial best practices 
                and industry standards for each type of contractor 
                business system, as described in subsection (b) of such 
                section 3843; and
                    (B) make recommendations for the approach required 
                by subsection (a) of such section 3843.
            (2) Report.--Not later than 90 days after the date on which 
        the Secretary and the organization enter into the agreement 
        required by paragraph (1), the organization shall submit to the 
        Secretary a report on the results of the activities carried out 
        under paragraph (1).
            (3) Consideration of report.--In implementing the initial 
        approach required by subsection (a) of such section 3843, and 
        in defining the minimum requirements for contractor business 
        systems under subsection (b) of such section, the Secretary 
        shall take into account the report submitted under paragraph 
        (2).
    (d) Repeal of Contractor Business Systems Improvement Program.--
Section 893 of the Ike Skelton National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2011 (Public Law 111-383; 10 U.S.C. note prec. 3841) is 
repealed.

SEC. 809. PROCUREMENT OF INITIAL SPARES.

    Section 4274 of title 10, United States Code, is amended to read as 
follows:
``Sec. 4274. Procurement of initial spares
    ``(a) In General.--Before awarding a contract for a covered end 
item, the contracting officer for such covered end item shall 
determine, in writing, that sufficient amounts have been programmed and 
budgeted for the procurement of initial spares associated with the 
covered end item.
    ``(b) Definitions.--
            ``(1) The term `covered end item' means an end item (as 
        defined section 4863 of this title) for a major defense 
        acquisition program to be procured after the Milestone C 
        approval (as defined in section 4172 of this title) for such 
        major defense acquisition program.
            ``(2) The term `initial spare' means a repairable or 
        consumable part for use in a major defense acquisition program 
        during the initial period of service of such weapon system.''.

SEC. 810. PROCUREMENT OF LOCAL PRODUCE, SEAFOOD, AND MEAT IN THE AREA 
              OF RESPONSIBILITY OF THE UNITED STATES INDO-PACIFIC 
              COMMAND.

    (a) Procurement for Certain Facilities in the Indo-Pacific 
Region.--Not later than one year after the date of the enactment of 
this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall develop and implement a plan 
to be carried out by the Defense Commissary Agency and the Defense 
Logistics Agency to increase procurement of local produce, seafood, and 
meat for a dining facility or commissary store located on a military 
installation or onboard a naval vessel located in the area of 
responsibility of the United States Indo-Pacific Command. Such plan 
will include a requirement, to the extent practicable, to procure local 
produce for commissary stores located in such area of responsibility.
    (b) Prohibition on Procurement of Foreign Produce or Meat.--Section 
4862(g)(2)(A) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by inserting 
``, produce, or meat'' after ``seafood''.
    (c) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report that include the following:
            (1) The plan required under subsection (a), including ways 
        in which the plan would--
                    (A) support partner or allied nations that are 
                experiencing economic coercion from China; and
                    (B) provide fresher food in dining facilities or 
                commissary stores described in such subsection.
            (2) The percentage of local produce, seafood, and meat 
        available, and projected percentage after two years of 
        implementing such plan--
                    (A) in each commissary store located on a military 
                installation located in the area of responsibility of 
                the United States Indo-Pacific Command;
                    (B) in each dining facility located on a military 
                installation located in the area of responsibility of 
                the United States Indo-Pacific Command; and
                    (C) onboard a naval vessel located in the area of 
                responsibility of the United States Indo-Pacific 
                Command.
    (d) Local Defined.--In this section, the term ``local'' means, with 
respect to produce, seafood, or meat, that such produce, seafood, or 
meat is sourced from a partner or allied nation or a State or territory 
of the United States located in the area of responsibility of the 
United States Indo-Pacific Command.

SEC. 811. REVIEW OF DEFENSE AUDIT AGENCIES.

    (a) Review Required.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall seek to enter 
into a contract with an entity that conducts audits, reviews, or 
surveillance of companies listed on a national securities exchange, to 
conduct a comprehensive review of the standards, guidance, and policies 
of the defense audit agencies relating to audits, reviews, and 
surveillance of defense contractors. The purpose of the comprehensive 
review shall be to identify opportunities to improve the processes of 
the defense audit agencies for auditing, reviewing, and surveilling 
defense contractors, including to streamline the auditing, reviewing, 
and surveilling processes, ensure materiality of reviews, and generally 
improve the effectiveness of the audits, reviews, and surveillance 
activities of the defense audit agencies.
    (b) Elements.--The comprehensive review required by subsection (a) 
shall assess the following:
            (1) A comparison of--
                    (A) the processes used by the defense audit 
                agencies to conduct audits, reviews, and surveillance 
                of defense contractors; and
                    (B) industry best practices for such processes.
            (2) A comparison of--
                    (A) the standards used by the defense audit 
                agencies in connection with such audits, reviews, and 
                surveillance, including the use of materiality 
                standards; and
                    (B) industry best practices for such standards.
            (3) The extent to which industry best practices are 
        applicable and transferrable to the audits, reviews, and 
        surveillance of defense contractors by the defense audit 
        agencies.
    (c) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the entity contracted for the comprehensive 
review required by subsection (a) shall provide a report on the results 
of the review to the Secretary of Defense and the Inspector General of 
the Department of Defense. The report shall include--
            (1) findings on the effectiveness of the defense audit 
        agencies in conducting audits, reviews, and surveillance of 
        defense contractors;
            (2) the comparison described in subsection (b)(1);
            (3) the comparison described in subsection (b)(2);
            (4) the assessment described in subsection (b)(3); and
            (5) Recommendations for improving the effectiveness of the 
        defense audit agencies in conducting audits, reviews, and 
        surveillance of defense contractors, including recommendations 
        for--
                    (A) improving the training of the staff of the 
                defense audit agencies who conduct such audits, 
                reviews, and surveillance;
                    (B) improving the accuracy and reliability of such 
                audits, reviews, and surveillance;
                    (C) ensuring the use of a materiality standard 
                similar to the standard used in generally accepted 
                auditing standards;
                    (D) improving the processes used by the defense 
                agencies to conduct such audits, reviews, and 
                surveillance;
                    (E) relieving the burdens on defense contractors of 
                such audits, reviews, and surveillance without 
                undermining the effectiveness and integrity of such 
                audits, reviews, and surveillance; and
                    (F) ensuring the effective implementation of such 
                recommendations by the defense audit agencies and the 
                effective monitoring of such implementation.
    (d) Submission to Congressional Committees.--Not later than 60 days 
after the date on which the Inspector General of the Department of 
Defense receives the report required by subsection (c), the Inspector 
General shall submit to the congressional defense committees an 
unaltered copy of the report, along with any comments or 
recommendations that the Inspector General considers appropriate.
    (e) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``defense audit agency'' means the Defense 
        Contract Audit Agency and the Defense Contract Management 
        Agency.
            (2) The term ``industry best practices'' means the best 
        practices used to conduct audits, reviews, and surveillance of 
        companies listed on a national securities exchange, in 
        accordance with generally accepted auditing standards or 
        national securities exchange requirements, as appropriate.
            (3) The term ``national securities exchange'' means an 
        exchange registered as a national securities exchange under 
        section 6 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 
        78f).

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

SEC. 821. MODIFICATION TO CERTAIN ACQUISITION THRESHOLDS.

    (a) Adjustment to Inflation.--
            (1) In general.--Section 1908(c)(2) of title 41, United 
        States Code, is amended by striking ``of each year evenly 
        divisible by 5'' and inserting ``, 2028, and every 3 years 
        thereafter''.
            (2) Conforming amendments.--
                    (A) Title 10.--Title 10, United States Code, is 
                amended--
                            (i) in section 3702(g), by striking 
                        ``Effective on October 1 of each year that is 
                        divisible by 5, each'' and inserting ``Each''; 
                        and
                            (ii) in section 3742, by striking 
                        ``Effective on October 1 of each year that is 
                        divisible by five, the'' and inserting ``The''.
                    (B) Title 41.--Section 3502(g) of title 41, United 
                States Code, is amended by striking ``Effective on 
                October 1 of each year that is divisible by 5, each'' 
                and inserting ``Each''.
    (b) Adjustments to Certain Acquisition Thresholds.--
            (1) Major program; title 41.--Section 109 of title 41, 
        United States Code, is amended--
                    (A) in subsection (b)(1)--
                            (i) by striking ``$75,000,000 (based on 
                        fiscal year 1980 constant dollars)'' and 
                        inserting ``$275,000,000''; and
                            (ii) by striking ``$300,000,000 (based on 
                        fiscal year 1980 constant dollars)'' and 
                        inserting ``$1,300,000,000''; and
                    (B) in subsection (b)(2), by striking ``$750,000 
                (based on fiscal year 1980 constant dollars)'' and 
                inserting ``$2,000,000''.
            (2) Simplified procedures for small purchases.--
                    (A) Title 10.--Section 3205(a)(2) of title 10, 
                United States Code, is amended by striking 
                ``$5,000,000'' and inserting ``$10,000,000''.
                    (B) Title 41.--Title 41, United States Code, is 
                amended--
                            (i) in section 1901(a)(2), by striking 
                        ``$5,000,000'' and inserting ``$10,000,000''; 
                        and
                            (ii) in section 3305(a)(2), by striking 
                        ``$5,000,000'' and inserting ``$10,000,000''.
            (3) Simplified acquisition threshold.--
                    (A) Title 10.--Section 3571 of title 10, United 
                States Code, is amended--
                            (i) in subsection (a), by striking ``For'' 
                        and inserting ``Except as provided in 
                        subsection (b), for'';
                            (ii) by redesignating subsection (b) as 
                        subsection (c); and
                            (iii) by inserting after subsection (a) the 
                        following new subsection:
    ``(b) Contingency Operations; Humanitarian or Peacekeeping 
Operations.--For purposes of acquisitions by agencies named in section 
3063 of this title, in the case of any contract to be awarded and 
performed, or purchase to be made, in support of a contingency 
operation or a humanitarian or peacekeeping operation, the simplified 
acquisition threshold means an amount equal to two times the amount 
specified for that term in subsection (a).''.
                    (B) Title 41.--Title 41, United States Code, is 
                amended--
                            (i) in section 134, by striking 
                        ``$250,000'' and inserting ``$500,000''; and
                            (ii) in section 153(1), by striking 
                        ``outside the United States''.
                    (C) Conforming amendments.--Title 10, United States 
                Code, is amended--
                            (i) in section 1724(a), by striking 
                        ``section 3205'' and inserting ``section 
                        3571'';
                            (ii) in section 3862(d), by striking 
                        paragraph (1);
                            (iii) in section 4505(h), by striking 
                        paragraph (7);
                            (iv) in section 4651(b), by striking ``(as 
                        defined in section 134 of title 41)'';
                            (v) in section 4654(d), by striking ``(as 
                        defined in section 134 of title 41)'';
                            (vi) in section 4655(c), by striking ``(as 
                        defined in section 134 of title 41)'';
                            (vii) in section 4656(a)(4)(A), by striking 
                        ``(as defined in section 134 of title 41)'';
                            (viii) in section 4659(b), by striking 
                        ``(as defined in section 134 of title 41)''; 
                        and
                            (ix) in section 4753(b)(3), by striking 
                        ``(as defined in section 134 of title 41)''.
            (4) Micro-purchase threshold.--
                    (A) Title 10.--Section 3573 of title 10, United 
                States Code, is amended by striking ``$10,000'' and 
                inserting ``the micro-purchase threshold specified in 
                section 1902(a)(1) of title 41''.
                    (B) Title 41.--Section 1902(a)(1) of title 41, 
                United States Code, is amended by striking ``$10,000'' 
                and inserting ``$25,000''.
            (5) Modifications to submissions of cost or pricing data; 
        title 41.--Section 3502(a) of title 41, United States Code, is 
        amended--
                    (A) in paragraph (1)--
                            (i) by striking ``2018'' each place it 
                        appears and inserting ``2027'';
                            (ii) in subparagraph (A), by striking 
                        ``$2,000,000'' and inserting ``$10,000,000''; 
                        and
                            (iii) in subparagraph (B), by striking 
                        ``$750,000'' and inserting ``$2,000,000'';
                    (B) in paragraph (2)--
                            (i) in subparagraph (A), by striking 
                        ``$2,000,000;'' and inserting ``$10,000,000; 
                        and'';
                            (ii) in subparagraph (B)--
                                    (I) by striking ``prime contract 
                                that was entered into on or before June 
                                30, 2018, and that has been modified 
                                pursuant to subsection (f),'' and 
                                inserting ``prime contract referred to 
                                in paragraph (1)(B),''; and
                                    (II) by striking ``$750,000; and'' 
                                and inserting ``$2,000,000.''; and
                            (iii) by striking subparagraph (C);
                    (C) in paragraph (3), by striking subparagraphs (A) 
                through (C) and inserting the following new 
                subparagraphs:
                    ``(A) in the case of a prime contract entered into 
                after June 30, 2027, the price of the subcontract is 
                expected to exceed $10,000,000; and
                    ``(B) in the case of a prime contract entered into 
                on or before June 30, 2027, the price of the 
                subcontract is expected to exceed $2,000,000.''; and
                    (D) in paragraph (4), by striking ``if--'' and all 
                that follows through the period at the end and 
                inserting ``if the price adjustment is expected to 
                exceed $2,000,000.''.
            (6) Modifications to prior contracts.--
                    (A) Title 10.--Section 3702(f) of title 10, United 
                States Code, is amended by striking ``2018'' and 
                inserting ``2026''.
                    (B) Title 41.--Section 3502(f) of title 41, United 
                States Code, is amended by striking ``2018'' and 
                inserting ``2027''.

SEC. 822. USE OF ACCRUED INTEREST BY CERTAIN CONSORTIUM MANAGERS.

    Section 4021(c) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``The authority'' and inserting ``(1) The 
        authority''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(2)(A) A contracting officer or an authorized official with legal 
authority to enter into an agreement on behalf of the Department of 
Defense under this section may authorize a consortium management 
organization to retain the interest accruing on the held amounts of 
such consortium management organization as payment for any covered 
costs through an agreement that--
            ``(i) authorizes such consortium management organization to 
        make payments to members of a consortium, other than such 
        consortium management organization, on behalf of the Department 
        of Defense; and
            ``(ii) requires such consortium management organization 
        to--
                    ``(I) invest such held amounts in Treasury bills of 
                the Government; and
                    ``(II) return to the Department any interest earned 
                on such held amounts that exceeds such covered costs.
    ``(B) Interest on held amounts of a covered advance payment that is 
returned to the Department of Defense by a consortium management 
organization pursuant to subparagraph (A) shall be credited to the 
account from which such covered advance payment was made. Amounts so 
credited shall be merged with amounts in that account, and shall be 
available for the same purposes, and subject to the same conditions and 
limitations, as other amounts in that account.
    ``(C) In this paragraph--
            ``(i) the term `consortium management organization' means 
        an entity that is responsible for coordinating, administering, 
        and supporting the activities of a consortium under an 
        agreement described in subparagraph (A);
            ``(ii) the term `covered advance payment' means an advance 
        payment made by the Department of Defense to a consortium 
        management organization under an agreement described in 
        subparagraph (A) for the purposes of such consortium management 
        organization making payments to members of a consortium on 
        behalf of the Department;
            ``(iii) the term `covered costs' means--
                    ``(I) the fees chargeable to the Government by a 
                consortium management organization under an agreement 
                described in subparagraph (A); and
                    ``(II) any other costs incurred by a consortium 
                management organization that are directly attributable 
                to the operation or the management of a consortium by a 
                consortium management organization and chargeable to 
                the Government under such agreement; and
            ``(iv) the term `held amounts' means funds provided as a 
        covered advance payment that have not yet been used by the 
        consortium management organization to which such covered 
        advance payment was made to make a payment to a member of a 
        consortium or returned to the Government in accordance with an 
        agreement described in subparagraph (A).''.

SEC. 823. AMENDMENT TO OTHER TRANSACTION AUTHORITY.

    (a) In General.--Section 4022 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)(2)--
                    (A) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``agency 
                that'' and all that follows through ``the use'' and 
                inserting ``agency that the use'';
                    (B) in subparagraph (B)(i), by striking ``writing 
                that'' and all that follows through ``the use'' and 
                inserting ``writing that the use''; and
                    (C) in subparagraph (C), by striking ``subsection 
                (f)'' each place it appears and inserting ``subsection 
                (g)'';
            (2) by amending subsection (d) to read as follows:
    ``(d) Appropriate Use of Authority.--An official responsible for 
entering into a transaction under the authority of this section may use 
such authority upon determining any one of the following conditions:
            ``(1) The use of such transaction permits the Secretary to 
        use innovative business arrangements or structures that would 
        not be practical or feasible under a contract.
            ``(2) The prototype project offered is an innovative or 
        novel product, service, process, or business practice that is 
        more practicable to acquire under such transaction than under a 
        contract.
            ``(3) The use of such transaction is expected to accelerate 
        delivery of capability to members of the armed forces compared 
        with other procurement methods.
            ``(4) The use of such transaction provides opportunity to 
        expand or strengthen the defense industrial base in a manner 
        that would not be practical or feasible under a contract.'';
            (3) by redesignating subsections (e) through (i) as 
        subsections (f) through (j), respectively; and
            (4) by inserting after subsection (d) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(e) Additional Considerations.--The official responsible for 
entering into a transaction under this section shall consider other 
actions by an offeror relating to such transaction if such actions will 
increase value to the Government, or contribute positively to the 
expansion, diversification, or resilience of the defense industrial 
base, including--
            ``(1) significant participation by one or more 
        nontraditional defense contractors (as defined in section 3014 
        of this title) or small business concerns (as defined under 
        section 3 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 632)), including 
        through teaming arrangements, joint ventures, or consortia;
            ``(2) the potential to reduce technical, schedule, or 
        performance risk, or accelerate transition to production; or
            ``(3) fielding through use of non-Federal cost sharing.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendments.--
            (1) National security act of 1947.--Section 102A(m)(6)(C) 
        of the National Security Act of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 3024(m)(6)(C)) 
        is amended--
                    (A) in clause (v), by striking ``of Defense'';
                    (B) by repealing clause (vi); and
                    (C) in clause (vii)--
                            (i) in the matter preceding subclause (I), 
                        by striking ``section 4022(f)(2)'' and 
                        inserting ``section 4022(g)(2)''; and
                            (ii) in subclause (V)(cc), by striking 
                        ``section 4022(f)(5)'' and inserting ``section 
                        4022(g)(5)''.
            (2) Homeland security act of 2002.--Section 831(d) of the 
        Homeland Security Act of 2002 (6 U.S.C. 391(d)) is amended by 
        striking ``4022(e)'' and inserting ``4022(f)''.
            (3) John s. mccain national defense authorization act for 
        fiscal year 2019.--Section 873(c)(1) of the John S. McCain 
        National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public 
        Law 115-232; 10 U.S.C. 4021 note) is amended--
                    (A) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``subsection 
                (f)'' and inserting ``subsection (g)''; and
                    (B) in subparagraph (E), by striking ``or (f)'' and 
                inserting ``or (g)''.
            (4) James m. inhofe national defense authorization act for 
        fiscal year 2023.--Section 322(h)(2) of the James M. Inhofe 
        National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (Public 
        Law 117-263; 10 U.S.C. 2911 note) is amended by striking 
        ``subsection (f)'' and inserting ``subsection (g)''.
            (5) Military construction authorization act for fiscal year 
        2026.--Section 2828 of the Military Construction Authorization 
        Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60) is amended by 
        striking ``section 4022(i)'' and inserting ``section 4022(j)''.

SEC. 824. REQUIREMENT FOR MODULAR OPEN SYSTEM APPROACH AND 
              MODIFICATIONS TO RIGHTS IN TECHNICAL DATA.

    (a) Requirement for Modular Open System Approach.--Section 4401 of 
title 10, United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 4401. Requirement for modular open system approach
    ``(a) Requirement.--The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that a 
covered system to be procured is designed and developed with a modular 
open system approach that is appropriately tailored to--
            ``(1) the characteristics, intended purpose, and use of the 
        covered system;
            ``(2) the planned service life of the covered system; and
            ``(3) any other factors relevant to the design and 
        development of the covered system.
    ``(b) Assessment to Inform Strategy.--Before designing, developing, 
or making a modification to a covered system, the Secretary of Defense 
shall conduct an assessment to identify one or more open systems 
objectives to be achieved by the design and development of the covered 
system. Such assessment shall describe how a modular open system 
approach would--
            ``(1) support the objectives of the defense acquisition 
        system established pursuant to section 3102 of this title;
            ``(2) align with the preference for the acquisition of 
        commercial products and commercial services in section 3453 of 
        this title and preserve the commercial characteristics of 
        modules that comprise the covered system;
            ``(3) reduce the complexity of, and increase the speed by 
        which, new technologies can be integrated into a covered system 
        to enhance military effectiveness and responsiveness to 
        emerging threats;
            ``(4) enable the use of iterative development cycles and 
        discontinue or terminate the development of capabilities--
                    ``(A) that no longer align with a capability 
                requirement established by the Secretary of Defense; or
                    ``(B) that are experiencing significant cost 
                growth, technical or performance deficiencies, or 
                delays in schedule;
            ``(5) seek to maintain a robust, resilient, and innovative 
        defense industrial base to support requirements throughout the 
        life cycle of the covered system;
            ``(6) reduce schedule delays and development timelines;
            ``(7) increase and enable interoperability of a covered 
        system with the joint force as changes to force design evolve;
            ``(8) enhance supply chain risk management and mitigate 
        industrial base production capacity risks by enabling the 
        integration of alternative sources of supply or enabling 
        augmented production of modules throughout the life cycle of 
        the covered system; or
            ``(9) enable effective life-cycle management and product 
        support of a covered system--
                    ``(A) in accordance with the requirements of 
                section 4324 of this title; and
                    ``(B) to achieve applicable operational readiness 
                requirements and materiel readiness objectives 
                (established under section 118(c) of this title) in the 
                most cost-effective manner practicable.
    ``(c) Architecture Requirements.--(1) In developing an open systems 
architecture for the procurement of a covered system, the Secretary 
shall ensure that such architecture--
                    ``(A) adequately designates and defines for the 
                covered system--
                            ``(i) modules;
                            ``(ii) open external interfaces and open 
                        module interfaces to ensure loose coupling of 
                        modules within the covered system;
                            ``(iii) open external interfaces, including 
                        external interfaces with a host platform or 
                        other external system, in a manner that 
                        supports interoperability; and
                            ``(iv) the openness characteristics 
                        identified in subsection (d);
                    ``(B) requires the exposure and full definition of 
                open interfaces in a manner than is most suited to 
                achieve the open systems objectives of the covered 
                system through--
                            ``(i) if available and suitable to achieve 
                        the open system objectives, the use, reuse, 
                        modification, or adaption of existing open 
                        systems architectures, interface standards, or 
                        widely supported or consensus-based standards 
                        that are available at no cost or under fair and 
                        reasonable license terms;
                            ``(ii) the use of commercial standards if 
                        such commercial standards are available under 
                        fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory terms;
                            ``(iii) the use of new standards that 
                        define relationships between module interfaces 
                        and external interfaces if such standards 
                        include--
                                    ``(I) the software-defined syntax 
                                and properties that specifically govern 
                                how values are validly passed and 
                                received between modules of a covered 
                                system, and between the covered system 
                                and other covered systems or a host 
                                platform, in a machine-readable format;
                                    ``(II) a machine-readable 
                                definition that is compatible with 
                                Department-approved digital engineering 
                                environments and model-based systems 
                                engineering tools and defines the 
                                relationship between--
                                            ``(aa) a module interface 
                                        or external interface; and
                                            ``(bb) existing standards 
                                        or interfaces that available in 
                                        the repository required by 
                                        subsection (g); and
                                    ``(III) documentation with 
                                functional descriptions of software-
                                defined interfaces that conveys the 
                                semantic meaning of elements of a 
                                module interface or external interface; 
                                or
                            ``(iv) any combination of clauses (i) 
                        through (iii); and
                    ``(C) is designed and developed to accelerate the 
                procurement and integration of commercial products as 
                modules when suitable and appropriate.
            ``(2) If a contractor develops a new interface standard or 
        modifies an existing standard, and such new or modified 
        standard is incorporated into an open systems architecture for 
        a covered system, the Secretary shall ensure the new or 
        modified standard is submitted to the repository required by 
        subsection (g) and, if the Secretary determines such submission 
        would support the open system objectives of the covered system, 
        is made available to recognized standards bodies.
            ``(3) The Secretary shall ensure acquisition executives and 
        program managers consider input from private entities as early 
        as possible to inform decisions regarding the level in the open 
        systems architecture at which a modular open system approach 
        will be implemented for a covered system.
            ``(4) The open systems architecture described in this 
        subsection shall be included in any draft and final 
        solicitations for procurement of a covered system.
    ``(d) Openness Characteristics.--Consistent with the requirements 
of subchapter I of chapter 275 of this title, the Secretary shall 
include in any draft or final solicitation for the covered system a 
description of the desired openness characteristics of the covered 
system necessary to achieve the open systems objectives identified in 
accordance with subsection (b) for such covered system including the 
following:
            ``(1) A description of the open systems objectives 
        identified in accordance with subsection (b).
            ``(2) A description of the application of specifications, 
        architectures, and standards for modularization and module 
        interfaces and external interfaces, including open external 
        interfaces with a host platform or other external system, to 
        achieve such objectives.
            ``(3) A description of the minimum technical data package 
        elements necessary to achieve such objectives.
            ``(4) The intended modularity and location of open 
        interfaces.
            ``(5) The desired license rights in module interfaces or 
        external interfaces based on such objectives, including desired 
        license rights to enable the replacement of a module, module 
        interface, or external interface with an alternative or new 
        module or interface.
    ``(e) Disclosure Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall make 
publicly available (to the maximum extent practicable consistent with 
national security requirements) any standards for implementation of 
modular open system approaches associated with contracts for covered 
systems as soon as feasible before the Secretary awards a contract to 
procure such a covered system, unless the applicable service 
acquisition executive submits to the Secretary a request to delay or 
restrict release of such standards, including a justification for such 
request.
    ``(f) Applicability to Commercial Products.--In applying the 
requirements of this section to a procurement of a covered system that 
includes a commercial product, the Secretary of Defense shall--
            ``(1) procure such commercial product under license terms 
        similar to such terms that are customarily provided to the 
        public, provided such commercial terms include or can be 
        supplemented by the license rights necessary for designated 
        open module interfaces or open external interfaces;
            ``(2) when applicable, obtain the delivery of commercial 
        software development kits with license rights necessary to 
        support the desired openness characteristics for the covered 
        system; and
            ``(3) to the maximum extent practical, conduct negotiations 
        for desired license rights in accordance with the preference 
        for specially negotiated licenses in section 3774(c) of this 
        title.
    ``(g) Digital Repositories for Open Systems Architectures.--
            ``(1) In general.--To support the creation, use, and reuse 
        of modular open systems approaches, the Secretary shall 
        establish a federated set of digital repositories within the 
        Department of Defense to store open systems architectures and 
        related artifacts for a covered system developed in accordance 
        with this section. The Secretary shall ensure that--
                    ``(A) the repositories incorporate cybersecurity 
                measures consistent with Department standards;
                    ``(B) program managers, portfolio acquisition 
                executives, and other appropriate officials of the 
                Department of Defense have the necessary administrative 
                control to manage assigned repositories and to 
                establish procedures and requirements for content; and
                    ``(C) the repositories are searchable and 
                accessible to authorized persons according to level of 
                security clearance.
            ``(2) Administration.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
        designate a lead organization responsible for governance, life-
        cycle management, standards adjudication, and configuration 
        control of repositories established under this subsection. Such 
        organization shall have demonstrated expertise in digital 
        engineering environments, model-based systems engineering, and 
        use of modular open system approaches.
    ``(h) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `covered system' means a system that is 
        acquired or developed under--
                    ``(A) an acquisition program of the Department of 
                Defense; or
                    ``(B) a research and development program of the 
                Department to address a capability requirement or joint 
                capability requirement (as defined in section 181 of 
                this title).
            ``(2) The term `external interface' means an interface 
        between a covered system and other elements, such as another 
        covered system or a host platform.
            ``(3) The term `host platform' means the system or 
        environment that provides the core infrastructure, interfaces, 
        and shared services necessary to support, integrate, and 
        operate modular components or subsystems, while enabling their 
        independent development, upgrade, and replacement through 
        standardized and open interfaces.
            ``(4) The term `modular open system approach' means an 
        integrated strategy that--
                    ``(A) incorporates acquisition, business, 
                technology, and logistics considerations; and
                    ``(B) uses an open systems architecture to achieve 
                one or more open systems objectives.
            ``(5) The term `module' means a self-contained discrete 
        functional unit, such as hardware, software, or a combination 
        thereof, in a discrete bundle--
                    ``(A) that can be developed, tested, and deployed 
                independently of a module interface or external 
                interface; and
                    ``(B) that can simultaneously interact with another 
                self-contained discrete functional unit described in 
                subparagraph (A) through a module interface or external 
                interface.
            ``(6) The term `module interface' means a shared boundary 
        between modules in a covered system defined by physical, 
        logical, or functional characteristics such as electrical, 
        mechanical, fluidic, optical, radio frequency, data, 
        networking, or software.
            ``(7) The term `open systems architecture' means an 
        architecture composed of a set of modules loosely coupled with 
        other modules via open, well-defined, and verifiable 
        interfaces, thereby enabling modules to be incrementally added, 
        removed, or replaced throughout the life cycle of the covered 
        system by any qualified offeror (as determined by the 
        Secretary), including independent third parties.
            ``(8) The term `software development kit' means a 
        collection of software tools and programs such as libraries, 
        application programming interfaces, integrated development 
        environments, testing tools, or documentation used to create 
        applications that are appropriate for a specific software 
        platform.''.
    (b) Applicability.--
            (1) In general.--The requirements of section 4401 of title 
        10, United States Code, as amended by this section, shall apply 
        with respect to a contract entered into on or after the date 
        that is 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act.
            (2) Guidance.--The Secretary of Defense shall issue 
        guidance to carry out the requirements of section 4401 of title 
        10, United States Code, as amended by this section in order to 
        implement this section.
    (c) Modification to Rights in Technical Data.--
            (1) Rights in technical data.--Section 3771 of title 10, 
        United States Code, is amended--
                    (A) in subsection (a)--
                            (i) in paragraph (2)(A), by striking `` or 
                        copyrights'' and inserting ``, copyrights, 
                        trade secrets,''; and
                            (ii) by adding at the end the following new 
                        paragraph:
            ``(3) Enforcement of certain rights.--Regulations 
        prescribed under paragraph (1) may not affect or limit any 
        right described in paragraph (2)(A) or the ability of a 
        contractor or subcontractor to enforce such a right against a 
        third party that has not otherwise obtained a license for such 
        a right from the United States or from the contractor or 
        subcontractor.''; and
                    (B) in subsection (b)--
                            (i) by amending paragraph (3) to read as 
                        follows:
            ``(3) Inapplicability of paragraph (2).--Unless otherwise 
        negotiated, paragraph (2) does not apply to technical data 
        that--
                    ``(A) constitutes a correction or change to data 
                furnished by the United States;
                    ``(B) relates to form, fit, or function (other than 
                detailed manufacturing or process data);
                    ``(C) is necessary for operation, maintenance, 
                installation, or training (other than detailed 
                manufacturing or process data, including such data 
                pertaining to a major system component); or
                    ``(D) is otherwise publicly available or has been 
                released or disclosed by the contractor or 
                subcontractor without restriction on further release or 
                disclosure.'';
                            (iii) by amending paragraph (4) to read as 
                        follows:
            ``(4) Exceptions to paragraph (2).--Notwithstanding 
        paragraph (2), unless otherwise negotiated, the United States 
        may release or disclose technical data to persons outside the 
        Government, or permit the use of technical data by such 
        persons, if--
                    ``(A) such release, disclosure, or use--
                            ``(i) is necessary for emergency repair and 
                        overhaul; or
                            ``(ii) is a release or disclosure of 
                        technical data (other than detailed 
                        manufacturing or process data) to, or use of 
                        such data by, a foreign government, where such 
                        release or disclosure is in the interest of the 
                        United States and is required for evaluation or 
                        informational purposes;
                    ``(B) such release, disclosure or use is made 
                subject to a prohibition that the person to whom the 
                data are released or disclosed may not further release, 
                disclose, or use such data; and
                    ``(C) the contractor or subcontractor asserting the 
                restriction is notified of such release, disclosure, or 
                use.'';
                            (iv) in paragraph (6)--
                                    (I) in the paragraph heading, by 
                                striking ``INTERFACES'' and inserting 
                                ``MODULE interfaces of an item'';
                                    (II) by inserting ``, in 
                                perpetuity,'' after ``government 
                                purpose rights''; and
                                    (III) by striking ``an interface 
                                between an item or process and other 
                                items or processes'' and inserting ``a 
                                module interface of an item''; and
                            (v) in paragraph (7)--
                                    (I) in the paragraph heading, by 
                                striking ``MODULAR system interfaces'' 
                                and inserting ``EXTERNAL interfaces of 
                                an item'';
                                    (II) in subparagraph (A)--
                                            (aa) by striking 
                                        ``paragraphs (2) and (5)'' and 
                                        inserting ``paragraph (5) and 
                                        except as otherwise provided by 
                                        subsection (f) of section 4401 
                                        of this title,'';
                                            (bb) by inserting ``, in 
                                        perpetuity,'' after 
                                        ``government purpose rights''; 
                                        and
                                            (cc) by striking ``modular 
                                        system interface'' and 
                                        inserting ``external interface 
                                        of an item'';
                                    (III) in subparagraph (B), by 
                                striking ``modular system interface'' 
                                and inserting ``an external 
                                interface''; and
                                    (IV) in subparagraph (C), by 
                                striking ``modular system interface'' 
                                and inserting ``external interface of 
                                an item''.
            (2) Definitions.--Section 3775(b) of title 10, United 
        States Code, is amended to read as follows:
    ``(b) Additional Definitions.--In this subchapter, the terms 
`external interface', `modular open system approach', and `module 
interface' have the meanings given, respectively, in section 4401 of 
this title.''.
    (d) Conforming Amendments.--
            (1) Section 3791(c)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is 
        amended--
                    (A) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``section 
                4401(b) of this title'' and inserting ``section 4401 of 
                this title''; and
                    (B) in subparagraph (D)(iv), by striking ``modular 
                system interfaces (as defined in section 4401(b) of 
                this title)'' and inserting ``module interfaces (as 
                defined in section 4401 of this title)''.
            (2) Section 4402 of title 10, United States Code, is 
        repealed.
            (3) Section 4403 of title 10, United States Code, is 
        repealed.
            (4) Section 4425 of title 10, United States Code, is 
        amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 4425. Definitions
    ``In this subchapter:
            ``(1) The term `major system platform' means the highest 
        level structure of a major weapon system that is not physically 
        mounted or installed onto a higher level structure and on which 
        a major system component can be physically mounted or 
        installed.
            ``(2) The term `weapon system component'--
                    ``(A) means a high level subsystem or assembly, 
                including hardware, software, or an integrated assembly 
                of both, that can be mounted or installed on a major 
                system platform through a external system interface (as 
                defined in section 4401 of this title); and
                    ``(B) includes a subsystem, assembly or, module 
                that is likely to have additional capability 
                requirements, is likely to change because of evolving 
                technology or threat, is needed for interoperability, 
                facilitates incremental deployment of capabilities, or 
                is expected to be replaced by another subsystem or 
                assembly described in subparagraph (A).''.
            (5) Section 804 of the National Defense Authorization Act 
        for Fiscal Year 2021 (10 U.S.C. 4401 note) is repealed.

SEC. 825. MODIFICATIONS TO REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO LONG-TERM 
              CONCESSIONS AGREEMENTS WITH CERTAIN RETAILERS.

    (a) In General.--Section 4664 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) by amending subsection (b) to read as follows:
    ``(b) Waiver.--(1) The Secretary may waive the requirements of 
subsection (a) with respect to a long-term concessions agreement with a 
retailer if the Secretary determines that the goods or services to be 
provided by the retailer under such long-term concessions agreement are 
vital for the welfare and morale of members of the Armed Forces and no 
reasonable alternatives exist.
    ``(2) Not later than 30 days after each use of the waiver authority 
under paragraph (1), the Secretary shall provide to the Committees on 
Armed Services of the House of Representatives and Senate a 
justification for such waiver.'';
            (2) by striking subsection (c);
            (3) by redesignating subsection (d) as subsection (c); and
            (4) in subsection (a), by striking ``subsections (b) and 
        (c)'' and inserting ``subsection (b)''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--Section 841(a)(2)(B) of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (10 U.S.C. 4664 note) is 
amended to read as follows:
                    ``(B) Determination described.--The determination 
                described in this subparagraph is, with respect to a 
                long-term concessions agreement, a determination that 
                the retailer that is a party to such long-term 
                concessions agreement is controlled by a covered nation 
                based on an assessment required by paragraph (1).''.

SEC. 826. PROHIBITION ON CONTRACTING WITH EMPLOYERS OF CONVICTED 
              TRAFFICKERS.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 363 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 4665. Prohibition on contracting with entities employing 
              convicted traffickers.
    ``(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense may not enter into a 
contract or other agreement with an entity if such entity employs an 
individual convicted of a trafficking crime.
    ``(b) Definitions.--In this section--
            ``(1) the term `individual convicted of a trafficking 
        crime' means an individual who has been convicted by a court of 
        competent jurisdiction of a trafficking crime and for whom such 
        conviction has not been overturned; and
            ``(2) the term `trafficking crime' means an offense--
                    ``(A) under chapter 77 of title 18, United States 
                Code; or
                    ``(B) under State, local, or tribal law consisting 
                of conduct that would have been an offense under the 
                chapter described in subparagraph (A) if the conduct 
                had occurred within the special maritime and 
                territorial jurisdiction of the United States (as 
                defined in section 7 of title 18, United States Code), 
                or in interstate or foreign commerce.''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections for chapter 363 of 
title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the 
following new item:

``4665. Prohibition on contracting with entities employing convicted 
                            traffickers.''.
    (c) Applicability.--Section 4665 of title 10, United States Code, 
as added by subsection (a), shall apply only with respect to contracts 
and other agreements entered into, renewed, or extended on or after the 
date of the enactment of this Act.
    (d) Current Defense Contractors.--Not later than 90 days after the 
date of the enactment of this Act, each contractor of the Department of 
Defense as of the date of the enactment of this Act that employs an 
individual convicted of a trafficking crime (as defined in section 4665 
of title 10, United States Code, as added by subsection (a)) shall 
submit to Secretary of Defense a notice that contractor employs such an 
individual.

SEC. 827. ACQUISITION THRESHOLDS FOR CERTAIN MATERIALS.

    (a) Strategic Materials.--Section 4863 of title 10, United States 
Code, is amended by amending subsection (f) to read as follows:
    ``(f) Exception for Small Purchases.--(1) Subsection (a) does not 
apply to acquisitions in amounts not greater than $250,000.
    ``(2) A proposed acquisition of an item subject to subsection (a) 
in an amount greater than $250,000 may not be divided into several 
purchases or contracts for lesser amounts in order to meet the 
exception under paragraph (1).
    ``(3) On October 1 of each year that is evenly divisible by five, 
the Secretary of Defense may adjust the dollar threshold in this 
subsection based on changes in the Consumer Price Index. Any such 
adjustment shall take effect on the date on which the Secretary 
publishes notice of such adjustment in the Federal Register.''.
    (b) Sensitive Materials From Non-allied Foreign Nations.--
            (1) In general.--Section 4872(c) of title 10, United States 
        Code, as amended by section 1803 of this Act, is further 
        amended--
                    (A) by redesignating subparagraphs (A) and (B) as 
                clauses (i) and (ii), respectively;
                    (B) by redesignating paragraphs (1) through (4) as 
                subparagraphs (A) through (D), respectively;
                    (C) by inserting ``(1)'' before ``Subsection (a)''; 
                and
                    (D) by adding at the end the following new 
                paragraph:
    ``(2)(A) Subsection (a) does not apply to procurements in amounts 
not greater than $250,000.
    ``(B) A proposed procurement of a material or item subject to 
subsection (a) in an amount greater than $250,000 may not be divided 
into several purchases or contracts for lesser amounts in order to meet 
the exception under subsection (a).
    ``(C) On October 1 of each year that is evenly divisible by five, 
the Secretary of Defense may adjust the dollar threshold in this 
subsection based on changes in the Consumer Price Index. Any such 
adjustment shall take effect on the date on which the Secretary 
publishes notice of such adjustment in the Federal Register.''.
            (2) Coordination of amendments.--For purposes of applying 
        amendments to section 4872 of title 10, United States Code, 
        made by provisions of this Act other than this subsection, the 
        amendments made by this subsection shall be treated as having 
        been enacted immediately after any such amendments to such 
        section 4872 by other provisions of this Act.
    (c) Printed Circuit Boards.--Section 4873 of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsections (c) through (f) as 
        subsections (d) through (g), respectively; and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(c) Exception for Small Purchases.--
            ``(1) Subsection (a)(1) does not apply to acquisitions in 
        amounts not greater than $10,000.
            ``(2) A proposed acquisition of an item subject to 
        subsection (a)(1) in an amount greater than $10,000 may not be 
        divided into several purchases or contracts for lesser amounts 
        in order to meet the exception under paragraph (1).
            ``(3) On October 1 of each year that is evenly divisible by 
        five, the Secretary of Defense may adjust the dollar threshold 
        in this subsection based on changes in the Consumer Price 
        Index. Any such adjustment shall take effect on the date on 
        which the Secretary publishes notice of such adjustment in the 
        Federal Register.''.

SEC. 828. CLARIFICATION OF CERTAIN ELEMENTS OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE 
              MENTOR-PROTEGE PROGRAM.

    (a) Clarification of Limitation on Protege Firms Participating in 
Concurrent Mentor-protege Agreements.--Subsection (c)(2) of section 
4902 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by inserting ``under subsection (e)'' after ``one 
        agreement''; and
            (2) by striking ``during the 5-year period beginning on the 
        date such concern enters into the first such agreement'' and 
        inserting ``after the completion of any previous such 
        agreement''.
    (b) Clarification of Requirement That Mentor Firms Must Be For-
profit Firms.--Subsection (d)(1) of such section is amended--
            (1) by striking ``and'' at the end of subparagraph (A);
            (2) by redesignating subparagraph (B) as subparagraph (C); 
        and
            (3) by inserting after subparagraph (A) the following new 
        subparagraph (B):
                    ``(B) is an entity organized for profit that 
                operates primarily within the United States; and''.
    (c) Clarification of Term of Participation Agreement.--Subsection 
(e)(1)(B) of such section is amended by inserting ``for the agreement'' 
after ``A program participation term''.
    (d) Clarification of Matters Relating to Reimbursement of Mentor 
Firms.--Subsection (e)(2) of such section is amended by striking ``may 
be'' and inserting ``may provide reimbursement through'' after ``may 
be''.

SEC. 829. CODIFICATION OF PROGRAM FOR NEGOTIATION OF COMPREHENSIVE 
              SMALL BUSINESS SUBCONTRACTING PLANS.

    (a) In General.--Section 834 of the National Defense Authorization 
Act for Fiscal Years 1990 and 1991 (15 U.S.C. 637 note) is transferred 
to subchapter I of chapter 387 of title 10, United States Code, 
inserted after section 4902, and redesignated as section 4903.
    (b) Amendments.--Section 4903 of title 10, United States Code, as 
so transferred and redesignated, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``test'' each place it appears in headings 
        and text;
            (2) by striking ``Test'' each place it appears in headings 
        and text;
            (3) in subsection (a)(1), by striking ``shall establish'' 
        and all that follows through ``demonstration projects, the 
        Secretary'' and inserting the following: ``shall maintain a 
        program under which each service acquisition executive and each 
        head of a Defense Agency may negotiate and administer 
        comprehensive subcontracting plans. The Secretary'';
            (4) in subsection (b)--
                    (A) in paragraph (1)--
                            (i) by striking ``In a demonstration 
                        project under the test program, the'' and 
                        inserting ``The''; and
                            (ii) by inserting at the end the following: 
                        ``The Secretary shall ensure procedures and 
                        systems accurately capture and report--
            ``(A) the annual goals for each subcontracting plan;
            ``(B) subcontract awards including number, dollar amount 
        and percentages of subcontracting value and total contract 
        value; and
            ``(C) the findings of good faith efforts.'';
                    (B) in paragraph (2)--
                            (i) in subparagraph (A), by striking 
                        ``and'' at the end;
                            (ii) in subparagraph (B), by striking the 
                        period at the end and inserting ``; and''; and
                            (iii) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(C) shall comply with the requirements included in 
        section 8(d)(6) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 
        637(d)(6)).''; and
                    (C) by amending paragraph (3) to read as follows:
    ``(3) A contractor described in paragraph (4) shall annually submit 
to the Secretary of Defense a report on the number and dollar amount of 
first-tier subcontracts awarded during the period covered by the report 
to covered small business concerns, set forth separately--
            ``(A) by North American Industry Classification System 
        code;
            ``(B) by major defense acquisition program (as defined in 
        section 4201 of this title);
            ``(C) by military department; and
            ``(D) by prime contract, if--
                    ``(i) the prime contract is for the maintenance, 
                overhaul, repair, servicing, rehabilitation, salvage, 
                modernization, or modification of supplies, systems, 
                equipment; and
                    ``(ii) the total value of the prime contract 
                (including options) is greater than $100,000,000.'';
            (5) by amending subsection (d)(2) to read as follows:
    ``(2) The Secretary of Defense shall report to the Committee on 
Armed Services and the Committee on Small Business of the House of 
Representatives and the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee 
on Small Business and Entrepreneurship of the Senate on any negotiated 
comprehensive subcontracting plan that the Secretary determines did not 
meet the subcontracting goals negotiated in the plan for the prior 
fiscal year and whether the contractor made a good faith effort 
regarding compliance.'';
            (6) by striking subsections (e) and (f); and
            (7) by redesignating subsection (g) as subsection (e).

SEC. 830. CONSUMPTION-BASED PROCUREMENTS AND ASSOCIATED PAYMENTS.

    (a) Advance Payments Related to Certain Services.--Section 3324(d) 
of title 31, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)(C), by striking ``; and'' and 
        inserting a semicolon;
            (2) in paragraph (2)--
                    (A) by inserting ``or commercially available 
                content'' after ``publication''; and
                    (B) by striking the period at the end and inserting 
                ``; and''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
            ``(3) charges for information and communications technology 
        subscriptions, reservations, or tenancy, including cloud 
        environments, for which the procuring agency defines 
        appropriate access and security standards.''.
    (b) Authority to Acquire Consumption-based Solutions.--
            (1) Amendment.--Chapter 23 of title 41, United States Code, 
        is amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 2314. Authority to acquire consumption-based solutions
    ``(a) Authority.--The head of each executive agency may acquire 
services through consumption-based solutions.
    ``(b) Procurement Requirements.--Not later than 180 days after the 
date of the enactment of this section, the Federal Acquisition 
Regulation shall be updated as necessary to create a new subcategory of 
services that--
            ``(1) is any combination of hardware, equipment, software, 
        labor, or services that together provides a seamless 
        capability;
            ``(2) has the ability to be metered and billed based on 
        actual usage;
            ``(3) has predetermined pricing at fixed-price units;
            ``(4) requires the awardee to notify the agency contracting 
        officer when consumption under the contract reaches 75 percent 
        and 90 percent of the funded amount, respectively, of the 
        contract; and
            ``(5) treats any modification of a contract entered into 
        under the authority established in subsection (a) to add a new 
        feature or capability in an amount less than or equal to 25 
        percent of the total value of such contract, as originally 
        awarded, as procurements made using competitive procedures (as 
        defined in section 152) for the purposes of chapter 33 of this 
        title.
    ``(c) Funding.--Amounts authorized to be appropriated for 
acquisitions using the authority under subsection (a) may be used to 
enter into incrementally funded contracts or other agreements, 
including advanced payments.
    ``(d) Consumption-based Solution Defined.--In this section, the 
term `consumption-based solution' means a model under which a service 
is provided to an executive agency and may use any combination of 
software, hardware or equipment, data, and labor or services that 
provides a capability that is metered and billed based on actual usage 
at fixed-price units.
    ``(e) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section may be 
construed to prohibit the use of the authority created under subsection 
(a) in combination with another contract type provided for under the 
Federal Acquisition Regulation.''.
            (2) Technical and conforming amendment.--The table of 
        sections for chapter 23 of title 41, United States Code, is 
        amended by adding at the end the following new section:

        ``2314. Authority to acquire consumption-based solutions.''.
    (c) Modification of Pilot Program for Anything-as-a-service.--
Section 809 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2024 (Public Law 118-31; 10 U.S.C. note prec. 3301) is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsection (g) as subsection (i); and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (f) the following new 
        subsections:
    ``(g) Report.--Not later than March 15, 2029, the Secretary shall 
provide a report to the congressional defense committees on the 
implementation of the pilot program, describing the use of the 
authority under this section and any lessons learned, along with a 
recommendation on whether to make the authority under this section 
permanent.
    ``(h) Sunset.--The authority under this section shall terminate on 
December 31, 2030.''.

SEC. 831. EXTENSION OF BRIEFING AND CERTIFICATION REQUIREMENT.

    Section 886 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2025 (Public Law 118-159; 138 Stat. 2022) is amended--
            (1) in the section heading, by striking ``briefings, 
        certification, and limitation on availability of funds'' and 
        inserting ``briefings and certification'';
            (2) by striking subsections (a) and (d) and redesignating 
        subsections (b) and (c) as subsections (a) and (b), 
        respectively; and
            (3) in each of subsections (a) and (b), as so redesignated, 
        by striking ``30 days after the date of the enactment of this 
        Act'' and inserting ``30 days after the date on which the 
        Secretary awards a contract for financial management services 
        for fuel contracts''.

SEC. 832. PREFERENCE FOR RECYCLED STRATEGIC AND CRITICAL MATERIALS.

    Section 848(a) of the William M. (Mac) Thornberry National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (10 U.S.C. 4811 note) is 
amended--
            (1) by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph (4); and
            (2) by inserting after paragraph (2) the following new 
        paragraph:
            ``(3) From sources described in paragraphs (1) and (2) that 
        produce such strategic and critical materials by extracting 
        such materials from electronic waste.''.

SEC. 833. TRANSFER AUTHORITY FOR RAPID TRANSITION OF OTHER TRANSACTION 
              AUTHORITY PROTOTYPES.

    (a) Authority.--
            (1) In general.--Subject to limitations in paragraph (2), a 
        portfolio acquisition executive may transfer amounts of 
        authorizations made available for programs, projects, or 
        activities that are included in the portfolio assigned under 
        the leadership of such portfolio acquisition executive in 
        accordance with section 1732 of title 10, United States Code.
            (2) Limitations on amounts transferred.--The transfer of an 
        amount made in accordance with paragraph (1), with respect to 
        amounts authorized for Research, Development, Test, and 
        Evaluation--
                    (A) shall not exceed 10 percent of the amount 
                authorized for a fiscal year for Research, Development, 
                Test, and Evaluation for all programs, projects, or 
                activities in the portfolio of such portfolio 
                acquisition executive; and
                    (B) may only be transferred to a corresponding 
                Procurement program, project, or activity within the 
                same portfolio.
    (b) Transfer Criteria.--A portfolio acquisition executive may 
transfer amounts under subsection (a) only if--
            (1) the capability proposed for procurement using such 
        transfer amounts was developed under a transaction or other 
        agreement entered into under section 4021 or 4022 of title 10, 
        United States Code;
            (2) such proposed capability has achieved a technology 
        readiness level of 8, as validated by the milestone decision 
        authority (as defined in section 4211 of title 10, United 
        States Code) or an independent technical authority designated 
        by the Secretary of Defense; and
            (3) the portfolio acquisition executive determines in 
        writing that procurement of such proposed capability is 
        necessary to address an operational problem or fulfill a 
        capability requirement (as such terms are defined, 
        respectively, in section 3101 of title 10, United States Code) 
        in a timely and cost-effective manner.
    (c) Notification.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 15 days before transferring 
        amounts under subsection (a), the portfolio acquisition 
        executive making such transfer shall submit a written 
        notification of such transfer to--
                    (A) the congressional defense committees;
                    (B) the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition 
                and Sustainment;
                    (C) the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and 
                Engineering; and
                    (D) the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller).
            (2) Contents.--Each notification required under paragraph 
        (1) with respect to a transfer of amounts under subsection (a) 
        shall include--
                    (A) the amount to be transferred;
                    (B) an identification of the program, project, or 
                activity that is the proposed source of the Research, 
                Development, Test, and Evaluation amount and an 
                identification of the program, project, or activity 
                that is the proposed recipient Procurement account;
                    (C) a description of the capability proposed for 
                procurement using such transfer amounts and the 
                validated technology readiness level of such 
                capability;
                    (D) the written determination required by paragraph 
                (3); and
                    (E) an assessment of the benefits or risks 
                anticipated as a result of the transfer of such amounts 
                on the programs, projects, and activities assigned 
                under the leadership of the portfolio acquisition 
                executive concerned.
    (d) General Limitations.--
            (1) New programs of record.--A portfolio acquisition 
        executive that transfers amounts pursuant to this section may 
        not use such amounts to initiate a program of record without 
        approval from the appropriate milestone decision authority.
            (2) Fund availability.--Amounts transferred pursuant to 
        this section shall be subject to the same period of 
        availability as the Procurement appropriation to which they are 
        transferred.
    (e) Exclusion From General Transfer Authority.--Amounts transferred 
pursuant to this section shall not be included in the dollar limitation 
of section 1001 of this Act.

SEC. 834. PORTFOLIO-BASED ACQUISITION OF AUTONOMOUS CAPABILITY.

    (a) In General.--There is established in the Department of Defense 
a program to be known as the ``Autonomy Integration Account'' (in this 
section referred to as the ``Account'') under which the Secretary of 
Defense shall seek to accelerate the resourcing and integration of 
autonomous mission execution capabilities into systems of the 
Department to enable the operational availability of such systems.
    (b) Elements.--Activities carried out under the Account shall 
primarily emphasize the procurement, research and development, training 
and simulation, integration, and continuous modernization of applicable 
software capabilities for navigation, targeting, communications, 
mission autonomy, battle management, and other mission-critical 
software-defined functions that enable autonomous mission execution.
    (c) Standards.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with 
the Director of the Defense Autonomous Warfare Group and each Secretary 
of a military department, shall establish standards for autonomous 
mission execution capabilities for any portfolio acquisition executive 
who leads an unmanned system portfolio. Such standards shall include, 
at a minimum--
            (1) the capability of unmanned systems within such 
        portfolio to execute mission objectives autonomously within the 
        domain of such systems, including in GPS-denied and 
        communications-denied environments;
            (2) the capability of such systems to integrate autonomy-
        enabling software consistent with a modular open systems 
        approach as defined in section 4401 of title 10, United States 
        Code;
            (3) common autonomy interfaces, data standards, and safety 
        and assurance criteria that permit the use of autonomy-enabling 
        and other mission-critical software across multiple platforms 
        and domains to the maximum extent practicable in alignment with 
        existing government reference architectures;
            (4) establishment of an autonomy software baseline and a 
        process for continuous integration, simulation and training, 
        security testing, and deployment of autonomy-enabling software 
        updates across systems within the portfolio; and
            (5) an acquisition preference for scalable commercial 
        solutions, including licensing and service agreements to enable 
        continuous improvement, training and simulation, and rapid 
        deployment, that--
                    (A) have been operationally validated in real-world 
                deployments to conflict zones; and
                    (B) have achieved a Technology Readiness Level of 7 
                or above.
    (d) Funding.--Activities under the Account shall be carried out 
using amounts authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2027 to 
Program Element 0604539D8Z on Line 115 of the account for ``Research, 
Development, Test, and Evaluation Defense-wide''.
    (e) Annual Report.--The Secretary of Defense shall include with the 
budget justification materials submitted to Congress in support of the 
budget of the Department of Defense for a fiscal year (as submitted 
with the budget of the President under section 1105(a) of title 31, 
United States Code) a report on the activities carried out under the 
Account for such fiscal year, including--
            (1) progress towards adoption of standards under subsection 
        (b);
            (2) results from cross-portfolio experimentation, 
        integration, and fielding activities conducted;
            (3) an assessment of software modernization efforts, 
        frequency of updates, cybersecurity posture, and workforce 
        readiness to support long-term sustainment of software-enabled 
        capabilities;
            (4) an inventory of programs that have transitioned from 
        the integration phase to the sustainment phase; and
            (5) identification of any statutory, regulatory, or 
        budgetary barriers limiting rapid integration of autonomy-
        enabling software across unmanned platforms.

SEC. 835. ESTABLISHMENT OF PATHFINDER PROGRAMS TO INFORM REQUIREMENTS 
              REFORM.

    (a) Requirement for Service-level Requirements Reform Pathfinder 
Programs.--Not later than 120 days after the date of the enactment of 
this section, each Secretary of a military department shall establish a 
program to be known as a ``Pathfinder Program'' to--
            (1) inform and assist in efforts to reorient and reform the 
        requirements process within such military department in 
        accordance with (b);
            (2) support the service chief concerned in the development 
        of capability requirement statements for equipping the armed 
        force concerned that--
                    (A) describes the operational problem to provide 
                necessary context for the capability requirement;
                    (B) proposes nonprescriptive solutions to 
                operational problems; and
                    (C) ensures system interoperability, where 
                appropriate, between and among joint military 
                capabilities (as defined in section 181 of title 10, 
                United States Code); and
            (3) develop and establish requirements-related processes of 
        the military department concerned in a manner that supports, 
        and is consistent with the Joint Force Requirements Process 
        prescribed in the ``Manual for the Joint Requirements Oversight 
        Council and the Joint Force Requirements Process'' (document 
        number CJCSM 5123.01; dated January 15, 2026).
    (b) Establishment.--A Pathfinder Program established in accordance 
with (a) shall seek to--
            (1) accelerate the delivery of capability requirements to 
        address operational problems;
            (2) remove bureaucratic barriers in the requirements 
        process;
            (3) provide operational users of required capabilities with 
        an independent voice and direct role to ensure that 
        capabilities meet the needs of such users;
            (4) apply data-based analytics for decision making related 
        to requirements, acquisition, and budgeting;
            (5) enable a clear, unbroken linkage from strategic 
        guidance to concepts to capabilities to budgeting;
            (6) drive design, development, and integration--
                    (A) to integrate processes across the military 
                department concerned and with the joint force as 
                required;
                    (B) to balance the urgency of immediate needs with 
                longer-term strategic investments;
                    (C) to support the breadth of existing innovative 
                technologies and major programs regardless of 
                acquisitions pathway; and
                    (D) to address all elements of doctrine, 
                organization, training, materiel, leadership and 
                education, personnel, facilities, and policy to deliver 
                holistic solutions considering all such elements; and
            (7) align authorities to responsibilities in order to 
        ensure that capability developers have the authority to execute 
        and are held accountable for outcomes.
    (c) Evaluation and Lessons Learned.--
            (1) In general.--Each Secretary of a military department 
        carrying out a Pathfinder Program shall observe, document, and 
        assess the execution of such Pathfinder Program, to enable the 
        development of recommendations to improve--
                    (A) speed, clarity, and effectiveness in the 
                prioritization of operation problems and the 
                development of capability requirements statements;
                    (B) alignment of requirements, acquisition, and 
                budgeting;
                    (C) integration of user feedback and operational 
                insights;
                    (D) effectiveness of engagement with private entity 
                partners; and
                    (E) alignment of requirements processes of military 
                departments with and in support of the Joint 
                Requirements Process.
    (d) Report to Congress.--Not later than one year after the date of 
the enactment of this section, the Secretary of Defense, in 
coordination with each Secretary of a military department, shall submit 
to the congressional defense committees a report containing--
            (1) barriers encountered the implementation of the 
        Pathfinder Program;
            (2) lessons learned and recommendations developed through 
        the implementation of the Pathfinder Program; and
            (3) recommended statutory, regulatory, or organizational 
        changes needed to accelerate the delivery of capability 
        requirements to address operational problems, and remove 
        bureaucratic barriers in the requirements process.
    (e) Termination.--
            (1) In general.--A Pathfinder Program established under 
        this section may be terminated at the discretion of the 
        Secretary concerned, but shall not be terminated on a date 
        prior to the day that is 24 months after the date of 
        establishment of such Pathfinder Program.
            (2) Notification.--Not less than 60 days before the date on 
        which the Secretary concerned prior terminates a Pathfinder 
        Program, such Secretary shall provide to the congressional 
        defense committees a notification of the intent to terminate 
        along with an updated report including the elements described 
        in subsection (d).
    (f) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The terms ``capability requirement'', ``operational 
        problem'', and ``service chief'' have the meanings given, 
        respectively, in section 3101 of title 10, United States Code.
            (2) The term ``requirements document'' has the meaning 
        provided in section 3104 of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 836. REQUIREMENTS FOR CERTAIN UNMANNED SURFACE VESSELS TO BE 
              MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES.

    (a) In General.--Subject to subsection (b), on or after the date of 
the enactment of this section, the Secretary of the Navy prioritize 
offers for a covered contract where the offeror provides assurances 
that--
            (1) the supply chain of the offeror for parts or components 
        of a covered program are domestic sources; and
            (2) the manufacturing, assembling, and finishing of parts 
        or components of a covered program occurs in the United States 
        and is conducted by entities, the primary place of business of 
        which is located in the United States.
    (b) Certification.--The Secretary may enter into a covered contract 
with an offeror that does not provide the assurances described in 
subsection (a) if the Secretary submits to the Committees on Armed 
Services of the Senate and House of Representatives a certification 
that no offeror that can provide such assurances is available to 
perform the contract.
    (c) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered contract'' means a contract or other 
        agreement for--
                    (A) the construction or manufacture of a covered 
                program or parts or components of a covered program;
                    (B) the integration of mechanical and electrical 
                systems associated with the power generation of such 
                covered program; or
                    (C) the operation or sustainment of a covered 
                program, where such contract or other agreement is for 
                the replacement of or improvements to components of a 
                covered program.
            (2) The term ``covered program'' means an unmanned surface 
        vessel acquired, leased, or operated under the Medium Unmanned 
        Surface Vessel program of the Department of the Navy.

  Subtitle C--Provisions Relating to Acquisition Workforce Development

SEC. 851. ACQUISITION WORKFORCE DATA ANALYTICS CAPABILITY.

    (a) Management for Acquisition Workforce Excellence.--Section 
1701a(b) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (10), by striking ``and'' at the end;
            (2) in paragraph (11), by striking the period at the end 
        and inserting ``; and''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
            ``(12) establish and maintain a Department-wide acquisition 
        workforce data analytics capability to collect, integrate, and 
        analyze data relating to the acquisition workforce in order to 
        support workforce planning and effective performance management 
        of the acquisition workforce, including by--
                    ``(A) integrating data from across the Department 
                of Defense relating to the size, composition, skills, 
                training, certifications, hiring, retention, 
                experience, and performance of the acquisition 
                workforce;
                    ``(B) enabling the assessment of the capacity and 
                capabilities of the acquisition workforce;
                    ``(C) identifying trends, risks, and constraints, 
                including current and projected workforce gaps, 
                affecting workforce readiness and the ability of the 
                acquisition workforce to achieve the objectives 
                described in subparagraph (E);
                    ``(D) informing decisions and resource allocation 
                relating to the recruitment, hiring, development, 
                training, credentialing, retention, and career 
                progression of the acquisition workforce; and
                    ``(E) ensuring that data and analytics generated by 
                the capability support--
                            ``(i) the objectives of the defense 
                        acquisition system established pursuant to 
                        section 3102 of this title; and
                            ``(ii) the key performance objectives for 
                        the acquisition workforce established under 
                        section 1722b(d) of this title.''.
    (b) Implementation of Analytics Capability.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense, acting through 
        the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment, 
        shall implement the capability required under paragraph (12) of 
        section 1701a(b) of title 10, United States Code, as added by 
        subsection (a), through the development and maintenance of a 
        dashboard or a similar data analytics or visualization tool for 
        such capability.
            (2) Data elements.--The tools, systems, or other means used 
        to implement the capability described in paragraph (1) shall, 
        to the maximum extent practicable, include Department of 
        Defense-wide acquisition workforce data and analytics necessary 
        to support strategic planning and management, including data 
        and analytics relating to--
                    (A) the size, composition, and geographic 
                distribution of the acquisition workforce;
                    (B) the skills, certifications, and experience of 
                members of the acquisition workforce, including 
                relevant education and professional experience;
                    (C) vacancy rates, time-to-hire metrics, and other 
                indicators of constraints on the capacity of the 
                acquisition workforce;
                    (D) the activities of the Department for 
                recruiting, hiring, and developing members of the 
                acquisition workforce, including the Defense Civilian 
                Training Corps established under section 2200g of title 
                10, United States Code;
                    (E) retention, attrition, career progression, and 
                related characteristics and trends, including 
                retirement eligibility and projected workforce changes 
                in the acquisition workforce;
                    (F) the performance of the acquisition workforce, 
                including measures relating to the execution of 
                acquisition programs and activities; and
                    (G) such other matters as the Under Secretary of 
                Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment determines 
                appropriate.
            (3) Use of commercial tools.--The Under Secretary of 
        Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment shall, to the maximum 
        extent practicable, use commercially available data analytics, 
        workforce management, and data visualization tools to support 
        the capability described in paragraph (1).
            (4) Limitation on development of custom information 
        technology.--The Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and 
        Sustainment may develop or acquire information technology that 
        is not commercially available to support the capability 
        described in paragraph (1) only if the Under Secretary 
        determines that no commercially available good or service can 
        meet the requirements of this subsection without more than 
        minor modifications.
            (5) Data access.--The Under Secretary of Defense for 
        Acquisition and Sustainment, in coordination with the Under 
        Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness and officials 
        responsible for data, digital, and information technology 
        policy and systems of the Department of Defense, shall ensure 
        the availability and integration of data necessary to carry out 
        the capability described in paragraph (1). Each Secretary of a 
        military department and each head of a Defense Agency shall 
        provide such data, in such format and such manner, as the Under 
        Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment determines 
        necessary to support such capability.
            (6) Workforce assessments.--The Under Secretary of Defense 
        for Acquisition and Sustainment shall use the capability 
        described in paragraph (1) to conduct regular assessments of 
        the capacity, capability, and distribution of the acquisition 
        workforce and provide recommendations to service acquisition 
        executives and component acquisition executives to address 
        identified shortfalls in the capacity and capabilities of the 
        acquisition workforce.
            (7) Definitions.--In this subsection, the terms 
        ``acquisition workforce'', ``Defense Agency'', ``military 
        department'', and ``service acquisition executive'' have the 
        meanings given such terms, respectively, in section 101(a) of 
        title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 852. CHIEF ACQUISITION TALENT OFFICER.

    (a) In General.--Subchapter I of chapter 87 of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended by inserting after section 1702 the following 
new sections:
``Sec. 1703. Chief Acquisition Talent Officer of the Department of 
              Defense
    ``(a) In General.--There is a Chief Acquisition Talent Officer of 
the Department of Defense, who shall be appointed by the Secretary of 
Defense and shall report to the Under Secretary of Defense for 
Acquisition and Sustainment.
    ``(b) Appointment Authorities.--The Secretary of Defense may 
appoint the Chief Acquisition Talent Officer of the Department of 
Defense as--
            ``(1) a member of the Senior Executive Service; or
            ``(2) a highly qualified expert under section 9903 of title 
        5, or other applicable authority.
    ``(c) Qualifications.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Chief Acquisition Talent Officer of 
        the Department of Defense shall possess substantial experience 
        in strategic talent management, workforce development, or 
        organizational leadership in large public or private sector 
        organizations.
            ``(2) Exclusivity.--An individual serving as the Chief 
        Acquisition Talent Officer of the Department of Defense may not 
        hold or occupy another position in the Department of Defense.
    ``(d) Responsibilities.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Chief Acquisition Talent Officer of 
        the Department of Defense shall support the Under Secretary of 
        Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment in carrying out the 
        responsibilities of the Under Secretary with respect to the 
        acquisition workforce under section 1702 of this title through 
        Department of Defense-wide strategy, planning, education, 
        training, and management of the acquisition workforce.
            ``(2) Specific duties.--In carrying out the 
        responsibilities under paragraph (1), the Chief Acquisition 
        Talent Officer of the Department of Defense shall--
                    ``(A) serve as the principal staff assistant to the 
                Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and 
                Sustainment on matters relating to acquisition 
                workforce talent management;
                    ``(B) engage with the service acquisition 
                executives, portfolio acquisition executives, and other 
                appropriate officials of the Department of Defense to 
                provide support and assistance with the 
                responsibilities of such officials related to the 
                planning, development, and management of the 
                acquisition workforce that are required to execute 
                acquisition programs and portfolios;
                    ``(C) use the Department-wide acquisition workforce 
                data analytics capability established under section 
                1701a(b)(12) of this title to assess the capacity of 
                the acquisition workforce, identify gaps in the 
                capabilities of the acquisition workforce, forecast the 
                needs of the acquisition workforce, and evaluate the 
                effectiveness of acquisition workforce development 
                initiatives and investments;
                    ``(D) develop and maintain a Department of Defense-
                wide acquisition workforce strategy to ensure that the 
                acquisition workforce has the capacity, capabilities, 
                and competencies necessary to achieve the objectives of 
                the defense acquisition system under section 3102 of 
                this title;
                    ``(E) enable the successful implementation of the 
                acquisition workforce strategy required by subparagraph 
                (D) by--
                            ``(i) assisting the Secretary of Defense in 
                        establishing policies and procedures for the 
                        effective management of the acquisition 
                        workforce in accordance with section 1701 of 
                        this title;
                            ``(ii) establishing Department-wide 
                        acquisition workforce planning processes; and
                            ``(iii) developing and implementing talent 
                        management initiatives for the acquisition 
                        workforce;
                    ``(F) coordinate with the Under Secretary of 
                Defense for Personnel and Readiness and the Secretaries 
                of the military departments to enable the alignment 
                of--
                            ``(i) specific education and training for 
                        members of the acquisition workforce who are 
                        members of the armed forces with general 
                        education and training requirements, including 
                        professional military education requirements 
                        for members of the armed forces; and
                            ``(ii) specific assignment and career 
                        development policies related to the civilian 
                        members of the acquisition workforce and the 
                        members of the acquisition workforce who are 
                        members of the armed forces;
                    ``(G) require the activities and curriculum of the 
                Defense Acquisition University and, as appropriate, 
                other education and training providers supporting the 
                acquisition workforce, to--
                            ``(i) align with the objectives of the 
                        defense acquisition system established pursuant 
                        to section 3102 of this title;
                            ``(ii) promote continuous learning and 
                        technical skills improvement across the 
                        acquisition workforce; and
                            ``(iii) support and enable the successful 
                        implementation of the acquisition workforce 
                        strategy required by subparagraph (D);
                    ``(H) support the integration of key performance 
                objectives for the acquisition workforce, established 
                under section 1722b(d) of this title, into the 
                training, certification, career development, and 
                performance management systems of the Department for 
                the acquisition workforce;
                    ``(I) assist the Under Secretary of Defense for 
                Acquisition and Sustainment in executing programs 
                related to the talent management initiatives of the 
                acquisition workforce, including the Defense Civilian 
                Training Corps authorized under section 2200g of this 
                title, and ensure that such programs are appropriately 
                integrated into Department-wide acquisition workforce 
                planning;
                    ``(J) promote and facilitate the use of the 
                authorities under section 1599g of this title and other 
                mechanisms to strengthen the acquisition workforce 
                through exchanges with the private sector;
                    ``(K) frequently conduct assessments of the 
                capacity, capability, and performance of the 
                acquisition workforce and develop and submit to the 
                Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and 
                Sustainment recommendations for Department-wide 
                acquisition workforce investments under the Defense 
                Acquisition Workforce Development Account established 
                under section 1705 of this title; and
                    ``(L) convene, not less frequently than 
                semiannually, the service acquisition executives, 
                Service Chief Acquisition Talent Officers, Component 
                Acquisition Executives (as defined in section 1703a(d) 
                of this title), and such other officers of the 
                Department as determined appropriate by the Chief 
                Acquisition Talent Officer of the Department to assess 
                the effectiveness of the acquisition workforce strategy 
                required by subparagraph (D) and review the performance 
                and priorities of the acquisition workforce across the 
                Department.
            ``(3) Talent management initiative defined.--In this 
        subsection, the term `talent management initiative' means the 
        activities of the Department of Defense relating to 
        recruitment, hiring, development, education, training, 
        credentialing, performance management, retention, succession 
        planning, and mobility, including rotations, reassignments, and 
        career progression pathways, for the acquisition workforce.
    ``(e) Acquisition Workforce Plans.--
            ``(1) In general.--In addition to the duties under 
        subsection (d), the Chief Acquisition Talent Officer of the 
        Department of Defense shall issue guidance requiring each 
        Service Chief Acquisition Talent Officer and Component Chief 
        Acquisition Talent Officer to develop and submit to the Chief 
        Acquisition Talent Officer of the Department of Defense not 
        less frequently than annually a plan for the acquisition 
        workforce of the applicable military department or component of 
        the Department of Defense that supports and enables the 
        successful implementation of the acquisition workforce strategy 
        required by subsection (d)(2)(D).
            ``(2) Timeline.--The Chief Acquisition Talent Officer of 
        the Department of Defense shall ensure that the plans required 
        under paragraph (1) are submitted in a timely manner so as to 
        inform the development of the budget submitted to Congress 
        under section 1105 of title 31.
            ``(3) Plan elements.--Each plan for the acquisition 
        workforce of a military department or component of the 
        Department of Defense submitted pursuant to paragraph (1) or 
        under paragraph (4) shall include--
                    ``(A) an assessment of the size, composition, and 
                distribution of such acquisition workforce;
                    ``(B) an identification of gaps in critical skills 
                and projected workforce needs of such acquisition 
                workforce, including anticipated hiring requirements 
                and requirements for emerging skills necessary to 
                support acquisition priorities;
                    ``(C) the hiring, retention, and workforce 
                development plans for such acquisition workforce;
                    ``(D) the anticipated requirements for and 
                availability of training programs and development 
                programs to support the hiring, retention, and 
                workforce development plans described in subparagraph 
                (C); and
                    ``(E) an explanation of how the acquisition 
                workforce plan supports the acquisition workforce 
                strategy required by subsection (d)(2)(D).
            ``(4) Alignment.--The Chief Acquisition Talent Officer of 
        the Department of Defense shall, for each plan submitted 
        pursuant to paragraph (1) or under paragraph (6)--
                    ``(A) evaluate whether such plan aligns with the 
                Department-wide acquisition workforce strategy and 
                priorities; and
                    ``(B) provide to the Under Secretary of Defense for 
                Acquisition and Sustainment--
                            ``(i) a recommendation regarding whether to 
                        approve such plan; and
                            ``(ii) recommendations regarding workforce 
                        investments associated with such plan, 
                        including investments under the Defense 
                        Acquisition Workforce Development Account 
                        established under section 1705 of this title, 
                        to ensure alignment with workforce plans 
                        approved by the Under Secretary and the 
                        Department-wide acquisition workforce strategy.
            ``(5) Flexibility for program adjustments.--In carrying out 
        this subsection, the Chief Acquisition Talent Officer of the 
        Department of Defense and the Under Secretary of Defense for 
        Acquisition and Sustainment shall ensure that workforce 
        planning, evaluation, and reporting under this subsection 
        remain responsive to changes in the requirements of acquisition 
        programs, including program terminations, restructurings, or 
        changes in scope.
            ``(6) Approval.--
                    ``(A) In general.--Not later than 90 days after the 
                date on which a Service Chief Acquisition Talent 
                Officer or Component Chief Acquisition Talent Officer 
                submits a plan for the acquisition workforce of the 
                military department or component of the Department 
                pursuant to paragraph (1) or under this paragraph, the 
                Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and 
                Sustainment shall--
                            ``(i) approve or reject such plan; and
                            ``(ii) provide to such Service Chief 
                        Acquisition Talent Officer or Component Chief 
                        Acquisition Talent Officer a written notice of 
                        such approval or rejection.
                    ``(B) Plan revision.--If the Under Secretary of 
                Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment rejects a plan 
                under subparagraph (A)--
                            ``(i) the Under Secretary shall include in 
                        the notice required by clause (ii) of such 
                        subparagraph a written explanation of the 
                        reasons for such rejection and any revisions 
                        required for such plan to be approved; and
                            ``(ii) the Service Chief Acquisition Talent 
                        Officer or Component Chief Acquisition Talent 
                        Officer that submitted such plan pursuant to 
                        paragraph (1) or under this paragraph shall 
                        revise such plan and submit such revised plan 
                        to the Chief Acquisition Talent Officer of the 
                        Department of Defense.
    ``(f) Report to Congress.--Not later than March 1 of each year, the 
Chief Acquisition Talent Officer of the Department of Defense shall 
submit to the congressional defense committees a report on the 
effectiveness of the Department-wide acquisition workforce strategy, 
including--
            ``(1) an assessment of workforce trends, hiring and 
        retention challenges, and critical skill gaps of the 
        acquisition workforce;
            ``(2) an evaluation of the extent to which the acquisition 
        workforces of the military departments and components are 
        aligned with the objectives of the defense acquisition system 
        established pursuant to section 3102 of this title and the 
        Department-wide acquisition workforce strategy required by 
        subsection (d)(2)(D);
            ``(3) a summary and assessment of the plans submitted under 
        subsection (e), including for each plan rejected under 
        subsection (e)(6), a summary of the reasons for such rejection; 
        and
            ``(4) recommendations for legislative and administrative 
        actions to address identified workforce gaps, improve workforce 
        performance, and strengthen the acquisition workforce.
    ``(g) Deputy Chief Acquisition Talent Officer.--The Secretary of 
Defense may appoint a Deputy Chief Acquisition Talent Officer of the 
Department of Defense, from among individuals serving in the Senior 
Executive Service or other appropriate positions in the Department of 
Defense, to assist the Chief Acquisition Talent Officer of the 
Department of Defense in carrying out the responsibilities of the Chief 
Acquisition Talent Officer of the Department of Defense under this 
section.
    ``(h) Personnel and Resources.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall ensure 
        that the Chief Acquisition Talent Officer of the Department of 
        Defense is provided dedicated personnel and resources necessary 
        to carry out the responsibilities of the Chief Acquisition 
        Talent Officer of the Department of Defense.
            ``(2) Dedicated personnel and resources defined.--In this 
        subsection, `dedicated personnel and resources' means personnel 
        and resources that are--
                    ``(A) exclusively engaged in supporting the Chief 
                Acquisition Talent Officer of the Department of Defense 
                in carrying out the responsibilities of the Chief 
                Acquisition Talent Officer of the Department of 
                Defense; and
                    ``(B) under the exclusive authority of the Chief 
                Acquisition Talent Officer of the Department of 
                Defense.
``Sec. 1703a. Service and Component Chief Acquisition Talent Officers
    ``(a) In General.--The Secretary of each military department and 
the head of each component of the Department of Defense for which there 
is a component acquisition executive shall designate a senior official 
of such military department or component as the Service Chief 
Acquisition Talent Officer of such military department or the Component 
Chief Acquisition Talent Officer of such component.
    ``(b) Reporting.--
            ``(1) Military departments.--A Service Chief Acquisition 
        Talent Officer of a military department designated under 
        subsection (a) shall report to the service acquisition 
        executive of such military department.
            ``(2) Components.--A Component Chief Acquisition Talent 
        Officer of a component of the Department of Defense designated 
        under subsection (a) shall report to the component acquisition 
        executive of such component, except that if such Component 
        Chief Acquisition Talent Officer is the component acquisition 
        executive of such component, such officer shall report to the 
        head of such component with respect to the duties of such 
        Component Chief Acquisition Talent Officer under this section.
    ``(c) Duties.--A Service Chief Acquisition Talent Officer of a 
military department or Component Chief Acquisition Talent Officer of a 
component of the Department of Defense designated under subsection (a) 
shall, subject to the authority, direction, and control of the official 
to whom such Service Chief Acquisition Talent Officer or Component 
Chief Acquisition Talent Officer reports under subsection (b)--
            ``(1) develop, submit to the Chief Acquisition Talent 
        Officer of the Department of Defense, and implement each plan 
        for the acquisition workforce of such military department or 
        component required under section 1703(e) of this title in 
        accordance with the guidance issued by the Chief Acquisition 
        Talent Officer of the Department of Defense;
            ``(2) oversee the execution of workforce plans and talent 
        management initiatives for the acquisition workforce of such 
        military department or component in support of the Department-
        wide acquisition workforce strategy;
            ``(3) advise the official to whom such Service Chief 
        Acquisition Talent Officer or Component Chief Acquisition 
        Talent Officer reports under subsection (b) on matters relating 
        to the readiness of the acquisition workforce of such military 
        department or component;
            ``(4) support the service acquisition executive, portfolio 
        acquisition executive, or component acquisition executive in 
        identifying and addressing acquisition workforce requirements 
        necessary to execute acquisition programs and portfolios;
            ``(5) coordinate with the Chief Acquisition Talent Officer 
        of the Department of Defense on Defense-wide initiatives and 
        programs for the acquisition workforce, including 
        implementation of the Department-wide acquisition workforce 
        strategy;
            ``(6) support the alignment of education and training for 
        members of the acquisition workforce of such military 
        department or component to enable the alignment of--
                    ``(A) specific education and training for members 
                of the acquisition workforce with general education and 
                training requirements, including professional military 
                education requirements for members of the armed forces; 
                and
                    ``(B) specific assignment and career development 
                policies related to the civilian members of the 
                acquisition workforce and the members of the 
                acquisition workforce who are members of the armed 
                forces;
            ``(7) establish hiring priorities and promote the effective 
        use of hiring authorities for the acquisition workforce of such 
        military department or component;
            ``(8) support the use of the authorities under section 
        1599g of this title and other mechanisms to strengthen the 
        acquisition workforce of such military department or component 
        through public-private talent exchanges;
            ``(9) provide to the Under Secretary of Defense for 
        Acquisition and Sustainment data related to the acquisition 
        workforce of such military department or component as required 
        to support the Department-wide acquisition workforce data 
        analytics capability and workforce planning; and
            ``(10) perform such other duties as determined appropriate 
        by the official to whom such Service Chief Acquisition Talent 
        Officer or Component Chief Acquisition Talent Officer reports 
        under subsection (b).
    ``(d) Component Acquisition Executive Defined.--In this subsection, 
the term `component acquisition executive' means the acquisition 
executive of a component of the Department of Defense, including 
combatant commands and the Defense Logistics Agency, who is responsible 
for all acquisition functions of such component, except that such term 
does not include service acquisition executives.''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections of subchapter I of 
chapter 87 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by inserting 
after the item relating to section 1702 the following new items:

``1703. Chief Acquisition Talent Officer of the Department of Defense.
``1703a. Service and Component Chief Acquisition Talent Officers.''.
    (c) Conforming Amendment.--
            (1) Defense acquisition university.--Section 1746(e) of 
        title 10, United States Code, is amended--
                    (A) by redesignating paragraphs (2) and (3) as 
                paragraphs (3) and (4), respectively; and
                    (B) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following 
                new paragraph:
            ``(2) The President of the Defense Acquisition University 
        shall report directly to the Chief Acquisition Talent Officer 
        of the Department of Defense.''.
            (2) Defense civilian and training corps.--Section 2200g of 
        title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end 
        the following new subsection:
    ``(d) Administration.--The Chief Acquisition Talent Officer of the 
Department of Defense shall administer and oversee the Defense Civilian 
Training Corps program under the authority of the Under Secretary of 
Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment.''.
    (d) Implementation.--
            (1) Chief acquisition talent officer of the department of 
        defense.--The Secretary of Defense shall implement section 1703 
        of title 10, United States Code, as added by subsection (a), 
        not later than one year after the date of the enactment of this 
        Act.
            (2) Service and component chief acquisition talent 
        officers.--Each Secretary of a military department (as defined 
        in section 101(a) of title 10, United States Code) and each 
        head of a component of the Department of Defense described in 
        subsection (a) of section 1703a of title 10, United States 
        Code, as added by subsection (a), shall implement such section 
        with respect to such military department or component, as 
        applicable, not later than one year after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act.

SEC. 853. CODIFICATION OF ACQUISITION WORKFORCE KEY PERFORMANCE 
              OBJECTIVES.

    (a) In General.--Section 1722b of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) in subsection (b), by adding at the end the following 
        new paragraph:
            ``(6) Key performance objectives described in subsection 
        (d).''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(d) Acquisition Workforce Key Performance Objectives.--(1) Not 
later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this subsection, 
the Secretary of Defense shall implement mandatory key performance 
objectives (in this subsection referred to as `KPOs') for evaluating 
the performance of civilian members of the acquisition workforce.
    ``(2) The KPOs implemented under paragraph (1) shall--
            ``(A) include strategic outcome objectives and workforce 
        behavioral objectives for the workforce; and
            ``(B) be developed in a manner that enables an assessment 
        of the degree of alignment between--
                    ``(i) the objectives of the defense acquisition 
                system established by section 3102 of this title; and
                    ``(ii) the prudent and appropriate use by civilian 
                members of the acquisition workforce of innovative, 
                risk-tolerant practices in achieving those objectives.
    ``(3) The strategic outcome objectives required under paragraph 
(2)(A) shall align with the objectives of the defense acquisition 
system established pursuant to section 3102 of this title and shall 
address strategic acquisition mission areas, including--
            ``(A) expeditiously delivering capabilities to enhance the 
        operational readiness of the armed forces and enable the 
        missions of the Department of Defense;
            ``(B) enabling and supporting the integration of innovative 
        solutions to enhance military effectiveness and responsiveness 
        to emerging threats;
            ``(C) ensuring supply chain and industrial base resilience 
        and surge capabilities to support contingency and operational 
        plans of the Department of Defense;
            ``(D) cultivating a leadership and organizational culture 
        in civilian members of the acquisition workforce that 
        encourages responsible risk-taking, collaboration, and learning 
        through failure; and
            ``(E) maintaining a current and proficient workforce 
        through continuous education, including digital and artificial 
        intelligence literacy and technical proficiency necessary for 
        the job function of an individual.
    ``(4) The workforce behavioral objectives required under paragraph 
(2)(A) shall be designed to develop the critical skills and behaviors 
of civilian members of the acquisition workforce, including--
            ``(A) the adoption of innovative acquisition authorities 
        and approaches;
            ``(B) a preference for commercial products and commercial 
        services and supporting market research of commercial or 
        emerging technologies;
            ``(C) engagement with end users to incorporate feedback 
        into acquisition decisions and acquisition program adjustments;
            ``(D) the ability to use iterative development cycles and 
        inform program tradeoffs, including discontinuing or 
        terminating the development of capabilities--
                    ``(i) that no longer align with approved capability 
                requirements (as defined in section 3101 of this title) 
                or priorities; or
                    ``(ii) that are experiencing significant cost 
                growth, performance or technical deficiencies, or 
                delays in schedule;
            ``(E) the pursuit of professional development to broaden 
        expertise and assume expanded responsibilities in cross-
        functional initiatives; and
            ``(F) the ability to overcome obstacles to prioritize end-
        user outcomes in acquisition execution.
    ``(5) The KPOs implemented under paragraph (1) shall be integrated 
into--
            ``(A) annual performance appraisals for civilian members of 
        the acquisition workforce;
            ``(B) promotion, bonus, and assignment considerations for 
        such members; and
            ``(C) requirements for certification, training, and 
        continuing education under this chapter.''.
    (b) Repeal.--Section 826 of the National Defense Authorization Act 
for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60) is repealed.
    (c) Application to Members of the Armed Forces.--Not later than 
October 1, 2027, the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the 
Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment and the 
Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness, shall submit to 
the congressional defense committees a report assessing the feasibility 
and advisability of applying the key performance objectives established 
under section 1722b(d) of title 10, United States Code (as added by 
this section), to members of the Armed Forces serving in the 
acquisition workforce (as defined in section 101 of such title), 
including recommendations on how such objectives could be appropriately 
adapted for such members.

SEC. 854. DEMONSTRATED PROFICIENCY REQUIREMENTS FOR CRITICAL 
              ACQUISITION POSITIONS.

    Section 1731 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding 
at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(d) Demonstrated Proficiency Requirements.--(1) In addition to 
the requirements under section 1735 of this title, the Secretary of 
Defense shall require that individuals selected for, and individuals 
serving in, civilian critical acquisition positions demonstrate 
appropriate proficiency in achieving the key performance objectives 
established under section 1722b(d) of this title.
    ``(2) The Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and 
Sustainment, in coordination with each service acquisition executive 
and component acquisition executive, shall establish and maintain a 
Department-wide framework for assessing demonstrated proficiency under 
this subsection, including methods for evaluating demonstrated 
proficiency in achieving the performance objectives described in 
paragraph (1), such as the use of covered authorities in programmatic 
or operational settings.
    ``(3) The Secretary shall ensure that the requirements established 
under this subsection are applied in a manner consistent with the 
acquisition workforce career field and responsibilities of the 
position.
    ``(4) The Secretary may not solely rely on the completion of 
training requirements of an individual, or any certification or 
credential earned by an individual, to satisfy the requirements of this 
subsection.
    ``(5) The Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and 
Sustainment, in coordination with each service acquisition executive 
and component acquisition executive, shall use the framework 
established under paragraph (2) to--
            ``(A) identify gaps in demonstrated proficiency among 
        individuals selected for, or serving in, critical acquisition 
        positions; and
            ``(B) ensure that such individuals who do not demonstrate 
        appropriate proficiency are provided targeted and structured 
        professional development opportunities (including experiential 
        learning, training, or other relevant opportunities) to address 
        such gaps.
    ``(6) The Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and 
Sustainment shall periodically review and update the framework 
established under paragraph (2) to ensure alignment with the objectives 
of the defense acquisition system under section 3102 of this title and 
to adapt such framework to incorporate new acquisition practices and 
technologies.
    ``(7) In this subsection, the term `covered authorities' means the 
following:
            ``(A) Chapter 247 of this title.
            ``(B) Sections 4021 and 4022 of this title.
            ``(C) Section 3602 of this title.
            ``(D) Any other acquisition authority, pathway, or method 
        established by the Secretary to enable the rapid, flexible, or 
        iterative development and delivery of a capability.
    ``(8) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this subsection shall be 
construed to modify or supersede any performance management system 
established under chapter 43 of title 5, United States Code, or to 
alter any rights or obligations under applicable collective bargaining 
agreements.''.

SEC. 855. EXTENSION AND MODIFICATION OF ACQUISITION WORKFORCE 
              DEMONSTRATION PROJECT.

    (a) Increase in Limitation on Number of Participants.--Section 1762 
of title 10, United States Code, is amended by striking ``130,000'' and 
inserting ``143,000''.
    (b) Extension.--Subsection (g) of such section is amended by 
striking ``December 31, 2031'' and inserting ``December 31, 2035''.
    (c) Briefing on Utilization of Acquisition Workforce Demonstration 
Project Authorities.--Not later than December 1, 2026, the Under 
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment shall provide a 
briefing to the congressional defense committees on the planned use of 
authorities under section 1762 of title 10, United States Code, as 
amended by this section, to support the acquisition workforce. Such 
briefing shall include--
            (1) the current number of individuals participating in the 
        acquisition workforce demonstration project under such section 
        1762, disaggregated by military department and Defense Agency;
            (2) expected growth in participation in the demonstration 
        project over the next 24 months, including anticipated and 
        confirmed transitions of organizations or elements into the 
        demonstration project and estimated implementation timelines 
        for such transitions;
            (3) an identification of military departments and other 
        elements of the Department of Defense that have expressed 
        interest in expanding participation in the demonstration 
        project or transitioning additional individuals into the 
        demonstration project;
            (4) an assessment of the extent to which statutory 
        limitations on the authorities in section 1762 affect workforce 
        planning or use of the authorities;
            (5) steps taken to increase and measure average workforce 
        understanding of how contributions scores under the 
        demonstration project are derived;
            (6) findings relevant to the demonstration project based on 
        data from tools used to measure employee satisfaction, such as 
        Defense Organizational Climate Surveys or the Federal Employee 
        Viewpoint Survey; and
            (7) recommendations on any additional steps, authorities, 
        or flexibilities the Under Secretary considers necessary to 
        support the development of the acquisition workforce.

               Subtitle D--Intellectual Property Matters

SEC. 861. REFORM OF TECHNICAL DATA AND SOFTWARE RIGHTS TO SUPPORT 
              COMPETITION, SUSTAINMENT, AND READINESS.

    (a) Default Government Purpose Rights for Deliverables.--Chapter 
239 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by inserting after 
section 3775 the following new section:
``Sec. 3776. Default government purpose rights for deliverables under 
              Department of Defense contracts
    ``(a) Default Rights.--Except as provided in subsection (b), any 
technical data, computer software, or computer software documentation 
delivered under a contract, subcontract, or other agreement entered 
into by the Department of Defense shall be provided with government 
purpose rights unless the contractor establishes, through clear and 
convincing evidence, entitlement to more restrictive rights.
    ``(b) Contractor Burden.--A contractor asserting less-than-
government purpose rights shall provide--
            ``(1) a compliant assertions table identifying each 
        specific item of data or software claimed;
            ``(2) factual documentation of private development funding;
            ``(3) clause-specific unlimited-rights exclusions applied 
        at the lowest practicable segregable level; and
            ``(4) corresponding portion markings on the deliverables.
    ``(c) Failure to Substantiate.--Any failure by a contractor to 
comply with subsection (b) shall result in the deliverable being 
treated as provided with government purpose rights.''.
    (b) Improper Markings of Critical Items.--For any critical 
readiness items of supply (as that term is defined in section 
4324(d)(4) of title 10, United States Code) that are noncommercial 
items, if the Secretary of Defense determines that a contractor--
            (1) applied an incorrect restrictive marking;
            (2) failed to exclude unlimited- or unrestricted-rights 
        categories;
            (3) failed to portion-mark at the required segregable 
        level; or
            (4) submitted an incomplete or invalid assertions table;
        then all affected technical data, computer software, and 
        documentation shall be deemed as government purpose rights.
    (c) Report on Clawback Authorities for Improper Restrictive 
Markings.--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 assessing the feasibility and advisability 
of establishing a mechanism to recover excess payments made by the 
Department of Defense in cases where improper restrictive markings, 
invalid assertions tables, or other unjustified restrictions on 
technical data, computer software, or computer software documentation 
contributed to reduced competition or sole-source procurement 
conditions. The report shall include--
            (1) an assessment of the extent to which improper 
        restrictions on technical data or software rights may have 
        resulted in excess costs to the Department;
            (2) an evaluation of existing authorities available to 
        recover such excess payments;
            (3) an assessment of the legal, contractual, and 
        evidentiary challenges associated with establishing a clawback 
        mechanism;
            (4) options for calculating excess payments attributable to 
        improper restrictions on technical data or software rights; and
            (5) recommendations regarding whether Congress should 
        authorize a clawback mechanism and, if so, the structure of 
        such authority.
    (d) Modifications to Rights in Technical Data.--Section 3771(b) of 
title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (3)(C), by inserting ``, and for which the 
        United States shall have government purpose rights, unless the 
        Government and the contractor negotiate different license 
        rights'' after ``component)''; and
            (2) in paragraph (4)(A)--
                    (A) in clause (ii), by striking ``; or'' and 
                inserting a semicolon;
                    (B) by redesignating clause (iii) as clause (iv); 
                and
                    (C) by inserting after clause (ii) the following 
                new clause:
                            ``(iii) is a release, disclosure, or use of 
                        detailed manufacturing or process data--
                                    ``(I) that is necessary for 
                                operation, maintenance, installation, 
                                or training and shall be used only for 
                                operation, maintenance, installation, 
                                or training purposes supporting wartime 
                                operations or contingency operations; 
                                and
                                    ``(II) for which the head of an 
                                agency determines that the original 
                                supplier of such data will be unable to 
                                satisfy military readiness or 
                                operational requirements for such 
                                operations; or''.
    (e) Applicability.--This section and the amendments made by this 
section shall apply--
            (1) in competitive procurements, to solicitations issued 
        after the date of the enactment of this Act and awards made in 
        connection with such solicitations; and
            (2) in non-competitive procurements, to awards made after 
        the date of the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 862. INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY OMBUDSMAN; VOLUNTARY EXPERT MEDIATION 
              FOR CERTAIN INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY MATTERS.

    (a) In General.--Subchapter III of chapter 275 of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended by inserting after section 3791 the following 
new sections:
``Sec. 3792. Intellectual Property Ombudsman
    ``(a) Designation.--(1) The Secretary of Defense, acting through 
the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Industrial Base Policy, shall 
designate a senior official, to be known as the Intellectual Property 
Ombudsman, to serve as ombudsman on matters involving intellectual 
property acquired or licensed (or proposed to be acquired or licensed) 
by the Department.
    ``(2) The Ombudsman shall be a senior official with--
            ``(A) demonstrated expertise in matters involving 
        intellectual property acquired or licensed (or proposed to be 
        acquired or licensed) by the Department, including the 
        provisions of the Department of Defense Supplement to the 
        Federal Acquisition Regulation that relate to technical data 
        and computer software; and
            ``(B) at least 5 years of experience on intellectual 
        property matters, of which at least 2 years must have been 
        representing or advising covered contractors of the Department 
        on matters involving intellectual property acquired or licensed 
        (or proposed to be acquired or licensed) by the Government.
    ``(b) Preservation of Independence.--(1) The Ombudsman shall serve 
within the Office of the Assistant Secretary and report directly to the 
Assistant Secretary, without intervening authority, and shall not 
report to or receive direction from any military department, agency, 
combatant command, or other element of the Department.
    ``(2) The Assistant Secretary may assign to the official serving as 
Ombudsman other primary or collateral duties to the extent the official 
remains able to carry out his or her duties as Ombudsman, except that 
the official--
            ``(A) may not perform any duty, or engage in any activity, 
        that could compromise his or her independence as Ombudsman; and
            ``(B) may not advise on, or participate in, any source 
        selection process, except to the extent necessary to carry out 
        his or her duties as Ombudsman.
    ``(3) The Ombudsman shall not be subject to removal, demotion, or 
other adverse personnel action based on the substance of any advice, 
guidance, opinion, or recommendation provided by the Ombudsman to a 
covered contractor or to a contracting officer or other Department 
official.
    ``(c) Personnel and Resources.--The Assistant Secretary shall 
ensure that the Ombudsman is provided with personnel and resources 
sufficient to carry out his or her duties as Ombudsman.
    ``(d) Duties.--(1) The Ombudsman shall, with respect to questions 
or disputes involving intellectual property acquired or licensed (or 
proposed to be acquired or licensed) by the Department, including 
questions or disputes involving rights and obligations relating to the 
delivery of, or access to, such intellectual property--
            ``(A) serve as the focal point for assisting covered 
        contractors of the Department on such questions or disputes;
            ``(B) facilitate communication between covered contractors 
        and appropriate senior officials of the Department on such 
        questions or disputes;
            ``(C) promote the use of collaborative alternative dispute 
        resolution techniques such as mediation to facilitate the 
        expeditious and cost-effective resolution of such questions or 
        disputes, when appropriate;
            ``(D) provide guidance to covered contractors and 
        contracting officers with respect to such questions or 
        disputes; and
            ``(E) upon request of a covered contractor or contracting 
        officer involved in such a question or dispute--
                    ``(i) within 45 days after the request was made--
                            ``(I) obtain from the covered contractor 
                        (and any subcontractor involved in the question 
                        or dispute) and from the contracting officer 
                        information relevant to the question or 
                        dispute; and
                            ``(II) complete a review of such 
                        information;
                    ``(ii) promptly thereafter, develop and provide 
                guidance to the covered contractor, the contracting 
                officer, or both on matters relevant to the question or 
                dispute, such as--
                            ``(I) relevant laws and regulations and how 
                        they apply to the question or dispute;
                            ``(II) alternative approaches to 
                        acquisition or licensing that may be available 
                        under applicable laws and regulations, such as 
                        specifically negotiated licenses (including 
                        specially negotiated licenses under section 
                        3774(c) of this title); and
                            ``(III) appropriate valuation of 
                        intellectual property under standard industry 
                        valuation techniques, including cost, value, 
                        capability, market, and income-based 
                        techniques; and
                    ``(iii) facilitate communications, and participate 
                in meetings, between the covered contractor and the 
                contracting officer.
    ``(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), the authority of the Ombudsman 
shall extend only to questions and disputes between covered contractors 
and the Department, and shall not extend to questions or disputes 
between or among covered contractors.
    ``(e) Nature of Guidance.--Guidance provided by the Ombudsman under 
this section--
            ``(1) may include analyses, opinions, and recommendations;
            ``(2) shall be independent and neutral with respect to the 
        covered contractor, the contracting officer, and the 
        Government, and
            ``(3) shall be advisory only and not binding on the covered 
        contractor, the contracting officer, or the Government.
    ``(f) Communications Between Contractor and Ombudsman; 
Confidentiality; Restrictions on Government.--(1) Any communication 
between a covered contractor and the Ombudsman, including the fact that 
such a communication occurred, shall be treated as confidential and 
shall not be disclosed to any person or entity that is not a party to 
the question or dispute or does not have an interest in the specific 
question or dispute without the consent of the covered contractor.
    ``(2) The Government shall not require a covered contractor to 
disclose any such communication and shall not use any such 
communication as a basis for evaluating a proposal, making an award, or 
challenging a restriction.
    ``(3) A requirement to publish a copy of, or any other information 
with respect to, communications between a covered contractor and the 
Ombudsman shall not apply to the extent such copy (or portion thereof) 
or information would be subject to withholding from public disclosure 
under section 552 of title 5.
    ``(g) Inferences.--The decision of a covered contractor to request, 
or decline to request, assistance from the Ombudsman shall not give 
rise to any inference regarding the validity of the covered 
contractor's assertions related to intellectual property and shall not 
be disclosed or referenced in any validation challenge, litigation, or 
other legal proceeding.
    ``(h) Consultation.--The Assistant Secretary shall establish a 
mechanism for regular consultation with the defense industry, portfolio 
acquisition executives, program managers, product support managers, and 
other officials of the Department responsible for sustainment of 
defense systems regarding the utility and effectiveness of the 
Ombudsman function and emerging intellectual property issues.
    ``(i) Public Reporting of Statistics.--On an annual basis, the 
Ombudsman shall make publicly available a report providing statistical 
information on the assistance specified in subsection (e) that was 
provided to covered contractors during the annual period covered by the 
report. The statistical information shall be presented in an aggregated 
or anonymized format and shall include information on the number of 
requests, the nature of requests, the nature of the contractors (such 
as small business concerns), the disposition of the requests, and the 
number of days from receipt of request to final disposition of the 
request.
    ``(j) Reports to Congress.--On an annual basis, the Ombudsman shall 
submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House 
of Representatives a report on the activities performed during the 
annual period covered by the report, including any recommendations for 
changes in law, regulation, policy, procedure, or practice that the 
Ombudsman considers appropriate.
    ``(k) Definitions.--In this section--
            ``(1) the term `covered contractor' includes a contractor 
        or subcontractor (or prospective contractor or subcontractor); 
        and
            ``(2) the term `subcontractor' includes a subcontractor at 
        any tier.
``Sec. 3792a. Rights in covered data: voluntary expert mediation
    ``(a) Establishment and Availability of Process.--The Secretary of 
Defense shall establish an expert mediation process under this section 
and shall make that process available to covered contractors and 
contracting officers to facilitate the resolution of questions or 
disputes related to covered data.
    ``(b) Matters Addressed.--The process established under subsection 
(a) may be used to address any intellectual property matters relevant 
to the resolution of the question or dispute, including matters such as 
the following:
            ``(1) The scope, terms, or interpretation of any relevant 
        agreement with respect to the intellectual property.
            ``(2) The scope of the rights acquired or licensed (or 
        proposed to be acquired or licensed) by the Government in the 
        intellectual property.
            ``(3) To the extent the Government's rights in intellectual 
        property are insufficient, or perceived as insufficient, to 
        meet the Department's identified requirement, any matters 
        necessary to address the insufficiency.
            ``(4) To the extent the intellectual property involves more 
        than one covered contractor, any matters necessary to address 
        the respective rights of the Government and each such 
        contractor.
    ``(c) Availability and Effect.--The process established under 
subsection (a) shall be available whenever a question or dispute 
covered by subsection (a) has arisen, including before, during, or 
after a procurement and before, during, or after the administration of 
a contract. It shall be available without regard to, and without effect 
on, any other dispute resolution processes that may be available, and 
without tolling any periods or deadlines under any other dispute 
resolution processes or under any applicable statute of limitations.
    ``(d) Participation Is Voluntary.--Participation in the process 
established under subsection (a) shall be strictly voluntary, both on 
the part of the contracting officer and on the part of the covered 
contractor, except as provided in subsection (h).
    ``(e) Initiation and Participation.--(1) Within 10 days after 
receiving a request under this subsection, a party shall submit to the 
other party a written response either accepting or declining the 
request.
    ``(2) A party submitting a written request to initiate, or any 
written response accepting such a request, shall include facts 
supporting the position of the party that the requirements of 
paragraphs (1) and (2) of subsection (a) are met.
    ``(3) If the request to initiate is accepted, a panel shall be 
established under subsection (f) and mediation shall commence under 
subsection (g).
    ``(f) Establishment of Panel.--(1) Mediation under the process 
established under subsection (a) shall be conducted by a panel 
established under this subsection.
    ``(2) The Secretary may use existing authorities, including those 
in paragraphs (2), (3), (4), and (6) of section 1707(d) of this title, 
to establish the panel.
    ``(3) The panel shall be composed of three members, each of whom 
shall be an individual with--
            ``(A) at least 5 years of experience in alternative dispute 
        resolution; and
            ``(B) demonstrated expertise in at least two of the 
        following areas: intellectual property law, patent licensing, 
        government contracts data rights, technical data 
        classification, and software licensing.
    ``(4) Of the three members--
            ``(A) one shall be selected by the covered contractor and 
        shall have significant experience in intellectual property or 
        data rights matters;
            ``(B) one shall be selected by the Department and shall 
        have significant experience in intellectual property or data 
        rights matters in government contracts, such as through service 
        as a contracting officer, agency counsel, board of contract 
        appeals judge, or Court of Federal Claims judge; and
            ``(C) one shall be selected by the other two members and 
        shall serve as the panel chair.
    ``(5) If the question or dispute involves the valuation of 
intellectual property, the member selected under paragraph (4)(C) shall 
have significant experience with standard industry valuation 
techniques, including cost, market, and income.
    ``(6) An individual may not serve as a member of the panel if that 
individual has a financial interest in the outcome or any other 
conflict of interest that would undermine impartiality.
    ``(7) In a case in which there is a vacancy in the membership of 
the panel, a new member of the panel shall be selected as soon as 
practicable to fill the vacancy in accordance with paragraph (4).
    ``(g) Mediation Period.--The panel shall be established as soon as 
practicable and shall commence the mediation not later than 30 days 
after the date on which the panel is established, except to the extent 
the parties agree to a later date. The mediation shall end not later 
than 90 days after the date on which the mediation commenced, except to 
the extent the parties agree to a later date.
    ``(h) Effect of Mediation Settlement or Panel Recommendations.--(1) 
Except as provided in paragraphs (2) and (4), the results of the 
mediation shall be advisory only and shall not be binding on either 
party.
    ``(2) To the extent the parties reach a resolution, the parties 
shall memorialize the resolution in a settlement agreement, which shall 
be binding upon the parties. Any such agreement shall--
            ``(A) be executed by the contracting officer and an 
        authorized representative of the covered contractor;
            ``(B) specifically reference the mediation; and
            ``(C) be incorporated into any applicable contract by 
        modification.
    ``(3) To the extent the parties do not reach a full resolution--
            ``(A) either party may pursue any remedy otherwise 
        available under chapter 71 of title 41 or other applicable law; 
        and
            ``(B) the mediation shall not be deemed to have resolved 
        the dispute for purposes of chapter 71 of title 41.
    ``(4) In a case in which the request to initiate the mediation 
regarding a contract entered into after the date of the enactment of 
this section was made by the Department and no resolution is reached, 
the following shall apply:
            ``(A) The panel may recommend to the Secretary of Defense 
        that the covered contractor with rights in the subject covered 
        data be required to provide non-deliverable access to such 
        covered data if--
                    ``(i) the panel finds that access to such covered 
                data is necessary--
                            ``(I) to address a critical operational 
                        requirement;
                            ``(II) to meet a critical materiel 
                        readiness objective for a major weapon system 
                        (as established in accordance with section 118 
                        of this title); or
                            ``(III) to address a shortfall in a 
                        critical readiness item of supply (as defined 
                        in section 4324 of this title) or recurring 
                        insufficiency of supply that the responsible 
                        contractor has failed to remedy in response to 
                        a corrective action plan developed in 
                        accordance with section 4323 of this title; and
                    ``(ii) the requirement for such covered data was 
                reviewed under section 805 of the National Defense 
                Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (10 U.S.C. 3771 
                note) and an insufficiency was identified under 
                subsection (d) of such section.
            ``(B) Such a recommendation--
                    ``(i) shall ensure release rights consistent with 
                commercially reasonable terms and conditions (subject 
                to later definitized consideration to reflect 
                development at private expense); and
                    ``(ii) may include a right to release to a covered 
                government support contractor (as defined in section 
                3775 of this title)--
                            ``(I) subject to a prohibition that the 
                        covered government support contractor to which 
                        the data is released may not further release, 
                        disclose, or use the covered data beyond the 
                        purpose for which it was released; and
                            ``(II) subject to notice by the contracting 
                        officer to the covered contractor of any such 
                        release.
            ``(C) If the Secretary approves the recommendation, the 
        recommendation shall be binding on the covered contractor and 
        the Department, subject to the availability of appropriations. 
        The parties shall memorialize the recommendation in a 
        settlement agreement, as described in paragraph (2). To the 
        extent the recommendation does not reach a full resolution of 
        the dispute, paragraph (3) shall apply.
    ``(i) Confidentiality; Protection of Information.--(1) The 
mediation shall be conducted in accordance with section 574 of title 5.
    ``(2) Each member of the panel shall--
            ``(A) sign a nondisclosure agreement, as appropriate, to 
        protect proprietary or nonpublic data;
            ``(B) access and use proprietary or nonpublic data 
        furnished to the panel only for the purposes of the mediation;
            ``(C) take all reasonable steps to protect proprietary and 
        nonpublic data furnished to the panel; and
            ``(D) not use proprietary or nonpublic data furnished to 
        the panel to compete for Government or nongovernment contracts.
    ``(j) Definitions.--In this section--
            ``(1) the term `covered contractor' includes a contractor 
        or subcontractor;
            ``(2) the term `covered data' means technical data and 
        computer software required to enable the Department of Defense 
        or government authorized repair contractors performing under a 
        support contract, to perform repair or maintenance actions on a 
        covered system;
            ``(3) the term `covered system' means--
                    ``(A) a major defense acquisition program, as 
                defined in section 4201 of this title; or
                    ``(B) an acquisition program or project that is 
                carried out using the rapid prototyping or rapid 
                fielding acquisition pathway under section 3602 of this 
                title that is estimated by the Secretary of Defense to 
                require an eventual total expenditure described in 
                section 4201(a)(2) of this title;
            ``(4) the term `non-deliverable access' means a model under 
        which the contractor provides access to intellectual property, 
        including any associated license agreements for such 
        intellectual property; and
            ``(5) the term `subcontractor' includes a subcontractor at 
        any tier.''.
    (b) Implementation.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall--
            (1) implement sections 3792 and 3792a of title 10, United 
        States Code, as inserted by this section;
            (2) provide a briefing to the congressional defense 
        committees on the implementation of such sections; and
            (3) submit to the congressional defense committees an 
        assessment of, and recommendations for, pay and compensation 
        under current law to provide competitive compensation for the 
        Intellectual Property Ombudsman established under section 3792 
        of title 10, United States Code, as inserted by this Act.
    (c) Annual Report.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than March 1, 2028, and each of 
        the next five years thereafter, the Under Secretary of Defense 
        for Acquisition and Sustainment shall submit to the 
        congressional defense committees an annual report on the 
        effectiveness of the Intellectual Property Ombudsman 
        established under section 3792 of title 10, United States Code, 
        as inserted by this Act, and the mediation process established 
        under section 3792a of title 10, United States Code, as 
        inserted by this Act, on--
                    (A) encouraging prime contractors and 
                subcontractors of the Department of Defense to quickly 
                and equitably resolve disputes with the Department 
                concerning intellectual property in order to address 
                critical operational readiness issues;
                    (B) encouraging contractors to leverage privately-
                funded innovation and offer their full range of 
                relevant technologies when competing for and performing 
                defense contracts;
                    (C) improving clarity for both Department and 
                contractor personnel regarding rights in technical 
                data, computer software, and computer software 
                documentation during the procurement process;
                    (D) resolving data rights disputes more rapidly and 
                collaboratively than through litigation, while 
                protecting contractors' legitimate investments in 
                privately funded innovation; and
                    (E) expeditiously addressing the Department's 
                national security, sustainment, and competitive 
                procurement needs.
            (2) Recommendations.--The report required by paragraph (1) 
        shall also include recommendations by the Under Secretary to 
        address any gaps in statute, regulation, or policy that 
        undermine the Department's ability to access technical data 
        necessary for maintenance and sustainment, asserting existing 
        rights, or protecting interests in intellectual property, and 
        any other recommendations the Under Secretary considers 
        appropriate.

SEC. 863. EXPANSION OF REVERSE ENGINEERING AUTHORITY FOR PROTOTYPE 
              PROJECTS.

    Subsection (f)(5)(B) of section 4022 of title 10, United States 
Code, as redesignated by section 823, is amended by striking ``to 
address obsolescence''.

SEC. 864. CLARIFICATIONS TO SUSTAINMENT PLANNING REQUIREMENTS FOR 
              COVERED SYSTEMS.

    (a) Intellectual Property Management Plan.--Section 4324(b)(1)(D) 
of title 10, United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
            ``(D) An intellectual property management plan for product 
        support developed in accordance with section 3774 of this 
        title, including--
                    ``(i) requirements for technical data, software, 
                and modular open system approaches (as defined in 
                section 4401 of this title);
                    ``(ii) a method to obtain technical data and 
                license rights necessary for maintenance, repair, and 
                overhaul of the covered system before the Milestone B 
                approval (or equivalent approval); and
                    ``(iii) a method to satisfy all other aspects of 
                sustainment for the covered system before the Milestone 
                C approval (or equivalent approval) in accordance with 
                the product support strategy described in subparagraph 
                (A).''.
    (b) Long-term Technical Data Needs.--Section 3774 of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)(1)--
                    (A) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``and'' at the 
                end;
                    (B) in subparagraph (B), by striking the period at 
                the end and inserting ``; and''; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following new 
                subparagraph:
                    ``(C) include in any contract solicitation for such 
                a system or subsystem requirements relating to 
                technical data and license rights necessary for 
                sustainment of the system or subsystem.''; and
            (2) in subsection (b)--
                    (A) by redesignating paragraphs (2), (3), and (4) 
                as paragraphs (3), (4), and (5) respectively; and
                    (B) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following:
            ``(2) be developed in accordance with the intellectual 
        property management plan described in section 4324(b)(1)(D) of 
        this title.''.

SEC. 865. SOFTWARE ACCOUNTABILITY IMPROVEMENTS OVER LIFECYCLES.

    (a) Software Sustainment Framework.--Section 4324(b)(1) of title 
10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following 
new subparagraph:
            ``(G) A software sustainment framework that--
                    ``(i) defines metrics for software-enabled 
                elements, including patch currency, vulnerability 
                remediation timelines, and version lifecycle status; 
                and
                    ``(ii) provides for periodic review of such 
                metrics.''.
    (b) Life-cycle Sustainment Planning by Product Support Managers.--
Section 4324(b)(2) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subparagraph (D), by striking ``and'' at the end;
            (2) in subparagraph (E), by striking the period at the end 
        and inserting a semicolon; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new subparagraphs:
            ``(F) maximize software-enabled solutions that reduce 
        unanticipated growth work during maintenance cycles; and
            ``(G) maximize the use of consumption-based solutions as 
        described in section 3605 of this title.''.
    (c) Responsibilities of Portfolio Acquisition Executives.--Section 
1732(c) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (7), by striking ``and'' at the end;
            (2) in paragraph (8), by striking the period at the end and 
        inserting ``; and''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
            ``(9) establish incentives for effective use by contractors 
        of software-enabled solutions that expand the collection of 
        decision-quality data to reduce unanticipated growth work 
        during maintenance cycles or expedite the construction or 
        procurement of capabilities.''.
    (d) Responsibilities of Product Support Managers.--Section 1733(d) 
of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating paragraphs (4) through (9) as 
        paragraphs (5) through (10), respectively;
            (2) by redesignating the second paragraph (3) (relating to 
        ``Adopting predictive analytics'') as paragraph (4); and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
            ``(11) Maximizing the qualification, approval, integration, 
        and adoption of advanced technologies and processes.''.

SEC. 866. ASSESSMENT OF A PAY-TO-PRINT PROGRAM.

    (a) Assessment.--The Secretary of Defense shall assess the 
feasibility and utility of establishing a Department of Defense-wide 
program to be known as the ``Pay-to-Print Program'' for the purposes 
of--
            (1) increasing the availability of parts in any supply 
        chains of a weapon system of the Department of Defense;
            (2) reducing manufacturing time or costs of such parts; and
            (3) increasing the ability to rapidly scale production of 
        such parts.
    (b) Elements.--In conducting the assessment required by subsection 
(a), the Secretary of Defense shall--
            (1) identify such parts included in a program, project, or 
        activity in a portfolio assigned under the leadership of a 
        portfolio acquisition executive that could be produced by 
        Government personnel or covered Government support contractors 
        via additive manufacturing processes;
            (2) review technical standards, qualification processes, 
        design templates, contracting methods, and policies and 
        determine if any changes are necessary to ensure the 
        feasibility of establishing the Pay-to-Print Program;
            (3) review methods of data access and methods to track the 
        use of the data for the Pay-to-Print Program, and identify any 
        lessons learned or best practices that could be implemented for 
        the Pay-to-Print Program;
            (4) identify funding authorities and mechanisms necessary 
        to establish the Pay-to-Print program; and
            (5) identify any other considerations for the 
        implementation of the Pay-to-Print Program, as determined by 
        the Secretary.
    (c) Report.--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 House of Representatives and the 
Senate an update on the assessment required by subsection (a).
    (d) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall preclude 
the Secretary of Defense from establishing a pay-to-print program 
before the submission of the report required in subsection (c).
    (e) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``pay-to-print'' means a business approach 
        where the customer pays a fee to access the original equipment 
        manufacturer's digital design file for the purpose of printing 
        a physical product using additive manufacturing processes.
            (2) The term ``portfolio acquisition executive'' has the 
        meaning given in section 1732 of title 10, United States Code.
            (3) The term ``covered Government support contractor'' has 
        the meaning given in section 3775 of title 10, United States 
        Code.

SEC. 867. PRIORITIZING MAINTENANCE, REPAIR, AND OVERHAUL FOR READINESS.

    Section 4323 of title 10, United States Code, is amended to read as 
follows:
``Sec. 4323. Continuous sustainment review and analysis
    ``(a) Review Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall require each 
Secretary concerned to conduct an assessment, updated not less 
frequently than annually, of the performance of each major weapon 
system and each critical readiness item of supply against established 
operational readiness requirements and the materiel readiness 
objectives under section 118(c) of this title.
    ``(b) Analysis of Deficiencies.--For any major weapon system or 
critical readiness item of supply that fails to meet the requirements 
and objectives described in subsection (a), the Secretary concerned 
shall evaluate the applicable life-cycle sustainment plan (in 
accordance with section 4324 of this title) or other sustainment plan, 
as appropriate. If the Secretary concerned determines such a plan does 
not effectively meet the requirements and objectives at an affordable 
cost, the Secretary shall conduct a root cause analysis to determine 
the reasons and to identify the specific parts, services, software, and 
corresponding intellectual property required to meet the requirements 
and objectives.
    ``(c) Corrective Action Plan.--(1) Upon completion of a root cause 
analysis under subsection (b), the Secretary concerned shall develop 
and maintain a corrective action plan to address deficiencies 
identified by such analysis.
    ``(2) In developing and executing the corrective action plan, the 
Secretary concerned shall, to the maximum extent practicable, first 
seek to resolve any identified deficiencies through existing 
contractual and statutory authorities, including--
            ``(A) authorities described in subchapter I of chapter 275 
        of this title, to exercise an option, modify an existing 
        contract or agreement, or enter into negotiations with a 
        covered contractor for a covered system, including--
                    ``(i) providing the covered contractor with the 
                opportunity to submit an alternative corrective action 
                plan to identify, qualify and secure other sources for 
                the required parts, services, software, and 
                intellectual property; and
                    ``(ii) entering into another contract or agreement, 
                or modifying an existing contract or agreement, with 
                the covered contractor to create, develop, and validate 
                technical instructions and procedures; or
            ``(B) the use of alternative sources, including advanced 
        manufacturing, reverse engineering, re-engineering, or 
        fabrication of parts by Government personnel or covered 
        Government support contractors (as defined in section 3775 of 
        this title).
    ``(3)(A) The Secretary concerned shall consider seeking assistance 
from the Intellectual Property Ombudsman (established in accordance 
with section 3792 of this title) in developing and implementing the 
corrective action plan if questions or disputes arise involving 
intellectual property acquired or licensed (or proposed to be acquired 
or licensed) by the Department for a major weapon system or critical 
readiness item of supply assessed under subsection (a), including 
questions or disputes involving rights and obligations relating to the 
delivery of, or access to, such intellectual property.
    ``(B) If such questions or disputes are not resolved through 
assistance from the Intellectual Property Ombudsman, the Secretary 
concerned shall consider submitting a written request for expert 
mediation in accordance with section 3792a of this title.
    ``(d) Submission to Congress.--(1) Not later than five days after 
the date on which the budget of the President is submitted to Congress 
pursuant to section 1105 of title 31, each Secretary concerned, in 
coordination with the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and 
Sustainment, shall submit to the congressional defense committees a 
report that includes the following:
            ``(A) Findings from the assessments required by subsection 
        (a).
            ``(B) A description of how such assessments informed the 
        submission of materials to Congress required by section 
        118(c)(2) of this title and the development of the future-years 
        defense program required by section 221 of this title.
            ``(C) For a covered system which has been declared to meet 
        initial operational capability, and that for two consecutive 
        calendar years has failed to meet established materiel 
        readiness objectives for materiel availability or operational 
        availability (as such terms are defined, respectively, in 
        section 118 of this title), such report shall include--
                    ``(i) an identification of factors contributing to 
                such failure; and
                    ``(ii) a corrective action plan described in 
                subsection (c), including any updates to a previously 
                submitted corrective action plan.
            ``(D) A summary of actions taken by the Secretary to ensure 
        that each covered system of the military department under the 
        jurisdiction of the Secretary meets the applicable operational 
        readiness requirements and materiel readiness objectives in the 
        most cost-effective manner practicable.
    ``(2) The report required by this subsection shall be submitted in 
unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.
    ``(3) For each report, the Secretary concerned shall make a summary 
of the report publicly available on an appropriate website of the 
Department of Defense not later than 60 days after the date on which it 
is submitted to the congressional defense committees unless the 
Secretary concerned, in coordination with the Under Secretary of 
Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment, determines that it is not 
feasible to make a summary publicly available due to classification or 
other security concerns. Upon making such a determination, the 
Secretary concerned shall submit to the congressional defense 
committees a written notification of the determination, including a 
detailed explanation of the security concerns and the reasons why those 
concerns cannot feasibly be addressed by redaction or other means.''.

                       Subtitle E--Other Matters

SEC. 871. ENHANCEMENT TO DEFENSE SUPPLY CHAIN RESILIENCE AND SECONDARY 
              SOURCE QUALIFICATION.

    (a) Streamlined Acceptance.--In implementing section 865 of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2025 (Public Law 
118-159; 10 U.S.C. 4811 note), the Secretary of Defense shall establish 
a pathway to streamline and consolidate the approval authority of the 
process established under such section for applications for Source 
Approval Requests submitted by the manufacturer of record for such 
capability.
    (b) Applicability.--The pathway established by subsection (a) shall 
apply in cases where--
            (1) a qualified engineering designee has certified in 
        writing that the engineering data included in the applicable 
        Source Approval Request, including the technical data package, 
        conforms to the applicable technical data package or reverse 
        engineering standards; and
            (2) the applicant, or the relevant majority-owned 
        manufacturing subsidiary of such applicant, holds a current 
        AS9100 Rev D certification (or successor standard) issued by an 
        accredited third-party certification body.
    (c) Expedited Qualification.--
            (1) Acceptance of certification.--Except as provided in 
        paragraph (2), an Expedited Qualification Panel established 
        under subsection (f) of such section 865 shall accept a 
        certification made under subsection (b) as the full engineering 
        evaluation necessary for the review of a Source Approval 
        Request by the Expedited Qualification Panel.
            (2) Additional evaluation.--An Expedited Qualification 
        Panel may determine in writing that additional engineering 
        evaluation of a Source Approval Request is required based on 
        safety or mission criticality, novelty, or complexity of the 
        item. Such a determination shall be provided to the applicant 
        not later than 14 days after such applicant submits such Source 
        Approval Request, along with a request from the Expedited 
        Qualification Panel for any additional information needed from 
        the application to complete the expedited qualification 
        process.

SEC. 872. TAILORED ACQUISITION PATHWAYS FOR NON-TRADITIONAL 
              INTERMEDIATE-RANGE FIRES CAPABILITIES.

    (a) Tailored Pathways.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army, acting through 
the Army Portfolio Acquisition Executive for Fires (the ``Portolio 
Acquisition Executive''), shall tailor and employ existing acquisition 
pathways to accelerate the development, testing, evaluation, and 
procurement of non-traditional intermediate-range fires capabilities, 
including affordable intermediate-range one-way attack munitions.
    (b) Elements.--
            (1) In general.--The pathways tailored under subsection (a) 
        shall enable rapid development, testing, evaluation, and 
        procurement of intermediate-range, affordable, attritable, and 
        autonomous fires capabilities outside of traditional, legacy 
        munitions.
            (2) Capabilities.--The characteristics of the capabilities 
        referred to in paragraph (1) may include--
                    (A) operational ranges relevant to combatant 
                command requirements;
                    (B) low-cost munitions and the associated 
                deployment and launch system, payloads, autonomy 
                software, and associated support;
                    (C) autonomy solutions and collaborative mission 
                software enabling resilience to operate in denied, 
                degraded, intermittent, and limited communications and 
                Global Positioning System-denied environments;
                    (D) interoperability and iterative characteristics 
                that enable incremental development and field-swappable 
                payloads and support competition for upgrades, 
                sustainment, and follow-on production;
                    (E) ability for deployment and operations with 
                minimal specialized infrastructure, including in 
                austere environments.
                    (F) a deployment system capacity, power needs, and 
                integration with existing logistics and fires 
                platforms;
                    (G) demonstrated producibility and scalable 
                manufacturing, including identification of achievable 
                monthly and annual production rates and the constraints 
                to scaling; and
                    (H) commercial off-the-shelf components and 
                manufacturing processes to reduce cost and enable 
                production at scale.
            (3) Authorities.--To the greatest extent practicable, the 
        pathways tailored under subsection (a) shall leverage existing, 
        alternative acquisition authorities and pathways, such as other 
        transaction authority, rapid prototyping and rapid fielding 
        pathways, middle tier acquisition pathways, and any new or 
        modified acquisition methods available to the Army and 
        identified by the Portfolio Acquisition Executive.
            (4) Integration.--The Secretary shall ensure integration 
        across stakeholders and may formalize partnerships between and 
        among the Army, the Defense Innovation Unit, and the Office of 
        the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment 
        to accelerate capability integration.
            (5) Mitigation of risks.--The Secretary shall identify and 
        mitigate long-lead risks, including test range access, 
        airworthiness and safety certification processes, and supply-
        chain constraints associated with intermediate-range attritable 
        munitions.
            (6) Transition considerations.--The Secretary shall 
        consider funding and resource needs, requirements, and 
        opportunities to transition evolving prototypes into programs 
        of record or enduring portfolio elements, including strategies 
        for transitioning from research, development, test, and 
        evaluation to procurement.
            (7) Co-production arrangements.--The Secretary may consider 
        co-production arrangements with trusted allies and partners to 
        establish secondary production lines, subject to applicable 
        technology security and foreign disclosure requirements and 
        provided that such arrangements do not undermine required 
        rights and deliverables for modular system interfaces and 
        government integration.
            (8) Autonomous or semi-autonomous weapon systems.--The 
        Secretary shall ensure that any autonomous or semi-autonomous 
        weapon system is developed, verified, validated, tested, and 
        fielded consistent with Department of Defense policy on 
        autonomy in weapon systems, including appropriate levels of 
        human judgment over the use of force, rigorous verification and 
        validation, and realistic developmental and operational test 
        and evaluation.
            (9) Software.--The Secretary shall consider establishing 
        software test and digital engineering infrastructure approaches 
        based on commercial best practices that software-in-the-loop 
        and hardware-in-the-loop test infrastructure to enable 
        continuous validation of autonomy and mission software and 
        integration.
    (c) Portfolio Alignment.--The Secretary shall determine whether 
such capabilities are best pursued as--
            (1) a new start program within the fires portfolio;
            (2) an expansion or modification of an existing effort; or
            (3) an Army-wide cross-portfolio initiative under the 
        authority of the Portolio Acquisition Executive.
    (d) Coordination With Joint Force Requirements.--Pathways tailored 
under this section shall align with joint force operational needs for 
intermediate-range fires, including complementary employment with 
existing capabilities such as hypersonic systems, cruise missiles, and 
other precision fires.
    (e) Briefing.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall provide a briefing to the 
congressional defense committees detailing--
            (1) the acquisition pathways tailored under this section;
            (2) the capabilities prioritized;
            (3) anticipated timelines for prototype demonstration and 
        initial limited operational capability; and
            (4) a recommended funding profile for fiscal years 2027 
        through 2031.
    (f) Definition.--In this section, the term ``intermediate-range'' 
means having a range between 3,000 and 5,500 kilometers.

SEC. 873. PILOT PROGRAM FOR DOMESTIC ANTIMONY AND COPPER PRODUCTION FOR 
              DEFENSE APPLICATIONS.

    (a) Establishment.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall establish a pilot 
program to support the recovery of antimony and copper as byproducts of 
mineral production in the United States.
    (b) Elements.--The pilot program required by subsection (a) shall 
include methods--
            (1) to evaluate multiple processes and techniques for 
        recovery of antimony and copper as byproducts of mineral 
        production;
            (2) to develop process design plans necessary for scaling 
        recovery of antimony and copper to demonstration-level 
        production;
            (3) to generate sample material for independent testing to 
        verify suitability for defense applications; and
            (4) to produce qualified antimony material that meets 
        specifications provided by the Defense Logistics Agency.
    (c) Contracting Authority.--The Secretary may enter into contracts, 
cooperative agreements, or other transactions with appropriate entities 
to implement the pilot program required by subsection (a).
    (d) Report to Congress.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than one year after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, and annually thereafter for four 
        years, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense 
        committees a report on the status and findings of the pilot 
        program required by subsection (a).
            (2) Elements.--Each report required by paragraph (1) shall 
        include--
                    (A) a summary of the progress made under the pilot 
                program required by subsection (a) with respect to 
                recovery and processing of antimony and copper;
                    (B) technical and economic assessments with respect 
                to such recovery; and
                    (C) recommendations for expanding domestic antimony 
                and copper production and reducing dependency on 
                foreign sources of antimony and copper.
    (e) Termination.--The pilot program required by subsection (a) 
shall terminate not later than five years after the date of the 
enactment of this Act.

SEC. 874. ADDRESSING THE BACKLOG OF OPEN CASES RELATED TO THE DEFENSE 
              FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATION SUPPLEMENT.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition 
and Sustainment, acting through the Principal Director for Defense 
Pricing, Contracting, and Acquisition Policy, shall establish a team of 
experts in acquisition regulations to assist in a process of 
promulgating and implementing regulations to resolve the backlog of 
open cases related to the Department of Defense Supplement to the 
Federal Acquisition Regulation (commonly known as the ``DFARS'').
    (b) Duties.--The team of experts described in subsection (a) shall 
be assigned to assist in all aspects of the process described in 
subsection (a), including drafting proposed and final rules, managing 
the public comment process, and any other tasks as directed by the 
Under Secretary.
    (c) Administration.--
            (1) In general.--In order to achieve the purpose set forth 
        in subsection (a), the Under Secretary shall ensure that the 
        team of experts described in subsection (a) has the appropriate 
        number of staff and such staff possesses the necessary skills, 
        knowledge, and experience to carry out the duties described in 
        subsection (b), including in relevant areas of regulatory 
        process, contracting, acquisition, and law. The Under Secretary 
        may use existing authorities to staff the team, including those 
        in paragraphs (2), (3), and (4).
            (2) Civilian personnel.--Civilian personnel from within the 
        Office of the Secretary of Defense, Joint Staff, military 
        departments, Defense Agencies, and combatant commands may be 
        assigned to serve as members of the team of experts described 
        in subsection (a), upon request of the Under Secretary.
            (3) Highly qualified experts.--The Under Secretary may use 
        the authorities for highly qualified experts under section 9903 
        of title 5, to hire members of the team of experts described in 
        subsection (a).
            (4) Contracts.--The Under Secretary may enter into a 
        contract with a private-sector entity for specialized expertise 
        to support the team of experts described in subsection (a). 
        Such entity may be considered a covered Government support 
        contractor, as defined in section 3775(a) of title 10, United 
        States Code.
    (d) Funding.--The Under Secretary is authorized to use amounts in 
the Defense Acquisition Workforce Development Fund for the purpose of 
paying salaries of members of the team of experts described in 
subsection (a) for the life of the team.
    (e) Expiration.--The authority to maintain the team of experts 
established under section (a) shall expire on the earlier of--
            (1) the date on which the Under Secretary determines there 
        is no open case in the backlog described in subsection (a) of 
        open cases related to the DFARS that--
                    (A) implements a requirement imposed by statute; 
                and
                    (B) has been open for more than 180 days after the 
                date of the enactment of the statute imposing the 
                requirement; or
            (2) the date that is three years after the date on which 
        the Under Secretary establishes the team of experts described 
        in subsection (a).
    (f) Briefings.--
            (1) Initial briefing.--Not later than 60 days after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act, the Under Secretary shall 
        provide a briefing to the congressional defense committees 
        outlining the strategy and methodology that will be used to 
        establish the team of experts described in subsection (a) and 
        the strategy and methodology to be used to reduce the backlog 
        described in subsection (a) of open cases related to the DFARS.
            (2) Progress briefings.--Not later than 30 days after the 
        date of the briefing required by paragraph (1), and at least 
        once in every 30-day period thereafter, the Under Secretary 
        shall provide a briefing to the congressional defense 
        committees on the progress made by the team of experts 
        described in subsection (a) in reducing the backlog described 
        in subsection (a) of open cases related to the DFARS. The 
        requirement for briefings under this paragraph shall terminate 
        with the first briefing that occurs after the expiration date 
        under subsection (e).

SEC. 875. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR PURCHASE OF 
              PHOTOVOLTAIC CELLS, MODULES, OR INVERTERS FROM FOREIGN 
              ENTITIES OF CONCERN.

    (a) Limitation.--Except as provided in subsection (b), none of the 
funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise made 
available for fiscal year 2027 for the Department of Defense may be 
used to enter into a contract for the procurement of photovoltaic 
cells, modules, or inverters manufactured by a foreign entity of 
concern (as defined in section 9901(8) of the William M. (Mac) 
Thornberry National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (15 
U.S.C. 4651(8))).
    (b) Waiver Authority.--The Secretary of Defense may waive 
subsection (a) if the Secretary--
            (1) determines that there is no alternative source of 
        photovoltaic cells, modules, or inverters other than from a 
        foreign entity of concern;
            (2) determines there is no national security risk posed by 
        the use of photovoltaic cells, modules, or inverters 
        manufactured by a foreign entity of concern; and
            (3) submits a certification of such determination in 
        writing to the congressional defense committees not later than 
        30 days before entering into a contract described under such 
        subsection.
    (c) Applicability.--
            (1) In general.--Subsection (a) shall not apply to a 
        contract involving any third party financing arrangements, 
        including energy savings contracts and those involving 
        privatized military housing or assets that enhance combat 
        capability.
            (2) Delayed effective date for assets that enhance combat 
        capability.--The limitation under subsection (a) shall not 
        apply to assets that enhance combat capability for a period of 
        one year following the date of the enactment of this Act.
    (d) Exemption for Certain Activities.--The limitation under 
subsection (a) shall not apply if the procurement is for the purposes 
of intelligence, electronic warfare, or information warfare operations, 
testing, analysis, and training.

SEC. 876. ENSURING DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE CONTRACTOR COMPLIANCE WITH 
              DISABILITY HIRING GOALS.

    (a) In General.--For each of fiscal years 2027 through 2030, the 
Secretary of Defense shall conduct an audit of the compliance of the 
contractors of the Department of Defense with the 7-percent utilization 
goal for employment of qualified individuals with disabilities by 
contractors established by the Office of Federal Contract Compliance 
Programs of the Department of Labor under section 503 of the 
Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 793).
    (b) Reports.--Not later than 5 months after the end of a fiscal 
year for which the Secretary of Defense was required to conduct an 
audit under subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense shall submit to 
the Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and 
the Senate a report on the findings of such audit.

SEC. 877. EXPEDITED IMPLEMENTATION OF COMMERCIAL ACQUISITION REFORMS.

    (a) Prioritization Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall ensure 
the Principal Director for Defense Pricing, Contracting, and 
Acquisition Policy prioritizes the issuance of regulations, guidance, 
class deviations, or other implementation materials necessary to 
successfully implement sections 1821 through 1828 of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60; 139 
Stat. 1245 et seq.).
    (b) Interim Implementation.--Not later than 60 days after the date 
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall issue, to the extent 
practicable, interim guidance, class deviations, or other temporary 
implementation instructions necessary to ensure that the policies 
reflected in sections 1821 through 1828 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 are applied pending completion 
of final regulations.
    (c) Final Regulations.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall issue final regulations 
in the Department of Defense Supplement to the Federal Acquisition 
Regulation necessary to carry out sections 1821 through 1828 of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026.
    (d) Implementation Schedule and Briefing.--Not later than 60 days 
after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit 
to the congressional defense committees a briefing that includes--
            (1) a list of each Department of Defense Supplement to the 
        Federal Acquisition Regulation case, Defense Acquisition 
        Regulations Council action, class deviation, guidance document, 
        or other implementation action associated with sections 1821 
        through 1828 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
        Fiscal Year 2026;
            (2) the current status of each such action;
            (3) the expected date for issuance of any proposed rule, 
        interim rule, final rule, class deviation, or guidance 
        document;
            (4) a description of any legal, policy, or resource 
        impediment to timely implementation; and
            (5) the actions the Secretary is taking to ensure that 
        implementation of such sections reduces barriers to the 
        participation of nontraditional defense contractors, commercial 
        suppliers, and small businesses in Department of Defense 
        acquisitions.
    (e) Limitation on Availability of Funds.--Of the funds authorized 
to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal 
year 2027 for the Office of the Secretary of Defense for travel 
expenses, not more than 50 percent may be obligated or expended until 
the Secretary issues interim implementation instructions as required by 
subsection (b).

      TITLE IX--DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT

SEC. 901. TRANSFER OF RESPONSIBILITY TO SUPERVISE ACTIVITIES OF 
              DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE RELATING TO EXPORT CONTROLS.

    (a) Responsibility of Under Secretary of Defense for Policy.--
Section 134(b) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking paragraph (3); and
            (2) by redesignating paragraphs (4) and (5) as paragraphs 
        (3) and (4), respectively.
    (b) Responsibility of Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition 
and Sustainment.--Section 133b(b) of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) in paragraph (9) by striking ``and'' at the end;
            (2) in paragraph (10) by striking the period at the end and 
        inserting ``; and''; and
            (3) by inserting after paragraph (10) the following new 
        paragraph:
            ``(11) the responsibility for supervising and directing 
        activities of the Department of Defense relating to export 
        controls.''.

SEC. 902. MEMBERSHIP OF COMMANDANT OF THE COAST GUARD ON THE JOINT 
              CHIEFS OF STAFF.

    (a) Membership on the Joint Chiefs of Staff.--Section 151(a) of 
title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the 
following new paragraph:
            ``(9) The Commandant of the Coast Guard.''.
    (b) Appointment of Chairman; Grade and Rank.--Section 152 of such 
title is amended--
            (1) in subsection (b)(1)(B) by striking ``or the Chief of 
        Space Operations'' and inserting ``the Chief of Space 
        Operations, or the Commandant of the Coast Guard''; and
            (2) in subsection (c), by striking ``Navy'' and inserting 
        ``Navy or Coast Guard''.
    (c) Vice Chairman.--Section 154(f) of such title is amended by 
striking ``Navy'' and inserting ``Navy or Coast Guard''.
    (d) Inclusion on the Joint Staff.--Section 155(a) of such title is 
amended--
            (1) in paragraph (2)--
                    (A) in the matter preceding subparagraph (A), by 
                striking ``(other than the Coast Guard)'';
                    (B) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``and'' at the 
                end;
                    (C) in subparagraph (C), by striking the period at 
                the end and inserting ``; and''; and
                    (D) by adding at the end the following new 
                subparagraph:
            ``(D) the Coast Guard.''; and
            (2) in paragraph (3), by striking ``Secretary of the 
        military department having jurisdiction over that armed force'' 
        and inserting ``Secretary concerned''.
    (e) Duties as Member of Joint Staff.--Section 302 of title 14, 
United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``The President may'' and inserting the 
        following:
    ``(a) The President may''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(b)(1) The Commandant of the Coast Guard shall also perform the 
duties prescribed for the Commandant as a member of the Joint Chiefs of 
Staff under section 151 of title 10.
    ``(2) To the extent that such action does not impair the 
independence of the Commandant in the performance of the Commandant's 
duties as a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Commandant shall 
inform the Secretary of the department in which the Coast Guard is 
operating regarding military advice rendered by members of the Joint 
Chiefs of Staff on matters affecting such department.
    ``(3) Subject to the authority, direction, and control of the 
Secretary of Defense, the Commandant shall keep the Secretary of the 
department in which the Coast Guard is operating fully informed of 
significant military operations affecting the duties and 
responsibilities of such Secretary.''.

SEC. 903. OVERSIGHT OF GEOGRAPHIC COMBATANT COMMANDS.

    Section 916(a) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 1022) is amended by inserting 
``or fiscal year 2027'' after ``fiscal year 2026''.

                      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 2027 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 
        $6,000,000,000.
            (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;
            (2) may not be used to provide authority for an item that 
        has been denied authorization by Congress; and
            (3) may not be used to reduce the total amount of 
        authorizations available for facilities sustainment, 
        restoration, and modernization projects for military 
        unaccompanied housing (as defined in section 2871 of title 10, 
        United States Code) or military child development centers (as 
        defined in section 1800 of such title) (commonly known as 
        ``Quality of Life Infrastructure'').
    (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. ANNUAL REPORT ON UNFUNDED PRIORITIES OF DEFENSE POW/MIA 
              ACCOUNTING AGENCY.

    Chapter 9 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by inserting 
after section 234 the following new section:
``Sec. 235. Unfunded priorities of Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency: 
              annual report
    ``(a) Reports.--Not later than 10 days after the date on which the 
budget of the President for a fiscal year is submitted to Congress 
pursuant to section 1105 of title 31, the Director of the Defense POW/
MIA Accounting Agency shall submit to the Secretary of Defense and the 
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and to the congressional defense 
committees, a report on the unfunded priorities of the Defense POW/MIA 
Accounting Agency.
    ``(b) Elements.--(1) Each report under subsection (a) shall 
specify, for each unfunded priority covered by such report, the 
following:
            ``(A) A summary description of such priority, including the 
        objectives to be achieved if such priority is funded (whether 
        in whole or in part).
            ``(B) The additional amount of funds recommended in 
        connection with the objectives under subparagraph (A).
            ``(C) Account information with respect to such priority, 
        including the following (as applicable):
                    ``(i) Line Item Number for applicable procurement 
                accounts.
                    ``(ii) Program Element number for applicable 
                research, development, test, and evaluation accounts.
                    ``(iii) Sub-activity group for applicable operation 
                and maintenance accounts.
    ``(2) Each report under subsection (a) shall present the unfunded 
priorities covered by such report in order of urgency of priority.
    ``(c) Unfunded Priority Defined.-- In this section, the term 
`unfunded priority', in the case of a fiscal year, means a program, 
activity, or mission requirement of the POW/MIA Accounting Agency 
that--
            ``(1) is not funded in the budget of the President for the 
        fiscal year as submitted to Congress pursuant to section 1105 
        of title 31, United States Code;
            ``(2) is necessary to fulfill a requirement associated with 
        an operational or contingency plan of a combatant command or 
        other validated requirement; and
            ``(3) would have been recommended for funding through the 
        budget referred to in paragraph (1) by the Director of the POW/
        MIA Accounting Agency in connection with the budget if 
        additional resources had been available for the budget to fund 
        the program, activity, or mission requirement.''.

SEC. 1003. EQUIVALENCY STANDARDS FOR FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT POSITIONS.

    (a) Equivalency Standards.--Section 1599d of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsections (b) through (f) as 
        subsections (c) through (g), respectively;
            (2) by inserting after subsection (a) the following new 
        subsection (b):
    ``(b) Equivalency Standards.--(1) The Secretary shall include, as 
part of the standards prescribed under subsection (a), equivalency 
standards for financial management positions that are applicable across 
the Department. Such equivalency standards shall include--
            ``(A) an identification of any test-based professional 
        certification or credential issued by an authority other than 
        the Department that the Secretary recognizes as satisfying, in 
        whole or in part, a standard prescribed under subsection (a);
            ``(B) an identification of any training or other 
        requirement of the Department for financial management 
        positions required for persons holding a professional 
        certification or credential recognized pursuant to subparagraph 
        (A); and
            ``(C) rules to prevent duplicative requirements of the 
        Department for such positions with respect to such persons.
    ``(2) On a basis that is not less frequent than annually, the 
Secretary shall review the equivalency standards under paragraph (1) 
and update such standards as may be necessary to reflect changes in the 
professional certifications or credentials recognized pursuant to such 
paragraph or modifications to the requirements of the Department for 
financial management positions.''; and
            (3) in subsection (e), as so redesignated, by inserting ``, 
        and shall establish, review, and update the equivalency 
        standards under subsection (b),'' after ``standards under 
        subsection (a)''.
    (b) Deadline for Initial Establishment.--The Under Secretary of 
Defense (Comptroller) shall establish the equivalency standards 
required under section 1599d(b) of title 10, United States Code, as 
amended by subsection (a), by not later than 180 days after the date of 
enactment of this Act.

SEC. 1004. COMPLIANCE WITH PAYMENT INTEGRITY INFORMATION ACT 
              REQUIREMENTS AND STRENGTHENING IMPROPER PAYMENTS 
              DETECTION.

    (a) Requirement.--Not later than September 30, 2027, the Under 
Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) shall take such corrective actions 
as may be necessary to achieve full compliance by the Department of 
Defense with requirements under the Payment Integrity Information Act 
of 2019 (Public Law 116-117; 31 U.S.C. 3301 note), consistent with the 
recommendations contained in the report of the Inspector General of the 
Department of Defense Report titled ``Audit of the Department of 
Defense's FY 2024 Compliance with Payment Integrity Information Act 
Requirements'' (DODIG-2025-105) and published on May 27, 2025, 
including by--
            (1) conducting required risk assessments for each program 
        subject to such requirements; and
            (2) publishing improper and unknown payment estimates for 
        such programs.
    (b) Notification.--Not later than September 30, 2027, the Under 
Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees a notification outlining the following:
            (1) The corrective actions taken to meet the requirement 
        under subsection (a).
            (2) Any such corrective action remaining outstanding, 
        including a timeline for the completion of such action.
    (c) Audit by Inspector General.--Not later than May 30, 2028, the 
Inspector General of the Department of Defense shall complete an 
updated audit of compliance by the Department of Defense with 
requirements under the Payment Integrity Information Act of 2019 
(Public Law 116-117; 31 U.S.C. 3301 note), including a certification of 
compliance with the requirement under subsection (a).
    (d) Briefing.--Not later than September 30, 2027, the Under 
Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) shall provide to the congressional 
defense committees a briefing on strengthening the recovery audit 
program of the Department of Defense. Such briefing shall include the 
following:
            (1) An assessment of the use, and effectiveness, of the 
        improper payment detection tool of the Department of Defense 
        Advanced Analytics (ADVANA) platform for the detection and 
        prevention of improper payments, as well as each action taken 
        to address high-risk programs.
            (2) Comprehensive data on improper payments and recoveries 
        in fiscal years 2025 through 2026.
            (3) An identification of any additional resources or 
        authorities necessary to strengthen the detection of improper 
        payments.

SEC. 1005. AUTHORITY TO ESTABLISH JOINT TASK FORCE AUDIT.

    (a) Authority to Establish.--In order to support the goal of 
achieving an unmodified financial statement audit opinion by December 
31, 2028, the Secretary of Defense may establish a task force, to be 
known as ``Joint Task Force Audit''. If the Secretary establishes the 
task force, the Secretary shall designate the Under Secretary of 
Defense (Comptroller) as the Director of the task force.
    (b) Responsibilities.--If the Secretary establishes a task force 
under subsection (a), the task force shall be authorized to carry out 
the following responsibilities:
            (1) The development and oversight of the execution of the 
        plan of the Department of Defense to achieve an unmodified 
        financial statement audit opinion by not later than December 
        31, 2028.
            (2) The approval, direction, and monitoring of performance 
        on corrective action plans needed to obtain such an unmodified 
        financial statement audit opinion.
            (3) The provision of support to components of the 
        Department in order to prioritize audit remediation and audit 
        response activities.
            (4) Leading and supporting engagement with the Inspector 
        General of the Department, the Federal Accounting Standards 
        Advisory Board, other appropriate Federal agencies, and any 
        independent public accounting firms on matters pertaining to 
        the audits of the financial statements of the Department.
            (5) Coordinating with the Chief Information Officer of the 
        Department on financial system modernization initiatives and 
        the elimination of legacy or duplicative financial systems.
    (c) Staffing.--If the Secretary establishes a task force under 
subsection (a), the Secretary of each military department may designate 
a representative to serve as a Deputy Director of the task force.
    (d) Reports.--If the Secretary establishes a task force under 
subsection (a), the Director of the task force shall be responsible for 
meeting the reporting requirements under section 240b(b) of title 10, 
United States Code, in a complete and timely manner.

SEC. 1006. BUDGET TRANSPARENCY FOR ARMY MULTI-DOMAIN TASK FORCE AND 
              MARINE LITTORAL REGIMENT.

    (a) Consolidated Budget Displays.--In the budget justification 
materials submitted in support of the budget of the Department of 
Defense (as submitted with the budget of the President under section 
1105(a) of title 31, United States Code) for fiscal year 2028 and each 
fiscal year thereafter until fiscal year 2032, the Secretary of the 
Army and the Secretary of the Navy shall each include a consolidated 
budget display identifying, with respect to the covered formations of 
the military department concerned--
            (1) the number of personnel authorized to be assigned, and 
        the number of personnel assigned, to such covered formations; 
        and
            (2) the amounts of operation and maintenance funding 
        requested for the training and readiness of such covered 
        formations.
    (b) Reports.--Not later than March 1, 2027, and annually thereafter 
until September 30, 2032, the Secretary of the Army and the Secretary 
of the Navy shall each submit to the congressional defense committees a 
report on the covered formations of the military department concerned. 
Each such report shall include--
            (1) an identification of the number of personnel authorized 
        to be assigned, and the number of personnel assigned, to such 
        covered formations;
            (2) an identification of the equipment necessary for full 
        operational capability of such covered formations, versus the 
        equipment available to such covered formations;
            (3) a description of the status of fielding for long-range 
        fires, air defense, sensing, and command and control 
        capabilities for such covered formations;
            (4) projected timelines for such covered formations 
        achieving initial operational capability and full operational 
        capability;
            (5) a detailed assessment of operational risks to such 
        covered formations resulting from any identified constraint on 
        readiness, including any such constraint relating to funding, 
        personnel, equipment, training, the industrial base, or supply 
        chains; and
            (6) a description of measures to mitigate any risk assessed 
        pursuant to paragraph (5) and resources necessary to restore 
        such covered formations to full operational capability.
    (c) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``Army multi-domain task force'' means a 
        formation of the Army designated as such a task force and 
        organized for the conduct of multi-domain operations in support 
        of joint force employment and the operational plans of the 
        commanders of the combatant commands.
            (2) The term ``covered formation'' means an Army multi-
        domain task force or a Marine Littoral Regiment.
            (3) The term ``Marine Littoral Regiment'' means a formation 
        of the Marine Corps designated as such a regiment and organized 
        for the conduct of littoral and expeditionary operations in 
        contested maritime environments in support of the operational 
        plans of the commanders of the combatant commands.
            (4) The term ``military department concerned'' means--
                    (A) the Army, with respect to submissions by the 
                Secretary of the Army; and
                    (B) the Marine Corps, with respect to submissions 
                by the Secretary of the Navy.

                Subtitle B--Naval Vessels and Shipyards

SEC. 1011. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO PURCHASE USED VESSELS WITH 
              NATIONAL DEFENSE SEALIFT FUND.

    (a) Exclusion of Vessels Built in China.--
            (1) Exclusion.--Subsection (f)(3) of section 2218 of title 
        10, United States Code, is amended--
                    (A) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``any used 
                vessel, regardless of where such vessel was 
                constructed'' and inserting ``any used vessel (other 
                than an excluded vessel), regardless of where such 
                vessel was constructed,''; and
                    (B) in subparagraph (B), by inserting ``(other than 
                an excluded vessel)'' after ``a used vessel''.
            (2) Definition of excluded vessel.--Subsection (k) of such 
        section is amended by adding at the end the following new 
        paragraph:
            ``(6) The term `excluded vessel' means a vessel that was--
                    ``(A) constructed or substantially modified in the 
                People's Republic of China; or
                    ``(B) built by a Chinese military company or a 
                Chinese owned or controlled entity.''.
    (b) Requirement for Purchase of Two New United States-constructed 
Vessels for Each Foreign-constructed Used Vessel Purchased in Excess of 
12.--Subparagraph (C) of paragraph (3) of subsection (f) of such 
section is amended to read as follows:
    ``(C) For each foreign-constructed vessel purchased by the 
Secretary under the authority of this paragraph in excess of 12, the 
Secretary shall contract for the purchase of two new vessels each of 
which is to be constructed in a shipyard located in the United 
States.''.
    (c) Clarifying Amendment.--Such paragraph is further amended in 
subparagraph (D) by striking ``subparagraph (A)'' and inserting ``this 
paragraph''.
    (d) Repeal of Obsolete Provision.--Such paragraph is further 
amended--
            (1) by striking subparagraph (E); and
            (2) by redesignating subparagraph (F) as subparagraph (E).
    (e) Repeal of 30-day Notice-and-wait Period Before Certain 
Purchases May Be Finalized.--Such paragraph is further amended by 
striking subparagraph (G).
    (f) Technical Amendments to Update Citations.--Such section is 
further amended--
            (1) in subsection (d)(3), by striking ``(10 U.S.C. 8661 
        note)'' and inserting ``(Public Law 101-510; 10 U.S.C. 8661 
        note)''; and
            (2) in subsections (f)(2) and (k)(2)(A), by striking 
        ``Public Law 101-510 (104 Stat. 1683)'' and inserting ``the 
        National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1991 (Public 
        Law 101-510; 10 U.S.C. 8661 note)''.

SEC. 1012. REQUIREMENT FOR PROCUREMENT OF COMPONENTS FOR NAVAL VESSELS 
              FROM MANUFACTURERS IN NATIONAL TECHNOLOGY AND INDUSTRIAL 
              BASE.

    (a) Additional Procurement Limitation.--Section 4864(a)(2) of title 
10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the following new 
subparagraphs:
                    ``(G) Auxiliary equipment, including pumps, for all 
                shipboard services.
                    ``(H) Propulsion system components, including 
                engines, shafting, reduction gears, and propellers.
                    ``(I) Shipboard cranes.
                    ``(J) Spreaders for shipboard cranes.
                    ``(K) Air circuit breakers.
                    ``(L) Auxiliary chill water systems.''.
    (b) Applicability.--The amendments made by subsection (a) shall 
apply with respect to contracts entered into on or after the date of 
the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 1013. SETTLEMENT OF ADMIRALTY CLAIMS AGAINST THE UNITED STATES.

    Section 7802 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (b), by striking ``$500,000'' both places 
        it appears and inserting ``$1,000,000''; and
            (2) in subsection (c), by striking ``$100,000'' and 
        inserting ``$500,000''.

SEC. 1014. AMPHIBIOUS FLEET FORCE STRUCTURE.

    (a) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the requirement of the Navy and Marine Corps to develop 
        and consistently project three amphibious ready groups and the 
        accompanying marine expeditionary units is foundational to the 
        force sizing construct of the Department of the Navy;
            (2) the Secretary of the Navy should obtain the expected 
        service life of the amphibious ships and require the Navy to 
        rigidly adhere to the direction provided by section 8678a of 
        title 10, United States Code;
            (3) similar to the analysis conducted on extending the 
        submarine force structure, a comprehensive assessment of all 
        LSD-41 and LSD-49 class dock landing ships should be conducted 
        to assess the viability of extending such ships beyond their 
        expected service life;
            (4) the budget of the President submitted to Congress under 
        section 1105(a) of title 31, United States Code, should 
        consistently support a comprehensive service life extension 
        program of the Wasp-class amphibious assault ships and fully 
        resource mid-life maintenance of the San Antonio-class 
        amphibious transport dock ships;
            (5) the Optimized Fleet Response Plan Force generation 
        construct of the Navy, as operating as of the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, sub-optimizes the ability to project 
        amphibious readiness groups; and
            (6) the Navy should adopt an alternative force generation 
        model that expands the ability to maintain a continuous 3.0 
        amphibious ready group/marine expeditionary unit presence 
        capable of deploying additional amphibious readiness groups.
    (b) Annual Risk Assessment.--Section 8026 of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended--
            (1) by inserting ``(a) In General.--'' before ``The 
        Secretary'';
            (2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(b) Risk Assessment.--(1) Not later than March 15 of each year, 
the Commandant of the Marine Corps shall submit to the Committees on 
Armed Services of the Senate and House of Representatives an assessment 
of the risks associated with amphibious forces, which shall be known as 
the `Amphibious Forces Risk Assessment of the Commandant'. Each such 
risk assessment shall include, for the year covered by the assessment, 
each of the following:
            ``(A) An identification and definition of each level of 
        risk, including the determination of the Commander of what 
        constitutes `significant' risk.
            ``(B) For each category of risk identified, an assessment 
        of the extent to which the degree of risk is expected to 
        increase, decrease, or remain stable as a result of budgetary 
        priorities, tradeoffs, and fiscal constraints or limitations 
        based on the most recent future-years defense program under 
        section 221 of this title.
    ``(2) Each risk assessment under this subsection shall be submitted 
in unclassified form, but may contain a classified annex.''.
    (c) Number of Amphibious Warfare Ships.-- Section 8062 of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (b), by striking ``31'' and inserting 
        ``33'';
            (2) in subsection (e)(4), by striking `` scheduled 
        maintenance and repair actions to maintain the minimum number 
        of available amphibious warfare ships to meet operational 
        requirements.'' and inserting ``the required number of 
        amphibious war ships to achieve a 3.0 amphibious ready group/
        marine expeditionary unit presence, as determined pursuant to 
        the Global Force Management Implementation Guidance and the 
        certification of the Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff 
        of the marine expeditionary unit presence requirement.''
    (d) Modification of Amphibious Warfare Ships.--Section 2244a(b) of 
title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the 
following new paragraph:
            ``(4) Exception for amphibious warfare ships.--The 
        prohibition in subsection (a) does not apply to a modification 
        to an amphibious warfare ship (as such term is defined in 
        section 8062(h) of this title) during any of fiscal years 2027 
        through 2034.''.
    (e) San Antonio-class Maintenance Plan.--Not later than September 
30, 2027, the Secretary of the Navy shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees a mid-life maintenance plan for San Antonio-class 
amphibious transport dock ships class.
    (f) Reporting Requirements.--Not later than March 1, 2027, the 
Secretary of the Navy shall submit to the congressional defense 
committees the following reports:
            (1) A report containing an assessment of all LSD-41 and 
        LSD-49 class dock landing ships and, for each such vessel, an 
        identification of options to extend the service life of the 
        vessel.
            (2) A report on options for the comprehensive development 
        of a modernization program that includes a service-life 
        extension plan for Wasp-class amphibious assault ships and a 
        mid-life maintenance plan for San Antonio-class amphibious 
        transport dock ships. Such report shall include, for each such 
        option, an assessment of--
                    (A) the overall timing of the application of such 
                option each Wasp-class amphibious assault ship and San 
                Antonio-class amphibious transport dock ship and 
                whether such timing coincides with the optimal service 
                life extension option for the ship;
                    (B) specific modernization program objectives for 
                each class of ship;
                    (C) the amount of funding required to carry out the 
                modernization program; and
                    (D) the capability of the defense industrial base 
                to support the modernization program.

SEC. 1015. ARMAMENT OF NAVAL AUXILIARY VESSELS.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 863 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 8699. Armament of naval auxiliary vessels
    ``(a) In General.--(1) Except as provided under paragraph (2), the 
Secretary of the Navy shall ensure, to the maximum extent practicable, 
that each naval auxiliary vessel operated by the Military Sealift 
Command and designated as a United States Naval Ship is equipped with 
defensive armament sufficient to provide for the self-defense of the 
vessel against air, surface, and asymmetric threats in contested 
environments.
    ``(2) The requirement under paragraph (1) does not apply to a 
vessel that is designated as a hospital ship and is protected from 
attack or capture under the Convention (II) for the Amelioration of the 
Condition of Wounded, Sick and Shipwrecked Members of Armed Forces at 
Sea done at Geneva August 12, 1949.
    ``(b) Minimum Capabilities.--Armament provided pursuant to 
subsection (a) may include, at the discretion of the Secretary, any of 
the following:
            ``(1) Close-in weapon systems or equivalent point-defense 
        systems.
            ``(2) Crew-served weapons and stabilized naval gun systems.
            ``(3) Counter-unmanned aerial system capabilities.
            ``(4) Electronic warfare and decoy systems.
            ``(5) Modular or containerized weapon systems capable of 
        rapid installation and scaling across classes of vessels.
    ``(c) Manning and Training.--The Secretary shall ensure that each 
vessel equipped pursuant to subsection (a) is--
            ``(1) provided with adequately trained personnel to operate 
        and maintain the armament provided to the vessel; and
            ``(2) integrated, as appropriate, with Navy reserve or 
        other augmentation forces for wartime operations.''.
    (b) Deadline for Implementation.--The Secretary shall--
            (1) begin implementation of section 8699 of title 10, 
        United States Code, as added by subsection (a), by not later 
        than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act; and
            (2) in implementing such section, prioritize vessels 
        supporting forward-deployed or contested logistics operations.
    (c) Report.--Not later than 120 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report that includes--
            (1) a prioritized list of naval auxiliary vessels to be 
        equipped with armament pursuant to section 8699 of title 10, 
        United States Code, as added by subsection (a);
            (2) recommended weapon systems for each class of vessel;
            (3) cost estimates and installation timelines for providing 
        such armament;
            (4) manning and training requirements for each such vessel 
        pursuant to subsection (c) of such section; and
            (5) any legislative or regulatory barriers to the 
        implementation of such section.

SEC. 1016. ADDITIONAL MEASURES FOR NAVY STRATEGY FOR INVESTMENT IN AND 
              SUPPORT FOR THE MARITIME INDUSTRIAL BASE.

    Section 1019 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 1032; 10 U.S.C. 8661 note) is 
amended--
            (1) in subsection (a), by striking ``programs'' and 
        inserting ``and sustainment''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(d) Additional Measures.--Not later than 180 days after the date 
of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2027, the 
Secretary shall include each of the following measures in the strategy 
required under subsection (a):
            ``(1) Measures to determine a total cost and schedule for 
        investments needed to enhance the performance of the submarine 
        industrial base to the extent to which it can support the 
        production of one Columbia class submarine and two Virginia 
        class submarines each year and improve in-service submarine 
        maintenance to achieve the goals of the Navy for operational 
        availability.
            ``(2) Measures to determine a total cost and schedule for 
        investments needed to enhance the performance of the surface 
        ship industrial base to the extent to which it can support the 
        goals of the Navy for surface ship construction and 
        sustainment.
            ``(3) Measures to identify roles, responsibilities, and 
        mechanism for coordination and data sharing between all 
        entities within the Department of Defense involved in investing 
        in and supporting the maritime industrial base.
            ``(4) Measures to conduct an analysis of the capacity of 
        the Department of Defense to effectively plan for, award, and 
        oversee investments in the maritime industrial base and, if 
        relevant offices do not have sufficient capacity, determine how 
        to increase capacity.''.

SEC. 1017. INCLUSION OF NAVY SURFACE COMBAT SHIP MAINTENANCE AS A 
              SEPARATE LINE ITEM IN OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE BUDGET.

    (a) In General.--The budget of the President submitted to Congress 
under section 1105(a) of title 31, United States Code, for fiscal year 
2028 and each subsequent fiscal year, shall display Navy surface combat 
ship maintenance as one or more separate line items under each 
subactivity within operation and maintenance, Navy.
    (b) Surface Combat Ship Defined.--In this section, the term 
``surface combat ship''--
            (1) means a surface ship that--
                    (A) is designed primarily to engage in attacks 
                against airborne, surface, subsurface, and shore 
                targets; and
                    (B) uses a propulsion system that is not nuclear-
                based; and
            (2) includes any--
                    (A) guided missile cruiser;
                    (B) guided missile destroyer;
                    (C) guided missile frigate; and
                    (D) littoral combat ship.

SEC. 1018. CONTRACTING REFORM FOR SURFACE SHIP MAINTENANCE, REPAIR, AND 
              OVERHAUL.

    (a) Indefinite Delivery-indefinite Quantity Contract.--
            (1) Requirement.--The Secretary of the Navy shall enter 
        into an indefinite delivery-indefinite quantity contract for 
        the maintenance, repair, and overhaul of covered vessels, and 
        shall issue task orders under such contract for the performance 
        of such activities, across availability periods, by private 
        shipyards, with a separate task order for each category of 
        covered vessel determined by the Secretary consistent with 
        subsection (c).
            (2) Responsibilities of contractors.--Each task order 
        issued under the contract required under paragraph (1) shall 
        require the private shipyard performing work under the task 
        order for a category of covered vessels to be responsible for 
        any routine, scheduled, or corrective life-cycle maintenance or 
        repair activity of such vessels assigned to such shipyard under 
        such task order.
            (3) Minimum term duration.--The Secretary shall ensure that 
        the term for any contractor that is a party to the indefinite 
        delivery-indefinite quantity contract required under paragraph 
        (1) is not less than five years after the date on which such 
        contract is entered into.
    (b) Pre-contract Requirements.--Prior to entering into the contract 
required under subsection (a)(1) or issuing any task order under such 
contract, but not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment 
of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense 
committees a report containing the following information:
            (1) A determination by the Secretary of the categories of 
        covered vessels to be used for purposes of such contract, 
        consistent with subsection (c), including the number, classes, 
        and anticipated availability schedules of vessels the 
        maintenance, repair, and overhaul of which is to be addressed 
        by each task order issued under such contract.
            (2) For each such category, an identification of the 
        availability of parts and supply chain capacity, forecasting, 
        and planning necessary to support the maintenance, repair, and 
        overhaul of covered vessels across availability periods.
            (3) An identification of standardized work-item sequencing, 
        bundling, and planning requirements to enable predictable 
        maintenance, repair, and overhaul of covered vessels across 
        availability periods.
            (4) An assessment of the adequacy of facilities for such 
        maintenance, repair, and overhaul, including with respect to 
        workforce capacity, dry dock and pier availability, and long-
        term infrastructure necessary to sustain workload requirements 
        under such contract.
            (5) A cost baseline for such maintenance, repair, and 
        overhaul, and a methodology for evaluating potential savings or 
        financial risks associated with such contract.
            (6) An identification of risks to such maintenance, repair, 
        and overhaul associated with schedule disruptions, supply chain 
        delays, or industrial base shortfalls, and a description of 
        mitigation strategies and contingency planning for such risks.
    (c) Considerations for Category Determination.--In determining 
categories of covered vessels for purposes of the contract required 
under subsection (a)(1), the Secretary shall consider--
            (1) the facilities, capabilities, and industrial capacity 
        required to carry out maintenance, repair, and overhaul 
        activities for covered vessels;
            (2) the need to ensure adequate competition, and prevent 
        the over-concentration of workload, among private shipyards; 
        and
            (3) options for task orders issued under such contract to 
        incorporate multiple covered vessels.
    (d) Notification of Contract Termination.--Not later than 30 days 
after any date on which the Secretary terminates the contract required 
under subsection (a)(1), or any task order under such contract, the 
Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense committees a notice 
of such termination, including a justification for such termination.
    (e) Applicability of Foreign Shipyard Restrictions.--The 
limitations under section 8680 of title 10, United States Code, shall 
apply with respect to the maintenance, repair, and overhaul of covered 
vessels pursuant to any task order issued under the contract required 
under subsection (a)(1).
    (f) Metrics and Mechanisms for Oversight.--In carrying out this 
section, the Secretary shall establish metrics and oversight mechanisms 
for--
            (1) contractor performance;
            (2) schedule adherence;
            (3) cost performance relative to the established baseline 
        cost;
            (4) effects on the industrial base and workforce 
        sustainment; and
            (5) effects on fleet readiness and operational 
        availability.
    (g) Annual Reports.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, and annually thereafter for 5 years, the 
Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report 
that contains, at a minimum, the following:
            (1) A description of--
                    (A) the status of the implementation of the 
                contract required under subsection (a)(1);
                    (B) the categories of covered vessels determined by 
                the Secretary for purposes of such contract, and the 
                rationale behind such determination;
                    (C) projected cost savings, schedule improvements, 
                and effects on the industrial base resulting from such 
                contract; and
                    (D) any risk identified with respect to such 
                contract and as applicable, the measures adopted to 
                mitigate any such risk.
            (2) Recommendations for legislative and regulatory changes 
        to improve the authority for, or implementation of, indefinite 
        delivery-indefinite quantity contracts entered into by the 
        Secretary.
    (h) Covered Vessel Defined.--In this section, the term ``covered 
vessel'' means a surface combatant vessel, as such term is defined in 
section 8227(e) of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 1019. REALIGNMENT OF CONTRACT MANAGEMENT FOR POLAR SECURITY CUTTER 
              PROGRAM.

    (a) Contract Management Alignment.--The Secretary of the Navy, in 
coordination with the Commandant of the Coast Guard, shall take such 
steps as are necessary to ensure that the Commandant of the Coast Guard 
is solely responsible for the contract management responsibilities for 
the Polar Security Cutter program.
    (b) Limitation on Navy Contracting Activities.--Beginning on the 
date that is 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the 
Secretary of the Navy may not maintain a separate contracting office 
for the Polar Security Cutter program except as required to provide 
advisory support requested by the Commandant of the Coast Guard.
    (c) Briefing Requirement.--Not later than 90 days after the date of 
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall provide to 
the congressional defense committees a briefing describing the 
implementation of this section.

SEC. 1020. DOMESTIC SOURCING OF BULK FUEL TO SUPPORT TANKER SECURITY 
              PROGRAM.

    (a) Domestic Sourcing.--Beginning not later than 180 days after the 
date of the enactment of this Act, the Director of the Defense 
Logistics Agency shall seek to procure at least 10 percent of covered 
bulk fuel from domestic refineries with excess production capacity.
    (b) Use of Tanker Security Fleet Vessels.--The delivery of covered 
bulk fuel procured from a domestic refinery pursuant to subsection (a) 
shall be transported for delivery to locations outside of the United 
States on participating fleet vessels.
    (c) Coordination.--In carrying out this section, the Director of 
the Defense Logistics Agency shall coordinate with the Administrator of 
the Maritime Administration to align procurement and delivery planning 
for covered bulk fuel in accordance with subsection (a) with the Tanker 
Security Program, including by identifying opportunities to increase 
the use of participating fleet vessels consistent with subsection (b).
    (d) Report.--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 that includes--
            (1) an assessment of the extent to which participating 
        fleet vessels are expected to be used pursuant to subsection 
        (b);
            (2) a description of opportunities to increase the delivery 
        of covered bulk fuel procured from a domestic refinery pursuant 
        to subsection (a) in support of the Tanker Security Program, 
        including opportunities to establish recurring shipments of 
        such fuel to fuel depots of the Department located outside of 
        the United States;
            (3) an assessment of how such increase would support the 
        availability of United States mariners and long-range fuel 
        supply chains necessary to sustain military operations in 
        contested environments; and
            (4) any legislation, policy, or contract authority that the 
        Secretary determines necessary to implement this section.
    (e) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered bulk fuel'' means aviation turbine 
        fuel, marine diesel, or any other refined petroleum product 
        procured by the Secretary of Defense for delivery to locations 
        outside of the United States in support of military operations 
        or fuel depots of the Department of Defense.
            (2) The term ``excess production capacity'', with respect 
        to a refinery, means a production capacity of the refinery that 
        the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the Secretary of 
        Energy, determines is in excess of domestic consumption 
        requirements.
            (3) The term ``participating fleet vessel'' has the meaning 
        given such term in section 53401 of title 46, United States 
        Code.

SEC. 1021. REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO UNMANNED SURFACE VESSELS.

    (a) Limitation.--The Secretary of the Navy may not accept or take 
delivery of an unmanned surface vessel before the date on which the 
Secretary submits to the congressional defense committees certification 
in writing that the Chief of Naval Operations or the Commandant of the 
Marine Corps has developed both concepts of operation and concepts of 
employment for at least one of the following combat functions:
            (1) Anti-submarine warfare.
            (2) Maritime strike.
            (3) Logistics.
            (4) Electronic warfare.
            (5) Command and control.
            (6) Intelligence.
            (7) Surveillance.
            (8) Reconnaissance.
            (9) Targeting.
            (10) Systems designed to counter any of the functions 
        described in paragraphs (1) through (9).
            (11) Any other combat function designated by the Chief of 
        Naval Operations or the Commandant of the Marine Corps.
    (b) Strategy Required.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall develop and 
implement a strategy for the integration of unmanned surface vessels 
into naval force design and joint maritime operations. Such strategy 
shall include each of the following:
            (1) A description of the role of unmanned surface vessels 
        in the future force design for the Department of the Navy.
            (2) The process and timelines associated with the 
        integration of unmanned surface vessels into joint maritime 
        operations.
            (3) An identification of the operational authorities 
        currently governing the use of unmanned surface vessels.
            (4) An acquisition strategy for unmanned surface vessels.
            (5) An identification of the manpower, training, and 
        infrastructure requirements for the integration of unmanned 
        surface vessels into naval force design and joint maritime 
        operations.
            (6) A description of different ownership or operating 
        models for unmanned surface vessels, including ownership and 
        operation by the Government and by contractors, and how each 
        such model would affect--
                    (A) manpower and infrastructure requirements;
                    (B) sustainment planning; and
                    (C) competition and industrial base concerns.
            (7) An identification of access and basing requirements for 
        unmanned surface vessels.
    (c) Report.--Not later than 210 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report on the strategy required 
under subsection (b).
    (d) Annual Briefing.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
submission of the report required under subsection (c), and biannually 
thereafter, the Portfolio Acquisition Executive established under 
section 1732 of title 10, United States Code, shall provide a briefing 
to the Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and 
the Senate. Each such briefing shall include each of the following:
            (1) A description of any changes or refinements made to the 
        strategy required under subsection (b) during the period by the 
        briefing.
            (2) A description of any planning, scenarios, or 
        simulations carried out by the Navy during the period by the 
        briefing that model the use of unmanned surface vessels in 
        defined environments for specific missions and tasks.
            (3) A description of any operational gaps identified during 
        the period by the briefing that unmanned surface vessel 
        capabilities could address.
            (4) A description of any validated and emerging 
        requirements of the combatant commands identified during the 
        period by the briefing for unmanned surface vessels and 
        unmanned underwater vessels, and the criteria used to validate 
        such requirements.
            (5) Any gaps in operational authority or required changes 
        with respect to unmanned surface vessels and unmanned 
        underwater vessels identified during the period by the 
        briefing.

SEC. 1022. ENHANCEMENT OF NAVY SUBMARINE RESCUE CAPABILITIES.

    (a) Diversification.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, in order to ensure operational readiness in the 
event of a prolonged unavailability of any single system, to the extent 
practicable, the Secretary of the Navy shall develop and maintain 
multiple, redundant submarine rescue capabilities, including--
            (1) Navy-owned rescue systems; and
            (2) commercially-classified or contract-operated rescue 
        systems certified under internationally recognized 
        classification standards.
    (b) Technological Modernization.--To the extent practicable, the 
Secretary shall--
            (1) integrate emerging technologies, including unmanned and 
        autonomous underwater vehicles, into submarine rescue 
        operations to improve--
                    (A) search and location of distressed submarines;
                    (B) mission situational awareness; and
                    (C) risk mitigation for human rescue personnel; and
            (2) evaluate and, where feasible, develop new deep 
        submarine escape and survival technologies to extend safe crew 
        survivability beyond current operational depth limits.
    (c) Training and Operational Readiness.--To the extent practicable, 
the Secretary shall--
            (1) ensure the conduct of frequent, realistic training 
        exercises for submarine crews and rescue teams, simulating 
        disabled submarine scenarios under operationally relevant 
        conditions; and
            (2) integrate advanced modeling and simulation tools to 
        optimize rescue search and response planning under uncertain 
        environmental conditions.
    (d) International Interoperability.--To the extent practicable, the 
Secretary shall--
            (1) expand cooperation and interoperability with allied 
        submarine-operating nations, including through--
                    (A) participation in multinational exercises, such 
                as Pacific Reach and NATO Dynamic Monarch; and
                    (B) engagement with the International Submarine 
                Escape and Rescue Liaison Office and other relevant 
                international bodies; and
            (2) develop agreements, standard operating procedures, and 
        shared protocols to enable coordinated, multinational response 
        to submarine distress incidents.
    (e) Oversight, Safety, and Risk Reduction.--To the extent 
practicable, the Secretary shall--
            (1) ensure independent classification, inspection, and 
        certification of all rescue systems, both Navy-owned and 
        commercially operated, to maintain the highest safety and 
        operational standards; and
            (2) continue programs that reduce the likelihood of 
        submarine accidents, including submarine safety and quality 
        assurance initiatives, to complement rescue capabilities.
    (f) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees a report on the implementation of this section.

SEC. 1023. NAVY-COAST GUARD MARITIME WORKFORCE AND CAPACITY 
              COORDINATION PLAN.

    (a) Establishment.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy and the Commandant of 
the Coast Guard shall establish a recurring coordination mechanism to 
align maritime industrial workforce requirements and capacity planning 
activities.
    (b) Quarterly Coordination.--In carrying out subsection (a), the 
Secretary of the Navy and the Commandant of the Coast Guard shall 
convene meetings not less frequently than once each quarter to--
            (1) identify projected workforce requirements and capacity 
        needs associated with shipbuilding, ship repair, maintenance, 
        sustainment, and related maritime industrial activities;
            (2) identify areas of overlap, competition, or resource 
        constraints that may adversely affect the ability of either 
        service to meet workforce and industrial base requirements;
            (3) assess opportunities to coordinate workforce 
        development activities, training pipelines, and industrial base 
        investments; and
            (4) identify actions necessary to reduce duplication and 
        improve coordination across shared industrial sectors.
    (c) 10-year Maritime Workforce and Capacity Plan.--
            (1) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, and every two years thereafter, the 
        Secretary of the Navy and the Commandant of the Coast Guard 
        shall jointly submit to the appropriate congressional 
        committees a report containing a 10-year maritime workforce and 
        capacity plan. Each such plan shall include, for the period 
        covered by the plan--
                    (A) projected workforce requirements across 
                shipbuilding, ship repair, maintenance, sustainment, 
                and critical supplier sectors;
                    (B) projected demand signals and anticipated 
                requirements for public and private shipyards and 
                related industrial base participants;
                    (C) an assessment of workforce gaps, shortages, and 
                associated risks to the execution of shipbuilding and 
                sustainment requirements;
                    (D) the identification of areas in which Navy and 
                Coast Guard requirements may create competing demands 
                for labor, infrastructure, or supplier capacity;
                    (E) recommendations for mitigating identified 
                constraints and improving coordination between the Navy 
                and the Coast Guard; and
                    (F) an assessment of actions necessary to provide 
                industry with greater predictability regarding future 
                workforce and capacity requirements.
            (2) Briefing.--Not later than 30 days after the date on 
        which a report is submitted under paragraph (1). the Secretary 
        of the Navy and the Commandant of the Coast Guard shall provide 
        to the appropriate congressional committees a briefing on the 
        plan contained in the report.
            (3) Appropriate congressional committees.--In this 
        subsection, the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' 
        means--
                    (A) the Committee on Armed Services and the 
                Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of 
                the Senate; and
                    (B) the Committee on Armed Services and the 
                Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the 
                House of Representatives.

SEC. 1024. PILOT PROGRAM ON USE OF ADDITIVE AND ADVANCED MANUFACTURING 
              TO SUPPORT NAVAL SHIPBUILDING.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary of the Navy shall conduct a pilot 
program through which the Secretary shall expand the use of additive 
manufacturing and advanced manufacturing technologies to address supply 
chain constraints, production delays, and part shortages affecting 
naval shipbuilding and ship repair.
    (b) Design of Pilot.--The Secretary shall design the pilot program 
to--
            (1) identify shipbuilding components, replacement parts, 
        tooling, fixtures, and other items that are constrained by 
        limited suppliers, long lead times, obsolete production 
        methods, or foreign dependence;
            (2) evaluate the use of additive manufacturing and advanced 
        manufacturing to produce such items in a manner that meets 
        applicable Navy technical, safety, cybersecurity, quality 
        assurance, and certification requirements;
            (3) reduce schedule delays in ship construction, 
        maintenance, and repair caused by shortages of parts or 
        production capacity;
            (4) strengthen domestic manufacturing capacity for naval 
        shipbuilding; and
            (5) support the development of qualification standards and 
        repeatable certification pathways for additive manufactured 
        shipbuilding components.
    (c) Implementation.--In carrying out the pilot program, the 
Secretary shall--
            (1) select not fewer than three classes of naval vessels 
        for participation in the pilot program;
            (2) prioritize components and parts that have demonstrated 
        supply chain constraints, production bottlenecks, or recurring 
        availability issues;
            (3) partner with public shipyards, private shipbuilders, 
        suppliers, and other entities within the domestic shipbuilding 
        industrial base;
            (4) support University Affiliated Research Centers, 
        federally funded research and development centers, and other 
        qualified technical organizations with expertise in additive 
        manufacturing, advanced manufacturing, materials science, and 
        industrial base modernization;
            (5) establish procedures for testing, qualification, and 
        certification of additive manufactured parts for naval use; and
            (6) ensure that any technical data, digital models, or 
        manufacturing processes developed under the pilot program are 
        managed to support long-term Navy sustainment and avoid vendor 
        lock-in.
    (d) UARC Support.--The Secretary may enter into agreements with 
University Affiliated Research Centers to provide technical support for 
the pilot program, including support for--
            (1) identifying candidate parts and components suitable for 
        additive or advanced manufacturing;
            (2) developing manufacturing processes and qualification 
        standards;
            (3) conducting materials testing and performance 
        validation;
            (4) assessing cybersecurity risks associated with digital 
        manufacturing files and production systems;
            (5) supporting workforce development and training for 
        additive manufacturing in the naval shipbuilding industrial 
        base; and
            (6) advising the Navy on how to scale successful 
        technologies across shipbuilding and ship repair programs.
    (e) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees a report on the implementation of the pilot program, 
including--
            (1) the ship classes, shipyards, and industrial base 
        partners participating in the pilot program;
            (2) the categories of parts or components selected for 
        additive manufacturing or advanced manufacturing;
            (3) the extent to which the pilot program has reduced lead 
        times, production delays, costs, or supplier constraints;
            (4) any barriers to qualification, certification, 
        cybersecurity, intellectual property, or technical data rights;
            (5) the role of University Affiliated Research Centers and 
        other technical organizations in supporting the pilot program; 
        and
            (6) recommendations for expanding the use of additive and 
        advanced manufacturing across naval shipbuilding and ship 
        repair.
    (f) Duration.--The authority under this section shall terminate on 
December 31, 2032.

SEC. 1025. LIMITATION ON USE OF FUNDS FOR PROCUREMENT OF A BATTLE FORCE 
              SHIP.

    (a) In General.--None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by 
this Act for fiscal year 2027 for the Department of the Navy may be 
obligated or expended to enter into a contract for the procurement of a 
battle force ship to be built a foreign shipyard that is to be 
commissioned a United States Ship (USS) warship.
    (b) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``battle force ship'' has the meaning given in 
        Secretary of the Navy Instruction 5030.8C.
            (2) The term ``foreign shipyard'' means any shipbuilding 
        facility located outside of the United States, Guam, and the 
        Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands.

SEC. 1026. STRATEGY FOR DISTRIBUTED SHIPBUILDING.

    (a) Strategy.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall develop and 
implement a strategy to increase distributed shipbuilding.
    (b) Briefing.--Not later than 270 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall provide to the congressional 
defense committees a briefing on the strategy required under subsection 
(a).
    (c) Distributed Shipbuilding Defined.--In this section, the term 
``distributed shipbuilding'' means, with respect to a vessel, the 
construction of modules of the vessel--
            (1) by one or more entities that are independent from the 
        operators of the shipyard at which the final assembly of the 
        vessel occurs; and
            (2) at a facility that is located separately from, or that 
        is located within but is not operated by, the shipyard at which 
        the final assembly of the vessel occurs.

SEC. 1027. STRATEGY OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE RELATING TO SMALL UNCREWED 
              SURFACE VESSELS.

    (a) Strategy.--Not later than 270 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in consultation with 
the Secretary of the Navy and the Director of the Defense Autonomous 
Warfare Group, shall develop and implement a strategy for the 
acquisition, sustainment, and operational employment of, and the 
development of the industrial base for, small uncrewed surface vessels.
    (b) Elements.--The strategy required under subsection (a) shall 
include the following elements:
            (1) A statement of the operational concept for the 
        employment of small uncrewed surface vessels by the naval 
        forces of the United States, including a description of the 
        following:
                    (A) The missions for which such vessels are 
                intended to be employed.
                    (B) The role of such vessels in distributed 
                maritime operations and the integration of such vessels 
                with crewed naval vessels.
                    (C) The integration of such vessels with command 
                and control, intelligence, surveillance, and 
                reconnaissance, and logistics structures of the naval 
                forces.
            (2) A plan for the acquisition of small uncrewed surface 
        vessels that includes the following:
                    (A) An identification of the role of the portfolio 
                acquisition executive for robotic and autonomous 
                systems of the Department of the Navy in acquiring such 
                vessels.
                    (B) Rules for the use of competitive procurement 
                methods that maximize participation by domestic 
                shipyards, including small shipyards and nontraditional 
                defense contractors.
                    (C) Measures to address the protection of designer 
                technical data and intellectual property in a manner 
                consistent with sustained competition for the 
                manufacture and sustainment of such vessels.
                    (D) Objectives relating to performance, cost, and 
                schedule, for each class of small uncrewed surface 
                vessel.
            (3) A plan for the development of the industrial base for 
        small uncrewed surface vessels, including the following:
                    (A) An identification of the production capacity, 
                supplier base, and workforce required to meet the 
                acquisition plan under paragraph (2) through fiscal 
                year 2032.
                    (B) Measures to expand domestic manufacturing 
                capacity for such vessels and to ensure critical 
                elements of the supply chain are available for the 
                construction of such vessels.
                    (C) An identification of, and measures to address, 
                risks of single-source dependency, foreign content, and 
                supply chain disruption.
                    (D) Mechanisms for engagement with the maritime 
                industrial base, including small shipyards, to align 
                industrial investment with the demand of the Department 
                of Defense.
            (4) A plan for the sustainment of small uncrewed surface 
        vessels, including the following:
                    (A) An identification of the sustainment capacity 
                of the Department of Defense and contractors of the 
                Department required to support the operational 
                employment of such vessels.
                    (B) Measures to address the licensing, ownership, 
                and accessibility of technical data necessary to enable 
                the competitive sustainment of such vessels.
                    (C) Measures to mitigate the risk of a lack of 
                competition for the sustainment of such vessels 
                resulting from proprietary information or restricted 
                technical data relating to such vessels or components 
                or systems thereof.
    (c) Submission to Congress.--Not later than 30 days after the date 
on which the Secretary of Defense completes the strategy required under 
subsection (a), the Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense 
committees such strategy.
    (d) Annual Reports.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, and annually thereafter until 
        September 30, 2030, the Secretary of the Navy, in coordination 
        with the portfolio acquisition executive for robotic and 
        autonomous systems of the Department of the Navy, shall submit 
        to the congressional defense committees a report on the 
        development of the industrial base for, and the acquisition of, 
        small uncrewed surface vessels.
            (2) Elements.--Each report submitted under paragraph (1) 
        shall include the following:
                    (A) An inventory, as of the date of the report, of 
                each small uncrewed surface vessel acquired by the 
                Department of the Navy, disaggregated by program, 
                class, fiscal year of procurement, quantity procured, 
                and unit cost.
                    (B) The acquisition plan for small uncrewed surface 
                vessels for each fiscal year of the most recent future-
                years defense program submitted to Congress under 
                section 221 of title 10, United States Code, including 
                the planned quantities and classes of such vessels to 
                be acquired, and the costs of such acquisition.
                    (C) An assessment of the capacity of the domestic 
                industrial base to meet such plan, including--
                            (i) an identification of shipyards and 
                        prime manufacturers engaged in the production 
                        of such vessels;
                            (ii) an identification of critical 
                        component and system suppliers, including 
                        suppliers of propulsion, autonomy, 
                        communications, and command and control systems 
                        for such vessels; and
                            (iii) an identification of any bottleneck, 
                        capacity shortfall, or other constraint that 
                        may impede the execution of such plan.
                    (D) A comparison of the current and projected rates 
                of the production of small uncrewed surface vessels, 
                versus the quantities of such vessels identified as 
                necessary to be maintained pursuant to the strategy 
                required under subsection (a).
                    (E) An assessment of the availability of the 
                workforce, including any skilled trades within such 
                workforce, required to meet the planned production of 
                such vessels, including an identification of any 
                workforce shortfall and any measures being taken to 
                address any such shortfall.
                    (F) An assessment of the risks to competition for 
                the sustainment of such vessels arising from such 
                vessels, or components or systems thereof, containing 
                proprietary information or restricted technical data, 
                and a description of any measures being taken to 
                mitigate such risks.
                    (G) An assessment of foreign content in small 
                uncrewed surface vessels acquired or planned for 
                acquisition, including an identification of supply 
                chain vulnerabilities and dependencies on suppliers 
                from countries of concern.
                    (H) Any recommendations for legislative, 
                regulatory, or budgetary action necessary to address 
                challenges identified in the report relating to the 
                development of the industrial base for, and the 
                acquisition of, small uncrewed surface vessels.
    (e) Form.--The strategy required under subsection (a) and each 
report required under subsection (d) shall be submitted in unclassified 
form, but may include a classified annex.
    (f) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``country of concern'' means a covered nation 
        as defined in section 4872(d) of title 10, United States Code.
            (2) The term ``nontraditional defense contractor'' has the 
        meaning given such term in 3014 of title 10, United States 
        Code.
            (3) The term ``small shipyard'' has the meaning given such 
        term in section 54101 of title 46, United States Code.
            (4) The term ``small uncrewed surface vessel''--
                    (A) means--
                            (i) an uncrewed surface vessel with a full 
                        load displacement of not more than 50 metric 
                        tons and a length of not more than 50 feet; or
                            (ii) any other uncrewed surface vessel 
                        designated by the Secretary of the Navy as a 
                        small uncrewed surface vessel for purposes of 
                        this section; and
                    (B) does not include any vessel of the program of 
                the Department of the Navy referred to as the ``Medium 
                Unmanned Surface Vessel Program''.

SEC. 1028. ARCTIC-FOCUSED FORECASTING, ICE MODELING, AND NAVAL 
              READINESS ASSESSMENT.

    (a) Requirements.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in consultation with 
the Secretary of the Navy and the Commander of Fleet Numerical 
Meteorology and Oceanography Center, shall assess options to expand and 
enhance Arctic-focused meteorological, oceanographic, and ice-modeling 
capabilities to improve naval readiness, operational planning, and 
force posture in the Arctic region. The Secretary shall seek carry out 
this subsection to--
            (1) strengthen high-resolution Arctic weather forecasting, 
        sea ice analysis, and predictive ice modeling in support of 
        naval and joint operations;
            (2) improve the integration of Arctic weather data into 
        operational decision-making, force employment, and logistics 
        planning;
            (3) support safe navigation, domain awareness, and mission 
        assurance for surface, subsurface, and aviation forces 
        operating in or transiting the Arctic;
            (4) enhance the ability of the Navy to anticipate and adapt 
        to long-term effects from weather affecting Arctic operations; 
        and
            (5) align Department of Defense Arctic capabilities with 
        whole-of-government Arctic strategies and priorities.
    (b) Report on Effects of Extreme Weather Conditions on Naval 
Readiness.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than one year after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall 
        submit to the congressional defense committees a report that 
        includes an assessment of the effects of extreme weather 
        conditions on naval readiness and force posture in the Arctic 
        region.
            (2) Contents.--Each such report shall include--
                    (A) an assessment of observed and projected Arctic 
                weather trends affecting naval and ground operations;
                    (B) an identification of the implications of sea 
                ice variability, permafrost degradation, and extreme 
                weather on naval infrastructure, mobility, and 
                sustainment;
                    (C) a description of the effects of Arctic weather 
                trends on mission readiness, response timelines, and 
                operational risk;
                    (D) an evaluation of how enhanced forecasting and 
                ice-modeling capabilities are being used to mitigate 
                such risks; and
                    (E) recommendations for additional capability 
                development, posture adjustments, or policy actions to 
                strengthen Arctic naval readiness.

SEC. 1029. RENAMING OF USNS CESAR CHAVEZ.

    The Secretary of the Navy shall rename the USNS Cesar Chavez (T-
AKE-14) in keeping with the naming conventions for that class of 
vessels and by naming the vessel after an individual, place, or concept 
that best reflects the values, ideals, and history of the United States 
and the Navy.

SEC. 1030. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING NAMING OF VESSEL FOR BATTLE OF 
              DAI DO.

    It is the sense of Congress that the Secretary of the Navy should 
name an amphibious or expeditionary class vessel for the Battle of Dai 
Do.

SEC. 1031. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING NAMING OF A VESSEL ``USS 
              GUADALCANAL''.

    (a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
            (1) The naval campaign on Guadalcanal during World War II 
        marked a decisive turning point in the Pacific theater and 
        demonstrated extraordinary courage, endurance, and joint 
        warfighting skill by members of the Armed Forces of the United 
        States.
            (2) The name ``Guadalcanal'' carries enduring historical 
        and operational significance for the United States Navy and 
        Marine Corps, reflecting a campaign that shaped modern 
        amphibious warfare and maritime power projection.
            (3) The Department of the Navy has previously honored this 
        legacy through ships bearing the name ``Guadalcanal'', thereby 
        establishing a lineage consistent with longstanding naval 
        naming tradition.
            (4) The continued recognition of historically significant 
        naval battles in ship naming promotes esprit de corps, 
        preserves institutional memory, and strengthens the connection 
        between the Fleet and the Nation's naval heritage.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that the 
Secretary of the Navy should give favorable consideration to naming an 
appropriate future vessel of the United States Navy ``USS 
Guadalcanal''.

SEC. 1032. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING NAMING OF A NAVAL VESSEL FOR 
              BATTLE OF MIDWAY.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) The Battle of Midway during World War II constituted a 
        decisive turning point in the Pacific theater, demonstrating 
        the skill, courage, and operational excellence of United States 
        naval forces.
            (2) The name ``Midway'' carries enduring historical and 
        strategic significance for the United States Navy, reflecting a 
        battle that fundamentally altered the course of the war and 
        validated the importance of naval aviation and maritime power.
            (3) The Department of the Navy has previously honored this 
        legacy through vessels bearing the name ``Midway,'' thereby 
        establishing a distinguished lineage consistent with 
        longstanding naval naming traditions.
            (4) Recognizing historically significant naval battles 
        through ship naming promotes esprit de corps, reinforces 
        warfighting heritage, and strengthens the connection between 
        the fleet of the United States Navy and the American people.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that the 
Secretary of the Navy should give favorable consideration to naming an 
appropriate future vessel of the United States Navy the ``USS Midway''.

SEC. 1033. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING NAMING OF A NAVAL VESSEL IN 
              HONOR OF CASIMIR PULASKI.

    (a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
            (1) Casimir Pulaski volunteered to support the cause of 
        American independence during the American Revolutionary War and 
        rendered distinguished service to the Continental Army.
            (2) Casimir Pulaski is widely recognized as the ``Father of 
        the American Cavalry'' for his contributions to the development 
        of cavalry tactics and operations in the United States.
            (3) Casimir Pulaski died from wounds sustained while 
        leading forces during the Siege of Savannah in 1779 in support 
        of American independence.
            (4) The United States Navy previously honored Casimir 
        Pulaski through the naming of the USS Casimir Pulaski (SSBN-
        633), a ballistic missile submarine that served the United 
        States during the Cold War.
            (5) The Republic of Poland remains one of the United States 
        strongest allies in Europe and a critical member of the North 
        Atlantic Treaty Organization.
            (6) The United States and Poland maintain close military, 
        economic, and diplomatic ties founded upon shared democratic 
        values, mutual security interests, and enduring people-to-
        people relationships.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that the 
Secretary of the Navy should name an appropriate vessel of the United 
States Navy as the ``USS Casimir Pulaski'' in honor of the service and 
sacrifice of Casimir Pulaski on behalf of the United States and to 
commemorate the enduring alliance and strategic partnership between the 
United States and the Republic of Poland.

SEC. 1034. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING NAMING OF VESSEL FOR REAR 
              ADMIRAL ALENE DUERK.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) Following Rear Admiral Duerk's birth in Defiance, Ohio, 
        and graduation from the Toledo Hospital School of Nursing, she 
        received a commission on January 23, 1943, and was appointed as 
        an ensign in the Nurse Corps of the Naval Reserve.
            (2) During World War II, Rear Admiral Duerk was assigned as 
        a Ward Nurse at the Naval Medical Center Portsmouth, 
        Portsmouth, Virginia, and at the Naval Hospital, Bethesda 
        Maryland where she cared for wounded members of the Armed 
        Forces.
            (3) In 1945, Rear Admiral Duerk was stationed on the U.S.S. 
        Benevolence in the Pacific Theater (AH-13) where she treated 
        casualties from Third Fleet operations until the end of World 
        War II.
            (4) After World War II, Rear Admiral Duerk progressed in 
        rank and served in positions of increasing responsibility in 
        both active duty and in the Naval Reserves, including posts in 
        Michigan, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Illinois, the Philippines, 
        Japan, California, and Washington, D.C.
            (5) The dedication and inspirational service of Rear 
        Admiral Durek culminated with her historic selection for the 
        rank of Rear Admiral on April 16, 1972, as the first woman to 
        become a flag officer.
            (6) Rear Admiral Duerk was awarded the Naval Reserve Medal, 
        American Campaign Medal, the Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal 
        with Bronze Star, the World War II Victory Medal, the Navy 
        Occupation Service Medal, Asia Clasp, and the National Defense 
        Service Medal with Bronze Star.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that the 
Secretary of the Navy should consider naming a vessel of the United 
States Navy the ``U.S.S. Rear Admiral Alene Duerk'' in honor of Rear 
Admiral Alene Duerk.

                      Subtitle C--Counterterrorism

SEC. 1041. 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; 132 Stat. 1953) is 
amended by striking ``December 31, 2026'' and inserting ``December 31, 
2027''.

SEC. 1042. 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; 132 Stat. 
1954) is amended by striking ``December 31, 2026'' and inserting 
``December 31, 2027''.

SEC. 1043. 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 2019 (Public Law 115-232; 132 Stat. 1954) is 
amended by striking ``December 31, 2026'' and inserting ``December 31, 
2027''.

SEC. 1044. 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) is amended by striking 
``fiscal years 2018 through 2026'' and inserting ``fiscal years 2018 
through 2027''.

         Subtitle D--Miscellaneous Authorities and Limitations

SEC. 1051. ESTABLISHMENT OF THE SECRETARIES OF DEFENSE HISTORICAL 
              SERIES AND PRIORITY DECLASSIFICATION AUTHORITY.

    Chapter 4 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at 
the end the following new section:
``Sec. 150. Publication of historical series
    ``(a) Requirement.--The Secretary of Defense shall prepare and 
publish, on an ongoing basis, a thorough, accurate, and reliable 
documentary historical record of major United States national security 
and defense policy decisions and significant diplomatic and military 
activities of the Department of Defense. Such historical record shall 
be known as the `Secretaries of Defense Historical Series' (in this 
section referred to as the `Series'), and shall--
            ``(1) consist of a comprehensive, multi-volume documentary 
        and narrative history organized, to the extent practicable, by 
        Presidential administration;
            ``(2) be based on all relevant records, including 
        classified records;
            ``(3) present a thorough, objective, and scholarly 
        historical record; and
            ``(4) include appropriate annotation, citations, and 
        indexing to facilitate public and academic research.
    ``(b) Timeliness Requirement.--The Secretary shall ensure that each 
volume of the Series is published not later than 30 years after the 
events documented, to the maximum extent practicable.
    ``(c) Declassification Priority.--The Secretary shall--
            ``(1) ensure that records required for the preparation and 
        publication of the Series receive priority for declassification 
        review;
            ``(2) coordinate with the heads of other departments and 
        agencies to ensure timely declassification of equities 
        contained in such records; and
            ``(3) establish expedited procedures for interagency review 
        of records associated with the Series.
    ``(d) Public Availability.--(1) Volumes of the Series shall be 
published in unclassified form to the greatest extent possible.
    ``(2) The Secretary shall make such volumes available to the public 
through--
            ``(A) the Government Publishing Office; and
            ``(B) a publicly accessible Department of Defense website.
    ``(e) Relationship to Other Historical Activities.--The Series 
shall serve as the flagship historical publication of the Office of the 
Secretary of Defense Historical Office and shall complement other 
official Department of Defense historical programs.
    ``(f) Resourcing.--The Secretary shall ensure that the Office of 
the Secretary of Defense Historical Office is adequately resourced to 
carry out this section, including personnel dedicated to--
            ``(1) historical research and writing; and
            ``(2) declassification review and coordination.''.

SEC. 1052. INCLUSION OF NATIONAL GUARD RELIEF FOUNDATION AS A MILITARY 
              WELFARE SOCIETY FOR CERTAIN PURPOSES.

    (a) Provision of Space and Services.--Section 2566(b)(1) of title 
10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following 
new subparagraph:
                    ``(E) The National Guard Relief Foundation.''.
    (b) Non-Federal Entities Authorized for Purposes of Certain 
Participation by Members of the Armed Forces.--Section 1033(b)(2) of 
title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the 
following new subparagraph:
            ``(E) National Guard Relief Foundation.''.

SEC. 1053. JOINT EXPERIMENTATION AND TRAINING RANGE INNOVATION OFFICE.

    Chapter 307 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding 
at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 4176. Joint Experimentation and Training Range Innovation Office
    ``(a) Authority.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish within 
the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and 
Engineering a Joint Experimentation and Training Range Innovation 
Office (in this section referred to as the `Office').
    ``(b) Director.--The Office shall be headed by a Director who shall 
report directly to the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and 
Engineering. The Director shall be subject to the supervision of the 
Under Secretary without the interposition of any other supervising 
official.
    ``(c) Responsibilities.--The Office shall be responsible for the 
following:
            ``(1) Centralizing efforts relating to advocacy, budgeting, 
        operations, and sustainment of joint experimentation and 
        training ranges (and capabilities supporting such ranges) that 
        are not facilities or resources of the Major Range and Test 
        Facility Base.
            ``(2) Accelerating modernization and integration across 
        such joint experimentation and training ranges.
            ``(3) Serving as the primary authority for the oversight, 
        coordination, and conduct of activities of the Eastern Range 
        Regional Complex, including such activities carried out in 
        territories of the United States located in the Caribbean 
        region.
            ``(4) Fostering and accelerating innovation in technologies 
        that enable realistic experimentation and training for multi-
        domain operations (including integrated cyber, electronic 
        warfare, and spectrum operations) in contested and other 
        environments, including with respect to--
                    ``(A) artificial intelligence, machine learning, 
                and autonomous systems;
                    ``(B) advanced modeling, digital twins, and other 
                simulations;
                    ``(C) hypersonic systems, directed energy 
                capabilities, and other next-generation weapons; and
                    ``(D) integrated systems relating to command, 
                control, computing, communications, cyber, 
                intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance, and 
                targeting.
            ``(5) Establishing and deploying regionally aligned support 
        teams that provide to the Department of Defense remote and on-
        site technical assistance for joint multi-domain 
        experimentation and training exercises, prototype integration, 
        and related resource-sharing mechanisms, with a particular 
        emphasis on the provision of such support with respect to the 
        Eastern Range Regional Complex.
            ``(6) Conducting objective, independent risk assessments 
        and other evaluations of the training programs, technologies 
        and other capabilities, and acquisition initiatives, of the 
        joint forces, for the purpose of informing the decision-making 
        of senior officers of the Department of Defense and reducing 
        such risks.
            ``(7) Developing and regularly updating the strategic plan 
        under subsection (d).
    ``(d) Strategic Plan.--(1) Not less frequently than once every two 
fiscal years, the Director of the Office (in coordination with the 
Secretaries of the military departments, the Under Secretary of Defense 
for Personnel and Readiness, the Director of the Joint Staff, the 
Director of Operational Test and Evaluation, the Director of the Test 
Resource Management Center, and the heads of such other Defense 
Agencies as the Director of the Office may determine relevant) shall 
submit to the Secretary of Defense a strategic plan addressing the 
needs of the Department for joint experimentation and training 
facilities and resources.
    ``(2) Each strategic plan under paragraph (1) shall include the 
following:
            ``(A) An assessment of the feasibility of, and 
        recommendations for, the conduct of a biennial joint multi-
        domain experimentation and training exercise across multiple 
        States and ranges within the Eastern Range Regional Complex to 
        validate and inform subsequent strategic plans.
            ``(B) An assessment of requirements for joint 
        experimentation and training (including requirements relating 
        to information technology, network infrastructure, and multi-
        level security) for the period covered by the plan.
            ``(C) An assessment of the facilities and resources, 
        including advanced threat environments, live-virtual 
        constructive simulation capabilities, interoperability 
        standards, networks, and data-sharing mechanisms, of the 
        Eastern Regional Range Complex, including a summary of 
        modernization priorities for such matters during the subsequent 
        two-year period.
            ``(D) An itemization, disaggregated by location, of 
        improvements to joint experimentation and training ranges 
        necessary to directly support the acceleration of 
        experimentation and training involving robotic and autonomous 
        systems and the integration of unmanned systems into joint 
        multi-domain operations.
            ``(E) An assessment of the effectiveness of the Office with 
        respect to--
                    ``(i) carrying out the responsibilities under 
                subsection (c);
                    ``(ii) increasing regional access to, and frequency 
                of, joint multi-domain experimentation and training 
                exercises consistent with such responsibilities;
                    ``(iii) enhancing military readiness; and
                    ``(iv) strengthening the defense industrial base.
            ``(F) With respect to the exercises specified in 
        subparagraph (E)(ii)--
                    ``(i) an identification of the number of such 
                exercises carried out during the period covered by the 
                plan;
                    ``(ii) an assessment of the extent to which such 
                exercises incorporated actors within private industry 
                and academia; and
                    ``(iii) a description of lessons learned as a 
                result of such exercises, including any resulting 
                updates to risk assessments.
            ``(G) An executive summary of any joint multi-domain 
        experimentation and training exercise planned to be carried out 
        within the Eastern Range Regional Complex during the subsequent 
        two-year period.
    ``(3) Not later than 90 days after the date on which the Secretary 
of Defense receives a strategic plan under paragraph (1), the Secretary 
shall submit to the congressional defense committees a copy of such 
plan and any comments of the Secretary regarding such plan.
    ``(e) Coordination.--In addition to the coordination required under 
subsection (d)(1), the Director of the Office shall coordinate with the 
Secretaries of the military departments, the Joint Staff, the Under 
Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness, and the commanders of 
relevant combatant commands, with respect to requirements for joint 
experimentation and training ranges and plans for joint multi-domain 
experimentation and training exercises under this section.
    ``(f) Administrative Support.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
provide to the Director of the Office administrative support sufficient 
to carry out the responsibilities under this section. Such support 
shall be provided from headquarters activities of the Department or 
from other activities the Secretary determines appropriate.
    ``(g) Funding.--The Secretary of Defense may use funds authorized 
to be appropriated or otherwise made available for the Joint Electronic 
Advanced Technology program (or any successor program) for the 
implementation of this section.
    ``(h) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to limit or otherwise modify the authorities or 
responsibilities of the Director of the Test Resource Management Center 
or the Director of Operational Test and Evaluation.
    ``(i) Major Range and Test Facility Base Defined.--In this section, 
the term `Major Range and Test Facility Base' has the meaning given 
such term under section 4173 of this title.''.

SEC. 1054. ESTABLISHMENT OF ARMY INFORMATION OPERATIONS CENTER OF 
              EXCELLENCE.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) The information environment has emerged as a decisive 
        domain of strategic competition in which adversaries of the 
        United States operate continuously and below the threshold of 
        armed conflict.
            (2) Components of Army information operations, including 
        military information support operations, electronic warfare, 
        public affairs, and cyberspace operations, remain 
        organizationally fragmented, hindering the translation of 
        national-level strategy into synchronized operational and 
        tactical action.
            (3) Following the inactivation of the 1st Information 
        Operations Command of the Army, the Department of the Army is 
        undertaking a significant reorganization of its information 
        operations enterprise, including the establishment of region-
        specific Theater Information Advantage Detachments aligned with 
        Multi-Domain Task Forces.
            (4) A dedicated Center of Excellence would improve the 
        translation of national-level information strategies into 
        operational campaigns and theater-tailored tactical activities, 
        advance doctrine, evaluate efficacy, and advocate for 
        resourcing. It would also aid the Army during its 
        reorganization process, facilitating coordination and resource 
        allocation across its information operations enterprise.
    (b) Establishment.--Chapter 703 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by inserting after section 7024 the following new section:
``Sec. 7025. Army Information Operations Center of Excellence
    ``(a) Establishment.--The Secretary of the Army shall operate the 
Army Information Operations Center of Excellence. The purpose of the 
Center shall be to serve as the lead organization of the Army for the 
integration, synchronization, and advancement of information operations 
across the operational and tactical levels, in support of national and 
combatant command objectives.
    ``(b) Purpose.--The Center shall be used to--
            ``(1) Coordinate and synchronize Army information 
        operations objectives across the geographic and functional 
        combatant commands.
            ``(2) Provide training and operational planning support for 
        information operations campaigns at the operational level.
            ``(3) Develop, revise, and disseminate doctrine for Army 
        information operations, ensuring that doctrine evolves in step 
        with on-the-ground developments and emerging threats.
            ``(4) Assess the efficacy of ongoing Army information 
        operations activities and inform resourcing recommendations to 
        senior Army leadership.
            ``(5) Advocate for the resourcing of critical information 
        operations requirements within the planning, programming, 
        budgeting, and execution process of the Army.
            ``(6) Integrate the activities of the components of Army 
        information operations, including military information support 
        operations, electronic warfare, public affairs, and cyberspace 
        operations, to ensure that such components operate in a 
        coordinated, mutually reinforcing manner rather than in 
        fragmentation.
            ``(7) Serve as the principal liaison of the Army to 
        comparable centers and commands of the other armed forces, 
        including the Navy Information Operations Command, and to the 
        information operations staff of the combatant commands.
            ``(9) Perform such other functions as the Secretary of the 
        Army may specify.
    ``(c) Annual Report.--The Secretary of the Army shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees, and make publicly available on an 
appropriate website of the Department, an annual report on the 
activities of the Center.''.
    (c) Implementation Plan.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army shall submit to 
the congressional defense committees a plan for the establishment of 
the Center of Excellence established under section 7025 of title 10, 
United States Code, as added by subsection (b), including--
            (1) the proposed organizational structure, location, and 
        reporting chain of the Center;
            (2) the resources, personnel, and authorities required to 
        establish and sustain the Center;
            (3) a description of how the Center will integrate with the 
        Theater Information Advantage Detachments, Multi-Domain Task 
        Forces, and the broader reorganization of Army information 
        operations;
            (4) milestones for initial operating capability and full 
        operating capability; and
            (5) metrics by which the Secretary will evaluate the 
        effectiveness of the Center.

SEC. 1055. EXTENSION OF LIMITATION ON RETIREMENT OR DIVESTMENT OF EA-
              18G AIRCRAFT.

    Section 8062(f)(1)(A) of title 10, United States Code, is amended 
by striking ``September 30, 2027'' and inserting ``September 30, 
2032''.

SEC. 1056. AUTHORITY FOR SECRETARY OF DEFENSE WAIVER RELATING TO 
              CERTAIN TRAINING.

    Section 1050 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60; 10 U.S.C. 4172 note) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``Beginning on'' and inserting the 
        following:
    ``(a) Prohibition.--Beginning on''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(b) Waiver.--The Secretary of Defense may waive the prohibition 
under subsection (a) with respect to the special operations forces (as 
identified in section 167(j) of title 10, United States Code) if the 
Secretary determines such prohibition, including the requirement for 
the use of alternate methods under paragraph (2) of such subsection, 
would degrade the readiness of special operations forces medics with 
respect to the ability to manage the lethal effects of blast 
injuries.''.

SEC. 1057. EXPANSION OF PROHIBITION ON DESTRUCTION OR SCRAPPING OF 
              WORLD WAR II-ERA AIRCRAFT.

    Section 1051 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60; 10 U.S.C. 2572 note) is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)(2), by inserting ``or the Department 
        of the Navy'' after ``Air Force'';
            (2) in subsection (b)(1), by inserting ``or the Department 
        of the Navy'' after ``Air Force'';
            (3) in subsection (c)(1), by inserting ``, the Department 
        of the Navy,'' after ``Air Force''; and
            (4) in subsection (d)(2), by inserting ``, the National 
        Naval Aviation Museum, the National Museum of the Marine 
        Corps,'' after ``Air Force''.

SEC. 1058. PROHIBITION ON DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE CONTRACTS WITH CERTAIN 
              FOREIGN-OWNED ONLINE TUTORING SERVICES.

    Section 854 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2025 (Public Law 118-159; 10 U.S.C. 4651 note prec.) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``The Secretary'' and inserting ``(a) In 
        General--The Secretary'';
            (2) by striking ``the People's Republic of China'' and 
        inserting ``a country of concern''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(b) Country of Concern Defined.--In this section, the term 
`country of concern' means any of the following:
            ``(1) China.
            ``(2) Russia.
            ``(3) Iran.
            ``(4) North Korea.''.

SEC. 1059. PROHIBITION ON DISPLAY OF UNAPPROVED FLAGS.

    Section 1052(d)(1) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2024 (10 U.S.C. 2661 note) is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subparagraphs (H) through (N) as 
        subparagraphs (I) through (O), respectively; and
            (2) by inserting after subparagraph (G) the following new 
        subparagraph:
                    ``(H) The Honor and Remember flag.''.

SEC. 1060. PROHIBITION ON LOBBYING ACTIVITIES WITH RESPECT TO THE 
              DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE BY CERTAIN OFFICERS OF THE ARMED 
              FORCES AND CIVILIAN EMPLOYEES OF THE DEPARTMENT FOLLOWING 
              SEPARATION FROM MILITARY SERVICE OR EMPLOYMENT WITH THE 
              DEPARTMENT.

    Section 1045 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 10 U.S.C. note prec. 971) is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)(1), by striking ``two-year'' and 
        inserting ``five-year''; and
            (2) in subsection (b)(1), by striking ``one-year'' and 
        inserting ``three-year''.

SEC. 1061. INTEGRATION OF SMALL UNMANNED AIRCRAFT SYSTEMS AND COUNTER-
              UNMANNED AIRCRAFT SYSTEMS TRAINING INTO INITIAL, OFFICER, 
              AND JOINT COLLECTIVE TRAINING.

    (a) In General.--The relevant service secretary shall integrate 
foundational small unmanned aircraft systems (sUAS) operation and 
counter-UAS (C-UAS) recognition and defeat protocols into the program 
of instruction for all initial entry and officer ascension training 
pipelines. To ensure institutional integration, sUAS and C-UAS training 
shall follow the historic, tiered progression of established combat 
marksmanship training.
    (b) Joint Integration in Service-level and Large-scale Combat 
Exercises.--The Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the 
Secretaries of the military departments, shall ensure that no service-
level training exercise or Joint-Force large-scale combat simulation 
may be certified as combat-ready or complete unless the exercise 
incorporates realistic, adversarial UAS threat simulation.
    (c) Applicability.--The requirements under section (a) and (b) 
shall apply to the below military department training maneuvers:
            (1) United States Marine Corps Marine Air-Ground Task Force 
        Warfighting Exercises and Integrated Training Exercises 
        conducted at Marine Corps Air-Ground Combat Center Twentynine 
        Palms, California.
            (2) United States Army exercises at the National Training 
        Center and the Joint Readiness Training Center.
            (3) United States Air Force and United States Navy Red Flag 
        and large-scale Fleet Exercises.
    (d) Establishment of a Matrixed Skill Line.--The Secretary of the 
Defense shall designate basic sUAS operation and C-UAS tactical defense 
as Core Warrior Tasks.

SEC. 1062. EASTERN REGIONAL RANGE COMPLEX DEMONSTRATION PROJECT.

    (a) Demonstration Project Required.--Consistent with section 1048 
of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public 
Law 119-60; 10 U.S.C. note prec. 4171), the Secretary of Defense shall 
carry out a demonstration project under which the Secretary shall--
            (1) integrate with respect to the Eastern Regional Range 
        Complex common network solutions identified with respect to the 
        Western Regional Range Complex;
            (2) interconnect training ranges and experimentation sites 
        located in the Eastern Regional Range Complex region;
            (3) use such interconnected ranges and sites for the 
        conduct of joint, multi-domain, kinetic and non-kinetic 
        training and experimentation, including within live, virtual, 
        and constructive environments, across the military departments; 
        and
            (4) enhance such experimentation and training by 
        integrating the combined operations of other Federal 
        departments and agencies with respect to such experimentation 
        and training.
    (b) Use of Existing Ranges and Capabilities.--In carrying out the 
demonstration project under subsection (a), the Secretary shall use 
training ranges, experimentation sites, and related capabilities that 
are available as of the date of the enactment of this Act.
    (c) Timeline for Completion of Initial Demonstration.--In carrying 
out subsection (a), the Secretary shall complete an initial 
demonstration, interconnecting two or more training ranges located in 
the region described in subsection (a)(1) or the experimentation sites 
of two or more military departments located in such region, not later 
than one year after the date of the enactment of this Act.
    (d) Report.--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 submit 
to the congressional defense committees a report that includes the 
following:
            (1) A phased implementation plan and design for the 
        interconnection of training ranges and experimentation sites 
        required under subsection (a), including the initial 
        demonstration required under subsection (c).
            (2) An analysis of how the design of such plan aligns with 
        recommendations of the most recent Electromagnetic Spectrum 
        Superiority Strategy of the Department of Defense.
            (3) An analysis of how such design architecture is expected 
        to support high-periodicity training, testing, research, and 
        development, including to inform future network designs and 
        architectures capable of interconnecting and supporting future, 
        advanced, joint, live, virtual, and constructive environments.
            (4) An analysis of the number and types of annually 
        recurring and non-recurring training and experimentation 
        activities conducted at training ranges and experimentation 
        sites of the military departments located in the Eastern 
        Regional Range Complex region.
            (5) An identification of any shortfalls in the networks, 
        facilities, or equipment of such ranges or sites.
            (6) An analysis of any statutory or intergovernmental 
        policy barriers to the use of the Eastern Regional Range 
        Complex, and any recommended changes to accelerate such use.
            (7) An analysis of the capacity of the Eastern Regional 
        Range Complex to be used for additional testing and evaluation 
        activities.
            (8) An analysis of the possibility of using training ranges 
        and experimentation sites located in the Eastern Regional Range 
        Complex region as threat-relevant environments for the 
        workforce and technology development activities of other 
        Federal department agencies and private sector entities in the 
        United States.
            (9) An analysis of the capacity of such ranges and sites to 
        be used for realistic advanced cyber, electronic warfare, and 
        information operations training in live, virtual, or 
        constructive environments.
            (10) An analysis of electronic warfare training shortfalls 
        at military installations located in the United States, 
        including with respect to the ability to perform full spectrum 
        electronic warfare training in environments considered 
        unobservable.
            (11) An analysis of the feasibility and advisability of 
        establishing, or expanding, dedicated training areas for 
        electronic warfare capabilities in the United States and 
        territories of the United States located in the Caribbean 
        region (including in the immediate vicinity of such locations).
    (e) Eastern Regional Range Complex Region Defined.--In this 
section, the term ``Eastern Regional Range Complex region'' means the 
region encompassing the territories specified in 1048(b) of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 
119-60; 10 U.S.C. note prec. 4171).
    (f) Termination.--This section shall terminate on September 30, 
2029.

SEC. 1063. PILOT PROGRAM ON TOTAL REPLACEMENT VALUE FOR AIR FORCE TEST 
              CENTER GROUND TEST INFRASTRUCTURE.

    (a) Pilot Program.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this section, the Secretary of the Air Force shall carry 
out a pilot program to adopt Total Replacement Value as the standard 
methodology for calculating cost for ground test infrastructure assets 
of the Air Force Test Center.
    (b) Elements.--The pilot program shall include--
            (1) a calculation of the Total Replacement Value for each 
        ground test infrastructure asset of the Air Force Test Center, 
        including separate calculations of Plant Replacement Value and 
        Equipment Replacement Value; and
            (2) an association of non-real property installed test 
        equipment with Real Property Unique Identifiers (or a similar 
        identifier for real property or other assets authorized by the 
        Secretary of Defense) in the Defense Property Accountability 
        System, or a successor system, to enable ongoing tracking of 
        Equipment Replacement Value.
    (c) Requirements.--The Secretary of the Air Force shall--
            (1) beginning in fiscal year 2028, include in the budget 
        justification materials submitted annually to Congress the 
        Total Replacement Value for all ground test infrastructure 
        assets of the Air Force Test Center, the amount requested for 
        sustainment of such ground test infrastructure assets as a 
        percentage of such Total Replacement Value, and, if that 
        percentage is less than two percent, an explanation of the 
        shortfall and the projected impact on infrastructure readiness; 
        and
            (2) submit to the congressional defense committees, not 
        later than one year after the date of the enactment of this 
        section, a plan to achieve a funding level for sustainment of 
        such ground test infrastructure assets of not less than two 
        percent of the Total Replacement Value for such assets for a 
        fiscal year, including projected milestones to maintain such 
        funding level for a five-year period.
    (d) Report.--Not later than three years after the date of the 
enactment of this section, the Secretary of the Air Force shall submit 
to the congressional defense committees a report on the pilot program 
that includes--
            (1) an assessment of the use of Total Replacement Value as 
        a methodology as the standard methodology for calculating costs 
        for ground test infrastructure assets of the Air Force Test 
        Center;
            (2) an assessment of funding levels for ground test 
        infrastructure assets of the Air Force Test Center compared to 
        the Total Replacement Value calculated during the pilot 
        program; and
            (3) a recommendation on whether and how to expand the use 
        of the Total Replacement Value methodology to all ground test 
        infrastructure assets of the Major Range and Test Facility Base 
        (as defined in section 4173(j) of title 10, United States 
        Code).
    (e) Recommendation.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
submission of the report required under subsection (d), the Under 
Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering shall review the 
recommendation described in subsection (d)(4) and determine whether to 
use the Total Replacement Value methodology for all ground test 
infrastructure assets of the Major Range and Test Facility Base.
    (f) Termination.--The pilot program shall terminate on the earlier 
of--
            (1) the date on which the Under Secretary of Defense of 
        Research and Engineering begins use of the Total Replacement 
        Value methodology for all ground test infrastructure assets of 
        the Major Range and Test Facility Base; or
            (2) the date that is five years after the date of the 
        enactment of this section.
    (g) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``Equipment Replacement Value'' means the 
        estimated cost to replace the non-real property installed test 
        equipment within a ground test infrastructure asset, calculated 
        using the same methodology as Plant Replacement Value is 
        calculated.
            (2) The term ``Plant Replacement Value'' means the 
        estimated cost to replace the physical structure of a ground 
        test infrastructure asset.
            (3) The term ``Total Replacement Value'' means the sum of 
        Plant Replacement Value and Equipment Replacement Value.

SEC. 1064. PILOT PROGRAM FOR BLOCKCHAIN-ENABLED INVENTORY MANAGEMENT.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense may establish a pilot 
program under which the Department of Defense shall use commercially 
available distributed ledger technology to seek to improve inventory 
management within the Department of Defense.
    (b) Objectives.--Under the pilot program established under 
subsection (a), the Secretary shall--
            (1) assess the feasibility and effectiveness of using 
        distributed ledger technology in improving inventory 
        management;
            (2) assess the cost savings resulting from the use of 
        distributed ledger technology in inventory management;
            (3) assess whether the use of distributed ledger technology 
        in inventory management improves the traceability of inventory;
            (4) assess whether the use of distributed ledger technology 
        in inventory management reduces the risk of waste, fraud, and 
        abuse; and
            (5) identify and mitigate potential challenges and risks 
        associated with the integration of distributed ledger 
        technology for inventory management, including cybersecurity 
        concerns.
    (c) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the 
Senate a report on the activities performed under the pilot program 
established under subsection (a).
    (d) Termination.--The authority to carry out a pilot program under 
subsection (a) shall terminate on January 1, 2029.
    (e) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``distributed ledger'' means a ledger that--
                    (A) is shared across a set of distributed nodes, 
                which are devices or processes, that participate in a 
                network and store a complete or partial replica of the 
                ledger;
                    (B) is synchronized between the nodes; and
                    (C) has data appended to it by following a 
                specified consensus mechanism.
            (2) The term ``distributed ledger technology'' means 
        technology that enables the operation and use of distributed 
        ledgers.

SEC. 1065. EXTENDED DEADLINE TO REASSESS NECESSITY OF USE OF IMMEDIATE 
              RESPONSE AUTHORITY OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.

    (a) Extended Deadline.--Not later than July 1, 2027, the Secretary 
of Defense shall--
            (1) issue an updated version of Department of Defense 
        Instruction 3025.18, titled ``Defense Support of Civil 
        Authorities (DSCA)'' with a revision to require that each 
        reassessment as to whether there remains a necessity for the 
        use of an immediate response authority pursuant to a request 
        for assistance is completed by not later than one week after 
        the date on which such request is received; and
            (2) submit to the congressional defense committees a 
        notification of such issuance.
    (b) Immediate Response Authority Defined.--In this section, the 
term ``immediate response authority'' has the meaning given such term 
in Department of Defense Instruction 3025.18, titled ``Defense Support 
of Civil Authorities (DSCA)''.

SEC. 1066. RECONSTITUTION OF A-10 DEMONSTRATION TEAM.

    (a) Reconstitution Required.--The Secretary of the Air Force may 
reconstitute and operate an A-10 demonstration team to support public 
outreach, recruiting, heritage, and official commemorative events 
associated with the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United 
States.
    (b) Purpose.--A demonstration team reconstituted and operated under 
subsection (a) shall--
            (1) honor the combat legacy and service history of the A-10 
        Thunderbolt II;
            (2) promote pride in American airpower and the service of 
        the men and women of the United States Air Force;
            (3) support appropriate public events, airshows, military 
        ceremonies, and official anniversary observances connected to 
        the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States; and
            (4) preserve and showcase the heritage of the A-10 
        community and the A-10 mission set.
    (c) Team Composition.--In carrying out this section, the Secretary 
may designate such aircraft, aircrew, maintainers, support personnel, 
and associated equipment as the Secretary determines necessary to 
establish and operate the demonstration team.
    (d) Limitation.--Aircraft designated for the demonstration team 
under this section--
            (1) shall be drawn from A-10 aircraft otherwise retained in 
        the inventory of the Air Force; and
            (2) may not be retired, divested, or transferred solely on 
        the basis of designation for demonstration purposes during the 
        period in which the team operates.
    (e) Briefing.--Not later than 120 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Air Force shall provide to 
the congressional defense committees a briefing on whether the 
Secretary plans to exercise the authority under this section, and if 
so, the plan to implement this section. If the Secretary does plan to 
exercise the authority under this section, the briefing shall include--
            (1) the number of aircraft to be assigned to the 
        demonstration team;
            (2) the expected cost and source of funds for such team;
            (3) the anticipated schedule of appearances and 
        commemorative events;
            (4) the basing location of the team;
            (5) any safety, maintenance, and sustainment requirements 
        associated with operation of the team; and
            (6) an assessment of the feasibility and advisability of 
        rebasing the demonstration team at Davis-Monthan Air Force 
        Base, Arizona.
    (f) Termination.--The authority to operate a demonstration team 
under this section shall terminate on September 30, 2033.

SEC. 1067. IMPLEMENTATION OF COGNITIVE PERFORMANCE ENHANCEMENT PROGRAM 
              FOR SPECIAL OPERATIONS FORCES.

    (a) Implementation.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Commander of the United States Special 
Operations Command shall implement a cognitive performance enhancement 
program to enhance cognitive performance metrics across the special 
operations forces. The program shall be known as the ``Cognitive 
Performance Enhancement Program'', and the Commander shall include the 
program in the strategy titled ``Comprehensive Strategy for Special 
Operations Warfighter Brain Health''.
    (b) Objectives.--The Commander shall ensure that the Cognitive 
Performance Enhancement Program--
            (1) improves readiness, resilience, and recovery, using 
        evidence-based holistic and proactive high-performance brain 
        training that has a validated ability to scale cost-effectively 
        across the special operations forces enterprise;
            (2) clearly distinguishes cognitive performance enhancement 
        from brain decline and injuries, including with respect to 
        traumatic brain injury, chronic traumatic encephalopathy, and 
        mental health, including post-traumatic stress disorder;
            (3) increases awareness of cognitive performance as a 
        critical differentiator that can help ensure special operations 
        forces remains the most lethal, decisive irregular warfare 
        force of the United States; and
            (4) ensures baseline cognitive performance assessments, 
        training, and enhancement are included as an essential element 
        of training and assessment throughout the career of a member of 
        the Armed Forces in the special operations forces in a similar 
        manner to other physical training and performance metrics.
    (c) Briefing.--Not later than one year after the date on which the 
Commander commences the implementation of the Cognitive Performance 
Enhancement Program, the Commander shall provide to the Committees on 
Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the Senate a 
briefing that includes--
            (1) an assessment of cognitive performance enhancement 
        tools used under the Program and whether the tools 
        qualitatively improved readiness, resilience, and recovery for 
        members of the Armed Forces in the special operations forces;
            (2) an assessment of how enhanced cognitive performance 
        contributes to operational advantages to the special operations 
        forces; and
            (3) any recommendations with respect to the feasibility of 
        implementing cognitive enhancement assessment and training 
        programs across the conventional force.

SEC. 1068. SENATOR ROBERT J. DOLE GREATEST GENERATION EDUCATION 
              PROGRAM.

    (a) Establishment of Program.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
establish and carry out a comprehensive educational program to increase 
public awareness and understanding of the achievements, sacrifices, and 
enduring lessons of the Greatest Generation in winning World War II. 
The Secretary shall design the program to--
            (1) teach the lessons of yesterday to unite the generations 
        of tomorrow, strengthening the bonds between young and old 
        people of the United States;
            (2) instill patriotism and pride in the young people of the 
        United States by sharing the stories of courage, sacrifice, 
        resilience, and unity demonstrated during World War II; and
            (3) offer hope for the future by demonstrating how the 
        people of the United States, when unified in purpose, can 
        overcome the greatest challenges.
    (b) Grants.--Under the program established by subsection (a), the 
Secretary may make grants to State and local governments, subject to 
the limitation under subsection (c), and nonprofit organizations. A 
recipient of such a grant shall use the grant to carry out educational 
activities for the general public anywhere in the United States that 
are designed to--
            (1) honor and thank World War II veterans, including those 
        who were prisoners of war or listed as missing in action, and 
        their families, for their service and sacrifice;
            (2) educate the public about the service and contributions 
        of the United States Armed Forces during World War II, as well 
        as the efforts of Federal agencies, allied nations, and 
        nongovernmental organizations;
            (3) promote awareness of the vital role of the home front 
        in the United States during World War II, including the 
        contributions of workers, families, and communities;
            (4) remember the Holocaust and honor the memory of its 
        victims, as well as recognizing the Allied forces who liberated 
        Nazi concentration camps;
            (5) support programs that engage students and young people 
        of the United States in learning about World War II, fostering 
        civic pride, historical understanding, and national unity; and
            (6) support programming and events held at nationally 
        significant sites of remembrance, such as the National World 
        War II Memorial, to reinforce public awareness and provide 
        immersive educational experiences that honor the legacy of the 
        Greatest Generation.
    (c) Limitation.--A State government that receives a grant under 
this section may only use the grant for a new initiative and may not 
use the grant to provide programming that is part of a secondary 
education program provided by the State.
    (d) Names and Symbols.--The Secretary of Defense shall have the 
sole and exclusive right to use the name ``Senator Robert J. Dole 
Greatest Generation Education Program'', as well as any associated 
seal, emblem, or badge. Nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to 
supersede any rights lawfully established prior to the date of 
enactment of this Act.
    (e) Nonprofit Organization Defined.--The term ``nonprofit 
organization'' means an organization described in section 501(c)(3) of 
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 and exempt from taxation under 
section 501(a) of such Code.

SEC. 1069. RECOGNITION PROGRAM FOR WORKING DOGS.

    (a) Establishment of Program.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
establish a program to recognize working dogs for actions that 
contribute to mission success, including actions that--
            (1) enhance force protection;
            (2) support lifesaving efforts; or
            (3) otherwise demonstrate exceptional service in the 
        performance of assigned duties.
    (b) Relationship to Other Honors.--Recognition of a working dog 
under this section may not be considered equivalent to, or otherwise 
diminish, an honor, award, or sacrifice of a member of the Armed Forces 
or a veteran.
    (c) Presentation.--Recognition of a working dog under this section 
may occur during an official military event in a manner that clearly 
distinguishes such recognition from an honor or award of a member of 
the Armed Forces or a veteran.
    (d) Records.--Recognition of a working dog under this section may 
be recorded in the official service documentation maintained for such 
working dog.

SEC. 1070. PROHIBITION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR CLOSURE OF ROCK 
              ISLAND ARSENAL MUSEUM.

    None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or 
otherwise made available for fiscal year 2027 for the Army may be 
obligated or expended to close the Rock Island Arsenal Museum located 
in Rock Island Arsenal, Illinois.

SEC. 1071. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR DEACTIVATION OF 
              EXPEDITIONARY COMBAT AVIATION BRIGADES.

    (a) Limitation.--None of the funds authorized to be appropriated or 
otherwise made available for any of fiscal years 2027 through 2031 for 
the Army may be obligated or expended to retire, deactivate, schedule 
to deactivate, or proceed with any other action that would reduce the 
capabilities, resources, training, aircraft, or personnel available, as 
of the date of the enactment of this Act, for the Expeditionary Combat 
Aviation Brigades unless the Secretary of the Army submits to the 
congressional defense committees--
            (1) a certification that the Secretary of the Army plans to 
        recapitalize any such aircraft for the Expeditionary Combat 
        Aviation Brigades and to otherwise restore any such 
        capabilities, resources, training, or personnel levels reduced 
        to the levels preceding such retirement, deactivation, or 
        reduction;
            (2) the plan of the Secretary of the Army for the actions 
        specified in paragraph (1); and
            (3) a report containing--
                    (A) an assessment of any planned reduction of 
                capability to Army aviation within the Army Reserve, 
                including reductions by platform and end strength and 
                all changes under the transformation initiative;
                    (B) an assessment of the effect of such reduction 
                on operational risk, readiness, and mission capability, 
                taking into consideration the operational tempo and 
                missions conducted by the Army during the five-year 
                period preceding the date of the report;
                    (C) an identification of any military construction 
                projects delayed, modified, or canceled as a result of 
                such reductions;
                    (D) an assessment of the remaining Army Reserve 
                rotary-wing and fixed-wing aviation capacity, by 
                platform, relative to validated mission requirements.
                    (E) the scale of the divestment of the 
                Expeditionary Combat Aviation Brigades as of the date 
                of the enactment of this Act and the effect of such 
                divestment on Army Reserve aviation capabilities, 
                including the number of remaining rotary wing aircraft, 
                by platform, required to meet mission requirements;
                    (F) a detailed breakdown of options available to 
                the members of the Armed Forces and civilian employees 
                affected by such divestment of the Expeditionary Combat 
                Aviation Brigades to continue service in the Armed 
                Forces or Department of Defense, as applicable, 
                including an identification of the number of affected 
                members and employees by specialty;
                    (G) an evaluation of the effect on State and local 
                communities of divesting the Expeditionary Combat 
                Aviation Brigades, including economic and workforce 
                effects; and
                    (H) a description of any strategic or scenario-
                based analysis or modeling used for making decisions to 
                divest the Expeditionary Combat Aviation Brigades.
    (b) Requirement to Restore.--
            (1) Requirement.--Not later than one year after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, for any Expeditionary Combat 
        Aviation Brigade that, prior to such date of enactment, the 
        Secretary of the Army retired or deactivated (or carried out 
        any other activity to reduce the capabilities, resources, 
        requisite individual or unit proficiency or qualification 
        training, aircraft, or personnel thereof), the Secretary of the 
        Army shall reinstate or reactivate such brigade, or otherwise 
        restore such brigade to the levels preceding such reduction, as 
        the case may be.
            (2) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army shall submit 
        to the congressional defense committees a report on the 
        implementation of this subsection.
    (c) Plan Required.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a plan to sustain and modernize the 
aircraft, readiness generation capacity, maintenance infrastructure, 
and requisite individual and unit training associated with the 
Expeditionary Combat Aviation Brigades.

SEC. 1072. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR TRAVEL EXPENSES OF 
              THE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE.

    Of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise 
made available for fiscal year 2027 for operation and maintenance, 
defense-wide, and available for the Office of the Secretary of Defense 
for travel expenses, not more than 75 percent may be obligated or 
expended until the Secretary of Defense submits to the congressional 
defense committees a certification that the Department of Defense is 
compliant with the requirements of section 1067 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2025 (Public Law 118-159; 138 Stat. 
2066), including--
            (1) a written statement that a copy of each execute order 
        required to be submitted to the congressional defense 
        committees under subsection (c) of such section has been so 
        submitted; and
            (2) a description of the mechanism established to 
        facilitate the provision to the congressional defense 
        committees of all future briefings required under subsection 
        (a) of such section, and the compliance with the disclosure and 
        notice requirements under subsection (c) of such section, 
        within the timeframes required by such section.

SEC. 1073. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR TRAVEL EXPENSES OF 
              OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE UNTIL SUBMISSION 
              CERTAIN ASSESSMENT.

     Of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act for fiscal 
year 2027 for operation and maintenance, Defense-wide, and available 
for the Office of the Secretary of Defense for travel expenses, not 
more than 95 percent may be obligated or expended until the Secretary 
of Defense submits the assessment required by section 835(a)(1) of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024 (Public Law 
118-31; 137 Stat. 338).

                    Subtitle E--Studies and Reports

SEC. 1081. REPEAL OF OBSOLETE REPORTING REQUIREMENTS.

    (a) Joint Safety Council Briefings.--Section 185 of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended by striking subsection (l).
    (b) Briefings on Basic Housing Allowance for Members Without 
Dependents When Home Port Change Would Financially Disadvantage 
Member.--Section 403(p)(2) of title 37, United States Code, is amended 
by striking subparagraph (C).
    (c)  Costs of Forward- Deploying Nuclear Weapons in Europe 
Briefing.--The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 
(Public Law 114-92) is amended by striking section 1656.
    (d) Littoral Combat Ship Report.--Section 123 of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014 (Public Law 114-328; 130 
Stat. 2030) is amended--
            (1) by striking subsection (a); and
            (2) by redesignating subsections (b) through (e) as 
        subsections (a) through (d), respectively.
    (e) Annual Explosive Ordnance Disposal Funding Documents.--Section 
343 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 
(Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2082; 10 U.S.C. 2701 note) is amended--
            (1) by striking subsection (b); and
            (2) by redesignating subsections (c) through (e) as 
        subsections (b) through (d), respectively.
    (f) Report on Military Action of Saudi Arabia and Its Coalition 
Partners in Yemen.--The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91) is amended by striking section 1265.
    (g) Consolidation of Reports on United States Armed Forces, 
Civilian Employees, and Contractors Deployed in Support of Operation 
Inherent Resolve, Operation Freedom's Sentinel, and Associated and 
Successor Operations.--Section 1267 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91) is amended--
            (1) by striking subsection (a) through (d);
            (2) by striking ``(f) Repeal of Superseded Provision.--''; 
        and
            (3) by amending the section heading to read as follows:

``SEC. 1267. REPEAL OF SUPERSEDED PROVISION.''.

    (h) Strategy to Counter Destabilizing Activities of Iran.--The John 
S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 
(Public Law 115-232) is amended by striking section 1237.
    (i) Study on Emerging Biotechnologies.--The National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (Public Law 116-92) is amended 
by striking section 263.
    (j) Annual Report on Progress Toward Depot Infrastructure 
Improvement.--Section 359 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2020 (Public Law 116-9; 133 Stat. 1323; 10 U.S.C. 2476 
note) is amended by striking subsection (c).
    (k) Annual Report of Defense Advisory Committee for the Prevention 
of Sexual Misconduct.--Section 550B of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (Public Law 116-92; 133 Stat. 
1381; 10 U.S.C. 1561 note) is amended by striking subsection (d).
    (l) Annual Report on Programs to Facilitate Award of Private 
Pilot's Certificates.--Section 560B of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (Public Law 116-92; 133 Stat. 
1393; 10 U.S.C. 2015 note).
    (m) Report on Legal Institutional Capacity Building Initiative.--
Section 1210 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2020 (Public Law 116-92) is amended--
            (1) by striking subsection (d); and
            (2) by redesignating subsections (e) and (f) as subsections 
        (d) and (e), respectively.
    (n) Report on Updated Strategy.--Section 1239 of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (Public Law 116-92; 133 
Stat. 1655) is amended by striking subsection (c).
    (o) Study on Competitive Strategies With Respect to China.--Section 
1253 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 
(Public Law 116-92; 133 Stat. 1669) is amended by striking subsection 
(c).
    (p) Report on Lay-down of Marines in Indo-Pacific.--The National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (Public Law 116-92) is 
amended by striking section 1260K.
    (q) Report on Saudi-led Coalition Strikes in Yemen.--The National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (Public Law 116-92) is 
amended by striking section 1274.
    (r) Reports on Expenses Incurred for In-flight Refueling of Saudi 
Coalition Aircraft.--The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2020 (Public Law 116-92) is amended by striking section 1275.
    (s) Report on Cost Imposition Strategy.--The National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (Public Law 116-92) is amended 
by striking section 1280
    (t) Annual Military Cyberspace Operations Report.--The National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (Public Law 116-92) is 
amended by striking section 1644.
    (u) Independent Study on Policy of No-first-use of Nuclear 
Weapons.--The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 
(Public Law 116-92) is amended by striking section 1673.
    (v) Independent Study on Risks of Nuclear Terrorism and Nuclear 
War.--The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 
(Public Law 116-92) is amended by striking section 1674.
    (w) Report on Military-to-military Dialogue to Reduce Risks of 
Miscalculation Leading to Nuclear War.--The National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (Public Law 116-92) is amended 
by striking section 1675.
    (x) Report on Transfers of Equipment to Prohibited Entities.--The 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (Public Law 
116-92) is amended by striking section 1722.
    (y) Pilot Program on Self-directed Training in Advanced 
Technologies.--The William M. (Mac) Thornberry National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (Public Law 116-283) is amended 
by striking section 248.
    (z) Report on Temporary Expansion of Availability of Enhanced 
Constructive Service Credit in a Particular Career Field Upon Original 
Appointment as a Commissioned Officer.--Section 503 of the William M. 
(Mac) Thornberry National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2021 (Public Law 116-283; 134 Stat. 3564; 10 U.S.C. 533 note) is 
amended by striking subsection (c).
    (aa) Briefing on Use of Existing Exchange Program Authority.--
Section 1102 of the William M. (Mac) Thornberry National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (Public Law 116-283; 134 Stat. 
3885) is amended by striking subsection (e).
    (bb) Report on Enhancing Security Partnerships Between the US and 
African Countries.--The William M. (Mac) Thornberry National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (Public Law 116-283) is amended 
by striking section 1293.
    (cc) Report on Progress With Respect to Denying Strategic Goals of 
Competitors Against Defense Partners.--The William M. (Mac) Thornberry 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (Public Law 
116-283) is amended by striking section 1299G.
    (dd) Quarterly Reports on Equipment Disposition.--Section 1521(c) 
of the William M. (Mac) Thornberry National Defense Authorization Act 
for Fiscal Year 2021 (Public Law 116-283; 134 Stat. 4035) is amended by 
striking paragraph (5).
    (ee) Implementation of GAO Recommendations on Preventing Tactical 
Vehicle Training Accidents.--The National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2022 (Public Law 117-81) is amended by striking section 
377.
    (ff) Submission to Congress of Certain Research and Analysis 
Relating to Retention of Female Surface Warfare Officers.--Section 
505(c) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2022 
(Public Law 117-81; 135 Stat. 1680) is amended--
            (1) by striking paragraph (2);
            (2) by striking ``(1) In general.--''; and
            (3) by adjusting the text beginning with ``Not later than'' 
        and ending with ``subsection (a).'' to appear immediately 
        following and in line with ``(c) Reports.--''.
    (gg) Annual Report on Highest and Lowest Performing Acquisition 
Programs.--The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2022 
(Public Law 117-81) is amended by striking section 806.
    (hh) Report on Russian Influence Operations Targeting US 
Alliances.--The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2022 
(Public Law 117-81) is amended by striking section 1235.
    (ii) Feasibility Briefing on Cooperation Between the National Guard 
and Taiwan.--The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2022 (Public Law 117-81) is amended by striking section 1249.
    (jj) Notification Relating to Overseas Humanitarian, Disaster, and 
Civil Aid Funds Obligated in Support of Operation Allies Welcome.--The 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2022 (Public Law 
117-81) is amended by striking section 1324.
    (kk) Annual Status Updates on Child Care Availability.--Section 
2816 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2022 
(Public Law 117-81; 135 Stat. 2194; 10 U.S.C. 1971 note) is amended--
            (1) by striking subsection (d); and
            (2) by redesignating subsection (e) as subsection (d).
    (ll) Strategy and Plan for Fostering and Strengthening Defense 
Innovation Ecosystem.--Section 236 of the James M. Inhofe National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (Public Law 117-263; 136 
Stat. 2491) is amended--
            (1) by striking subsections (d) through (f); and
            (2) by redesignating subsection (g) as subsection (d).
    (mm) Plan for Investments to Support Development of Novel 
Processing Approaches.--The James M. Inhofe National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (Public Law 117-263) is amended 
by striking section 233.
    (nn) Strategy for Increasing Competitive Opportunities for Certain 
Critical Technologies.--The James M. Inhofe National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (Public Law 117-263) is amended 
by striking section 861.
    (oo) Briefings on Universal Pre-kindergarden Programs.--The 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024 (Public Law 
118-31) is amended by striking section 587.
    (pp) Report on Resourcing of Arctic Strategy.--Section 1071 of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2025 (Public Law 
118-159; 138 Stat. 2070) is amended--
            (1) by striking subsection (c); and
            (2) by redesignating subsections (d) and (e) as subsections 
        (c) and (d), respectively.

SEC. 1082. EXTENSION OF BRIEFING REQUIREMENT REGARDING CIVIL 
              AUTHORITIES AT THE SOUTHWEST BORDER.

    Section 1070 of the James M. Inhofe National Defense Authorization 
Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (Public Law 117-263; 136 Stat. 2791), as most 
recently amended by section 1064 of the National Defense Authorization 
Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 1046), is 
further amended by striking ``through December 31, 2026'' and inserting 
``through December 31, 2027''.

SEC. 1083. EXTENSION OF REQUIREMENT FOR ANNUAL BRIEFINGS ON NATIONAL 
              BIODEFENSE STRATEGY.

    Section 1086(d) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 6 U.S.C. 104(d)) is amended by 
striking ``March 1, 2025'' and inserting ``March 1, 2031''.

SEC. 1084. ANNUAL REPORT AND BRIEFING ON IMPLEMENTATION OF ARMY 
              TRANSFORMATION INITIATIVE.

    (a) In General.--Not later than February 15, 2027, and annually 
thereafter through February 15, 2032, the Secretary of the Army shall 
submit to the congressional defense committees a report detailing the 
programmatic choices made to implement the Army Continuous 
Transformation initiative, the Army Transformation Initiative, and the 
Transformation in Contact initiative, including both new developmental 
and fielded capabilities, as well as capabilities and capacity divested 
to accelerate implementation of the Army Continuous Transformation 
initiative.
    (b) Briefing Requirement.--Not later than March 15, 2027, and 
annually thereafter through March 15, 2032, the Secretary of the Army 
shall provide to the congressional defense committees a briefing on the 
elements described under subsection (c).
    (c) Elements.--Each report required under subsection (a), and each 
briefing required under subsection (b), shall include the following 
elements:
            (1) An assessment of changes in the national defense 
        strategy, the Defense Planning Guidance, the Joint Warfighting 
        Concept (and associated concept required capabilities), and any 
        other planning process of the Department of Defense that 
        informed the initiatives specified in subsection (a).
            (2) An inventory and assessment of the exercises and 
        experimentation relating to the Army Continuous Transformation 
        initiative, beginning in fiscal year 2023, including an 
        identification of the capabilities involved and the extent to 
        which such exercises and experimentation validated or militated 
        against proposed capability investments.
            (3) An inventory of divestments of capabilities or 
        capacity, whether force structure and equipment, beginning in 
        fiscal year 2023, including the following information:
                    (A) A timeline of the progress of each such 
                divestment.
                    (B) The type of force structure or equipment 
                divested or reduced.
                    (C) The percentage of force structure or equipment 
                divested or reduced, including any equipment entered 
                into inventory management or another form of storage.
                    (D) The rationale and context behind such 
                divestment.
                    (E) An identification of whether such divestment 
                affects the ability of the Army to meet the 
                requirements of the Global Force Management process and 
                operational plans, including an explanation of how the 
                Army plans to mitigate the loss of such capability or 
                capacity if the divestment affects the ability of the 
                Army to meet the requirements of the Global Force 
                Management process and operational plans, including 
                through new investments, additional joint planning and 
                training, or other methods.
                    (F) An assessment of the actual and projected 
                recruitment and retention percentages for the Army, 
                beginning in fiscal year 2023.
            (4) An inventory of extant or planned investments in 
        capabilities as a part of the Army Continuous Transformation 
        initiative, disaggregated by combat vehicles, rotary aircraft, 
        munitions, and reconnaissance and counter-reconnaissance 
        forces, including--
                    (A) capability name;
                    (B) capability purpose and context;
                    (C) capability being replaced (or not applicable);
                    (D) date of initial operation capability;
                    (E) date of full operational capability;
                    (F) deliveries of units by year; and
                    (G) approved acquisition objective or similar 
                inventory objective.
            (5) An assessment of how the investments described in 
        paragraph (4) contribute to joint force efficacy in new ways, 
        including through the support of other Armed Forces.

SEC. 1085. QUARTERLY REPORTS ON EFFECTS OF UNPLANNED GLOBAL TASKINGS ON 
              OPERATIONS, DETERRENCE, AND READINESS IN THE AREA OF 
              OPERATIONS OF UNITED STATES INDO-PACIFIC COMMAND.

    (a) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that, in line 
with the most recent national defense strategy under section 113(g) of 
title 10, United States Code, and national security strategy report of 
the President under section 108 of the National Security Act of 1947 
(50 U.S.C. 3043), deterring China and maintaining a favorable balance 
of military power in the Indo-Pacific region is a strategic priority of 
the United States.
    (b) Quarterly Reports.--Not later than 30 days after the last day 
of each fiscal quarter, the Director of the Joint Staff, in 
coordination with the Commander of the United States Indo-Pacific 
Command, shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report 
on the effects of unplanned global taskings, contingency deployments, 
and diverted assets on operations, deterrence, and readiness within the 
area of operations of the United States Indo-Pacific Command. Each such 
report shall include, for the quarter covered by the report, each of 
the following:
            (1) A description of specific effects on current and 
        planned operations, exercises, and training events.
            (2) An assessment of the effects on the ability of the 
        United States Indo-Pacific Command to maintain required levels 
        of deterrence against adversaries.
            (3) An assessment of the overall effects on theater 
        readiness, including any identified capability gaps or elevated 
        operational risks.
            (4) An assessment of effects on munitions inventories, 
        shortfalls, and projected resupply timelines within the United 
        States Indo-Pacific Command.
            (5) An assessment of the anticipated effects on force 
        generation and sourcing, including for each of the four fiscal 
        quarters following the quarter covered by the report.
            (6) A description of mitigation measures planned or 
        underway to address identified operational, deterrence, and 
        readiness effects.
    (c) Form.--Each report required under subsection (b) shall be 
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.
    (d) Termination.--The requirement to submit a report under 
subsection (b) shall terminate on September 30, 2029.

SEC. 1086. BIANNUAL REPORTS ON OPERATIONAL ADAPTATION AND FIELDING OF 
              DEFENSE AUTONOMOUS WARFARE GROUP.

    (a) Reports Required.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, and every 180 days thereafter until the date 
that is two years after the date of the enactment of this Act, the 
Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the Commander of United 
States Special Operations Command, shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees a report on the adaptation cycles of the Defense 
Autonomous Warfare Group and associated autonomous warfare programs. 
Each such report shall include, for the period covered by the report, 
each of the following:
            (1) A summary of operational lessons identified during such 
        period regarding the employment, maintenance, and integration 
        of autonomous and remotely piloted systems, including lessons 
        derived from combat observations, electronic warfare and cyber 
        threat environments, and joint exercises.
            (2) A description of the specific actions taken to 
        incorporate the lessons identified under paragraph (1) into 
        joint and service-level military doctrine, including the 
        timeline from the identification of a lesson to the formal 
        update of doctrinal publications.
            (3) A description of modifications made to training 
        pipelines, leader development programs, and personnel policies 
        to reflect operational lessons.
            (4) An analysis of how operational feedback has influenced 
        current and future procurement strategies, including--
                    (A) changes made to existing contracts or 
                performance requirements;
                    (B) the speed at which technical feedback from 
                operators was translated into hardware or software 
                updates;
                    (C) an analysis of the reliance on non-domestic 
                supply chains for components altered during adaptation 
                cycles; and
                    (D) a list of any procurement programs under which 
                existing contractual requirements hindered the rapid 
                adoption of operational lessons.
            (5) A summary of the broad allocation of funds across major 
        capability lines and the general distribution profile of 
        resulting autonomous assets across the military departments and 
        combatant commands.
            (6) An assessment of the adaptation cycle speed for 
        autonomous systems, defined as the duration between the 
        identification of an operational deficiency or opportunity and 
        the implementation of a corresponding change in doctrine, 
        training, or procurement, including an assessment of the 
        average time required to develop, test, and deploy software 
        patches or technical countermeasures to fielded autonomous 
        systems.
            (7) To the extent practicable, a comparison of the 
        adaptation cycle speed of the Department of Defense relative to 
        the observed adaptation cycles of near-peer competitors in the 
        field of autonomous warfare.
    (b) Form of Report.--The report required under subsection (a) shall 
be submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.

SEC. 1087. SERVICE-WIDE ENTERPRISE STRATEGIES FOR HUMAN PERFORMANCE.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, each Secretary of a military department shall 
establish a strategy for human performance for that military 
department. Each such strategy shall include each of the following 
elements:
            (1) Requirements and policies applicable to that military 
        department that are designed to optimize the use and 
        acquisition of human performance technology and services.
            (2) The identification of a program of primary 
        responsibility for human performance within that military 
        department, which will be responsible for the integration, 
        synchronization, and optimization of human performance 
        technology and services across the military department.
            (3) Requirements for the procurement of human performance 
        technology and services.
            (4) Security requirements, including the identification of 
        risks associated with wearable technology devices for which the 
        hardware is assembled in China.
            (5) A timeline and estimated funding for implementation of 
        the strategy, including acquisition plans, for the period 
        covering fiscal years 2027 through 2031.
            (6) Metrics and performance indicators for assessing the 
        effectiveness and value of the human performance enterprise 
        solution.
            (7) An identification of opportunities to leverage existing 
        Department-wide and military department-level enterprise data, 
        analytics, and readiness platforms, and establish 
        interoperability requirements to optimize technology 
        investments and accelerate implementation.
    (b) Report.--Not later than 270 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, each Secretary of a military department shall 
submit to the congressional defense committees a report containing a 
description of the strategy required under subsection (a) for that 
military department.
    (c) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``human performance'' means the optimization 
        of physical and mental health (such as physical readiness, 
        mental readiness, sleep readiness, nutritional readiness, 
        spiritual readiness) required for optimal performance and 
        improved readiness.
            (2) The term ``human performance technology and services'' 
        means wearable technology devices and data management platforms 
        that support human performance.

SEC. 1088. MOBILITY CAPABILITIES STRATEGIC PLAN.

    (a) In General.--Not later than January 1, 2027, the Secretary of 
the Air Force, in coordination with the Commander of the United States 
Transportation Command and in consultation with the commanders of each 
of the geographic combatant commands, shall submit to the Committees on 
Armed Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a report 
that includes a comprehensive and detailed strategic plan for the 
development, acquisition, modernization, and integration of mobility 
capabilities of the Department of Defense through fiscal year 2047.
    (b) Elements.--The plan required by subsection (a) shall include 
each of the following:
            (1) An operational environment assessment of--
                    (A) contested operations across all domains over 
                great distances;
                    (B) contested lines of communication extending from 
                the United States to operational theaters;
                    (C) adversary capabilities designed to target 
                United States mobility forces, mobility infrastructure, 
                and logistics networks; and
                    (D) the requirement for mobility forces to operate 
                in degraded, contested, and highly contested 
                environments including austere locations, battle-
                damaged airfields, degraded runways, ramps, taxiways, 
                and other runway agnostic operating environments.
            (2) An assessment of current mobility force, including--
                    (A) the ability of Air Mobility Command to support 
                the requirements of all of the Armed Forces in 
                competition, crisis, and conflict;
                    (B) the ability of Air Mobility Command to support 
                agility concepts for all of the Armed Forces 
                simultaneously in conflict, including agile combat 
                employment, multi-domain task force operations, 
                expeditionary advanced base operations, and distributed 
                maritime operations;
                    (C) the vulnerability of mobility forces, mobility 
                infrastructure, and global logistics networks in 
                contested environments; and
                    (D) the degree to which existing mobility 
                capability and capacity meet homeland defense 
                priorities, nuclear mission obligations, and 
                simultaneous global operational demands.
            (3) An identification of the attributes required of future 
        mobility forces, including--
                    (A) secure beyond line-of-sight connectivity with--
                            (i) service and joint data links;
                            (ii) service and joint battle management 
                        networks; and
                            (iii) service and joint command and control 
                        network;
                    (B) automation and autonomous aviation 
                capabilities;
                    (C) the ability to operate across the full spectrum 
                of threat environments;
                    (D) flexibility across the full scale of mobility 
                missions, including small and distributed missions, 
                tactical, operational, and strategic missions, and 
                oversized and large-volume movements;
                    (E) the ability to operate from runway-agnostic and 
                degraded operating locations;
                    (F) fuel-resilient aviation concepts, including 
                aircraft capable of operating on traditional fuels and 
                emerging propulsion systems, such as electric, hybrid-
                electric, and hydrogen;
                    (G) consideration of aircraft designed with open 
                architecture enabling rapid integration of mission 
                systems including palletized effects, electronic 
                warfare, battle management, and intelligence, 
                surveillance, and reconnaissance capabilities; and
                    (H) signature management capabilities that enable 
                mobility aircraft to operate globally while maintaining 
                operational security, including the ability to comply 
                with international aviation safety requirements while 
                limiting exposure of aircraft identity, position, and 
                mission information through publicly accessible 
                tracking systems or other unclassified means.
            (4) An evaluation of future tanker capabilities, 
        including--
                    (A) collaborative tanker aircraft supporting 
                collaborative, distant, and distributed refueling 
                operation in contested environments;
                    (B) penetrating stealth tanker aircraft capable of 
                operating in highly contested environments;
                    (C) low-signature tanker concepts, including 
                blended-wing body tanker aircraft;
                    (D) tactical tanker aircraft capable of supporting 
                distributed tanker and airlift operations;
                    (E) modernization of legacy tanker aircraft through 
                connectivity and full automation;
                    (F) tanker aircraft designed with open architecture 
                and multi-role capability, enabling complementary 
                missions including electronic warfare, battle 
                management, and intelligence, surveillance, and 
                reconnaissance capabilities;
                    (G) opportunities to expand tanker capacity through 
                commercial tanker constructs including Government 
                owned, contractor operated; and
                    (H) the establishment of a Civil Reserve Air Fleet 
                tanker capability that would enable the commercial 
                operation of tanker aircraft to provide immediate and 
                dependable augmentation of United States tanker 
                capacity.
            (5) An evaluation of future airlift capabilities across 
        mission scales, including--
                    (A) autonomous airlift platforms supporting small 
                and tactical missions;
                    (B) the establishment of a distributed maneuver 
                pool composed of autonomous and highly automated 
                mobility platforms capable of supporting maneuvering 
                units and distributed operations, with mobility 
                capabilities owned or controlled by lower-echelon 
                multi-service operational units and integrated into the 
                broader mobility enterprise;
                    (C) improved and automated tactical and operational 
                airlift capabilities supporting maneuver and 
                distributed operations;
                    (D) new and improved strategic airlift capabilities 
                supporting global force flow and theater reinforcement, 
                including the development of a next-generation 
                strategic airlifter to augment or replace the C-17 
                aircraft and establishing a new standard for military 
                airlift through improved capability, capacity, 
                survivability, connectivity, automation, and 
                operational flexibility;
                    (E) oversized and large-volume airlift systems;
                    (F) vertical takeoff and landing and short-field 
                takeoff and landing airlift platforms supporting multi-
                service agility and distributed operations;
                    (G) delivery systems, including automated airdrop, 
                glider, towable, and hybrid aircraft logistics 
                platforms; and
                    (H) opportunities to expand airlift capacity 
                through commercial operation of strategic airlift 
                aircraft, Civil Reserve Air Fleet participation, and 
                service-based acquisition models such as effects-as-a-
                service.
            (6) An assessment of command and control architecture 
        required to support mobility operations in contested 
        environments, including--
                    (A) the use of maneuver battle management using 
                technologies such as artificial intelligence, 
                algorithmic allocation systems, and advanced data 
                architectures to integrate logistics, maneuver, and 
                mobility operations across the Joint Force; and
                    (B) integration of distributed traditional air 
                battle management capabilities within mobility forces.
            (7) An assessment of opportunities to expand mobility 
        capability and capacity through commercial aviation 
        capabilities, including--
                    (A) the expansion of the Civil Reserve Air Fleet;
                    (B) the establishment of the Civil Reserve Air 
                Fleet tanker capability;
                    (C) the commercial operation of excess, 
                transitioned, or Government-owned strategic airlift and 
                tanker aircraft;
                    (D) the use of service-based acquisition models 
                such as mobility-as-a-service or effects-as-a-service; 
                and
                    (E) the role of nonprime aviation companies in 
                enabling the building of the future mobility 
                enterprise.
    (c) Form.--The report required under subsection (a) shall be 
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.

SEC. 1089. REQUIRED DOCTRINE ON USE OF UNMANNED AUTONOMOUS SYSTEMS AND 
              AUTONOMOUS FORMATIONS.

    Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this 
Act, the Defense Autonomous Warfare Group shall develop a military 
doctrine for the deployment of unmanned autonomous systems and 
formations composed of such unmanned autonomous systems. Such doctrine 
shall address the following:
            (1) Concepts for the operational use of such systems and 
        formations.
            (2) Tactics, techniques, and procedures for such use.
            (3) Force structure requirements relating to such systems 
        and formations.
            (4) Plans for the sustainment and maintenance of such 
        systems and formations.
            (5) Compliance with safety and legal requirements with 
        respect to the use of such systems and formations.
            (6) Such other matters as the Defense Autonomous Warfare 
        Group may determine relevant.

SEC. 1089A. STRATEGY FOR SUSTAINMENT OF CERTAIN UNMANNED AIRCRAFT 
              SYSTEMS.

    (a) Strategy.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with 
the Secretaries of the military departments, shall develop a strategy 
for the sustainment of covered unmanned aircraft systems. Such strategy 
shall address, and differentiate between, stockpiled covered unmanned 
aircraft systems and covered unmanned aircraft systems in use on a more 
frequent basis.
    (b) Elements.--The strategy under subsection (a) shall include the 
following:
            (1) A plan to ensure continuous software updates for 
        fielded covered unmanned aircraft systems across the military 
        departments, including any such updates relating to--
                    (A) operating systems;
                    (B) autonomy and other capabilities enabled by 
                artificial intelligence and machine learning; or
                    (C) automatic target recognition.
            (2) A plan to ensure the batteries of fielded covered 
        unmanned aircraft systems are fully functional and charged, 
        including a strategy for charging such batteries in extreme and 
        austere environments.
            (3) Metrics to assess the readiness of fielded covered 
        unmanned aircraft systems and associated components.
            (4) An identification of the command level, unit level, or 
        other organizational level responsible for ensuring such 
        readiness.
            (5) A plan to ensure standardized training for the use of 
        covered unmanned aircraft systems and the sustainment of such 
        systems across the military departments.
            (6) A strategy for the repair of fielded covered unmanned 
        aircraft systems, including for field-level maintenance, as 
        appropriate.
    (c) Updates.--On a basis that is not less frequent than once every 
two years, the Secretary of Defense shall update the strategy under 
subsection (a).
    (d) Submission to Congress.--Not later than 30 days after the date 
on which the Secretary of Defense completes the strategy under 
subsection (a), the Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense 
committees such strategy.
    (e) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered unmanned aircraft'' means any 
        unmanned aircraft categorized as Group 1, Group 2, or Group 3 
        pursuant to the Joint Publication 3-30 of the Department of 
        Defense, titled ``Joint Air Operations'' and dated July 25, 
        2019, or such successor publication.
            (2) The terms ``unmanned aircraft'' and ``unmanned aircraft 
        system'' have the meanings given such terms in section 130i of 
        title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 1089B. STRATEGY FOR USE OF LOW-COST AND ATTRITABLE GROUP 4 AND 5 
              UNMANNED AIRCRAFT SYSTEMS IN CONTESTED LOGISTICS 
              OPERATIONS.

    (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 Under Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering and the 
Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment, shall 
develop a strategy for the use of low-cost and attritable Group 4 and 5 
unmanned aircraft systems in contested logistics operations.
    (b) Requirements for Strategy.--The strategy under subsection (a) 
shall include each of the following:
            (1) An assessment of current and projected lift 
        capabilities required for contested logistics operations, 
        specifically focusing on identifying--
                    (A) the limitations of existing platforms; and
                    (B) mission sets for which the use of Group 4 and 5 
                unmanned aircraft systems would reduce risk.
            (2) An assessment of the challenges presented by 
        communications degradation in contested logistics operations 
        and how unmanned aircraft systems could be integrated into 
        mission sets identified under paragraph (1)(B) to solve 
        capability gaps.
            (3) A review of performance specifications, including 
        payload capacity and range, that are required to complete the 
        mission sets identified under paragraph (1)(B).
            (4) An evaluation of acceptable loss rates, replacement 
        speed, scale of employment, and integration timelines for 
        unmanned aircraft systems.
            (5) A plan for coordinating among, and drafting 
        requirements for, each of the military departments and 
        combatant commands with respect to the use of low-cost and 
        attritable unmanned aircraft systems for contested logistics, 
        as appropriate.
            (6) A plan to synchronize research, development, 
        prototyping, and acquisition activities related to such 
        systems.
            (7) A transition plan for the operational fielding by the 
        joint force of Group 4 and 5 unmanned aircraft systems for 
        contested logistics operations.
            (8) An evaluation of commercially available innovative 
        solutions that could be used to enhance the effectiveness of 
        the Armed Forces and the response of the Department of Defense 
        to emerging threats.
    (c) Preference for Commercial Products.--In developing the strategy 
under subsection (a), the Secretary shall leverage commercially 
available solutions to the maximum extent practicable.
    (d) Report to Congress.--Not later than 90 days after the 
development of the strategy required by subsection (a), the Secretary 
shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report on the 
strategy.

SEC. 1089C. FEASIBILITY STUDY ON TACTICAL INFORMATION OPERATIONS 
              COMMAND AUTHORITY.

    (a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
            (1) Information operations must be ongoing, iterative, and 
        responsive to rapidly evolving conditions in the information 
        environment. Narratives and messaging that are effective at one 
        point in time can quickly become outdated or counterproductive 
        as the information environment changes.
            (2) Department of Defense Directive 3600.01, ``Information 
        Operations'', currently designates Combatant Commanders at the 
        four-star and flag officer level as the principal authorities 
        for integrating, synchronizing, employing, and adapting 
        information-related capabilities and for developing, planning, 
        programming, and assessing information operations.
            (3) The concentration of tactical information operations 
        approval authority at the Combatant Commander level creates 
        operational bottlenecks, as those officers bear responsibility 
        for the full range of joint force activities and may be unable 
        to respond to tactical information operations requirements with 
        the speed demanded by the information environment.
            (4) In other operational domains, commanders at the O-6 
        level and below routinely exercise authority to execute 
        tactical actions within strategic frameworks approved by 
        higher-level commanders. A similar model may be feasible and 
        beneficial for tactical information operations.
            (5) At the same time, information operations carry unique 
        risks, including potential foreign policy, legal, and 
        escalatory implications, that may counsel retaining significant 
        oversight at senior command levels. Any delegation of authority 
        must be carefully calibrated to preserve appropriate oversight 
        while reducing operational bottlenecks.
            (6) Before directing any revision to Department of Defense 
        Directive 3600.01, Congress should have the benefit of a 
        thorough and expert assessment of the feasibility, benefits, 
        risks, and implementation requirements of delegating tactical 
        information operations authority to lower-level commanders.
    (b) Report Required.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall 
        submit to the congressional defense committees a report on the 
        feasibility of revising Department of Defense Directive 3600.01 
        to delegate authority to approve and execute tactical 
        information operations to commanders below the level of the 
        combatant commander.
            (2) Contents of report.--The report required in paragraph 
        (1) shall include--
                    (A) an assessment of the current command authority 
                structure under Department of Defense Directive 3600.01 
                as it applies to the planning, approval, and execution 
                of tactical information operations, including an 
                assessment of existing operational bottlenecks and 
                their impact on the speed and effectiveness of 
                information operations;
                    (B) an evaluation of the feasibility of delegating 
                authority to approve and execute tactical information 
                operations to commanders at specified rank levels below 
                combatant commander, including the O-6 (colonel or Navy 
                captain) level, or other appropriate levels as 
                determined by the Secretary of Defense;
                    (C) For each delegation option evaluated under 
                subparagraph (B), an assessment of--
                            (i) the potential benefits, including 
                        improvements in operational speed, 
                        responsiveness, and effectiveness;
                            (ii) the potential risks, including risks 
                        related to escalation, foreign policy 
                        implications, legal compliance, consistency 
                        with strategic narratives, and unintended 
                        consequences;
                            (iii) the mechanisms and safeguards that 
                        would be necessary to ensure that tactical 
                        information operations executed by lower-level 
                        commanders remain consistent with higher-level 
                        strategic objectives and narratives established 
                        by Combatant Commanders and the Secretary of 
                        Defense;
                            (iv) the training, education, and personnel 
                        requirements necessary to prepare lower-level 
                        commanders to exercise information operations 
                        authority effectively and responsibly;
                            (v) the legal authorities and any statutory 
                        or regulatory changes that would be required to 
                        implement the delegation;
                            (vi) the oversight mechanisms that would be 
                        required to maintain the visibility of the 
                        combatant commander and Secretary of Defense 
                        into tactical information operations conducted 
                        pursuant to delegated authority; and
                            (vii) the estimated costs and resource 
                        implications of implementing the delegation;
                    (D) an examination of analogous delegation models 
                in other operational domains, including fire support, 
                electronic warfare, and cyber operations, to identify 
                lessons learned and best practices applicable to 
                information operations;
                    (E) an assessment of the experiences of allied and 
                partner nations that have implemented delegation of 
                tactical information operations authority to lower-
                level commanders, to the extent practicable;
                    (F) an evaluation of whether the current bottleneck 
                in tactical information operations approval could be 
                addressed through means other than formal authority 
                delegation, including--
                            (i) dedicated information operations staff 
                        augmentation at the level of the combatant 
                        commander;
                            (ii) predelegated authorities for specific, 
                        preapproved categories of tactical information 
                        operations activities;
                            (iii) streamlined approval processes and 
                        standing execution orders; and
                            (iv) improved interoperability and 
                        communication systems to reduce approval 
                        timelines;
                    (G) an identification and assessment of any legal, 
                policy, or operational constraints that would prevent 
                or limit the feasibility of delegating tactical 
                information operations authority; and
                    (H) the assessment of Secretary of Defense of 
                whether revision of Department of Defense Directive 
                3600.01 to delegate tactical information operations 
                authority to lower-level commanders is feasible, 
                advisable, and in the interest of the Department of 
                Defense.
            (3) Form.--The report required in paragraph (1) shall be 
        submitted in unclassified form, but may include an classified 
        annex.

SEC. 1089D. PUBLIC AVAILABILITY OF FINDINGS OF INSPECTOR GENERAL 
              INVESTIGATION OF CERTAIN TARGETING OPERATIONS.

    Not later than 90 days after completion of the Evaluation of United 
States Southern Command Joint Targeting Cycle initiated by the 
Inspector General of the Department of Defense concerning targeting 
operations in the area of operations of United States Southern Command, 
the Secretary of Defense shall make publicly available an unclassified 
summary of the findings of the evaluation, including findings with 
respect to--
            (1) whether the Joint Targeting Cycle was followed; and
            (2) recommendations for corrective actions.

SEC. 1089E. REPORT ON COST OF UNITED STATES MILITARY OPERATIONS IN 
              IRAN.

    (a) Report Required.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than April 1, 2027, the 
        Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional defense 
        committees a report that includes the total financial cost to 
        the United States of the military operations carried out in 
        Iran during the period beginning on February 28, 2026, and 
        ending on the date that is 30 days before the date of the 
        submission of the report. Such total financial cost shall 
        include the costs associated with damaged or destroyed 
        infrastructure of the United States. The report shall include 
        the following:
                    (A) A full inventory and replacement valuation of 
                all United States military aircraft, naval vessels, 
                drones, and other significant equipment damaged or 
                destroyed during such military operations.
                    (B) The total cost and quantity of all weapons, 
                missiles, and munitions expended during such military 
                operations and replacement costs.
                    (C) A comprehensive assessment of the costs 
                associated with repairing or rebuilding United States 
                military bases and facilities damaged or destroyed 
                during such military operations and the extent to which 
                infrastructure was damaged or destroyed during such 
                military operations.
                    (D) For any military base or facility or 
                infrastructure identified under subparagraph (C), the 
                location of the base, facility, or infrastructure.
                    (E) An assessment of the overall effects that 
                damage to infrastructure during such military 
                operations has had on theater readiness, including any 
                plans to not repair or rebuild United States 
                infrastructure in the region.
                    (F) All costs related to the unplanned deployments 
                and mobilizations of additional members of a covered 
                Armed Force and military assets for such military 
                operations and the costs associated with the 
                enforcement of the maritime blockade in the Strait of 
                Hormuz.
            (2) Form.--The report required under paragraph (1) shall be 
        submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified 
        annex. The Secretary shall post the unclassified report on a 
        publicly available and appropriate website of the Department of 
        Defense.
    (b) Covered Armed Force Defined.--The term ``covered Armed Force'' 
means the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, or Space Force.

SEC. 1089F. REPORT ON OPERATION SOUTHERN SPEAR.

    (a) Report.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment 
of this section, and quarterly thereafter until 180 days after the 
conclusion of Operation Southern Spear (or any successor operation), 
the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional defense 
committees a report that includes the total financial cost (as 
described in subsection (b)) of the military operations carried out 
under Operation Southern Spear. The initial report shall include the 
period beginning on January 20, 2025, and ending on the date that is 60 
days after the date of the enactment of this section.
    (b) Total Financial Cost.--In this section, the total financial 
cost shall include any funds of the Department of Defense obligated or 
expended for the operation, including the following:
            (1) A full inventory and replacement value of all United 
        States military aircraft, naval vessels, drones, and other 
        significant equipment damaged or destroyed during such military 
        operations.
            (2) The total cost and quantity of all weapons, missiles, 
        and munitions expended during such military operations and 
        replacement costs.
            (3) A comprehensive assessment of the costs associated with 
        repairing or rebuilding United States military installations, 
        facilities, and infrastructure damaged or destroyed during such 
        military operations.
            (4) An assessment of the overall effects that damage to 
        infrastructure during such military operations has had on 
        theater readiness, including any plans to not repair or rebuild 
        United States infrastructure in the region in which such 
        military operations were conducted.
            (5) All costs related to the unplanned deployments and 
        mobilizations of additional members of the Armed Forces and 
        military assets for such military operations.
    (c) Form.--The report required under this section shall be 
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex. The 
Secretary shall make the unclassified report publicly available on an 
appropriate website of the Department of Defense.

SEC. 1089G. REPORT ON CIVILIAN HARM INVESTIGATION RELATING TO SHAJAREH 
              TAYYEBEH ELEMENTARY SCHOOL.

    (a) Report Required.--Not later than 30 days after the completion 
of the civilian harm investigation of the Department of Defense with 
respect to the strike on Minab, Iran, that occurred on February 28, 
2026, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees a report on the results of such investigation.
    (b) Form.--The report required under subsection (a) shall be 
submitted in unclassified form, but may contain a classified annex.
    (c) Public Availability.--The Secretary of Defense shall make 
publicly available the unclassified portion of the report required 
under subsection (a).

SEC. 1089H. REPORT ON PORT SHUAIBA INVESTIGATION.

    (a) In General.--Upon the conclusion of the Department of Defense 
investigation into the attack on Port Shuaiba, Kuwait, that occurred on 
March 1, 2026, the Secretary of Defense shall transmit to the 
congressional defense committees the following information:
            (1) All findings of the investigation.
            (2) Any remedial actions taken as a result of the findings.
            (3) A detailed description of the conduct of the 
        investigation.
    (b) Form of Submission; Availability.--The information required 
under subsection (a) shall be submitted in unclassified form, but may 
contain a classified annex. The Secretary shall make the unclassified 
version of the findings publicly available on an appropriate website of 
the Department.

                       Subtitle F--Other Matters

SEC. 1091. DEEMING REFERENCES TO THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE AND 
              SECRETARY OF DEFENSE AS REFERENCES TO THE DEPARTMENT OF 
              WAR AND SECRETARY OF WAR.

    Chapter 1 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at 
the end the following new section:
``Sec. 103. References to the Secretary of Defense and the Department 
              of Defense
    ``Any reference to the Secretary of Defense or Department of 
Defense in any law, regulation, map, document, record, or other paper 
of the United States shall be deemed to be a reference to the Secretary 
of War or Department of War, respectively.''.

SEC. 1092. DEFINITION OF SPECIAL OPERATIONS ACTIVITIES.

    Section 167(k)(6) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``Military information support operations'' and inserting 
``Psychological and cognitive warfare''.

SEC. 1093. DEFINITION OF COUNTER-SUAS SYSTEM FOR PURPOSES OF JOINT 
              INTERAGENCY TASK FORCE 401.

    Section 199(h)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
inserting ``detecting, identifying, monitoring, tracking,'' after 
``lawfully and safely''.

SEC. 1094. INCREASE IN CAP FOR SUPPORT OF SMALL SCALE CONSTRUCTION 
              PROJECTS OF FOREIGN PARTNERS IN SUPPORT OF COUNTERDRUG 
              ACTIVITIES AND ACTIVITIES TO COUNTER TRANSNATIONAL 
              ORGANIZED CRIME.

    (a) Increase in Cap.--Subsection (i)(3) of section 284 of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended by striking ``$1,000,000'' and inserting 
``$2,000,000''.
    (b) Technical Correction Relating to Congressional Notification 
Requirements.--Subsection (h)(1)(B) of such section is amended by 
inserting ``minor military construction or'' after ``any''.

SEC. 1095. MODIFICATION TO FUNDING LIMITATION FOR PROCUREMENT OF 
              EQUIPMENT FOR CERTAIN DRUG INTERDICTION AND COUNTER-DRUG 
              ACTIVITIES.

    Section 112(a)(3) of title 32, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``$15,000'' and inserting ``$25,000''.

SEC. 1096. NATIONAL GUARD ATTORNEY LICENSE PORTABILITY.

    Chapter 3 of title 32, United States Code, is amended by inserting 
after section 329 the following new section:
``Sec. 330. Attorney license portability
    ``(a) In General.--Notwithstanding any law regarding the licensure 
of attorneys, a judge advocate or technician attorney performing duties 
under this title may provide legal services in any jurisdiction in 
support of National Guard training or operations, subject to such 
regulations as may be prescribed by the Secretary of the Army or the 
Secretary of the Air Force, as the case may be.
    ``(b) Authorized Legal Services.--Such legal services--
            ``(1) may be provided only by a judge advocate or a 
        technician attorney who is a member of the bar of a Federal 
        court or of the highest court of a State, and
            ``(2) must be within the scope of authorized duties as 
        prescribed by the Secretary concerned.''.

SEC. 1097. OVERSIGHT AND DIRECTION OF IRREGULAR WARFARE EXERCISE 
              LABORATORY.

    Section 1094 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 1066; 10 U.S.C. 127d note) is 
amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (d); and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new 
        subsection (c):
    ``(c) Oversight and Direction.--If the Secretary establishes an 
Irregular Warfare Exercise Laboratory under subsection (a)--
            ``(1) such laboratory shall operate under the strategic 
        oversight and policy coordination of the Irregular Warfare 
        Center of the Department of Defense; and
            ``(2) the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special 
        Operations and Low-Intensity Conflict, acting through the 
        Director of the Irregular Warfare Center, shall exercise 
        authority, direction, and control over such laboratory to--
                    ``(A) provide policy guidance and integration 
                direction for all activities of the laboratory;
                    ``(B) ensure the alignment of laboratory 
                initiatives with Department-wide irregular warfare 
                strategy and campaigning objectives; and
                    ``(C) prioritize the development of laboratory 
                capabilities in accordance with the most recent 
                national defense strategy under section 113(g) of title 
                10, United States Code.''.

SEC. 1098. UBIQUITOUS TECHNICAL SURVEILLANCE AND DIGITAL FORCE 
              PROTECTION.

    (a) Ubiquitous Technical Surveillance Functions.--
            (1) Responsibility.--Not later than April 1, 2027, the 
        Secretary of Defense shall designate the head of an 
        organization of the Department of Defense who shall be 
        responsible for--
                    (A) coordinating and directing the identification 
                of vulnerabilities with respect to ubiquitous technical 
                surveillance;
                    (B) developing a plan and strategy for research, 
                development, and procurement of secure communications 
                and obfuscation technologies; and
                    (C) developing ubiquitous technical surveillance 
                training and techniques to enhance digital force 
                protection.
            (2) Program of record.--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 plan to 
        establish a program of record to meet counter-ubiquitous 
        technical surveillance and digital force protection needs 
        across the Department of Defense.
    (b) Report.--Not later than December 1, 2027, the Secretary of 
Defense shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report 
that includes--
            (1) the plan and strategy developed pursuant to subsection 
        (a)(1)(B); and
            (2) the identification of the organization of the 
        Department of Defense that has been designated under subsection 
        (a)(1).
    (c) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``digital force protection'' means the 
        policies, tools, and practices used to protect military 
        personnel, operations, and critical assets from adversarial 
        exploitation of the commercial digital surveillance economy, 
        associated commercial data, and digital footprints.
            (2) The term ``ubiquitous technical surveillance'' means 
        persistent, networked, or commercially-enabled technical means 
        used to detect, identify, track, exploit, or monitor personnel, 
        operations, equipment, or digital activities.

SEC. 1099. POTENTIAL DESIGNATION OF INFORMATION AS A DOMAIN OF WARFARE.

    (a) Determination 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 determination as to whether to 
designate information as a domain of warfare of the Department of 
Defense.
    (b) Effect of Positive Determination.--If the Secretary of Defense 
determines to make the designation specified under subsection (b), the 
Secretary shall--
            (1) revise any applicable guidance, directive, instruction, 
        publication, or doctrine of the Department to reflect such 
        designation, including by directing the Chairman of the Joint 
        Chiefs of Staff to revise the Joint Concept for Operating in 
        the Information Environment and other relevant joint doctrine 
        and publications, to reflect such designation;
            (2) ensure that planning, programming, budgeting, and 
        execution processes treat information as a mission-essential 
        consideration in operational planning, rather than solely as a 
        supporting effect;
            (3) establish or strengthen career fields, professional 
        military education, and training pipelines for personnel 
        assigned to information domain functions, including with 
        respect to--
                    (A) military information support operations;
                    (B) electronic warfare;
                    (C) public affairs;
                    (D) intelligence support to information operations; 
                and
                    (E) cyber operations functions that contribute to 
                information effects; and
            (4) improve the integration of cyber operations, electronic 
        warfare, intelligence, and psychological operations 
        capabilities in support of information-domain objectives and 
        reduce redundancy across such operations.
    (c) Report.--
            (1) Submission.--Not later than 180 days after the date on 
        which the Secretary of Defense submits the determination 
        required under subsection (a), the Secretary shall submit to 
        the Committees on Armed Services of the House of 
        Representatives and the Senate a report on the implementation 
        of this section. Such report shall include the following:
                    (A) An assessment of the effect of such 
                determination, including with respect to personnel, 
                training, and resourcing.
                    (B) A description of any revisions to materials 
                made pursuant to subsection (b)(2).
            (2) Form.--The report required under paragraph (1) shall be 
        submitted in an unclassified form but may contain a classified 
        annex.

                      TITLE XI--CIVILIAN PERSONNEL

SEC. 1101. LIMITATION ON OUTSIDE INCOME FOR INDIVIDUALS IN OFFICE OF 
              THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE.

    Section 131 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding 
at the end the following:
    ``(e)(1) Any covered employee who is employed by, or detailed or 
otherwise assigned to, the Office of the Secretary of Defense may not 
receive any outside earned income during the period such individual is 
so employed, detailed, or assigned unless the individual notifies the 
relevant designated agency ethics official and such official reviews 
such income and issues a determination (in writing) that--
            ``(A) the outside earned income received is unrelated to 
        the duties the individual has performed or is expected to 
        perform for the United States; and
            ``(B) the individual--
                    ``(i) does not have official business in front of 
                the Department of Defense; and
                    ``(ii) the individual is not working on behalf of, 
                or representing, a foreign agent or government.
    ``(2) Any determination under paragraph (1) shall be published on 
the public website of the Office of Government Ethics not later than 15 
days after such determination is made.
    ``(3) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a covered 
employee who receives outside earned income shall file a public 
financial disclosure report pursuant section 13103(a) of title 5 not 
later than 30 days after receiving such income.
    ``(4) In this subsection--
            ``(A) the term `covered employee' means--
                    ``(i) any special Government employee (as that term 
                is defined in section 202 of title 18);
                    ``(ii) an officer or employee who is serving 
                without compensation; and
                    ``(iii) any member of a reserve component of the 
                Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, or Space Force;
            ``(B) the term `designated agency ethics official' has the 
        meaning given that term in section 13101 of title 5; and
            ``(C) the term `outside earned income'--
                    ``(i) means wages, salaries, honoraria, 
                commissions, professional fees and any other form of 
                compensation for services other than salary, benefits, 
                and allowances paid by the United States Government; 
                and
                    ``(ii) does not include the following:
                            ``(I) Items that may be accepted under 
                        applicable standards of conduct gift 
                        regulations if they were offered by a 
                        prohibited source.
                            ``(II) Income attributable to service with 
                        the military reserves or national guard.
                            ``(III) Income from pensions and other 
                        continuing benefits attributable to previous 
                        employment or services.
                            ``(IV) Income from investment activities 
                        where the individual's services are not a 
                        material factor in the production of income.
                            ``(V) Copyright royalties, fees, and their 
                        functional equivalent, from the use or sale of 
                        copyright, patent and similar forms of 
                        intellectual property rights, when received 
                        from established users or purchasers of those 
                        rights.
                            ``(VI) Actual and necessary expenses 
                        incurred by the employee in connection with an 
                        outside activity. Where such expenses are paid 
                        or reimbursed by another person, the amount of 
                        any such payment shall not be counted as 
                        compensation or outside earned income. Where 
                        such expenses are not paid or reimbursed, the 
                        amount of compensation or earned income shall 
                        be determined by subtracting the actual and 
                        necessary expenses incurred by the employee 
                        from any payment received for the activity.
    ``(5) Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of 
the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2027, the 
Secretary of Defense, in concurrence with the Office of Government 
Ethics, shall issue such regulations as the Secretary determines 
necessary to carry out this subsection.''.

SEC. 1102. SKILLS-BASED HIRING FOR DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE CIVILIAN 
              POSITIONS.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 81 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 1599k. Skills-based hiring for civilian positions
    ``(a) Framework for Skills-based Hiring.--
            ``(1) The Secretary of Defense shall establish and 
        implement a skills-based hiring framework for appointment to a 
        position in the competitive service or the excepted service 
        that--
                    ``(A) prioritizes the evaluation of applicants 
                based on demonstrated competencies, skills, and 
                relevant experience and validated assessments; and
                    ``(B) permits applicants to qualify for positions 
                through one or more pathways based on experience, 
                training, apprenticeships, certifications, licenses, 
                education, or other alternative credentials, as 
                appropriate to the duties of the position.
            ``(2) Qualification standards for a position shall be based 
        on a job analysis that identifies the competencies, knowledge, 
        skills, abilities, and education, if applicable, necessary to 
        perform the essential duties of the position.
    ``(b) Use of Education Requirements.--
            ``(1) In general.--Except as provided in subsection (c), 
        and consistent with paragraph (2) of this subsection, the 
        Secretary may waive or remove a minimum education requirement 
        as a mandatory qualification standard for appointment to a 
        position based on a determination that the competencies 
        required for the position may be demonstrated through relevant 
        experience, apprenticeships, certifications, validated 
        assessments, or other alternative qualifications.
            ``(2) Sunset.--The authority to waive or remove a minimum 
        education requirement under paragraph (1) shall expire on the 
        date that is five years after the date of the enactment of the 
        National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2027.
    ``(c) Exceptions.--Subsection (b) shall not apply to a position--
            ``(1) for which a minimum education requirement is 
        established by Federal statute;
            ``(2) in a recognized profession for which a minimum 
        education requirement is necessary for professional licensure, 
        certification, or accreditation by a recognized accrediting 
        body, including positions in the fields of medicine, law, 
        engineering, accounting, and other professions as determined by 
        the Secretary; or
            ``(3) classified in a scientific or technical occupational 
        series for which the Office of Personnel Management has 
        established a positive education requirement that the Secretary 
        determines is directly and specifically necessary for 
        satisfactory performance of the duties of the position.
    ``(d) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) Education.--The term `education' means any form of 
        formal learning, including a high school diploma or its 
        equivalent, a credential from a qualifying career or technical 
        education program, an associate, baccalaureate, graduate, or 
        professional degree, or industry-recognized certifications and 
        apprenticeships.
            ``(2) Education requirement.--The term `education 
        requirement' includes a requirement that can be met through--
                    ``(A) education alone; or
                    ``(B) a combination of education and experience.''.
    (b) Technical and Conforming Amendment.--The table of sections at 
the beginning of such chapter is amended by adding at the end the 
following new item:

``1599k. Skills-based hiring for civilian positions.''.
    (c) Implementation Plan.--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 plan for implementing this section, 
including--
            (1) a timeline for implementation of this section;
            (2) a strategy for training hiring managers and human 
        resources professionals on skills-based assessment methods;
            (3) a description of validated assessment tools the 
        Department plans to develop or adopt; and
            (4) metrics for evaluating the impacts of this section on 
        time-to-hire, quality of hire, and retention rates.
    (d) Annual Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
enactment of this Act, and annually thereafter for five years, the 
Secretary of Defense shall submit a report on the authority under 
section 1599k(b) of title 10, United States Code, as added by this Act. 
The report shall include the following:
            (1) Identification of any occupational series or position 
        for which the authority under such section is exercised.
            (2) The service, agency, or component to which such 
        position is assigned.
            (3) The justification for exercising such section for each 
        such occupational series or position.
    (e) Applicability.--Section 1599k of title 10, United States Code, 
as added by subsection (a), shall apply with respect to job opportunity 
announcements issued on or after the date that is 18 months after the 
date of the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 1103. ESTABLISHMENT OF A STUDENT INTERNSHIP PROGRAM FOR MILITARY 
              CHILD AND YOUTH PROGRAMS.

    Subchapter II of chapter 88 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by inserting after section 1792 the following new section:
``Sec. 1792a. Internship program for military child and youth programs
    ``(a) Establishment.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2027, the Secretary of Defense shall establish and carry out an 
internship program through which an individual described in subsection 
(b) may perform duties as an intern in a military child and youth 
program to prepare the individual for possible future employment in a 
military child and youth program.
    ``(b) Eligible Individuals.--An individual eligible to be an intern 
participating in the internship program under this section is an 
individual who--
            ``(1) is a student in good standing at an institution of 
        higher education; and
            ``(2) the Secretary determines--
                    ``(A) to be qualified and talented; and
                    ``(B) has passed appropriate screening and 
                background checks.
    ``(c) Program Requirements.--Requirements of the internship program 
shall include the following:
            ``(1) An intern may perform duties only in a military child 
        development center under the supervision of a child care 
        employee.
            ``(2) Pursuant to section 1588(a)(3)(B) of this title, a 
        student intern shall perform their duties on a voluntary basis.
            ``(3) A student intern may not work more than eight hours a 
        day or a total of 40 hours per week.
    ``(d) Authorization of Certain Expenses.--The Secretary may pay the 
following expenses incurred in the course of an intern's participation 
in the internship program:
            ``(1) Lodging expenses.
            ``(2) Subsistence expenses.
            ``(3) Incidental expenses.
            ``(4) Transportation expenses for transportation between 
        the residence of the intern and the military installation where 
        the intern performs duties under the internship program.
    ``(e) Agreements.--The Secretary may enter into agreements with one 
or more institutions of higher education so an intern may receive 
appropriate levels credit towards a graduate or undergraduate degree 
for duties performed under the internship program.
    ``(f) Definition of Institution of Higher Education.--In this 
section, the term `institution of higher education' has the meaning 
given that term in section 102 of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20 
U.S.C. 1002).''.

SEC. 1104. EXPANSION OF ELIGIBLE EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS UNDER THE SMART 
              DEFENSE EDUCATION PROGRAM.

    (a) Eligible Educational Programs.--Section 4093(b)(1)(B) of title 
10, United States Code, is amended by striking ``is pursuing an 
associates degree, undergraduate degree, or advanced degree in a 
critical skill or discipline described in subsection (a) at an 
accredited institution of higher education'' and inserting ``is 
pursuing an associates degree, undergraduate degree, or advanced degree 
in a critical skill or discipline described in subsection (a) at an 
accredited institution of higher education or career and technical 
education, vocational education, apprenticeship preparation, or 
workforce credentialing program''.
    (b) Service Agreement Requirements.--Section 4093(c)(1)(B)(ii)(I) 
of title 10, United States Code, is amended by striking ``and'' and 
inserting ``or''.

SEC. 1105. MILITARY TECHNICIAN (DUAL STATUS): ELIMINATION OF TITLE 32 
              AUTHORITY; CONVERSIONS OF EXISTING POSITIONS.

    (a) Termination of Title 32 Authority.--
            (1) In general.--Section 709 of title 32, United States 
        Code, is amended by adding at the end the following subsection:
    ``(k) This section shall cease to be effective on October 1, 
2038.''.
            (2) Technical and conforming amendments.--
                    (A) In general.--Effective October 1, 2038--
                            (i) section 115(d) of title 10, United 
                        States Code, is amended by striking ``each 
                        reserve component of the Army and Air Force'' 
                        and inserting ``the Army Reserve and the Air 
                        Force Reserve''; and
                            (ii) section 10216(a)(1)(A) of title 10, 
                        United States Code, is amended by striking ``or 
                        section 709(b) of title 32''.
                    (B) National guard bureau personnel.--Section 
                10508(b)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is amended 
                by inserting ``sections 1601 and 1762 of title 10,'' 
                before ``or section 328 of title 32,''.
                    (C) Maintenance and repair duties.--Section 328(b) 
                of title 32, United States Code, is amended by 
                inserting ``maintaining and repairing supplies issued 
                to the National Guard or the Armed Forces,'' before 
                ``and training the reserve components''.
    (b) Conversion Authority.--The Secretary of Defense may convert a 
military technician (dual status) position filled by an individual 
employed under section 709 of title 32, United States Code, to either 
of the following:
            (1) A position filled by an individual employed under--
                    (A) section 3101 of title 5, United States Code; or
                    (B) section 1601, 1762, or 10508 of title 10, 
                United States Code.
            (2) A position filled by an individual who is performing 
        Active Guard and Reserve duty under section 328 of title 32, 
        United States Code, unless such duty is performed as a general 
        or flag officer.
    (c) Transfer Authority.--In addition to the conversion authority 
under subsection (b), the Secretary of Defense may, with the consent of 
the Governor of the State concerned, for the purpose of reducing the 
number of National Guard military technician (dual status) positions, 
provide a State with funding for a non-Federal position for an 
individual employed in such position. Any such funding shall be 
provided through a cooperative agreement entered into with the State 
Governor under section 6305 of title 31, United States Code.
    (d) Consent of Employee to Conversion or Transfer.--The Secretary 
of Defense may convert, pursuant to subsection (b), or transfer, 
pursuant to subsection (c), a filled position only with the written 
consent of the individual filling such position.
    (e) Reemployment.--An individual filling a military technician 
(dual status) position that is converted to Active Guard and Reserve 
duty pursuant to subsection (b)(2), waives any reemployment entitlement 
under section 4314 of title 38, United States Code, to another military 
technician (dual status) position but may assert reemployment rights to 
a civilian position employed under section 3101 of title 5, United 
States Code, or section 1601, 1762, or 10508 of title 10, United States 
Code if a similar position is reasonably available.
    (f) Automatic Adjustment to End Strength Requirements.--Whenever a 
military technician (dual status) position is converted pursuant to 
subsection (b)(2)--
            (1) the applicable statutory annual end strength limitation 
        for Active Guard and Reserve personnel within the Army and Air 
        National Guards of the United States, in accordance with 
        section 115 of title 10, United States Code, shall be increased 
        accordingly.
            (2) the applicable statutory annual minimum end strength 
        required for National Guard military technician (dual status) 
        within the Army and Air National Guards of the United States, 
        in accordance with section 115 of title 10, United States Code, 
        shall be decreased accordingly.
    (g) Hiring Freeze.--Beginning on October 1, 2028, no individual may 
be newly hired or employed, or rehired or reemployed, as a military 
technician (dual status) under section 709 of title 32, United States 
Code.
    (h) Definitions.--In this section--
            (1) the term ``military technician (dual status)'' has the 
        meaning given such term in section 10216 of title 10, United 
        States Code; and
            (2) the term ``State'' has the meaning given such term in 
        section 901 of title 32, United States Code.

SEC. 1106. 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), as 
most recently amended by section 1105 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 
1074), is further amended by striking ``through 2026'' and inserting 
``through 2027''.

SEC. 1107. ONE-YEAR EXTENSION OF TEMPORARY AUTHORITY TO GRANT 
              ALLOWANCES, BENEFITS, AND GRATUITIES TO CIVILIAN 
              PERSONNEL ON OFFICIAL DUTY IN A COMBAT ZONE.

    Paragraph (2) of section 1603(a) of the Emergency Supplemental 
Appropriations Act for Defense, the Global War on Terror, and Hurricane 
Recovery, 2006 (Public Law 109-234; 120 Stat. 443), as added by section 
1102 of the Duncan Hunter National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2009 (Public Law 110-417; 122 Stat. 4616) and as most recently 
amended by section 1106 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 1074), is further 
amended by striking ``2027'' and inserting ``2028''.

SEC. 1108. LIVING QUARTER ALLOWANCE FOR DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE CIVILIAN 
              EMPLOYEES WITH PERMANENT DUTY STATION IN GUAM.

    Section 1102 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2024 (Public Law 118-31) is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)(1), by striking ``rent'' and 
        inserting ``rent or mortgage payments'';
            (2) by striking subsection (d) (relating to sunset date 3 
        years after the date of the enactment of the National Defense 
        Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026); and
            (3) by redesignating subsection (c) (relating to sunset 
        date of January 1, 2034) at the end as subsection (d).

SEC. 1109. PILOT PROGRAM ON INTEGRATION OF UNITED STATES TECH FORCE 
              WITH SKILLS-BASED HIRING AUTHORITIES.

    (a) Program Required.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall carry out a 
        pilot program to integrate the United States Tech Force into 
        the implementation of the hiring and promotion reforms 
        authorized under the National Defense Authorization Act for 
        Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60).
            (2) Purpose.--The purpose of the pilot is to use the United 
        States Tech Force to develop, validate, and deploy the skills-
        based assessments required to modernize the defense workforce.
    (b) Use of Commercial Technology for Skills Verification.--In 
carrying out the pilot program, the Secretary of Defense shall use 
commercially available, interoperable technology platforms to--
            (1) create a ``Digital Skills Passport'' for members of the 
        United States Tech Force and Department of Defense civilian 
        employees, documenting verified competencies rather than solely 
        degrees or tenure;
            (2) automatically map the skills possessed by United States 
        Tech Force participants to gaps identified in the Department of 
        Defense cyber and digital workforce; and
            (3) track the mobility of talent across the Department 
        based on skills proficiency, consistent with the removal of 
        time-in-grade restrictions.
    (c) Reporting.--Not later than 1 year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report on the effectiveness of using 
commercial skills-based platforms to integrate the United States Tech 
Force with Department of Defense hiring authorities.
    (d) Sunset.--The authority to carry out the pilot program under 
this section shall expire on the date that is five years after the date 
of the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 1110. ENHANCED HIRING AUTHORITY FOR INSTRUCTOR PILOTS AND CIVILIAN 
              SIMULATOR INSTRUCTORS.

    (a) Direct Hire.--The Secretary of Defense may appoint, without 
regard to the provisions of subchapter I of chapter 33 of title 5, 
United States Code, (other than sections 3303, 3307, and 3328 of such 
chapter), qualified candidates to instructor pilot positions and 
civilian simulator instructor positions.
    (b) Rates of Pay.--The Secretary may set annual rates of pay for 
such positions without regard to the provisions chapters 51 and 53 
(relating to classification and pay rates) of such title 5. Such rates 
shall be equal to the annual rate of pay for positions in private 
industry comparable to instructor pilot positions and civilian 
simulator instructor positions, as determined by the Secretary.
    (c) Recruitment and Retention Authority.--The Secretary may use the 
authority provided under sections 5373 and section of title 5, United 
States Code, for the payment of recruitment, relocation, and retention 
incentives to instructor pilots and civilian simulator instructors or 
applicants to such positions.
    (d) Study and Report.--Not later than 1 year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall conduct a study on the 
hiring authorities issued under this section and submit a report on 
such study to the congressional defense committees. Such study shall 
include information with respect to the following:
            (1) How the authority under this section is being used, 
        including--
                    (A) how many instances such authority has been used 
                and where the authority is being used;
                    (B) time to hire; and
                    (C) the hiring incentives, recruitment bonuses, and 
                special pay authorities used under this section
            (2) The total number of--
                    (A) vacant instructor pilot positions and civilian 
                simulator instructor positions filled using such 
                authority; and
                    (B) vacant instructor pilot positions and civilian 
                simulator instructor positions remaining.
            (3) Any additional authorities necessary to ensure the 
        Secretary is able to hire and retain instructor pilots and 
        civilian simulator instructors.
    (e) Sunset.--The authority under this section shall terminate on 
the date that is five years after the date of the enactment of this 
Act.

SEC. 1111. PILOT PROGRAM ON TECH TALENT COMPETITIVENESS.

    (a) Pilot Program.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall establish a pilot 
program that expedites and scales the sourcing and placement of early-
career talent across the Department of Defense in the areas of science, 
technology, engineering, and math and functional areas of artificial 
intelligence, cybersecurity, biotechnology, materials and 
manufacturing, and business process innovation. In carrying out the 
pilot program, the Secretary of Defense shall--
            (1) use the authorities under section 213.3102(r) of title 
        5, Code of Federal Regulations, to appoint individuals in 
        support of establishing fellowships;
            (2) develop and implement a process for identifying, 
        sourcing, and training a pool of qualified candidates;
            (3) establish a professional development structure for 
        pilot program participants; and
            (4) partner with a nonprofit intermediary organization that 
        have a proven track record in delivering efficient recruitment 
        and screening processes and have demonstrated expertise in 
        navigating the Federal security clearance procedures to support 
        the development of qualified talent pools with the necessary 
        skills and expertise.
    (b) Assessment Required.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
the enactment of this Act and annually thereafter until the pilot 
program sunsets, the Secretary of Defense shall provide an assessment 
to the congressional defense committees on the effectiveness of the 
pilot program. Each such assessment shall include--
            (1) an evaluation of the efficacy in matching the pre-
        vetted pools of candidates to the requirements of the 
        Department of Defense; and
            (2) the effectiveness of partnering with intermediary 
        organizations for the purposes of carrying out activities in 
        support of developing qualified pools of talent with the skills 
        and expertise necessary to meet the purposes of the pilot 
        program.
    (c) Program Administration.--For the purposes of carrying out this 
section, the Secretary of Defense may--
            (1) waive any requirement for a permanent billet to be 
        required to support hiring of talent;
            (2) make selections based on needs and available budget; 
        and
            (3) direct legal counsel of the Department to provide 
        guidance that--
                    (A) enables post-employment opportunities by 
                avoiding government assignments that preclude hiring 
                outside the Federal Government following the term 
                appointment; and
                    (B) requires ethics officials to provide guidance 
                that aligns with the temporary nature of the 
                appointment and design protocols to minimize post-
                employment restrictions.
    (d) Sunset.--The pilot program shall terminate on the date that is 
3 years after the date such program is established.
    (e) Intermediary Organization Defined.--In this section, the term 
``intermediary organization'' means--
            (1) a nonprofit registered under section 501(c)(3) of title 
        26, United States Code; and
            (2) an organization having demonstrated expertise in--
                    (A) streamlining recruitment and pre-screening for 
                early-career tech talent;
                    (B) carrying out public-private talent exchanges 
                through a proven track record, including managing 
                rotations between private and public sector entities 
                and reducing governmental administrative burden in the 
                process;
                    (C) skills development and mentorship programming 
                that ensures program participants remain on the cutting 
                edge of their technical and management skills; and

SEC. 1112. CIVILIAN EMPLOYEE AND CONTRACTOR FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT 
              WORKFORCE WITHIN THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.

    (a) In General.--The planning policies and associated processes, 
practices, and activities of the financial management civilian 
workforce within the Department of Defense shall be consistent with the 
following principles:
            (1) Involving top management, staff members, and other 
        stakeholders in developing, communicating, and implementing the 
        strategic workforce plan.
            (2) Supporting workforce planning strategies that use 
        existing human capital flexibilities.
            (3) Monitoring and evaluating progress toward human capital 
        goals.
            (4) Determining needed critical skills.
            (5) Developing strategies to address gaps in critical 
        skills.
    (b) Financial Management Skills Assessment Integrated Product 
Team.--
            (1) Establishment.--Not later than 60 days after the date 
        of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in 
        coordination with the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller), 
        shall establish a Financial Management Skills Assessment 
        Integrated Product Team (in this subsection referred to as the 
        ``Team'') to develop a strategy to identify functions performed 
        by civilian employees and contractors supporting financial 
        management within the Department.
            (2) Process.--The Team shall establish and implement a 
        repeatable process for timely reporting on financial management 
        functions performed by civilian employees and contractors 
        across the Department.
            (3) Briefing.--The Secretary shall provide a briefing to 
        the congressional defense committees on the Team, a description 
        of how the Team tracks financial management functions performed 
        by civilian employees and contractors, and the Department's 
        audit readiness.

SEC. 1113. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE BEST PRACTICES GUIDE FOR FAMILY CHILD 
              CARE HOMES.

    (a) Department-wide Family Child Care Guide Required.--Not later 
than one year after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary of 
Defense shall publish a Department-wide best practices guide for 
individuals seeking to establish and operate a Family Child Care home 
on a military installation.
    (b) Consultation Requirement.--In developing the guide required 
under subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense shall consult with 
military departments, military installations, Family Child Care program 
administrators, and established Family Child Care providers operating 
under successful Family Child Care programs across the Department of 
Defense to identify and incorporate best practices, lessons learned, 
and approaches that have demonstrated success in expanding 
participation and reducing barriers to establishing and operating 
Family Child Care homes.
    (c) Required Elements.--The guide required under subsection (a) 
shall include, at a minimum--
            (1) an overview of the process for becoming a certified 
        Family Child Care provider;
            (2) standardized information regarding training, 
        inspections, background checks, licensing, and certification 
        requirements;
            (3) guidance regarding available financial assistance, 
        startup support, subsidies, grants, and reimbursement 
        opportunities;
            (4) information on liability coverage, safety standards, 
        and emergency preparedness requirements;
            (5) recommendations for reducing administrative barriers to 
        establishing Family Child Care homes; and
            (6) any additional information the Secretary determines 
        appropriate to support prospective Family Child Care providers.
    (d) Public Availability.--The Secretary shall make the guide 
required under subsection (a) publicly available on an internet website 
of the Department of Defense in a searchable and accessible format for 
military families.
    (e) Service-specific Appendices.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall encourage 
        the Secretaries of the military departments to publish and 
        maintain service-specific appendices accompanying the guide 
        required under subsection (a).
            (2) Contents.--A service-specific appendix under paragraph 
        (1) may include--
                    (A) service-specific policies or procedures;
                    (B) installation-level best practices;
                    (C) information regarding unique operational 
                requirements or child care demands within the military 
                department concerned;
                    (D) guidance regarding military housing 
                considerations related to Family Child Care homes; and
                    (E) points of contact and resources specific to the 
                military department concerned.
    (f) Briefing.--Not later than 18 months after the date of enactment 
of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall provide a briefing to the 
congressional defense committees regarding--
            (1) actions taken to implement this section;
            (2) efforts to improve awareness of Family Child Care 
        opportunities among military spouses and families;
            (3) barriers identified in the establishment of Family 
        Child Care homes; and
            (4) recommendations for legislative or administrative 
        action to improve military child care capacity.

SEC. 1114. DELEGATION OF AUTHORITY FOR CORRECTIVE ACTION FOR 
              NONAPPROPRIATED FUND EMPLOYEES IN CASES OF COMPLAINT OF 
              REPRISAL.

    Section 1587(d) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking the second sentence.

SEC. 1115. LIMITATION ON USE OF FUNDS TO LIMIT COLLECTIVE BARGAINING.

    None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or 
otherwise made available for the Department of Defense for fiscal year 
2027 may be used to implement Executive Order 14251, issued on March 
27, 2025, relating to Exclusions from Federal labor management 
relations programs, or any following policy or guidance.

SEC. 1116. HIRING FREEZE EXCEPTIONS.

    None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or 
otherwise made available for the Department of Defense for fiscal year 
2027 may be used to implement a hiring freeze on the following 
categories:
            (1) Positions essential to immigration enforcement, 
        national security, or public safety.
            (2) Positions funded by nonappropriated funds in Department 
        of Defense NAF instrumentalities.
            (3) Civilian Mariner positions.
            (4) Positions at depots, shipyards, arsenals, and 
        maintenance facilities.
            (5) Positions at United States Military Entrance Processing 
        Command.
            (6) Positions at military medical treatment facilities that 
        perform patient care or are essential to hospital operations.
            (7) Child and Youth Programs staff.
            (8) Instructors or facility support staff at Department of 
        Defense schools or child care centers.
            (9) Installation positions that support fire, life, and 
        safety functions.

SEC. 1117. PROHIBITION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR TERMINATION OF 
              DODEA, CHILDCARE, AND HEALTHCARE WORKERS.

    None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or 
otherwise made available for fiscal year 2027 for the Department of 
Defense may be obligated or expended to terminate employees of Military 
Child Development Programs, employees of the Department of Defense 9 
Education Activity, or employees of the Defense Health Agencies or the 
healthcare workforce within the Department regardless of whether such 
positions are funded by appropriated or nonappropriated funds, unless 
the employee was documented as not performing or engaging in 
misconduct.

SEC. 1118. DEMONSTRATION PROJECT RELATING TO PAY AND PERSONNEL POLICIES 
              FOR EMPLOYEES AT GROUND-BASED INTERCONTINENTAL BALLISTIC 
              MISSILE DEVELOPMENT AND MAINTENANCE FACILITIES.

    (a) Commencement.--The Secretary of Defense, through the Secretary 
of the Air Force, is authorized to carry out a demonstration project, 
the purpose of which is to determine the feasibility or desirability of 
one or more proposals for improving the personnel management policies 
or procedures that apply with respect to the maintenance, 
modernization, and sustainment of ground-based intercontinental 
ballistic missile systems at operational missile wings, sustainment 
facilities, and contractor facilities of the Department of the Air 
Force.
    (b) Application.--Section 4703 of title 5, United States Code, 
shall apply to the demonstration project under this section, except 
that--
            (1) subsection (d)(1)(A) of such section 4703 shall be 
        applied by substituting ``15,000'' for ``5,000''; and
            (2) subsection (d)(1)(B) of such section 4703 shall not 
        apply.
    (c) Terms and Conditions.--Except as otherwise provided in this 
subsection, any demonstration project described in subsection (a) shall 
include the following:
            (1) Pay band structures that provide maximum flexibility to 
        attract and retain employees with critical skills, including 
        into apprentice programs.
            (2) Trades, technical, and leadership career paths that 
        provide advancement opportunities for employees to progress 
        through the bands based on performance and contribution to the 
        mission.
            (3) Broad classification authority not otherwise subject to 
        current government classification and job grading standards.
            (4) A performance management system that emphasizes desired 
        mission outcomes and workforce alignment to Air Force 
        priorities.
            (5) Pay flexibilities that promote opportunities for 
        greater recruitment and retention of employees at 
        intercontinental ballistic missile facilities.
    (d) Effect of Reorganizations.--The applicability of this section 
to an organization or team shall not terminate as a result of a 
reorganization, restructuring, realignment, consolidation, or other 
organizational change.
    (e) Assessments.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall designate 
        an independent organization to conduct two assessments of this 
        demonstration project described in subsection (a).
            (2) Requirements.--Each such assessment shall include the 
        following:
                    (A) A description of the workforce included in the 
                project.
                    (B) An explanation of the flexibilities used in the 
                project to appoint individuals to the Air Force 
                workforce participating in the demonstration project 
                and whether those appointments are based on competitive 
                procedures and recognized veteran's preferences.
                    (C) An explanation of the flexibilities used in the 
                project to develop a performance appraisal system that 
                recognizes excellence in performance and offers 
                opportunities for improvement.
                    (D) The steps taken to ensure that such system is 
                fair and transparent for all employees in the project.
                    (E) An explanation of how the project allows the 
                organization to better meet mission needs.
                    (F) An analysis of how the flexibilities in 
                subparagraphs (B) and (C) are used, and what barriers 
                have been encountered that inhibit their use.
                    (G) A description of the processes for--
                            (i) ensuring ongoing performance feedback 
                        and dialogue among supervisors, managers, and 
                        employees throughout the performance appraisal 
                        period; and
                            (ii) setting timetables for performance 
                        appraisals.
                    (H) The project's impact on career progression.
                    (I) The project's appropriateness or 
                inappropriateness in light of the complexities of the 
                workforce affected.
                    (J) The adequacy of the training, policy 
                guidelines, and other preparations afforded in 
                connection with using the project.
                    (K) Whether there is a process for ensuring 
                employee involvement in the development and improvement 
                of the project.
                    (L) Five year plan.
            (3) Schedule.--The first assessment under this subsection 
        shall be completed not later than September 30, 2028. The 
        second and final assessment shall be completed not later than 2 
        years after the date the first assessment is completed. The 
        Secretary shall submit to the covered congressional committees 
        a copy of each assessment within 30 days after receiving the 
        assessment.
    (f) Covered Congressional Committees.--In this section, the term 
``covered congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the 
        House of Representatives;
            (2) the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental 
        Affairs of the Senate; and
            (3) the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform of the 
        House of Representatives.
    (g) Termination of Authority.--The authority to conduct a 
demonstration project under this section shall terminate on the date 
that is 3 years after the date of the enactment of this Act.
    (h) Conversion.--Not later than 6 months after the authority to 
conduct a demonstration project under this section is terminated under 
subsection (g), employees in the project shall convert to the civilian 
personnel system created pursuant to section 9902 of title 5, United 
States Code.

SEC. 1119. DEMONSTRATION PROJECT RELATING TO PAY AND PERSONNEL POLICIES 
              FOR EMPLOYEES AT NAVAL SHIPYARDS, NAVY REGIONAL 
              MAINTENANCE CENTERS, AND NAVY TRIDENT REFIT FACILITIES.

    (a) Commencement.--The Secretary of Defense, through the Secretary 
of the Navy, is authorized to carry out a demonstration project, the 
purpose of which is to determine the feasibility or desirability of one 
or more proposals for improving the personnel management policies or 
procedures that apply with respect to the maintenance and sustainment 
of ships, submarines, and their associated systems at shipyards, 
regional maintenance centers, and trident refit facilities of the 
Department of the Navy.
    (b) Application.--
            (1) Title 5.--Section 4703 of title 5, United States Code, 
        shall apply to the demonstration project under this section, 
        except that--
                    (A) subsection (d)(1)(A) of such section 4703 shall 
                be applied by substituting ``60,000'' for ``5,000''; 
                and
                    (B) subsection (d)(1)(B) of such section 4703 shall 
                not apply.
            (2) Prevailing rate employees.--The demonstration project 
        under this section shall only apply to prevailing rate 
        employees.
    (c) Terms and Conditions.--Except as otherwise provided in this 
subsection, any demonstration project described in subsection (a) shall 
include the following:
            (1) Pay band structures that provide maximum flexibility to 
        attract and retain employees with critical skills, including 
        into apprentice programs.
            (2) Trades, technical, and leadership career paths that 
        provide advancement opportunities for employees to progress 
        through the bands based on performance and contribution to the 
        mission.
            (3) Broad classification authority not otherwise subject to 
        current government classification and job grading standards.
            (4) A performance management system that emphasizes desired 
        mission outcomes and workforce alignment to Navy priorities.
            (5) Pay flexibilities that promote opportunities for 
        greater recruitment and retention of shipyard employees.
    (d) Effect of Reorganizations.--The applicability of this section 
to an organization or team shall not terminate as a result of a 
reorganization, restructuring, realignment, consolidation, or other 
organizational change.
    (e) Assessments.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall designate 
        an independent organization to conduct two assessments of this 
        demonstration project described in subsection (a).
            (2) Requirements.--Each such assessment shall include the 
        following:
                    (A) A description of the workforce included in the 
                project.
                    (B) An explanation of the flexibilities used in the 
                project to appoint individuals to the Navy workforce 
                participating in the demonstration project and whether 
                those appointments are based on competitive procedures 
                and recognized veteran's preferences.
                    (C) An explanation of the flexibilities used in the 
                project to develop a performance appraisal system that 
                recognizes excellence in performance and offers 
                opportunities for improvement.
                    (D) The steps taken to ensure that such system is 
                fair and transparent for all employees in the project.
                    (E) An explanation of how the project allows the 
                organization to better meet mission needs.
                    (F) An analysis of how the flexibilities in 
                subparagraphs (B) and (C) are used, and what barriers 
                have been encountered that inhibit their use.
                    (G) A description of the processes for--
                            (i) ensuring ongoing performance feedback 
                        and dialogue among supervisors, managers, and 
                        employees throughout the performance appraisal 
                        period; and
                            (ii) setting timetables for performance 
                        appraisals.
                    (H) The project's impact on career progression.
                    (I) The project's appropriateness or 
                inappropriateness in light of the complexities of the 
                workforce affected.
                    (J) The adequacy of the training, policy 
                guidelines, and other preparations afforded in 
                connection with using the project.
                    (K) Whether there is a process for ensuring 
                employee involvement in the development and improvement 
                of the project.
                    (L) Five year plan.
            (3) Schedule.--The first assessment under this subsection 
        shall be completed not later than September 30, 2028. The 
        second and final assessment shall be completed not later than 
        September 30, 2033. The Secretary shall submit to the covered 
        congressional committees a copy of each assessment within 30 
        days after receiving the assessment.
    (f) Covered Congressional Committees.--In this section, the term 
``covered congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the 
        House of Representatives;
            (2) the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental 
        Affairs of the Senate; and
            (3) the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform of the 
        House of Representatives.
    (g) Termination of Authority.--The authority to conduct a 
demonstration project under this section shall terminate on the date 
that is 3 years after the date of the enactment of this Act.
    (h) Conversion.--Not later than 6 months after the authority to 
conduct a demonstration project under this section is terminated under 
subsection (g), employees in the project shall convert to the civilian 
personnel system created pursuant to section 9902 of title 5, United 
States Code.

SEC. 1120. DEMONSTRATION PROJECT RELATING TO PAY AND PERSONNEL POLICIES 
              FOR PREVAILING RATE EMPLOYEES AT COVERED DEPOTS.

    (a) Commencement.--The Secretary of Defense, through the Secretary 
of the Army, is authorized to carry out a demonstration project, the 
purpose of which is to determine the feasibility or desirability of one 
or more proposals for improving the personnel management policies or 
procedures that apply with respect to the maintenance and sustainment 
of covered depots (as that term is defined in section 2476 of title 10, 
United States Code).
    (b) Application.--
            (1) Title 5.--Section 4703 of title 5, United States Code, 
        shall apply to the demonstration project under this section, 
        except that--
                    (A) subsection (d)(1)(A) of such section 4703 shall 
                be applied by substituting ``60,000'' for ``5,000''; 
                and
                    (B) subsection (d)(1)(B) of such section 4703 shall 
                not apply.
            (2) Prevailing rate employees.--The demonstration project 
        under this section shall only apply to prevailing rate 
        employees.
    (c) Terms and Conditions.--Except as otherwise provided in this 
subsection, any demonstration project described in subsection (a) shall 
include the following:
            (1) Pay band structures that provide maximum flexibility to 
        attract and retain employees with critical skills, including 
        into apprentice programs.
            (2) Trades, technical, and leadership career paths that 
        provide advancement opportunities for employees to progress 
        through the bands based on performance and contribution to the 
        mission.
            (3) Broad classification authority not otherwise subject to 
        current government classification and job grading standards.
            (4) A performance management system that emphasizes desired 
        mission outcomes and workforce alignment to Department 
        priorities.
            (5) Pay flexibilities that promote opportunities for 
        greater recruitment and retention of covered depot employees.
    (d) Effect of Reorganizations.--The applicability of this section 
to an organization or team shall not terminate as a result of a 
reorganization, restructuring, realignment, consolidation, or other 
organizational change.
    (e) Assessments.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall designate 
        an independent organization to conduct two assessments of this 
        demonstration project described in subsection (a).
            (2) Requirements.--Each such assessment shall include the 
        following:
                    (A) A description of the workforce included in the 
                project.
                    (B) An explanation of the flexibilities used in the 
                project to appoint individuals to the workforce 
                participating in the demonstration project and whether 
                those appointments are based on competitive procedures 
                and recognized veteran's preferences.
                    (C) An explanation of the flexibilities used in the 
                project to develop a performance appraisal system that 
                recognizes excellence in performance and offers 
                opportunities for improvement.
                    (D) The steps taken to ensure that such system is 
                fair and transparent for all employees in the project.
                    (E) An explanation of how the project allows the 
                organization to better meet mission needs.
                    (F) An analysis of how the flexibilities in 
                subparagraphs (B) and (C) are used, and what barriers 
                have been encountered that inhibit their use.
                    (G) A description of the processes for--
                            (i) ensuring ongoing performance feedback 
                        and dialogue among supervisors, managers, and 
                        employees throughout the performance appraisal 
                        period; and
                            (ii) setting timetables for performance 
                        appraisals.
                    (H) The project's impact on career progression.
                    (I) The project's appropriateness or 
                inappropriateness in light of the complexities of the 
                workforce affected.
            (3) Schedule.--The first assessment under this subsection 
        shall be completed not later than September 30, 2028. The 
        second and final assessment shall be completed not later than 
        September 30, 2033. The Secretary shall submit to the covered 
        congressional committees a copy of each assessment within 30 
        days after receiving the assessment.
    (f) Covered Congressional Committees.--In this section, the term 
``covered congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the 
        House of Representatives;
            (2) the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental 
        Affairs of the Senate; and
            (3) the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform of the 
        House of Representatives.
    (g) Termination of Authority.--The authority to conduct a 
demonstration project under this section shall terminate on December 
31, 2032.
    (h) Conversion.--Not later than 6 months after the authority to 
conduct a demonstration project under this section is terminated under 
subsection (g), employees in the project shall convert to the civilian 
personnel system created pursuant to section 9902 of title 5, United 
States Code.

SEC. 1121. PROHIBITION ON CARRYING OUT HIRING FREEZE, REDUCTION IN 
              FORCE, OR HIRING DELAY WITHOUT CAUSE AT PUBLIC SHIPYARDS 
              OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.

    None of the funds authorized to be appropriated or otherwise made 
available for fiscal year 2027 for the Department of Defense may be 
used to--
            (1) carry out a hiring freeze at a public shipyard of the 
        Department;
            (2) carry out a reduction in force at a public shipyard of 
        the Department; or
            (3) delay without cause the filling of a vacant Federal 
        civilian employee position at a public shipyard of the 
        Department.

             TITLE XII--MATTERS RELATING TO FOREIGN NATIONS

                  Subtitle A--Assistance and Training

SEC. 1201. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY FOR SUPPORT OF SPECIAL OPERATIONS 
              FOR IRREGULAR WARFARE.

    Section 127d(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``$20,000,000'' and inserting ``$50,000,000''.

SEC. 1202. AUTHORITY TO BUILD CAPACITY FOR SPACE DOMAIN AWARENESS.

    Section 333(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
adding at the end the following new paragraph:
            ``(10) Space domain awareness.''.

SEC. 1203. ESTABLISHMENT OF INTER-PACIFIC AIR FORCES ACADEMY.

    Chapter 16 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by inserting 
after section 352 the following new section:
``Sec. 353. Inter-Pacific Air Forces Academy
    ``(a) Operation.--The Secretary of the Air Force may operate the 
Air Force education and training facility known as the Inter-Pacific 
Air Forces Academy (in this section referred to as the `Academy').
    ``(b) Purpose.--The purpose of the Academy shall be to provide 
military education and training to military personnel of countries that 
are--
            ``(1) within the United States Indo-Pacific Command area of 
        responsibility; and
            ``(2) eligible for assistance under chapter 5 of part II of 
        the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2347 et seq.).
    ``(c) Limitations.--
            ``(1) Concurrence of secretary of state.--Military 
        personnel of a country may be provided education and training 
        under this section only with the concurrence of the Secretary 
        of State.
            ``(2) Assistance otherwise prohibited by law.--Education 
        and training may not be provided under this section to the 
        military personnel of any country that is otherwise prohibited 
        from receiving such type of assistance under any other 
        provision of law.
    ``(d) Supplies and Clothing.--The Secretary of the Air Force may, 
under such conditions as the Secretary may prescribe, provide to a 
person receiving education and training under this section the 
following:
            ``(1) Transportation incident to such education and 
        training.
            ``(2) Supplies and equipment to be used during such 
        education and training.
            ``(3) Billeting, food, and health services in connection 
        with the receipt of such education and training.
    ``(e) Living Allowance.--The Secretary of the Air Force may pay to 
a person receiving education and training under this section a living 
allowance at a rate to be prescribed by the Secretary, taking into 
account the rates of living allowances authorized for a member of the 
Armed Forces under similar circumstances.
    ``(f) Funding.--Amounts for the operations and maintenance of the 
Academy, and for the provision of education and training through the 
Academy, may be paid from funds available for the Air Force for 
operation and maintenance.''.

SEC. 1204. REVIEW OF EXECUTION OF PROGRAMS TO BUILD PARTNER CAPACITY.

    Not later than 1 year after the date of the enactment of this Act, 
the Comptroller General of the United States shall submit to the 
Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the 
Senate, the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of 
Representatives, and the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate a 
report containing a review of the execution by the Department of 
Defense of programs conducted pursuant to section 333 of title 10, 
United States Code. The review shall include, with respect to such 
programs, the following information:
            (1) The extent to which the Department of Defense has 
        defined measurable timelines and goals with targets for such 
        programs.
            (2) The extent to which program execution has been timely 
        and programs have achieved their stated goals.
            (3) Challenges affecting the outcomes of such programs.
            (4) Any other matters the Comptroller General of the United 
        States determines relevant.

SEC. 1205. ESTABLISHMENT OF PARTNERSHIP PROGRAMS ON MILITARY TRAUMA 
              CARE AND RESEARCH BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND FOREIGN 
              COUNTRIES.

    (a) Partnerships.--The Secretary of Defense, in consultation with 
the Secretary of State, may establish a joint education and training 
program on military trauma care and research with appropriate personnel 
of the military forces of one or more foreign countries.
    (b) Elements.--The Secretary may include in each joint education 
and training program on military trauma care and research under 
subsection (a) the following:
            (1) The sharing of relevant lessons learned in combat 
        casualty care derived from prior conflicts.
            (2) The conduct of joint conferences, symposia, and 
        professional exchange programs involving military medical 
        professionals from the United States and the foreign countries 
        participating in the program.
            (3) Collaboration through structured knowledge exchanges on 
        matters relating to health policy, health administration, and 
        medical logistics, including with respect to medical supplies 
        and equipment.
            (4) The conduct of joint research and development 
        initiatives addressing the health effects of new and emerging 
        weapons and methods of warfare.
            (5) Capacity-building programs to support the development, 
        sustainment, and modernization of military trauma care systems 
        and programs.
            (6) Coordination, through the Joint Trauma System of the 
        Defense Health Agency, of trauma care doctrine, data 
        collection, performance improvement, and clinical best 
        practices with the Armed Forces of the United States and the 
        military medical services of the foreign countries 
        participating in the program.
            (7) The provision of training to the military forces of 
        such foreign countries with respect to--
                    (A) military trauma care;
                    (B) combat wound infection; and
                    (C) post-traumatic stress disorder and suicide 
                prevention relating to the treatment of military trauma 
                care.
    (c) Use of Authorities.--In carrying out the joint education and 
training program on military trauma care and research under subsection 
(a), the Secretary of Defense may use the authorities under chapter 16 
of title 10, United States Code, and other applicable statutory 
authorities available to the Secretary.

        Subtitle B--Matters Relating to the Near and Middle East

SEC. 1211. EXTENSION OF COUNTER-TERRORISM SUPPORT AUTHORITY.

    Section 1226(h) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 22 U.S.C. 2151 note) is amended by 
striking ``December 31, 2026'' and inserting ``December 31, 2027''.

SEC. 1212. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY FOR REIMBURSEMENT OF CERTAIN 
              COALITION NATIONS FOR SUPPORT PROVIDED TO UNITED STATES 
              MILITARY OPERATIONS.

    (a) Extension of Authority.--Section 1233(a) of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (Public Law 110-181; 122 
Stat. 393) is amended by striking ``beginning on October 1, 2025, and 
ending on December 31, 2026'' and inserting ``beginning on October 1, 
2026, and ending on December 31, 2027''.
    (b) Extension of Limitation on Amount.--Section 1233(d)(1) of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (Public Law 
110-181; 122 Stat. 393) is amended by striking ``beginning on October 
1, 2025, and ending on December 31, 2026'' and inserting ``beginning on 
October 1, 2026, and ending on December 31, 2027''.

SEC. 1213. DEADLINE FOR AFGHANISTAN WAR COMMISSION FINAL REPORT.

    Section 1094(e)(2)(A)(ii)(I) of the National Defense Authorization 
Act for Fiscal Year 2022 (Public Law 117-81; 135 Stat. 1941) is amended 
by striking ``3 years'' and inserting ``4 years''.

SEC. 1214. PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS TO SUPPORT THE TALIBAN.

    None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or 
otherwise made available to the Department of Defense may be obligated 
or expended to provide direct or indirect assistance or support, 
including training, equipment, services, or currency, to--
            (1) the Taliban;
            (2) the Government of Afghanistan;
            (3) any subsidiary, agent, instrumentality, or successor of 
        the Taliban; or
            (4) an entity or foreign country that solicits or accepts 
        support or assistance from the United States with the intent to 
        forward or transfer that support or assistance to the Taliban 
        or the Government of Afghanistan.

SEC. 1215. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO PROVIDE ASSISTANCE TO COUNTER THE 
              ISLAMIC STATE OF IRAQ AND SYRIA.

     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. 3558) is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a), in the matter preceding paragraph 
        (1), by striking ``December 31, 2026'' and inserting ``December 
        31, 2027''; and
            (2) in subsection (n)(6), by striking ``December 31, 2026'' 
        and inserting ``December 31, 2027''.

SEC. 1216. EXTENSION OF LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR THE 
              IRAQI SECURITY FORCES.

    (a) Limitation on Obligation of Funds.--Not more than 25 percent of 
the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise made 
available for fiscal year 2027 for the Iraqi security forces under 
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. 3558) may be obligated or expended until the date on which the 
Secretary of Defense submits to the congressional defense committees a 
certification that the Government of Iraq has taken credible steps--
            (1) to reduce the operational capacity of Iran-aligned 
        militia groups not integrated into the Iraqi security forces 
        through a publicly verifiable disarmament, demobilization, and 
        reintegration process;
            (2) to strengthen the authority and operational control of 
        the Prime Minister of Iraq as Commander-in-Chief over the Iraqi 
        security forces; and
            (3) to investigate and hold accountable members of Iran-
        aligned militia groups or members of the Iraqi security forces 
        operating outside the formal chain of command of the Iraqi 
        security forces who engage in attacks on United States or Iraqi 
        personnel or otherwise act in an illegal or destabilizing 
        manner.
    (b) Waiver.--The Secretary of Defense may waive the limitation in 
subsection (a) for a period of not more than 180 days if the Secretary 
determines that such waiver is in the national security interest of the 
United States. Any such waiver shall be submitted in writing to the 
congressional defense committees not later than 15 days after issuance, 
along with a justification and a description of the steps being taken 
to achieve the objectives described in subsection (a).
    (c) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall apply to 
funds authorized to be appropriated for the Iraqi security forces that 
are designated for the Kurdish Peshmerga Forces.
    (d) Iraqi Security Forces Defined.--In this section, the term 
``Iraqi security forces'' means the military and other security forces 
of or associated with the Government of Iraq.

SEC. 1217. PROHIBITION ON TRANSFERS TO THE BADR ORGANIZATION.

    None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or 
otherwise made available to the Secretary of Defense for fiscal year 
2027 may be made available to the Badr Organization or any affiliates 
or successors of the Badr Organization.

                 Subtitle C--Matters Relating to Israel

SEC. 1221. EXTENSION OF WAR RESERVE STOCKPILE AUTHORITY FOR ISRAEL.

    Section 12001(d) of the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 
2005 (Public Law 108-287; 118 Stat. 1011) is amended by striking 
``January 1, 2027'' and inserting ``January 1, 2029''.

SEC. 1222. UNITED STATES-ISRAEL SUBTERRANEAN COOPERATION.

    Section 1279 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2016 (22 U.S.C. 8606 note) is amended--
            (1) in the section heading, by striking ``anti-tunnel'' and 
        inserting ``subterranean'';
            (2) by striking ``anti-tunnel'' each place it appears and 
        inserting ``subterranean'';
            (3) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) in the heading, by striking ``Anti-tunnel'' and 
                inserting ``Subterranean''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (1), strike ``underground 
                tunnels'' and insert ``or destroy subterranean 
                facilities, including tunnels, bunkers, and other 
                underground targets,'';
            (4) in subsection (b)--
                    (A) by striking paragraph (4); and
                    (B) by redesignating paragraph (5) as paragraph 
                (4); and
            (5) in subsection (f), by striking ``2028'' and inserting 
        ``2029''.

SEC. 1223. UNITED STATES-ISRAEL COOPERATION TO COUNTER UNMANNED SYSTEMS 
              IN ALL WARFIGHTING DOMAINS.

    Section 1278 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2020 (22 U.S.C. 8606 note) is amended--
            (1) in subsection (b)--
                    (A) by striking paragraph (4); and
                    (B) by redesignating paragraph (5) as paragraph 
                (4); and
            (2) in subsection (g), by striking ``2028'' and inserting 
        ``2029''.

                 Subtitle D--Matters Relating to Europe

SEC. 1231. ARMS SALES AND WEAPONS SYSTEM TRANSFERS TO NATO COUNTRIES.

    Section 1250 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2024 (10 U.S.C. 113 note) is amended--
            (1) in the heading, by inserting ``, and arms sales and 
        weapon systems transfers to,'' after ``training in''; and
            (2) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by inserting 
        ``and decisions related to arms sales and weapon systems and 
        equipment transfers under section 333 of title 10, United 
        States Code, to such member countries'' after ``countries''.

SEC. 1232. EXTENSION AND MODIFICATION OF OVERSIGHT OF UNITED STATES 
              MILITARY POSTURE IN EUROPE.

    (a) Extension.--Section 1249 of the National Defense Authorization 
Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60) is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a), by inserting ``or fiscal year 2027'' 
        after ``fiscal year 2026'';
            (2) in subsection (e), by striking ``December 31, 2027'' 
        and inserting ``December 31, 2028.''; and
            (3) in subsection (f), by striking ``2026'' each place it 
        appears and inserting ``2027''.
    (b) Modification of Certain Certifications and Assessments.--
            (1) Certifications.--Section 1249(b) of the National 
        Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-
        60) is amended--
                    (A) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by 
                striking ``The certification described'' and inserting 
                following:
            ``(1) In general.--Except as provided under paragraph (2), 
        the certification described'';
                    (B) by redesignating paragraphs (1) and (2) as 
                subparagraphs (A) and (B), respectively; and
                    (C) by adding at the end following new paragraph:
            ``(2) Exception.--With respect to a proposed action 
        described in paragraph (1) or (3) of subsection (a), the 
        certification described in paragraph (1) of this subsection 
        shall also include a certification that such action is being 
        undertaken only after submission of the assessment described in 
        subsection (c)(1)(A)(x) which determined it was not feasible to 
        reposition members of the Armed Forces or Department of Defense 
        equipment to a member of NATO located on NATO's eastern flank, 
        including Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, or 
        Romania.''.
            (2) Assessments.--Section 1249(c)(A) of the National 
        Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-
        60) is amended by adding at the end the following new clause:
                            ``(x) with respect to an assessment under 
                        this subparagraph relating to a proposed action 
                        described in subsection (a)(1) or (a)(3), in 
                        cases involving the withdrawal of members of 
                        the Armed Forces or Department of Defense 
                        equipment from countries in the area of 
                        responsibility of the United States European 
                        Command, a detailed analysis of the feasibility 
                        of repositioning such personnel or equipment to 
                        a member of NATO located on NATO's eastern 
                        flank, including Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, 
                        Lithuania, Poland, or Romania, that has 
                        demonstrated progress toward meeting the 
                        defense investment commitments agreed to in the 
                        Hague Summit Declaration of June 25, 2025, and 
                        has made substantial investments in 
                        infrastructure in support of United States 
                        Armed Forces personnel and allied defense 
                        objectives, as determined by the Commander of 
                        the United States European Command.''.

SEC. 1233. MODIFICATION OF CERTIFICATION WITH RESPECT TO OVERSIGHT OF 
              UNITED STATES MILITARY POSTURE IN EUROPE.

    Section 1249(b) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``; and'';
            (2) in paragraph (2), by striking the period at the end and 
        inserting a semicolon; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(3) does not undermine United States or allied deterrence 
        of the Russian Federation; and
            ``(4) does not reduce the readiness of forces assigned to 
        or stationed in the United States European Command to support 
        global contingencies.''.

SEC. 1234. POLAND DEFENSE INDUSTRIAL COOPERATION PROGRAM.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary of Defense, in coordination with 
the Secretary of State, shall establish a program to expand cooperation 
between the defense industrial bases of the United States and Poland to 
expand co-production capacity, enhance supply chain resilience, and 
support operational readiness for United States and allied forces. The 
program shall seek to--
            (1) enhance bilateral cooperation between the United States 
        and Poland;
            (2) reduce barriers to co-production between the United 
        States and Poland; and
            (3) strengthen NATO's deterrence capability, including 
        against malign influence from the Russian Federation and 
        People's Republic of China.
    (b) Elements.--The program established pursuant to subsection (a) 
may also include the following:
            (1) Co-production of munitions, ground combat systems, air 
        combat systems and other critical defense articles.
            (2) The establishment and expansion of forward repair, 
        maintenance, and sustainment capabilities in Poland.
            (3) The identification and authorization of technology 
        transfer necessary to establish co-production of co-sustainment 
        capabilities in Poland that support the Armed Forces in Poland 
        and NATO's deterrence capabilities.
            (4) The development of redundant and resilient supply 
        chains to carry out the objectives described in paragraphs (1) 
        through (3) of subsection (a).
            (5) Actions to identify and mitigate barriers to defense 
        industrial base cooperation, including barriers relating to 
        export controls, technology transfer, or contracting practices.
    (c) Authorities.--In carrying out the program established pursuant 
to subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense shall coordinate with other 
Federal departments and agencies, including the Department of State and 
the Department of Commerce, in order to--
            (1) enter into contracts, cooperative agreements, and other 
        bilateral agreements (including under section 4022 of title 10, 
        United States Code); and
            (2) provide technical assistance, training, and equipment 
        relating to defense industrial base cooperation.
    (d) Industry Engagement.--The Secretary of Defense, in coordination 
with the Secretary of State, shall seek to coordinate with appropriate 
counterparts of Poland to convene an annual industry roundtable 
consisting of United States and Polish defense companies, with the goal 
of expanding cooperation and engagement across sectors and between 
government and industry with respect to activities to implement the 
program established pursuant to subsection (a).
    (e) Report.--The Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the 
Secretary of State, shall annually for a period of 5 years submit to 
the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on Foreign Relations 
of the Senate and Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on 
Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives a report on--
            (1) any additional legislative authorities required to 
        carry out the program established pursuant to subsection (a) or 
        any of the elements described in subsection (b); and
            (2) any regulatory or policy barriers to achieving the 
        objectives described in paragraphs (1) through (3) of 
        subsection (a).

SEC. 1235. POLICY ON NATO STANDARDIZATION AND ALLIED PRODUCTION FOR 
              NEXT-GENERATION SMALL ARMS AMMUNITION.

    (a) Statement of Policy.--It shall be the policy of the Department 
of Defense that any next-generation small arms ammunition adopted for 
widespread operational use by the Armed Forces shall, to the maximum 
extent practicable consistent with operational and survivability 
requirements--
            (1) be aligned with and incorporated into NATO 
        standardization agreements;
            (2) support full interoperability among NATO member 
        countries for logistics, resupply, and coalition operations; 
        and
            (3) be capable of manufacture at scale by multiple 
        producers, including producers located within NATO member 
        countries.
    (b) Engagement for Implementation.--The Secretary of Defense, 
acting through the Secretary of the Army, shall implement the policy 
described in subsection (a) by--
            (1) formally engaging appropriate counterparts of NATO 
        member countries, NATO standardization bodies, and allied 
        defense ministries to pursue adoption of a standardization 
        agreement for 6.8x51mm ammunition, or any successor next-
        generation small arms ammunition, with the objective of 
        pursuing standardization on a timeline not exceeding, to the 
        extent feasible, five years after the date of enactment of this 
        Act;
            (2) incorporating NATO standardization and allied 
        production objectives as mandatory program requirements, 
        acquisition strategy elements, and milestone decision criteria 
        for 6.8x51mm ammunition; and
            (3) ensuring that domestic ammunition design, performance 
        specifications, and production planning for 6.8x51mm 
        ammunition--
                    (A) do not foreclose opportunities for NATO 
                standardization through proprietary or design 
                constraints; and
                    (B) otherwise affirmatively enable NATO 
                standardization and interoperability.
    (c) Technical Data Rights for Allied Production.--The Secretary of 
the Army shall, in implementing an acquisition strategy for 6.8x51mm 
ammunition consistent with subsection (b)--
            (1) obtain, consistent with subchapter I of chapter 275 of 
        title 10, United States Code (and data rights policies issued 
        thereunder), a technical data package and associated unlimited 
        or government-purpose rights with respect to such ammunition 
        sufficient to enable competitive procurement and, where 
        appropriate, allied production;
            (2) establish contracting mechanisms to permit licensed or 
        independent production of such ammunition by entities within 
        NATO member countries; and
            (3) minimize, to the greatest extent possible and 
        consistent with other applicable provisions of law, 
        proprietary, licensing, or intellectual property restrictions 
        that would unreasonably impede allied production or coalition 
        interoperability.
    (d) Report on Interoperability Constraints.--Not later than March 
1, 2027, the Secretary of the Army shall notify the congressional 
defense committees of any restrictions described in subsection (c)(3) 
that are not capable of being eliminated, along with the reasons for 
such incapability.
    (e) Strategy for NATO Standardization.--Not later than 180 days 
after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall 
submit to the congressional defense committees a strategy that--
            (1) identifies the specific NATO standardization bodies, 
        forums, and timelines through which standardization described 
        in subsection (b)(1) will be pursued;
            (2) describes the industrial base actions required to 
        enable allied production of 6.8x51mm ammunition; and
            (3) identifies known barriers to NATO standardization, 
        adoption, or commercialization with respect to such ammunition, 
        whether technical, legal, or contractual, and specific steps 
        and timelines to resolve each.
    (f) Annual Progress Report.--Not later than one year after 
submission of the strategy required under subsection (e), and annually 
thereafter until the Secretary of Defense makes an affirmative 
determination described in subsection (g), the Secretary of Defense 
shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report that--
            (1) describes progress toward NATO standardization of 
        6.8x51mm ammunition;
            (2) identifies actions taken to enable allied production of 
        such ammunition;
            (3) assesses any remaining barriers to achieving NATO 
        standardization, adoption, or commercialization and steps 
        planned to address them; and
            (4) explains any failure to meet the timelines established 
        in the strategy submitted pursuant to subsection (e).
    (g) Termination of Progress Report.--The requirement under 
subsection (f) shall terminate on the date the Secretary of Defense 
determines that--
            (1) at least one European ally is producing 6.8x51mm 
        ammunition in accordance with the standardization and 
        interoperability objectives of this section; or
            (2) no current United States weapons system uses 6.8x51mm 
        ammunition.
    (h) Applicability.--To the maximum extent practicable, the 
requirements of this section shall be implemented through future 
solicitations, contract modifications by mutual agreement, and new 
contract awards.
    (i) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section may be construed 
to require the renegotiation of existing contracts in a manner that 
would violate applicable procurement laws or result in a breach of 
contract.

SEC. 1236. REVIEW OF THE ANALYTICAL BASIS FOR UNITED STATES FORCE 
              POSTURE ADJUSTMENTS IN EUROPE.

    (a) Report.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment 
of this Act, the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, in coordination 
with the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report that includes--
            (1) the analytical framework, analysis of alternatives, 
        war-gaming activities and other operational assessments, 
        intelligence assessments, and operational and strategic risk 
        assessments used by the Department of Defense in conducting the 
        review of global force posture undertaken during development of 
        the national defense strategy most recently prepared pursuant 
        to section 113(g) of title 10, United States Code, specifically 
        as it pertained to the area of responsibility of the United 
        States European Command; and
            (2) an explanation of how and to what extent the analytical 
        framework, analysis of alternatives, war-gaming activities and 
        other operational assessments, intelligence assessments, and 
        operational and strategic risk assessments described in 
        paragraph (1) informed and were consistent with changes to 
        United States force posture in the area of responsibility of 
        the United States European Command implemented after January 
        20, 2025.
    (b) Elements.--The report required under subsection (a) shall 
include the following:
            (1) A description of the modeling assumptions and analytic 
        parameters used in the review to evaluate United States force 
        posture in the area of responsibility of the United States 
        European Command, including--
                    (A) force-sizing constructs and campaign planning 
                assumptions;
                    (B) logistics, sustainment, strategic mobility, 
                contested deployment, and reinforcement assumptions;
                    (C) assumptions relating to United States and 
                allied force availability, readiness, reinforcement 
                timelines, munitions expenditures, prepositioned 
                stocks, and strategic lift capacity;
                    (D) adversary force readiness, mobilization and 
                reinforcement timelines, and operational objectives; 
                and
                    (E) assumptions relating to simultaneous or 
                overlapping theater demands.
            (2) A comprehensive description of the force-planning 
        scenarios, tabletop exercises, and war-gaming inputs used in 
        the review to evaluate United States force posture in the area 
        of responsibility of the United States European Command.
            (3) An assessment of the alternative force posture options 
        considered during the review and the analytical criteria used 
        to evaluate and compare such options, including cost, host 
        nation and allied burden-sharing contributions, the relative 
        operational effects of rotational and permanently stationed 
        forces, and the operational implications of positioning forces 
        closer to potential contingency areas along NATO's eastern 
        flank.
            (4) The intelligence assessments and threat analyses used 
        to inform the Department of Defense's review of United States 
        force posture in the area of responsibility of the United 
        States European Command.
            (5) An assessment of capability gaps associated with 
        combatant commander campaign plans and NATO regional plans as 
        well as the associated operational and strategic risks 
        identified by the Department of Defense in its review of United 
        States force posture in the area of responsibility of the 
        United States European Command.
            (6) A description of how the analytical framework, analysis 
        of alternatives, war-gaming activities and other operational 
        assessments, intelligence assessments, and operational and 
        strategic risk assessments used by the Department of Defense in 
        the review evaluated the ability of NATO allies and partners to 
        mitigate identified capability gaps and associated operational 
        and strategic risks, including projected timelines for 
        capability development and fielding.
            (7) A description of the coordination undertaken during the 
        initial review in the development and application of the 
        analytical framework, analysis of alternatives, war-gaming 
        activities and other operational assessments, intelligence 
        assessments, and operational and strategic risk assessments 
        described in paragraphs (1) through (6), with--
                    (A) the Joint Staff, the Military Departments, and 
                the Commander of United States European Command;
                    (B) the Department of State;
                    (C) the intelligence community; and
                    (D) NATO military authorities and NATO allies and 
                partners in Europe and Canada.
            (8) An assessment of the extent to which the analytical 
        framework, analysis of alternatives, war-gaming activities and 
        other operational assessments, intelligence assessments, and 
        operational and strategic risk assessments described in 
        paragraphs (1) through (6) were consistent with United States 
        force posture adjustments within the area of responsibility of 
        the United States European Command implemented after January 
        20, 2025, including--
                    (A) an assessment of each such adjustment to United 
                States force posture in Europe during such period;
                    (B) an assessment of the operational, strategic, 
                fiscal, and risk-based justification for each such 
                adjustment;
                    (C) an identification of any deviations from the 
                initial review's analytical framework, analysis of 
                alternatives, war-gaming activities and other 
                operational assessments, intelligence assessments, and 
                operational and strategic risk assessments in the 
                analysis underlying such adjustments, including the 
                rationale for any such deviation;
                    (D) an identification of any deviations from 
                military interagency assessments or non-concurrence 
                about such adjustments, including the rationale for any 
                such deviation; and
                    (E) an evaluation of the implications of each such 
                adjustment for United States national security 
                interests, NATO's deterrence and defense posture, and 
                execution of combatant commander campaign plans and 
                NATO regional plans.
    (c) Form.--The report required under subsection (a) shall be 
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.
    (d) Independent Assessment by the Government Accountability 
Office.--
            (1) Assessment required.--Not later than 180 days after the 
        submission of the report required under subsection (a), the 
        Comptroller General of the United States shall submit to the 
        congressional defense committees an independent assessment of--
                    (A) the analytical framework, analysis of 
                alternatives, war-gaming activities and other 
                operational assessments, intelligence assessments, and 
                operational and strategic risk assessments used in 
                conducting the review of global force posture 
                undertaken during development of the national defense 
                strategy most recently prepared pursuant to section 
                113(g) of title 10, United States Code, specifically as 
                it pertained to the area of responsibility of the 
                United States European Command;
                    (B) the conclusions drawn from such review of 
                global force posture; and
                    (C) the extent to which such analytical framework, 
                analysis of alternatives, war-gaming activities and 
                other operational assessments, intelligence 
                assessments, and operational and strategic risk 
                assessments informed and were consistent with changes 
                to United States force posture in the area of 
                responsibility of the United States European Command 
                implemented after January 20, 2025.
            (2) Elements.--The assessment under paragraph (1) shall 
        include--
                    (A) an evaluation of the completeness, rigor, and 
                methodological validity of the analytical framework, 
                assumptions, scenarios, intelligence inputs, and 
                analysis of alternatives;
                    (B) an assessment of the consistency between the 
                analytical conclusions and actual posture decisions 
                implemented after January 20, 2025;
                    (C) a review of the sensitivity of conclusions to 
                key assumptions and variables;
                    (D) an identification of any gaps, limitations, or 
                sources of analytical risk; and
                    (E) an evaluation of the implications of each such 
                adjustment for United States national security 
                interests, NATO's deterrence and defense posture, and 
                execution of combatant commander campaign plans and 
                NATO regional plans.
            (3) Access to information.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
        provide the Comptroller General with timely access to all data, 
        assumptions, models, briefings, analyses, memoranda, 
        recommendations, dissenting views, decision memoranda, and 
        other information necessary to carry out the assessment 
        required under this subsection, including classified 
        information, consistent with applicable law.

SEC. 1237. NATO DEFENSE PLANNING AND BURDEN SHARING ACTIVITIES.

    (a) Report Required.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, and every 90 days thereafter through January 1, 
2028, the Commander, United States European Command shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report on each of the following:
            (1) An evaluation of allied progress on meeting the 5 
        percent defense investment commitment agreed to at the 2025 
        Summit of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) in The 
        Hague.
            (2) An evaluation of allied progress on implementing NATO 
        capability targets and any priority capability shortfalls.
            (3) A list of critical capabilities required to execute 
        NATO's regional plans that are largely or wholly provided by 
        the United States and a description of any European and 
        Canadian allied efforts to develop or procure those or similar 
        capabilities.
            (4) A description of United States forces available to the 
        Supreme Allied Commander Europe under the NATO Force Model.
            (5)(A) In the first report submitted under this subsection, 
        a description of any changes to the United States forces 
        available to the Supreme Allied Commander Europe under the NATO 
        Force Model in the previous year.
                    (B) In the subsequent reports submitted under this 
                subsection, a description of any changes to the United 
                States forces available to the Supreme Allied Commander 
                Europe under the NATO Force Model in the preceding 90-
                day period.
            (6) In the case of any changes described pursuant to 
        paragraph (5)--
                    (A) an assessment of whether Europe has the force 
                structure, readiness levels, and enabling capabilities 
                to assume responsibility for any decreases in United 
                States forces available to the Supreme Allied Commander 
                Europe under the NATO Force Model;
                    (B) an assessment of the risk such change poses to 
                NATO's deterrence and defense posture; and
                    (C) whether modifications to the NATO Defense 
                Planning Process are required, including whether such 
                changes--
                            (i) alter NATO capability targets or 
                        apportionment decisions; or
                            (ii) require updated NATO political 
                        guidance at the ministerial or summit level.
            (7) An assessment of NATO's deterrence and defense posture 
        on the alliance's eastern flank, including--
                    (A) a description of United States military force 
                posture in each country on the eastern flank, including 
                any changes to United States forces on such flank 
                during the 90-day period preceding the submission of 
                the report;
                    (B) a description of allied military force posture 
                in each country on the eastern flank;
                    (C) an evaluation of the capacity of United States 
                and allied forces to reinforce NATO's eastern flank in 
                the event of a conflict;
                    (D) an identification of any obstacles that could 
                delay such reinforcement, including the status of 
                prepositioned United States materiel in Europe; and
                    (E) a description of efforts by the United States 
                and NATO allies to address the obstacles identified 
                pursuant to subparagraph (D).
            (8) An assessment of NATO's deterrence efforts in Romania, 
        including a description and evaluation of--
                    (A) United States force posture in Romania, 
                including any new rotations to Romania intended to 
                enhance deterrence following the 2025 decision to end 
                the rotational presence of a United States brigade;
                    (B) consultations with NATO allies regarding 
                efforts to backfill or otherwise mitigate the 
                capability gap resulting from the end the rotational 
                presence of a United States brigade;
                    (C) NATO Forward Land Forces in Romania;
                    (D) new or expanded bilateral and multilateral 
                training activities and military exercises conducted to 
                build capacity and improve interoperability among 
                United States forces, Romanian forces, and other NATO 
                allies;
                    (E) efforts undertaken by the United States, 
                Romania, and other NATO allies to improve critical 
                military infrastructure in Romania, including 
                infrastructure necessary to support collective defense 
                obligations of the alliance and to enable United States 
                contingency operations; and
                    (F) efforts to support and strengthen the defense 
                industrial base of Romania.
    (b) Form.--The report required by subsection (a) shall be submitted 
in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.

            Subtitle E--Matters Relating to the Indo-Pacific

SEC. 1241. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON DEFENSE ALLIANCES AND PARTNERSHIPS IN 
              THE INDO-PACIFIC REGION.

    It is the sense of Congress that the Secretary of Defense should 
continue efforts that strengthen United States defense alliances and 
partnerships in the Indo-Pacific region so as to further the 
comparative advantage of the United States in strategic competition 
with the People's Republic of China, including by--
            (1) enhancing cooperation with Japan, consistent with the 
        Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security Between the United 
        States of America and Japan, signed at Washington, January 19, 
        1960, including by developing advanced military capabilities, 
        upgrading command and control relationships, fostering 
        interoperability across all domains, and improving sharing of 
        information and intelligence;
            (2) reinforcing the United States alliance with the 
        Republic of Korea, including by maintaining the presence of 
        approximately 28,500 members of the United States Armed Forces 
        deployed to the Republic of Korea, enhancing mutual defense 
        base cooperation, and affirming the United States extended 
        deterrence commitment using the full range of United States 
        defense capabilities, consistent with the Mutual Defense Treaty 
        Between the United States and the Republic of Korea, signed at 
        Washington, October 1, 1953, in support of the shared objective 
        of a peaceful and stable Korean Peninsula;
            (3) fostering bilateral and multilateral cooperation with 
        Australia, consistent with the Security Treaty Between 
        Australia, New Zealand, and the United States of America, 
        signed at San Francisco, September 1, 1951, and through the 
        partnership among Australia, the United Kingdom, and the United 
        States to--
                    (A) advance shared security objectives;
                    (B) accelerate the fielding of advanced military 
                capabilities; and
                    (C) build the capacity of emerging partners;
            (4) advancing United States alliances with the Philippines 
        and Thailand and United States partnerships with other partners 
        in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to enhance 
        maritime domain awareness, promote sovereignty and territorial 
        integrity, leverage technology and promote innovation, and 
        support an open, inclusive, and rules-based regional 
        architecture;
            (5) broadening United States engagement with India, 
        including through the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue to--
                    (A) advance the shared objective of a free and open 
                Indo-Pacific region through bilateral and multilateral 
                engagements and participation in military exercises, 
                expanded defense trade, and collaboration on 
                humanitarian aid and disaster response; and
                    (B) enable greater cooperation on maritime 
                security;
            (6) strengthening the United States partnership with 
        Taiwan, consistent with the Three Communiques, the Taiwan 
        Relations Act (Public Law 96-8; 22 U.S.C. 3301 et seq.), and 
        the Six Assurances, with the goal of improving Taiwan's 
        defensive capabilities and promoting peaceful cross-strait 
        relations;
            (7) reinforcing the status of Singapore as a Major Security 
        Cooperation Partner of the United States and continuing to 
        strengthen defense and security cooperation between the 
        military forces of Singapore and the United States Armed 
        Forces, including through participation in combined exercises 
        and training;
            (8) engaging with the Federated States of Micronesia, the 
        Republic of the Marshall Islands, Palau, and other Pacific 
        island countries, with the goal of strengthening regional 
        security and addressing issues of mutual concern, including 
        protecting fisheries from illegal, unreported, and unregulated 
        fishing;
            (9) collaborating with Canada, the United Kingdom, France, 
        and other members of the European Union and the North Atlantic 
        Treaty Organization to build connectivity and advance a shared 
        vision for the region that is principled, long-term, and 
        anchored in democratic resilience;
            (10) investing in enhanced military posture and 
        capabilities in the area of responsibility of the United States 
        Indo-Pacific Command and strengthening cooperation in bilateral 
        relationships, multilateral partnerships, and other 
        international fora to uphold global security and shared 
        principles, with the goal of ensuring the maintenance of a free 
        and open Indo-Pacific region;
            (11) supporting efforts by the Republic of Korea to 
        strengthen deterrence and to deepen bilateral defense 
        cooperation between the United States and the Republic of 
        Korea; and
            (12) expanding shipbuilding cooperation with the Republic 
        of Korea to bolster the shipbuilding capacity and workforce of 
        the United States and to reinforce the defense industrial base 
        of the United States.

SEC. 1242. EXTENSION OF PACIFIC DETERRENCE INITIATIVE.

    (a) Funding.--Subsection (c) of section 1251 of the William M. 
(Mac) Thornberry National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2021 (10 U.S.C. 113 note) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``the National Defense Authorization Act 
        for Fiscal Year 2026'' and inserting ``the National Defense 
        Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2027''; and
            (2) by striking ``fiscal year 2026'' and inserting ``fiscal 
        year 2027''.
    (b) Reports and Briefings.--Subsection (d) of such section is 
amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)(A), in the matter preceding clause 
        (i), by striking ``fiscal years 2027 and 2028'' and inserting 
        ``fiscal years 2028 and 2029''; and
            (2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``fiscal years 2027 and 
        2028'' each place it appears and inserting ``fiscal years 2028 
        and 2029''.
    (c) Extension of Plan.--Subsection (e) of such section is amended, 
in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by striking ``fiscal years 2027 
and 2028'' and inserting ``fiscal years 2028 and 2029''.

SEC. 1243. EXTENSION OF REQUIREMENT FOR PUBLIC REPORTING OF CHINESE 
              MILITARY COMPANIES OPERATING IN THE UNITED STATES.

    Section 1260H(b) of the William M. (Mac) Thornberry National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (Public Law 116-283; 10 
U.S.C. 113 note) is amended by striking ``2030'' and inserting 
``2035''.

SEC. 1244. MODIFICATIONS TO PUBLIC REPORTING OF CHINESE MILITARY 
              COMPANIES OPERATING IN THE UNITED STATES.

    Section 1260H of the William M. (Mac) Thornberry National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (10 U.S.C. 113 note) is 
amended--
            (1) in subsection (b)(3)(A), by striking ``not less 
        frequently'' and all that follows through the end of the 
        sentence and inserting ``as determined appropriate by the 
        Secretary based on the latest information available.'';
            (2) by amending subsection (b)(4) to read as follows:
            ``(4) Language requirement.--The Secretary shall publish 
        the list in English. The Secretary may include Mandarin Chinese 
        or other foreign-language identifiers as appropriate for entity 
        identification purposes.'';
            (3) by striking subsection (e) and inserting the following:
    ``(e) Regulations.--The Secretary of Defense shall prescribe 
regulations as necessary to implement this section.''; and
            (4) in subsection (g), by adding at the end the following:
            ``(6) Assistance.--The term `assistance' means benefits 
        provided by the Government of China, including grants, loans, 
        subsidies, tax benefits, real or personal property, sponsored 
        research, or any other preferential treatment.
            ``(7) Formal association.--The term `formal association' 
        includes joint ventures, partnerships, consortiums, task 
        forces, or research collaborations with an entity identified 
        under subsection (g)(2)(B)(i).
            ``(8) Informal association.--The term `informal 
        association' includes participation in exhibitions, 
        competitions, demonstrations, or other temporary activities 
        with an entity identified under subsection (g)(2)(B)(i).''.

SEC. 1245. EXTENSION AND MODIFICATION OF ANNUAL REPORT ON MILITARY AND 
              SECURITY DEVELOPMENTS INVOLVING THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF 
              CHINA.

    Section 1202 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2000 (10 U.S.C. 113 note) is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a), by striking ``2027'' and inserting 
        ``2030''; and
            (2) in subsection (b)--
                    (A) in paragraph (3)(C), by striking the period at 
                the end and inserting ``, including nuclear, missile, 
                air defense, submarine quieting, and drone development 
                cooperation.'';
                    (B) by inserting after paragraph (5) the following:
            ``(6) Complicity, involvement, and degree of association of 
        the People's Liberation Army in the use of forced labor by and 
        the violation of other human rights of Uyghurs in Xinjiang.'';
                    (C) in paragraph (8)(A)--
                            (i) by inserting a comma after 
                        ``infrastructure)''; and
                            (ii) by striking the period at the end and 
                        inserting ``, and the likely role of Chinese 
                        cyber capabilities in a conflict with the 
                        United States, including against allied and 
                        partner nations in the First and Second Island 
                        Chain and the United States homeland.'';
                    (D) in paragraph (9)--
                            (i) in subparagraph (A)(i), by inserting 
                        ``including the United States,'' after ``any 
                        other country,''; and
                            (ii) in subparagraph (B)--
                                    (I) by inserting ``biotechnology,'' 
                                after ``space,''; and
                                    (II) by inserting ``and emerging'' 
                                after ``other advanced'';
                    (E) in paragraph (10)--
                            (i) in subparagraph (A), by striking 
                        ``and'' at the end;
                            (ii) by redesignating subparagraph (B) as 
                        subparagraph (D); and
                            (iii) by inserting after subparagraph (A) 
                        the following:
                    ``(B) how delays in delivery of American defense 
                articles to Taiwan affect the Chinese Communist Party's 
                assessments of the balance of power in the Strait;
                    ``(C) the likely strategic intent of Chinese forces 
                in a conflict over Taiwan, how they will conduct a 
                cyber enabled economic warfare campaign, a cross-strait 
                invasion campaign, or a blockade campaign and how 
                Russia may be assisting China in preparation for such 
                activities; and'';
                    (F) by redesignating paragraph (14) as paragraph 
                (16); and
                    (G) by inserting after paragraph (13) the 
                following:
            ``(14) An assessment of the character, extent, trajectory, 
        and consequences of security cooperation between the People's 
        Republic of China and the Russian Federation, the Islamic 
        Republic of Iran, and North Korea, including how China provides 
        dual-use support to the defense industrial bases of these 
        countries.
            ``(15) An assessment of the effects that population trends 
        and forecasts of the People's Republic of China have on the 
        force structure and size of the People's Liberation Army.''.

SEC. 1246. MODIFICATION OF TAIWAN SECURITY COOPERATION INITIATIVE.

    Subsection (d) of section 1323 of the Servicemember Quality of Life 
Improvement and National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2025 
(Public Law 118-159) is amended by adding at the end the following:
            ``(3) Fiscal year 2027.--Of the amounts authorized to be 
        appropriated for fiscal year 2027 for the Department of 
        Defense, not more than $1,000,000,000 may be made available for 
        the purposes of subsection (a).''.

SEC. 1247. OVERSIGHT OF UNITED STATES MILITARY POSTURE ON THE KOREAN 
              PENINSULA.

    Section 1268 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60) is amended by striking ``Amounts 
authorized to be appropriated by this Act may not be obligated or 
expended'' and inserting ``None of the amounts authorized to be 
appropriated by this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal years 
2026 or 2027 may be obligated or expended''.

                          Subtitle F--Reports

SEC. 1251. OVERSIGHT OF MILITARY-TO-MILITARY EXCHANGES AND CONTACTS 
              BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION.

    (a) Report Required.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, and every 90 days thereafter, the Secretary of 
Defense shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report 
detailing any instance of bilateral military-to-military exchange or 
contact between the Department of Defense and the Government of the 
Russian Federation.
    (b) Elements.--Each report required in subsection (a) shall 
include--
            (1) a list of each instance of military-to-military 
        exchange or contact between the Department of Defense and the 
        Government of the Russian Federation;
            (2) a description of the purpose of each such instance of 
        military-to-military exchange or contact;
            (3) a detailed description of the benefits the Government 
        of the Russian Federation expects to gain from such military-
        to-military exchanges and contacts; and
            (4) a detailed assessment of the benefits the Department of 
        Defense expects to gain from such military-to-military 
        exchanges and contacts.
    (c) Sunset.--This section shall cease to be effective on December 
31, 2029.

SEC. 1252. REPORT ON RUSSIA'S TARGETING OF RELIGIOUS INFRASTRUCTURE IN 
              UKRAINE.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, and annually thereafter for 3 years, the 
Secretary of Defense shall coordinate with the Director of National 
Intelligence to ensure the preparation of this report does not diminish 
national intelligence activities, and in coordination with the 
Secretary of State, shall submit to the appropriate congressional 
committees a report that includes--
            (1) a detailed description of the Russian Armed Forces and 
        their affiliated, quasi-state, or occupation-era activities 
        that damage, destroy, seize, repurpose, or otherwise directly 
        or indirectly engage in or facilitate serious harm to churches, 
        synagogues, mosques, and other religious facilities, and their 
        respective religious organizations, in Russian-occupied 
        territories of Ukraine, including a description of the weapons 
        systems, units, and, where ascertainable, the commanders 
        responsible for ordering or conducting such strikes;
            (2) an identification of churches, synagogues, mosques, and 
        other religious facilities, including Christian, Jewish, 
        Muslim, and other minority religious institutions, that have 
        been destroyed, damaged, seized, repurposed, or otherwise 
        appropriated directly or indirectly by persons operating for or 
        on behalf of the Russian Armed Forces or the Government of the 
        Russian Federation in occupied territories of Ukraine;
            (3) an assessment of--
                    (A) the number of Christians, Jews, Muslims 
                (including Crimean Tatars), and other religious 
                minorities not affiliated with the Russian Orthodox 
                Church who have been subjected to persecution, 
                imprisonment, or forced displacement in occupied 
                territories of Ukraine as a result of Russian military 
                operations or occupation-era policies;
                    (B) restrictions imposed on Christian, Jewish, 
                Muslim, and other religions not affiliated with the 
                Russian Orthodox Church's religious practices, worship 
                services, or religious education in occupied 
                territories, insofar as such restrictions are imposed 
                or enforced by Russian military or security forces;
                    (C) efforts by the Government of Russia, by 
                authorities exercising de facto governmental control in 
                occupied territory, or by entities or persons otherwise 
                affiliated with Russia, to compel Christian 
                organizations to affiliate with Moscow-based religious 
                institutions or to suppress Christian, Jewish, Muslim, 
                or any other denominations not aligned with Russian 
                state interests, where such efforts are carried out by 
                or in coordination with Russian military forces; and
                    (D) the overall impact of Russia's invasion of 
                Ukraine, and its occupation of Ukrainian territory, on 
                religious freedom and the physical integrity of 
                religious infrastructure in occupied territories of 
                Ukraine, including Crimea and Sevastopol; and
            (4) a list of individuals and entities affiliated with the 
        Government of Russia, the Russian Armed Forces, or exercising 
        de facto authority in occupied territory, that--
                    (A) are responsible for ordering, directing, or 
                conducting strikes or occupation-era activities that 
                damaged or destroyed religious infrastructure, or that 
                persecute, suppress, or discriminate against 
                Christians, Jews, or Muslims in Ukraine and in the 
                occupied territories of Ukraine; or
                    (B) have otherwise engaged in or attempted to 
                engage in any of the conduct described in this 
                subsection.
    (b) Form.--The report required under subsection (a) shall be 
submitted in an unclassified form but may include a classified annex.
    (c) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on 
        Foreign Affairs, and the Permanent Select Committee on 
        Intelligence of the House of Representatives; and
            (2) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on 
        Foreign Relations, and the Select Committee on Intelligence of 
        the Senate.

SEC. 1253. STUDY ON EFFECTIVENESS OF UNITED STATES-SOMALIA POLICY.

    (a) Study.--Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of 
this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall seek to enter into a contract 
or other agreement with a federally funded research and development 
center under which the center shall--
            (1) conduct a study to assess the effectiveness of the past 
        20 years of United States policy in Somalia, including through 
        United States security cooperation and security assistance, 
        military operations, and other forms of assistance provided to 
        and in Somalia, with respect to--
                    (A) addressing and reducing the threat of violence 
                posed by Al Shabaab and ISIS-Somalia; and
                    (B) achieving other United States objectives with 
                respect to Somalia; and
            (2) develop evidence-based options and recommendations for 
        United States policy in Somalia to reduce or resolve the threat 
        of violence posed by Al Shabaab and ISIS-Somalia.
    (b) Elements.--The study required by subsection (a) shall also 
discuss the following with respect to Somalia:
            (1) Factors leading to initial United States involvement in 
        the conflict.
            (2) The legal opinions that interpreted the 2001 
        Authorization to Use Military Force to apply to Al Shabaab.
            (3) A description of the threats posed by Al Shabaab and 
        ISIS-Somalia to the United States homeland.
            (4) The amount of funds spent on security, development and 
        humanitarian assistance, including the estimated costs of 
        Department of Defense operations.
            (5) An assessment of the policy objectives identified by 
        the United States with respect to such assistance and 
        operations and any United States Government efforts to assess 
        whether those objectives were met.
            (6) A description of any efforts to push for a political 
        solution for the war, including internal United States 
        Government discussions and outcomes, concerning whether or not 
        to support dialogue with Al Shabaab.
            (7) A description of all significant changes in United 
        States policy, practice, or other factors that have contributed 
        to an increase in the number of United States airstrikes in 
        Somalia since January 2025.
            (8) A description of past and planned efforts to engage 
        with the Somali armed forces on civilian harm mitigation and 
        response issues.
            (9) United States Government benchmarks for disengaging 
        from military operations in Somalia over the course of United 
        States military operations in the country.
    (c) Report to Secretary.--The federally funded research and 
development center that carries out the study and analysis under 
subsection (a) shall submit to the Secretary of Defense a report 
containing the results of such study.
    (d) Report to Congress.--Not later than 30 days after receiving the 
report required by subsection (c), the Secretary of Defense shall 
submit an unaltered copy of the report to the Committees on Armed 
Services of the Senate and House of Representatives.
    (e) Form; Publication.--The submission required by subsection (d) 
shall be in unclassified form and may include a classified annex. The 
unclassified portion of the report shall concurrently be made publicly 
available.

                       Subtitle G--Other Matters

SEC. 1261. REPEAL OF TEMPORARY AUTHORITY TO PROVIDE TRAINING TO 
              MILITARY FORCES OR NATIONAL SECURITY FORCES OF COSTA RICA 
              AND PANAMA.

    Section 1209 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2025 (Public Law 118-159; 10 U.S.C. 321 note) is repealed.

                    TITLE XIV--OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS

                     Subtitle A--Military Programs

Sec. 1401. Working capital funds.
Sec. 1402. Chemical agents and munitions destruction, defense.
Sec. 1403. Drug interdiction and counter-drug activities, defense-wide.
Sec. 1404. Defense Inspector General.
Sec. 1405. Defense Health Program.
Sec. 1406. Cable security fleet expansion.

                       Subtitle B--Other Matters

Sec. 1411. Extension of authorities for funding and management of joint 
                            Department of Defense-Department of 
                            Veterans Affairs Medical Facility 
                            Demonstration Fund for Captain James A. 
                            Lovell Health Care Center, Illinois.
Sec. 1412. Authorization of appropriations for Armed Forces Retirement 
                            Home.
Sec. 1413. Critical minerals traceability pilot program.

                     Subtitle A--Military Programs

SEC. 1401. WORKING CAPITAL FUNDS.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2027 
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 2027 
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 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).

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 2027 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 2027 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 2027 
for the Defense Health Program for use of the Armed Forces and other 
activities and agencies of the Department of Defense for providing for 
the health of eligible beneficiaries, as specified in the funding table 
in section 4501.

SEC. 1406. CABLE SECURITY FLEET EXPANSION.

    (a) Establishment of the Cable Security Fleet.--Section 53202(a)(2) 
of title 46, United States Code, is amended by striking ``two'' and 
inserting ``not less than 6''.
    (b) Authorization of Appropriations.--Section 53209 of title 46, 
United States Code, is amended by striking ``$10,000,000 for each of 
the fiscal years 2021 through 2035'' and inserting ``$30,000,000 for 
each of the fiscal years 2027 through 2040''.

                       Subtitle B--Other Matters

SEC. 1411. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITIES FOR FUNDING AND MANAGEMENT OF JOINT 
              DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE-DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS 
              MEDICAL FACILITY DEMONSTRATION FUND FOR CAPTAIN JAMES A. 
              LOVELL HEALTH CARE CENTER, ILLINOIS.

    (a) In General.--Section 1704(e) of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 (Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 
2573), as most recently amended by section 1421(a) of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2025 (Public Law 118-159; 138 
Stat. 2129), is amended by striking ``September 30, 2027'' and 
inserting ``September 30, 2028''.
    (b) Authority for Transfer of Funds.--Of the funds authorized to be 
appropriated for section 1405 and available for the Defense Health 
Program for operation and maintenance, $174,000,000 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.
    (c) Use of Transferred Funds.--For the purposes of subsection (b) 
of such section 1704, facility operations for which funds transferred 
under subsection (a) may be used are operations of the Captain James A. 
Lovell Federal Health Care Center, consisting of the North Chicago 
Veterans Affairs Medical Center, the Navy Ambulatory Care Center, and 
supporting facilities designated as a combined Federal medical facility 
under an operational agreement covered by section 706 of the Duncan 
Hunter National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 (Public 
Law 110-417; 122 Stat. 4500).

SEC. 1412. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS FOR ARMED FORCES RETIREMENT 
              HOME.

    There is hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2027 
from the Armed Forces Retirement Home Trust Fund the sum of $77,000,000 
for the operation of the Armed Forces Retirement Home.

SEC. 1413. CRITICAL MINERALS TRACEABILITY PILOT PROGRAM.

    (a) Establishment.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall establish a pilot 
program within the Defense Logistics Agency to develop and evaluate 
traceability systems for essential materials managed by the Agency, 
including materials held in or acquired for the National Defense 
Stockpile. In carrying out the pilot program, the Secretary of Defense 
shall seek to--
            (1) improve the ability of the Department of Defense to 
        rapidly mobilize and allocate materials during national 
        emergencies or contingencies; and
            (2) inform potential future Department-wide implementation 
        of traceability requirements for defense-critical supply 
        chains.
    (b) Contracts.--In carrying out the pilot program, the Secretary of 
Defense shall seek to enter into contracts with appropriate entities to 
provide traceability systems in accordance with this section.
    (c) Traceability Providers.--
            (1) Requirements for providers.--The Secretary of Defense 
        shall require that any entity that enters into a contract under 
        this section--
                    (A) be organized under the laws of the United 
                States;
                    (B) be owned and controlled by a United States 
                person; and
                    (C) not be subject to foreign ownership or control 
                or influence by any foreign government.
            (2) Contract requirements.--Any contract entered into under 
        this section shall require that the entity operate exclusively 
        as a noncustodial digital traceability and verification service 
        and shall not--
                    (A) extract, process, refine, transport, store, 
                broker, finance, or take title to any covered material; 
                or
                    (B) exercise physical control, custody, or 
                possession of any covered material.
    (d) Traceability System.--
            (1) Covered materials.--Any contract entered into under 
        this section shall require that the traceability system 
        provided under such contract traces the following materials:
                    (A) Titanium and titanium alloys.
                    (B) Cobalt.
                    (C) Rare earth elements and permanent magnet 
                materials.
                    (D) Lithium and battery-grade materials.
                    (E) Such other strategic and critical materials as 
                the Secretary of Defense determines are necessary to 
                support defense production and surge requirements.
            (2) Technical requirements.--Any contract entered into 
        under this section shall require that the traceability system 
        provided under such contract--
                    (A) provides end-to-end visibility of covered 
                materials from point of extraction through processing, 
                transportation, and end use in defense articles or 
                defense services;
                    (B) verifies the origin, chain of custody, mass 
                balance, purity, and processing history of covered 
                materials;
                    (C) maintains tamper-resistant, immutable, and 
                time-stamped records of custody events, transformation 
                events, and compliance status for covered materials;
                    (D) employs cryptographic mechanisms to protect 
                sensitive commercial and national security data while 
                enabling verification by authorized security personnel;
                    (E) enables continuous auditing, anomaly detection, 
                and identification and assessment of supply chain 
                threats; and
                    (F) integrates with existing Department of Defense 
                procurement, intelligence monitoring, and risk 
                assessment frameworks, including support compliance 
                audits conducted under section 252.225-7052 of the 
                Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation, or successor 
                regulations.
    (e) Enforcement.--The Secretary of Defense may enforce compliance 
with the requirements of this section through--
            (1) suspension or termination of contracts with entities 
        that fail to comply with traceability system requirements under 
        this section;
            (2) withholding of payments for contractors or 
        subcontractors that fail to provide required traceability 
        documentation; and
            (3) exclusion from future defense contracts of entities 
        that repeatedly fail to meet traceability system requirements 
        under this section.
    (f) Phased Expansion.--
            (1) Phase i.--During the period beginning on the date the 
        pilot program is established under subsection (a) and ending on 
        September 30, 2028, the Secretary of Defense shall implement a 
        traceability system for materials managed by the Defense 
        Logistics Agency, with priority given to covered materials 
        designated as critical to weapons systems production.
            (2) Phase ii.--Subject to the results of the report 
        required under subsection (h), the Secretary of Defense may 
        expand the traceability system to covered materials procured 
        under defense contracts subject to the Defense Federal 
        Acquisition Regulation Supplement, beginning not earlier than 
        October 1, 2029.
    (g) Briefing.--Not later than one year after the date on which the 
Secretary of Defense establishes the pilot program under subsection 
(a), the Secretary shall provide a briefing to the Committee on Armed 
Services of the House of Representatives. Such briefing shall include--
            (1) a description of each traceability system being 
        evaluated under the pilot program, including an assessment of 
        how such system satisfied the technical requirements under 
        subsection (d);
            (2) the criteria and process used to select a traceability 
        service provider for the pilot program, including how provider 
        eligibility requirements under subsection (c) were assessed and 
        enforced;
            (3) the timeline and status of pilot program implementation 
        milestones; and
            (4) any challenges or resource requirements encountered in 
        establishing the pilot programs.
    (h) Report.--Not later than two years after the date on which the 
Secretary of Defense establishes the pilot program under subsection 
(a), the Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense committees 
a report assessing the results of the pilot program. Such report shall 
include--
            (1) an assessment of the operational effectiveness of each 
        traceability system evaluated under the pilot program;
            (2) an assessment of the impacts of such system on defense 
        readiness an surge capacity;
            (3) an assessment of the implications of such system for 
        National Defense Stockpile management and replenishment;
            (4) an assessment of the cost, scalability, and integration 
        of such system with existing Department of Defense procurement 
        systems; and
            (5) recommendations for expansion of the pilot program or 
        permanent authorization of a traceability requirement for 
        defense-critical supply chains.
    (i) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered materials'' means any material 
        listed in subsection (d)(1).
            (2) The term ``National Defense Stockpile'' means the 
        stockpile provided for in section 3 of the Strategic and 
        Critical Materials Stockpiling Act (50 U.S.C. 98b).
            (3) The term ``United States person'' has the meaning given 
        such term in section 7701(a)(30) of the Internal Revenue Code 
        of 1986.

                  TITLE XV--CYBERSPACE-RELATED MATTERS

                       Subtitle A--Cybersecurity

SEC. 1501. DATA RECOVERY REQUIREMENTS AND STRATEGY.

    (a) Data Recovery Requirements.--Chapter 19 of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended by inserting after section 391b the following 
new section:
``Sec. 391c. Data recovery requirements
    ``(a) Mandatory Recovery Time Objectives.--(1) The Secretary of 
Defense shall, with respect to each element of the Department of 
Defense, carry out the following:
            ``(A) Identify data that is mission critical or essential 
        to the operation of Department of Defense information systems 
        and national security systems.
            ``(B) Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
        enactment of this section, establish mandatory recovery time 
        objectives for data so identified.
    ``(2) Each recovery time objective established under paragraph (1) 
shall satisfy the following requirements:
            ``(A) Be based upon the type of data to which such 
        objective applies, including with respect to threat exposure.
            ``(B) Be updated in response to intelligence on evolving 
        threats.
    ``(b) Definition.--In this section, the term `recovery time 
objective' means the maximum allowable time the Secretary of Defense 
determines necessary to restore critical functions and data following a 
cyberattack.''.
    (b) Data Resilience Pilot Program.--
            (1) Establishment.--Not later than 180 days after the date 
        of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall 
        establish a pilot program to assess the feasibility and 
        effectiveness of fielding data resilience capabilities for data 
        that is mission critical or essential to the operation of 
        Department of Defense information systems and national security 
        systems, including--
                    (A) immutable backups that preserve logically 
                separated copies of data isolated from external 
                networks by means of software, firewalls, or other 
                controls; and
                    (B) continuous monitoring of backup environments to 
                detect tampering, insider threats, and malicious 
                corruption.
            (2) Scope.--The Secretary shall carry out the pilot program 
        under paragraph (1) across not fewer than three covered systems 
        selected by the Secretary, prioritizing covered systems with 
        the highest concentration of data that is mission critical or 
        essential to the operation of Department of Defense information 
        systems and national security systems.
            (3) Report.--Not later than one year after the 
        establishment of the pilot program under paragraph (1), the 
        Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense committees 
        a report on the pilot program that includes--
                    (A) an assessment of the effectiveness of the 
                capabilities fielded under the pilot program in 
                supporting recovery time objectives established under 
                section 391c of title 10, United States Code, as added 
                by subsection (a);
                    (B) the cost of fielding such capabilities; and
                    (C) a recommendation on whether to extend such 
                capabilities Department-wide.
            (4) Definition.--In this subsection, the term ``covered 
        system'' means an information system or national security 
        system of the Department of Defense that stores or processes 
        data that is mission critical, as identified pursuant to 
        subsection (a)(1)(A) of such section 391c.
    (c) Data Recovery Strategy.--
            (1) Submission to committees.--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 data 
        recovery strategy for the Department of Defense that includes 
        information relating to the following:
                            (A) Recovery time objectives for such 
                        strategy.
                            (B) The approach to accomplish such 
                        objectives.
                            (C) Oversight processes with respect to 
                        such strategy.
                            (D) The funds necessary to carry out such 
                        strategy.
                            (E) The approach to fielding data 
                        resilience capabilities for data that is 
                        mission critical or essential to the operation 
                        of Department of Defense information systems 
                        and national security systems, including 
                        immutable backups that preserve logically 
                        separated copies isolated from external 
                        networks, and continuous monitoring of backup 
                        environments to detect tampering, insider 
                        threats, and malicious corruption.
                    (2) Form.--The strategy under paragraph (1) shall 
                be submitted in unclassified form, but may contain a 
                classified annex.
                    (3) Definition.--In this subsection, the term 
                ``recovery time objective'' means the maximum allowable 
                time the Secretary of Defense determines necessary to 
                restore critical functions and data following a 
                cyberattack.

SEC. 1502. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE AI INCIDENT AND VULNERABILITY 
              REPORTING PROGRAM.

    Chapter 131 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
inserting after section 2224a the following new section:
``Sec. 2224b. Artificial intelligence incident and vulnerability 
              reporting program
    ``(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish a 
centralized Department-wide program for the reporting, tracking, 
analysis, and remediation of covered AI incidents and covered AI 
vulnerabilities arising from the development, testing, procurement, 
fielding, or operation of artificial intelligence systems within the 
Department of Defense.
    ``(b) Purpose.--The purpose of the program established under 
subsection (a) shall be to--
            ``(1) identify recurring risks, failure modes, 
        vulnerabilities, and systemic weaknesses in artificial 
        intelligence systems, including risks or failure modes arising 
        from human-machine teaming;
            ``(2) support mitigation of significant risks; and
            ``(3) inform testing, procurement, cybersecurity, and 
        deployment decisions to improve the safety, security, 
        reliability, and operational effectiveness of such systems.
    ``(c) Requirements for Program.--The program shall--
            ``(1) be designed using practices drawn from established 
        safety incident reporting programs, vulnerability disclosure 
        programs, and programs to identify and develop lessons learned;
            ``(2) emphasize non-punitive reporting, protection of 
        sensitive and proprietary information, and dissemination of 
        lessons learned, as appropriate; and
            ``(3) include a mechanism to enable timely access to and 
        sharing of relevant logs, system data, and model information as 
        necessary to support analysis and response.
    ``(d) Designation of Official.--The Secretary shall designate an 
appropriate official for the reporting, tracking, analysis, and 
remediation of covered AI incidents and covered AI vulnerabilities 
under this section. The Secretary, acting through such official, shall 
receive and standardize reports, conduct trend analysis, identify 
recurring risks and failure modes, and issue guidance, alerts, and 
recommendations, as appropriate.
    ``(e) Reporting and Categorization.--(1) The Secretary shall 
require prompt reporting to the official designated under subsection 
(d) of--
            ``(A) any covered AI incident; and
            ``(B) any covered AI vulnerability.
    ``(2) The Secretary, acting through the official, shall categorize 
each incident or vulnerability reported to the official according to 
whether the incident or vulnerability requires--
            ``(A) a Department-wide response;
            ``(B) a response at the program level; or
            ``(C) a response at a local level.
    ``(f) Department-wide and Program-level Matters.--(1) In the case 
of any incident or vulnerability categorized under subsection (e)(2)(A) 
or (B), the Secretary, acting through the official designated under 
subsection (d), shall coordinate any responses that the Secretary 
considers appropriate, such as remediation, retesting, mitigation 
measures, or deployment restrictions.
    ``(2) In addition, in the case of any incident or vulnerability 
described in subsection (e)(2)(A), the Secretary, acting through the 
official, shall require--
            ``(A) a documented corrective action plan; and
            ``(B) validation that the mitigation measures, if any, in 
        such plan have been implemented before continued operational 
        use.
    ``(g) Protection of Reports.--(1) The Secretary shall establish a 
protected disclosure process, informed by established vulnerability 
disclosure practices, through which members of the Armed Forces, 
civilian employees, contractors, and subcontractors at any tier may 
report covered AI incidents and covered AI vulnerabilities in good 
faith.
    ``(2) The Secretary shall ensure that a person making a report in 
good faith under paragraph (1) is not, on the basis of that report 
alone, subject to adverse contract action, subject to adverse personnel 
action, or otherwise retaliated against by the Department.
    ``(h) Protection of Information.--The Secretary shall establish 
procedures to protect sensitive, proprietary, and classified 
information submitted through the protected disclosure process under 
subsection (g).
    ``(i) Annual Report.--(1) In each of years 2027 through 2031, the 
Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense committees an 
annual report on the program. The report shall include--
            ``(A) the number of reports made of incidents and 
        vulnerabilities and the categorizations of such reports;
            ``(B) a summary of significant trends, recurring risks, 
        systemic issues, and corrective actions taken in response;
            ``(C) in the case of any covered AI incident resulting in 
        the loss of life of, or in bodily harm to, a member of the 
        Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, or Space Force--
                    ``(i) a description of the incident, including the 
                system or systems involved and the operational context;
                    ``(ii) the date and time the incident occurred;
                    ``(iii) an assessment of the cause and operational 
                consequence of the incident; and
                    ``(iv) any corrective actions taken; and
            ``(D) any recommendations for changes to testing, 
        procurement, cybersecurity, or deployment policies relating to 
        artificial intelligence systems.
    ``(2) Each report under this subsection shall be submitted in 
unclassified form but may include a classified annex.
    ``(j) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `artificial intelligence' has the meaning 
        given such term in section 5002 of the National Artificial 
        Intelligence Initiative Act of 2020 (15 U.S.C. 9401).
            ``(2) The term `covered AI incident' means an event in 
        which an artificial intelligence system--
                    ``(A) causes unintended operational, safety, or 
                security harm;
                    ``(B) operates outside authorized parameters or 
                approved safety, legal, or mission guardrails;
                    ``(C) materially degrades mission performance or 
                reliability in a real-world or operationally 
                representative environment;
                    ``(D) fails to respond to an operator disengage 
                command;
                    ``(E) operates in a manner that, under reasonably 
                foreseeable circumstances, could have resulted in 
                significant unintended operational, safety, or security 
                harm; or
                    ``(F) operates in a manner that raises concerns 
                regarding system control and autonomy.
            ``(3) The term `covered AI vulnerability' means an 
        exploitable weakness, vulnerability, or systemic issue in an 
        artificial intelligence system or related component that could 
        materially affect mission performance, compromise system 
        integrity, create safety risk, or result in unauthorized or 
        unintended behavior.''.

SEC. 1503. REVIEW AND REALIGNMENT OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE 
              CYBERSECURITY RESPONSIBILITIES.

    (a) Review and Realignment.--
            (1) Review required.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
        conduct a comprehensive review of the roles, responsibilities, 
        relationships, authorities, and governance structures relating 
        to cybersecurity, information technology, network defense, and 
        defensive cyber operations within the Department of Defense in 
        order to achieve the following goals:
                    (A) Establish clear accountability for the 
                cybersecurity of Department of Defense information 
                networks, including identification of one official 
                designated as the single accountable official 
                responsible for the cybersecurity of Department of 
                Defense information networks.
                    (B) Improve the operational effectiveness, 
                responsiveness, and unity of effort of Department-wide 
                cybersecurity, information technology, network defense, 
                and defensive cyber operations.
                    (C) Eliminate structural overlap, duplication, and 
                fragmentation across organizations responsible for 
                cybersecurity, information technology, network defense, 
                and defensive cyber operations.
                    (D) Reduce overlapping responsibilities and ensure 
                alignment of policy, strategy, budgetary oversight, and 
                operational support necessary for the cybersecurity of 
                Department of Defense information networks in an 
                evolving threat environment.
            (2) Scope.--The review conducted under this subsection 
        shall include an assessment of the roles, responsibilities, 
        relationships, and authorities among--
                    (A) the Chief Information Officer of the Department 
                of Defense;
                    (B) the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Cyber 
                Policy;
                    (C) the Principal Cyber Advisor to the Secretary of 
                Defense;
                    (D) the Commander of the United States Cyber 
                Command;
                    (E) the Department of Defense Cyber Defense 
                Command; and
                    (F) such other offices, elements, or organizations 
                as the Secretary determines appropriate.
            (3) Realignment.--As a result of the review, and in order 
        to achieve the goals specified in paragraph (1), the Secretary 
        may, consistent with applicable law--
                    (A) realign, consolidate, or modify the roles, 
                responsibilities, relationships, and authorities of the 
                officials, offices, elements, and organizations 
                specified in paragraph (2);
                    (B) reassign functions, personnel, and resources 
                among such officials, offices, elements, and 
                organizations;
                    (C) eliminate duplicative functions; and
                    (D) clarify or revise reporting relationships and 
                lines of authority.
    (b) Preservation of Functions.--In carrying out subsection (a), the 
Secretary shall ensure that all functions necessary for the governance, 
defense, and operation of Department of Defense information networks 
are maintained, regardless of the organizational structure to which 
such functions are assigned.
    (c) Limitation on Establishment of New Office or Organization.--The 
Secretary may not establish a new office or organization for the 
purpose of carrying out this section unless the Secretary determines 
that such establishment is necessary to achieve the goals specified in 
subsection (a)(1) and consistent with applicable law.
    (d) Limitation on Reassignment or Elimination of Function.--The 
Secretary may not reassign or eliminate a function associated with an 
official, office, element, or organization for the purpose of carrying 
out this section unless the Secretary submits to the congressional 
defense committees a notification of the reassignment or elimination of 
the function and a period of 15 days has elapsed after the date on 
which the notification was submitted.
    (e) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to authorize the Secretary of Defense to modify, transfer, 
eliminate, or otherwise alter any role, responsibility, relationship, 
authority, function, or any other matter expressly required by law.
    (f) Report.--
            (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 
        results of the review conducted under subsection (a).
            (2) Elements.--The report shall include--
                    (A) identification of the official designated as 
                the single accountable official responsible for the 
                cybersecurity of Department of Defense information 
                networks, as specified in subsection (a)(1)(A);
                    (B) a description of any realignment, 
                consolidation, or modification made, or to be made, to 
                the roles, responsibilities, relationships, and 
                authorities of the officials, offices, elements, and 
                organizations reviewed, as specified in subsection 
                (a)(3)(A);
                    (C) a description of any reassignment of functions, 
                personnel, and resources made, or to be made, among the 
                officials, offices, elements, and organizations 
                reviewed, as specified in subsection (a)(3)(B);
                    (D) a description of any duplicative functions 
                eliminated, or to be eliminated, as set forth in 
                subsection (a)(3)(C);
                    (E) a description of any clarification or revision 
                made, or to be made, to reporting relationships and 
                lines of authority, as set forth in subsection 
                (a)(3)(D);
                    (F) a mapping of the responsibilities and 
                authorities assigned as of the date of the enactment of 
                this Act to each respective official, office, element, 
                or organization reviewed (including an identification 
                of whether the responsibility or authority is required 
                by law to be assigned to such official, office, 
                element, or organization, and an mapping of the 
                responsibilities and authorities as they will be 
                assigned after completion of the activities specified 
                in subsection (a)(3);
                    (G) a timeline for implementation of the activities 
                specified in subsection (a)(3), under which all such 
                activities shall be implemented not later than one year 
                after the date of the enactment of this Act;
                    (H) identification of any legislative 
                recommendations, including any provisions of law 
                requiring amendment, to fully implement the goals 
                specified in subsection (a)(1) and the activities 
                specified in subsection (a)(3); and
                    (I) a justification for the new structure, 
                including an explanation for how the new structure 
                better achieves the goals specified in subsection 
                (a)(1) than the current structure.
    (g) Briefing.--Not later than 45 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall provide a briefing to the 
congressional defense committees on preliminary findings of the review.

SEC. 1504. INCLUSION OF CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE AND OPERATIONAL 
              TECHNOLOGY SECURITY IN COMBATANT COMMAND PLANNING AND 
              READINESS EXERCISES.

    (a) Requirement.--The Secretary of Defense shall direct the 
commanders of the combatant commands, consistent with the authorities 
provided under sections 164 and 167b of title 10, United States Code, 
to incorporate critical infrastructure security and operational 
technology security considerations into--
            (1) planning activities conducted to execute national 
        defense strategies; and
            (2) joint and combined planning, training, and readiness 
        exercises.
    (b) Scope of Activities.--The activities described in subsection 
(a) shall, at a minimum, include--
            (1) assessment of vulnerabilities and resilience of 
        critical infrastructure and operational technology systems that 
        support military operations, defense support to civil 
        authorities, and homeland defense missions;
            (2) coordination with relevant Federal departments and 
        agencies, State, local, Tribal, and territorial authorities, 
        and private sector owners and operators, as appropriate; and
            (3) integration of cyber, operational technology, and 
        physical effects relevant to disruption, degradation, or 
        compromise of such systems.

SEC. 1505. PILOT PROGRAM FOR AUTONOMOUS MISSION INTEGRATION OF UNMANNED 
              SURFACE VEHICLES.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary of the Navy, in consultation with 
the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering, shall 
establish a pilot program, to be known as the Autonomous Mission Pre-
Integration Pilot Program, to assess industry-led approaches for pre-
integration of autonomy services and multi-mission payloads on medium 
unmanned surface vehicles, utilizing a common, cybersecure operating 
system to enable cross-platform collaboration.
    (b) Objectives.--The pilot program shall develop and validate 
rapidly composable, multi-mission capabilities to support distributed 
maritime operations in contested environments, including pre-
integration of--
            (1) autonomy services and mission software;
            (2) kinetic and non-kinetic systems;
            (3) advanced sensors and communications; and
            (4) edge-based collaborative artificial intelligence.
    (c) Modular Open Systems Architecture.--The pilot program shall 
employ modular open systems architecture standards and open interfaces 
to ensure interoperability, portability, and cybersecurity across 
platforms. The Secretary shall leverage lessons from prior autonomy and 
control system efforts while avoiding approaches that limit 
competition, inhibit innovation, or place primary integration 
responsibility on the Government where industry solutions are 
available.
    (d) Briefings.--
            (1) Initial briefing.--Not later than 120 days after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary, in 
        consultation with the Under Secretary, shall brief the 
        congressional defense committees on the implementation of the 
        pilot program, including--
                    (A) coordination between and among program offices, 
                the Under Secretary, the commanders of the combatant 
                commands, the operational component, and industry;
                    (B) methods to reduce technical risk and promote 
                competition, including shifting integration risk to 
                industry through pre-integration and demonstration; and
                    (C) plans to accelerate prototyping, independent 
                assessment, and operational integration.
            (2) Follow-on briefing.--Not later than one year after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall brief 
        the congressional defense committees with an update on the 
        implementation of the pilot program, including findings, data, 
        and mission outcomes.

SEC. 1506. CIVILIAN CYBERSECURITY RESERVE CORPS PILOT PROGRAM.

    (a) Program Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall carry out a 
pilot program to further evaluate the feasibility and advisability of 
creating and maintaining a civilian cybersecurity reserve corps to 
enable the Department of Defense and military services to provide 
qualified civilian manpower to the Department of Defense to effectively 
respond to significant cyber incidents or to assist in solving other 
exceptionally difficult cyber workforce-related challenges.
    (b) Consideration of Prior Report.--In conducting the pilot program 
required by subsection (a), the Secretary shall take into consideration 
the findings and recommendations of the report required by section 1540 
of the James M. Inhofe National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2023 (Public Law 117-263; 136 Stat. 2914) (titled ``Independent 
Assessment of Civilian Cybersecurity Reserve for Department of 
Defense'' and dated October 2025).
    (c) Planning.--
            (1) Plan.--Prior to carrying out the pilot program required 
        by subsection (a), the Secretary shall create a detailed 
        written plan for the program, which shall include--
                    (A) a concept of operations for the civilian 
                cybersecurity reserve corps;
                    (B) an assessment of the necessary legal and 
                contractual requirements;
                    (C) recruitment, assessment, and selection criteria 
                and methodologies;
                    (D) talent management processes and system 
                prototypes;
                    (E) defining the initial mission set and 
                organization structure of the civilian cybersecurity 
                reserve corps;
                    (F) metrics with respect to cost and benefits that 
                will be used to inform the Secretary's evaluation of 
                the pilot program; and
                    (G) any other matters that the Secretary considers 
                appropriate.
            (2) Report and briefing.--Not later than the date that is 
        six months after the date of the enactment of this Act, the 
        Secretary shall provide the congressional defense committees 
        with a report and briefing on the plan created under paragraph 
        (1). The Secretary shall not carry out the pilot program until 
        after the Secretary has provided the report and briefing.
    (d) Scope.--In carrying out the pilot program, the Secretary shall 
establish an initial cohort of not more than 20 members of the civilian 
cybersecurity reserve corps.

SEC. 1507. FEDERAL CONTRACTOR VULNERABILITY DISCLOSURE POLICY.

    (a) Recommendations.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Director of the Office of 
        Management and Budget, in consultation with the Director of the 
        Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, the National 
        Cyber Director, the Director of the National Institute of 
        Standards and Technology, and any other appropriate head of an 
        Executive department, shall--
                    (A) review the Federal Acquisition Regulation 
                contract requirements and language for contractor 
                vulnerability disclosure programs; and
                    (B) recommend updates to such requirements and 
                language to the Federal Acquisition Regulation Council.
            (2) Contents.--The recommendations required by paragraph 
        (1) shall include updates to such requirements designed to 
        ensure that covered contractors implement a vulnerability 
        disclosure policy consistent with NIST guidelines for 
        contractors as required under section 5 of the IoT 
        Cybersecurity Improvement Act of 2020 (15 U.S.C. 278g-3c).
    (b) Procurement Requirements.--Not later than 180 days after the 
date on which the recommended contract language developed pursuant to 
subsection (a) is received, the Federal Acquisition Regulation Council 
shall review the recommended contract language and update the FAR as 
necessary to incorporate requirements for covered contractors to 
receive information about a potential security vulnerability relating 
to an information system owned or controlled by a contractor, in 
performance of the contract.
    (c) Elements.--The update to the FAR pursuant to subsection (b) 
shall--
            (1) to the maximum extent practicable, align with the 
        security vulnerability disclosure process and coordinated 
        disclosure requirements relating to Federal information systems 
        under sections 5 and 6 of the IoT Cybersecurity Improvement Act 
        of 2020 (15 U.S.C. 278g-3c and 278g-3d); and
            (2) to the maximum extent practicable, be aligned with 
        industry best practices and Standards 29147 and 30111 of the 
        International Standards Organization (or any successor 
        standard) or any other appropriate, relevant, and widely used 
        standard.
    (d) Waiver.--The head of an agency may waive the security 
vulnerability disclosure policy requirement under subsection (b) if--
            (1) the agency Chief Information Officer determines that 
        the waiver is necessary in the interest of national security or 
        research purposes; and
            (2) if, not later than 30 days after granting a waiver, 
        such head submits a notification and justification (including 
        information about the duration of the waiver) to the Committee 
        on Oversight and Government Reform of the House of 
        Representatives and the Committee on Homeland Security and 
        Governmental Affairs of the Senate.
    (e) Department of Defense Supplement to the Federal Acquisition 
Regulation.--
            (1) Review.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall review 
        the Department of Defense Supplement to the Federal Acquisition 
        Regulation contract requirements and language for contractor 
        vulnerability disclosure programs and develop updates to such 
        requirements designed to ensure that covered contractors 
        implement a vulnerability disclosure policy consistent with 
        NIST guidelines for contractors as required under section 5 of 
        the IoT Cybersecurity Improvement Act of 2020 (15 U.S.C. 278g-
        3c).
            (2) Revisions.--Not later than 180 days after the date on 
        which the review required under subsection (a) is completed, 
        the Secretary shall revise the DFARS as necessary to 
        incorporate requirements for covered contractors to receive 
        information about a potential security vulnerability relating 
        to an information system owned or controlled by a contractor, 
        in performance of the contract.
            (3) Elements.--The Secretary shall ensure that the revision 
        to the DFARS described in this subsection is carried out in 
        accordance with the requirements of paragraphs (1) and (2) of 
        subsection (c).
            (4) Waiver.--The Chief Information Officer of the 
        Department of Defense, in consultation with the National 
        Manager for National Security Systems, may waive the security 
        vulnerability disclosure policy requirements under paragraph 
        (2) if the Chief Information Officer--
                    (A) determines that the waiver is necessary in the 
                interest of national security or research purposes; and
                    (B) not later than 30 days after granting a waiver, 
                submits a notification and justification (including 
                information about the duration of the waiver) to the 
                Committees on Armed Services of the House of 
                Representatives and the Senate.
    (f) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``agency'' has the meaning given the term in 
        section 3502 of title 44, United States Code.
            (2) The term ``covered contractor'' means a contractor (as 
        defined in section 7101 of title 41, United States Code)--
                    (A) whose contract is in an amount the same as or 
                greater than the simplified acquisition threshold; or
                    (B) that operates, manages, or maintains a Federal 
                information system (as defined by section 11331 of 
                title 40, United Stated Code) on behalf of an agency.
            (3) The term ``DFARS'' means the Department of Defense 
        Supplement to the Federal Acquisition Regulation.
            (4) The term ``Executive department'' has the meaning given 
        that term in section 101 of title 5, United States Code.
            (5) The term ``FAR'' means the Federal Acquisition 
        Regulation.
            (6) The term ``NIST'' means the National Institute of 
        Standards and Technology.
            (7) The term ``OMB'' means the Office of Management and 
        Budget.
            (8) The term ``security vulnerability'' has the meaning 
        given that term in section 2200 of the Homeland Security Act of 
        2002 (6 U.S.C. 650).
            (9) The term ``simplified acquisition threshold'' has the 
        meaning given that term in section 134 of title 41, United 
        States Code.

     Subtitle B--Information Technology and Artificial Intelligence

SEC. 1521. SOFTWARE PLANNING, PROGRAMMING, BUDGETING, AND EXECUTION 
              REFORM.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 131 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by inserting after section 2220 the following new section:
``Sec. 2221. Availability of appropriations accounts for full lifecycle 
              of software capabilities: regulations
    ``(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that the 
relevant financial management regulations of the Department provide 
guidance for the budgeting and execution of funds for software 
capabilities. Such guidance shall--
            ``(1) reflect that amounts appropriated for operations and 
        maintenance, procurement, or research, development, test, and 
        evaluation may be used at each stage in the lifecycle of a 
        software capability, consistent with applicable law;
            ``(2) clarify that such amounts may be used, as 
        appropriate, for all activities at each such stage in the 
        lifecycle of a software capability;
            ``(3) provide that, for any program or activity of the 
        Department that requires a new software capability, the 
        appropriations account primarily available for that program or 
        activity shall be available for that new software capability;
            ``(4) not impose restrictions on the availability of funds 
        for software capabilities, except as required by law; and
            ``(5) maintain consistency, to the maximum extent 
        practicable, with Recommendation 11A of the final report (dated 
        March 2024) of the Commission on Planning, Programming, 
        Budgeting, and Execution Reform, as submitted under section 
        1004 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
        2022 (Public Law 117-81; 135 Stat. 1884).
    ``(b) Definition.--In this section, the term `lifecycle' includes 
stages such as development, prototyping, testing, fielding, 
modification, upgrading, licensing, sustainment, and retirement.''.
    (b) Issuance of Revised Regulations.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than one year after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall issue 
        revised regulations to implement section 2221 of title 10, 
        United States Code, as added by this section.
            (2) Notification.--Not later than 30 days after the 
        Secretary issues the revised regulations under paragraph (1), 
        the Secretary shall notify the congressional defense committees 
        of the revisions.
    (c) Updates and Report.--
            (1) Written updates.--Not later than 180 days after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act, and every 90 days thereafter 
        until the revised regulations required by subsection (b) are 
        issued, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense 
        committees a written update containing--
                    (A) a description of the progress made toward 
                completing the revised regulations, along with specific 
                actions taken and remaining milestones;
                    (B) the most up-to-date working draft of the 
                revised regulations, or an outline of such working 
                draft in sufficient detail to demonstrate the manner in 
                which, and the extent to which, the working draft 
                implements section 2221;
                    (C) a description of any anticipated barriers to 
                full and timely issuance of the revised regulations and 
                full and timely implementation of such regulations;
                    (D) any recommendations for legislation to fully 
                implement such revised regulations; and
                    (E) if the Secretary has not issued such revised 
                regulations within the period described in subsection 
                (b), an explanation for the delay and the anticipated 
                timeline for issuing the revised regulations.
            (2) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the 
        congressional defense committees a report containing--
                    (A) the revised regulations required by subsection 
                (b); and
                    (B) any remaining barriers to full and timely 
                implementation of such revised regulations.

SEC. 1522. REQUIREMENT FOR GUIDANCE AND PROHIBITION ON USE OF 
              ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE OF CERTAIN ARTIFICIAL 
              INTELLIGENCE COMPANIES.

    Section 1532 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2026 (10 U.S.C. 2224 note) is amended in subsection (a)--
            (1) by amending paragraph (2) to read as follows:
            ``(2) Guidance for department systems and devices.--Not 
        later than 30 days after the date of the enactment of the 
        National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2027, the 
        Secretary of Defense shall issue Department of Defense-wide 
        guidance for the identification of covered artificial 
        intelligence companies and processes for the exclusion and 
        removal of artificial intelligence developed by such companies 
        from systems and devices of the Department.''; and
            (2) in paragraph (3)(B), by striking ``if'' and inserting 
        ``on and after the date that is 90 days after the date on 
        which''.

SEC. 1523. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE MODEL RAPID DEPLOYMENT FRAMEWORK.

    (a) Framework Required.--The Secretary of Defense, acting through 
the Chief Digital and Artificial Intelligence Officer of the Department 
of Defense, shall establish a framework for the rapid deployment of 
artificial intelligence (``AI''), to be known as the Artificial 
Intelligence Model Rapid Deployment Framework (in this section referred 
to as the ``Framework''), to enable the evaluation, authorization, and 
deployment of AI systems on Department enterprise AI platforms, as 
appropriate. The objective of the Framework shall be to enable 
deployment of such systems on such platforms within 30 days after 
public availability.
    (b) Elements.--The Framework shall include the following elements:
            (1) Vendor and model onboarding process.--Establishment of 
        standardized processes for deploying AI systems onto Department 
        enterprise AI platforms, including security reviews, technical 
        assessments, and integration with other Department systems and 
        platforms.
            (2) Common definitions and categories.--Common definitions 
        or categories for AI systems deployed on Department enterprise 
        AI platforms, including systems with agentic capabilities, to 
        support acquisition clarity, testing, authorization, and 
        operational adoption.
            (3) Security testing and evaluation.--Establishment of 
        security testing and evaluation capabilities to support 
        security assessments for AI systems deployed on Department 
        enterprise AI platforms, including adversarial testing, supply 
        chain risk assessments, and other security testing appropriate 
        for AI systems, consistent with existing cybersecurity and test 
        and evaluation policies.
            (4) Multi-classification deployment.--Establishment of 
        capability to deploy AI systems on Department enterprise AI 
        platforms across multiple classification levels, as 
        appropriate, with appropriate security controls and data 
        isolation.
            (5) Streamlined system authorization processes.--In 
        coordination with the Chief Information Officer of the 
        Department, establishment of streamlined processes for 
        authorization of AI systems deployed on Department enterprise 
        AI platforms, including reuse of authorization artifacts, 
        common control inheritance, and continuous monitoring 
        capabilities.
            (6) Registry and governance systems.--Implementation of 
        registry and governance processes to track version history, 
        performance, security status, and compliance for AI systems 
        deployed on Department enterprise AI platforms.
    (c) Integration With Other Frameworks.--The Secretary shall ensure 
that the rapid deployment of AI systems under the Framework is achieved 
in a manner that maintains security standards through integration with 
other relevant frameworks, including--
            (1) the plans, strategies, and other matters relating to AI 
        required by section 1544 of the National Defense Authorization 
        Act for Fiscal Year 2024 (10 U.S.C. 4001 note);
            (2) the Defense-wide policy required by section 1512 of the 
        National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (10 
        U.S.C. 394 note); and
            (3) the framework and other requirements required by 
        section 1513 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
        Fiscal Year 2026 (10 U.S.C. 2224 note).
    (d) Compliance With Requirements.--The Secretary shall ensure that 
the Framework complies with all applicable requirements for test and 
evaluation of Department systems in accordance with applicable law, 
policy, and guidance.
    (e) Metrics and Reporting.--The Chief Digital and Artificial 
Intelligence Officer shall--
            (1) establish metrics to measure the time required to 
        evaluate, authorize, deploy, and update AI systems on 
        Department enterprise AI platforms; and
            (2) in each of fiscal years 2027, 2028, 2029, and 2030, 
        submit an annual report to the congressional defense committees 
        on progress toward achieving the objective stated in subsection 
        (a).
    (f) Definition.--In this section, the term ``Department enterprise 
AI platform'' means a centrally managed platform that hosts or provides 
AI services or applications for use across multiple elements of the 
Department, rather than for a single program, system, or mission 
application.

SEC. 1524. UPDATE OF POLICY ON AUTONOMOUS AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE-
              ENABLED SYSTEMS.

    (a) Policy Update Required.--Not later than 1 year after the date 
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall update 
policies and guidance of the Department of Defense, including by 
revising Department of Defense Directive 3000.09 (relating to Autonomy 
in Weapon Systems) and establishing or revising such additional 
Department policies and guidance as may be appropriate, governing--
            (1) autonomous and semi-autonomous weapon systems; and
            (2) artificial intelligence-enabled systems intended to 
        support, recommend, or materially influence operational 
        decisions associated with the employment of force, including 
        systems used for operational planning, target development, 
        weaponeering, or engagement recommendation.
    (b) Required Policy Elements.--In updating the policies and 
guidance required by subsection (a), the Secretary shall ensure such 
policies and guidance include--
            (1) criteria for categorizing systems according to such 
        factors as mission context, autonomy, human involvement, and 
        operational consequence;
            (2) appropriate and operationally responsive requirements 
        for approval, validation, oversight, and authorized operational 
        use applicable to categories of systems identified pursuant to 
        the criteria in paragraph (1);
            (3) realistic and combat-effective requirements for 
        operator intervention, override mechanisms, and operational 
        resilience;
            (4) requirements to preserve existing human command 
        responsibility for the use of force involving autonomous 
        systems or artificial intelligence-enabled systems, including 
        procedures to identify the human commanders or operators 
        responsible for authorizing, supervising, and terminating such 
        use of force;
            (5) appropriate requirements for auditability, 
        traceability, and accountability;
            (6) criteria and procedures for rapidly fielding 
        capabilities following material changes to software, models, 
        data, or operational context;
            (7) requirements for appropriate and operationally 
        responsive risk mitigation measures and notifications 
        applicable to systems granted conditional or temporary 
        operational use;
            (8) requirements for operational testing, evaluation, and 
        human training commensurate with mission risk and operational 
        consequence, including training to promote calibrated reliance 
        on artificial intelligence-enabled systems; and
            (9) processes and timelines for periodic review and 
        reevaluation of approved systems and operational use cases.
    (c) Compliance With Law.--The Secretary shall ensure that the 
policies and guidance required by subsection (a) are consistent with 
applicable provisions of Federal law, including section 1638 of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2025 (Public Law 
118-159; 10 U.S.C. 491 note), and applicable Department policies and 
regulations.
    (d) Continuity of Operations.--This section does not require the 
Secretary to suspend or terminate any ongoing operations, activities, 
or programs pending completion of the updates required by subsection 
(a).
    (e) Interim Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall provide a report to the 
congressional defense committees describing the progress of the 
Department toward completion of the updates required by subsection (a), 
including a preliminary assessment of the matters described in 
subsection (b).
    (f) Final Policy Briefing.--Not later than 30 days after the 
completion of the updates required by subsection (a), the Secretary 
shall provide a briefing to the congressional defense committees on--
            (1) the updates completed under subsection (a);
            (2) the rationale supporting the updates, including the 
        assessment of the Secretary with respect to each matter 
        described in subsection (b); and
            (3) any recommendations for authorities, resources, or 
        statutory changes.
    (g) Semiannual Reports.--Not less frequently than semiannually 
through December 31, 2032, the Secretary of Defense shall provide a 
report to the congressional defense committees regarding the 
implementation of the updates required by subsection (a), including--
            (1) systems and use cases reviewed under the updates 
        required by subsection (a), including whether such systems and 
        use cases were approved, restricted, suspended, or subject to 
        additional review; and
            (2) any significant acquisition, resourcing, sustainment, 
        or programmatic impacts resulting from implementation of the 
        updates required by subsection (a).

SEC. 1525. EXPANSION OF AI-ENABLED MAINTENANCE INTELLIGENCE PLATFORMS 
              ACROSS AIR EDUCATION AND TRAINING COMMAND.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, and subject to the availability of 
appropriations, the Secretary of the Air Force shall establish a pilot 
program to operationalize and expand artificial intelligence (AI)-
enabled maintenance data cleansing and correction capabilities across 
the Air Force. This program will prioritize the improvement of aircraft 
availability and pilot production capacity by modernizing maintenance 
data quality, increasing the effectiveness of sustainment operations, 
and maximizing readiness of existing training aircraft fleets through 
enhanced data fidelity and decision support.
    (b) Scope.--The program under subsection (a) shall apply across the 
full portfolio of aircraft operating within Air Education and Training 
Command.
    (c) Objectives.--The objectives of the program are to leverage AI-
enabled software solutions to--
            (1) cleanse and correct structured and unstructured 
        maintenance and logistics data;
            (2) establish validated, high-fidelity ground-truth 
        maintenance datasets to improve the performance and reliability 
        of existing Air Force readiness, logistics, and decision-
        support systems;
            (3) reduce manual data correction burdens and improve 
        interoperability with legacy maintenance information systems;
            (4) enhance sustainment efficiency, sortie generation, and 
        scheduling accuracy through improved maintenance visibility;
            (5) increase situational awareness for tactical-level 
        maintainers and operational leadership;
            (6) establish standardized, reusable maintenance data 
        cleansing, correction, and integration frameworks designed to 
        interoperate with and enhance existing Air Force maintenance, 
        logistics, and readiness systems; and
            (7) enable scalable, repeatable integration of AI-enabled 
        maintenance capabilities across the Air Force.
    (d) Partnerships.--In carrying out the program under subsection 
(a), the Secretary of the Air Force may partner with a federally funded 
research and development center, a University Affiliated Research 
Center, a center of excellence, a military service laboratory, or one 
or more private-sector entities with experience in deploying AI-powered 
maintenance intelligence capabilities that support data cleansing, 
parts forecasting, and sustainment modernization within the Air Force, 
as well as any other partners the Secretary deems necessary.
    (e) Briefing.--At least 30 days before the date on which the 
authority expires under subsection (f), the Secretary of the Air Force 
shall provide to the congressional defense committees a briefing that 
includes--
            (1) a description of the data cleansing and correction 
        challenges addressed through the program;
            (2) an assessment of any improvements in data accuracy, 
        aircraft availability, and maintenance efficiency resulting 
        from the program; and
            (3) an evaluation of the feasibility and advisability of 
        expanding these capabilities to additional Air Force units 
        operating the same aircraft types.
    (f) Expiration.--The authority to carry out the program under 
subsection (a) shall expire on the date that is one year after the date 
of the enactment of this Act.

                 Subtitle C--Reports and Other Matters

SEC. 1541. ROADMAP FOR MODERNIZATION OF TOP SECRET AND SPECIAL ACCESS 
              PROGRAM NETWORK ARCHITECTURES.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall develop and 
submit to the congressional defense committees, and begin 
implementation of, a roadmap for the modernization of Department of 
Defense networks that process, store, or transmit information that is 
classified at the level of top secret or is designated as being within 
a special access program.
    (b) Elements.--The roadmap required under subsection (a) shall 
include the following elements:
            (1) An assessment of the current architecture, capacity, 
        security posture, and technical limitations of such networks, 
        including identification of major capability gaps, 
        cybersecurity risks, infrastructure limitations, and technical 
        debt.
            (2) Target or reference architectures for modernized 
        environments for such networks, including enterprise-level and 
        component-level networks, as appropriate.
            (3) Milestones and timelines for transition from current 
        environments to the target or reference architectures.
            (4) Plans to improve resilience, survivability, and 
        operations of such networks in contested, degraded, or 
        disconnected environments.
            (5) Plans to improve interoperability and data sharing 
        across such networks and relevant mission partner environments, 
        as appropriate.
            (6) An assessment of high-performance computing and 
        distributed computing requirements, whether locally or in cloud 
        environments, necessary to support real-time sensor data 
        fusion, advanced analytics, and artificial intelligence 
        capabilities.
            (7) An assessment of the extent to which such networks 
        support the operational requirements of combatant commands, 
        including the ability to enable integration with joint and 
        mission partner environments.
            (8) Identification of governance, roles, and 
        responsibilities for modernization of such networks across the 
        Department.
            (9) Estimated resource requirements necessary to implement 
        the roadmap.
    (c) Annual Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, and annually thereafter for each of the next 
five years, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense 
committees a report on progress in implementing the roadmap required 
under subsection (a).
    (d) Report Elements.--Each report submitted under subsection (c) 
shall include the following:
            (1) Progress made toward roadmap milestones and 
        modernization goals.
            (2) Updates to the roadmap, as appropriate.
            (3) Major risks, delays, or challenges affecting 
        implementation.
            (4) Budgetary resources requested and obligated for 
        modernization of such networks.
            (5) Any recommendations that the Secretary considers 
        appropriate for legislative or funding actions to implement the 
        roadmap.
    (e) Form of Roadmap and Reports.--The roadmap required by 
subsection (a) and the reports required by subsection (c) shall be 
submitted in classified form, but may include an unclassified summary.

SEC. 1542. SEMIANNUAL REPORTS ON CYBER OPERATIONAL READINESS ASSESSMENT 
              PROGRAM.

    (a) Semiannual Reports 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, the Secretary of Defense shall, acting 
through the Chief Information Officer of the Department of Defense and 
the Commander of the Department of Defense Cyber Defense Command 
(DCDC), submit to the congressional defense committees a semiannual 
report on the implementation of the Cyber Operational Readiness 
Assessment program of the Department of Defense Cyber Defense Command 
and the findings from such program.
    (b) Contents.--Each report required under subsection (a) shall 
include, for the period covered by the report, the following:
            (1) An overview of the implementation status of the Cyber 
        Operational Readiness Assessment program, including scope, 
        methodology, and assessment cadence across the military 
        departments and the defense agencies and Department of Defense 
        field activities.
            (2) Aggregate and component-level findings on cyber 
        operational readiness, including systemic risks, recurring 
        deficiencies, and trends affecting mission assurance.
            (3) An assessment of operational resilience, including the 
        ability of the Department of Defense to maintain essential 
        functions, contain adversary activity, and recover from cyber 
        incidents during contested operations.
            (4) A description of actions taken or planned to address 
        material risks identified through the program, including 
        timelines, responsible organizations, and any resource 
        constraints.
            (5) An initial plan, and subsequent progress reports, for 
        incorporating operational technology (OT) environments into 
        assessments carried out under the program to ensure a 
        comprehensive operational readiness evaluation of mission-
        critical systems, weapon platforms, industrial control systems, 
        and supporting infrastructure.
            (6) An assessment of how assessments under the program will 
        incorporate and operationalize Critical Infrastructure 
        Discovery and Evaluation (CIDE) activities conducted by the 
        Department of Defense Cyber Defense Command on operational 
        technology networks, including alignment of scope, methodology, 
        data collection, reporting, and resourcing to ensure unity of 
        effort and avoid duplication.
            (7) A description of any policy, authority, or resourcing 
        gaps that inhibit full execution of the program as an 
        operational readiness assessment.
    (c) Purpose.--The purpose of subsection (a) is to ensure that 
cybersecurity is treated by the Department as an element of operational 
readiness across the Department and to support senior leader 
decisionmaking, risk acceptance, and resource prioritization related to 
the security and resilience of the Department of Defense Information 
Network (DoDIN).
    (d) Termination.--The requirements of this section shall terminate 
on the date that is three years after the date of the enactment of this 
Act.

   TITLE XVI--SPACE ACTIVITIES, STRATEGIC PROGRAMS, AND INTELLIGENCE 
                                MATTERS

                      Subtitle A--Space Activities

SEC. 1601. REORGANIZATION OF ACQUISITION RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE SPACE 
              FORCE.

    (a) Elimination of Space Development Agency.--
            (1) Repeal.--Section 9087 of title 10, United States Code, 
        is repealed.
            (2) Conforming amendments.--
                    (A) Title 10.--Title 10, United States Code, is 
                amended as follows:
                            (i) In section 4092--
                                    (I) in subsection (a)(8)--
                                            (aa) in the heading, by 
                                        striking ``SDA'' and inserting 
                                        ``Space force'';
                                            (bb) by striking ``The 
                                        Director of the Space 
                                        Development Agency'' and 
                                        inserting ``The portfolio 
                                        acquisition executive of the 
                                        Space Force designated under 
                                        section 1732 of this title with 
                                        respect to missile warning and 
                                        tracking''; and
                                            (cc) by striking ``the 
                                        Agency.'' and inserting ``the 
                                        Space Force.'';
                                    (II) in subsection (b)(1)(H)--
                                            (aa) by striking ``in the 
                                        case of the Space Development 
                                        Agency'' and inserting ``in 
                                        addition to any positions 
                                        appointed under subparagraph 
                                        (A), in the case of the Space 
                                        Force''; and
                                            (bb) by striking ``the 
                                        Agency'' both places it appears 
                                        and inserting ``the Space 
                                        Force''; and
                                    (III) in subsection (c)(2), by 
                                striking ``, the Space Development 
                                Agency'' and inserting ``, the Space 
                                Force''.
                            (ii) In section 9016(b)(6)(B)--
                                    (I) by striking clauses (iii), 
                                (iv), and (v) and inserting the 
                                following new clause:
            ``(iii) Oversee, direct, and synchronize acquisition 
        projects for all space systems and programs of the Department 
        of the Air Force.'';
                                    (II) by redesignating clause (vi) 
                                as clause (iv); and
                                    (III) in clause (iv), as so 
                                redesignated, by striking ``Effective 
                                as of'' and all that follows through 
                                ``serve'' and inserting ``Serve''.
                    (B) National defense authorization act for fiscal 
                year 2024.--Section 1608 of the National Defense 
                Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024 (Public Law 118-
                31; 10 U.S.C. 2271 note) is repealed.
    (b) Elimination of Space Rapid Capabilities Office.--
            (1) Repeal.--Section 2273a of title 10, United States Code, 
        is repealed.
            (2) Conforming amendment.--Section 1609(c) of the National 
        Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (Public Law 116-
        92; 10 U.S.C. 2273 note) is amended by striking ``, including 
        the Space Rapid Capabilities Office''.

SEC. 1602. REORGANIZATION OF OVERSIGHT OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE 
              POSITIONING, NAVIGATION, AND TIMING ENTERPRISE.

    (a) Repeal.--Section 2279b of title 10, United States Code, is 
repealed.
    (b) Designation of Official.--
            (1) Requirement.--Chapter 135 of title 10, United States 
        Code, is amended by inserting after section 2279 the following 
        new section:
``Sec. 2279a. Oversight of the Department of Defense Positioning, 
              Navigation, and Timing Enterprise
    ``(a) Designation.--(1) The Secretary of Defense, in consultation 
with the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, shall designate a 
single official of the Department of Defense (other than the Chief 
Information Officer of the Department) as the principal official of the 
Department with responsibility for the oversight of the Department of 
Defense positioning, navigation, and timing enterprise.
    ``(2) The official designated under paragraph (1) shall report 
directly to the Deputy Secretary of Defense with respect to matters 
concerning the Department of Defense positioning, navigation, and 
timing enterprise (including alternative positioning, navigation, and 
timing efforts of the Department).
    ``(b) Duties.--The Secretary--
            ``(1) shall assign to the official designated under 
        subsection (a)(1)--
                    ``(A) any duty the Secretary determines appropriate 
                from among the duties carried out by the former Council 
                on Oversight of the Department of Defense Positioning, 
                Navigation, and Timing Enterprise as of January 1, 
                2026; and
                    ``(B) any other duty the Secretary determines 
                appropriate; and
            ``(2) may delegate to other officials of the Department any 
        such duty described in paragraph (1)(A) not assigned to the 
        official designated under subsection (a).
    ``(c) Annual Certifications; Limitation on Availability of Funds.--
(1) At the same time as the President submits to Congress the annual 
budget request under section 1105 of title 31 for a fiscal year, the 
official designated under subsection (a)(1) shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees, with respect to each military 
department--
            ``(A) a certification that such budget request would fully 
        fund the user equipment and ground control systems of the 
        Department of Defense positioning, navigation, and timing 
        enterprise; or
            ``(B) a notice that such budget request would not fully 
        fund such user equipment and ground control systems.
    ``(2) Of the amounts authorized to be appropriated or otherwise 
made available for fiscal year 2028 or any fiscal year thereafter for 
the travel expenses of the Secretary of a military department, not more 
than 90 percent may be obligated or expended during a fiscal year 
covered by a budget request for which the official designated under 
subsection (a)(1) did not make a certification under paragraph 
(1)(A).''.
            (2) Timing.--The Secretary of Defense shall designate the 
        official under section 2279a of title 10, United States Code, 
        as added by paragraph (1), by not later than 60 days after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 1603. SPACE LAUNCH SUPPORT SERVICES AND ALTERNATIVE LAUNCH 
              PROCUREMENT PROCESS.

    (a) Extension of Transition Limitations and Reporting 
Requirements.--Section 2276a(e) of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by striking ``fiscal years 2024, 2025, and 2026'' and inserting 
``fiscal years 2024 through 2031''.
    (b) Notification of Use of Alternative Launch Procurement.--Section 
1601(c) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2022 
(Public Law 117-81; 10 U.S.C. 2276 note) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``the Secretary of Defense'' both places it 
        appears and inserting ``the portfolio acquisition executive of 
        the Space Force'';
            (2) by striking ``the Director of the National 
        Reconnaissance Office'' and inserting ``the Director of the 
        Office of Space Launch of the National Reconnaissance Office''; 
        and
            (3) by striking ``the Director of National Intelligence'' 
        and inserting ``the Director of the Office of Space Launch''.

SEC. 1604. SPACEPORT OF THE FUTURE INITIATIVE.

    (a) Program Requirements.--Section 1608 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 
1177) is amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(c) Program Requirements.--
            ``(1) Single program.--The Secretary of the Air Force shall 
        carry out the Spaceport of the Future initiative as a single 
        program of the Space Force overseen by the portfolio 
        acquisition executive for space access pursuant to section 1732 
        of title 10, United States Code.
            ``(2) Prioritized investments.--As a part of the defense 
        budget materials (as defined in section 239 of title 10, United 
        States Code) for each of fiscal years 2027 through 2031, the 
        portfolio acquisition executive for space access shall submit 
        to the congressional defense committees a list of prioritized 
        investments required for infrastructure efforts under the 
        Spaceport of the Future initiative.''.
    (b) Annual Updates.--Paragraph (3) of subsection (b) of such 
section is amended to read as follows:
            ``(3) Annual updates.--Not later than March 31 of each of 
        2027 through 2031, the Secretary shall submit to the 
        congressional defense committees an update on the Spaceport of 
        the Future initiative, including with respect to--
                    ``(A) project status;
                    ``(B) estimated completion dates;
                    ``(C) total costs;
                    ``(D) any updated assessments of funding or 
                infrastructure needs; and
                    ``(E) the status of any policy recommendations 
                described in paragraph (2)(D).''.

SEC. 1605. PROCUREMENT OF COMMERCIAL SPACE-BASED DATA AND TO SUPPORT 
              WILDFIRE RESILIENCE.

    (a) Procurement.--Subject to the availability of appropriations for 
such purpose, the Secretary of the Air Force, acting through the 
Commercial Space Office and in coordination with the FireGuard program 
of the National Guard and the Commander of the United States Northern 
Command, shall procure space-based commercial data and end products to 
support the efforts of the Department of Defense and the wildfire 
mission of the United States Northern Command by delivering timely, 
effective military support to the Federal Government and State, local, 
and Tribal governments to protect military readiness and installations, 
provide emergency military support to civil authorities, and conduct 
proactive wildland fire management.
    (b) Authorized Sharing.--The Secretary may share space-based 
commercial data and end products procured under subsection (a) with 
State, local, and Tribal governments to assist with firefighting 
efforts.

SEC. 1606. CONTINUATION OF NEXT-GENERATION OVERHEAD PERSISTENT INFRARED 
              POLAR PROGRAM OF THE DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE.

    (a) Requirement to Continue, Maintain, and Execute Program.--
Subject to the availability of appropriations made in advance for such 
purpose, the Secretary of the Air Force shall continue, maintain, and 
execute the Next-Generation Overhead Persistent Infrared Polar program, 
including Next Generation OPIR, Block 0 Polar, through launch of space 
vehicles one and two.
    (b) Program Management.--The Secretary shall manage Next Generation 
OPIR, Block 0 Polar as an active acquisition program and shall take all 
actions necessary to preserve program continuity, including maintaining 
program office responsibilities, executing planned development and 
integration activities, supporting contracting actions, preserving 
schedule, and conducting launch preparation activities necessary to 
support the launch of space vehicles one and two.
    (c) Limitation on Use of Funds for Certain Purposes.--None of the 
funds authorized to be appropriated or otherwise made available for 
fiscal year 2027 for the Department of Defense may be obligated or 
expended to--
            (1) to terminate, close out, materially reduce, 
        restructure, delay, or otherwise impede continuation of the 
        Next-Generation Overhead Persistent Infrared Polar program, 
        including Next Generation OPIR, Block 0 Polar, through the 
        launch of space vehicles one and two; or
            (2) for any activity not directly supporting Next 
        Generation OPIR, Block 0 Polar, including closeout activities, 
        termination activities, or activities solely supporting other 
        missile warning and missile tracking architectures
    (d) Program Execution Plan.--Not later than 60 days after the date 
of the enactment of this section, the Secretary, in coordination with 
the Chief of Space Operations of the Space Force, shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees an execution plan for continuing Next 
Generation OPIR, Block 0 Polar through the launch of space vehicles one 
and two. Such plan shall include planned activities, schedule, major 
milestones, contracting actions, launch preparation activities, program 
office responsibilities, and obligation and expenditure plans for the 
funds authorized to be appropriated for such program.

  Subtitle B--Defense Intelligence and Intelligence-Related Activities

SEC. 1611. EXPENDITURE OF FUNDS ACROSS FISCAL YEARS FOR DEPARTMENT OF 
              DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE AND COUNTERINTELLIGENCE ACTIVITIES.

    Section 429a of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a), by striking ``subsections (b) and 
        (c)'' and inserting ``subsections (b) and (d)'';
            (2) by redesignating subsections (c) through (g) as 
        subsections (d) though (h), respectively;
            (3) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(c) Availability of Funds for Programs Across Fiscal Years.--(1) 
With respect to fiscal year 2027 and any subsequent fiscal year, not 
more than 10 percent of the amounts described in paragraph (2) may be 
used for programs under subsection (a) that begin in such fiscal year 
and end not later than the end of the second fiscal year thereafter.
    ``(2) The amounts described in this paragraph are amounts--
            ``(A) made available in fiscal year 2027 or any subsequent 
        fiscal year to carry out the authority in subsection (a); and
            ``(B) that the Secretary may expend without making a 
        notification pursuant to the limitation in subsection (b).''; 
        and
            (4) in subsection (e), as so redesignated--
                    (A) by striking ``Not later'' and inserting ``(1) 
                Not later'';
                    (B) by striking ``section (c)'' and inserting 
                ``subsection (d)''; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following new 
                paragraph:
    ``(2) The Secretary shall include in each report under paragraph 
(1) a separate portion detailing how the Secretary carried out 
subsection (c) during the fiscal year covered by the report with 
respect to the availability of funds for programs in more than one 
fiscal year, including--
            ``(A) an explanation for carrying out such subsection for 
        such programs and the purpose of such programs;
            ``(B) the balance of such funds available for such programs 
        following the first fiscal year in which funds were expended, 
        by activity and by fiscal year; and
            ``(C) the program elements of such programs.''.

SEC. 1612. PERMANENT AUTHORITY FOR MILITARY INTELLIGENCE COLLECTION AND 
              ANALYSIS PARTNERSHIPS.

    (a) Permanent Authority.--Section 1621 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024 (Public Law 118-31; 10 U.S.C. 
421 note prec.) is amended--
            (1) in subsection (b), by striking ``for four years'';
            (2) by striking subsection (c); and
            (3) by redesignating subsection (d) as subsection (c).
    (b) Transfer.--Section 1621 of the National Defense Authorization 
Act for Fiscal Year 2024 (Public Law 118-31; 10 U.S.C. 421 note prec.) 
is--
            (1) transferred to chapter 21 of title 10, United States 
        Code;
            (2) inserted after section 421; and
            (3) redesignated as section 421a.
    (c) Conforming Amendments.--Section 421a of title 10, United States 
Code, as added by subsection (b), is amended--
            (1) in the enumerator, by striking ``SEC.'' and inserting 
        ``Sec. '';
            (2) in the section heading--
                    (A) by striking the period at the end; and
                    (B) by conforming the typeface and typestyle, 
                including capitalization, to the typeface and typestyle 
                as used in the section heading of section 421 of such 
                title; and
            (3) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) by striking each heading that is not a 
                subsection heading; and
                    (B) by conforming the margins to the margins used 
                in section 426(a) of such title, including with respect 
                to the use of inline paragraphs and subparagraphs.

SEC. 1613. REPEAL OF CERTAIN REPORTING AND BRIEFING REQUIREMENTS.

    (a) Strategy and Plan to Implement Certain Defense Intelligence 
Reforms.--Section 1622 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2022 (Public Law 117-81; 10 U.S.C. 421 note prec.) is 
repealed.
    (b) Briefing on Department of Defense Plan to Deter and Counter 
Adversaries in the Information Environment.--Section 1560 of the James 
M. Inhofe National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 
(Public Law 117-263; 136 Stat. 2927) is repealed.

SEC. 1614. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY OF ARMY COUNTERINTELLIGENCE AGENTS 
              TO EXECUTE WARRANTS AND MAKE ARRESTS.

    Section 7377(b)(2) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``during the four-year period beginning on the date of the 
enactment of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2025,''.

SEC. 1615. PERIODIC STRATEGY AND ASSESSMENT OF INTELLIGENCE, 
              SURVEILLANCE, AND RECONNAISSANCE CAPABILITIES TO MEET 
              INTELLIGENCE COLLECTION PRIORITIES.

    Chapter 21 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by inserting 
after section 426 the following new section:
``Sec. 426a. Periodic strategy and assessment of intelligence, 
              surveillance, and reconnaissance capabilities to meet 
              intelligence collection priorities
    ``(a) Biennial Reports.--Not later than December 31, 2027, and 
every two years thereafter until December 31, 2037, the Under Secretary 
of Defense for Intelligence and Security shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees and the congressional intelligence 
committees a report containing--
            ``(1) an assessment of the intelligence, surveillance, and 
        reconnaissance capabilities of the Department of Defense as of 
        the date of the report; and
            ``(2) a strategy to improve such capabilities to support 
        the intelligence requirements of the Department.
    ``(b) Matters Included.--The Under Secretary of Defense for 
Intelligence and Security shall ensure that each report under 
subsection (a) includes the following:
            ``(1) With respect to the assessment under paragraph (1) of 
        such subsection--
                    ``(A) a review of all spaceborne, airborne, 
                surface, and subsurface intelligence, surveillance, and 
                reconnaissance activities (manned and unmanned);
                    ``(B) an assessment of the capacity and capability 
                to meet intelligence collection requirements, including 
                with respect to the requirements of the commanders of 
                the geographic combatant commands;
                    ``(C) an assessment of the risk and security 
                threats caused by inadequate capacity or capability to 
                meet intelligence collection requirements; and
                    ``(D) a plan to mitigate such risk.
            ``(2) With respect to the strategy under paragraph (2) of 
        such subsection--
                    ``(A) an assessment of the projected intelligence, 
                surveillance, and reconnaissance capabilities and 
                whether such capabilities will meet future intelligence 
                collection requirements;
                    ``(B) recommendations to improve collection 
                postures in the near-, mid-, and long-term to meet 
                future intelligence collection requirements;
                    ``(C) an assessment of the risk associated with an 
                inability to meet future intelligence collection 
                requirements; and
                    ``(D) a plan to mitigate such risk.
            ``(3) Any other matters the Under Secretary determines 
        necessary.
    ``(c) Coordination and Consultation.--The Under Secretary of 
Defense for Intelligence and Security shall develop each report under 
subsection (a)--
            ``(1) in coordination with the heads of the components of 
        the Department of Defense that are elements of the intelligence 
        community, the commanders of the geographic combatant commands, 
        and the Commander of the United States Special Operations 
        Command; and
            ``(2) in consultation with the service acquisition 
        executives of the military departments.
    ``(d) Form.--Each report under subsection (a) shall be submitted in 
unclassified form but may include a classified annex.
    ``(e) Definitions.--In this section, the terms `congressional 
intelligence committees' and `intelligence community' have the meanings 
given those terms in section 3 of the National Security Act of 1947 (50 
U.S.C. 3003).''.

SEC. 1616. INTEGRATION OF OPEN-SOURCE INTELLIGENCE TRAINING AND 
              TRADECRAFT INTO ALL-SOURCE INTELLIGENCE ANALYSIS 
              CURRICULA.

    (a) In General.--Subchapter I of chapter 21 of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 430f. Integration of open-source intelligence training and 
              tradecraft into all-source intelligence analysis 
              curricula
    ``(a) Requirement.--The Secretary of each military department shall 
ensure that training within such military department for all-source 
intelligence analysts includes instruction in open-source intelligence 
tradecraft.
    ``(b) Guidance and Standards.--The Under Secretary of Defense for 
Intelligence and Security shall--
            ``(1) issue guidance to standardize open-source 
        intelligence training requirements for the military 
        departments; and
            ``(2) establish minimum open-source intelligence tradecraft 
        standards for use by the military departments.
    ``(c) Matters Covered.--Training required under subsection (a) 
shall include instruction in open-source intelligence tradecraft, 
including--
            ``(1) methods for the discovery, collection, and analysis 
        of publicly available information, including commercially 
        available information;
            ``(2) use of open-source intelligence tools, platforms, and 
        data sources;
            ``(3) evaluation of source reliability, data quality, and 
        analytic validity;
            ``(4) integration of open-source intelligence with other 
        intelligence disciplines;
            ``(5) legal, policy, and privacy considerations associated 
        with open-source intelligence activities; and
            ``(6) use of emerging technologies, including artificial 
        intelligence, to support open-source intelligence analysis.
    ``(d) Applicability.--The requirements under subsection (a) shall 
apply to initial-entry training programs for military and civilian all-
source intelligence analysts across the military departments.
    ``(e) Coordination.--In issuing guidance and standards under 
subsection (b), the Under Secretary shall consult with the Director of 
National Intelligence to ensure consistency with standards for open-
source intelligence in the intelligence community.''.
    (b) Implementation.--The Secretary of each military department 
shall implement the requirements of section 430f of title 10, United 
States Code, as added by subsection (a), not later than one year after 
the date of the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 1617. OBJECT-BASED GENERATIVE ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE FOR OPEN-
              SOURCE INTELLIGENCE.

    (a) Assessment.--The Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence 
and Security shall assess the capabilities of the Defense Intelligence 
Enterprise that support the application of artificial intelligence, 
including generative artificial intelligence, to open-source 
intelligence. Such assessment shall--
            (1) identify efforts to develop, acquire, or use 
        capabilities that support object-based or entity-centric 
        analysis, including the use of knowledge graphs, retrieval-
        augmented generation, or similar techniques;
            (2) describe the maturity, scope, and users of such 
        capabilities;
            (3) assess the extent of duplication, fragmentation, or 
        overlap among such efforts;
            (4) identify gaps, limitations, and barriers to scaling 
        such capabilities, including technical, policy, and data access 
        challenges;
            (5) evaluate the extent to which commercial technologies 
        are being used for such capabilities; and
            (6) identify opportunities to consolidate, scale, or 
        designate a capability as a shared or enterprise solution.
    (b) Pilot Program.--
            (1) Establishment.--The Under Secretary of Defense for 
        Intelligence and Security shall carry out a pilot program to 
        develop, acquire, or use commercial and other technologies to 
        develop and support an object-based generative artificial 
        intelligence analytic capability for open-source intelligence 
        activities throughout the Defense Intelligence Enterprise. The 
        Under Secretary shall design such pilot program to improve the 
        discovery, correlation, and analysis of high-interest objects 
        and the associated relationships of such objects, including 
        weapon systems and related entities.
            (2) Capability described.--The object-based generative 
        artificial intelligence analytic capability described in 
        paragraph (1) shall--
                    (A) make use of object-based data models, knowledge 
                graphs, and retrieval-augmented generation techniques;
                    (B) enable discovery, contextualization, and 
                analysis of high-interest objects, including weapon 
                systems and associated entities;
                    (C) integrate publicly available information and 
                commercially available information;
                    (D) produce explainable, evidence-based analytic 
                outputs; and
                    (E) align with data, analytic, and security 
                standards of the Department of Defense and the 
                intelligence community.
            (3) Pilot program lead.--
                    (A) Designation.--The Under Secretary of Defense 
                for Intelligence and Security shall designate the head 
                of a component of the Department of Defense to serve as 
                the lead for the pilot program required by paragraph 
                (1). In making that designation, the Under Secretary 
                shall take into consideration analytic capabilities, 
                technical expertise, and the ability to scale 
                throughout the Defense Intelligence Enterprise.
                    (B) Duties.--The head of the component of the 
                Department of Defense designated under subparagraph (A) 
                shall--
                            (i) implement and operate the capability 
                        described in paragraph (1); and
                            (ii) support Defense Intelligence 
                        Enterprise users.
    (c) Transition and Integration.--The Under Secretary of Defense for 
Intelligence and Security, in consultation with the Director of 
National Intelligence, shall evaluate the results of the pilot program 
required by subsection (b) to determine if--
            (1) the capability developed by such pilot program should 
        become an enduring program of the Defense Intelligence 
        Enterprise; and
            (2) the Under Secretary should recommend to the Director of 
        National Intelligence that such capability be designated as a 
        service of common concern for the intelligence community.
    (d) Briefing.--Not later than 120 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence 
and Security shall provide to the congressional intelligence committees 
and the Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives 
and the Senate a briefing on--
            (1) the findings of the assessment required by subsection 
        (a); and
            (2) the plan for implementation fo the pilot program 
        required by subsection (b).
    (e) Defense Intelligence Enterprise Defined.--In this section, the 
term ``Defense Intelligence Enterprise'' has the meaning given that 
term in section 426(b)(4) of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 1618. REPORT ON PROTECTION FROM DISCLOSURE OF MEMBERS OF THE ARMED 
              FORCES UNDER COVER.

    Not later than November 1, 2027, the Secretary of Defense shall 
submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the House of 
Representatives and the Senate a report on the efforts of the 
Department of Defense to update military personnel systems to protect 
from unauthorized disclosure--
            (1) intelligence operations of the Department of Defense;
            (2) the identities of undercover personnel conducting 
        intelligence or intelligence-related activities;
            (3) intelligence sources and methods; and
            (4) cover mechanisms in support of intelligence or 
        intelligence-related activities.

                       Subtitle C--Nuclear Forces

SEC. 1631. MATTERS RELATING TO INTERCONTINENTAL BALLISTIC MISSILES.

    (a) Transfer Authority.--Chapter 24 of title 10, United States 
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 499d. Transfer authority to support intercontinental ballistic 
              missile capabilities
    ``(a) Transfer Authority.--Subject to the authority, direction and 
control of the Secretary of Defense, and subject to the limitation 
under subsection (d), the Secretary of the Air Force may transfer 
amounts authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2027 or any 
fiscal year thereafter under `Research, Development, Test and 
Evaluation', `Air Force; Other Procurement', `Air Force; Missile 
Procurement', and `Air Force, Operation and Maintenance' for covered 
programs between such accounts for the purposes of modernizing, 
mitigating risk relating to, or otherwise enhancing, the 
intercontinental ballistic missile capabilities of the United States.
    ``(b) Treatment of Transferred Funds.--Amounts transferred under 
subsection (a) shall be merged with and be available for the same 
purposes and for the same time period as amounts in the receiving 
account.
    ``(c) Additional Authority.--The authority under subsection (a) is 
in addition to any other transfer authority available to the Department 
of Defense.
    ``(d) Notice and Wait Requirement.--The Secretary of the Air Force 
may not initiate a transfer under subsection (a) until--
            ``(1) the Secretary submits to the congressional defense 
        committees a written notification containing a detailed 
        description of the proposed transfer; and
            ``(2) a period of 15 days has elapsed following the date of 
        such notification.
    ``(e) Quarterly Report.--Not later than 30 days after the end of 
each fiscal quarter until the date of termination under subsection (g), 
the Secretary of the Air Force shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees a report containing a summary of any transfers 
carried out during such fiscal quarter under subsection (a).
    ``(f) Covered Program Defined.--In this section, the term `covered 
program' means a program of the Air Force that the Secretary of the Air 
Force determines supports the following:
            ``(1) The LGM-30G Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic 
        missile.
            ``(2) The LGM-35A Sentinel intercontinental ballistic 
        missile.
            ``(3) Any reentry vehicle capability for an 
        intercontinental ballistic missile.
            ``(4) Any other capability for an intercontinental 
        ballistic missile, as determined by the Secretary.
    ``(g) Termination.--The authority under subsection (a) shall 
terminate on the date that is 10 years after the date of the enactment 
of this section.''.
    (b) Exception to Limitation on Expenditures for Modifications for 
Certain Below-threshold Modifications.--Section 2244a(b) of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
paragraph:
            ``(4) Exception for below-threshold strategic delivery 
        system modifications.--The prohibition in subsection (a) does 
        not apply to a modification of a strategic delivery system (as 
        such term is defined in section 495(e) of this title) for which 
        the cost is less than $500,000.''.
    (c) Advance Procurement of Flight Test Kits.--
            (1) Authority for multiyear procurement.--Subject to 
        section 3501 of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary of 
        the Air Force may enter into one or more multiyear contracts, 
        beginning in fiscal year 2027, for the procurement of flight 
        test kits in support of the program of the Air Force Global 
        Strike Command for operational test launches of the Minuteman 
        III intercontinental ballistic missile
            (2) Authority for advance procurement.--The Secretary of 
        the Air Force may enter into one or more contracts for advance 
        procurement associated with the procurement of the flight test 
        kits for which contracts are authorized under subsection (a), 
        including procurement of systems and subsystems associated with 
        such flight test kits in economic order quantities when cost 
        savings are achievable.
            (3) Conditions 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 2027 is subject to 
        the availability of appropriations for that purpose for such 
        fiscal year.
            (4) Termination.--The authority of the Secretary of the Air 
        Force to enter into contracts under subsection (a) shall 
        terminate on September 30, 2030.
    (d) Contract Authority to Mitigate Certain Diminishing Sources and 
Shortages.--
            (1) Contract authority.--Subject to the limitation under 
        paragraph (2), the Secretary of the Air Force may enter into 
        one or more contracts for the life-of-program procurement of 
        components necessary to mitigate diminishing manufacturing 
        sources or material shortages affecting a covered program.
            (2) Notice and wait requirement.--The Secretary may not 
        enter into a contract under paragraph (1) until--
                    (A) the Secretary submits to the congressional 
                defense committees a written notification containing a 
                detailed description of the proposed contract; and
                    (B) a period of 15 days has elapsed following the 
                date of such notification.
    (e) Covered Program Defined.--In this section, the term ``covered 
program'' has the meaning given such term in section 499d of title 10, 
United States Code, as added by subsection (a).

SEC. 1632. DESIGNATION OF AIR FORCE GLOBAL STRIKE COMMAND AS NATIONAL 
              CENTER FOR CONVENTIONAL-NUCLEAR INTEGRATION.

    (a) National Center for Conventional-Nuclear Integration.--Section 
9068 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end 
the following new subsection:
    ``(d) National Center for Conventional-Nuclear Integration.--(1) 
The Air Force Global Strike Command shall serve as the National Center 
for Conventional-Nuclear Integration of the Department of the Air 
Force.
    ``(2) The responsibilities of the National Center for Conventional-
Nuclear Integration under paragraph (1) shall include the following:
            ``(A) Establishing policies and standards, and issuing 
        guidance, to integrate conventional and nuclear weapons 
        capabilities across the Air Force in a manner that aligns with 
        the operational requirements of the United States Strategic 
        Command, including with respect to integrated planning, command 
        and control, and mission execution in support of such Command.
            ``(B) Establishing a governance and coordination framework 
        to synchronize efforts for such integration across relevant 
        major commands, field commands, and centers of the Air Force.
            ``(C) Determining required education, training, and 
        exercise objectives relating to such integration, including by 
        ensuring appropriate operational plans and readiness constructs 
        of the Air Force reflect such integration.
            ``(D) Identifying any gaps in capabilities necessary for 
        such integration (including with respect to doctrine, 
        interoperability, decision support, and command and control) 
        and establishing resourcing priorities to address any such 
        gaps.''.
    (b) Deadline for Designation.--Not later than 90 days after the 
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Air Force shall 
designate the Air Force Global Strike Command as the National Center 
for Conventional-Nuclear Integration of the Department of the Air Force 
for purposes of section 9068(d) of title 10, United States Code, as 
added by subsection (a).
    (c) Implementation Plan.--
            (1) Plan.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the 
        congressional defense committees a plan for the implementation 
        of this section and the amendments made by this section. Such 
        plan shall include the following:
                    (A) A description of the organizational structure 
                of, and a resourcing strategy for, the National Center 
                for Conventional-Nuclear Integration under section 
                9068(d) of title 10, United States Code, as added by 
                subsection (a).
                    (B) Measurable objectives and milestones for the 
                implementation of the responsibilities under such 
                section 9068(d).
                    (C) An assessment of the extent to which such 
                responsibilities advance the responsibilities of the 
                Commander of the Air Force Global Strike Command 
                specified in section 9068(c) of title 10, United States 
                Code, including with respect to nuclear and long-range 
                strike missions in support of the United States 
                Strategic Command.
            (2) Form.--The plan under paragraph (1) shall be submitted 
        in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.

SEC. 1633. QUADRENNIAL REPORT ON THE PLAN FOR THE NUCLEAR WEAPONS 
              STOCKPILE, NUCLEAR WEAPONS COMPLEX, NUCLEAR WEAPONS 
              DELIVERY SYSTEMS, AND NUCLEAR WEAPONS COMMAND AND CONTROL 
              SYSTEM.

    Section 492a of title 10, United States Code, is amended as 
follows:
            (1) In the heading, by striking ``Biennial'' and inserting 
        ``Quadrennial''.
            (2) In subsection (a)--
                    (A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``2029'' and 
                inserting ``2027, and on a quadrennial basis 
                thereafter,''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (2)--
                            (i) in subparagraph (A), by striking 
                        ``enhance the safety, security, and reliability 
                        of'' and inserting ``sustain and modernize''; 
                        and
                            (ii) in subparagraph (F)--
                                    (I) by striking ``10-year period 
                                following the date of the report'' and 
                                inserting ``period covered by the 
                                future-years defense program submitted 
                                to Congress under section 221 of this 
                                title''; and
                                    (II) by striking ``such 10-year 
                                period'' and inserting ``such period''.

SEC. 1634. PROHIBITION ON REDUCTION OF INTERCONTINENTAL BALLISTIC 
              MISSILES OF THE UNITED STATES.

    (a) Prohibition.--Except as provided in subsection (b), none of the 
funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise made 
available for fiscal year 2027 for the Department of Defense may be 
obligated or expended for the following, and the Department may not 
otherwise take any action to do the following:
            (1) Reduce, or prepare to reduce, the responsiveness or 
        alert level of the intercontinental ballistic missiles of the 
        United States.
            (2) Reduce, or prepare to reduce, the quantity of deployed 
        intercontinental ballistic missiles of the United States to a 
        number less than 400.
    (b) Exception.--The prohibition under subsection (a) shall not 
apply with respect to any of the following activities:
            (1) The maintenance or sustainment of intercontinental 
        ballistic missiles.
            (2) Ensuring the safety, security, or reliability of 
        intercontinental ballistic missiles.
            (3) Facilitating the transition from the LGM-30G Minuteman 
        III intercontinental ballistic missile to the Sentinel LGM-35A 
        intercontinental ballistic missile.

SEC. 1635. LIMITATION ON REALLOCATION OF FUNDS FOR RONALD REAGAN SPACE 
              AND MISSILE TEST RANGE AND UNITED STATES ARMY GARRISON 
              KWAJALEIN ATOLL.

    (a) Limitation on Reallocation of Funds.--Funds authorized to be 
appropriated for the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2027 for 
activities at the Ronald Reagan Space and Missile Test Range or the 
United States Army Garrison Kwajalein Atoll--
            (1) may be obligated or expended only for the purposes for 
        which such funds are authorized and appropriated; and
            (2) except as expressly authorized by law, may not be 
        transferred or reprogrammed for a purpose other than the 
        purposes for which such funds are authorized and appropriated.
    (b) Exception.--The limitation under subsection (a)(2) shall not 
apply with respect to any transfer or reprogramming action that is 
carried out in accordance with section 2214 of title 10, United States 
Code.

SEC. 1636. FEASIBILITY ASSESSMENT FOR POTENTIAL DESIGNATION OF JOINT 
              GLOBAL STRIKE OPERATIONS CENTER AS GLOBAL OPERATIONS 
              CENTER-ALTERNATE.

    (a) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Air Force, in coordination 
with the Commander of the United States Strategic Command and the 
Commander of the Air Force Global Strike Command, shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report that contains an assessment 
of the feasibility, strategic benefits, risks, and resource 
requirements associated with the potential designation of the Joint 
Global Strike Operations Center at Barksdale Air Force Base, Louisiana, 
as an alternate command post to the Global Operations Center of the 
United States Strategic Command, to be known as the ``Global Operations 
Center-Alternate''.
    (b) Elements.--The report under subsection (a) shall include the 
following:
            (1) A proposal setting forth how the Joint Global Strike 
        Operations Center at Barksdale Air Force Base, Louisiana, would 
        assume and sustain responsibilities as the Global Operations 
        Center-Alternate in support of nuclear and long-range strike 
        missions of the United States Strategic Command across stages 
        of conflict and crisis response.
            (2) A proposal for the organizational structure of the 
        Global Operations Center-Alternate, including with respect to 
        relevant authorities thereof, the relationship to and required 
        coordination with the United States Strategic Command, the Air 
        Force Global Strike Command, and the Eighth Air Force (and 
        associated operational and command and control structures), and 
        arrangements for the provision and receipt of support with 
        respect to other elements of the Department of the Air Force.
            (3) An assessment of the capabilities for communications 
        and interoperability (including the redundancy, resiliency, and 
        survivability of such capabilities) necessary to perform the 
        proposed functions of the Global Operations Center-Alternate, 
        including any such capabilities relating to nuclear command, 
        control, and communications systems in support of nuclear and 
        long-range strike missions of the United States Strategic 
        Command.
            (4) An identification of the personnel levels and readiness 
        requirements necessary for the performance of such proposed 
        functions, including any specialized requirements to support 
        such missions.
            (5) An identification of any facilities or other 
        infrastructure the construction or modification of which would 
        be necessary for the performance of such proposed functions, 
        together with cost estimates and a notional timeline for any 
        such required construction or modification.
            (6) An identification of the anticipated funding needs 
        during the period covered by the most recent future-years 
        defense program submitted to Congress under section 221 of 
        title 10, United States Code, for the establishment, operation, 
        and sustainment of the Global Operations Center-Alternate, and 
        any resourcing activities or legislative authorities the 
        Secretary determines necessary for such purpose.
    (c) Briefing.--Not later than 30 days after the date on which the 
Secretary submits to the congressional defense committees the report 
under subsection (a), the Secretary shall provide to such committees an 
unclassified briefing to summarize key findings, recommended actions, 
and decision points regarding the potential designation of the Joint 
Global Strike Operations Center at Barksdale Air Force Base, Louisiana, 
as an alternate command post to the Global Operations Center of the 
United States Strategic Command.

SEC. 1637. SPACE LAUNCH COMPLEX 46.

    The Secretary of the Air Force may not take any action to reduce or 
modify the exclusive and priority use of Space Launch Complex 46 by the 
Secretary of the Navy until the date on which the Chief of Naval 
Operations submits to the congressional defense committees a 
notification that--
            (1) the test capabilities and infrastructure at Space 
        Launch Complex 51 are equivalent to such capabilities and 
        infrastructure at Space Launch Complex 46 with respect to 
        meeting the mission needs of the Secretary of the Navy; and
            (2) the Director of Navy Strategic Systems Programs has 
        issued a final acceptance and certification of the facilities 
        at Space Launch Complex 51.

SEC. 1638. MODIFICATION OF REPORT REQUIREMENT FOR CERTAIN DECISIONS 
              RELATING TO NUCLEAR WEAPONS EMPLOYMENT STRATEGY OF THE 
              UNITED STATES.

    Section 491(c) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
inserting ``, or a similar evaluation,'' after ``made pursuant to a 
Nuclear Posture Review Implementation Study''.

SEC. 1639. INDEPENDENT ASSESSMENT OF BONE MARROW RADIATION SHIELDING 
              FOR NUCLEAR SURVIVABILITY.

    (a) Assessment Required.--Not later than 30 days after the date of 
the enactment of this Act, the Assistant Secretary of Defense for 
Nuclear, Chemical, and Biological Defense, Policy and Programs shall 
seek to enter into an agreement with a University Affiliated Research 
Center affiliated with United States Strategic Command to conduct an 
independent scientific assessment on whether preserving the viability 
of bone marrow using partial body radiation shielding can improve the 
survivability of an individual exposed to gamma radiation as compared 
to an individual without such protection.
    (b) Elements.--The assessment required under subsection (a) shall 
examine peer-reviewed scientific literature, laboratory studies and 
relevant experimental data to evaluate the comparative effectiveness of 
preserving bone marrow using partial body radiation shielding with 
respect to--
            (1) the likelihood of developing Acute Radiation Syndrome;
            (2) the severity of Acute Radiation Syndrome when it 
        occurs; and
            (3) overall mortality rates following gamma radiation 
        exposure.
    (c) Report.--Not later than 150 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Assistant Secretary shall submit to the 
Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the 
Senate a report on the assessment required under subsection (a) that 
includes the findings of such assessment.

                  Subtitle D--Missile Defense Programs

SEC. 1651. PROHIBITION OF UNAUTHORIZED USE OF NAME OR SEAL OF THE 
              MISSILE DEFENSE AGENCY.

    (a) Prohibition.--Section 5502 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(d) Prohibition of Unauthorized Use of Name or Seal.--(1) Except 
with the written permission of the Secretary of Defense, no person may 
knowingly use, in connection with any merchandise, retail product, 
impersonation, solicitation, or commercial activity in a manner 
reasonably calculated to convey the impression that such use is 
approved, endorsed, or authorized by the Secretary, any of the 
following (or any colorable imitation thereof):
            ``(A) The words `Missile Defense Agency'.
            ``(B) The seal of the Missile Defense Agency.
    ``(2) Whenever it appears to the Attorney General that any person 
is engaged or is about to engage in an act or practice which 
constitutes or will constitute conduct prohibited by paragraph (1), the 
Attorney General may initiate a civil proceeding in a district court of 
the United States to enjoin such act or practice. Such court shall 
proceed as soon as practicable to the hearing and determination of such 
action and may, at any time before final determination, enter such 
restraining orders or prohibitions, or take such other actions as is 
warranted, to prevent injury to the United States or to any person or 
class of persons for whose protection the action is brought.''.
    (b) Technical Amendments.--Subsection (c)(3) of such section is 
amended--
            (1) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``the date of the 
        enactment of this subsection'' and inserting ``December 27, 
        2021,'';
            (2) in subparagraph (B)--
                    (A) by striking ``the date of the enactment of this 
                subsection'' and inserting ``December 27, 2021''; and
                    (B) by striking ``the date of such enactment'' and 
                inserting ``such date''; and
            (3) in subparagraph (C), by striking ``the date of the 
        enactment of this subsection'' and inserting ``December 27, 
        2021,''.

SEC. 1652. REMOVAL OF DUPLICATIVE MISSILE DEFENSE AGENCY TESTING 
              REQUIREMENT.

    Section 5534 of title 10, United States Code, is repealed.

SEC. 1653. UPDATED MIDDLE EAST INTEGRATED AIR AND MISSILE DEFENSE 
              STRATEGY.

    Section 1658(b) of the James M. Inhofe National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (Public Law 117-263; 136 Stat. 
2951) is amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
            ``(5) Update.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
        the enactment of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
        Fiscal Year 2027, the Secretary of Defense, in consultation 
        with the Secretary of State, shall submit to the congressional 
        defense committees, the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the 
        House of Representatives, and the Committee on Foreign 
        Relations of the Senate an update to the strategy under 
        paragraph (1).''.

SEC. 1654. NEXT-GENERATION INTEGRATED AIR AND MISSILE DEFENSE SYSTEM 
              MUNITIONS STRATEGY.

    (a) Plan 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 an alternative plan with respect to 
procuring munitions for the next-generation air and missile defense 
architecture being developed pursuant to Executive Order 14186 (90 Fed. 
Reg. 8767).
    (b) Elements.--The plan under subsection (a) shall include the 
following:
            (1) A summary of the munitions and associated procurement 
        quantities necessary to meet mission objectives by 2028.
            (2) An assessment of current and near-term planned 
        production capacity for each munition.
            (3) An overview of alternative munitions with potential air 
        and missile defense capability, including the production 
        capacity of each such munition.
            (4) An evaluation of the feasibility of incorporating 
        alternative munitions into the next-generation air and missile 
        defense architecture and associated effects on operational 
        performance.

SEC. 1655. SPACE-BASED INTERCEPTORS.

    (a) Independent Life-cycle Cost Estimate.--
            (1) Requirement.--The Director of Cost Assessment and 
        Program Evaluation shall conduct an independent life-cycle cost 
        estimate of the space-based interceptor program.
            (2) Affordability controls.--Following the completion of 
        the independent life-cycle cost estimate under paragraph (1), 
        the Secretary of Defense shall ensure that the space-based 
        interceptor program meets affordability controls in accordance 
        with section 4271 of title 10, United States Code.
            (3) Submission.--The Secretary may not award a full-rate 
        production contract for the space-based interceptor program 
        unless the Secretary has submitted to the congressional defense 
        committees--
                    (A) the preliminary findings of the independent 
                cost assessment under paragraph (1); and
                    (B) a notification that the goals under section 
                4271(a)(2) of title 10, United States Code, have been 
                established with respect to such program.
    (b) Flight Test.--In addition to the requirements of section 4171 
of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary may not make any 
decision regarding full-rate production, or equivalent, of the space-
based interceptor unless the Secretary has--
            (1) certified to the congressional defense committees that 
        the Secretary has conducted at least one successful 
        operationally relevant flight test of the space-based 
        interceptor; and
            (2) provided to such committees a briefing on the details 
        of such tests, including with respect to the operational 
        realism of such tests.

SEC. 1656. LOW-COST EXO-ATMOSPHERIC INTERCEPTOR DEVELOPMENT.

    (a) Requirement.--The Secretary of Defense, acting through the 
Director of the Missile Defense Agency, shall carry out a program to 
develop and demonstrate a low-cost exo-atmospheric interceptor to 
provide complementary, scalable intercept capability to existing 
interceptors in the ballistic missile defense architecture.
    (b) Briefing.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Director of the Missile Defense Agency shall 
provide the congressional defense committees a briefing on programs and 
activities carried out under this section.
    (c) Report.--Not later than 180 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) the current threat environment necessitating low-cost 
        and scalable exo-atmospheric intercept capability; and
            (2) the acquisition strategy for a low-cost and scalable 
        exo-atmospheric interceptor program.

                       Subtitle E--Other Matters

SEC. 1661. BRIEFINGS AND REPORTS ON CROSS-FUNCTIONAL TEAM FOR ANOMALOUS 
              HEALTH INCIDENTS.

    (a) Briefings and Reports.--Subsection (e) of section 910 of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2022 (Public Law 
117-81; 10 U.S.C. 111 note) is amended to read as follows:
    ``(e) Updates.--(1) The Secretary shall provide to the appropriate 
congressional committees a briefing containing updates on the 
activities carried out by the cross-functional team during the period 
covered by the briefing as follows:
            ``(A) On a quarterly basis during the period beginning 
        January 1, 2027, and ending December 31, 2028.
            ``(B) On a semiannual basis during the period beginning 
        January 1, 2029, and ending December 31, 2030.
    ``(2) On an annual basis during the period beginning January 1, 
2027, and ending December 31, 2030, the Secretary shall submit to the 
appropriate congressional committees a report on the activities carried 
out by the cross-functional team during the period covered by the 
report.''.
    (b) Transfer.--Section 910 of the National Defense Authorization 
Act for Fiscal Year 2022 (Public Law 117-81; 10 U.S.C. 111 note) is--
            (1) transferred to chapter 21 of title 10, United States 
        Code;
            (2) inserted after section 430e; and
            (3) redesignated as section 430f.
    (c) Conforming Amendments.--Section 430f of title 10, United States 
Code, as added by subsection (b), is amended--
            (1) in the enumerator, by striking ``SEC.'' and inserting 
        ``Sec. '';
            (2) in the section heading--
                    (A) by striking the period at the end; and
                    (B) by conforming the typeface and typestyle, 
                including capitalization, to the typeface and typestyle 
                as used in the section heading of section 430e of such 
                title; and
            (3) in subsection (a), by striking ``title 10, United 
        States Code'' and inserting ``this title''.

SEC. 1662. COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION FUNDS.

    (a) Funding Allocation.--Of the $221,332,000 authorized to be 
appropriated to the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2027 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 delivery system threat reduction, $0.
            (2) For chemical security and elimination, $23,435,000.
            (3) For global nuclear security, $29,950,000.
            (4) For biological threat reduction, $66,524,000.
            (5) For proliferation prevention, $52,052,000.
            (6) For transportation elimination disposition, 
        $26,414,000.
            (7) For activities designated as Other Assessments/
        Administration Costs, $22,957,000.
    (b) Specification of Cooperative Threat Reduction 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 2027, 2028, and 2029.

SEC. 1663. SOLID ROCKET MOTOR INDUSTRIAL BASE.

    (a) Solid Rocket Motor Qualification Working Group.--
            (1) Establishment.--Not later than 90 days after the date 
        of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall 
        establish a working group of the Department of Defense to be 
        known as the ``Solid Rocket Motor Qualification Working Group'' 
        to expedite the qualification of solid rocket motors from a 
        supplier that does not otherwise supply such motors.
            (2) Membership.--The Solid Rocket Motor Qualification 
        Working Group shall consist of a representative from each of 
        the following:
                    (A) The Department of the Army.
                    (B) The Department of the Navy.
                    (C) The Department of the Air Force.
                    (D) The Missile Defense Agency.
                    (E) The Office of the Assistant Secretary of 
                Defense for Industrial Base Policy.
                    (F) Any other component of the Department of 
                Defense the Secretary of Defense determines 
                appropriate.
            (3) Duties.--The Solid Rocket Motor Qualification Working 
        Group shall--
                    (A) establish a strategy and implementation plan 
                for the Department of Defense with respect to the 
                qualification process for solid rocket motors from a 
                contractor that does not otherwise supply such motors; 
                and
                    (B) designate not fewer than three missile programs 
                for which the Secretary of Defense will expedite such 
                qualification.
            (4) Reports.--
                    (A) Annual reports.--Not later than September 30, 
                2027, and annually thereafter through September 30, 
                2031, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional 
                defense committees a report on the actions carried out 
                by the Solid Rocket Motor Qualification Working Group, 
                including--
                            (i) the status of qualifying solid rocket 
                        motors from a contractor that does not 
                        otherwise supply such motors;
                            (ii) an implementation plan for such 
                        qualification; and
                            (iii) an estimate of the costs to carry out 
                        such plan with respect to each new solid rocket 
                        motor or contractor, or both.
                    (B) Initial report.--Not later than 90 days after 
                the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of 
                Defense shall submit to the congressional defense 
                committees a report containing--
                            (i) a certification that the Secretary has 
                        established the Solid Rocket Motor 
                        Qualification Working Group;
                            (ii) an identification of who is leading 
                        the Working Group; and
                            (iii) the strategy and implementation plan 
                        under paragraph (3)(A).
                    (C) Limitation.--Of the amounts authorized to be 
                appropriated by this Act or otherwise made available 
                for fiscal year 2027 for the travel expenses of the 
                Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and 
                Sustainment, not more than 75 percent may be obligated 
                or expended until the date on which the report under 
                subparagraph (B) is submitted.
    (b) Second Sourcing for Production of Existing Critical 
Munitions.--
            (1) Requirement.--The Secretary of Defense shall ensure 
        that a prime contractor that provides a covered munition 
        sources solid rocket motors for such munition from more than 
        one supplier.
            (2) Annual certifications.--
                    (A) Requirement.--Except as provided by 
                subparagraph (B), at the same time as the President 
                submits to Congress the annual budget request under 
                section 1105 of title 31, United States Code, for a 
                fiscal year, the Secretary shall submit to the 
                congressional defense committees a certification that, 
                for each covered munition, a second supplier has been 
                identified from which the prime contractor will source 
                solid rocket motors for such munition during the fiscal 
                year covered by that budget.
                    (B) Initial certification.--The Secretary shall 
                submit the initial certification under subparagraph (A) 
                by not later than September 1, 2027, with respect to 
                fiscal year 2028.
                    (C) Limitation.--Of the amounts authorized to be 
                appropriated by this Act or otherwise made available 
                for fiscal year 2028 and any fiscal year thereafter for 
                any office described in subparagraph (D), not more than 
                50 percent may be obligated or expended unless the 
                Secretary has submitted the certification under 
                subparagraph (A) for that fiscal year.
                    (D) Office described.--An office described in this 
                subparagraph is any of the following:
                            (i) The Office of the Deputy Secretary of 
                        Defense.
                            (ii) The Office of the Economic Defense 
                        Unit.
            (3) Report.--Not later than 120 days after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the 
        congressional defense committees a report on carrying out 
        paragraph (1), including--
                    (A) a timeline and the costs associated with 
                procuring from a second supplier the munitions covered 
                by such paragraph;
                    (B) an identification of each such second supplier; 
                and
                    (C) an assessment on the feasibility and 
                advisability of the Secretary carrying out a direct 
                supply strategy regarding the procurement of solid 
                rocket motors by the Department to support critical 
                munition production.
    (c) Production of New Munitions.--With respect to a contract or 
other agreement entered into for a covered munition on or after October 
1, 2027, the Secretary of Defense, acting through the Secretaries of 
the military departments and the Under Secretary of Defense for 
Acquisition and Sustainment, shall ensure that not fewer than two solid 
rocket motor suppliers are providing solid rocket motors for such 
munition.
    (d) Covered Munition.--In this section, the term ``covered 
munition'' means any of the following:
            (1) Patriot advanced capability-3 missile segment 
        enhancement.
            (2) Terminal high altitude area defense interceptors.
            (3) All standard missile variants (including standard 
        missile-6, standard missile-3 blocks IB and IIA).
            (4) Tomahawk land attack missiles.
            (5) Maritime strike Tomahawk missiles.
            (6) Advanced medium-range air-to-air missiles.
            (7) Precision strike missiles.
            (8) Hydra 70 rockets.
            (9) Any other munitions the Secretary determines 
        appropriate.

                   TITLE XVII--OTHER DEFENSE MATTERS

         Subtitle A--Miscellaneous Authorities and Limitations

SEC. 1701. AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE STATE 
              PARTNERSHIP PROGRAM.

    Section 341(e)(1)(A) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
inserting ``, including costs incurred with respect to activities 
beginning in a fiscal year and ending not later than the end of the 
first fiscal year thereafter'' before the semicolon.

SEC. 1702. INCLUSION OF MEMBERS OF SPECIAL OPERATIONS FORCES IN 
              PRESEPARATION COUNSELING.

    Section 1142(a)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by inserting ``(including each member of the special 
        operations forces)'' after ``armed forces'';
            (2) by inserting ``(A)'' before ``Within''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph: 
        ``(B)''
    ``(B) The Secretary concerned shall ensure that a member described 
in subparagraph (A) receives preseparation counseling in the following 
amounts:
            ``(i) In the case of a member who has accepted an offer of 
        full-time employment,or has enrolled in a program of education 
        or vocational training, that shall commence after the member 
        separates, retires, or is discharged, not fewer than three 
        days.
            ``(ii) In the case of a member other than a member 
        described in clause (i), not fewer than five days.''.

SEC. 1703. COPYRIGHT TO A LITERARY WORK PRODUCED BY A CIVILIAN FACULTY 
              MEMBER OF A SPACE FORCE PROFESSIONAL MILITARY EDUCATION 
              PROGRAM IN THE COURSE OF EMPLOYMENT: FREE USE BY THE 
              FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.

    (a) Use by Federal Government.--Subsection (d)(2) of section 105 of 
title 17, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subparagraphs (M) through (O) as 
        subparagraphs (O) through (Q); and
            (2) by inserting after subparagraph (L) the following new 
        subparagraphs:
                    ``(M) Space Force Senior Level Education Program.
                    ``(N) Space Force Intermediate Level Education 
                Program.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendments.--Subsection (c) of such section is 
amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)--
                    (A) by striking ``through (L)'' and inserting 
                ``through (N)''; and
                    (B) by striking ``subparagraph (M)'' and inserting 
                ``subparagraph (O)'';
            (2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``subsection (d)(2)(M)'' 
        and inserting ``subsection (d)(2)(O)'';
            (3) in paragraph (3), by striking ``subsection (d)(2)(N)'' 
        and inserting ``subsection (d)(2)(P)''; and
            (4) in paragraph (4), by striking ``subsection (d)(2)(O)'' 
        and inserting ``subsection (d)(2)(Q)''.

SEC. 1704. INAPPLICABILITY OF DEFENSE BASE ACT TO GUAM.

    Section 1 of the Defense Base Act (42 U.S.C. 1651) is amended--
            (1) in subsection (b)--
                    (A) in paragraph (4), by striking ``and the 
                District of Columbia.'' and inserting ``, the District 
                of Columbia, and Guam;'';
                    (B) by adding at the end the following new 
                paragraph:
            ``(5) the term `Territory or possession outside the 
        continental United States' does not include Guam.''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following:
    ``(g) Limitation on Applicability.--This section shall only apply 
to Guam during periods in which Guam has in effect worker's 
compensation regulations that are comparable to the laws and 
regulations of worker's compensation regulations in any of the 50 
States.''.

SEC. 1705. EXTENSION OF ADMISSION FOR CERTAIN NONIMMIGRANT H-2B 
              WORKERS.

    Section 6(b)(1)(B) of the Joint Resolution entitled ``A Joint 
Resolution to approve the `Covenant to Establish a Commonwealth of the 
Northern Mariana Islands in Political Union with the United States of 
America', and for other purposes'', approved March 24, 1976 (48 U.S.C. 
1806(b)(1)(B)), is amended, in the matter preceding clause (i), by 
striking ``December 31, 2029'' and inserting ``December 31, 2035''.

SEC. 1706. REAUTHORIZATION OF THE CYBERSECURITY ACT OF 2015.

    (a) In General.--The Cybersecurity Act of 2015 (6 U.S.C. 1501 et 
seq.; enacted as division N of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 
2016; Public Law 114-113) is amended--
            (1) in section 102 (6 U.S.C. 1501; relating to 
        definitions)--
                    (A) by redesignating paragraphs (4), (5), (6), (7), 
                (8), (9), (10), (11), (12), (13), (14), (15), (16), 
                (17), and (18) as paragraphs (6), (7), (8), (9), (10), 
                (11), (12), (13), (14), (15), (16), (17), (18), (19), 
                and (20), respectively; and
                    (B) by inserting after paragraph (3) the following 
                new paragraphs:
            ``(4) Artificial intelligence.--The term `artificial 
        intelligence' has the meaning given such term in section 5002 
        of the National Artificial Intelligence Initiative Act of 2020 
        (15 U.S.C. 9401).
            ``(5) Critical infrastructure.--The term `critical 
        infrastructure' has the meaning given such term in section 
        1016(e) of Public Law 107-56 (42 U.S.C. 5195c(e)).'';
            (2) in section 103 (6 U.S.C. 1502; relating to sharing of 
        information by the Federal Government)--
                    (A) in subsection (a), in the matter preceding 
                paragraph (1), by striking ``develop and issue'' and 
                inserting ``develop, issue, and, as appropriate, 
                update''; and
                    (B) in subsection (b)--
                            (i) in paragraph (1)--
                                    (I) in the matter preceding 
                                subparagraph (A), by inserting ``and, 
                                as appropriate, updated,'' after 
                                ``developed'';
                                    (II) by amending subparagraph (A) 
                                to read as follows:
                    ``(A) ensure the Federal Government has and 
                maintains the capability to share cyber threat 
                indicators and defensive measures in real-time 
                consistent with the protection of classified 
                information, and maintains the capability to provide 
                technical assistance, on a voluntary basis, to non-
                Federal entities in utilizing cyber threat indicators 
                and defensive measures for cybersecurity purposes;'';
                                    (III) in subparagraph (E)(ii), by 
                                striking ``and'' after the semicolon;
                                    (IV) in subparagraph (F), by 
                                striking the period and inserting ``; 
                                and''; and
                                    (V) by adding at the end the 
                                following new subparagraph:
                    ``(G) pursuant to section 2212 of the Homeland 
                Security Act of 2002 (6 U.S.C. 662), provide one-time 
                read-ins, as appropriate, to select individuals 
                identified by non-Federal entities that own or operate 
                critical infrastructure or artificial intelligence;''; 
                and
                            (ii) in paragraph (2)--
                                    (I) by inserting ``and, as 
                                appropriate, updating,'' after 
                                ``developing''; and
                                    (II) by inserting ``and defensive 
                                measures'' after ``promote the sharing 
                                of cyber threat indicators''; and
                    (C) in subsection (c)--
                            (i) by inserting ``and not later than 60 
                        days after any update, as appropriate, of 
                        procedures required by subsection (a),'' after 
                        ``Act,''; and
                            (ii) by inserting ``(or update, as 
                        appropriate)'' after ``procedures'';
            (3) in section 104 (6 U.S.C. 1503; relating to 
        authorizations for preventing, detecting, analyzing, and 
        mitigating cybersecurity threats)--
                    (A) in paragraph (3) of subsection (c)--
                            (i) in the matter preceding subparagraph 
                        (A), by striking ``shall be'' and inserting 
                        ``may be'';
                            (ii) in subparagraph (A), by striking 
                        ``or'' after the semicolon;
                            (iii) in subparagraph (B), by striking the 
                        period and inserting ``; or''; and
                            (iv) by adding at the end the following new 
                        subparagraph:
                    ``(C) to preclude the use of artificial 
                intelligence that is strictly deployed for 
                cybersecurity purposes in carrying out the activities 
                authorized under paragraph (1) provided that such 
                deployment complies with section 105(d)(5).''; and
                    (B) in subparagraph (B) of subsection (d)(2), by 
                inserting ``, which may utilize artificial intelligence 
                that is strictly deployed for cybersecurity purposes,'' 
                after ``technical capability'';
            (4) in section 105 (6 U.S.C. 1504; relating to sharing of 
        cyber threat indicators and defensive measures with the Federal 
        Government)--
                    (A) in subsection (a)--
                            (i) in paragraph (2), by adding at the end 
                        the following new sentences: ``As appropriate, 
                        the Attorney General and the Secretary of 
                        Homeland Security shall, in consultation with 
                        the heads of the appropriate Federal entities, 
                        jointly update such policies and procedures, 
                        and issue and make publicly available such 
                        updated policies and procedures. Such updates 
                        shall prioritize rapid dissemination to State, 
                        local, Tribal, and territorial governments and 
                        owners and operators of non-Federal critical 
                        infrastructure or artificial intelligence of 
                        relevant and actionable cyber threat indicators 
                        and defensive measures.'';
                            (ii) in paragraph (3), in the matter 
                        preceding subparagraph (A), by striking 
                        ``developed or issued'' and inserting 
                        ``developed, issued, or, as appropriate, 
                        updated,''; and
                            (iii) in paragraph (4)--
                                    (I) in subparagraph (A), by adding 
                                at the end the following new sentence: 
                                ``As appropriate, the Attorney General 
                                and the Secretary of Homeland Security 
                                shall jointly update and make publicly 
                                available such guidance to so assist 
                                entities and promote such sharing of 
                                cyber threat indicators and defensive 
                                measures with such Federal entities 
                                under this title.''; and
                                    (II) in subparagraph (B), in the 
                                matter preceding clause (i), by 
                                inserting ``and, as appropriate, 
                                updated,'' after ``developed'';
                    (B) in subsection (b)--
                            (i) in paragraph (2)(B), by inserting ``, 
                        and, as appropriate, update,'' after 
                        ``review''; and
                            (ii) in paragraph (3), in the matter 
                        preceding subparagraph (A), by inserting ``and, 
                        as appropriate, updated,'' after ``required''; 
                        and
                    (C) in subsection (c)--
                            (i) in paragraph (1)(D), by inserting ``, 
                        including if such capability and process 
                        employs artificial intelligence'' before the 
                        semicolon; and
                            (ii) in paragraph (2), by adding at the end 
                        the following new subparagraphs:
                    ``(C) Outreach.--Not later than 90 days after the 
                date of the enactment of this subparagraph, the 
                Secretary of Homeland Security shall develop and 
                continuously implement an outreach plan, including 
                targeted engagement, to ensure Federal and non-Federal 
                entities, particularly small or rural owners or 
                operators of critical infrastructure which often lack 
                dedicated cybersecurity staff but remain vital to 
                national security--
                            ``(i) are aware of the capability and 
                        process required by paragraph (1) to share 
                        cyber threat indicators and defensive measures, 
                        including the benefits real-time information 
                        sharing provides;
                            ``(ii) understand how to share cyber threat 
                        indicators and defensive measures;
                            ``(iii) understand the obligation to remove 
                        certain personal information in accordance with 
                        section 104(d)(7) prior to sharing a cyber 
                        threat indicator;
                            ``(iv) understand how cyber threat 
                        indicators and defensive measures are received, 
                        processed, used, and protected;
                            ``(v) understand the protections they are 
                        afforded in sharing any cyber threat indicators 
                        and defensive measures; and
                            ``(vi) can provide feedback to the 
                        Secretary when policies, procedures, and 
                        guidelines that are unclear or unintentionally 
                        prohibitive to sharing cyber threat indicators 
                        and defensive measures.
                    ``(D) Briefings on outreach.--The Secretary of 
                Homeland Security shall annually provide to the 
                Committee on Homeland Security of the House of 
                Representatives and the Committee on Homeland Security 
                and Governmental Affairs of the Senate a briefing on 
                the implementation of outreach pursuant to subparagraph 
                (B).''; and
                    (D) in subsection (d)--
                            (i) in paragraph (1), by striking ``trade 
                        secret protection'' and inserting 
                        ``intellectual property protection''; and
                            (ii) in paragraph (5)(A),
                                    (I) in clause (iv), by striking 
                                ``or'' after the semicolon;
                                    (II) in clause (v)(III), by 
                                striking the period and inserting ``; 
                                or''; and
                                    (III) by adding at the end the 
                                following new clause:
                            ``(vi) the purpose of rapidly providing to 
                        other Federal entities awareness of a 
                        cybersecurity threat that may impact the 
                        information systems of such Agencies.'';
            (5) in section 108 (6 U.S.C. 1507; relating to construction 
        and preemption)--
                    (A) in subsection (c)--
                            (i) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), 
                        by striking ``shall be'' and inserting ``may 
                        be'';
                            (ii) in paragraph (2), by striking ``or'' 
                        after the semicolon;
                            (iii) in paragraph (3), by striking the 
                        period and inserting ``; or''; and
                            (iv) by adding at the end the following new 
                        paragraph:
            ``(4) to preclude the use of artificial intelligence that 
        is strictly deployed for cybersecurity purposes in carrying out 
        activities authorized by this title.''; and
                    (B) in subsection (f)(3), by inserting ``to share 
                cyber threat indicators or defensive measures'' after 
                ``relationship'';
            (6) in section 109 (6 U.S.C. 1508; relating to report on 
        cybersecurity threats)--
                    (A) in subsection (a)--
                            (i) by inserting ``and not later than 
                        September 30 of every two years thereafter,'' 
                        after ``Act,'';
                            (ii) by inserting ``the Secretary of 
                        Homeland Security and'' after ``in coordination 
                        with'';
                            (iii) by inserting ``and the Committee on 
                        Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs'' 
                        before ``of the Senate'';
                            (iv) by inserting ``and the Committee on 
                        Homeland Security'' before ``of the House''; 
                        and
                            (v) by inserting ``prepositioning 
                        activities, ransomware,'' after ``attacks,''; 
                        and
                    (B) in subsection (b)--
                            (i) in paragraph (1), by inserting 
                        ``prepositioning activities, ransomware,'' 
                        after ``attacks,'';
                            (ii) in paragraph (2), by inserting 
                        ``prepositioning activity, ransomware,'' after 
                        ``attack,'';
                            (iii) in paragraph (3), by inserting 
                        ``prepositioning activities, ransomware,'' 
                        after ``attacks,'' each place it appears; and
                            (iv) in paragraph (4), by inserting 
                        ``prepositioning activities, ransomware,'' 
                        after ``attacks,''; and
            (7) in section 111(a) (6 U.S.C. 1510(a), relating to 
        effective period), by striking ``2025'' and inserting ``2035''.
    (b) Conforming Amendments.--Section 2200 of the Homeland Security 
Act of 2002 (6 U.S.C. 650; relating to definitions) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (5)--
                    (A) in subparagraph (B), by inserting ``or 
                compromising'' after ``defeating'';
                    (B) in subparagraph (C), by inserting ``including a 
                security vulnerability affecting an information system 
                or a technology included in the critical and emerging 
                technologies list of the Office of Science and 
                Technology Policy or successor list, such as artificial 
                intelligence, which may be in a Federal entity's or 
                non-Federal entity's software or hardware supply 
                chain,'' after ``security vulnerability,'';
                    (C) in subparagraph (D), by inserting ``or 
                compromise'' after ``defeat''; and
                    (D) in subparagraph (F), by inserting ``or 
                compromised'' after ``exfiltrated'';
            (2) in paragraph (14), by amending subparagraph (B) to read 
        as follows:
                    ``(B) includes, in accordance with section 
                104(d)(2) of the Cybersecurity Sharing Act of 2015 (6 
                U.S.C. 1503(d)(2)), operational technology, including 
                industrial control systems, such as supervisory control 
                and data acquisition systems, distributed control 
                systems, and programmable logic controllers.''; and
            (3) in paragraph (25), by inserting ``or compromise'' after 
        ``defeat''.

SEC. 1707. UNITED STATES-ABRAHAM ACCORDS DEFENSE COOPERATION 
              INITIATIVE.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary of Defense may establish a United 
States-Abraham Accords Defense Cooperation Initiative (in this section 
referred to as the ``Initiative'') to bolster defense cooperation 
between the United States and the militaries of Abraham Accords 
countries.
    (b) Relationship to Existing Authorities.--An Initiative 
established under subsection (a) shall be carried out pursuant to the 
authorities provided in title 10, United States Code.
    (c) Objectives.--The objectives of the Initiative shall include--
            (1) deterring aggression by Iran and proxies of Iran in the 
        Middle East;
            (2) coordination with the Comprehensive Security 
        Integration and Prosperity Agreement; and
            (3) enhancing regional planning and cooperation among the 
        militaries of Abraham Accords countries, particularly with 
        respect to long-term regional projects, such as--
                    (A) counter-unmanned aircraft systems capabilities;
                    (B) ground-based air defenses;
                    (C) theater ballistic missiles and cruise missiles;
                    (D) intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance 
                and tactical command and control;
                    (E) special operations forces development;
                    (F) joint air or naval military exercises; and
                    (G) any other military capability the Secretary 
                considers appropriate.
    (d) Report.--Not later than 6 months after the date on which the 
Initiative is established under subsection (a), the Secretary shall 
submit to the congressional defense committees a report setting forth a 
strategy for achieving the objectives described in subsection (c).
    (e) Abraham Accords Country Defined.--In this section, the term 
``Abraham Accords country'' means--
            (1) a country that is a signatory of the Abraham Accords 
        Declaration, done at Washington September 15, 2020; and
            (2) any regional, Arab, or Muslim-majority country that has 
        sought to normalize relations with the State of Israel since 
        2020.

SEC. 1708. ESTABLISHMENT OF THE ATOMIC CIVILIANS COMMEMORATIVE SERVICE 
              MEDAL.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall design and produce 
a commemorative service medal, to be known as the ``Atomic Civilians 
Commemorative Service Medal'' (in this section referred to as the 
``Medal''), to commemorate the service and sacrifice of civilian 
employees and contractors of the Department of Defense and other 
Federal agencies who were instrumental in the development of our 
Nation's atomic and nuclear weapons programs.
    (b) Eligibility Requirements.--
            (1) Eligibility.--Current or former civilian employees, and 
        former employees of any contractor, of the United States 
        Government shall be eligible for the Medal if such individual--
                    (A) directly participated in the detonation of an 
                atomic weapon or device;
                    (B) directly participated in the cleanup of 
                radioactive material resulting from any such 
                atmospheric detonation;
                    (C) directly participated in the cleanup of 
                radioactive material resulting from an accident 
                associated with an atomic weapon; or
                    (D) was exposed to ionizing radiation resulting 
                from the operational use of atomic weapons during World 
                War II.
            (2) Documentation.--The Secretary of Defense may require 
        individuals to submit supporting documentation for the medal 
        authorized in subsection (a) to determine eligibility under 
        paragraph (1).
    (c) Distribution of Medal.--
            (1) Issuance to retired and former civilian employees.--At 
        the request of an eligible individual described under 
        subsection (b)(1), the Secretary of Defense shall issue the 
        Medal to such individual.
            (2) Issuance to next-of-kin.--In the case of am individual 
        who is deceased but would otherwise be eligible for the Medal, 
        the Secretary may provide for issuance of the Medal to the 
        next-of-kin of such individual. If applications for a Medal are 
        filed by more than one next of kin of such an individual, the 
        Secretary of Defense shall determine which next-of-kin will 
        receive the Medal.
            (3) Application.--The Secretary shall prepare and 
        disseminate as appropriate an application by which eligible 
        individuals and their next-of-kin may apply to receive the 
        Medal.

SEC. 1709. ESTABLISHMENT OF THE BLAST OVERPRESSURE TASK FORCE OF THE 
              DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS.

    (a) Establishment.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Veterans Affairs shall appoint, 
through the Department of Veterans Affairs-Department of Defense Joint 
Executive Committee under section 320 of title 38, United States Code, 
the Blast Overpressure Task Force of the Department of Veterans Affairs 
(in this section referred to as the ``Task Force'').
    (b) Membership.--Each member of the Task Force appointed under 
subsection (a) shall be a member of the Health Executive Committee 
under subsection (b)(2) of such section who, at the time of 
appointment, is involved in research regarding the mitigation and 
treatment of blast overpressure or blast exposure.
    (c) Duties.--The duties of the Task Force are the following:
            (1) To improve how the Secretary of Veterans Affairs, in 
        consultation with the Secretary of Defense, provides health 
        care and other benefits to veterans or members of the Armed 
        Forces diagnosed with traumatic brain injury, post-traumatic 
        stress disorder, or other symptoms, from blast overpressure or 
        blast exposure.
            (2) To align research agendas and acquisition strategies of 
        the Department regarding such health care.
            (3) To establish physiological and cognitive performance 
        baselines for such veterans and members.
            (4) To prioritize translational research regarding such 
        veterans and members, including research regarding--
                    (A) sleep therapy;
                    (B) blast-related gut health;
                    (C) mobile diagnostics;
                    (D) vestibular dysfunction and balance impairment;
                    (E) autonomic nervous system dysregulation;
                    (F) cumulative mild traumatic brain injury;
                    (G) neuroinflammation and glial activation; and
                    (H) any other issue determined appropriate by the 
                Secretary.
            (5) To monitor sensory decline (including with regards to 
        vision, hearing, and vestibular function) and stress-related 
        impairments among such veterans and members.
            (6) To support continuity of such care by integrating 
        mobile and longitudinal diagnostic tools.
    (d) Reports.--The Task Force shall issue annual reports to the 
Committees on Veterans' Affairs and on Armed Services of the Senate and 
House of Representatives. Each such report shall include the following 
elements:
            (1) Details of research initiatives, coordination outcomes, 
        and clinical advancements of the Task Force.
            (2) Recommendations of the Task Force regarding--
                    (A) how claims processors of the Department of 
                Veterans Affairs should evaluate evidence that links 
                such conditions to active military, naval, air, or 
                space service; and
                    (B) best practices regarding the evaluation of 
                neurological injuries in examinations for benefits 
                under chapters 11 or 15 of title 38, United States 
                Code.
    (e) Sunset.--The Task Force shall terminate on September 30, 2029.

SEC. 1710. AUTHORIZATION OF TRANSFER OF CERTAIN LAND NEAR DAYTON 
              NATIONAL CEMETERY TO DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS.

    (a) Transfer.--Not later than 30 days after the date on which the 
Montgomery County Land Bank makes an offer to transfer to the 
Department of Veterans Affairs the parcel of land described in 
subsection (b), the Secretary of Veterans Affairs shall begin the 
process of entering into an agreement with the Land Bank to carry out 
such transfer. Under any such agreement--
            (1) the Land Bank shall agree to transfer to the Department 
        all right, title, and interest in such parcel at no cost of the 
        land to the Department and for no consideration; and
            (2) the Secretary shall agree to accept such transfer--
                    (A) in order to use such parcel as a national 
                cemetery; and
                    (B) not later than three years after the date on 
                which the Land Bank offers to transfer the parcel.
    (b) Parcel Described.--The parcel of land described in this 
subsection is the approximately 58 acres of land located in Dayton, 
Ohio, across from Dayton National Cemetery, bound by the intersection 
of McCall St. and South Gettysburg Avenue, the intersection of McCall 
Street and Resaca Avenue, the intersection of South Gettysburg Avenue 
and U.S. Route 35 of the Interstate Highway System, and depicted on the 
map titled ``Dayton National Cemetery Proposed Land Transfer'' and 
dated January 26, 2024, and labeled on the map as ``Expansion Area''.
    (c) Rules of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to--
            (1) require or encourage the Secretary to acquire any 
        parcel other than the parcel described in subsection (b); or
            (2) require or encourage the Secretary to enter into any 
        special agreement with an entity other than the Montgomery 
        County Land Bank.
    (d) Montgomery County Land Bank Defined.--In this section, the 
Montgomery County Land Bank means the land bank located at 130 W. 
Second Street, Suite 1425, Dayton, Ohio 45402.

                       Subtitle B--Other Matters

SEC. 1721. TECHNICAL AND CONFORMING AMENDMENTS.

    (a) Title 10, United States Code.--Title 10, United States Code, is 
amended as follows:
            (1) By redesignating the second section 130g (relating to 
        notification requirements for waivers issued under Department 
        of Defense guidance related to autonomy in weapon systems) as 
        section 130h.
            (2) In section 130i(m)(4), by striking ```covered facility 
        or asset--''' and inserting ```covered facility or asset'--''.
            (3) In section 179(f)--
                    (A) in paragraph (3)(C), by striking ``section 
                6218'' and inserting ``section 6128''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (6), by striking ``section 
                231(f)'' and inserting ``section 231(h)(1)''.
            (4) In section 222c--
                    (A) in subsection (c) by redesignating the second 
                paragraph (9) (relating to the estimated aggregate 
                demand from United States allies and partners) as 
                paragraph (10);
                    (B) in subsection (f), by striking ``paragraph 
                (1)'' and inserting ``subsection (e)(1)''; and
                    (C) in subsection (g), by striking ``subsection 
                (c)(9)'' and inserting ``subsection (c)(10)''.
            (5) In section 345(c)(4)(B), by striking ``"The'' and 
        inserting ``The''.
            (6) In section 430e(a)(2)(C), by striking ``; and'' and 
        inserting a period.
            (7) In section 500f(b), by inserting ``of this title'' 
        after ``section 500e''.
            (8) In section 714(b)(1), by inserting ``of subsection 
        (a)'' after ``paragraphs (1) through (7)''.
            (9) In section 1096(e)--
                    (A) in paragraph (2)(A), by inserting ``National'' 
                before ``Institute''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (4)(A), by striking ``1621'' and 
                inserting ``1601''.
            (10) In section 1142--
                    (A) in subsection (b)(9)(A), by striking ``,,'' and 
                inserting a comma; and
                    (B) in subsection (c), by redesignating 
                subparagraph (R) as subparagraph (Q).
            (11) In section 1597(d), by inserting a comma after 
        ``involuntary reduction''.
            (12) In section 1733(d)--
                    (A) by redesignating the second paragraph (3) 
                through paragraph (9) as paragraphs (4) through (10), 
                respectively; and
                    (B) in paragraph (8), as so redesignated, by 
                inserting ``and'' before ``critical readiness''.
            (13) In section 2004c(h)(2), by striking ``subsection (f)'' 
        and inserting ``subsection (g)''.
            (14) In section 2200h(b)(2), by inserting ``of'' after 
        ``renew the appointment''.
            (15) In section 2866a(g)(2)(B), by striking ``subsection 
        (d)(1)(E)'' and inserting ``subsection (d)(2)(E)''.
            (16) In section 3702(a)(3)(A)(ii), by striking ``..'' and 
        inserting ``.''.
            (17) In section 4324, by redesignating subsection (d) as 
        subsection (c).
            (18) In section 4402(e)(1)(B), by striking ``the the'' and 
        inserting ``the''.
            (19) In section 9040(b)(4), by inserting a comma after 
        ``Secretary of the Air Force''.
    (b) Title 37, United States Code.--Title 37, United States Code, is 
amended as follows:
            (1) In paragraph (24)(H) of section 101, by striking 
        ``Reserve Corps of the Public Health Service'' and inserting 
        ``Ready Reserve Corps of the Public Health Service''.
            (2) In section 206(d)(2), by striking ``Ready Reserve or'' 
        and inserting ``Ready Reserve, or of''.
            (3) In section 302a(a)(2)(B), by striking ``Reserve Corps 
        of the Public Health Service'' and inserting ``Ready Reserve 
        Corps of the Public Health Service''.
            (4) In section 302i(b)(1), by striking ``Reserve Corps of 
        the Public Health Service'' and inserting ``Ready Reserve Corps 
        of the Public Health Service''.
            (5) In section 303(a)(2)(C), by striking ``Reserve Corps of 
        the Public Health Service'' and inserting ``Ready Reserve Corps 
        of the Public Health Service''.
            (6) In section 303a(b), by striking ``Reserve Corps of the 
        Public Health Service'' both places it appears and inserting 
        ``Ready Reserve Corps of the Public Health Service''.
            (7) In section 317(b)(2), by striking the period and 
        inserting ``; and''.
            (8) In section 335(j)(8), by striking ``reserve corps of 
        the Public Health Service'' and inserting ``Ready Reserve Corps 
        of the Public Health Service''.
            (9) In section 351(c)(2)(B)(ii), by striking ``of member'' 
        and inserting ``of a member''.
            (10) In section 356(g), by striking ``(a)''.
            (11) In the table of sections at the beginning of chapter 
        8, by striking the item relating to section 463 and inserting 
        the following new item:

``463. Programs of compliance; electronic processing of travel 
                            claims.''.
            (12) In section 437, in the section heading, by striking 
        ``premiums'' and inserting ``premium''.
            (13) In section 453(g)(5)(A), by striking ``a the'' and 
        inserting ``the''.
            (14) In section 501(g), by striking ``Reserve Corps of the 
        Public Health Service'' and inserting ``Ready Reserve Corps of 
        the Public Health Service''.
            (15) In section 503(b), by striking ``Reserve Corps of the 
        Public Health Service'' and inserting ``Ready Reserve Corps of 
        the Public Health Service''.
            (16) In section 907(d)(1)(K), by striking ``section 
        section'' and inserting ``section''
            (17) In section 908(a)(3), by striking ``Commissioned 
        Reserve Corps of the Public Health Service'' and inserting 
        ``Ready Reserve Corps of the Public Health Service''.
            (18) In section 1011, in the section heading, by striking 
        ``operation'' and inserting ``operations''.
    (c) Coordination With Other Amendments Made by This Act.--For 
purposes of applying amendments made by provisions of this Act other 
than this section, the amendments made by this section shall be treated 
as having been enacted immediately before any such amendments by other 
provisions of this Act.

SEC. 1722. COUNTERING CHINA'S CONTROL OF THE CAUCASUS.

    (a) Report on Russian and Chinese Intelligence Assets in Georgia.--
Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, 
the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the Director of National 
Intelligence and the Secretary of State, shall submit to the relevant 
congressional committees a classified report that--
            (1) is prepared consistent with the protection of sources 
        and methods;
            (2) examines the penetration of Russian and Chinese 
        intelligence elements and their assets in Georgia; and
            (3) examines the potential intersection of Russian and 
        Chinese influence and cooperation in Georgia.
    (b) 5-year United States Strategy for Bilateral Relations With 
Georgia.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of State shall submit 
        to the relevant congressional committees a detailed strategy 
        that--
                    (A) outlines specific objectives for enhancing 
                bilateral ties which reflect the current domestic 
                political environment in Georgia;
                    (B) includes a determination of the tools, 
                resources, and funding that should be available to 
                achieve the objectives outlined pursuant to 
                subparagraph (A) and an assessment of whether Georgia 
                should remain a top recipient of United States funding 
                in the Europe and Eurasia region;
                    (C) includes a determination of the extent to which 
                the United States should continue to invest in its 
                partnership with Georgia; and
                    (D) includes a determination of whether the 
                Government of Georgia remains committed to expanding 
                trade ties with the United States and Europe and 
                whether the United States Government should continue to 
                invest in Georgian projects.
            (2) Form.--The report required under paragraph (1) shall be 
        submitted in unclassified form, with a classified annex.
    (c) Relevant Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``relevant congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate;
            (2) the Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate;
            (3) the Committee on Armed Services of the Senate;
            (4) the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of 
        Representatives;
            (5) the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the 
        House of Representatives; and
            (6) the Committee on Armed Services of the House of 
        Representatives.

SEC. 1723. COMPTROLLER GENERAL STUDY ON SKILLBRIDGE PROGRAMS.

    (a) Study Required.--The Comptroller General of the United States 
shall conduct a study of the Skillbridge programs under section 1143(e) 
of title 10, United States Code.
    (b) Report.--Not later than two years after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Comptroller General shall submit to the 
Committees on Armed Services, and the Committees on Veterans' Affairs, 
of the Senate and House of Representatives, a report regarding the 
study required under subsection (a). Such report shall include 
observations and recommendations of the Comptroller regarding, with 
respect to members of the Armed Forces and employers who participate in 
the Skillbridge program--
            (1) differences in criteria for participation between the 
        Armed Forces;
            (2) other differences in Skillbridge programs between the 
        Armed Forces;
            (3) best practices in Skillbridge programs across the Armed 
        Forces, including--
                    (A) the selection of employers; and
                    (B) the development of contracts; and
            (4) the feasibility of making Skillbridge programs uniform 
        across the Armed Forces.

       TITLE XVIII--REVITALIZATION OF THE DEFENSE INDUSTRIAL BASE

     Subtitle A--Provisions to Protect and Strengthen Supply Chains

SEC. 1801. REQUIREMENTS FOR INFORMATION RELATING TO SUPPLY CHAIN RISK.

    Section 3252 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (b)--
                    (A) by amending paragraph (1) to read as follows:
            ``(1) consulting with and receiving a written 
        recommendation from procurement and other relevant officials of 
        the covered agency, including the chief acquisition officer of 
        the agency (or comparable employee);'';
                    (B) in paragraph (2)--
                            (i) in subparagraph (A), by inserting ``, 
                        including the conclusions of the risk 
                        assessment upon which this determination was 
                        made'' after ``supply chain risk''; and
                            (ii) in subparagraph (B), by striking 
                        ``risk; and'' and inserting ``risk, including 
                        the facts and evidence upon which this 
                        determination was made, the options that were 
                        considered in making this determination, and 
                        why such options were not reasonably available 
                        to reduce supply chain risk; and''; and
                    (C) by amending paragraph (3) to read as follows:
            ``(3) providing a classified or unclassified notice of the 
        determination made under paragraph (2) to the appropriate 
        congressional committees, which notice shall include--
                    ``(A) a summary of the risk assessment that serves 
                as the basis for the written determination required by 
                paragraph (2); and
                    ``(B) the written determination required by 
                paragraph (2).'';
            (2) by redesignating subsection (d) as subsection (h);
            (3) by inserting after subsection (c) the following new 
        subsections:
    ``(d) Additional Requirements Before Carrying Out a Covered 
Procurement Action.--(1) The head of a covered agency may carry out a 
covered procurement action affecting a domestic source or a non-FOCI 
entity only after--
            ``(A) notifying the domestic source or non-FOCI entity that 
        a covered action is being considered;
            ``(B) providing the domestic source or non-FOCI entity, to 
        the extent consistent with the national security and law 
        enforcement interests, of information that forms the basis for 
        the covered action, in accordance with paragraph (3);
            ``(C) allowing the domestic source or non-FOCI entity 30 
        days after receipt of the notice to submit information and 
        argument to the head of the covered agency in response to such 
        notification; and
            ``(D) submitting notice to the appropriate congressional 
        committees that the covered procurement action is not being 
        taken for any purpose described in paragraph (2).
    ``(2) The head of a covered agency may not directly or indirectly 
exclude a domestic source or non-FOCI entity as a source pursuant to 
subsection (a) for--
            ``(A) exercising, declining to waive, or declining to 
        renegotiate any right under, or any term or condition of, a 
        contract, subcontract, agreement, license, or other arrangement 
        with a Federal agency; or
            ``(B) for declining to enter into such an arrangement on 
        terms proposed by a Federal official.
    ``(3) In carrying out a covered procurement action affecting a 
domestic source or a non-FOCI entity under this section, the head of a 
covered agency may not withhold from the domestic source or non-FOCI 
entity an unclassified written summary of the determinations required 
under subparagraphs (A) and (B) of subsection (b)(2), stated in 
sufficient detail to notify the entity of the basis for the action and 
to permit a meaningful opportunity to respond. Specific facts or 
sources whose disclosure would harm national security or law 
enforcement interests may be withheld from the domestic source or non-
FOCI entity, as applicable, and provided to the appropriate 
congressional committees under the procedures in subsection (g).
    ``(e) Exception for Imminent National Security Threat.--The head of 
a covered agency may immediately carry out a covered procurement action 
affecting a non-FOCI entity without first providing the information 
required under subsection (b)(3) and notifications required under 
subsection (d)(1) if--
            ``(1) such head determines that an imminent national 
        security threat requires immediate action; and
            ``(2) not later than three days after carrying out such 
        covered procurement action, such head--
                    ``(A) provides to the appropriate congressional 
                committees--
                            ``(i) the notice required under subsection 
                        (b)(3) and a written explanation of the 
                        imminent national security threat and the 
                        reasons such threat required carrying out such 
                        action before providing such notice; and
                            ``(ii) provides to the domestic source or 
                        non-FOCI entity the notifications and 
                        information required under subsection (d)(1).
    ``(f) Classified Annex Procedures.--(1) If information required to 
be provided under subsections (b) or (c) includes classified 
information, the head of the covered agency may transmit such 
information in a classified annex.
    ``(2) A classified annex transmitted under paragraph (1)--
            ``(A) shall be provided to members of Congress and 
        congressional staff in accordance with applicable security 
        procedures; and
            ``(B) may include intelligence sources and methods, risk 
        assessments, and other national security information necessary 
        to support the determination.
    ``(3) To the greatest extent practicable, the agency shall provide 
an unclassified summary of the information contained in the classified 
annex.''; and
            (4) in subsection (h), as so redesignated--
                    (A) in paragraph (2), by adding at the end the 
                following:
                    ``(D) The termination of an existing contract, 
                subcontract, agreement, or license for a covered 
                system, in whole or in part, for the purpose of 
                reducing supply chain risk.''; and
                    (B) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(7) Domestic source.--The term `domestic source' has the 
        meaning in section 702 of the Defense Production Act of 1950 
        (50 U.S.C. 4552).
            ``(8) Non-FOCI entity.--The term `non-FOCI entity' means--
                    ``(A) a domestic source; or
                    ``(B) an entity that has not been identified to be 
                operating under foreign ownership, control, or 
                influence pursuant to a Defense Counterintelligence and 
                Security Agency review of such entity.''.

SEC. 1802. OVERSIGHT OF SPECIALTY METALS PROCUREMENTS UNDER EXCEPTION 
              RELATING TO AGREEMENTS WITH FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS.

    (a) Limitation on Use of Exception Relating to Agreements With 
Foreign Governments.--Section 4863 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(o) Limitation on Procurements Under Exception Relating to 
Agreements With Foreign Governments.--(1) For any fiscal year, the 
total value of specialty metals acquired, including specialty metals 
incorporated into end items, pursuant to the exception under subsection 
(d), may not exceed 30 percent of the total value of specialty metals 
procured by the Department of Defense during such fiscal year.
    ``(2) In calculating the total value under paragraph (1), the 
Secretary of Defense shall include specialty metals directly procured 
by the Department and specialty metals incorporated into articles, 
materials, and supplies furnished by contractors and subcontractors to 
the Department.
    ``(3) Not later than 120 days after the last day of each fiscal 
year, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees a certification described compliance of the 
Secretary with the requirements of this subsection, including a 
description of the the methodology used to calculate the total value 
under paragraph (1).
    ``(4) The Secretary of Defense may waive the requirements of this 
subsection if the Secretary determines that such waiver is necessary in 
the interest of national security and submits to the congressional 
defense committees a written justification for the waiver not later 
than 30 days after exercising such authority.''.
    (b) Report.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than one year after the date of 
        enactment of this section, the Secretary of Defense shall 
        submit to the congressional defense committees a report 
        regarding the use of the exception under section 4863(d) of 
        title 10, United States Code relating to agreements with 
        foreign governments.
            (2) Content.--The report required under paragraph (1) shall 
        include--
                    (A) an assessment of the frequency with which the 
                Department of Defense, including prime contractors and 
                subcontractors performing contracts for the Department, 
                utilizes the exception under such subsection (d);
                    (B) the total value and percentage of procurements 
                to which such exception applied during each of the five 
                fiscal years preceding the date of the report;
                    (C) a list of each foreign country with which the 
                United States has entered into a reciprocal defense 
                procurement memorandum of understanding or other 
                defense procurement agreement for purposes of 
                qualifying for the exception under such subsection (d);
                    (D) a supply chain analysis of each country 
                described in subparagraph (C);
                    (E) an assessment of the extent to which specialty 
                metals incorporated into articles, materials, or 
                supplies acquired pursuant to the exception in section 
                4863(d) of title 10, United States Code, originate from 
                countries that are not parties to a defense procurement 
                memorandum of understanding or other defense 
                procurement agreement;
                    (F) an identification of any secondary dependencies 
                on specialty metals sourced from countries that are not 
                parties to a defense procurement memorandum of 
                understanding or other defense procurement agreement; 
                and
                    (G) an assessment of risks to the defense 
                industrial base arising from such dependencies.

SEC. 1803. CRITICAL MATERIALS: TIERED SOURCING RESTRICTIONS AND 
              REQUIREMENTS.

    (a) In General.--Section 4872 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 4872. Critical materials: tiered restrictions on sourcing from 
              covered nations and other foreign nations; prohibition on 
              sales
    ``(a) Prohibition on Sourcing Covered Materials From Covered 
Nations.--Except as provided in subsections (c), (d), (e), and (g), the 
Secretary of Defense may not procure covered material sourced from, by, 
or through a covered nation, or a covered item that contains covered 
material sourced from, by, or through a covered nation.
    ``(b) Applicability.--This section applies to prime contracts and 
subcontracts at any tier.
    ``(c) Exceptions for Certain Items and Material.--Subsection (a) 
shall not apply to the procurement of a covered item that is--
            ``(1) a commercially available off-the-shelf item, other 
        than a covered COTS item or product;
            ``(2) an electronic device, unless the Secretary of 
        Defense, upon the recommendation of the Strategic and Critical 
        Materials Board of Directors pursuant to section 10 of the 
        Strategic and Critical Materials Stock Piling Act (50 U.S.C. 
        98h-1), determines that the domestic availability of a 
        particular electronic device is critical to national security;
            ``(3) a neodymium-iron-boron magnet or samarium-cobalt 
        magnet manufactured from recycled material if the milling of 
        the recycled material and sintering of the final magnet takes 
        place in the United States; or
            ``(4) tantalum, tungsten, niobium, or molybdenum produced 
        from recycled material, if the contractor demonstrates to the 
        Secretary that--
                    ``(A) the recycled material was produced outside of 
                any covered nation; and
                    ``(B) the melting of the recycled material and any 
                further processing and manufacturing of the recycled 
                material takes place in the United States or in the 
                country of a qualifying foreign government, as defined 
                in section 4863(m)(11) of this title.
    ``(d) Tier 1 Materials -- Prohibition on Sourcing From Covered 
Nations; Requirement That a Minimum Percentage Be Sourced From United 
States.--(1) The Secretary may not procure Tier 1 material sourced 
from, by, or through a covered nation, or a covered item that contains 
Tier 1 material sourced from, by, or through a covered nation, except 
as provided in this subsection or in subsection (c) or (g).
    ``(2) The Secretary may procure Tier 1 material sourced outside 
covered nations, or covered items that contain Tier 1 material sourced 
outside covered nations, but only if the percentage of cost of such 
material, as calculated under paragraph (3), that is produced by 
domestically owned entities is at least 50 percent.
    ``(3) The percentage referred to in paragraph (2)--
            ``(A) shall be calculated as a fraction (and expressed as a 
        percentage), in which--
                    ``(i) the numerator is the total cost of all Tier 1 
                material in the procurement (including Tier 1 material 
                contained in any covered item) that is produced by any 
                domestically owned entity; and
                    ``(ii) the denominator is the total cost of all 
                Tier 1 material in the procurement (including Tier 1 
                material contained in any covered item); and
            ``(B) shall be calculated without including in either the 
        numerator or denominator any Tier 2 material contained in a 
        covered item excluded by subsection (c).
    ``(e) Tier 2 Materials -- Prohibition on Sourcing From Covered 
Nations; Exceptions for Certain Periods.--(1) The Secretary may not 
procure Tier 2 material sourced from, by, or through a covered nation, 
or a covered item that contains Tier 2 material sourced from, by, or 
through a covered nation, except as provided in this subsection or in 
subsection (c) or (g).
    ``(2) For each period specified in paragraph (3), the Secretary may 
procure Tier 2 material sourced from, by, or through a covered nation, 
or a covered item that contains Tier 2 material sourced from, by, or 
through a covered nation, but only if the percentage of cost of such 
material, as calculated under paragraph (4), that is produced outside 
covered nations is at least the percentage specified in paragraph (3).
    ``(3) The periods referred to in paragraph (2), and the percentages 
associated with those periods, are as follows:
            ``(A) January 1, 2028, to December 31, 2028, 25 percent.
            ``(B) January 1, 2029, to December 31, 2029, 50 percent.
            ``(C) January 1, 2030, to December 31, 2030, 75 percent.
            ``(D) On and after January 1, 2031, 100 percent.
    ``(4) The percentage of cost referred to in paragraph (2)--
            ``(A) shall be calculated separately for each category of 
        Tier 2 material, with the calculation for a category including 
        all Tier 2 material within that category and excluding all Tier 
        2 material not within that category;
            ``(B) shall be calculated as a fraction (and expressed as a 
        percentage), in which--
                    ``(i) the numerator is the total cost of all Tier 2 
                material in that category (including Tier 2 material 
                contained in a covered item) that is sourced outside 
                covered nations; and
                    ``(ii) the denominator is the total cost of all 
                Tier 2 material in that category (including Tier 2 
                material contained in a covered item); and
            ``(C) shall be calculated without including in either the 
        numerator or denominator any Tier 2 material contained in a 
        covered item excluded by subsection (c).
    ``(5)(A) In addition to the certifications required by subsection 
(h), for any procurement of Tier 2 material (or covered item that 
contains Tier 2 material), for each category of Tier 2 material in the 
procurement and for each period specified in subparagraph (B) during 
which the prime contractor delivers such material to the Department 
under the contract, the Secretary shall require the prime contractor 
to--
            ``(i) certify that it has entered into a contractual 
        agreement, or agreements, to obtain a supply of that category 
        of Tier 2 material (or Tier 2 material contained in a covered 
        item, as applicable) from sources outside covered nations in 
        amounts sufficient to ensure that the prime contractor will be 
        able to satisfy the percentages specified in paragraph (3); and
            ``(ii) provide documentation in accordance with subsection 
        (h)(4) that not less than the applicable percentage specified 
        in paragraph (3) of that category of Tier 2 material (or Tier 2 
        material contained in a covered item, as applicable) was 
        sourced outside covered nations.
    ``(B) The period referred to in subparagraph (A) shall be the 
annual period determined by the contractor's fiscal year or, in the 
case of a contract with a period of performance of less than one year, 
the life of the contract. Notwithstanding the preceding sentence, the 
Secretary may prescribe a period other than an annual period for a 
contract or type of contract if the Secretary determines that it would 
be impracticable for the prime contractor to certify and provide 
documentation for an annual period.
    ``(C) In making the certification under paragraph (A)(i), the prime 
contractor--
            ``(i) shall not be required to determine the country of 
        origin of Tier 2 material that is not counted toward compliance 
        with this subsection;
            ``(ii) may use a reasonable, consistently applied 
        estimation methodology, including grade-based, weight-based, or 
        industry-standard estimation, provided the methodology is 
        disclosed in the certifications required under subsection (h) 
        and supported by available documentation; and
            ``(iii) may rely in good faith on certifications and 
        supporting documentation provided by subcontractors at any tier 
        in establishing compliance with this subsection and shall not 
        be required to independently verify a subcontractor 
        certification absent actual knowledge of facts that would cause 
        a reasonable contractor to question the accuracy of the 
        certification.
    ``(f) Authority of Secretary to Add and Transfer Materials on Tier 
1 and Tier 2 Lists.--(1) Not less frequently than once every 6 months, 
the Secretary of Defense shall carry out a review of the categories of 
Tier 1 and Tier 2 materials. If the Secretary determines, based on the 
results of the review, that an addition or transfer described in 
paragraph (2) is warranted to protect national security, improve 
supply-chain resilience, reflect industrial base conditions, or account 
for changes in defense needs or commercial availability, the Secretary 
may implement the addition or transfer, subject to the requirements of 
this subsection.
    ``(2) An addition or transfer described in this paragraph is 
limited to one or more of the following:
            ``(A) The addition of a new category of Tier 1 or Tier 2 
        material.
            ``(B) The addition of a material that is not a covered 
        material to a new or existing category of Tier 1 or Tier 2 
        material.
            ``(C) The transfer of a material from a category of Tier 2 
        material to a category of Tier 1 material.
    ``(3) In carrying out a review under paragraph (1), the Secretary 
may consider information from the elements and program offices of the 
Department and private industry sources, including prime and sub-tier 
contractors and critical mineral producers, as well as any other 
information the Secretary considers appropriate.
    ``(4) To implement an addition or transfer under this subsection, 
the Secretary shall publish the addition or transfer in the Federal 
Register and on a publicly accessible website of the Department and 
ensure that the addition or transfer is incorporated, as appropriate, 
into the Department of Defense Supplement to the Federal Acquisition 
Regulation.
    ``(5) The addition or transfer shall take effect on the later of 
the following dates:
            ``(A) The date that is one year after the date on which it 
        was published in the Federal Register.
            ``(B) The date specified in the Department of Defense 
        Supplement to the Federal Acquisition Regulation.
    ``(g) Authority to Waive Tier 1 or Tier 2 Sourcing Requirements.--
(1) The Secretary of Defense may waive the application of a requirement 
in subsection (d) or (e), in whole or in part, to a procurement, or to 
a covered item, or to a Tier 1 or Tier 2 material, or to a supply-chain 
stage, or to any of the foregoing matters in combination or as a class, 
if the waiver is made in writing that--
            ``(A) identifies with specificity the materials and other 
        circumstances covered by the waiver;
            ``(B) identifies the period during which the waiver 
        applies;
            ``(C) explains the factual basis for the waiver;
            ``(D) includes a determination that the Tier 1 material 
        within the scope of the waiver is not produced by domestically 
        owned entities, or the Tier 2 material within the scope of the 
        waiver is not produced outside covered nations, in sufficient 
        quantity, quality, or form to meet defense needs in a timely 
        manner and on reasonable terms;
            ``(E) includes a determination (which may be based on or 
        informed by a national security waiver issued under section 
        4863(k) of this title) that, absent the waiver, there would be 
        a significant adverse effect on national security, defense 
        production, readiness, sustainment, or timely contract 
        performance; and
            ``(F) provides a transition plan identifying actions to 
        reduce reliance by the Department on foreign nations (in the 
        case of a Tier 1 material) or covered nations (in the case of a 
        Tier 2 material), which shall include--
                    ``(i) mitigation measures, with quantifiable 
                milestones and associated timelines;
                    ``(ii) a requirement that, before the end of the 
                period during which the waiver applies, the contractor 
                will enter into one or more binding agreements with 
                suppliers that will result in compliance with this 
                section and obviate the need for a future waiver or 
                renewal; and
                    ``(iii) any contractual considerations the 
                Secretary determines appropriate, such as performance 
                security or an adjustment in performance or price.
    ``(2) A waiver under this subsection that applies to an upstream 
form of material (such as an ore, concentrate, oxide, fluoride, salt, 
precursor, or intermediate) shall not apply to a downstream form of 
material (such as a metal, alloy, magnet, mill product, or component) 
unless the waiver expressly so provides.
    ``(3) A waiver under this subsection may be effective for a period 
of up to two years and may be renewed one or more times for another 
such period upon a new written determination satisfying paragraph (1). 
There shall be no limit on the number of waivers or renewals that may 
be issued under this subsection.
    ``(4) A waiver or renewal under this subsection shall not take 
effect until the Secretary submits notice of the waiver or renewal to 
the congressional defense committees and a period of 30 days has 
elapsed or, if the Secretary certifies that there is an urgent need for 
the waiver or renewal, a period of 7 days has elapsed. The notice shall 
include the matters required by subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) of 
paragraph (1) and the principal mitigation measures required by 
subparagraph (F)(i).
    ``(5) A contractor seeking a waiver under this subsection shall 
submit, at such time and in such manner as the Secretary may prescribe, 
reasonably available documentation supporting the waiver.
    ``(h) Contractor Certification and Records; Special Rule for 
Preferred Domestic Manufacturers and Producers.--(1) For each 
procurement of covered material or covered items that contain such 
material, the Secretary shall require the prime contractor to make the 
certifications described in paragraph (2), obtain the documentation 
described in paragraph (3), and maintain such certifications and 
documentation for not less than 10 years after the date on which the 
prime contractor receives final payment. The Secretary shall require 
each prime contractor to ensure that each subcontractor at any tier 
that supplies such material or items also make such certifications, 
obtain such documentation, and maintain such certifications and 
documentation for not less than 10 years after the date on which the 
subcontractor receives final payment.
    ``(2) The certifications referred to in paragraph (1) are the 
following certifications, made in such form as the Secretary may 
prescribe:
            ``(A) As a condition of award or exercise of option, that 
        the prime contractor (or subcontractor, as applicable) has a 
        reasonable basis to expect compliance with this section.
            ``(B) As a condition of payment, that the covered material 
        and covered items supplied by the prime contractor (or 
        subcontractor, as applicable) comply with this section.
            ``(C) That the prime contractor (or subcontractor, as 
        applicable) has obtained and will maintain the documentation 
        described in paragraph (3).
    ``(3) The documentation referred to in paragraph (1) is--
            ``(A) documentation supporting the known provenance of the 
        covered materials and covered items, together with any 
        certifications and documentation made by subcontractors; or
            ``(B) if the prime contractor (or subcontractor, as 
        applicable) is a preferred domestic manufacturer or producer, 
        documentation identifying the supplier of the covered material 
        and covered items, together with the attestation of the prime 
        contractor (or subcontractor) that such supplier was also a 
        preferred domestic manufacturer or producer and that such 
        supplier made a certification under paragraph (2)(B) that such 
        material and items comply with this section.
    ``(4) The Secretary shall prescribe regulations to implement this 
subsection, including uniform standards for the certifications, 
documentation, and attestations required by this subsection and how 
those requirements apply to mixed materials, recycled materials, and 
commingled lots.
    ``(i) Preferred Domestic Manufacturers and Producers; Designation 
and Benefits.--(1) Under regulations prescribed by the Secretary, the 
Secretary may designate as a preferred domestic manufacturer or 
producer any contractor that--
            ``(A) is a manufacturer or producer within the United 
        States of covered materials; or
            ``(B) is a manufacturer or producer that--
                    ``(i) manufactures or produces, within the United 
                States, covered items that contain covered materials;
                    ``(ii) manufactures or produces such items in a 
                manner that complies with the sourcing requirements of 
                subsections (d) and (e); and
                    ``(iii) maintains documentation for such items in a 
                manner that complies with subsection (h).
    ``(2) Under regulations prescribed by the Secretary, the Secretary 
may revoke such a designation.
    ``(3) A prime contractor that is supplied covered material, or a 
covered item that contains covered material, from a supplier that is 
designated as a preferred domestic manufacturer or producer at the time 
such material or item is supplied may reasonably rely on that 
designation in making certifications and obtaining documentation under 
subsection (h). In a case in which the supplier was not, in fact, a 
preferred domestic manufacturer or producer at the time such material 
or item is supplied (such as because the designation was revoked), the 
prime contractor shall not be accountable for a deficiency in its 
certifications and documentation under subsection (h) unless the 
contractor had actual knowledge of facts that would have caused a 
reasonable contractor to question whether the supplier was in fact a 
preferred domestic manufacturer or producer.
    ``(4) The fact that a contractor is designated as a preferred 
domestic manufacturer or producer may, if appropriate and consistent 
with law, be used by the Department for other purposes, such as in 
determining whether to provide credit in source selection, priority in 
processing of qualifications, or opportunity to participate in pilot 
programs.
    ``(j) Delegation.--The authorities in subsections (f), (g), and (i) 
may be delegated no lower than the senior acquisition executive of the 
military department concerned or, in the case of a Defense Agency, the 
Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment.
    ``(k) Annual Report; Publication.--(1) Not later than March 1 of 
each year, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense 
committees, and publish in accordance with paragraph (3), a report on 
the implementation of this section. Each report shall cover the fiscal 
year that ended on September 30 of the preceding year and the fiscal 
year immediately preceding that fiscal year.
    ``(2) Each report shall include, for each fiscal year covered by 
the report, data for each category of covered material, including--
            ``(A) sourcing percentages achieved;
            ``(B) waivers granted under subsection (g), identified by 
        category of material and supply-chain stage, including duration 
        and stated basis;
            ``(C) contractors designated as preferred domestic 
        manufacturers and producers;
            ``(D) any findings, whether preliminary or not, of false 
        certification, misconduct, or noncompliance with this section;
            ``(E) actions taken by the Secretary to increase the supply 
        of Tier 1 and Tier 2 materials that meet the requirements of 
        this section, including progress on investments in domestic 
        capacity; and
            ``(F) such other information as the Secretary determines 
        appropriate to describe implementation of this section.
    ``(3) The report shall be submitted in unclassified form, but may 
include a classified annex.
    ``(4) To the maximum extent practicable, the Secretary shall 
publish each report in a machine-readable, standardized format on a 
publicly accessible website of the Department.
    ``(l) Sale of National Defense Stockpile Materials.--The Secretary 
of Defense may not sell any material from the National Defense 
Stockpile, if the National Defense Stockpile Manager determines that 
such a sale is not in the national interests of the United States, to--
            ``(1) any covered nation; or
            ``(2) any third party that the Secretary reasonably 
        believes is acting as a broker or agent for a covered nation or 
        an entity in a covered nation.
    ``(m) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `commercially available off-the-shelf item' 
        has the meaning given such term in section 104 of title 41.
            ``(2) The term `covered COTS item' means a commercially 
        available off-the-shelf item--
                    ``(A) at least 50 percent of which, by weight, is 
                covered material; or
                    ``(B) that is a mill product, such as bar, billet, 
                slab, wire, cube, sphere, block, blank, plate, powder, 
                or sheet, that has not been incorporated into an end 
                item, subsystem, assembly, or component.
            ``(3) The term `covered item' means an end item (as defined 
        in section 4863 of this title), subsystem, assembly, component, 
        or commercially available off-the-shelf item.
            ``(4) The term `covered material' means a Tier 1 material 
        or a Tier 2 material.
            ``(5) The term `covered nation' means--
                    ``(A) the Democratic People's Republic of North 
                Korea;
                    ``(B) the People's Republic of China;
                    ``(C) the Russian Federation; and
                    ``(D) the Islamic Republic of Iran.
            ``(6) The term `domestically owned entity' means an entity 
        organized under the laws of the United States or a State and 
        controlled by United States persons.
            ``(7) The term `preferred domestic manufacturer or 
        producer' means a contractor designated as a preferred domestic 
        manufacturer or producer under subsection (i).
            ``(8) The term `supply-chain stage' includes stages such as 
        mining, concentration, refining, separation, reduction, 
        melting, alloying, powder production, sintering, processing, 
        and manufacturing, and any other stage that the Secretary 
        considers appropriate.
            ``(9) A material is `sourced from, by, or through' a nation 
        if any portion of the mining, refining, separation, melting and 
        pouring, processing, or manufacturing of the material occurred 
        in the nation or was performed by an entity located in the 
        nation.
            ``(10) The term `sourced outside covered nations' means, 
        with respect to a material, that the contractor has established 
        through the certifications and documentation under this section 
        that the material was not sourced from, by, or through a 
        covered nation.
            ``(11) Subject to the authority of the Secretary under 
        subsection (f), the term `Tier 1 material' means the following 
        material, as set forth in categories (A) through (G):
                    ``(A) Neodymium-iron-boron (NdFeB) and samarium-
                cobalt (SmCo) permanent magnets.
                    ``(B) Tungsten metal powder, tungsten heavy alloy, 
                or any finished or semi-finished component containing 
                tungsten heavy alloy.
                    ``(C) Neodymium oxide and metal, praseodymium oxide 
                and metal, and neodymium-praseodymium oxide and metal, 
                and ores and concentrates from which these oxides and 
                metals are sourced.
                    ``(D) Tantalum, including tantalum ores and oxides, 
                concentrates, metal, tantalum powder, and tantalum 
                alloys.
                    ``(E) On and after December 18, 2027, molybdenum 
                metals, powders, and alloys.
                    ``(F) On and after December 18, 2027, gallium and 
                gallium nitride.
                    ``(G) On and after December 18, 2027, germanium.
            ``(12) Subject to the authority of the Secretary under 
        subsection (f), and excluding any material that is Tier 1 
        material, the term `Tier 2 material' means the following 
        material, as set forth in categories (A) through (C):
                    ``(A) Items comprised in whole or in part of 
                oxides, metals, alloys (and intermediate products) of 
                gadolinium, samarium, neodymium, praseodymium, 
                neodymium-praseodymium, and terbium.
                    ``(B) Items of tungsten, including--
                            ``(i) precursors, including tungsten ores 
                        and concentrates, ammonium paratungstate, 
                        ammonium metatungstate, tungstic acid, sodium 
                        tungstate, and tungsten oxides; and
                            ``(ii) on and after January 1, 2029, 
                        tungsten carbide.
                    ``(C) Items comprised in whole or in part of 
                niobium oxides, metals, and alloys.
            ``(13) The term `United States person' means--
                    ``(A) a citizen of the United States;
                    ``(B) an alien lawfully admitted for permanent 
                residence; or
                    ``(C) an entity organized under the laws of the 
                United States or a jurisdiction within the United 
                States if the ultimate beneficial ownership and control 
                of such entity is with persons described in 
                subparagraph (A) or (B).''.
    (b) Effective Date and Applicability; Regulations.--
            (1) Effective date and applicability.--The amendment made 
        by subsection (a) shall take effect on the date (the 
        ``effective date'') that is 180 days after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act and shall apply to solicitations issued, 
        and contracts entered into, on or after such effective date, 
        except as provided in paragraph (3).
            (2) Regulations.--Not later than the effective date 
        specified in paragraph (1), the Secretary of Defense shall 
        issue regulations to implement section 4872 of title 10, United 
        States Code, as amended by subsection (a).
            (3) Applicability to tier 2 materials.--Subsection (e) of 
        section 4872, as amended by subsection (a), shall not apply to 
        solicitations issued or contracts awarded before January 1, 
        2028. Until such date, a solicitation issued or contract 
        awarded for a procurement of Tier 2 material (or covered item 
        that contains Tier 2 material) shall be administered in 
        accordance with section 4872 as in effect immediately before 
        the effective date specified in paragraph (1).
    (c) Non-execution Into Current Law, and Repeal, of Amendment 
Prohibiting Procurement of Material Mined, Refined, or Separated in Any 
Covered Nation.--
            (1) In general.--Section 844 of the National Defense 
        Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (Public Law 116-283; 134 
        Stat. 3766), as amended by section 848 of the National Defense 
        Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60; 139 
        Stat. 978), is repealed.
            (2) Effective date.--The repeal made by paragraph (1) shall 
        take effect on the earlier of December 31, 2026, or the date of 
        the enactment of this Act.
    (d) Expedited Qualification of New Domestic and Allied-nation 
Sources.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish 
        an expedited qualification process for new domestic and allied-
        nation sources of covered material (as defined in section 4872 
        of title 10, United States Code).
            (2) Scope.--The process under paragraph (1) shall apply 
        to--
                    (A) source qualification;
                    (B) product qualification; and
                    (C) platform or program qualification.
            (3) Deadline.--The Secretary shall ensure that, for each 
        entity seeking to be qualified as a domestic or allied-nation 
        source, the qualification process is completed not later than 
        12 months after the date on which the entity submits a 
        materially complete qualification package in the form 
        prescribed by the Secretary.
            (4) Acceptance of existing testing and qualification 
        data.--In carrying out this subsection, the Secretary shall, to 
        the maximum extent practicable, accept and rely on--
                    (A) test data, analyses, certifications, or other 
                qualification evidence from a Government laboratory, an 
                accredited independent laboratory, or an accredited 
                commercial laboratory, whether located in the United 
                States or outside the United States;
                    (B) qualification results or approvals previously 
                accepted by a military department, another Federal 
                agency, an original equipment manufacturer, or another 
                commercial qualification regime; and
                    (C) commercial production history, first-article 
                results, lot acceptance data, and comparable evidence 
                of performance.
            (5) Department-wide recognition.--The Secretary shall 
        ensure that the result of each qualification process completed 
        under this subsection is accepted throughout the Department of 
        Defense for the same or substantially similar applications to 
        the maximum extent practicable.
            (6) Implementation.--The Secretary shall maintain a 
        centralized record of the result of each qualification process 
        completed under this subsection for use across the military 
        departments and defense agencies.
            (7) Qualification by prime contractor.--The Secretary 
        shall, for the purposes of this subsection, establish policy 
        for the acceptance of a determination by a prime contractor 
        that a domestic supplier of a covered material is capable of 
        providing such covered material in the form and quality 
        required by the prime contractor and thus deem the domestic 
        supplier a qualified source.
            (8) Definition.--In this subsection, the term ``allied 
        nation'' means the United States or any foreign nation (other 
        than a covered nation, as defined in section 4872 of title 10, 
        United States Code) designated by the Secretary for purposes of 
        this subsection.

SEC. 1804. CHANGES WITH RESPECT TO THE FEDERAL ACQUISITION SECURITY 
              COUNCIL.

    (a) Definition of Source of Concern, Covered Source of Concern, 
Recommended Order, and Designated Order.--Section 1321 of title 41, 
United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by amending paragraph (3) to read as follows:
            ``(3) Covered article.--The term `covered article'--
                    ``(A) has the meaning given that term in section 
                4713; and
                    ``(B) includes operational technology (as defined 
                in section 3 of the Internet of Things Cybersecurity 
                Improvement Act of 2020 (Public Law 116-207; 15 U.S.C. 
                278g-3a)).'';
            (2) by redesignating paragraphs (5) through (8) as 
        paragraphs (7) through (10), respectively;
            (3) by inserting after paragraph (4) the following:
            ``(5) Covered source of concern.--The term `covered source 
        of concern' means a source of concern that sells, produces, or 
        is involved in the development of a covered article that is 
        designated in section 1328(c) as a statutorily designated 
        covered article.
            ``(6) Designated order.--The term `designated order' means 
        an order described under section 1323(c)(3).''; and
            (4) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(11) Recommended order.--The term `recommended order' 
        means an order recommended under section 1323(c)(2).
            ``(12) Source of concern.--
                    ``(A) In general.--The term `source of concern' 
                means a source--
                            ``(i) subject to the jurisdiction, 
                        direction, or control of the government of a 
                        foreign adversary, or operates on behalf of the 
                        government of a foreign adversary; or
                            ``(ii) that poses a risk to the national 
                        security of the United States based on 
                        collaboration with, whole or partial ownership 
                        or control by, or being affiliated with a 
                        military, internal security force, or 
                        intelligence agency of a foreign adversary.
                    ``(B) Foreign adversary defined.--In this 
                paragraph, the term `foreign adversary' has the meaning 
                given the term `covered nation' in section 4872(d) of 
                title 10.''.
    (b) Establishment and Members of Council.--Section 1322 of title 
41, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a), by striking ``executive branch'' and 
        inserting ``Executive Office of the President'';
            (2) in subsection (b)--
                    (A) by amending paragraph (1) to read as follows:
            ``(1) In general.--The members of the Council shall be as 
        follows:
                    ``(A) The Administrator for Federal Procurement 
                Policy.
                    ``(B) The Deputy Director for Management of the 
                Office of Management and Budget.
                    ``(C) The following officials, each of whom shall 
                occupy a position at the level of Assistant Secretary 
                or Deputy Assistant Secretary (or equivalent):
                            ``(i) Two officials from the Office of the 
                        Director of National Intelligence, one of which 
                        shall be from the National Counterintelligence 
                        and Security Center.
                            ``(ii) Two officials from the Department of 
                        Defense, one of which shall be one from the 
                        National Security Agency.
                            ``(iii) Two officials from the Department 
                        of Homeland Security, one of which shall be one 
                        from the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure 
                        Security Agency.
                            ``(iv) An official from the General 
                        Services Administration.
                            ``(v) An official from the Office of the 
                        National Cyber Director.
                            ``(vi) Two officials from the Department of 
                        Justice, one of which shall be one from the 
                        Federal Bureau of Investigation.
                            ``(vii) Two officials from the Department 
                        of Commerce, one of which shall be from the 
                        National Institute of Standards and Technology 
                        and one of which shall be from the Bureau of 
                        Industry and Security.
                            ``(viii) An official from any executive 
                        agency not listed under clauses (i) through 
                        (vii) whose temporary or permanent 
                        participation is determined by the Chairperson 
                        of the Council to be necessary to carry out the 
                        functions of the Council while maintaining the 
                        intended balance in subject matter 
                        expertise.''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (2)--
                            (i) in the heading, by striking ``Lead 
                        representatives'' and inserting ``Members'';
                            (ii) by amending subparagraph (A)(i) to 
                        read as follows:
                            ``(i) In general.--The head of each 
                        executive agency listed under paragraph (1)(C) 
                        shall designate the official or officials from 
                        that agency who shall serve on the Council in 
                        accordance with such paragraph.'';
                            (iii) by amending subparagraph (A)(ii) to 
                        read as follows:
                            ``(ii) Requirements.--To the extent 
                        feasible, any official designated under clause 
                        (i) shall have expertise in supply chain risk 
                        management, acquisitions, law, or information 
                        and communications technology.'';
                            (iv) by amending subparagraph (B) to read 
                        as follows:
                    ``(B) Functions.--A member of the Council shall--
                            ``(i) regularly participate in the 
                        activities of the Council;
                            ``(ii) ensure that any information 
                        requested by the Council from the agency 
                        represented by the member is provided to the 
                        Council; and
                            ``(iii) ensure that the head of the agency 
                        represented by the member and other appropriate 
                        personnel of the agency are aware of the 
                        activities of the Council.'';
            (3) in subsection (c)--
                    (A) by amending paragraph (1) to read as follows:
            ``(1) In general.--
                    ``(A) Designation.--Not later than 45 days after 
                the date of the enactment of this paragraph, the 
                President shall a designate a member of the Council to 
                serve as Chairperson of the Council.
                    ``(B) Transition.--The Chairperson of the Council 
                on the day before the date of the enactment of this 
                paragraph shall remain the Chairperson until the 
                President makes a designation pursuant to subparagraph 
                (A).''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (2)--
                            (i) in subparagraph (B), by striking `` 
                        subsection (b)(1)(H)'' and inserting 
                        ``subsection (b)(1)(C)(viii)''; and
                            (ii) in subparagraph (C), by striking 
                        ``lead representative of each agency 
                        represented on the Council'' and inserting 
                        ``members of the Council''; and
            (4) in subsection (d)--
                    (A) by striking ``The Council'' and inserting the 
                following:
            ``(1) Council meetings.--The Council''; and
                    (B) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(2) Other meetings.--The Chairperson of the Council shall 
        meet, not less frequently than semiannually, with--
                    ``(A) the Secretary of Homeland Security, Secretary 
                of Defense, and Director of National Intelligence; or
                    ``(B) in the case that any of the officials under 
                subparagraph (A) delegated authority to an official 
                under section 1323(c)(6)(C), with the delegated 
                official.''.
    (c) Functions and Authorities.--Section 1323 of title 41, United 
States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) by striking ``supply chain'' each place it 
                appears and inserting ``acquisition security and supply 
                chain'';
                    (B) in paragraph (1), as amended by subparagraph 
                (A), by striking ``, particularly'' and inserting 
                ``that arise'';
                    (C) in paragraph (2), as amended by subparagraph 
                (A)--
                            (i) by striking ``sharing information'' and 
                        inserting ``exchanging information'';
                            (ii) by inserting ``associated with the 
                        acquisition and use of covered articles'' after 
                        ``risk'';
                            (iii) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``; 
                        and'' and inserting a semicolon;
                            (iv) by redesignating subparagraph (C) as 
                        subparagraph (D); and
                            (v) by inserting after subparagraph (B) the 
                        following:
                    ``(C) the process for an executive agency to submit 
                supply chain risk information to the Council in 
                furtherance of identifying, mitigating, or managing its 
                supply chain risk; and'';
                    (D) in paragraph (6), as amended by subparagraph 
                (A), by--
                            (i) striking ``posed by'' and inserting 
                        ``associated with''; and
                            (ii) inserting ``and use'' before ``of 
                        covered articles'';
                    (E) in paragraph (7), by striking ``posed by 
                acquisitions'' and inserting ``associated with the 
                acquisition'';
                    (F) by redesignating paragraph (7) as paragraph 
                (12); and
                    (G) by inserting after paragraph (6) the following:
            ``(7) Implementing a prioritization scheme for evaluating 
        the security risks associated with the acquisition and use of 
        covered articles sold, produced, or developed by a covered 
        source of concern.
            ``(8) Evaluating each covered source of concern to 
        determine whether to issue a designated order with respect to 
        the covered source of concern or a covered article sold, 
        produced, or developed by the covered source of concern.
            ``(9) Evaluating sources of concern to determine whether to 
        issue a recommended order with respect to the source of 
        concern, or any covered article sold, produced, or developed by 
        the source of concern.
            ``(10) Monitoring and evaluating compliance by the 
        Secretary of Homeland Security, Secretary of Defense, and 
        Director of National Intelligence with the requirement to issue 
        designated orders under subsection (c)(6)(B).
            ``(11) Reporting to Congress annually on the security risks 
        associated with the acquisition and use of covered articles 
        sold, produced, or developed by sources of concern.'';
            (2) in subsection (b)--
                    (A) by striking ``The Council'' and inserting the 
                following:
            ``(1) In general.--The Council'';
                    (B) in paragraph (1), as so redesignated, by 
                striking ``a program office and''; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(2) Federal acquisition security council program 
        office.--
                    ``(A) Establishment.--Not later than 45 days after 
                the date of the enactment of this paragraph, the 
                President shall establish a Federal Acquisition 
                Security Council Program Office (referred to in this 
                paragraph as the `Program Office') within the Executive 
                Office of the President to carry out the duties 
                described under subparagraph (B).
                    ``(B) Duties.--The Program Office shall provide to 
                the Council, including any committees, working groups, 
                or other constituent bodies established by the Council 
                under paragraph (1)--
                            ``(i) administrative, legal, and policy 
                        support; and
                            ``(ii) analysis and subject matter 
                        expertise on information communications 
                        technology, acquisition security, and supply 
                        chain risk.
                    ``(C) Structure.--The head of the Program Office 
                shall be designated by the Chairperson of the Council.
                    ``(D) Prohibition.--The Program Office may not 
                provide administrative support to the Council for any 
                activities of the Council carried out pursuant to a 
                provision of law other than a provision of law under 
                this subchapter.
                    ``(E) Funding and resources.--The Program Office 
                may use the staff and resources of the Executive Office 
                of the President or maintain dedicated staff and 
                resources, as appropriate, in the performance of the 
                duties of the Office.
                    ``(F) Shared staffing authority.--
                            ``(i) In general.--The Program Office may 
                        accept officers or employees of the United 
                        States or members of the Armed Forces on a 
                        detail from an element of the intelligence 
                        community (as such term is defined in section 3 
                        of the National Security Act of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 
                        3003)) or from another element of the Federal 
                        Government on a nonreimbursable basis, as 
                        jointly agreed to by the heads of the receiving 
                        and detailing elements, for a period not to 
                        exceed three years.
                            ``(ii) Rule of construction.--Nothing in 
                        this subparagraph may be construed as imposing 
                        any limitation on any other authority for 
                        reimbursable or nonreimbursable details.
                            ``(iii) Nonreimbursable detail.--A 
                        nonreimbursable detail made under this 
                        subparagraph shall not be considered an 
                        augmentation of the appropriations of the 
                        receiving element of the Program Office.''; and
            (3) in subsection (c)--
                    (A) in paragraph (1)--
                            (i) in the matter preceding subparagraph 
                        (A), by striking ``supply chain risk'' and 
                        inserting ``acquisition security and supply 
                        chain risk associated with the acquisition of 
                        covered articles'';
                            (ii) in subparagraph (A), by inserting 
                        ``recommended'' before ``exclusion orders'';
                            (iii) in subparagraph (B), by inserting 
                        ``recommended'' before ``removal orders'';
                            (iv) in subparagraph (C), by striking ``; 
                        and'' and inserting a semicolon;
                            (v) in subparagraph (D), by striking the 
                        period at the end and inserting ``; and''; and
                            (vi) by adding at the end the following:
                    ``(E) issuing designated orders.'';
                    (B) in paragraph (2)--
                            (i) in the heading, by striking 
                        ``Recommendations'' and inserting ``Recommended 
                        orders'';
                            (ii) by striking ``use'' and inserting ``, 
                        using'';
                            (iii) by striking ``to issue 
                        recommendations'' and inserting ``, recommend 
                        orders'';
                            (iv) by striking ``Such recommendations'' 
                        and inserting ``Any such order recommended'';
                            (v) by inserting ``to the officials 
                        described under clause (iii) of paragraph 
                        (6)(A) for issuance under such paragraph'' 
                        after ``thereof,'';
                            (vi) in subparagraph (D), by striking 
                        ``supply chain risk'' and inserting 
                        ``acquisition security and supply chain risk 
                        associated with the acquisition of covered 
                        articles''; and
                            (vii) in subparagraph (E), by striking 
                        ``exclusion or removal'';
                    (C) by redesignating paragraphs (3) through (7) as 
                paragraphs (4) through (8), respectively;
                    (D) by inserting after paragraph (2) the following:
            ``(3) Designated orders.--
                    ``(A) Exclusion or removal of covered sources of 
                concern.--
                            ``(i) In general.--Not later than 270 days 
                        after a source of concern is designated as a 
                        covered source of concern, the Council--
                                    ``(I) shall provide to the 
                                officials described under clause (iii) 
                                of paragraph (6)(B) for issuance under 
                                such paragraph orders requiring--
                                            ``(aa) the exclusion of the 
                                        covered source of concern from 
                                        any executive agency 
                                        procurement action, including 
                                        source selection and consent 
                                        for a contractor; or
                                            ``(bb) the removal of 
                                        covered articles sold, 
                                        produced, or developed by the 
                                        covered source of concern from 
                                        the information system of 
                                        executive agencies; or
                                    ``(II) report to Congress why the 
                                Council has determined to not issue an 
                                order described under subclause (I) 
                                with respect to the covered source of 
                                concern or covered articles sold, 
                                produced, or developed by the covered 
                                source of concern.
                            ``(ii) Contents of order.--Any order 
                        provided under clause (i) shall include--
                                    ``(I) information regarding the 
                                scope and applicability of the order, 
                                including any information necessary to 
                                positively identify the covered source 
                                of concern or covered articles sold, 
                                produced, or developed by the covered 
                                source of concern required to be 
                                excluded or removed under the order;
                                    ``(II) a summary of any risk 
                                assessment reviewed or conducted in 
                                support of the order;
                                    ``(III) a summary of the basis for 
                                the order, including a discussion of 
                                less intrusive measures that were 
                                considered and why such measures were 
                                not reasonably available to reduce 
                                security risk;
                                    ``(IV) a description of the actions 
                                necessary to implement the order; and
                                    ``(V) where practicable, in the 
                                Council's sole and unreviewable 
                                discretion, a description of mitigation 
                                steps that could be taken by the 
                                covered source of concern that may 
                                result in the Council rescinding the 
                                order.
                    ``(B) Exclusion or removal of second order sources 
                or covered articles.--
                            ``(i) Issuance.--In the case that the 
                        Council provides an order under subparagraph 
                        (A), the Council may also provide an order to 
                        the officials described under paragraph 
                        (6)(A)(iii) requiring the exclusion of sources 
                        or covered articles from executive agency 
                        procurement actions or removal of covered 
                        articles from executive agency information 
                        systems if--
                                    ``(I) such covered articles or such 
                                sources use a covered source of concern 
                                in the performance of a contract with 
                                the executive agency; or
                                    ``(II) such sources enter into a 
                                contract, the performance of which such 
                                source knows or has reason to believe 
                                will require, in the performance of a 
                                contract with the executive agency, the 
                                use of a covered source of concern or 
                                the use of a covered article sold, 
                                produced, or developed by a covered 
                                source of concern.
                            ``(ii) Effective date considerations.--Any 
                        effective date prescribed by the Council for an 
                        order issued pursuant to clause (i) shall take 
                        into account--
                                    ``(I) the risk posed by the covered 
                                source of concern or the covered 
                                article sold, produced, or developed by 
                                the covered source of concern to the 
                                national security of the United States;
                                    ``(II) the likelihood of the 
                                covered source of concern or the 
                                covered article sold, produced, or 
                                developed by the covered source of 
                                concern causing imminent threat to 
                                public health and safety;
                                    ``(III) the availability of an 
                                alternative source or covered article 
                                sold, produced, or developed by an 
                                alternative source; and
                                    ``(IV) an assessment of the 
                                potential direct or quantifiable costs 
                                that may be incurred by the Federal 
                                Government, a State, local, or Tribal 
                                government, or by the private sector, 
                                as a result of compliance by the head 
                                of an executive agency with such an 
                                exclusion or removal order.'';
                    (E) in paragraph (4), as so redesignated--
                            (i) in the heading, by striking ``of 
                        recommendation and review'' and inserting ``and 
                        review of recommended and designated orders'';
                            (ii) by striking ``the recommendation'' 
                        each place it appears, and inserting ``the 
                        order'';
                            (iii) in the matter preceding subparagraph 
                        (A), by striking ``A notice of the Council's 
                        recommendation under paragraph (2)'' and 
                        inserting ``Before the Council recommends an 
                        order under paragraph (2) or issues an order 
                        under paragraph (3), a notice'';
                            (iv) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``a 
                        recommendation has been made'' and inserting 
                        ``the order will be recommended or issued'';
                            (v) in subparagraph (D), by striking 
                        ``paragraph (5)'' and inserting ``paragraph 
                        (6)''; and
                            (vi) in subparagraph (E), by striking the 
                        ``the recommendation'' and inserting ``the 
                        order'';
                    (F) in paragraph (5), as so redesignated--
                            (i) by striking ``paragraph (3)'' and 
                        inserting ``paragraph (4)'';
                            (ii) in subparagraph (A), by striking 
                        ``paragraph (5)'' and inserting ``paragraph 
                        (6)'';
                            (iii) in subparagraph (B), by striking 
                        ``paragraph (6)'' and inserting ``paragraph 
                        (7)'';
                            (iv) by striking ``Any notice'' and 
                        inserting ``(A) In general.--Any notice''; and
                            (v) by inserting at the end the following:
                    ``(B) Information collected.--Any information 
                collected from a source after notice under paragraph 
                (4) shall be exempt from public disclosure and 
                disclosure under subsection (b)(3)(B) of section 552 of 
                title 5 (commonly referred to as the `Freedom of 
                Information Act'), until an order is issued pursuant to 
                paragraph (6).''; and
                    (G) in paragraph (6), as so redesignated--
                            (i) by amending subparagraph (A) to read as 
                        follows:
                    ``(A) Issuance of recommended orders.--
                            ``(i) Modifications to order.--After 
                        considering any response properly submitted by 
                        a source under paragraph (4) related to an 
                        order to be recommended under paragraph (2), 
                        the Council shall--
                                    ``(I) make such modifications to 
                                the order as the Council considers 
                                appropriate; and
                                    ``(II) provide the order (together 
                                with any information submitted by a 
                                source under paragraph (4) related to 
                                such order) to the officials described 
                                under clause (iii).
                            ``(ii) Order.--Not later than 90 days after 
                        receiving a recommended order, the officials 
                        described under clause (iii) shall--
                                    ``(I) issue the order to the heads 
                                of the applicable agencies; or
                                    ``(II) submit a notification to the 
                                Council that the order will not be 
                                issued, that includes in the 
                                notification to the Council, all the 
                                reasons for why the order will not be 
                                issued.
                            ``(iii) Officials.--The officials described 
                        in this clause are as follows:
                                    ``(I) The Secretary of Homeland 
                                Security, for exclusion and removal 
                                orders applicable to civilian agencies, 
                                to the extent not covered by subclause 
                                (II) or (III).
                                    ``(II) The Secretary of Defense, 
                                for exclusion and removal orders 
                                applicable to the Department of Defense 
                                and national security systems other 
                                than sensitive compartmented 
                                information systems.
                                    ``(III) The Director of National 
                                Intelligence, for exclusion and removal 
                                orders applicable to the intelligence 
                                community and sensitive compartmented 
                                information systems, to the extent not 
                                covered by subclause (II).'';
                            (ii) by redesignating subparagraphs (B) 
                        through (E) as subparagraphs (C) through (F), 
                        respectively;
                            (iii) by inserting after subparagraph (A) 
                        the following:
                    ``(B) Issuance of designated order.--
                            ``(i) Modifications.--After considering any 
                        response properly submitted by a source under 
                        paragraph (4) related to a designated order, 
                        the Council shall--
                                    ``(I)(aa) make any such 
                                modifications to the order as the 
                                Council considers appropriate; or
                                    ``(bb) if the Council determines 
                                that the issuance of a designated order 
                                is not warranted, rescind the 
                                designated order and notify the source 
                                of the rescission; and
                                    ``(II) except in the case that the 
                                Council rescinds the designated order 
                                under subclause (I)(bb), provide the 
                                designated order (including any 
                                modifications made to such order by the 
                                Council) to the officials described in 
                                clause (iii).
                            ``(ii) Issuance.--The officials described 
                        in clause (iii) shall, not later than 90 days 
                        after receiving a designated order, issue the 
                        order to the heads of the applicable agencies.
                            ``(iii) Officials.--The officials described 
                        in this clause are as follows:
                                    ``(I) The Secretary of Homeland 
                                Security, for exclusion and removal 
                                orders applicable to civilian agencies, 
                                to the extent not covered by subclause 
                                (II) or (III).
                                    ``(II) The Secretary of Defense, 
                                for exclusion and removal orders 
                                applicable to the Department of Defense 
                                and national security systems other 
                                than sensitive compartmented 
                                information systems.
                                    ``(III) The Director of National 
                                Intelligence, for exclusion and removal 
                                orders applicable to the intelligence 
                                community and sensitive compartmented 
                                information systems, to the extent not 
                                covered by subclause (II).
                            ``(iv) Waiver.--An official described under 
                        clause (iii) may waive for a period of not more 
                        than 365 days the application of an order 
                        issued by such official under clause (ii) with 
                        respect to a covered source of concern or a 
                        covered article sold, produced, or developed by 
                        a covered source of concern if the official 
                        submits, not later than 30 days after making 
                        such waiver, a written notification to the 
                        Council, appropriate congressional committees, 
                        the Speaker and Minority Leader of the House of 
                        Representatives, and the Majority and Minority 
                        Leaders of the Senate that contains the 
                        justification for such waiver.
                            ``(v) Renewal of waiver.--An official 
                        described under clause (iii) may renew a waiver 
                        under clause (iv) for an additional period of 
                        not more than 180 days if--
                                    ``(I) the renewal of the waiver is 
                                in the national security interests of 
                                the United States; and
                                    ``(II) the official submits, not 
                                later than 30 days after renewing such 
                                waiver, a written notification to the 
                                Council, appropriate congressional 
                                committees, the Speaker and Minority 
                                Leader of the House of Representatives, 
                                and the Majority and Minority Leaders 
                                of the Senate that includes the 
                                justification for renewing the wavier.
                            ``(vi) National security waiver.--An 
                        official described under clause (iii) may waive 
                        the application of an order issued by such 
                        official under clause (ii) with respect to a 
                        covered source of concern or a covered article 
                        sold, produced, or developed by a covered 
                        source of concern for any activity subject to 
                        the reporting requirements under title V of the 
                        National Security Act of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 3091 
                        et seq.) or any authorized intelligence 
                        activities of the United States.
                            ``(vii) Rescission of order.--An exclusion 
                        or removal order issued under this subparagraph 
                        by an official may be rescinded only by the 
                        Council.'';
                            (iv) in subparagraph (C), as so 
                        redesignated--
                                    (I) by striking ``subparagraph 
                                (A)'' and inserting ``subparagraph 
                                (A)(iii) or (B)(iii)'';
                                    (II) by striking ``this 
                                subparagraph'' and inserting 
                                ``subparagraph (A)(iii) or (B)(iii)''; 
                                and
                                    (III) by striking ``, except'' and 
                                all that follows before the period at 
                                the end;
                            (v) in subparagraph (D), as so 
                        redesignated--
                                    (I) by striking ``this paragraph'' 
                                and inserting ``subparagraph (A)(iii) 
                                or (B)(iii)''; and
                                    (II) by striking ``help'';
                            (vi) in subparagraph (E), as so 
                        redesignated, by striking ``this paragraph'' 
                        and inserting ``subparagraph (A)''; and
                            (vii) by adding after subparagraph (F), as 
                        so redesignated, the following:
                    ``(G) Effective date of orders.--The effective date 
                of an order issued under this paragraph may not be more 
                than 365 days after the order is issued.'';
                    (H) in paragraph (7), as so redesignated, by 
                striking ``paragraph (5)(A)'' and inserting 
                ``subparagraph (A) or (B) of paragraph (6)''; and
                    (I) in paragraph (8), as so redesignated, by 
                striking ``paragraph (5)'' and inserting ``paragraph 
                (6)'';
            (4) in subsection (e), by inserting ``the Chief Data 
        Officers Council,'' before ``the Chief Acquisition''; and
            (5) in subsection (f)(2), by striking the period at the end 
        and inserting ``, unless such source is a covered source of 
        concern.''.
    (d) Strategic Plan.--Section 1324(a) of title 41, United States 
Code, is amended--
            (1) by inserting ``, and periodically thereafter'' after 
        ``2018'';
            (2) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by inserting 
        ``acquisition security and'' before ``supply chain risks'';
            (3) in paragraph (8), by inserting ``acquisition security 
        and'' before ``supply chain risks''; and
            (4) in paragraph (9)(A), by inserting ``acquisition 
        security and'' before ``supply chain risk''.
    (e) Requirements for Executive Agencies.--Section 1326 of title 41, 
United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``; and'' and 
                inserting a semicolon;
                    (B) in paragraph (2), by striking the period at the 
                end and inserting ``; and''; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(3) providing any information requested by the 
        Chairperson of the Council for the purpose of carrying out 
        activities of this subchapter, subject to applicable law or 
        policy on the control and handling of classified, sensitive, or 
        proprietary information.'';
            (2) by striking ``supply chain'' each place it appears and 
        inserting ``security and supply chain''; and
            (3) in subsection (b)(6), by striking ``supply chain'' and 
        inserting ``security or supply chain''.
    (f) Judicial Procedure.--Section 1327(b) of title 41, United States 
Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``section 1323(c)(6)'' 
        and inserting ``section 1323(c)(7)'';
            (2) in paragraph (3), by striking ``sections 1323(c)(5)'' 
        and inserting ``sections 1323(c)(6)''; and
            (3) in paragraph (4), by amending subparagraph (B)(i) to 
        read as follows:
                            ``(i) Filing of record.--The United States 
                        shall file with the court an administrative 
                        record, which shall consist of--
                                    ``(I) in the case of a designated 
                                order issued under section 1323(c)(6) 
                                by the appropriate official, the 
                                information the Council relied upon in 
                                providing such order to such official; 
                                and
                                    ``(II) the information that the 
                                appropriate official relied upon in 
                                issuing an exclusion or removal order 
                                under section 1323(c)(6) or a covered 
                                procurement action under section 
                                4713.''.
    (g) Additional Provisions.--Section 1328 of title 41, United States 
Code, is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 1328. Additional provisions
    ``(a) Compliance With Existing Prohibitions.--In implementing this 
subchapter, the Council shall coordinate, as applicable and 
practicable, with the head of an agency to assist with compliance by 
the agency with--
            ``(1) section 889 of the John S. McCain National Defense 
        Authorization Act of 2019 (Public Law 115-232; 41 U.S.C. 3901 
        note);
            ``(2) section 5949 of the James M. Inhofe National Defense 
        Authorization Act of 2023 (Public Law 117-263; 41 U.S.C. 4713 
        note); and
            ``(3) the American Security Drone Act of 2023 (Public Law 
        118-31; 41 U.S.C. 3901 note).
    ``(b) Update to Regulations.--The Federal Acquisition Security 
Council shall update, not later than two years after the date of the 
enactment of this section, any regulations of the Council as necessary.
    ``(c) Statutorily Designated Covered Article Defined.--The term 
`statutorily designated covered article' pursuant to section 1321(5)--
            ``(1) means a vehicle or a mechanical device commonly known 
        as an `unmanned ground vehicle system' that--
                    ``(A) is capable of locomotion, navigation, or 
                movement on the ground; and
                    ``(B) operates at a distance from one or more 
                operators or supervisors based on commands or in 
                response to sensor data, or through any combination 
                thereof; and
            ``(2) includes--
                    ``(A) humanoid robots, mobile robotics, remote 
                surveillance vehicles, and autonomous patrol 
                technologies; and
                    ``(B) the vehicle, its payload, and any external 
                device used to control the vehicle.''.
    (h) Reallocating Existing Resources.--Section 5949(l)(1) of the 
James M. Inhofe National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 
(Public Law 117-263) is amended by inserting before the period at the 
end the following: ``and the Federal Acquisition Security Council 
Program Office established under section 1323(b)(2) of title 41, United 
States Code''.
    (i) Implementation by the Department of Defense.--
            (1) Notification.--Not later than 30 days after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall 
        provide to the congressional defense committees a notification 
        of the designation of the officials of the Department of 
        Defense who shall serve on the Council in accordance with 
        clause (b)(1)(C)(ii) of section 1322 of title 41, United 
        States.
            (2) Performance of duties.--The Secretary shall ensure that 
        the officials designated--
                    (A) regularly participate in the activities of the 
                Council;
                    (B) ensure that any information requested by the 
                Council from the agency represented by the such 
                official or officials is provided to the Council in a 
                timely manner; and
                    (C) establish procedures to ensure that Under 
                Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment, 
                the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and 
                Engineering, the Chair of the Joint Requirements 
                Oversight Council, the Assistant Secretary of Defense 
                for Industrial Base Policy, and other appropriate 
                personnel of the Department of Defense are informed of 
                the activities of the Council in a timely manner.
    (j) Technical and Conforming Changes.--Subchapter III of chapter 13 
of title 41, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in the table of sections for the subchapter by adding 
        after the item related to section 1327 the following:

``1328. Additional provisions.''; and
            (2) by striking ``of this title'' each place the term 
        appears.

SEC. 1805. MODIFICATIONS TO STRATEGY TO ELIMINATE SOURCING OF COMPUTER 
              DISPLAYS FROM CERTAIN NATIONS.

    Section 835 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60; 10 U.S.C. 4651 note prec.) is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsection (e) as subsection (f); and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (d) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(e) Certifications.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall submit to 
        the congressional defense committees a written certification--
                    ``(A) not later than June 30, 2027, that 
                implementation of the strategy required by this section 
                has begun; and
                    ``(B) not later than January 1, 2030, that the 
                strategy required by this section has eliminated the 
                reliance of the Department on any covered nation to 
                acquire computer displays.''.

SEC. 1806. EXTENSION OF COMPTROLLER GENERAL ASSESSMENTS AND REPORTS ON 
              COMPLIANCE WITH PROCUREMENT REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO RARE 
              EARTH ELEMENTS AND STRATEGIC AND CRITICAL MATERIALS.

    Section 857(c) of the James M. Inhofe National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (Public Law 117-263; 136 Stat. 
2727) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (3)(A) by inserting ``, including any 
        recommendations that the Comptroller General considers 
        appropriate'' before the period at the end; and
            (2) in subsection (c)(5) by striking ``the date that is 5 
        years after the date of the enactment of this Act'' and 
        inserting ``the date that is 12 years after the date of the 
        enactment of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
        Year 2027''.

SEC. 1807. REQUIREMENTS RELATED TO DETECTION AND AVOIDANCE OF 
              COUNTERFEIT ELECTRONIC PARTS.

    (a) In General.--Section 818(c)(3) of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 10 U.S.C. 
3241 note prec.) is amended--
            (1) in subparagraph (C), by striking ``and'' at the end;
            (2) in subparagraph (D)(iii), by striking the period at the 
        end and inserting ``; and''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
                    ``(E) require that, for purchases made in 
                accordance with procedures applicable to purchases 
                below micro-purchase threshold (as defined in section 
                3573 of title 10, United States Code) or in accordance 
                with procedures applicable to purchases below 
                simplified acquisition threshold (as defined in section 
                3571 of such title), Department personnel--
                            ``(i) obtain electronic parts that are in 
                        production or currently available in stock from 
                        the original manufacturer or an authorized 
                        dealer for such electronic part, or from a 
                        supplier that obtains such electronic parts 
                        exclusively from the original manufacturer or 
                        an authorized dealer for such electronic part; 
                        and
                            ``(ii) obtain electronic parts that are not 
                        in production or currently available in stock 
                        in accordance with regulations prescribed 
                        pursuant to subparagraph (C) or (D).''.
    (b) DFARS Revision.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall revise the Department of 
Defense Supplement to the Federal Acquisition Regulation to carry out 
the amendments made by this section.
    (c) Guidance Required.--Not later than 30 days after the revision 
required under subsection (b) has been finalized, the Secretary shall 
update the guidance required under section 818(c) of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 10 
U.S.C. 3241 note prec.)) as amended by this section, including 
practices and procedures to be used under part 8 of the Federal 
Acquisition Regulation.
    (d) Comptroller General Report.--Not later than 270 days after the 
date of the enactment of this section, the Comptroller General of the 
United States shall submit to the congressional defense committees a 
report that reviews of use of government purchase cards by the 
Department of Defense to obtain electronic parts (as defined in section 
818 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 
(Public Law 112-81; 10 U.S.C. 3241 note prec.)) and components for such 
electronic parts using multiple award contracts or using full and open 
competition, along with any recommendations to improve procurement 
procedures to reduce the risk posed by counterfeit electronic parts and 
components.

SEC. 1808. ANALYSIS AND REPORT ON SOURCING OF CERTAIN ITEMS.

    (a) Analysis Required.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense, acting through 
        the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment 
        and other appropriate officials, shall conduct an analysis of 
        each item described in subsection (c) and shall make 
        recommendations for action, consistent with the policies, 
        programs, and activities required under chapters 381 through 
        385 and chapter 389 of title 10, United States Code, chapter 83 
        of title 41, United States Code, and the Defense Production Act 
        of 1950 (50 U.S.C. 4501 et seq.), including--
                    (A) actions for restricting procurement of each 
                such item (with appropriate waivers for cost, emergency 
                requirements, and nonavailability of suppliers), 
                including such restrictions applicable to--
                            (i) domestic suppliers;
                            (ii) suppliers in the national technology 
                        and industrial base (as defined in section 4801 
                        of title 10, United States Code); or
                            (iii) suppliers in other allied country;
                    (B) actions for increasing Federal Government 
                investment in research and development or using other 
                available authorities such as contracts, grants, loans, 
                cooperative agreements, or other transaction 
                authorities, including actions to--
                            (i) expand sourcing, processing, 
                        production, manufacturing capability, or 
                        production capacity of each such item;
                            (ii) diversify sources of supply of each 
                        such item; or
                            (iii) promote alternative approaches for 
                        addressing military requirements for each such 
                        item;
                    (C) actions for prohibiting procurement each such 
                item from selected sources or countries;
                    (D) stockpiling actions for each such item, 
                including creating incentives for domestic suppliers to 
                expand and retain capacity such as--
                            (i) use of long-term purchasing agreements; 
                        or
                            (ii) restrictions related to provenance of 
                        each such item purchased for such stockpile;
                    (E) actions for increasing availability of each 
                such item through recycling or reuse; or
                    (F) a combination of actions described under 
                subparagraphs (A) through (E).
            (2) Considerations.--In conducting the analysis described 
        in paragraph (1), the Secretary shall consider how any actions 
        taken under the analysis would enhance or improve--
                    (A) national security;
                    (B) the economy;
                    (C) current and potential suppliers of the items in 
                subsection (c), including the ability of such suppliers 
                to meet anticipated surge production requirements of 
                the Department of Defense; and
                    (D) implementation of any existing treaties or 
                international agreements to which the United States is 
                a party.
    (b) Reporting on Analyses, Recommendations, and Actions.--Not later 
than October 1, 2027, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report containing the following:
            (1) A summary of the findings of the analyses undertaken 
        for each item pursuant to subsection (a).
            (2) Relevant findings and recommendations for action 
        resulting from such analyses.
            (3) Descriptions of specific actions undertaken or planned 
        to be taken as a result of the analyses, including schedule and 
        resources allocated for any planned actions.
            (4) Any relevant findings or recommendations from such 
        analyses, as appropriate, that should be incorporated into one 
        or more of the following:
                    (A) The biennial report to Congress on the national 
                technology and industrial base required under section 
                4814 of title 10, United States Code.
                    (B) The annual report on unfunded priorities of the 
                national technology and industrial base required under 
                section 4815 of such title.
                    (C) The Department of Defense national security 
                strategy for the national technology and industrial 
                base and associated policy guidance prescribed under 
                section 4811(c) of such title.
                    (D) Activities to modernize acquisition processes 
                to ensure integrity of industrial base pursuant to 
                section 4819 of such title.
                    (E) Activities and associated expenditures related 
                to defense supply chains, including for material, 
                material production, components, subassemblies, and 
                finished products, testing and qualification, 
                infrastructure, facility construction and improvement, 
                and equipment needed in accordance with 4817 of such 
                title.
                    (F) Activities of the Office of Strategic Capital.
                    (G) Defense memoranda of understanding and related 
                agreements between the Secretary of Defense, acting on 
                behalf of the United States, and one or more foreign 
                countries considered in accordance with section 4851 of 
                such title.
                    (H) Activities of the Industrial Analysis Group (or 
                successor group) of the Defense Contract Management 
                Agency.
                    (I) Activities of the Warstopper Program (or 
                successor program) of the Defense Logistics Agency.
                    (J) Industrial base or acquisition policy changes.
                    (K) Legislative proposals for modifications to 
                relevant statutes.
    (c) Items Described.--The items described in this subsection are 
the following:
            (1) A material or other item of supply for which the 
        Secretary or another designated official has issued a waiver or 
        exception to a statutory sourcing restriction, or for which a 
        domestic non-availability determination has been applied.
            (2) Strategic and critical materials (as defined in section 
        12(1) of the Strategic and Critical Materials Stock Piling Act 
        (50 U.S.C. 98h-3(1)), including rare earth materials.
            (3) Strategic and critical minerals derived from recycled 
        or reused minerals and metals.
            (4) Printed circuit boards and components of printed 
        circuit boards.
            (5) Microelectronic, semiconductor, and data storage 
        components.
            (6) Neodymium-iron-boron permanent magnets.
            (7) Samarium and samarium-cobalt permanent magnets.
            (8) Neodymium oxide and metal, praseodymium oxide and 
        metal, and neodymium-praseodymium oxide and metal.
            (9) Additive powders for specialty metals such as titanium-
        based and nickel-based alloys.
            (10) Tantalum, including tantalum metal, tantalum powder, 
        and tantalum alloys.
            (11) Gallium, gallium nitride, and gallium oxide.
            (12) Niobium, including niobium metal, niobium powder, and 
        niobium alloys.
            (13) Tungsten, tungsten carbide, and tungsten precursors, 
        including tungsten ores and concentrates, ammonium 
        paratungstate, ammonium metatungstate, tungstic acid, sodium 
        tungstate, and tungsten oxides.
            (14) Heavy rare earth oxides, namely oxides of erbium, 
        gadolinium, lutetium, samarium, scandium, dysprosium, terbium, 
        ytterbium, and yttrium.
            (15) Rare earth metals and alloys, namely metals and alloys 
        of erbium, gadolinium, lutetium, neodymium, praseodymium, 
        samarium, scandium, dysprosium, terbium, ytterbium, and 
        yttrium.
            (16) Rare earth fluorides, namely fluorides of erbium, 
        gadolinium, lutetium, neodymium, praseodymium, samarium, 
        scandium, dysprosium, terbium, ytterbium, and yttrium.
            (17) Magnesium alloy parts.
            (18) High-purity iron suitable for rare earth magnet 
        manufacturing, naval shipbuilding alloys, electrical steel, and 
        other specialty alloys.
            (19) Aluminum and aluminum-based alloys.
            (20) Graphene and graphene-based materials.
            (21) Mesophase pitch, isotropic pitch, and other critical 
        precursor materials for carbon-carbon composites and synthetic 
        graphite.
            (22) Boron carbide powder or any finished or semi-finished 
        product containing boron carbide powder.
            (23) Optical glass or optical glass systems, as defined in 
        section 834 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
        Fiscal Year 2026, and weapon sights made from such glass.
            (24) Optical transmission equipment, including optical 
        fiber, optical transmitters, and optical cable equipment.
            (25) Continuous filament glass fiber yarn.
            (26) Ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene fiber 
        production capacity.
            (27) Copper foil and copper clad laminate (including woven 
        glass mat and glass fibers necessary to produce such laminate).
            (28) Chemicals critical to defense applications, as 
        determined by the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition 
        and Sustainment.
            (29) Non-rare earth permanent magnets composed of materials 
        such as iron nitride, iron-nickel, or manganese bismuth.
            (30) Synthetic diamond and super abrasive materials used in 
        defense applications.
    (d) Conforming Repeal.--Section 849 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (Public Law 116-283) is 
repealed.

SEC. 1809. ASSESSMENT AND IMPLEMENTATION PLAN FOR SOURCING OF SYNTHETIC 
              DIAMOND AND SUPER ABRASIVE MATERIALS USED IN DEFENSE 
              APPLICATIONS.

    (a) Assessment.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report that includes--
            (1) an assessment of the extent to which the Department of 
        Defense relies on foreign sources, including sources of 
        concern, for synthetic diamond materials and related super 
        abrasive materials used in defense-critical applications;
            (2) a description of the defense systems, subsystems, and 
        manufacturing processes for which such materials are critical, 
        including their role in the production, sustainment, repair, 
        sensing, guidance, navigation, communications, electronic 
        warfare, and precision manufacturing functions of covered 
        systems;
            (3) an evaluation of the current and projected capacity of 
        capable domestic sources and capable sources located in allied 
        or partner countries to meet Department of Defense requirements 
        for such materials;
            (4) an assessment of risks to the defense industrial base 
        associated with supply disruption, including risks arising from 
        single points of failure, limited qualified suppliers, and 
        reliance on sources of concern; and
            (5) recommendations to mitigate identified risks and to 
        strengthen domestic production capability where the Secretary 
        determines such capability is necessary to address national 
        security risks.
    (b) Implementation Plan.--Not later than 90 days after submittal of 
the report under subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense shall submit 
to the congressional defense committees a plan--
            (1) to reduce reliance on foreign sources of concern for 
        synthetic diamond materials and related super abrasive 
        materials; and
            (2) to increase the use of capable domestic sources and, 
        only where such capable domestic sources are not available, 
        capable sources located in allied or partner countries, for 
        such materials in designated defense-critical applications.
    (c) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``allied or partner country'' means a country 
        that the Secretary of Defense determines, based on national 
        security considerations, does not pose an undue risk to the 
        defense industrial base or the security of defense supply 
        chains.
            (2) The term ``capable domestic source'' means a source 
        located in the United States that the Secretary of Defense 
        determines has the technical capability, production capacity, 
        quality controls, security posture, and ability to meet 
        designated defense requirements at program scale.
            (3) The term ``covered system'' means such defense systems 
        or platforms as the Secretary of Defense determines 
        appropriate.
            (4) The term ``source of concern'' means a covered nation 
        as defined in section 4872(f)(2) of title 10, United States 
        Code.
            (5) The term ``super abrasive material'' includes cubic 
        boron nitride and other ultra-hard materials used in defense 
        manufacturing or defense system applications.
            (6) The term ``synthetic diamond materials'' means 
        synthetic or laboratory-engineered diamond materials, including 
        grit, powders, wafers, films, optical components, electronic 
        components, and other functional diamond forms, used in 
        defense-critical applications.

SEC. 1810. DEFENSE SUPPLY CHAIN INTELLIGENCE AND RISK RESPONSE PROGRAM.

    (a) Establishment.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, acting through the 
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Industrial Base Policy, shall 
establish a Department of Defense-wide program to be known as the 
``Defense Supply Chain Intelligence and Risk Response Program'' (in 
this section referred to as the ``Program'') to enhance the 
Department's ability to illuminate, assess, anticipate, and respond to 
risks across the defense industrial base supply chain.
    (b) Purpose.--The purpose of the Program shall be to provide a 
coordinated, holistic framework for the Department of Defense to 
effectively identify and manage the risks within and across the broader 
defense supply chain, including risks associated with microelectronics, 
semiconductors, counterfeit items, diminishing manufacturing sources 
and material shortages, obsolescence, supply chain disruptions, cyber 
vulnerabilities, foreign sourced components, foreign investments, 
financial distress, and sourcing of critical technologies from entities 
within or associated with covered nations.
    (c) Activities.--The Program shall--
            (1) identify and characterize supplier concentration, 
        single-point dependencies, structural vulnerabilities, and 
        risks arising from foreign ownership, control, or influence;
            (2) inform Department of Defense policy and funding 
        decisions intended to enable rapid, scalable response to supply 
        chain vulnerabilities, including creation of stockpiles and 
        identification of alternative domestic suppliers and surge 
        capacity; and
            (3) support and inform Department of Defense efforts to 
        reduce reliance on covered nations for supply chains essential 
        to the national defense.
    (d) Implementation.--In implementing this section, the Assistant 
Secretary of Defense for Industrial Base Policy shall, in consultation 
with the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Sustainment and not later 
than 365 days after the date of the enactment of this Act--
            (1) perform an identification and assessment of the supply 
        chain illumination efforts, supply chain risk management 
        activities, and policies of the Department of Defense, along 
        with annual funding profiles associated with such efforts, 
        activities and policies;
            (2) develop a common framework across the Department of 
        Defense and with contractors of the Department to enable a 
        holistic and coordinated approach for identifying managing 
        risks within defense supply chains; and
            (3) provide the Secretary of Defense the following:
                    (A) Findings and recommendations based on the 
                assessment performed under paragraph (1), including 
                recommendations related to expansion, consolidation, or 
                cancellation of identified supply chain illumination 
                efforts and supply chain risk management activities.
                    (B) A plan of action for successful implementation 
                of the framework developed under paragraph (2).
                    (C) Recommendations for employment of advanced data 
                analytics and artificial intelligence capabilities or 
                tools to support and enable Program activities, 
                including capabilities such as--
                            (i) mapping of multi-tier supply chains 
                        across the defense industrial base, including 
                        domestic and international supplier networks;
                            (ii) identifying and linking entities 
                        across public records, corporate registries, 
                        trade data, and other commercial datasets to 
                        identify foreign ownership, control, or 
                        influence;
                            (iii) highlighting supplier concentration, 
                        single-point dependencies, and other structural 
                        risk indicators; and
                            (iv) modeling and forecasting of supply 
                        chain disruptions and economic security risks.
    (e) Commercial Technology Utilization.--The Secretary shall ensure 
that any advanced data analytics and artificial intelligence 
capabilities or tools to support the Program are procured--
            (1) in accordance with the preference for commercial 
        products and commercial services under section 3453 of title 
        10, United States Code;
            (2) in accordance with the requirements to use competitive 
        procedures under applicable law and the Department of Defense 
        Supplement to the Federal Acquisition Regulation; and
            (3) in a manner that provides the Department with 
        flexibility to adapt procurement strategies to Program needs, 
        evolving market conditions, and advances in technology 
        throughout the life of the Program.
    (f) Reporting Requirements.--
            (1) Initial report.--Not later than April 1, 2027, the 
        Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense committees 
        a report describing--
                    (A) progress made in implementing the Program;
                    (B) integration of Program activities with existing 
                Industrial Base Analysis and Sustainment activities and 
                supply chain risk management activities; and
                    (C) resource requirements, including funding, 
                personnel, data access, and technical infrastructure.
            (2) Annual report.--Not later than one year after the date 
        on which the Program is established, and annually thereafter 
        for five years, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional 
        defense committees a report that includes--
                    (A) an assessment of the effectiveness of the 
                Program in improving the Department's ability to 
                illuminate, assess, anticipate, and respond to risks 
                across the defense industrial base supply chain; and
                    (B) any additional legislative, regulatory, or 
                policy recommendations necessary to strengthen defense 
                industrial base resilience.
    (g) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered nation'' has the meaning given such 
        term in section 4872 of title 10, United States Code.
            (2) The term ``foreign ownership, control, or influence'' 
        refers to ownership structures, governance arrangements, 
        financial relationships, or other mechanisms through which a 
        foreign person or entity may direct, materially influence, or 
        control a supplier or sub-tier entity within the defense 
        industrial base.
            (3) The term ``economic security risks'' means risks 
        arising from supply chain fragility, economic coercion by a 
        covered nation including financing by a covered nation, or 
        other vulnerabilities in a commercial supply chain that may 
        adversely affect national security.

SEC. 1811. IDENTIFICATION OF SUPPLY CHAIN DEPENDENCIES.

    (a) Annual Reports.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than March 1, 2028, and annually 
        thereafter until 2032, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to 
        the appropriate congressional committees an unclassified report 
        with a classified annex that assesses, during the year 
        preceding the date of the report, the extent to which the 
        supply chains for biotechnology equipment and services obtained 
        or funded by the Department of Defense through covered 
        transactions contain critical supply dependencies.
            (2) Report contents.--The unclassified report required 
        under paragraph (1) shall, for biotechnology equipment and 
        services described in such paragraph--
                    (A) describe the supply chains for such 
                biotechnology equipment and services, including an 
                analysis of critical supply dependencies for such 
                supply chains and the overall vulnerability of such 
                supply chains to geopolitical risk stemming from 
                critical supply dependencies;
                    (B) identify the value of such biotechnology 
                equipment and services, both in absolute numbers and as 
                a percentage of the total value of such biotechnology 
                equipment and services, where the supply chain for such 
                biotechnology equipment or service contained at least 
                one critical supply dependency;
                    (C) list the types of such biotechnology equipment 
                or services with critical supply dependencies in 
                defense industrial base supply chains that, if 
                compromised, would cause significant potential 
                disruption to military readiness; and
                    (D) identify the top five percent of covered 
                transactions for biotechnology equipment and services, 
                as measured by the total expected value over the life 
                of the transaction for biotechnology equipment or 
                services obtained or funded by the Department of 
                Defense for which the supply chains contain at least 
                one critical supply dependency.
            (3) Annex contents.--The classified annex required under 
        paragraph (1) shall, for biotechnology equipment and services 
        described in paragraph (1)--
                    (A) identify any covered foreign entities analyzed 
                in the report that the Secretary of Defense has 
                recommended or is considering recommending to the 
                Office of Management and Budget for designation as a 
                biotechnology company of concern to inform that 
                recommendation;
                    (B) describe any additional legislative authorities 
                or resource requirements necessary to adequately assess 
                the vulnerability of supply chains for biotechnology 
                equipment and services that contributes to the defense 
                industrial base, including funding, personnel, data 
                access, and technical infrastructure; and
                    (C) elaborate as necessary on the contents of the 
                unclassified report.
    (b) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``appropriate congressional committees'' 
        means--
                    (A) the Committee on Armed Services of the House of 
                Representatives; and
                    (B) the Committee on Armed Services of the Senate.
            (2) The terms ``biotechnology company of concern'', 
        ``biotechnology equipment or service'', and ``foreign 
        adversary'' have the meaning givens, respectively, in section 
        851 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
        2026 (Public Law 119-60).
            (3) The term ``covered foreign entity'' means an entity 
        including any subsidiary thereof, organized under the laws of a 
        foreign country if either the principal place of business of 
        such entity is in a foreign adversary or the equity securities 
        of the entity are primarily traded on one or more exchanges 
        based in a foreign adversary.
            (4) The term ``covered transaction'' means any Department 
        of Defense contract, subcontract, cooperative agreement, grant, 
        or other transaction with a value greater than $10,000,000.
            (5) The term ``critical supply dependency'' means a step in 
        a supply chain for a biotechnology equipment or service 
        characterized by a limited supplier base consisting entirely or 
        almost entirely of covered foreign entities, such that 
        disruption from a single covered foreign entity or a small set 
        of covered foreign entities is likely to materially impair the 
        availability of functionally interchangeable biotechnology 
        equipment or services.

SEC. 1812. FEDERAL ACQUISITION SECURITY COUNCIL EXCLUSION ORDERS FOR 
              CHINESE MILITARY COMPANY DESIGNEES.

    (a) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) CMC list.--The term ``CMC List'' means the list of 
        Chinese military companies operating in the United States under 
        section 1260H of the William M. (Mac) Thornberry National 
        Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (10 U.S.C. 113 
        note).
            (2) Covered article.--The term ``covered article'' has the 
        meaning given such term in section 1321 of title 41, United 
        States Code.
            (3) Exclusion order.--The term ``exclusion order'' means an 
        order referred to in section 1323(c)(1)(A) of title 41, United 
        States Code.
            (4) Council.--The term ``Council'' means the Federal 
        Acquisition Security Council established under section 1322(a) 
        of title 41, United States Code.
    (b) Mandatory Referral by the Secretary of Defense.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 90 days after determining 
        to add an entity to the CMC List, the Secretary of Defense 
        shall transmit to the Council a written referral recommending 
        that the Council recommend an exclusion order for covered 
        articles produced or provided by such entity.
            (2) Contents.--Each referral shall include--
                    (A) identification of the entity, including known 
                subsidiaries and affiliates;
                    (B) the basis for the determination under such 
                section 1260H, consistent with protection of 
                intelligence sources and methods; and
                    (C) any additional information relevant to the 
                Council's assessment of whether to recommend an 
                exclusion order for covered articles produced or 
                provided by such entity.
    (c) Required Council Action.--
            (1) Review required.--Upon receipt of a referral under 
        subsection (b), the Council shall use the information provided 
        in the referral and any other information the Council 
        determines appropriate under section 1323(c) of title 41, 
        United States Code, to review whether to issue a recommendation 
        to the President for an exclusion order prohibiting executive 
        agencies from procuring covered articles produced or provided 
        by the designated entity. The Council shall complete such 
        review not later than 270 days after the date on which the 
        Council receives the referral.
            (2) Recommendation to the president.--If, as a result of 
        the review, the Council determines to issue such a 
        recommendation, the Council shall transmit the recommendation 
        to the President not later than 90 days after the date on which 
        the Council completes the review.
            (3) Scope.--The recommendation shall apply Government-wide 
        and include subsidiaries and affiliates identified in the 
        referral.
    (d) Removal From CMC List.--
            (1) Notice.--Not later than 90 days after determining to 
        remove an entity from the CMC List, the Secretary of Defense 
        shall notify the Council of the determination and provide the 
        basis for the determination.
            (2) Review.--Upon receipt of such a notice, the Council 
        shall review whether to transmit to the President a 
        recommendation to rescind or modify the exclusion order.
            (3) No automatic rescission.--Removal from the CMC List 
        shall not automatically rescind an exclusion order.
    (e) Existing Designees.--Not later than 90 days after the date of 
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall transmit to 
the Council a written referral under subsection (b)(1) for each entity 
already appearing on the CMC List for which no exclusion order is in 
effect.

SEC. 1813. DOMESTIC PREFERENCE IN THE PROCUREMENT OF PROFESSIONAL 
              SERVICES.

    (a) Establishment of Preference.--Not later than 180 days after the 
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall 
revise the Department of Defense Supplement to the Federal Acquisition 
Regulation to ensure that with respect to contracts for the procurement 
of professional services, a contracting officer--
            (1) shall establish a preference for offerors that are 
        United States companies, to the maximum extent practicable and 
        consistent with the interests of national security; and
            (2) may elect not to apply such preference if the 
        contracting officer provides documentation, including a 
        rationale, for not applying the preference, which may include 
        evidence--
                    (A) that the Secretary of Defense prioritized the 
                urgency of the procurement or delivery of professional 
                services over such preference;
                    (B) that no United States company is capable of 
                fulfilling the requirements of the contract in a timely 
                or cost-effective manner; or
                    (C) of other circumstances determined by the 
                Secretary.
    (b) Relationship to Other Preferences.--The preference established 
under subsection (a) shall not take priority over any preference for 
procurement from the procurement list established pursuant to section 
8503 of title 41, United States Code, the Federal Prison Industries 
catalog described under section 4124(d) of title 18, United States 
Code, or under the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 631 et seq.).
    (c) Reports.--Beginning on March 1, 2028, and annually thereafter 
through March 1, 2031, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report that includes--
            (1) a description of the effectiveness of the preference 
        described in subsection (a) in improving acquisition outcomes 
        in the procurement of professional services;
            (2) the effect of such preference on the number of domestic 
        entities providing professional services to the Department of 
        Defense; and
            (3) a summary of instances during the calendar year 
        preceding the date of submission of the report where such 
        preference was not applied, along with rationale for not 
        applying such preference.
    (d) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``foreign entity'' has the meaning given in 
        section 225.772-1 of the Department of Defense Supplement to 
        the Federal Acquisition Regulation (or a successor regulation).
            (2) The term ``United States company''--
                    (A) means a business entity that--
                            (i) is organized under the laws of a State, 
                        the District of Columbia, or a territory or 
                        possession of the United States;
                            (ii) has its principal place of business 
                        located in the United States, the District of 
                        Columbia, or a territory or possession of the 
                        United States; and
                            (iii) is not directly or indirectly owned 
                        and controlled by a foreign entity; and
                    (B) includes a joint venture for which a business 
                entity described in subparagraph (A) holds an ownership 
                interest greater than or equal to 50 percent.
            (3) The term ``professional services'' includes one or more 
        of the following services:
                    (A) Engineering.
                    (B) Architecture.
                    (C) Design.
                    (D) Environmental consulting.
                    (E) Financial consulting.
                    (F) Program management.
                    (G) Legal.

SEC. 1814. PROHIBITION ON THE USE OF CHINESE-MANUFACTURED OPTICAL FIBER 
              BY THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.

    (a) Prohibition.--The Secretary of Defense may not procure or 
obtain optical fiber and optical fiber cable produced, manufactured, or 
assembled by an entity that is owned by, controlled by, or subject to 
the jurisdiction or direction of the People's Republic of China for use 
in Department of Defense information networks or communications 
systems.
    (b) Covered Optical Fiber Defined.--In this section, the term 
``covered optical fiber'' means single-mode or multi-mode optical fiber 
and optical fiber cable.
    (c) Waiver Authority.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense may waive the 
        prohibition under subsection (a) on a case-by-case basis if the 
        Secretary determines that--
                    (A) the waiver is necessary for the national 
                security interests of the United States; and
                    (B) no practicable alternative exists from a source 
                not described in subsection (a).
            (2) Limitation.--A waiver granted under this subsection 
        shall be limited in time and in scope to the minimum extent 
        necessary.
            (3) Notice.--Not later than 30 days after granting a 
        waiver, the Secretary shall submit written notice to the 
        Committee on Armed Services of the Senate and the Committee on 
        Armed Services of the House of Representatives describing--
                    (A) the justification for the waiver;
                    (B) the duration and scope of the waiver; and
                    (C) the plan to transition to compliant materials.
    (d) Effective Date.--This section shall apply to contracts awarded 
on and after October 1 of the first fiscal year beginning after the 
date of the enactment of this Act.
    (e) FASC Recommendation.--Not later than 90 days after the date of 
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall direct the 
Department of Defense official serving on the Federal Acquisition 
Security Council to formally recommend that the Council--
            (1) evaluate optical fiber and optical fiber cable 
        (including fiber optic cable assemblies) sold, produced, or 
        developed by any entity that constitutes a source of concern 
        due to the relationship of the entity to the People's Republic 
        of China; and
            (2) determine, based on such evaluation, whether to issue a 
        recommended order with respect to such source of concern, or 
        any covered article sold, produced, or developed by such source 
        of concern.
    (f) Scope of Evaluation.--The recommendation under subsection (b) 
shall specifically request that the Federal Acquisition Security 
Council evaluation under paragraph (1) of such subsection consider, at 
a minimum--
            (1) whether an entity that produces or assembles optical 
        fiber and optical fiber cable in the People's Republic of China 
        would meet the definition of source of concern; and
            (2) potential vectors for intelligence collection, 
        disruption, or degradation of national security communications 
        through optical fiber infrastructure procured from such an 
        entity.
    (g) Report.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall 
        submit to the congressional defense committees a report that 
        includes--
                    (A) an assessment by the Secretary regarding 
                national security risks posed by the procurement or use 
                of optical fiber and optical fiber cable produced or 
                assembled by an entity that is a source of concern 
                based on such entity's affiliation with the People's 
                Republic of China;
                    (B) an assessment of the extent to which such 
                optical fiber is present in, or procured for 
                information networks or communications systems of the 
                Department of Defense, or the networks of Department of 
                Defense contractors and subcontractors;
                    (C) an assessment of the availability of 
                alternative sources of optical fiber from domestic 
                suppliers or suppliers from a country that is not a 
                foreign adversary;
                    (D) an update on the status of the recommendation 
                for evaluation made in accordance with subsection (b);
                    (E) an update on any recommended order or 
                designated order issued or under consideration by the 
                Federal Acquisition Security Council with respect to 
                optical fiber or optical fiber cable from any source of 
                concern affiliated with the People's Republic of China; 
                and
                    (F) any actions taken or recommended to be taken by 
                the Secretary to mitigate risks identified under 
                subparagraph (A), including any proposed amendments to 
                the Department of Defense Supplement to the Federal 
                Acquisition Regulation.
            (2) Form.--The report required under this subsection shall 
        be submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified 
        annex.
    (h) Definitions.--In this section, the terms ``covered article'', 
``designated order'', ``Federal Acquisition Security Council'', 
``foreign adversary'', ``recommended order'', and ``source of concern'' 
have the meanings given, respectively, in section 1322 of title 41, 
United States Code (as amended by section 1804 of this Act) in that 
term in section 1321(3) of title 41, United States Code (as amended by 
section 1804 of this Act).

SEC. 1815. REPORT ON PRIMARY ALUMINUM SECTOR INDUSTRIAL BASE 
              ASSESSMENT.

    (a) Report.--Upon enactment of this Act, the Under Secretary of 
Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment shall transmit to the 
congressional defense committees the report titled ``Primary Aluminum 
Sector Industrial Base Assessment Report'' issued by the Industrial 
Analysis Division of the Defense Contract Management Agency and 
submitted to the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Industrial Base 
Policy on April 9, 2025.
    (b) Briefing Required.--Not later than March 1, 2027, the Assistant 
Secretary of Defense for Industrial Base Policy shall provide to the 
congressional defense committees a briefing detailing--
            (1) the reliance of the United States on imports or scrap 
        for aluminum production, including reliance on foreign 
        adversaries or other foreign sources that are at risk of supply 
        chain disruption;
            (2) the current alumina and primary aluminum production 
        capacity in the United States and a near- and long-term 
        assessment of the robustness of such capacity;
            (3) the status and risks facing advanced aluminum 
        fabrication facilities that are an essential part of the 
        defense industrial base;
            (4) insights and findings from the ``Aluminum Wargame'' 
        executed by the Defense Logistics Agency under the Defense 
        Logistics Agency Industrial Base Campaign of Learning series;
            (5) an assessment of the need for large-scale aluminum 
        extrusion capabilities in the United States to support current 
        and projected national defense requirements;
            (6) an assessment of workforce, permitting, infrastructure, 
        and energy considerations associated with sustaining or 
        expanding large-scale aluminum extrusion capabilities in the 
        United States;
            (7) opportunities for increased secondary aluminum 
        production in the United States to increase domestic defense-
        grade aluminum production; and
            (8) policy, acquisition, or investment options the 
        Secretary of Defense is undertaking or considering to mitigate 
        identified risks or gaps in domestic aluminum extrusion 
        capacity, including potential public-private partnerships or 
        other industrial base support mechanisms, as appropriate.

SEC. 1816. ASSESSMENT OF RISK RELATED TO ADVERSARIAL CAPITAL IN THE 
              DEFENSE INDUSTRIAL BASE.

    (a) Designation.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall designate an 
office within the Office of Industrial Base Policy with primary 
responsibility for assessing and mitigating risks related to the use of 
adversarial capital by the entities in the national technology and 
industrial base (as defined in section 4801 of title 10, United States 
Code).
    (b) Duties.--The Secretary shall ensure the office designated under 
subsection (a) is responsible for the following:
            (1) Facilitating collaboration among elements of the 
        Department of Defense and with other stakeholders, including 
        private sector entities and academia, to identify and mitigate 
        such risks, including--
                    (A) by coordinating, deconflicting, and 
                synchronizing adversarial capital risk management 
                activities;
                    (B) by facilitating timely sharing with entities in 
                the national technology and industrial base of threat 
                information, vulnerability assessments, and risk 
                indicators; and
                    (C) by establishing relationships, including 
                through cooperative research and development 
                agreements, to support shared informational 
                understanding of the commercial and economic domain to 
                advance the economic security interests of the 
                Department.
            (2) Tracing the flow of adversarial capital from its source 
        to entities in the national and technological industrial base.
            (3) Identifying and monitoring dependencies of entities in 
        the national and technological industrial base on foreign 
        adversaries by identifying--
                    (A) single points of failure, critical chokepoints, 
                and foreign adversary-controlled aspects of relevant 
                supply chains that could vulnerable to adversarial 
                capital; and
                    (B) tactics, techniques, and procedures used by 
                foreign adversaries to gain influence or control over 
                such entities.
            (4) Providing specific recommendations to Secretary of 
        Defense on actions or policies necessary to reduce adversarial 
        capital flows for mission-critical weapons systems, 
        technologies, and materials.
            (5) Working with stakeholders to develop and implement 
        clear legal, contractual, and technical procedures to--
                    (A) support and enable identification of beneficial 
                ownership data of subcontractors (at any tier) and 
                suppliers in the national and technological industrial 
                base that is relevant to national security;
                    (B) ensure appropriate liability protections for 
                such subcontractors and suppliers making good-faith 
                disclosures of data described in subparagraph (A);
                    (C) implement a voluntary risk-sharing framework 
                under which national and technological industrial base 
                entities may share supplier risk information and 
                receive validated risk assessments of the supply chain 
                of such entity in return, with safeguards for 
                proprietary data.
            (6) Implementing and maintaining continuous automated 
        monitoring of entities in the national and technological 
        industrial base for changes in corporate control, beneficial 
        ownership, geographic sourcing, and supply chain structure.
            (7) Issuing automated alerts to appropriate members of the 
        acquisition workforce and affected stakeholders upon detection 
        of significant risk indicators of adversarial capital.
            (8) Applying corroboration protocols requiring validation 
        of significant risk indicators of adversarial capital across 
        not fewer than two independent data sources before forming the 
        basis for risk-tier elevation, mitigation action, or referral 
        to appropriate law enforcement or regulatory authorities.
    (c) Economic Security Risk Assurance Capability.--Not later than 
180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the head of the 
office designated under subsection (a) shall establish and maintain a 
capability to be known as the ``Economic Security Risk Assurance'' 
capability, which shall--
            (1) consolidate and analyze information related to 
        adversarial capital flows to entities in the national and 
        technological industrial base, supplier identifiers, links 
        between programs of the Department of Defense and suppliers, 
        and other information as determined by such head;
            (2) enable analysis and reporting to support the assessment 
        and risk mitigation of adversarial capital in the national 
        technology and industrial base;
            (3) provide visualization of the risk of adversarial 
        capital on entities in the national and technological 
        industrial base;
            (4) enable federated access by program managers, portfolio 
        acquisition executives, and other appropriate officials of the 
        Department of Defense to supply chain illumination efforts of 
        the Department; and
            (5) enable the office to better perform the duties outlined 
        by this subsection.
    (d) Reporting Requirements.--
            (1) Initial establishment.--The Secretary shall submit to 
        the congressional defense committees a notification of the 
        designation of an office under subsection (a) and the 
        establishment of the Economic Security Risk Assurance tool in 
        accordance with subsection (c).
            (2) Annual report.--Not later than December 1, 2027, and 
        annually thereafter, the Secretary shall submit to the 
        congressional defense committees an annual report analyzing the 
        activities of the office designated under subsection (a). The 
        report may be provided in classified form and may include any 
        recommendations of the Secretary to reduce or further mitigate 
        risks related to adversarial capital in the national and 
        technological industrial base.
    (e) Adversarial Capital Defined.--In this section, the term 
``adversarial capital'' means loans or other forms of financial 
assistance provided to entities in the national and technological 
industrial base.

SEC. 1817. INTEGRATION OF DEMAND FOR FOREIGN MILITARY SALES INTO 
              INDUSTRIAL BASE PLANNING.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall include projected 
demand for foreign military sales, including any foreign military sales 
that are in progress, in--
            (1) Any industrial base assessments conducted by the 
        Secretary.
            (2) Munitions production planning documents.
            (3) Sustainment planning for major defense acquisition 
        programs (as defined in section 4201 of title 10, United States 
        Code).
            (4) Decisions of the Secretary regarding production rate 
        increases and capacity expansion of defense articles (as 
        defined in section 644 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 
        (22 U.S.C. 2403)).
    (b) Objectives.--In carrying out subsection (a), the Secretary 
shall seek to achieve the following objectives with respect to the 
defense industrial base:
            (1) Expand production capacity.
            (2) Stabilize critical suppliers and of the defense 
        industrial base.
            (3) Incentivize capital investment in critical production 
        lines.

SEC. 1818. REPORT ON THE FEASIBILITY OF REQUIRING BILLS OF MATERIALS 
              FOR DEFENSE ACQUISITION.

    (a) Report Required.--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 following:
            (1) The feasibility of including requirements for Bills of 
        Materials, including software, hardware, artificial 
        intelligence, and cryptography, within DoD Instruction 5000.87 
        and the Software Acquisition Pathway.
            (2) The expected value of the information gained through 
        Bills of Materials as it relates to risk management and supply 
        chain integrity.
            (3) The necessity of establishing a new system or 
        consolidating existing systems to perform asset management 
        within the Department to house the information in Bills of 
        Materials as it relates to weapon system components currently 
        in use across the Armed Forces.
    (b) Form.--The report required by subsection (a) shall be submitted 
in unclassified form and may include a classified annex.

      Subtitle B--Provisions Relating to Defense Industrial Base 
                             Manufacturing

SEC. 1831. CLARIFICATION OF ELIGIBLE USES OF DEFENSE INDUSTRIAL BASE 
              FUND.

    (a) In General.--Section 4817(g)(1) of title 10, United States 
Code, as added by section 867 of the National Defense Authorization Act 
for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60), is amended--
            (1) by amending subparagraph (L) to read as follows:
                    ``(L) Ships or submarines, including technologies 
                and capabilities supporting the assembly or automation 
                of ships or submarines, new or modernized 
                infrastructure for the construction of ships or 
                submarines, and infrastructure or capabilities for the 
                maintenance, sustainment, or battle-damage repair of 
                ships or submarines (including private-sector drydock 
                and ship repair infrastructure components and 
                systems).''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
                    ``(P) Advanced microelectronics packaging, 
                including substrates, interposers, heterogeneous 
                integration, and related manufacturing capability and 
                capacity.''.
    (b) Limitation on Use of Certain Funds.--The Secretary of Defense 
may not use funds made available before the date of the enactment of 
this Act to carry out activities under the authority of subsection 
(g)(1)(L) or (g)(1)(P) of section 4817 of title 10, United States Code, 
as added by this Act.

SEC. 1832. INCLUSION OF BIOTECHNOLOGY IN USES OF THE INDUSTRIAL BASE 
              FUND.

    (a) In General.--Section 4817(g)(1) of title 10, United States 
Code, as amended by section 1831, is further amended by adding at the 
end the following new subparagraph:
                    ``(Q) Biotechnology and biomanufacturing.''.
    (b) Limitation on Use of Certain Amounts.--The Secretary of Defense 
may not use amounts made available before the date of the enactment of 
this Act to carry out activities under the authority of subparagraph 
(Q) of section 4817(g)(1) of title 10, United States Code, as added by 
this section.

SEC. 1833. DEVELOPMENT AND APPLICATION OF ALTERNATIVE MATERIAL SOURCES.

    (a) Defense Modernization Account.--Section 3136(d) of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
paragraph:
            ``(7) For developing alternative material sources, through 
        technologies including reverse engineering, reengineering, and 
        advanced manufacturing (as defined in section 4841 of this 
        title), to meet operational requirements.''.
    (b) Life-cycle Sustainment Plan.--Section 4324(b)(1)(C) of title 
10, United States Code, is amended by inserting before the period at 
the end the following: ``, where such considerations shall include the 
application of alternative methods to support sustainment, including 
reverse engineering, reengineering, and advanced manufacturing (as 
defined in section 4841 of this title)''.

SEC. 1834. REPORT AND IMPLEMENTATION OF PLAN FOR ADVANCED MANUFACTURING 
              FOR CERTAIN CRITICAL READINESS ITEMS OF SUPPLY.

    Section 1842 of the National Defense Authorization Act of Fiscal 
Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60) is amended--
            (1) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new 
        subsections:
    ``(c) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this subsection, the Under Secretary of Defense for 
Acquisition and Sustainment shall submit the plan required by 
subsection (a) to--
            ``(1) the collaborative forum established under section 
        1844 of this Act (Public Law 119-60; 10 U.S.C. 4811 note);
            ``(2) the Defense Logistics Agency; and
            ``(3) the congressional defense committees.
    ``(d) Implementation.--
            ``(1) Working group.--Following receipt of the plan 
        described in paragraph (1), members of the collaborative forum 
        established under such section 1844 shall establish a working 
        group (or other appropriate organization) to implement such 
        plan by developing or identifying advanced manufacturing 
        solutions to increase the production of critical readiness 
        items of supply identified under subsection (a)(1), where such 
        solutions are likely ensure the production of such items not 
        later than 24 months after the date of the establishment of the 
        working group.
            ``(2) Notation.--Not later than 60 days after receipt of 
        the plan described in paragraph (1), the Director of the 
        Defense Logistics Agency shall update the No Bid Solicitation 
        List to include a notation for items that have been identified 
        under subsection (a)(1) as critical readiness items of 
        supply.''; and
            (2) in subsection (e), by adding at the end the following 
        new paragraphs:
            ``(3) The term `No Bid Solicitation List' means the list 
        maintained by the Defense Logistics Agency identifying 
        solicitations that have received no bids or no responsive 
        offers within required procurement timelines.
            ``(4) The term `covered system' has the meaning given in 
        section 4324 of title 10, United States Code.''.

SEC. 1835. ADDITIONAL GUIDANCE RELATED TO ADVANCED MANUFACTURING.

    Section 1846(b)(2) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60) is amended--
            (1) in subparagraph (F), by striking the word ``and'';
            (2) in subparagraph (G)(ii), by striking the period and 
        inserting ``; and''; and
            (3) by adding the following new subparagraph:
                    ``(H) risk-based policies and best practices to 
                prevent the dissemination of information or 
                capabilities that enable influence of entities located 
                in China, Russia, Iran, or North Korea over the 
                production of parts, including a preference for the use 
                of parts produced through secure, domestic advanced 
                manufacturing processes.''.

SEC. 1836. MODIFICATIONS TO ADVANCED MANUFACTURING POLICY REVIEW AND 
              GUIDANCE.

    Section 1846(b)(2) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60; 10 U.S.C. 4841 note) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``September 30, 2027'' and inserting 
        ``February 28, 2027'';
            (2) in subparagraph (F), by striking ``and'' at the end;
            (3) in subparagraph (G)(ii), by striking the period at the 
        end and inserting a semicolon; and
            (4) by adding at the end the following:
                    ``(H) a methodology for establishing common part 
                numbering system for AM materials, processes, and 
                parts; and
                    ``(I) a methodology for qualification testing for 
                small run critical parts.''.

SEC. 1837. ENHANCED DOMESTIC CONTENT REQUIREMENT FOR SHIPBUILDING 
              PROGRAMS.

    Section 835(b) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2023 (Public Law 118-31; 137 Stat. 338; 10 U.S.C. note prec. 4201) 
is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (4)(B), by inserting ``except as provided 
        in paragraph (5),'' before ``shall not apply''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
            ``(5) Exclusion for shipbuilding programs.--Paragraph 
        (4)(B) shall not apply to manufactured articles procured in 
        connection with a shipbuilding program.''.

SEC. 1838. TRIENNIAL REVIEW OF MERGER AND ACQUISITION ACTIVITY 
              ASSOCIATED WITH MAJOR DEFENSE SUPPLIERS.

    (a) Triennial Review.--The Assistant Secretary of Defense for 
Industrial Base Policy shall triennially review merger and acquisition 
activity associated with major defense suppliers, including assessing 
the resulting financial health of such suppliers and whether resulting 
mergers and acquisitions have affected the supply of an essential good 
or service needed to support the Department of Defense's mission to 
provide national security and defense.
    (b) Triennial Report.--Not later than December 31, 2027, and 
triennially thereafter, the Assistant Secretary of Defense for 
Industrial Base Policy shall submit to the congressional defense 
committees a report on the findings of the review conducted for the 
previous three fiscal years, including a description of the effects of 
completed mergers and acquisitions on the health of the defense 
industrial base and actions taken to mitigate any risks identified.

SEC. 1839. MULTIYEAR PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR CERTAIN MUNITIONS.

    (a) Authority.--Subject to the provisions of section 3501 of title 
10, United States Code, specified in subsection (c), the head of an 
agency may enter into one or more multiyear contracts for more than one 
but not more than seven program years, beginning in fiscal year 2027, 
for the procurement of the following systems (including items, 
services, and logistics support associated with those systems and their 
subsystems):
            (1) Standard Missile-3 (SM-3) Block IB missile systems.
            (2) Standard Missile-3 (SM-3) Block IIA missile systems.
            (3) Precision Strike Missiles (PrSM).
            (4) Standard Missile-6 Missiles (SM-6).
            (5) Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missiles (AMRAAM).
            (6) Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missiles (JASSM).
            (7) Long Range Anti-Ship Missiles (LRASM).
            (8) Tomahawk Land Attack Missile (TLAM) and Maritime Strike 
        Tomahawk (MST).
            (9) Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) systems.
            (10) Patriot Advanced Capability-3 (PAC-3) Missile Segment 
        Enhancement (MSE) systems.
            (11) Low-cost hypersonic strike systems.
            (12) Family of Affordable Mass Munitions (FAMM), Extended-
        Range Attack Munition (ERAM), Enterprise Test Vehicle (ETV), 
        and ground-launched low-cost cruise missile systems.
            (13) Joint Advanced Tactical Missiles (JATM).
    (b) Procurement in Conjunction With Existing Contracts.--The 
systems authorized to be procured under subsection (a) may be procured 
as an addition to an existing contract relating to such systems.
    (c) Limited Applicability of Other Law.--The provisions of section 
3501 of title 10, United States Code, specified in this subsection are 
as follows:
            (1) Subsection (f).
            (2) Subsection (g), applied by substituting ``contract 
        awarded pursuant to the authority of this section'' for 
        ``contract described in subsection (a)'' each place it appears.
            (3) Subsection (i)(1).
            (4) Subsection (1)(3).
    (d) Certification to Congressional Defense Committees Required.--
The head of an agency may enter into a multiyear contract under 
subsection (a) only if the head of the agency certifies to the 
congressional defense committees in writing, not later than seven days 
before entering into such a contract, each of the following:
            (1) That the use of such a contract is consistent with the 
        projected force structure requirements for the applicable 
        program.
            (2) That the use of such a contract will result in 
        significant savings compared to the total anticipated costs of 
        carrying out the program through annual contracts.
            (3) That there is a reasonable expectation that throughout 
        the contemplated contract period the head of the agency will 
        request funding for the contract at the level required to avoid 
        contract cancellation.
            (4) That there is a stable design for the property to be 
        acquired and the technical risks associated with such property 
        are not excessive.
            (5) That the estimates of both the cost of the contract and 
        the anticipated cost avoidance through the use of a such a 
        contract are realistic.
            (6) That the use of such a contract will promote the 
        national security of the United States.
            (7) That during the fiscal year in which the contract is to 
        be awarded, sufficient funds will be available to perform the 
        contract in such fiscal year, and the future-years defense 
        program (as defined in section 221 of title 10, United States 
        Code) for such fiscal year will include the funding required to 
        execute the program without cancellation.
    (e) Authority for Advance Procurement.--The head of an agency may 
enter into one or more contracts for advance procurement associated 
with a program for which authorization to enter into a multiyear 
contract is provided under subsection (a) and for systems and 
subsystems associated with such program, in economic order quantities 
when cost savings are achievable.
    (f) Condition for Out-year Contract Payments.--A multiyear 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 2027 is subject to the availability of 
appropriations for that purpose for such later fiscal year.
    (g) Definition.--In this section, the term ``head of an agency'' 
means--
            (1) the Secretary of Defense;
            (2) the Secretary of the Army;
            (3) the Secretary of the Navy; or
            (4) the Secretary of the Air Force.

SEC. 1840. MULTIYEAR PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR PLATFORMS AND COMPONENTS 
              SYSTEMS.

    (a) Authority.--Subject to the provisions of section 3501 of title 
10, United States Code, specified in subsection (c), the head of an 
agency may enter into one or more multiyear contracts for more than one 
but not more than seven program years, beginning in fiscal year 2027, 
for the procurement of the following systems (including items, 
services, and logistics support associated with those systems and their 
subsystems):
            (1) Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System (GMLRS).
            (2) 6.8mm ammunition.
            (3) Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System (APKWS) (AGR-20 
        A/B), II / Fixed-Wing, Air Launched, Counter-Unmanned [Aircraft 
        Systems] Ordnance (FALCO) (AGR-20F).
            (4) Lower Tier Air and Missile Defense Sensor (LTAMDS).
            (5) Small Diameter Bomb II (SDB II).
            (6) Air Intercept Missile-9X (AIM-9X).
            (7) Patriot Guidance Enhanced Missile-Tactical (GEM-T).
            (8) Integrated Battle Command System (IBCS).
            (9) Air-Launched Rapid Response Weapon Increment 1 (ARRW 
        Inc 1).
            (10) Army/Navy Transportable Radar Surveillance (TPY-2).
            (11) Javelin CLU (Command Launch Unit).
            (12) FGM-148 Javelin.
            (13) Coyote Block 2C (C-UAS interceptor).
            (14) Sonobuoys (SSQ-36, SSQ-53, SSQ-62, SSQ-101, SSQ-125).
            (15) RIM-162 Evolved Sea Sparrow Missile (ESSM).
            (16) RIM-116 Rolling Airframe Missile (RAM).
            (17) Remote Modular Terminal (RMT).
            (18) Counter Communications System (CCS).
    (b) Procurement in Conjunction With Existing Contracts.--The 
systems authorized to be procured under subsection (a) may be procured 
as additions to existing contracts covering such systems.
    (c) Limited Applicability of Other Law.--In applying section 3501 
of title 10, United States Code, to subsection (a), only the following 
provisions of that section shall apply:
            (1) Subsection (f).
            (2) Subsection (g), in which the term ``contract described 
        in subsection (a)'' shall mean a contract awarded pursuant to 
        the authority of this section.
            (3) Subsection (i)(1).
            (4) Subsection (l)(3).
    (d) Certification to Congressional Defense Committees Required.--
The head of an agency may enter into a multiyear contract under 
subsection (a) only if the head of the agency certifies to the 
congressional defense committees in writing, not less than 7 days 
before entry into the contract, each of the following:
            (1) That the use of such a contract is consistent with the 
        projected force structure requirements for the respective 
        program.
            (2) That the use of such a contract will result in--
                    (A) savings of the total anticipated costs of 
                carrying out the program through annual contracts; or
                    (B) necessary defense industrial base stability not 
                otherwise achievable through annual contracts.
            (3) That there is a reasonable expectation that throughout 
        the contemplated contract period the head of the agency will 
        request funding for the contract at the level required to avoid 
        contract cancellation.
            (4) That there is a stable design for the property to be 
        acquired and the technical risks associated with such property 
        are not excessive.
            (5) That the estimates of both the cost of the contract and 
        the anticipated cost avoidance through the use of a such a 
        contract are realistic.
            (6) That the use of such a contract will promote the 
        national security of the United States.
            (7) That during the fiscal year in which the contract is to 
        be awarded, sufficient funds will be available to perform the 
        contract in such fiscal year, and the future-years defense 
        program (as defined in section 221 of title 10, United States 
        Code) for such fiscal year will include the funding required to 
        execute the program without cancellation.
    (e) Authority for Advance Procurement.--The head of an agency may 
enter into one or more contracts for advance procurement associated 
with a program for which authorization to enter into a multiyear 
contract is provided under subsection (a) and for systems and 
subsystems associated with such program, in economic order quantities 
when cost savings are achievable.
    (f) Condition for Out-year Contract Payments.--A multiyear 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 2027 is subject to the availability of 
appropriations for that purpose for such later fiscal year.
    (g) Definition.--In this section, the term ``head of an agency'' 
means--
            (1) the Secretary of Defense;
            (2) the Secretary of the Army;
            (3) the Secretary of the Navy; or
            (4) the Secretary of the Air Force.

SEC. 1841. MANAGING AND MITIGATING RISKS IN MAJOR MUNITIONS PROGRAMS.

    (a) Requirement.--In meeting the requirements of the Department of 
Defense for major munitions programs, the Secretary of Defense shall 
consider alternative designs, including designs such as low-cost, mass-
produced munitions or other capabilities that could complement existing 
munitions capabilities.
    (b) Definitions.--In this section--
            (1) the term ``major munitions program'' means--
                    (A) any major munitions program within the meaning 
                given such term in section 4172 of title 10, United 
                States Code; and
                    (B) any munitions program that is identified as a 
                critical munitions requirement by the Munitions 
                Acceleration Council in the budget justification 
                materials submitted to Congress in support of the 
                Department of Defense budget for fiscal year 2027; and
            (2) the term ``low-cost, mass-produced munition'' means any 
        munition that can be produced and delivered by a single 
        contractor--
                    (A) in quantities two or more times greater than 
                the quantities that the relevant existing munition can 
                be produced and delivered in a single fiscal year using 
                production capacity that is currently available to the 
                contractor; and
                    (B) at a cost to the Department at least 25 percent 
                lower per unit than the relevant existing munition.

SEC. 1842. COMPTROLLER GENERAL ASSESSMENT ON IMPROVING WEAPON SYSTEMS 
              AND TECHNOLOGY PROCUREMENT.

    (a) Assessments.--The Comptroller General of the United States 
shall conduct one or more assessments of how the Secretary of Defense 
can improve procurement of weapon systems and technologies.
    (b) Elements.--Any assessment under subsection (a) shall include 
the following:
            (1) An evaluation of the extent to which the members of the 
        acquisition workforce (as defined in section 101 of title 10, 
        United States Code) have the knowledge, skills, and expertise 
        necessary to negotiate a fair deal for weapon systems and 
        technologies for the Department of Defense.
            (2) With respect to a procurement described in subsection 
        (a), a determination of whether the Secretary--
                    (A) has sufficient understanding and data on the 
                incentives and motivations of defense contractors 
                necessary to negotiate a fair deal for the Department 
                of Defense;
                    (B) has and uses mechanisms to assess contractor 
                performance and tools for accountability for meeting 
                contractual obligations;
                    (C) understands the data rights needed to maintain, 
                sustain, and upgrade weapon systems and effectively 
                uses contracting approaches to facilitate iterative 
                development and to adopt commercial technologies;
                    (D) has sufficient understanding of, and can 
                monitor changes in, the defense industrial base, 
                including the effect of mergers and acquisitions and 
                tracking as new entrants; and
                    (E) evaluates the effectiveness of efforts to 
                reduce supply chain risks and measure the effects of 
                available industrial policy tools.
    (c) Briefing.--Not later than 60 days after the date of the 
enactment of this section, the Comptroller General shall provide to the 
congressional defense committees a briefing on plans for any 
assessments required under subsection (a) and a timeline and format for 
delivery of the final results of such assessments.

                  Subtitle C--Organic Industrial Base

SEC. 1861. MODIFICATION TO ANNUAL REPORT ON DEPOT-LEVEL MAINTENANCE AND 
              REPAIR WORKLOADS BY PUBLIC AND PRIVATE SECTORS.

    Section 2466(d)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``each Defense Agency, the percentage'' and 
        inserting ``each Defense Agency--''
            ``(A) the percentage'';
            (2) in subparagraph (A), as so redesignated, by striking 
        the period at the end and inserting ``; and''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
            ``(B) the dollar amount of such expended and projected 
        funds, respectively, disaggregated by covered depot.''.

SEC. 1862. AUTHORITY TO WRITE OFF CAPITAL EXPENDITURES FOR CERTAIN 
              DEPOTS OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.

    Chapter 146 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
inserting after section 2470 the following new section:
``Sec. 2471. Accounting for certain depots: authority to write off 
              capital expenditures
    ``(a) Authority.--With respect to any covered depot, the Secretary 
of Defense may write off, for accounting purposes, any depreciated cost 
or debt associated with capital that does not generate revenue as a 
result of a Government-directed mission change.
    ``(b) Delegation of Authority.--The Secretary may delegate the 
authority under subsection (a) to the Secretary of a military 
department.
    ``(c) Covered Depot Defined.--In this section, the term `covered 
depot' has the meaning given such term in section 2476 of this 
title.''.

SEC. 1863. REFORMS RELATING TO ARMY ORGANIC INDUSTRIAL BASE.

    (a) Modernization.--Chapter 146 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 2477. Modernization of organic industrial base of Department of 
              the Army
    ``(a) Modernization.--The Secretary of the Army shall take such 
steps as may be necessary to accelerate the modernization of the 
organic industrial base of the Army to meet the requirements of the 
Army, including by carrying out the following:
    ``(1) Ensuring the production of additional materials by, or the 
expanded use of capabilities of, such organic industrial base.
    ``(2) Establishing an updated structure for the governance of such 
organic industrial base, under which--
            ``(A) decisions regarding resourcing and site operations 
        overseen by the Army Materiel Command shall be delineated from, 
        and reconciled with, workload and acquisition requirements 
        overseen by the Assistant Secretary of the Army for 
        Acquisition, Logistics, and Technology; and
            ``(B) the relationship between the Army Sustainment Command 
        and the Joint Energetics Transition Office established under 
        section 148 of this title shall be delineated with respect to 
        such organic industrial base.
    ``(3) Establishing an updated resourcing model for such organic 
industrial base, for the purpose of--
            ``(A) reducing production costs associated with each 
        covered Army depot; and
            ``(B) ensuring such costs are, to the maximum extent 
        practicable, competitive with commercial capabilities.
    ``(4) Ensuring the updated resourcing model established under 
paragraph (3)--
            ``(A) details any modification to a working-capital fund of 
        the Army necessary to achieve a purpose specified in such 
        paragraph; and
            ``(B) accounts for the use of funds appropriated for the 
        Army or relevant elements of the Department of Defense, 
        including the Army Contracting Command, the Civilian Human 
        Resources Agency of the Army, the Defense Finance and 
        Accounting Service, and the Defense Information Systems Agency, 
        or for base operating services.
    ``(5) Establishing key training pipelines, and desired throughput 
with respect to such pipelines, necessary to support each covered Army 
depot in accordance with this subsection, including by identifying 
appropriations necessary for such support.
    ``(b) Limitation on Actions to Decrease Workload.--The Secretary of 
the Army may not carry out any action that would decrease the workload 
performed by any covered Army depot for a year by more than 10 percent 
as compared with the workload performed by that covered Army depot five 
years prior unless--
            ``(1) the Secretary of the Army submits to the 
        congressional defense committees a notification that includes 
        an explanation for such decrease and a plan to shift other 
        workload requirements of the Army to the covered Army depot, to 
        maintain workforce capability; and
            ``(2) a period of 30 days has elapsed following such 
        notification.
    ``(c) Reports on Modernization Efforts.--Concurrent with the 
submission of each plan required by section 2473 of this title, the 
Secretary of the Army shall submit to the congressional defense 
committees a report detailing, with respect to the five-year period 
covered by the plan, the efforts of the Army over such period to 
modernize covered Army depots consistent with this section, including 
the criteria used to allocate funds available for such modernization 
between such depots.
    ``(d) Annual Report on Certain Activities.--On an annual basis, the 
Secretary of the Army shall disseminate to each covered Army depot, and 
submit to the congressional defense committees, a report that 
includes--
            ``(1) with respect to the year preceding the date of the 
        submission of the report, detailed information on--
                    ``(A) the type and quantity of production 
                activities and depot-level maintenance and repair 
                activities performed by each such depot during such 
                year; and
                    ``(B) how such activities were coordinated with 
                other production activities and depot-level maintenance 
                and repair activities across the Department of Defense; 
                and
            ``(2) with respect to the three-year period following the 
        date of the submission of the report, a comprehensive plan for 
        the production activities and depot-level maintenance and 
        repair activities to be performed by each such depot during 
        such period, including detailed information on--
                    ``(A) the type and quantity of such activities;
                    ``(B) how such activities would be coordinated with 
                other production activities and depot-level maintenance 
                and repair activities across the Department of Defense;
                    ``(C) for each fiscal year within such period, how 
                the projected use of funds for the depot-level 
                maintenance and repair workload of each covered Army 
                depot would contribute to the percentage limitation 
                under section 2466 of this title; and
                    ``(D) the current and projected needs of the Army, 
                the other military departments, and foreign partners, 
                that may be addressed through such activities.
    ``(e) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `covered Army depot' means a covered depot 
        listed in section 2476(f)(1) of this title.
            ``(2) The term `organic industrial base of the Army' means 
        each covered Army depot.''.
    (b) Guidance.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army shall issue guidance 
to implement section 2477 of title 10, United States Code, as added by 
subsection (a).
    (c) GAO Review.--
            (1) Review.--The Comptroller General of the United States 
        shall conduct a review of plans of the Army for sustainment 
        with respect to the development and fielding of new weapon 
        systems. Such review shall include the following:
                    (A) An identification of key weapon systems 
                expected to be fielded by the Army for the first time 
                during the five-year period following the date of the 
                commencement of such review.
                    (B) An assessment of the plans of the Army for the 
                maintenance and repair of, and the logistics, supply 
                chain, and other sustainment functions for, such weapon 
                systems.
                    (C) An assessment of the extent to which the Army 
                is developing and investing in the sustainment 
                functions specified in subparagraph (B) concurrent with 
                the fielding of such weapon systems.
            (2) Briefing.--Not later than April 1, 2027, the 
        Comptroller General shall provide to the congressional defense 
        committees a briefing on preliminary observations relating to 
        the review under paragraph (1), including on planned reporting 
        formats and schedules.
            (3) Report.--Not later than August 1, 2027, the Comptroller 
        General shall submit to the congressional defense committees a 
        report containing the results of the review under paragraph 
        (1).

SEC. 1864. EXCLUSION OF MANUFACTURING ARSENAL WORKLOAD FROM DEPOT 
              CARRYOVER CALCULATION.

    Section 377(2) of the James M. Inhofe National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (Public Law 117-263; 10 U.S.C. 
2476 note) is amended by inserting ``any manufacturing arsenal workload 
and'' after ``calculated carryover amount''.

SEC. 1865. TEMPORARY AUTHORITY FOR USE OF OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE 
              FUNDS TO PROVIDE TRAINING FOR CERTAIN EMPLOYEES 
              PERFORMING SERVICES OR WORK FUNDED BY WORKING-CAPITAL 
              FUNDS.

    (a) In General.--Notwithstanding subsection (c) of section 2208 of 
title 10, United States Code, the Secretary of Defense and the 
Secretary of a military department may use funds available for 
operations and maintenance to pay expenses necessary to train 
prevailing rate employees, as defined by section 5342(a)(2)(A) of title 
5, United States Code, who perform services or work funded by a 
working-capital fund.
    (b) Termination.--The authority under subsection (a) shall expire 
on October 1, 2032.

SEC. 1866. DEMONSTRATION AND PROTOTYPING PROGRAM FOR QUALIFICATION OF 
              ORGANIC INDUSTRIAL BASE AS ALTERNATE SOURCE FOR 
              MANUFACTURE OF CASTS AND FORGED COMPONENTS FOR LEGACY 
              AIRCRAFT.

    (a) Program.--Not later than 60 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall establish a 
demonstration and prototyping program, to be known as the ``Organic 
Industrial Base Qualification Program for Castings and Forgings for 
Legacy Aircraft'', to develop, test, and qualify the organic industrial 
base as an alternate source for the manufacture of casts and forged 
components for fixed wing or rotary wing legacy aircraft.
    (b) Selection of Depots.--
            (1) Selection.--The Secretary shall select one or more 
        covered depots at which to carry out the Program.
            (2) Foundry requirement.--The Secretary shall ensure that 
        any covered depot selected under paragraph (1) has a foundry 
        capable of manufacturing casts and forged components.
    (c) Activities Authorized.--In carrying out the Program, the 
Secretary of Defense may conduct at any covered depot selected pursuant 
to subsection (b) one or more of the following activities:
            (1) Such activities as may be necessary to certify or 
        otherwise accredit the covered depot to meet industry standards 
        relating to the manufacturing of casts and forged components 
        for legacy aircraft, including the processing of raw materials 
        for such manufacturing.
            (2) The identification of candidate casts or forged 
        components to be manufactured at a covered depot for legacy 
        aircraft.
            (3) The manufacture of test articles for such candidate 
        casts or forged components.
            (4) The analysis, test, demonstration, and qualification of 
        such candidate casts and forged components for use with respect 
        to legacy aircraft.
            (5) The manufacture, in limited production quantities, of 
        such candidate casts and forged components for use as reserve 
        stock for such legacy aircraft.
            (6) The development or acquisition of such workforce, 
        equipment, or materials as may be necessary to accomplish any 
        activity under paragraphs (1) through (5).
    (d) Public-private Partnership.--
            (1) Requirement.--Under the Program, each covered depot 
        selected under subsection (b) shall seek to enter into at least 
        one public-private partnership with an original manufacturer of 
        legacy aircraft for the purpose of such manufacturer supporting 
        the activities conducted at the covered depot under subsection 
        (c).
            (2) Authority under partnership.--As part of any 
        partnership entered into between an original manufacturer of 
        legacy aircraft and a covered depot under paragraph (1), such 
        original manufacturer may analyze requirements and 
        specifications relating to legacy aircraft, and update related 
        technical data, to identify the minimum requirements for raw 
        material, processing of such raw material, and manufacturing, 
        relating to casts and forged components for legacy aircraft.
    (e) 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 report on the activities carried out under the 
Program, including--
            (1) an identification of any certification or accreditation 
        achieved pursuant to subsection (c)(1);
            (2) a description of the number and type of casts and 
        forged components manufactured by each covered depot under the 
        Program and whether such casts or forged components have been 
        qualified for use with respect to legacy aircraft;
            (3) a description of any operational or funding barriers to 
        implementation of the Program;
            (4) any recommendations for legislative, regulatory, or 
        policy modifications necessary to reduce such barriers, 
        including with respect to the receipt of funds to carry out the 
        Program; and
            (5) any other recommendations for improving the Program, 
        including whether to extend the or make permanent the Program.
    (f) Termination.--The authority to carry out the Program shall 
terminate on the date that is five years after the date of the 
enactment of this Act.
    (g) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered depot'' has the meaning given such 
        term in 2476 of title 10, United States Code.
            (2) The term ``organic industrial base'' means each covered 
        depot.
            (3) The term ``Program'' means the program established 
        under subsection (a).

SEC. 1867. BRIEFING AND REPORT ON DEFENSE INDUSTRIAL BASE CHOKEPOINTS 
              AND ORGANIC INDUSTRIAL BASE MODERNIZATION.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Assistant Secretary of Defense for 
Industrial Base Policy shall provide to the congressional defense 
committees a briefing and report that include each of the following:
            (1) An identification of supply chain chokepoints for each 
        covered strategic component, including--
                    (A) the defense articles and systems dependent on 
                the chokepoint, particularly for components necessary 
                to produce multiple critical defense articles;
                    (B) the current domestic and foreign sources of 
                supply, including identification of any covered nation 
                sources and any single points of failure;
                    (C) the consequences to defense production of a 
                disruption of the chokepoint; and
                    (D) the estimated time required to restore or 
                replace the capability in the event of a disruption.
            (2) A categorization of identified supply chain chokepoints 
        into the following approaches best suited for expanding 
        domestic production, including a description of the criteria 
        used for each category:
                    (A) Government production.
                    (B) Government-supported commercial production.
                    (C) Commercially viable production with de-risked 
                private entry.
            (3) An evaluation of production and financing models and 
        mechanisms best suited to expand domestic production for each 
        identified supply chain chokepoint, including each of the 
        following:
                    (A) Government-owned, government-operated, or other 
                forms of government production;
                    (B) Government-owned, contractor-operated 
                production;
                    (C) Contractor-owned, contractor-operated 
                production, or other forms of commercial production;
                    (D) Pre-qualifying additional commercial production 
                sources;
                    (E) Strategic stockpiling;
                    (F) Government lending, grants, and other 
                financing; and
                    (G) Offtake agreements, price-floor commitments, 
                multiyear procurement, or other government commitments 
                to ensure predictable demand aggregation.
            (4) Such recommendations, including legislative 
        recommendations and recommendations for new or expanded 
        production or financing authorities, as the Assistant Secretary 
        considers appropriate to expand organic industrial base and 
        other production needs identified in the briefing and report.
    (b) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered strategic component'' means each of 
        the following:
                    (A) High-strength steel and titanium castings and 
                forgings and other components supporting the submarine 
                industrial base.
                    (B) Subcomponents required for long-range fires and 
                air and missile defense systems, including--
                            (i) solid rocket motors;
                            (ii) energetics and their precursors; and
                            (iii) sensitive electronics.
                    (C) Batteries, rare earth magnets, and other energy 
                storage platforms.
                    (D) Castings and forgings.
                    (E) Printed circuit boards.
                    (F) Subcomponents for attritable, unmanned, and 
                autonomous systems, including--
                            (i) optical sensors;
                            (ii) motors; and
                            (iii) cameras.
                    (G) Such other components as designated by the 
                Assistant Secretary pursuant to a determination that 
                the sector is critical to the ability of the United 
                States to deter or prevail in a high-end conflict.
            (2) The term ``supply chain chokepoint'' means any 
        component or subcomponent that--
                    (A) is a necessary input to the production of one 
                or more defense articles within a covered strategic 
                sector; and
                    (B) is--
                            (i) produced by a limited number of 
                        domestic suppliers, a single domestic supplier, 
                        or no domestic supplier; or
                            (ii) is sourced in significant part from a 
                        covered nation, as such term is defined in 
                        section 4872(f)(2) of title 10, United States 
                        Code, the disruption of which would materially 
                        impair the production of one or more defense 
                        articles.

                   Subtitle D--Small Business Matters

SEC. 1871. EXCEPTION TO CONTRACT PRICE REQUIREMENT RELATING TO USE OF 
              TEST AND EVALUATION INSTALLATIONS BY COMMERCIAL ENTITIES.

    Section 4175 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (c), by striking ``A contract entered 
        into'' and inserting ``Except as provided in subsection (e), a 
        contract entered into'';
            (2) in subsection (d), by inserting ``or subsection (e)'' 
        after ``subsection (c)'';
            (3) by redesignating subsections (e) and (f) as subsections 
        (f) and (g), respectively;
            (4) by inserting after subsection (d) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(e) Exception to Contract Price Requirement.--(1) Notwithstanding 
subsection (c), a contract entered into under subsection (a) with a 
covered contractor may include a provision authorizing a commercial 
entity using a Major Range and Test Facility Installation under the 
contract to reimburse the Department of Defense for a cost that is less 
than the amount of all direct costs to the United States associated 
with the test and evaluation activities conducted by the covered 
contractor under the contract if the Secretary determines, and 
certifies in writing, that--
            ``(A) such test and evaluation activities are for a 
        promising science and technology concept with a low technology 
        readiness level;
            ``(B) the contract is expected to yield to the Department 
        of Defense a significant, long-term technological benefit or 
        benefit relating to the defense industrial base; and
            ``(C) such test and evaluation activities will not delay or 
        displace previously scheduled test activities associated with 
        an existing program of record or the Portfolio Acquisition 
        Executive of such program of record has provided written 
        agreement to the delay or displacement.
    ``(2) The Secretary of Defense may delegate the authority under 
paragraph (1) to the commander of a Major Range and Test Facility 
Installation.''; and
            (5) in subsection (g), as redesignated by paragraph (3), by 
        adding at the end the following new paragraphs:
            ``(3) The term `covered contractor' means a small business 
        concern or nontraditional defense contractor, that, during the 
        preceding fiscal year, received not greater than $50,000,000 in 
        contracts or agreements from the Department of Defense.
            ``(4) The term `nontraditional defense contractor' has the 
        meaning given such term in section 3014 of this title.
            ``(5) The term `small business concern' has the meaning 
        given such term under section 3 of the Small Business Act (15 
        U.S.C. 632).''.

SEC. 1872. AMENDMENTS TO THE PROCUREMENT TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE 
              COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT PROGRAM.

    (a) Purposes.--Section 4952(1) of title 10, United States Code, as 
amended by section 861 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60), is amended by striking 
``furnishing procurement technical assistance'' and inserting 
``furnishing confidential procurement technical assistance''.
    (b) Increased Funding Limits.--Section 4955 of title 10, United 
States Code, as amended by section 861(c) of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60), is 
amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``$1,500,000'' 
                and inserting ``$2,000,000'';
                    (B) in paragraph (2), by striking ``$750,000'' and 
                inserting ``$1,000,000''; and
                    (C) in paragraph (4), by striking ``1,500,000'' and 
                inserting ``$2,000,000''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(f) Waiver.--The Secretary may waive or modify the dollar amounts 
in subsection (a) on a case-by-case basis, if the Secretary--
            ``(1) determines that it would be in the best interest of 
        the program; and
            ``(2) provides the congressional defense committees notice 
        of such modification or waiver not later than 30 days after 
        making such modification or issuing such waiver.''.

SEC. 1873. PILOT PROGRAM ON DIGITAL ENGINEERING AND ADVANCED 
              MANUFACTURING TO ADDRESS NO-BID SOLICITATIONS.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
enactment of this Act, the Director of the Defense Logistics Agency, in 
coordination with the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Sustainment 
and the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Industrial Base Policy, 
shall establish a pilot program to leverage small business concerns to 
address supply chain gaps associated with parts, components, and 
assemblies listed on the No Bid Solicitation List.
    (b) Program Activities.--In carrying out the pilot program 
established under subsection (a), the Director shall--
            (1) identify each part, component, or assembly listed on 
        the No Bid Solicitation List that--
                    (A) is a critical readiness item of supply;
                    (B) is associated with a solicitation made at least 
                18 months in the past that has received no bids or no 
                responsive offers; and
                    (C) is suitable to be produced by advanced 
                manufacturing;
            (2) for each part, component, or assembly identified under 
        paragraph (1), identify one or more small business concerns 
        with capabilities to produce or contribute to the production of 
        the part, component, or assembly, including capabilities such 
        as--
                    (A) utilization of digital engineering, digital 
                twins, or model-based engineering;
                    (B) employment of advanced manufacturing 
                technologies, including additive manufacturing;
                    (C) rapid prototyping or reverse engineering;
                    (D) ability to produce low-volume or legacy parts, 
                components, or assemblies; or
                    (E) specialization in--
                            (i) development of engineering and 
                        technical data packages;
                            (ii) validated manufacturing processes and 
                        materials; or
                            (iii) support testing, certification, and 
                        qualification activities of parts, components, 
                        or assemblies; and
            (3) use available authorities to enter into contracts or 
        agreements with small business concerns identified under 
        paragraph (2) for the manufacture of parts, components, or 
        assemblies identified under paragraph (1).
    (c) Duration.--The authority to carry out the pilot program under 
this section shall terminate on the date that is five years after the 
date on which the Director establishes the pilot program.
    (d) Reports.--Not later than 180 days after the date on which the 
Director establishes the pilot program, and annually thereafter for the 
duration of the program, the Director shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees a report that includes--
            (1) the number and type of parts, components, and 
        assemblies addressed under the program;
            (2) the number of small business concerns participating in 
        the program;
            (3) the number of small business concerns for which the 
        contract or agreement entered into under the program is their 
        first contract or agreement with the Department of Defense;
            (4) improvements in lead times and readiness metrics as a 
        result of the program; and
            (5) recommendations of the Director regarding continuation, 
        modification, or expansion of the program.
    (e) Definitions.--In this section--
            (1) the term ``advanced manufacturing'' has the meaning 
        given such term in section 4841(f) of title 10, United States 
        Code;
            (2) the term ``critical readiness item of supply'' has the 
        meaning given such term in section 4324 of title 10, United 
        States Code;
            (3) the term ``No Bid Solicitation List'' means the list 
        maintained by the Defense Logistics Agency identifying 
        solicitations that have received no bids or no responsive 
        offers within required procurement timelines; and
            (4) the term ``small business concern'' means a small 
        business concern as defined under section 3 of the Small 
        Business Act (15 U.S.C. 632).

SEC. 1874. PILOT PROGRAM TO IMPROVE PARTICIPATION BY SMALL BUSINESS 
              CONCERNS IN CERTAIN DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE CONTRACTS.

    (a) Establishment.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall establish a pilot 
program to improve participation by small business concerns (as defined 
under section 3 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 632)) seeking to 
submit offers for Department of Defense contracts relating to 
artificial intelligence, software modernization, cybersecurity, quantum 
technologies, autonomous systems, advanced software development, and 
related dual-use technologies.
    (b) Procedures.--The pilot program established by subsection (a) 
shall include the following:
            (1) Alternative acquisition pathways, including commercial 
        solutions openings, simplified proposal requirements, 
        accelerated acquisition timelines, and other streamlined 
        acquisition procedures.
            (2) Coordination with existing Department of Defense 
        innovation organizations, including the Defense Innovation 
        Unit, AFWERX, NavalX, Army Applications Laboratory, Strategic 
        Capabilities Office, or similar organizations.
    (c) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this section, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees, the Committee on Small Business of 
the House of Representatives, and the Committee on Small Business and 
Entrepreneurship of the Senate a report describing implementation of 
the pilot program established by subsection (a), including 
participation outcomes for small business concerns, barriers to 
submitting contracts described in subsection (a) identified by 
participants, and recommendations for improving participation of small 
business concerns in Department of Defense emerging technology 
acquisition programs.

SEC. 1875. GUIDANCE TO ENSURE PROTECTION OF COVERED INFORMATION DURING 
              COVERED PREAWARD ENGAGEMENTS.

    (a) Establishment of Process.--Not later than 180 days after the 
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall 
establish a process to provide timely guidance to covered entities and 
Department of Defense personnel to ensure protection of covered 
information during covered preaward engagements.
    (b) Requirements.--The process established under subsection (a) 
shall provide the following:
            (1) Standard procedures and guidance to Department of 
        Defense personnel for structuring a covered preaward engagement 
        to reduce the risk of inadvertent disclosure or improper 
        receipt of classified or controlled information.
            (2) Development and use of standard templates, request 
        procedures, and best practices for use by covered entities and 
        Department of Defense officials during covered preaward 
        engagements.
            (3) Timely notification to a covered entity on measures to 
        ensure proper handling of sensitive information including--
                    (A) whether the proposed covered preaward 
                engagement may involve covered information;
                    (B) whether a solicitation-stage Department of 
                Defense Form 254, security classification guide, 
                nondisclosure agreement, controlled unclassified 
                information guidance, or other security instrument may 
                be required before the engagement proceeds;
                    (C) appropriate procedures for marking, 
                transmitting, storing, or discussing covered 
                information during the engagement;
                    (D) referral, where appropriate, to existing 
                mechanisms of the Department of Defense for access to 
                classified facilities, secure workspaces, secure 
                networks, or shared classified commercial 
                infrastructure; and
                    (E) points of contact for resolving unresolved 
                classification, disclosure, or safeguarding questions.
    (c) Briefing.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this section, the Secretary of Defense shall provide to 
the congressional defense committees a briefing on the implementation 
of this section, including--
            (1) steps taken to coordinate the process established under 
        this section with existing mechanisms of the Department of 
        Defense for facility clearances, secure workspaces, classified 
        networks, shared classified commercial infrastructure, and each 
        solicitation-stage Department of Defense Form 254; and
            (2) any recommendations for improving the ability of 
        covered entities to engage with the Department before award of 
        a contract, grant, cooperative agreement, other transaction 
        agreement, or other agreement while protecting classified and 
        controlled information.
    (d) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered entity'' means--
                    (A) a small business concern, as defined under 
                section 3 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 632); or
                    (B) a nontraditional defense contractor, as defined 
                in section 3014 of title 10, United States Code.
            (2) The term ``covered information'' means information that 
        is or may be--
                    (A) classified information;
                    (B) controlled unclassified information;
                    (C) controlled technical information;
                    (D) export-controlled technical data;
                    (E) government-furnished information; or
                    (F) other technical, operational, or security-
                sensitive information that may require safeguarding 
                under law, regulation, or Department of Defense policy.
            (3) The term ``covered preaward engagement'' means an 
        engagement between the Department of Defense and a covered 
        entity before the award of a contract, grant, cooperative 
        agreement, other transaction agreement, or other agreement, 
        including market research, technical exchange, concept 
        development, demonstration planning, request for information 
        activity, broad agency announcement activity, commercial 
        solutions opening activity, prototype discussions, or other 
        preaward acquisition or technology-transition activity.

         Subtitle E--Defense Industrial Base Workforce Matters

SEC. 1881. SKILLS-BASED REQUIREMENTS FOR DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE 
              CONTRACTOR PERSONNEL.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 223 of title 10, United States Code, as 
amended by section 802, is further amended by inserting after section 
3244 the following new section:
``Sec. 3245. Flexibility in contractor education requirements
    ``(a) Prohibition.--A solicitation, or a task order or delivery 
order under an indefinite delivery-indefinite quantity contract, issued 
by the Department for any procurement of property or services may not 
set forth any minimum education requirement for proposed contractor 
personnel in order for an offeror to be eligible for award of a 
contract (or task or delivery order, as applicable) unless the 
contracting officer includes in the solicitation (or task order or 
delivery order, as applicable) a written justification that explains 
why the needs of the Department cannot be met without any such 
requirement and clarifies how the requirement ensures the needs are 
met.
    ``(b) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `education' means an associate, 
        baccalaureate, graduate, or professional degree, specified 
        coursework, or other form of educational attainment awarded by 
        a junior or community college, baccalaureate, graduate, or 
        professional degree or other form of educational attainment 
        awarded by a junior or community college, college, or 
        university that is accredited as a collegiate institution by a 
        recognized accrediting agency or approved by the appropriate 
        State education authority under State law (or the appropriate 
        education authority of the District of Columbia) to grant 
        associate or higher degrees.
            ``(2) The term `education requirement' includes a 
        requirement that can be met through--
                    ``(A) education alone;
                    ``(B) either education or experience; or
                    ``(C) a combination of education and experience.''.
    (b) Applicability.--Section 3245 of title 10, United States Code, 
as added by subsection (a), shall apply to solicitations, and to task 
or delivery orders, issued on or after the date that is 18 months after 
the date of the enactment of this Act.
    (c) Regulation.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall revise the 
Department of Defense Supplement to the Federal Acquisition Regulation 
to carry out such section 3245, including--
            (1) instructions for contracting officers regarding the 
        written justifications required under such section, including a 
        standardized format or template for such justifications;
            (2) instructions encouraging the use of alternatives to 
        education requirements, including skills assessments, relevant 
        work experience, professional certifications, apprenticeship 
        completion, and demonstrated competencies; and
            (3) requirements for data collection on the use of 
        education requirements in solicitations, including the number 
        and type of justifications issued and the rate at which 
        education requirements are used relative to alternative 
        qualifications.
    (d) Conforming Repeal.--Effective at the close of the date on which 
the Department of Defense Supplement to the Federal Acquisition 
Regulation is revised as required by subsection (c), section 813 of the 
Floyd D. Spence National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2001 
(Public Law 106-398; 114 Stat. 1654A-214) is repealed.

SEC. 1882. MODIFICATION OF WORKING GROUP ON THE ADVANCED MANUFACTURING 
              WORKFORCE.

    (a) Expansion of Responsibilities.--Section 1843(c) of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60) is 
amended--
            (1) in paragraph (2), by striking ``skills and abilities 
        that are required for such fields; and'' and inserting 
        ``skills, abilities, training, and certifications that are 
        required for such fields in the defense industrial base;'';
            (2) by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph (4);
            (3) by inserting after paragraph (2) the following new 
        paragraph:
            ``(3) identify limitations to the capacity of entities in 
        the defense industrial base to recruit, train, and certify a 
        sufficient workforce in advanced manufacturing career fields in 
        the defense industrial base; and''; and
            (4) in paragraph (4) (as so redesignated)--
                    (A) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``; and'' and 
                inserting a semicolon;
                    (B) by redesignating subparagraph (C) as 
                subparagraph (D); and
                    (C) by inserting after subparagraph (B) the 
                following new subparagraph:
                    ``(C) approaches to expand the capacity to develop 
                and sustain a sufficient workforce in advanced 
                manufacturing career fields in the defense industrial 
                base; and''.
    (b) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of 
this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees a report, which may be included along with or as an 
addendum to the report required under section 1843(d) of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (Public Law 119-60), 
that includes--
            (1) an assessment of the extent to which existing pilot 
        programs or initiatives, such as the Accelerated Training in 
        Defense Manufacturing program, demonstrate the ability to train 
        and certify individuals in advanced manufacturing career fields 
        in the defense industrial base;
            (2) options for increasing the capacity to train and 
        certify the advanced manufacturing workforce, including options 
        to institutionalize existing pilot programs or initiatives or 
        to establish new programs to address workforce shortages;
            (3) options for supporting the long-term sustainability and 
        continuous improvement of workforce training and certification 
        programs, including through public-private partnerships and 
        other funding or cost-sharing mechanisms; and
            (4) any recommendations the Secretary may have to 
        accelerate training, credentialing, and qualification of 
        workers supporting the defense industrial base, including 
        recommendations related to improving the Department's planning 
        and resourcing of such activities.

SEC. 1883. WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVES TO SUPPORT MINING OF 
              CRITICAL MINERALS.

    (a) Requirement for Initiatives.--In order to support and enable 
the development of domestic critical mineral supply chains to meet 
defense industrial base requirements, the Secretary of Defense shall 
use existing authorities, including authorities under title III of the 
Defense Production Act of 1950 (50 U.S.C. 4531 et seq.) and under 
section 4817 of title 10, United States Code, to ensure that the 
workforce development initiatives of the Department of Defense for the 
defense industrial base include workforce development initiatives to 
support the mining industry.
    (b) Initiatives That May Be Included.--The initiatives required by 
subsection (a) may include--
            (1) contracts, grants, cooperative agreements, or other 
        transactions with accredited mining schools for the purpose of 
        recruiting and educating the next generation of mining 
        engineers, faculty, and other qualified professionals;
            (2) scholarship, stipend, or tuition assistance programs 
        designed to reduce financial barriers to entry into fields 
        related to critical minerals;
            (3) workforce development pathways, such as cooperative 
        education, apprenticeships, internships, and work-based 
        learning opportunities, in fields related to critical minerals;
            (4) industry-driven senior design projects, applied 
        research opportunities, faculty development, and other 
        experiential learning activities directly related to production 
        and processing of critical minerals; and
            (5) activities to recruit, train, qualify, and place 
        individuals into the mining profession or occupations 
        supporting the supply chains for critical minerals.
    (c) Priority.--In carrying out this section, the Secretary shall 
prioritize initiatives that--
            (1) align with current and projected defense industrial 
        base requirements for critical minerals; and
            (2) demonstrate the ability to expand workforce training, 
        credentialing, and placement into the mining profession or 
        occupations supporting the supply chains for critical minerals.
    (d) Coordination.--The Secretary shall ensure that activities 
carried out under this section are coordinated with other workforce 
development initiatives of the Department of Defense for the defense 
industrial base and with institutions and entities participating in 
such initiatives.
    (e) Recommendations to Enhance Implementation.--
            (1) Assessment.--Not later than September 1, 2027, the 
        Secretary shall complete an assessment of the feasibility and 
        advisability of requiring, as a condition of award, that the 
        prime awardee of a covered project award actively participate 
        in one or more workforce development initiatives to support the 
        mining industry, including the feasibility and advisability of 
        requiring that the prime awardee--
                    (A) establish and maintain a partnership with an 
                accredited mining school as described in subsection 
                (b)(1);
                    (B) establish and maintain one or more workforce 
                development pathways as described in subsection (b)(3) 
                that are aligned with the workforce needs of the 
                project and are for United States veterans and members 
                of the Armed Forces who are transitioning to civilian 
                life; and
                    (C) implement any other workforce development 
                initiative identified by the Secretary for inclusion in 
                the assessment.
            (2) Report.--Not later than March 1, 2028, the Secretary 
        shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report 
        on the assessment, including the results of the assessment and 
        any recommendations the Secretary may have to expand domestic 
        mining, processing, refining, recycling, or related production 
        capacity for critical minerals.
    (f) Annual Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, and each year thereafter through 2030, the 
Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report 
describing--
            (1) the activities carried out under this section;
            (2) the number of participants supported through workforce 
        development initiatives described in this section and the 
        workforce placement outcomes for those participants; and
            (3) any recommendations the Secretary may have to improve 
        the development of mining schools to meet the future workforce 
        needs.
    (g) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered project award'' means an award for a 
        project to expand domestic mining, processing, refining, 
        recycling, or related production capacity for critical minerals 
        made by the Department of Defense under title III of the 
        Defense Production Act of 1950 (50 U.S.C. 4531 et seq.) or 
        under section 4817 of title 10, United States Code.
            (2) The term ``mining industry'' means the mining industry 
        of the United States, consisting of the search for, and 
        extraction, beneficiation, refining, smelting, processing, 
        reprocessing, and recycling of, naturally occurring metal and 
        nonmetal minerals from the earth.
            (3) The term ``mining profession'' means the body of jobs 
        directly relevant to--
                    (A) the exploration, planning, execution, and 
                remediation of metal and nonmetal mining sites; and
                    (B) the extraction, including the separation, 
                refining, alloying, smelting, concentration, 
                processing, beneficiation, reprocessing, and recycling, 
                of mineral ores.
            (4) The term ``mining school'' means--
                    (A) a mining, metallurgical, geological, or mineral 
                engineering program accredited by the Accreditation 
                Board for Engineering and Technology that is located at 
                an institution of higher education, including a Tribal 
                College or University; or
                    (B) a geology or engineering program or department 
                that is located at a 4-year public institution of 
                higher education located in a State the gross domestic 
                product of which in 2024 was not less than 
                $2,000,000,000 in the combined categories of ``Mining 
                (except oil and gas)'' and ``Support activities for 
                mining'', according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
            (5) The term ``Tribal College or University'' has the 
        meaning given the term in section 316(b) of the Higher 
        Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1059c(b)).

                       Subtitle F--Other Matters

SEC. 1891. EXEMPTION FROM TRADEMARK LICENSING FEES FOR CERTAIN MILITARY 
              EXCHANGE CONTRACTORS.

    Section 2260 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a), by striking ``and may retain'' and 
        inserting ``and may, except as provided in subsection (f), 
        retain'';
            (2) in subsection (b), by striking ``The Secretary 
        concerned'' and inserting ``Except as provided in subsection 
        (f), the Secretary concerned'';
            (3) by redesignating subsection (f) as subsection (g); and
            (4) by inserting after subsection (e) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(f) Exemption for Long-term Exchange Contractors.--(1) The 
Secretary concerned may not require contractor performing a contract of 
one year or longer with a military exchange--
            ``(A) to be subject to any fee described in subsection (a) 
        or (b);
            ``(B) to obtain approval from the trademark and licensing 
        office of a military department for the production or sale of 
        items sold through such exchange; or
            ``(C) to pay a royalty or other licensing fee to the 
        trademark and licensing office of a military department, 
        including any royalty or other licensing fee collected pursuant 
        to a licensing agreement authorized under this section, in 
        connection with the production or sale of items through such 
        exchange or a Morale, Welfare, and Recreation program.
    ``(2) In this subsection, the term `Morale, Welfare, and Recreation 
program' means a nonappropriated fund activity providing community 
support, recreational, and quality-of-life services to members of the 
armed forces and dependents of such members, as authorized under 
chapter 147 of title 10.''.

SEC. 1892. MAJOR SYSTEM COST GROWTH OVERSIGHT.

    (a) Shorten Nunn-McCurdy Breach Report Timeline.--Section 4374 of 
title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a), by striking ``When a unit cost 
        report'' and inserting ``Not later than 30 days after a unit 
        cost report'';
            (2) in subsection (b), by striking ``When a unit cost 
        report'' and inserting ``Not later than 30 days after a unit 
        cost report''; and
            (3) in subsection (c), by amending paragraph (2) to read as 
        follows:
            ``(2) Time for submission of notification to congress.--In 
        the case of a determination based on a quarterly report 
        submitted in accordance with section 4372 of this title or a 
        report submitted in accordance with section 4373 of this title, 
        the Secretary shall submit the notification to Congress within 
        30 days after the date on which the determination was made.''.
    (b) End Item Major Subprogram Designation.--Section 4203(a)(1) of 
title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the 
following new subparagraph:
                    ``(C) If the Secretary of Defense determines that a 
                major defense acquisition program requires the delivery 
                of two or more end items that are each estimated to 
                require an eventual total expenditure for research, 
                development, test, evaluation, operation, and support 
                of more than $500,000,000, the Secretary shall 
                designate each such end item as a major subprogram for 
                the purposes of acquisition reporting under this 
                subpart.''.
    (c) Operations and Support Cost Inclusion.--Section 4214(a)(2) of 
title 10, United States Code, is amended by inserting ``for the life 
cycle of such major defense acquisition program or designated major 
subprogram'' before the period at the end.
    (d) Critical Cost Growth Termination.--Section 4376 of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (b), by adding at the end the following 
        new paragraphs:
            ``(4) Delegation.--The Secretary may not delegate the 
        submission of a written certification under paragraph (1).''; 
        and
            (2) in subsection (c)--
                    (A) in paragraph (2), by striking ``and'' at the 
                end;
                    (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) consideration of termination plans that maximize 
        value, including--
                    ``(A) immediate termination of the program with no 
                further action;
                    ``(B) termination of the program after completion 
                of the end items in production and for which funds have 
                been obligated or expended under the program as of the 
                date that is the last day of the applicable 60-day 
                period described in subsection (b)(1) for the program;
                    ``(C) termination of the program after completion 
                of the end items described in subparagraph (B) for 
                which the resale value exceeds the cost of completing 
                such end items; and
                    ``(D) any other course of action to maximize the 
                value to the Government of the funds that have been 
                obligated or expended under the program as of the date 
                that is the last day of the applicable 60-day period 
                described in subsection (b)(1) for the program.''.

SEC. 1893. INAPPLICABILITY OF BERRY AMENDMENT EXCEPTIONS TO CERTAIN 
              SEAFOOD PURCHASES.

    Section 4862 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by amending subsection (g) to read as follows:
    ``(g) Exception for Commissaries, Exchanges, and Other 
Nonappropriated Fund Instrumentalities.--Subsection (a) does not apply 
to items purchased for resale purposes in commissaries, exchanges, or 
nonappropriated fund instrumentalities operated by the Department of 
Defense.'';
            (2) by inserting after subsection (k) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(l) Application to Certain Seafood Purchases.--The exceptions in 
subsections (c) through (h) of this section shall not apply with 
respect to procurement of any fish, shellfish, or seafood product.''.

SEC. 1894. CLARIFICATION OF COMMERCIAL SOLICITATION RESTRICTIONS DURING 
              INITIAL ENTRY TRAINING FOR MEMORABILIA AND PHOTOGRAPHY.

    (a) Amendment to Implementing Regulations.--Not later than 180 days 
after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, 
acting through each Secretary of a military department, shall revise 
any regulations governing commercial solicitation during initial entry 
training at military installations, including section 552.60(d) of 
title 32, Code of Federal Regulations and any similar provisions 
specific to a military department, to provide the following:
            (1) Such regulations shall not apply to preorders for 
        cycle-commemorative or unit-specific merchandise organized at 
        the initiative of members of the Armed Forces or dependents of 
        such members, provided that no financial commitment, payment, 
        or other consideration is made by or collected from a member 
        until delivery of the product occurs after completion of the 
        applicable training cycle.
            (2) Such regulations shall not apply to photography 
        services provided by photographers operating under a contract 
        or other agreement with a military installation, a Morale, 
        Welfare, and Recreation program, or a military exchange, for 
        the sale of graduation ceremony photographs to members of the 
        Armed Forces or dependents of such members during or 
        immediately following graduation ceremonies.
    (b) Uniformity of Application.--Each Secretary of a military 
department shall ensure that any military installation-specific 
policies--
            (1) are applied uniformly across military installations 
        under the jurisdiction of such Secretary; and
            (2) do not impose restrictions more stringent than those 
        established by the regulations described in subsection (a), as 
        revised by this section.
    (c) Definitions.--In this section:
            (2) The term ``military exchange'' means the Army and Air 
        Force Exchange Service, the Navy Exchange Service Command, the 
        Marine Corps Exchange, the Coast Guard Exchange, or any 
        successor organization, as applicable.
            (3) The term ``Morale, Welfare, and Recreation program'' 
        means a nonappropriated fund activity providing community 
        support, recreational, and quality-of-life services to members 
        of the armed forces and their families, as authorized under 
        chapter 147 of title 10, United States Code.

            DIVISION B--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION AUTHORIZATIONS

SEC. 2001. SHORT TITLE.

    This division may be cited as the ``Military Construction 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2027''.

SEC. 2002. EXPIRATION OF AUTHORIZATIONS AND AMOUNTS REQUIRED TO BE 
              SPECIFIED BY LAW.

    (a) Expiration of Authorizations After Three Years.--Except as 
provided in subsection (b), all authorizations contained in titles XXI 
through XXVII for military construction projects, land acquisition, 
family housing projects and facilities, and contributions to the North 
Atlantic Treaty Organization Security Investment Program (and 
authorizations of appropriations therefor) shall expire on the later 
of--
            (1) October 1, 2029; or
            (2) the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds 
        for military construction for fiscal year 2030.
    (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, 2029; or
            (2) the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds 
        for fiscal year 2030 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 shall take effect on the later of--
            (1) October 1, 2026; 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 or Location                  Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Guam...........................................  Joint Region Marianas.........................     $155,000,000
Hawaii.........................................  Wheeler Army Air Field........................     $380,000,000
                                                 Schofield Barracks............................      $30,000,000
Louisiana......................................  Fort Polk.....................................     $237,000,000
New York.......................................  Fort Drum.....................................      $25,000,000
Oklahoma.......................................  Fort Sill.....................................      $94,000,000
Texas..........................................  Joint Base San Antonio........................     $918,000,000
                                                 Fort Bliss....................................      $35,000,000
                                                 Fort Hood.....................................      $81,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (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
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                    Installation or
            Country                    Location              Amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Italy..........................  Caserma Renato Del    $17,000,000
                                  Din................
------------------------------------------------------------------------

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
------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Country                  Installation            Amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Germany........................  South Camp Vilseck..  $95,060,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (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 $39,079,000.

SEC. 2103. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, ARMY.

    (a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby authorized 
to be appropriated for fiscal years beginning after September 30, 2026, 
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 sections 2101 and 2102 
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. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT FISCAL YEAR 2021 PROJECT 
              AT FORT GILLEM, GEORGIA.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (division B of 
Public Law 116-283; 134 Stat. 4294), the authorization set forth in the 
table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2101(a) of that Act 
(134 Stat. 4295) and most recently extended by section 2104 of the 
Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (division 
B of Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 1266), shall remain in effect until 
October 1, 2027, or the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing 
funds for military construction for fiscal year 2028, whichever is 
later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                                  Army: Extension of 2021 Project Authorization
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                    Original
                 State                   Installation or Location            Project           Authorized Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Georgia...............................  Fort Gillem...............  Forensic Laboratory......        $71,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2105. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2022 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2022 (division B of 
Public Law 117-81; 135 Stat. 2161), the authorization set forth in the 
table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2101 of that Act (135 
Stat. 2163) and most recently extended by section 2105 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (division B of 
Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 1267), shall remain in effect until 
October 1, 2027, or the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing 
funds for military construction for fiscal year 2028, whichever is 
later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                                 Army: Extension of 2022 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                    Original
             State/Country               Installation or Location            Project           Authorized Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Georgia...............................  Fort Stewart..............  Barracks.................       $105,000,000
Germany...............................  Smith Barracks............  Live Fire Exercise               $16,000,000
                                                                     Shoothouse..............
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2106. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT FISCAL YEAR 2022 
              PROJECT AT FORT STEWART, GEORGIA.

    In the case of the authorization contained in the table in section 
2101 of the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2022 (division B of Public Law 117-81; 135 Stat. 2161) for Fort 
Stewart, Georgia for construction of a barracks, the Secretary of the 
Army may construct a facility consisting of 193,347 square feet.

SEC. 2107. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2023 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (division B of 
Public Law 117-263; 136 Stat. 2970), the authorizations set forth in 
the table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2101 of that Act 
(136 Stat. 2971), and extended by section 2106 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (division B of 
Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 1267), shall remain in effect until 
October 1, 2027, or the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing 
funds for military construction for fiscal year 2028, whichever is 
later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                                 Army: Extension of 2023 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                    Original
             State/Country               Installation or Location            Project           Authorized Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Germany...............................  East Camp Grafenwoehr.....  EDI: Battalion Trng Cplx2        $64,000,000
                                                                     (OPS/Veh Maint).........
Hawaii................................  Fort Shafter..............  Water System Upgrade.....        $33,000,000
                                        Tripler Army Medical        Upgrade Potable Water            $38,000,000
                                         Center...................   System..................
Japan.................................  Kadena Air Force Base.....  Vehicle Maintenance Shop.        $80,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2108. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2024 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024 (division B of 
Public Law 118-31; 137 Stat. 709), the authorizations set forth in the 
table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2101 of that Act (137 
Stat. 710), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2027, or the date 
of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds for military construction 
for fiscal year 2028, whichever is later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                                 Army: Extension of 2024 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                    Original
             State/Country               Installation or Location            Project           Authorized Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Germany...............................  Grafenwoehr...............  Automated Multipurpose           $10,400,000
                                                                     Machine Gun Range.......
                                        Hohenfels.................  Simulations Center.......        $88,000,000
Hawaii................................  Aliamanu Military           Water Storage Tank.......        $20,000,000
                                         Reservation..............
                                        Fort Shafter..............  Clearwell and Booster            $80,000,000
                                                                     Pump....................
                                        Helemano Military           Wells and Storage Tanks..        $90,000,000
                                         Reservation..............
                                        Schofield Barracks........  Elevated Tank and                $35,000,000
                                                                     Distribution Lines......
                                        ..........................  Water Storage Tank.......        $35,000,000
Kentucky..............................  Fort Campbell.............   Multipurpose Training           $39,000,000
                                                                     Range...................
North Carolina........................  Fort Liberty..............  Aircraft Maintenance             $61,000,000
                                                                     Hangar..................
                                        ..........................  Barracks (Facility               $85,000,000
                                                                     Prototyping)............
Texas.................................  Red River Army Depot......  Component Rebuild Shop...       $113,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2109. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT FISCAL YEAR 2025 
              PROJECT AT GRAFENWOEHR, GERMANY.

    In the case of the authorization contained in the table in section 
2101 of the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2025 (Division B of Public Law 118-159; 138 Stat. 2211) for U.S. 
Garrison Bavaria, Germany, for construction of an Operational Readiness 
Training Complex (ORTC) underground electric line as specified in the 
funding table in section 4601 of such Act, the Secretary of the Army 
may construct an Operational Readiness Training Complex (ORTC) 
underground electric line at Grafenwoehr, Germany.

SEC. 2110. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT FISCAL YEAR 2026 
              PROJECT AT JOINT REGION MARIANAS, GUAM.

    In the case of the authorization contained in the table in section 
2101 of the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2026 (division B of Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 1265) for Joint Region 
Marianas, Guam, for construction of PDI: Guam Defense System, EIAMD, 
Phase 2 (Inc), at that location, the Secretary of the Army may 
construct a 2,496 square foot pump house and 648,000 gallon non-
portable water storage tank.

                 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 2203(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 and Marine Corps: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                     State                                 Installation or Location                  Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California....................................  Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton.............        $53,150,000
Florida.......................................  Cape Canaveral Space Force Station...........        $60,990,000
Georgia.......................................  Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay...............       $490,550,000
                                                Albany.......................................        $86,350,000
Guam..........................................  Joint Region Marianas........................     $1,346,763,000
Hawaii........................................  Ford Island..................................       $183,760,000
                                                 Marine Corps Base Kaneohe Bay...............       $210,640,000
Maryland......................................  United States Naval Academy..................        $86,020,000
Nevada........................................  Naval Air Station Fallon.....................       $387,570,000
North Carolina................................  Camp Lejeune.................................       $391,910,000
Virginia......................................   Naval Air Station Oceana....................       $104,340,000
                                                 Naval Station Norfolk.......................       $177,980,000
                                                Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek-Fort           $65,640,000
                                                 Story.
Washington....................................  Puget Sound Naval Shipyard...................    $14,759,360,000
                                                Naval Base Kitsap-Bremerton..................       $195,227,000
                                                Naval Base Kitsap-Bangor.....................       $558,530,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (b) Outside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant 
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2203(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
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Japan.......................................   Kadena Air Base.................................      $31,780,000
Spain.......................................  Naval Station Rota...............................      $64,080,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2202. FAMILY HOUSING.

    Using amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of 
appropriations in section 2203(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 $14,971,000.

SEC. 2203. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, NAVY.

    (a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby authorized 
to be appropriated for fiscal years beginning after September 30, 2026, 
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 sections 2201 and 2202 
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. 2204. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2023 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (division B of 
Public Law 117-263; 136 Stat. 2970), the authorizations set forth in 
the table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2201 of that Act 
(136 Stat. 2975) and extended by section 2206 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (division B of 
Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 1271), shall remain in effect until 
October 1, 2027, or the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing 
funds for military construction for fiscal year 2028, whichever is 
later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                                 Navy: Extension of 2023 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                    Original
             State/Country               Installation or Location            Project           Authorized Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Florida...............................  Naval Air Station           Engine Test Cells               $100,570,000
                                         Jacksonville.............   Modifications...........
Hawaii................................  Joint Base Pearl Harbor-    Missile Magazines........       $142,783,000
                                         Hickam...................
North Carolina........................  Marine Corps Air Station    CH-53K Gearbox Repair and        $44,830,000
                                         Cherry Point.............   Test Facility...........
South Carolina........................  Marine Corps Recruit Depot  Recruit Barracks.........        $81,690,000
                                         Parris Island............
                                        ..........................  Recruit Barracks.........        $85,040,000
Spain.................................  Naval Station Rota........  EDI: Missile Magazines...        $92,323,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2205. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2024 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024 (division B of 
Public Law 118-31; 137 Stat. 709), the authorizations set forth in the 
table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2201 of that Act (137 
Stat. 714), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2027, or the date 
of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds for military construction 
for fiscal year 2028, whichever is later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                                 Navy: Extension of 2024 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                    Original
             State/Country               Installation or Location            Project           Authorized Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California............................  Marine Corps Air Ground     Communications Towers....        $55,341,000
                                         Combat Center Twentynine
                                         Palms....................
Connecticut...........................  Naval Submarine Base New    Weapons Magazine &              $219,200,000
                                         London...................   Ordnance Operations Fac.
District of Columbia..................  Marine Barracks Washington  Bachelor Enlisted               $131,800,000
                                         (8th Street and I).......   Quarters & Support
                                                                     Facility................
Guam..................................  Naval Base Guam...........  PDI: Consolidated MEB HQ/        $19,740,000
                                                                     NCIS Phase II...........
                                        ..........................  PDI: Satellite                  $595,100,000
                                                                     Communications Facility
                                                                     (INC)...................
Hawaii................................  Marine Corps Base Kaneohe   Water Reclamation               $318,845,000
                                         Bay......................   Facility Compliance
                                                                     Upgrade.................
Italy.................................  Naval Air Station           EDI Ordnance Magazines...        $90,348,000
                                         Sigonella................
Maryland..............................  Fort Meade................  Cybersecurity Operations        $186,480,000
                                                                     Facility................
                                        Naval Air Station Pax       Aircraft Development and        $141,700,000
                                         River....................   Maintenance Facilities..
North Carolina........................  Marine Corps Base Camp      10th Marines Maintenance        $117,550,000
                                         Lejeune..................   & Operations Complex....
Virginia..............................  Marine Corps Base Quantico  Water Treatment Plant....       $127,120,000
                                        Naval Station Norfolk.....  MQ-25 Aircraft Laydown          $128,678,000
                                                                     Facility................
                                        Naval Weapons Station       Weapons Magazines........       $283,500,000
                                         Yorktown.................
Washington............................  Naval Base Kitsap.........  Alternate Power                  $19,000,000
                                                                     Transmission Line.......
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2206. EXTENSION AND MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT FISCAL 
              YEAR 2024 PROJECT AT MARINE CORPS BASE QUANTICO, 
              VIRGINIA.

    (a) Modification.--In the case of the authorization contained in 
the table in section 2201 of the Military Construction Authorization 
Act for Fiscal Year 2024 (division B of Public Law 118-31; 137 Stat. 
714) for construction of a Water Treatment Plant at Marine Corps Base 
Quantico, Virginia, the Secretary of the Navy may construct 20,000 
linear feet of water supply lines, three pump houses (non-occupied), 
and one 2,300 square foot pump station/multi-purpose building 
(occupied) in lieu of a water treatment plant at the installation.
    (b) Extension.--Such authorization shall remain in effect until 
October 1, 2027, or the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing 
funds for military construction for fiscal year 2028, whichever is 
later.

SEC. 2207. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT FISCAL YEAR 2026 
              PROJECT AT PACIFIC MISSILE RANGE FACILITY BARKING SANDS, 
              HAWAII.

    In the case of the authorization contained in the table in section 
2201 of the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2026 (division B of Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 1268) for construction 
of PDI: Airfield Pavement Upgrades at Pacific Missile Range Facility 
Barking Sands, Hawaii, the Secretary of the Navy may expand airfield 
pavement areas to 280,000 square meters to mitigate the risk of 
aircraft hydroplane.

SEC. 2208. TRANSFER OF AMOUNTS FOR MITIGATION FOR PROJECTS LOCATED AT 
              PUGET SOUND NAVAL SHIPYARD, BREMERTON, WASHINGTON.

    Not later than one year after the date of enactment of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2027, the Secretary of the 
Navy shall transfer $42,000,000 of amounts authorized to be 
appropriated for fiscal year 2027 to the Secretary of the Navy to carry 
out the P454 military construction project (as authorized in the table 
in section 2201 of this Act) to an account for mitigation efforts not 
otherwise authorized by law relating to the projects known as ``Multi-
Mission Drydock'' and ``Pier 2'' located at or near the Puget Sound 
Naval Shipyard in Bremerton, Washington, as described in the memorandum 
of the Assistant Secretary of the Navy signed on April 29, 2026.

              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 2303(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
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alabama......................................  Redstone Arsenal...............................    $2,050,000,000
Alaska.......................................  Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson................    $2,066,050,000
                                               Eielson Air Force Base.........................       $91,000,000
Arkansas.....................................  Little Rock Air Force Base.....................       $27,000,000
California...................................  Edwards Air Force Base.........................        $4,500,000
Colorado.....................................  Schriever Space Force Base.....................      $250,000,000
Florida......................................  Tyndall Air Force Base.........................      $160,000,000
                                               Eglin Air Force Base...........................       $87,800,000
                                               Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.............      $409,800,000
Georgia......................................  Moody Air Force Base...........................       $15,870,000
Mississippi..................................  Columbus Air Force Base........................       $11,800,000
Missouri.....................................  Whiteman Air Force Base........................      $169,000,000
Montana......................................  Malmstrom Air Force Base.......................    $1,390,000,000
 Nevada......................................  Nellis Air Force Base..........................      $730,700,000
                                               Creech Air Force Base..........................       $91,000,000
New Jersey...................................  Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst...............       $22,500,000
New Mexico...................................  Kirtland Air Force Base........................      $250,000,000
North Dakota.................................  Grand Forks Air Force Base.....................      $250,000,000
                                               Minot Air Force Base...........................      $232,000,000
Oklahoma.....................................  Tinker Air Force Base..........................      $110,000,000
Tennessee....................................  Arnold Air Force Base..........................       $20,000,000
Texas........................................  Joint Base San Antonio.........................      $180,000,000
                                               Lackland Air Force Base........................       $96,000,000
                                               Dyess Air Force Base...........................      $386,000,000
Virginia.....................................  Joint Base Langley-Eustis......................       $49,000,000
Wake Island..................................  Wake Island....................................      $335,000,000
Wyoming......................................  F.E. Warren Air Force Base.....................      $171,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (b) Outside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant 
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2303(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
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Djibouti......................................  Chabelley Airfield..............................     $27,000,000
Japan.........................................  Kadena Air Base.................................     $99,000,000
Spain.........................................  Moron Air Base..................................    $156,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2302. FAMILY HOUSING.

    (a) Construction and Acquisition.--Using amounts appropriated 
pursuant to the authorization of appropriations in section 2303(a) and 
available for military family housing functions as specified in the 
funding table in section 4601, the Secretary of the Air Force may 
construct or acquire family housing units (including land acquisition 
and supporting facilities) at the installations or locations and in the 
amounts set forth in the following table:

                                            Air Force: Family Housing
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                    Country                                       Installation                        Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
United Kingdom................................  Royal Air Force Croughton.......................     $24,104,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (b) Planning and Design.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant to 
the authorization of appropriations in section 2303(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 $25,854,000.

SEC. 2303. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, AIR FORCE.

    (a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby authorized 
to be appropriated for fiscal years beginning after September 30, 2026, 
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 sections 2301 and 2302 
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. 2304. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2019 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (division B of 
Public Law 115-232; 132 Stat. 2240), the authorizations set forth in 
the table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2903 of that Act 
(132 Stat. 2287) and most recently extended by section 2305 of the 
Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (division 
B of Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 1274), shall remain in effect until 
October 1, 2027, or the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing 
funds for military construction for fiscal year 2028, whichever is 
later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                               Air Force: Extension of 2019 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                    Original
                Country                  Installation or Location            Project               Authorized
                                                                                                     Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
United Kingdom........................  Royal Air Force Fairford..  EDI: Construct DABS-FEV          $87,000,000
                                                                     Storage.................
                                                                    EDI: Munitions Holding           $19,000,000
                                                                     Area....................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2305. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2020 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (division B of 
Public Law 116-92; 133 Stat. 1862), the authorizations set forth in the 
table in subsection (b), as provided in sections 2301(a) and 2912(a) of 
that Act (133 Stat. 1867, 1913), and most recently extended by section 
2306 of the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2026 (division B of Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 1275), shall remain in 
effect until October 1, 2027, or the date of the enactment of an Act 
authorizing funds for military construction for fiscal year 2028, 
whichever is later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                               Air Force: Extension of 2020 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                    Original
                 State                   Installation or Location            Project               Authorized
                                                                                                     Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Florida...............................  Tyndall Air Force Base....  Deployment Center/Flight         $43,000,000
                                                                     Line Dining/AAFES.......
Georgia...............................  Moody Air Force Base......  41 RQS HH-60W Apron......        $12,500,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2306. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2023 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (division B of 
Public Law 117-263; 136 Stat. 2970), the authorizations set forth in 
the table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2301 of that Act 
(136 Stat. 2978), and extended by section 2308 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (division B of 
Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 1272), shall remain in effect until 
October 1, 2027, or the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing 
funds for military construction for fiscal year 2028, whichever is 
later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                               Air Force: Extension of 2023 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                    Original
             State/Country               Installation or Location            Project               Authorized
                                                                                                     Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Florida...............................  Patrick Space Force Base..  Consolidated                     $97,000,000
                                                                     Communications Center...
Norway................................  Rygge Air Station.........  EDI: Base Perimeter               $8,200,000
                                                                     Security Fence..........
Texas.................................  Joint Base San Antonio-     Child Development Center.        $29,000,000
                                         Randolph.................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2307. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2024 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024 (division B of 
Public Law 118-31; 137 Stat. 709), the authorizations set forth in the 
table in subsection (b), as provided in sections 2301 and 2302 of that 
Act (136 Stat. 719), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2027, or 
the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds for military 
construction for fiscal year 2028, whichever is later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                               Air Force: Extension of 2024 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                    Original
             State/Country               Installation or Location            Project               Authorized
                                                                                                     Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alabama...............................  Maxwell Air Force Base...  MHPI Restructure AETC             $65,000,000
                                                                    Group II.................
Colorado..............................  U.S. Air Force Academy...  Construction Improvement..         $9,282,000
Florida...............................  Eglin Air Force Base.....  LRSO Hardware Software            $15,500,000
                                                                    Development and Test
                                                                    Facility.................
                                        MacDill Air Force Base...  KC-46A ADAL Aircraft              $25,000,000
                                                                    Corrosion Control........
                                                                   KC-46A ADAL Aircraft              $27,000,000
                                                                    Maintenance Hangar.......
                                                                   KC-46A ADAL Apron and             $78,000,000
                                                                    Hydrant Fueling Pits.....
                                                                   KC-46A ADAL Fuel System           $18,000,000
                                                                    Maintenance Dock.........
Guam..................................  Joint Region Marianas....  PDI: North Aircraft              $411,000,000
                                                                    Parking Ramp (INC).......
Hawaii................................  Joint Base Pearl Harbor-   MHPI Restructure-Joint            $75,000,000
                                         Hickam..................   Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam.
Massachusetts.........................  Hanscom Air Force Base...  Child Development Center..        $37,000,000
Mississippi...........................  Keesler Air Force Base...  MHPI Restructure-Southern         $80,000,000
                                                                    Group....................
Montana...............................  Malmstrom Air Force Base.  Fire Station Bay/Storage          $10,300,000
                                                                    Area.....................
Norway................................  Rygge Air Station........  EDI: DABS-FEV Storage.....        $96,000,000
                                        .........................  EDI: Munitions Storage            $40,000,000
                                                                    Area.....................
Spain.................................  Moron Air Base...........  EDI: Munitions Storage....        $34,000,000
Texas.................................  Joint Base San Antonio-    BMT-Chapel For America's          $90,000,000
                                         Lackland................   Airmen...................
United Kingdom........................  Royal Air Force Fairford.  EDI: RADR Storage Facility        $67,000,000
                                        Royal Air Force            EDI: RADR Storage Facility        $51,000,000
                                         Lakenheath..............
Wyoming...............................  F.E. Warren Air Force      GBSD Integrated Training          $85,000,000
                                         Base....................   Center...................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2308. AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT PROJECT AT EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE, 
              FLORIDA.

    The Secretary of the Air Force may carry out a military 
construction project to construct a 6,934 square meter Joint All-Domain 
Command and Control (JADC2) and Air Battle Management Systems (ABMS) 
Test Facility at Eglin Air Force Base, Florida, in the amount of 
$87,800,000 using funds made available in fiscal year 2027, or any 
subsequent fiscal year, for research, development, test, and 
evaluation.

           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
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alabama........................................  Maxwell Air Force Base........................      $44,000,000
Colorado.......................................  Def Reutil and Mktg Ofc-Colorado Springs......      $85,000,000
Florida........................................   Naval Air Station Jacksonville...............      $40,000,000
Guam...........................................  Joint Region Marianas.........................     $315,286,000
 Kentucky......................................  Fort Knox.....................................     $117,000,000
Maryland.......................................  Bethesda Naval Hospital.......................     $415,739,000
                                                 Fort Meade....................................   $1,393,465,000
Nevada.........................................  Creech Air Force Base.........................      $25,381,000
North Carolina.................................  Camp Lejeune..................................      $72,000,000
                                                 Fort Bragg....................................     $115,000,000
Utah...........................................  Camp Williams.................................     $471,000,000
Virginia.......................................  Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek-Fort          $36,000,000
                                                  Story........................................
Wake Island....................................  Wake Island...................................   $1,652,000,000
Washington.....................................  Joint Base Lewis-McChord......................      $35,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (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
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Belgium........................................  Brussels......................................      $33,000,000
Germany........................................  Baumholder....................................     $140,000,000
                                                 Ramstein Air Base.............................      $20,500,000
Japan..........................................  Yokota Air Base...............................      $88,200,000
                                                 Camp Butler...................................      $37,900,000
Korea..........................................  Kunsan Air Base...............................      $65,000,000
United Kingdom.................................  Menwith Hill Station..........................      $35,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alabama........................................  Redstone Arsenal..............................      $90,000,000
California.....................................  Camp Roberts..................................      $79,000,000
Florida........................................  Eglin Air Force Base..........................      $43,000,000
Pennsylvania...................................  Defense Distribution Center, Susquehanna......      $58,000,000
Puerto Rico....................................  Fort Buchanan.................................      $33,500,000
Texas..........................................  Brooks Army Medical Center....................      $55,500,000
Washington.....................................  Naval Base Kitsap.............................     $132,690,000
                                                 Yakima Training Center........................      $73,000,000
Wyoming........................................  F.E. Warren Air Force Base....................      $51,717,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (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
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bahrain........................................   Naval Support Activity Bahrain...............       $5,900,000
Germany........................................  Army Garrison Ansbach.........................      $72,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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, 2026, 
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 sections 2401 and 2402 
of this Act may not exceed the total amount authorized to be 
appropriated under subsection (a), as specified in the funding table in 
section 4601.

SEC. 2404. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2023 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (division B of 
Public Law 117-263; 136 Stat. 2970), the authorizations set forth in 
the table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2402 of that Act 
(136 Stat. 2983) and most recently extended by section 2406 of the 
Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 (division 
B of Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 1281), shall remain in effect until 
October 1, 2027, or the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing 
funds for military construction for fiscal year 2028, whichever is 
later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

        ERCIP Projects: Extension of 2023 Project Authorizations
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                  Installation or                           Original
 State/Country        Location           Project       Authorized Amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
California       Marine Corps       Microgrid and      $25,560,000
                  Mountain Warfare   Backup Power....
                  Training Center.
Florida          Naval Air Station  Facility Energy    $2,400,000
                  Jacksonville....   Operations
                                     Center
                                     Renovation......
Georgia          Fort Stewart-      Power Generation   $25,400,000
                  Hunter Army        and Microgrid...
                  Airfield........
                 Naval Submarine    SCADA              $11,200,000
                  Base Kings Bay..   Modernization...
Texas            Fort Hood........  Power Generation   $31,500,000
                                     and Microgrid...
------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2405. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2024 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024 (division B of 
Public Law 118-31; 137 Stat. 709), the authorizations set forth in the 
table in subsection (b), as provided in sections 2401 and 2402 of that 
Act (137 Stat. 726, 727), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2027, 
or the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds for military 
construction for fiscal year 2028, whichever is later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                  Defense Agencies and ERCIP Projects: Extension of 2024 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                          Installation or                                   Original Authorized
            State/Country                     Location                  Project                   Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California..........................  Marine Corps Air         Electrical                 $30,550,000
                                       Station Miramar.......   Infrastructure, On-Site
                                                                Generation, and
                                                                Microgrid Improvements..
                                      Vandenberg Space Force   Microgrid and Backup       $57,000,000
                                       Base..................   Power...................
Georgia.............................  Naval Submarine Base     Electrical Transmission    $74,500,000
                                       Kings Bay.............   and Distribution
                                                                Improvements, Phase 2...
Kansas..............................  Forbes Field...........  Microgrid and Backup       $5,850,000
                                                                Power...................
Missouri............................  Lake City Army           Microgrid and Backup       $80,100,000
                                       Ammunition Plant......   Power...................
Nebraska............................  Offutt Air Force Base..  Microgrid and Backup       $41,000,000
                                                                Power...................
North Carolina......................  Fort Bragg (Camp         Microgrid and Backup       $10,500,000
                                       Mackall)..............   Power...................
Oklahoma............................  Fort Sill..............  Microgrid and Backup       $76,650,000
                                                                Power...................
Puerto Rico.........................  Fort Buchanan..........  Microgrid and Backup       $56,000,000
                                                                Power...................
Spain...............................  Naval Station Rota.....  Bulk Tank Farm, Phase 1..  $80,000,000
Texas...............................  Fort Hood..............  Microgrid and Backup       $18,250,000
                                                                Power...................
Wyoming.............................  F.E. Warren Air Force    Microgrid and Battery      $25,000,000
                                       Base..................   Storage.................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                   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 collected from the North Atlantic Treaty 
Organization as a result of construction previously financed by the 
United States, and in the amounts, set forth in the following table:

                         North Atlantic Treaty Organization Security Investment Program
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   Country                                 Installation or Location                   Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Worldwide Unspecified.......................  NATO Security Investment Program.................     $604,270,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2502. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, NATO.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years 
beginning after September 30, 2026, for contributions by the Secretary 
of Defense under section 2806 of title 10, United States Code, for the 
share of the United States of the cost of projects for the North 
Atlantic Treaty Organization Security Investment Program authorized by 
section 2501 as specified in the funding table in section 4601.

             Subtitle B--Host Country In-Kind Contributions

SEC. 2511. REPUBLIC OF KOREA FUNDED CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS.

    Pursuant to agreement with the Republic of Korea for required in-
kind contributions, the Secretary of Defense may accept military 
construction projects for the installations or locations in the 
Republic of Korea, and in the amounts, set forth in the following 
table:

                                 Republic of Korea Funded Construction Projects
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                           Installation or
              Component                        Location                 Project                   Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Air Force............................  Osan Air Base..........  Consolidated Aircraft    $78,000,000
                                                                 Maintenance Facility,
                                                                 Phase 1.
Air Force............................  Osan Air Base..........  Upgrade Electrical       $103,000,000
                                                                 Distribution, East,
                                                                 Phase 2.
Army.................................  Camp Walker............  Elementary School......  $91,000,000
Army.................................  USAG Humphreys.........  POL Pipeline...........  $35,000,000
Marine Corps.........................  Camp Mujuk.............  Administrative District  $18,500,000
                                                                 Access Control Point.
Marine Corps.........................  Yecheon Air Base.......  Replace Concrete Apron.  $47,000,000
Navy.................................  CFA Chinhae............  Enlisted Unaccompanied   $44,000,000
                                                                 Personnel Housing.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2512. REPUBLIC OF POLAND FUNDED CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS.

    Pursuant to agreement with the Republic of Poland for required in-
kind contributions, the Secretary of Defense may accept military 
construction projects for the installations or locations in the 
Republic of Poland, and in the amounts, set forth in the following 
table:

                                 Republic of Poland Funded Construction Projects
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                           Installation or
              Component                        Location                 Project                   Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Air Force............................  Wroclaw................  Dormitory and Multi-Use  $32,000,000
                                                                 Support Building.
Army.................................  Powdiz.................  Rotary Wing Maintenance  $102,000,000
                                                                 Hangars.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

            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: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                    State                                          Location                           Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Florida.....................................  Camp Blanding....................................      $28,000,000
Guam........................................  Barrigada........................................      $20,000,000
Idaho.......................................  Orchard Training Area............................      $27,000,000
Illinois....................................  Peoria...........................................       $8,000,000
 Louisiana..................................   Abbeville Readiness Center......................      $23,000,000
Massachusetts...............................  Camp Edwards.....................................      $43,000,000
Oklahoma....................................  Tulsa Army Aviation Support Facility.............      $18,500,000
Washington..................................  Yakima Training Center...........................      $18,000,000
West Virginia...............................  Martinsburg Readiness Center.....................      $20,000,000
Wisconsin...................................  Black River Falls................................      $20,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2602. AUTHORIZED ARMY RESERVE CONSTRUCTION AND LAND ACQUISITION 
              PROJECTS.

    Using amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of 
appropriations in section 2606 and available for the National Guard and 
Reserve as specified in the funding table in section 4601, the 
Secretary of the Army may acquire real property and carry out military 
construction projects for the Army Reserve locations inside the United 
States, and in the amounts, set forth in the following table:

                                     Army Reserve: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                    State                                          Location                           Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Colorado....................................  Fort Carson......................................      $92,000,000
Illinois....................................  Fort Sheridan....................................      $38,000,000
Virginia....................................  Richmond Reserve Center..........................      $48,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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 project for the Navy Reserve and Marine Corps Reserve 
location inside the United States, and in the amount, set forth in the 
following table:

                         Navy Reserve and Marine Corps Reserve: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                    State                                          Location                           Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Florida.....................................  Naval Air Station Jacksonville...................      $47,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                    State                                          Location                           Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alaska......................................  Eielson Air Force Base...........................      $16,000,000
Michigan....................................   Selfridge Air National Guard Base...............     $425,000,000
Missouri....................................  Rosecrans Air National Guard Base................      $63,000,000
Texas.......................................   Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base Fort Worth.      $27,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                    State                                          Location                           Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pennsylvania................................  Pittsburgh Air Reserve Station...................      $19,500,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2606. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, NATIONAL GUARD AND RESERVE.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years 
beginning after September 30, 2026, 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.

SEC. 2607. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2023 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (division B of 
Public Law 117-263; 136 Stat. 2970), the authorizations set forth in 
the table in subsection (b), as provided in sections 2601, 2602, 2603 
and 2604 of that Act (136 Stat. 2986-2987) and extended by section 2607 
of the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026 
(division B of Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 1287), shall remain in 
effect until October 1, 2027, or the date of the enactment of an Act 
authorizing funds for military construction for fiscal year 2028, 
whichever is later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                      National Guard and Reserve: Extension of 2023 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                           Installation or                                 Original Authorized
            State/Country                      Location                 Project                   Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alaska...............................  Joint Base Elmendorf-    Aircraft Maintenance     $63,000,000
                                        Richardson............   Hangar................
Arizona..............................  Morris Air National      Base Entry Complex.....  $12,000,000
                                        Guard Base............
                                       Tucson International     Land Acquisition.......  $11,700,000
                                        Airport...............
Arkansas.............................  Camp Robinson..........  Automated Multipurpose   $9,500,000
                                                                 Machine Gun Range.....
Florida..............................  Gainesville............  National Guard           $21,000,000
                                                                 Readiness Center......
                                       Perrine................  Army Reserve Center/     $46,000,000
                                                                 AMSA..................
 Hawaii..............................  Marine Corps Base        C-40 Aircraft            $116,964,000
                                        Kaneohe Bay...........   Maintenance Hangar....
Indiana..............................   Fort Wayne              Munitions Maintenance    $16,500,000
                                        International Airport.   and Storage Complex...
Puerto Rico..........................  Camp Santiago Joint      Engineering/Housing      $14,500,000
                                        Maneuver Training        Maintenance Shops
                                        Center................   (DPW).................
West Virginia........................  McLaughlin Air National  C-130J Apron Expansion.  $12,500,000
                                        Guard Base............
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2608. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2024 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024 (division B of 
Public Law 118-31; 137 Stat. 709), the authorizations set forth in the 
table in subsection (b), as provided in sections 2601, 2602, 2604, and 
2605 of that Act (137 Stat. 735-737), shall remain in effect until 
October 1, 2027, or the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing 
funds for military construction for fiscal year 2028, whichever is 
later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                      National Guard and Reserve: Extension of 2024 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                           Installation or                                 Original Authorized
            State/Country                      Location                 Project                   Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alabama..............................  Birmingham.............  Army Reserve Center/     $57,000,000
                                                                 AMSA/Land.............
Arizona..............................  Davis-Monthan Air Force  Guardian Angel POTFF     $8,500,000
                                        Base..................   Facility..............
Arkansas.............................  Ebbing Air National      3-Bay Hangar...........  $54,000,000
                                        Guard Base............
                                                                Special Access Program   $21,989,000
                                                                 Facility..............
Florida..............................  Camp Blanding..........  Multipurpose Machine     $11,000,000
                                                                 Gun Range.............
Indiana..............................  Fort Wayne               Fire Station...........  $8,900,000
                                        International Airport.
New Mexico...........................  Rio Rancho Training      National Guard Vehicle   $11,000,000
                                        Site..................   Maintenance Shop
                                                                 Addition..............
Oregon...............................   Portland International  Special Tactics          $23,000,000
                                        Airport...............   Complex, Phase 1......
                                                                Special Tactics          $21,000,000
                                                                 Complex, Phase 2......
                                                                Special Tactics          $24,000,000
                                                                 Complex, Phase 3......
                                                                Special Tactics          $11,000,000
                                                                 Complex, Phase 4......
Pennsylvania                           Hermitage Readiness      National Guard           $13,600,000
                                        Center                   Readiness Center......
Rhode Island.........................  Quonset Point..........  National Guard           $41,000,000
                                                                 Readiness Center......
South Carolina.......................  Aiken County Readiness   National Guard           $20,000,000
                                        Center................   Readiness Center......
                                       McCrady Training Site..  Automated Multipurpose   $7,900,000
                                                                 Machine Gun Range.....
Texas................................  Naval Air Station Joint  LRS Warehouse..........  $16,000,000
                                        Reserve Base Fort
                                        Worth.................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2609. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT FISCAL YEAR 2026 
              PROJECT AT COLONIE, NEW YORK.

    In the case of the authorization contained in the table in section 
2601 of the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2026 (Division B of Public Law 119-60; 139 Stat. 1264) for Albany, New 
York, for construction of a readiness center as specified in the 
funding table in section 4601 of such Act, the Secretary of the Army 
may construct a readiness center at Colonie, New York.

          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, 2026, 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.

         TITLE XXVIII--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION GENERAL PROVISIONS

               Subtitle A--Military Construction Programs

SEC. 2801. EXECUTION OF PROJECTS UNDER THE NORTH ATLANTIC TREATY 
              ORGANIZATION SECURITY INVESTMENT PROGRAM.

    Section 2350q of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (d), by striking ``The construction 
        agent'' and all that follows through ``to execute'' and 
        inserting ``The head of the contracting activity for the 
        Department of Defense executing''; and
            (2) in subsection (e), by striking ``construction agent 
        designated by the Department of Defense'' and inserting ``head 
        of the contracting activity''.

SEC. 2802. INCLUSION OF TRIBAL GOVERNMENTS IN DEFENSE COMMUNITY 
              INFRASTRUCTURE PROGRAM.

    Section 2391 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (d)--
                    (A) in paragraph (1)(A), by inserting `` Indian 
                tribes,'' after ``local governments,''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (2)(B), by striking ``or local 
                government'' each place such term appears and inserting 
                ``government, local government, or Indian tribe,''; and
            (2) in subsection (e)--
                    (A) in paragraph (4)(A)(ii)(I), by striking ``or 
                local government'' and inserting ``government, local 
                government, or Indian tribe''; and
                    (B) by adding at the end the following new 
                paragraph:
            ``(7) 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. 2803. BRIEFING REQUIRED FOR CERTAIN BASING ACTIONS OF THE 
              DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE.

    Section 2392 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsection (f) as subsection (g); and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (e) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(f) Briefing Required for Covered Basing Actions.--(1) Not later 
than 15 days after any date on which the Secretary notifies the 
Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the 
Senate of a covered basing action, the Secretary shall provide to 
Congress a briefing with respect to the covered basing action that 
includes--
            ``(A) an identification of the affected basing action, 
        military installation, and unit or weapons system;
            ``(B) an identification of the authority of the Secretary 
        pursuant to which the covered basing action will be carried 
        out;
            ``(C) an explanation of the reasons the covered basing 
        action is not in compliance with the process for strategic 
        basing actions under this section;
            ``(D) an assessment of potential consequences of the 
        covered basing action, including how the covered basing 
        decision may conflict with--
                    ``(i) planning of the Department of the Air Force; 
                and
                    ``(ii) timelines for other military installations, 
                units, or weapons systems;
            ``(E) an assessment of the military installation in receipt 
        of units or weapons systems pursuant to the covered basing 
        action, including--
                    ``(i) whether the military installation is in 
                compliance with applicable environmental protection 
                laws;
                    ``(ii) the amount of appropriations for military 
                construction needed for the military installation;
                    ``(iii) any deficiencies in infrastructure on the 
                military installation with respect to--
                            ``(I) operational capacity;
                            ``(II) training capacity and requirements; 
                        and
                            ``(III) funding.
    ``(2) In this subsection, the term `covered basing action' means a 
basing action that--
            ``(A) is not approved by the strategic basing panel and 
        strategic basing executive steering group pursuant to this 
        section; and
            ``(B) the Secretary of the Air Force received direction to 
        implement prior to completing the process for strategic basing 
        actions under this section.''.

SEC. 2804. UNSPECIFIED MINOR MILITARY CONSTRUCTION DOLLAR THRESHOLDS.

    (a) In General.--Section 2805(a)(2) of title 10, United States 
Code, is amended by striking ``$9,000,000'' and inserting 
``$12,000,000''.
    (b) Laboratory Revitalization.--Section 2805(d) of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended by striking ``$9,000,000'' each place it 
appears and inserting ``$15,000,000''.
    (c) Adjustment of Dollar Limitations.--Section 2805(f) of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``for Location'' and all that follows 
        through ``Each fiscal year'' and inserting ``Each fiscal 
        year''; and
            (2) by striking ``may exceed'' and all that follows through 
        the period at the end and inserting the following: ``may 
        exceed--
            ``(1) with respect to a project described in subsection 
        (d), 150 percent of the dollar amount specified in such 
        subsection; and
            ``(2) with respect to any other project described in 
        subsection (a)(2), 150 percent of the dollar amount specified 
        in such subsection.''.

SEC. 2805. REPEAL OF LIMITATION ON AVAILABLE FUNDS FOR RESEARCH, 
              DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION MILITARY CONSTRUCTION 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) In General.--Section 2810(f)(5) of title 10, United States 
Code, is repealed.
    (b) Applicability.--The amendment made by subsection (a) shall 
apply with respect to amounts made available for research, development, 
test, and evaluation on or after the date of the enactment of this 
section.

SEC. 2806. MODIFICATION OF APPROVAL AND NOTIFICATION THRESHOLDS FOR 
              REPAIR PROJECTS ON MILITARY FACILITIES.

    Section 2811(b) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``$7,500,000'' and inserting ``$20,000,000''.

SEC. 2807. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE MILITARY INSTALLATION STORMWATER 
              PROJECT ACCELERATION PROGRAM.

    (a) Establishment of Program.--Subchapter I of chapter 169 of title 
10, United States Code, is amended by inserting after section 2815a the 
following new section:
``Sec. 2815b. Military Installation Stormwater Project Acceleration 
              Program
    ``(a) Establishment.--The Secretary of Defense shall carry out a 
program to be known as the `Military Installation Stormwater Project 
Acceleration Program' (in this section referred to as the `Program').
    ``(b) Activities.--Under the Program, the Secretary shall--
            ``(1) establish procedures to accelerate the planning for 
        and implementation of military construction projects described 
        in subsection (c); and
            ``(2) provide supplemental funding to military construction 
        projects described in such subsection.
    ``(c) Military Construction Project Described.--A military 
construction project described in this subsection is a military 
construction project that is--
            ``(1) specified in the military installation resilience 
        component of a military installation master plan developed 
        pursuant to section 2864(a);
            ``(2) identified as a potential military installation 
        resilience project under section 2815 of this title;
            ``(3) identified as a stormwater management project under 
        section 2815a of this title; or
            ``(4) identified as suitable to preserve or enhance defense 
        access roads in accordance with section 210 of title 23.
    ``(d) Merit-based Criteria.--The Secretary shall establish merit-
based criteria for use in the selection of military construction 
projects to receive funding under the Program.
    ``(e) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to require or enable any official of the Department of 
Defense to provide funding under this section pursuant to--
            ``(1) a community project funding request; or
            ``(2) a congressionally directed spending item (as defined 
        in the Standing Rules of the Senate).
    ``(f) Annual Report.--Not later than March 1 of the first calendar 
year beginning after the date of the enactment of this section, and on 
an annual basis thereafter, the Secretary shall submit to the 
Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of 
Representatives a report on the Program. Each such report shall include 
the following:
            ``(1) A description of the nature and status of the 
        military construction projects or actions undertaken in whole 
        or part with funds appropriated for the Program.
            ``(2) An assessment of the effectiveness of such military 
        construction projects or actions as part of a long-term 
        strategy--
                    ``(A) to prevent flooding on--
                            ``(i) military installations;
                            ``(ii) key supporting civilian 
                        infrastructure; and
                            ``(iii) and defense access roads; and
                    ``(B) to improve the management of stormwater on or 
                related to a military installation.
            ``(3) An evaluation of the methodology and criteria used to 
        select and establish priorities for military construction 
        projects and actions funded in whole or part with funds 
        appropriated for the Program.
            ``(4) Such recommendations as the Secretary determines 
        appropriate for legislative or administrative actions to 
        improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the Program.''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of 
such subchapter is amended by inserting after the item relating to 
section 2815a the following new item:

``2815b. Military Installation Stormwater Project Acceleration 
                            Program.''.

SEC. 2808. EXPANSION OF ANNUAL REPORT ON UNFUNDED REQUIREMENTS FOR 
              CERTAIN MILITARY CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS.

    Section 2806 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 10 U.S.C. 222a note) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``The Under Secretary of Defense for 
        Research and Engineering'' and inserting the following: ``(a) 
        In General.--The Chief of Staff of the Army, the Chief of Naval 
        Operations, and the Chief of Staff of the Air Force, in 
        coordination with the Under Secretary of Defense for Research 
        and Engineering'';
            (2) by striking ``order'' and all that follows through the 
        end of the section and inserting ``order.''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new subsections:
    ``(b) Elements.--Each report required under subsection (a) shall 
include, for each military construction project listed in the report--
            ``(1) a description that identifies the objectives of the 
        national defense strategy required under section 113(g) of this 
        title and the National Military Strategy required under section 
        139(b) of this title that would be advanced if the military 
        construction project were funded, in whole or in part;
            ``(2) a detailed assessment of each specific risk to the 
        execution of the national defense strategy and the National 
        Military Strategy that would be reduced the military 
        construction project were funded, in whole or in part; and
            ``(3) a Department of Defense Form 1391.
    ``(c) Consistency With Military Construction Requirements.--
Information regarding project scope, cost estimate, and design maturity 
for military construction projects included in a report under 
subsection (a) shall be prepared and validated in a manner consistent 
with the requirements applicable to military construction projects 
included in the budget of the President submitted to Congress under 
section 1105(a) of title 31.
    ``(d) Certification.--The Secretary of the military department 
concerned shall certify each military construction project under the 
jurisdiction of the Secretary that is listed in a report required under 
subsection (a) as--
            ``(1) a valid unfunded military construction requirement of 
        the military department; and
            ``(2) appropriate for consideration by Congress as part of 
        the unfunded priorities of the military department.''.

                  Subtitle B--Military Housing Reforms

SEC. 2811. CONGRESSIONAL NOTIFICATION OF WINDOW FALL INCIDENTS IN 
              CERTAIN PRIVATIZED MILITARY HOUSING.

    Section 2857(d) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``The Secretary concerned'' and inserting 
        ``(1) The Secretary concerned'';
            (2) by inserting ``or any other individual'' after ``minor 
        child''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(2) Not later than 72 hours after any date on which an incident 
in which a minor child or any other individual falls from a window in a 
unit of military family housing under the jurisdiction of the Secretary 
concerned occurs, the Secretary concerned shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a notification that includes, with 
respect to such incident--
            ``(A) the date;
            ``(B) the location;
            ``(C) the associated circumstances; and
            ``(D) whether injury or death resulted.''.

SEC. 2812. EXPANSION OF PROTECTIONS AGAINST REPRISAL OR RETALIATION FOR 
              CERTAIN TENANTS OF PRIVATIZED MILITARY HOUSING.

    Section 2890 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (b)(7), by striking ``and housing 
        management office'' and inserting ``housing management office, 
        the Chief Housing Officer of the Department of Defense, the 
        Inspector General of the Department of Defense, the Inspector 
        General of the military department concerned, or a Member of 
        Congress''; and
            (2) in subsection (e)--
                    (A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``for reporting 
                an issue relating to a housing unit'' and inserting the 
                following: ``who reports an issue relating to a housing 
                unit to any of the following:
            ``(A) The landlord.
            ``(B) The chain of command.
            ``(C) The applicable housing management office.
            ``(D) The Chief Housing Officer of the Department of 
        Defense.
            ``(E) The Inspector General of the Department of Defense.
            ``(F) The Inspector General of the military department 
        concerned.
            ``(G) A Member of Congress.''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (2)--
                            (i) by redesignating subparagraphs (A) and 
                        (B) as subparagraphs (B) and (C), respectively;
                            (ii) by inserting before subparagraph (B), 
                        as so redesignated, the following new 
                        subparagraph (A):
                    ``(A) provide notice of that determination to the 
                Secretary of the military department concerned;''; and
                            (iii) in subparagraph (C), as so 
                        redesignated, by striking ``the Inspector 
                        General has taken final action'' and inserting 
                        ``the Secretary of the military department 
                        concerned has notified the Inspector General 
                        that the Secretary has taken final action''.

SEC. 2813. TREATMENT OF NONDISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS WITH RESPECT TO 
              PRIVATIZED MILITARY HOUSING.

    Section 2890(f) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1), in the first sentence--
                    (A) by striking ``A tenant or prospective tenant of 
                a housing unit may not be required to sign'' and 
                inserting ``A landlord may not request that a tenant, 
                former tenant, or prospective tenant of a housing unit 
                sign''; and
                    (B) by inserting ``or in connection with the 
                provision of services related to the housing unit'' 
                before the period; and
            (2) by striking paragraphs (2) and (3) and inserting the 
        following:
    ``(2) The prohibition under paragraph (1) shall apply to all 
housing units, including military family housing and military 
unaccompanied housing.
    ``(3) In this subsection, the term `tenant' includes any party 
(other than a landlord) to a lease for a housing unit.''.

SEC. 2814. EXPANSION OF PILOT PROGRAM TO INCLUDE AUTHORITY TO REPLACE 
              CERTAIN DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE LABORATORIES.

    Section 2835 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2024 (Public Law 118-31; 10 U.S.C. 2821 note) is amended--
            (1) in the heading, by striking ``covered military 
        unaccompanied housing'' and inserting ``department of 
        defense''; and
            (2) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) by striking ``, to replace a covered military 
                unaccompanied housing facility'';
                    (B) by redesignating paragraphs (1) and (2) as 
                subparagraphs (A) and (B), respectively;
                    (C) by inserting before subparagraph (A), as so 
                redesignated, the following new paragraph (1):
            ``(1) to replace a covered military unaccompanied housing 
        facility--'';
                    (D) in subparagraph (B), as so redesignated, by 
                striking the period at the end and inserting ``; and''; 
                and
                    (E) by adding at the end the following new 
                paragraph (2):
            ``(2) to replace a Department of Defense laboratory at 
        which--
                    ``(A) research with respect to science and 
                technology is carried out; or
                    ``(B) test and evaluation activities are 
                conducted.''.

SEC. 2815. MODIFICATION TO PILOT PROGRAM FOR MILITARY CONSTRUCTION 
              PROJECTS TO REPLACE CERTAIN MILITARY UNACCOMPANIED 
              HOUSING FACILITIES.

    Section 2835 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2024 (Public Law 118-31; 10 USC 2821 note) is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) by striking ``a covered military unaccompanied 
                housing facility'';
                    (B) in paragraph (1), by striking ``that such 
                Secretary determines is'' and inserting ``covered 
                military housing facilities that such Secretary 
                determines are''; and
                    (C) by striking paragraph (2) and inserting the 
                following:
            ``(2) facilities in a failed or failing condition which are 
        located within covered depots, or which are directly related to 
        the function or activity managed through the Army Working 
        Capital Fund.'';
            (2) in subsection (d), by adding at the end the following 
        new sentence: ``Charges for goods and services provided through 
        a working capital fund may not include amounts necessary to 
        recover costs of military construction projects funded under 
        the pilot program.'';
            (3) in subsection (f), by striking ``shall terminate on'' 
        and all that follows through ``this Act'' and inserting ``shall 
        terminate on October 1, 2032''; and
            (4) in subsection (g)--
                    (A) by redesignating paragraph (2) as paragraph 
                (3); and
                    (B) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following 
                new paragraph (2):
            ``(3) The term `covered depot' means a depot specified in 
        paragraph (1) of section 2476(f) of title 10, United States 
        Code.''.

SEC. 2816. ESTABLISHMENT OF TIMELINESS STANDARDS WITH RESPECT TO 
              MAINTENANCE WORK ORDERS FOR COVERED MILITARY 
              UNACCOMPANIED HOUSING; ANNUAL REPORT.

    Section 2839 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2024 (Public Law 118-31) is amended--
            (1) in the heading, by inserting ``; work order timeliness 
        standards'' after ``covered military unaccompanied housing'';
            (2) by redesignating subsections (c) through subsection (e) 
        as subsections (d) through (f), respectively; and
            (3) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(c) Work Order Timeliness Standards; Annual Report.--
            ``(1) In general.--Not later than July 1, 2027, the 
        Secretary of Defense shall establish Department of Defense-wide 
        timeliness standards for the resolution of work orders for 
        covered military unaccompanied housing.
            ``(2) Annual report.--In conjunction with the submission of 
        the report under subsection (a) for fiscal year 2028, and on an 
        annual basis thereafter during the reporting requirement under 
        such subsection is effective, the Secretary shall submit to the 
        congressional defense committees a report that includes, for 
        each military installation under the jurisdiction of the 
        Secretary, with respect to the fiscal year that precedes the 
        fiscal year during which the report is submitted, an 
        identification of--
                    ``(A) the total number of work orders for covered 
                military unaccompanied housing resolved within a period 
                that complied with the timeliness standards under 
                paragraph (1);
                    ``(B) the total number of such work orders resolve 
                within a period that did not comply with such 
                timeliness standards;
                    ``(C) the total number of such work orders that 
                remain open at the end of the fiscal year covered by 
                the report;
                    ``(D) the total number of work orders comprising 
                the total numbers under subparagraphs (A) through (C), 
                respectively, that relate to the health and safety of 
                covered military unaccompanied housing;
                    ``(E) the total number of employees with duties 
                that include the maintenance and administration of 
                military unaccompanied housing authorized;
                    ``(F) the total number of authorized positions for 
                employment with such duties that remain open at the end 
                of the fiscal year covered by the report; and
                    ``(G) the total amount obligated or expended on 
                service contracts for the maintenance and 
                administration of covered military unaccompanied 
                housing.''.

SEC. 2817. EXPANSION OF ELEMENTS INCLUDED IN ANNUAL REPORTS ON THE 
              CONDITION OF COVERED MILITARY UNACCOMPANIED HOUSING.

    Section 2839(b) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2024 (Public Law 118-31) is amended--
            (1) by redesignating paragraph (4) as paragraph (6); and
            (2) by inserting after paragraph (3) the following new 
        paragraphs:
            ``(4) A list of whether each such covered military 
        unaccompanied housing facility located on each military 
        installation under the jurisdiction of the Secretary of the 
        military department concerned complies with the uniform minimum 
        habitability standards for covered military unaccompanied 
        housing as required under section 2856b of title 10, United 
        States Code.
            ``(5) For such facilities that do not comply with uniform 
        minimum habitability standards--
                    ``(A) a list of elements that are not in 
                compliance;
                    ``(B) the funding required to conduct improvements 
                to meet uniform minimum habitability standards; and
                    ``(C) a five-year plan for carrying out such 
                improvements.''.

SEC. 2818. MODIFICATION TO REQUIRED INVESTMENTS IN IMPROVING MILITARY 
              UNACCOMPANIED HOUSING.

    (a) In General.--Section 2814 of the National Defense Authorization 
Act for Fiscal Year 2022 (Public Law 117-81) is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) by striking ``a covered fiscal year'' and 
                inserting ``the fiscal years specified in subsection 
                (e)''; and
                    (B) by striking ``five percent'' and inserting 
                ``ten percent'';
            (2) by amending subsection (b)(1) to read as follows:
            ``(1) The term `military unaccompanied housing' has the 
        meaning given in section 2871 of title 10, United States 
        Code.'';
            (3) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (e);
            (4) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new 
        subsections:
    ``(c) Standards.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall establish a 
Department-wide standard for tracking the use of facilities 
sustainment, restoration, and modernization funds for military 
unaccompanied housing.
    ``(d) Report.--Along with the submission of the budget of the 
President to Congress under section 1105(a) of title 31, United States 
Code, the Secretary of Defense shall report on the extent to which each 
Secretary of a military department is meeting the minimum requirements 
of this section.''; and
            (5) in subsection (e), by striking ``2026'' and inserting 
        ``2031''.
    (b) Applicability.--This section and the amendments made by this 
section shall apply with respect to amounts reserved pursuant to 
section 2814 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2022 (Public Law 117-81) on or after October 1, 2026.

        Subtitle C--Real Property and Facilities Administration

SEC. 2821. AUTHORIZATION FOR CERTAIN PLANNING, DESIGN, AND CONSTRUCTION 
              CONTRACTS IN SUPPORT OF MILITARY SERVICE ACADEMIES.

    Subchapter I of chapter 134 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by inserting after section 2246 the following new section:
``Sec. 2247. Authorization for certain planning, design, and 
              construction contracts in support of military service 
              academies
    ``(a) Authority.--Subject to subsection (b) and amounts made 
available in advance for such purpose, and pursuant to such regulations 
as the Secretary of Defense may prescribe, the Superintendent of a 
Service Academy may seek to enter into a contract with a covered 
foundation for the planning, design, construction, equipping, and 
maintenance of facilities and other projects that support the mission 
of such Service Academy.
    ``(b) Limitations.--Contractual agreements under subsection (a) may 
be provided only if such agreements--
            ``(1) are without any liability of the United States to the 
        covered foundation;
            ``(2) do not affect the ability of any official or employee 
        of the military department concerned to carry out any 
        responsibility or duty in a fair and objective manner;
            ``(3) do not compromise the integrity or appearance of 
        integrity of any program of the military department concerned, 
        or any individual involved in such a program;
            ``(4) comply with the Joint Ethics Regulation; and
            ``(5) have been reviewed and approved by an attorney of the 
        military department concerned.
    ``(c) Briefing.--In any fiscal year during which the Superintendent 
of a Service Academy exercises the authority under subsection (a), the 
Secretary of the military department concerned shall provide a briefing 
not later than the last day of that fiscal year to the Committees on 
Armed Services of the Senate and House of Representatives regarding the 
campus improvement projects initiated during such fiscal year.
    ``(d) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `covered foundation' means a charitable, 
        educational, or civic nonprofit organization under section 
        501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, that the 
        Secretary concerned determines operates exclusively to support, 
        with respect to a Service Academy, any of the following:
                    ``(A) Recruiting.
                    ``(B) Parent or alumni development.
                    ``(C) Academic, leadership, or character 
                development.
                    ``(D) Institutional development.
                    ``(E) Athletics.
            ``(2) The term `Service Academy' has the meaning given such 
        term in section 347 of this title.''.

SEC. 2822. EXEMPTION OF CERTAIN MILITARY INSTALLATIONS FROM GUIDANCE 
              WITH RESPECT TO AGGREGATE SQUARE FOOTAGE REQUIREMENTS.

    Section 2849(f) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2025 (Public Law 118-159; 10 U.S.C. 2802 note) is amended 
by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
            ``(5) Military installations undergoing a mission 
        transition as of the date of the enactment of this 
        paragraph.''.

SEC. 2823. MATCHING REQUIREMENT FOR THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS ON MILITARY 
              INSTALLATIONS PROGRAM.

    (a) In General.--With respect to a grant, cooperative agreement, or 
supplementary financial assistance provided to a State or local 
educational agency for a project to construct, renovate, repair, or 
expand an elementary or secondary public school on a military 
installation pursuant to section 8109 of the Consolidated 
Appropriations Act, 2022 (Public Law 117-103; 136 Stat. 201), the 
Secretary of Defense shall ensure that the terms of such grant, 
cooperative agreement, or financial assistance do not require the 
recipient State or local educational agency to provide a matching 
contribution in an amount greater than the amount that is equal to 20 
percent of the total cost of the project.
    (b) Rulemaking.--The Secretary of Defense shall revise the notice 
titled ``Department of Defense Program for Construction, Renovation, 
Repair or Expansion of Public Schools Located on Military 
Installations'' (76 Fed. Reg. 55883 et seq.; published September 9, 
2011) to carry out the requirements of this section.
    (c) Applicability.--Subsection (a) shall apply with respect to a 
grant awarded, cooperative agreement entered into, or financial 
assistance provided on or after the date of the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 2824. IMPROVEMENT TO PROCEDURES FOR PROCESSING VISITORS TO 
              DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE MILITARY INSTALLATIONS.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that, at all 
military installations located inside the United States--
            (1) not fewer than one open gate always has the capability 
        and procedures to process visitors for access to the military 
        installation, regardless of whether the installation's primary 
        visitor control center is open; and
            (2) personnel at the military installation responsible for 
        security at all open gates are able to direct visitors to the 
        military installation to the appropriate office on the military 
        installation for visitor processing.
    (b) Military Installation Defined.--In this section, the term 
``military installation'' has the meaning given such term in section 
2801 of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 2825. RESTRICTIONS ON DATA FACILITY EQUIPMENT PLACED ON FACILITIES 
              LEASED FROM THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall not to enter into 
an enhanced use lease unless the lease terms prohibit the lessee (and 
any sublessor or operator thereof) from installing or operating data 
facility equipment that contains one or more significant components 
manufactured in, or by an entity domiciled in or subject to the 
jurisdiction of, a covered nation.
    (b) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``covered nation'' shall mean--
                    (A) China;
                    (B) Russia;
                    (C) Iran; or
                    (D) North Korea.
            (2) The term ``data facility'' shall mean any data center, 
        supercomputer, or other facility for the mass storage, 
        processing, or transmission of data.
            (3) The term ``enhanced use lease'' means a lease entered 
        into under section 2667 of title 10, United States Code, or any 
        other similar authority.
            (4) The term ``significant component'' shall mean--
                    (A) any covered printed circuit board, as that term 
                is defined in section 4873 of title 10, United States 
                Code;
                    (B) advanced semiconductors and chipsets, including 
                any integrated circuit--
                            (i) manufactured using a non-planar 
                        transistor architecture; or
                            (ii) manufactured using a production 
                        technology node of 14 nanometers or smaller; 
                        and
                    (C) any other component that provides a unique 
                functionality to the data facility that the Secretary 
                of Defense determines to be a risk to national security 
                of the United States.

SEC. 2826. NAME OF DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY MILITARY INSTALLATION, 
              AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.

    The military installation under the jurisdiction of the Department 
of the Army located in Augusta, Georgia, shall after the date of the 
enactment of this Act be known and designated as ``Fort Shughart 
Gordon''. Any reference to such military installation in any law, 
regulation, map, document, record, or other paper of the United States 
shall be considered a reference to Fort Shughart Gordon.

SEC. 2827. NAME OF THE DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY MILITARY INSTALLATION 
              LOCATED IN MUSCOGEE COUNTY AND CHATTAHOOCHEE COUNTY, 
              GEORGIA.

    The military installation under the jurisdiction of the Department 
of the Army located in Muscogee County and Chattahoochee County, 
Georgia, shall on and after the date of the enactment of this Act be 
known and designated as ``Fort Moore'', in commemoration of Lieutenant 
General Harold G. Moore, Jr., United States Army, and Mrs. Julia 
Compton Moore. Any reference to such military installation in any law, 
regulation, map, document, record, or other paper of the United States 
shall be considered a reference to Fort Moore.

SEC. 2828. MILITARY INSTALLATION RENAMINGS.

    Upon the enactment of this section, the Secretary of Defense shall 
rename military installations as set forth in the following table:

                     Military Installation Renamings
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                        Current        New Installation
              State                Installation Name         Name
------------------------------------------------------------------------
North Carolina..................  Fort Bragg........  Fort Liberty
Georgia.........................  Fort Benning......  Fort Moore
Texas...........................  Fort Hood.........  Fort Cavazos
Georgia.........................  Fort Gordon.......  Fort Shughart-
                                                       Gordon
Virginia........................  Fort Lee..........  Fort Gregg-Adams
Louisiana.......................  Fort Polk.........  Fort Johnson
Alabama.........................  Fort Rucker.......  Fort Novosel
Virginia........................  Fort Pickett......  Fort Barfoot
Virginia........................  Fort A.P. Hill....  Fort Walker
------------------------------------------------------------------------

              Subtitle D--Land Conveyances and Withdrawals

SEC. 2831. REPORT ON LAND WITHDRAWAL AT YUMA PROVING GROUND, ARIZONA.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army shall submit to the 
Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the 
Senate a report on the land withdrawal at Yuma Proving Ground, Arizona.
    (b) Elements.--The report required under subsection (a) shall 
include--
            (1) a description of effects on operational and testing 
        capabilities if the land withdrawal authorization at Yuma 
        Proving Ground were not renewed or extended; and
            (2) recommendations of the Secretary with respect to 
        modifications of the land withdrawal at Yuma Proving Ground 
        that the Secretary determines would require an Act of Congress.

SEC. 2832. LAND CONVEYANCE, STATE ARMORY BOARD, UTAH NATIONAL GUARD, 
              CAMP WILLIAMS STATE MILITARY RESERVATION, LEHI, UTAH.

    (a) Conveyance Authorized.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of the Army (in this section 
        referred to as the ``Secretary'') may convey to the Utah 
        National Guard, Lehi, Utah, all right, title, and interest of 
        the United States in and to a parcel of real property, 
        including any improvements thereon, consisting of three parcels 
        described in subsection (b).
            (2) Continuation of existing easements, restrictions, and 
        covenants.--The conveyance of the property under paragraph (1) 
        shall be subject to any easement, restriction, or covenant of 
        record applicable to the property and in existence on the date 
        of the enactment of this Act.
    (b) Description of Property.--
            (1) In general.--The property, including all land, 
        improvements, and appurtenances, described in this subsection 
        is the following:
                    (A) First parcel.--A strip of land of varying width 
                situated in Section 35, Township 4 South, Range 1 West, 
                Salt Lake Base and Meridian. Such strip of land 
                extending 25 feet each side and parallel with the 
                following described center line: Beginning at a point 
                in the East line of section 35, 1298 feet East and 1808 
                feet North 44 59'' West from the Southwest corner of 
                Section 36, Township 4 South, Range 1 West, Salt Lake 
                Base and Meridian; thence North 45 9'' West 1999 feet, 
                describing a 75 foot strip of land extending 25 feet 
                Eastwardly and 50 feet Westwardly and Parallel with 
                such center line; thence continuing on same bearing 
                1368.1 feet to the PC of a 5 spiralled curve to the 
                right. Describing a 100 foot strip of land extending 50 
                feet each side and parallel with said center line, 
                thence Northwesterly along said 5 curve to the right 
                507.9 feet more or less to a point in the South line of 
                the Northeast quarter of the Northwest quarter of said 
                Section 35, describing a 100 foot strip of land 
                extending 50 feet each side and parallel with such 
                center line.
                    (B) Second parcel.--An irregular shaped parcel of 
                land situated in the Northeast quarter of the Northwest 
                quarter of Section 35, Township 4 South Range 1 West, 
                Salt Lake Base and Meridian. Beginning at the Northwest 
                corner of the herein described land, said point bears 
                West 194 feet from the North quarter corner of Section 
                35, thence South 5 47'' West 587 feet more or less, 
                thence along the line of the 5 spiralled curve to the 
                left a distance of 767.4 feet to a point in the South 
                line of the Northeast quarter of the Northwest quarter 
                of said Section 35; thence East 50 feet to the west 
                right of way line of the Utah Lake Irrigation Company's 
                canal, thence North 1 24'' East along said West right 
                of way line in distance of 1180 feet more or less; 
                thence North 3 2'' West 128 feet; thence West 115 feet 
                to the point of beginning.
                    (C) Third parcel.--A parcel of land situated in 
                Southwest quarter of Section 26, Township 4 South, 
                Range 1 West, Salt Lake Base and Meridian: Commencing 
                144 feet West from South quarter corner of Section 26; 
                a strip of land 200 feet wide extending 100 feet each 
                side and parallel with the following described center 
                line: Commencing from said point of beginning North 5 
                47'' East 861.1 feet more or less, along the line of a 
                7 spiral cure to left a distance of 464.4 feet more of 
                less to a point in North line of Southeast, quarter of 
                Southwest quarter of Section 26, extending 100 feet 
                each side and parallel with side center line.
            (2) Survey.--The exact acreage and legal description of the 
        parcels described in paragraph (1) shall be determined by a 
        survey satisfactory to the Secretary.
    (c) Reversionary Interest.--
            (1) In general.--If the Secretary determines at any time 
        that the property conveyed under subsection (a) is not being 
        used for activities of the Utah National Guard relating to 
        training and readiness, all right, title, and interest in and 
        to the property, including any improvements thereto, may, at 
        the option of the Secretary, revert to and become the property 
        of the United States, and the United States may have the right 
        of immediate entry onto such property.
            (2) Determination.--A determination by the Secretary under 
        paragraph (1) may be made on the record after an opportunity 
        for a hearing.
    (d) Payment of Costs of Conveyance.--
            (1) Payment required.--The Secretary may require the State 
        of Utah to cover all costs (except costs for environmental 
        remediation of the property) to be incurred by the Secretary, 
        or to reimburse the Secretary for costs incurred by the 
        Secretary, to carry out the conveyance under subsection (a), 
        including costs for environmental and real estate due diligence 
        and any other administrative costs related to the conveyance.
            (2) Refund of excess amounts.--If amounts are collected 
        from the State under paragraph (1) in advance of the Secretary 
        incurring the actual costs, and the amount collected exceeds 
        the costs actually incurred by the Secretary to carry out the 
        conveyance under subsection (a), the Secretary shall refund the 
        excess amount to the State.
    (e) Limitation on Source of Funds.--The State may not use Federal 
funds to cover any portion of the costs required to be paid by the 
State under this section.
    (f) Additional Terms and Conditions.--The Secretary may require 
such additional terms and conditions in connection with the conveyance 
under subsection (a) as the Secretary considers appropriate to protect 
the interests of the United States.

SEC. 2833. LAND CONVEYANCE, MILAN ARMY AMMUNITION PLANT, TENNESSEE.

    (a) Conveyance Authorized.--The Secretary of the Army may convey, 
without consideration, to the University of Tennessee System (in this 
section referred to as the ``University'') all right, title, and 
interest of the United States in and to parcels of real property, 
including any improvements thereon, at Milan Army Ammunition Plant, 
Tennessee, that consist of a total of approximately 5,000 acres for the 
purpose of permitting the University to use the parcels for education 
research.
    (b) Revisionary Interest.--
            (1) Interest retained.--
                    (A) In general.--If the Secretary of the Army 
                determines at any time that the property conveyed to 
                the University under subsection (a) is not being used 
                in accordance with the purpose of the conveyance 
                specified in such subsection, all right, title, and 
                interest in and to the conveyed property, including any 
                improvements thereon, 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 the property.
                    (B) Determination.--A determination by the 
                Secretary of the Army under subparagraph (A) shall be 
                made on the record after an opportunity for a hearing.
            (2) Alternative consideration option.--In lieu of 
        exercising the reversionary interest retained under paragraph 
        (1), the Secretary of the Army may accept an offer by the 
        University to pay to the Secretary an amount equal to the fair 
        market value of the property conveyed under subsection (a), 
        excluding the value of any improvements on the conveyed 
        property constructed without Federal funds after the date the 
        conveyance is completed, as determined by the Secretary.
    (c) Payment of Costs of Conveyance.--The Secretary of the Army 
shall require the University to pay costs (except costs for 
environmental remediation of the property) to be incurred by the 
Secretary, or to reimburse the Secretary for such costs incurred by the 
Secretary, to carry out the conveyance authorized under subsection (a), 
including survey costs, appraisal costs, costs for environmental 
documentation related to the conveyance, and any other administrative 
costs related to the conveyance.
    (d) Treatment of Amounts Received.--
            (1) In general.--Amounts received as reimbursement under 
        subsection (c) or as alternative consideration under subsection 
        (b)(2) shall be credited to the fund or account that was used 
        to pay the costs incurred by the Secretary of the Army in 
        carrying out the conveyance under subsection (a) or, if the 
        period of availability of obligation for appropriations to that 
        fund or account has expired, to the fund or account that is 
        currently available to the Secretary for the same purpose.
            (2) Merger of amounts.--Amounts credited to a fund or 
        account under paragraph (1) shall be merged with amounts in 
        such fund or account and shall be available for the same 
        purposes, and subject to the same conditions and limitations, 
        as amounts in such fund or account.
    (e) Description of Property.--The exact acreage and legal 
description of the parcels of real property to be conveyed under 
subsection (a) shall be determined by a survey satisfactory to the 
Secretary of the Army.
    (f) Additional Terms and Conditions.--The Secretary of the Army may 
require such additional terms and conditions in connection with the 
conveyance authorized by subsection (a) as the Secretary considers 
appropriate to protect the interests of the United States.

                       Subtitle E--Pilot Programs

SEC. 2841. DIGITAL TWIN MODELS AT CERTAIN MILITARY INSTALLATIONS.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 120 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with 
the Secretaries of the military departments, shall carry out a three-
year pilot program to implement digital twin models at not less than 
five covered military installations for the purposes of identifying any 
vulnerabilities or interdependencies of such covered military 
installations.
    (b) Requirements of Models.--The Secretary of Defense shall ensure 
that each digital twin model represents a virtual model of the 
infrastructure systems of the respective covered military installation, 
including--
            (1) the energy systems;
            (2) the water systems;
            (3) the transportation systems;
            (4) the communications systems; and
            (5) any other critical mission-support systems.
    (c) Use of Models.--The Secretary of Defense shall use such digital 
twin models to--
            (1) conduct an assessment of--
                    (A) the infrastructure system of each covered 
                military installation represented by such digital twin 
                models; and
                    (B) any public infrastructure systems, including 
                local facilities of the bulk-power system, 
                transportation systems, local systems for the 
                distribution of fuel, and public water systems, that 
                are used by such covered military installations; and
            (2) to evaluate, during a disruption scenario, the 
        resilience and continuity of operations of such covered 
        military installations, including during--
                    (A) a cyber attack;
                    (B) a kinetic attack;
                    (C) a natural disaster; or
                    (D) an interruption of the supply chains of such 
                covered military installations.
    (d) Covered Military Installation.--In this section, the term 
``covered military installation'' means a military installation that 
would be critical to a contingency operation in the Indo-Pacific 
region, as determined by the Secretary of Defense.

SEC. 2842. PILOT PROGRAM ON WASTEWATER MONITORING AND PATHOGEN-AGNOSTIC 
              MONITORING SYSTEM OF CERTAIN MILITARY INSTALLATIONS.

    (a) Pilot Program Required.--Not later than 180 days after the date 
of the enactment of this section, the Secretary of Defense shall carry 
out a pilot program under which the Secretary shall develop and 
implement a comprehensive wastewater monitoring system at not fewer 
than four military installations at which the Secretary seeks to 
identify the prevalence of infectious diseases among members of the 
Armed Forces at the installation (in this section referred to as the 
``pilot program'').
    (b) Pathogen-agnostic Pilot Program.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
        enactment of this section, the Secretary shall carry out a 
        second pilot program under which the Secretary shall develop 
        and implement a pathogen-agnostic monitoring system that 
        leverages emerging biotechnologies for early detection of novel 
        pathogens (in this section referred to as the ``pathogen-
        agnostic pilot program'').
            (2) Purposes.--The purpose of the pathogen-agnostic pilot 
        program shall aim to--
                    (A) improve detection, identification, and analysis 
                of infectious disease prevalence among members of the 
                Armed Forces and other relevant Department of Defense 
                personnel; and
                    (B) strengthen early-warning capabilities for novel 
                pathogens.
    (c) Technologies and Data System Used.--In carrying out the pilot 
program under subsection (a), the Secretary shall ensure all systems 
developed and implemented under such subsection is comprised of 
appropriate technologies, standardized analytical tools, and a uniform 
data system.
    (d) Duration.--The pilot program shall be carried out during a two-
year period beginning on the date of the commencement of the pilot 
program and the pathogen-agnostic pilot program, respectively.
    (e) Report.--Not later than 90 days after the termination of the 
pilot program and the pathogen-agnostic pilot program, respectively, 
the Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense committees a 
report that includes the following:
            (1) A summary of the findings from all monitoring systems 
        under the pilot program and pathogen-agnostic pilot program.
            (2) Recommendations for interventions or policy changes 
        based on trends observed under the pilot program.
            (3) An assessment of the effectiveness of the pilot program 
        in enhancing force health protection, readiness, and early 
        pathogen detection.
    (f) Strategic Plan.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this section, the Secretary shall submit to Congress a 
strategic plan that--
            (1) defines requirements for implementing a scalable, 
        pathogen-agnostic monitoring capability;
            (2) identifies technologies and risk-based methodologies to 
        achieve mission requirements; and
            (3) demonstrates coordination with the Biodefense Council 
        ensuring compliance with Privacy Act and Department 
        regulations.

SEC. 2843. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE PILOT PROGRAM FOR DEVELOPMENT AND USE 
              OF ONLINE REAL ESTATE INVENTORY TOOL.

    (a) Pilot Program Required.--
            (1) Establishment.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
        establish a pilot program for the development of an online real 
        estate tool to identify the existing inventory of space 
        available at the military installations selected by the 
        Secretary under paragraph (2) for the purposes specified in 
        subsection (b).
            (2) Selection of pilot locations.--The Secretary shall 
        evaluate the online inventory tool at not less than five, but 
        not more than ten, Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps and Space 
        Force military installations selected by the Secretary as 
        appropriate locations for evaluation of the online inventory 
        tool.
            (3) Coordination with army.--In addition to the military 
        installations selected under paragraph (2), the Secretary shall 
        include in the pilot program--
                    (A) all military installations under the 
                jurisdiction of the Department of the Army that 
                participated in the pilot program established under 
                section 2866 of the Military Construction Authorization 
                Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (division B of Public Law 116-
                283; 10 U.S.C. 7771 note prec.); and
                    (B) entries included in the online real estate tool 
                of the Department of Army as of the date on which such 
                pilot program terminated.
            (4) Consultation.--The Secretary shall establish the pilot 
        program and develop the online inventory tool in consultation 
        with the Administrator of General Services and each of the 
        service Secretaries.
    (b) Purposes.--The purposes of the online inventory tool are--
            (1) to achieve efficiencies in real estate property 
        management consistent with the National Defense Strategy goal 
        of finding greater efficiencies within Department of Defense 
        operations and leveraging commercial off-the-shelf technologies 
        to better enable members of the Armed Forces;
            (2) to provide a means to better market to the public 
        information regarding space available at all Department of 
        Defense military installations for better utilization of such 
        space; and
            (3) to provide a means to better quantify existing space 
        available at all Department of Defense military installations 
        and how it is utilized for current missions and requirements.
    (c) Considerations.--To establish the pilot program, the Secretary 
of Defense shall--
            (1) consider innovative approaches, including the use of 
        other transaction authorities consistent with section 2371 of 
        title 10, United States Code, and the use of commercial off- 
        the-shelf technologies;
            (2) develop appropriate protections of sensitive or 
        classified information from being included with the online 
        inventory tool; and
            (3) develop appropriate levels of access for private sector 
        users of the online inventory tool;
            (4) in developing these considerations shall include 
        lessons learned from the Secretary of the Army on the 
        development of the pilot program for the online real estate 
        tool under 2866 of the Military Construction Authorization Act 
        for Fiscal Year 2021.
    (d) Establishment of Use Policy.--In connection with the 
development of the online inventory tool, the Secretary of the Defense 
shall develop policy requiring the use of the online inventory tool at 
all Department of Defense military installations selected under 
subsection (a)(2) to query for existing inventory at such military 
installations before any military construction or off-post leases are 
agreed to for such military installations. The Secretary shall 
prescribe guidelines that will be implemented by each respective 
service secretary. Further, the Secretary shall ensure that all 
relevant notifications to congressional defense committees include 
certification that the online inventory tool was used.
    (e) Online Inventory Tool Defined.--In this section, the term 
``online inventory tool'' means the online real estate tool developed 
under the pilot program to identify existing inventory of space 
available at Department of Defense military installations selected to 
participate in the pilot program.
    (f) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to effect the application of title V of the McKinney- Vento 
Homeless Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 11411 et seq.).
    (g) Reporting Requirement.--Not later than February 15, 2027, the 
Secretary of the Defense shall submit to Committees on Armed Services 
of the Senate and the House of Representatives a report evaluating the 
success of the pilot program in achieving the purposes specified in 
subsection (b). At a minimum, the report also shall identify and 
contain the following:
            (1) The Department of Defense military installations 
        selected under subsection (a)(2) to participate in the pilot 
        program broken out by respective service.
            (2) The number of real estate agreements entered into by 
        each of the respective service secretaries that were 
        facilitated by use of the online inventory tool, including for 
        each agreement the installation, amount of space, value, and 
        purpose of the agreement.
            (3) An evaluation of the extent to which use of the online 
        inventory tool reduced the need for military construction or 
        off-post leases.
            (4) An evaluation of any impediments to efficient use of 
        the online inventory tool.
            (5) The recommendations of the Secretary of Defense 
        regarding whether the pilot program should be extended, 
        expanded, or made permanent.
    (h) Duration.--The authority of the Secretary of the Defense to 
carry out the pilot program shall expire on September 30, 2031.

SEC. 2844. PILOT PROGRAM TO PROVIDE INTEGRATED CONNECTIVITY SERVICE.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary of Defense, acting through the 
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Energy, Installations, and 
Environment, shall establish and carry out a pilot program to provide 
integrated connectivity service to a covered population--
            (1) stationed at five covered military installations in the 
        Middle East, as determined by the Secretary; and
            (2) at no cost to such covered population.
    (b) Program Requirements.--
            (1) Service provisioning and ensuring.--The Assistant 
        Secretary shall enter into a contract with an American 
        contracted entity to act as telecommunications operator for the 
        covered military installation--
                    (A) to provision the integrated connectivity 
                service with a private network management system or a 
                hybrid-capable network management system;
                    (B) to ensure the integrated connectivity service 
                can support multiple tenant commands, or activity 
                present on such covered military installations with 
                individualized commitments, such as separate network 
                slices and security policies that can be tailored to 
                the tenant command requirements; and
                    (C) to provision and ensure operation of the 
                integrated connectivity service.
            (2) Integrated connectivity service requirement.--The 
        integrated connectivity service provided under the pilot 
        program established pursuant to subsection (a) shall--
                    (A) provide broadband internet access service as 
                the baseline service and meet or exceed any speed 
                benchmarks established by the Chairman of the Federal 
                Communications Commission for broadband internet access 
                services, including--
                            (i) a minimum download speed of 100-Mbps; 
                        and
                            (ii) a minimum upload speed of 20-Mbps; and
                    (B) support the integration of P5G data services 
                with broadband internet access service over a common 
                integrated connectivity service, where such mobile 
                services are identified as required by the covered 
                military installation tenant command.
            (3) Goods procured under contract.--Any goods procured 
        under the contract described under paragraph (1) shall be the 
        property of the Department of Defense.
            (4) Standard.--Infrastructure setup and operation of the 
        integrated connectivity service--
                    (A) shall be based on National Institute of 
                Standards and Technology standards specified in NIST SP 
                800-171 Rev. 3, or successor standards, including any 
                future revisions, updates, or successor publications to 
                ensure the availability and security of such integrated 
                connectivity service; and
                    (B) shall exclude hybrid-capable network management 
                systems with availability and security risks, such as 
                pure public cloud only network management systems.
            (5) Cost.--In carrying out the pilot program, the Assistant 
        Secretary shall account for the full life cycle costs of such 
        pilot program, including--
                    (A) the initial build and setup;
                    (B) a refresh, every five years during the period 
                the authority to carry out the pilot program is 
                effective, of the integrated connectivity service, 
                including a refresh of the underlying infrastructure of 
                the entire integrated connectivity service, to ensure 
                long-term--
                            (i) availability;
                            (ii) security; and
                            (iii) usability; and
                    (C) monthly recurring costs, including services 
                provided by--
                            (i) the host nation carrier for bandwidth; 
                        and
                            (ii) the telecommunications operator.
            (6) Methodology.--When carrying out the pilot program, the 
        Assistant Secretary shall use industry standard life cycle 
        methodologies and broadly adopted practices, including the NIST 
        Cybersecurity Framework, NIST SP 800-53, Information Technology 
        infrastructure library and the Plan, Prepare, Design, 
        Implement, Operate, Optimize methodology to deliver a cost-
        effective, secure, sustainable, right-sized network 
        infrastructure.
            (7) Equipment procurement.--Any articles, materials, or 
        supplies procured by the American contracted entity for the 
        purpose of providing integrated connectivity service, as 
        described under paragraph (1), shall be made in the United 
        States.
    (c) Report.--Not later than five years after the date of the 
enactment of this section, and annually thereafter, the Assistant 
Secretary shall submit to Congress a report on the pilot program 
carried out under this section, including--
            (1) an analysis of the cost; and
            (2) a determination of which additional military 
        installations located outside the contiguous United States 
        should be provided with integrated connectivity service.
    (d) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``5G'' means fifth generation mobile network 
        technology, including higher-speed and lower latency device 
        connectivity over mobile radio networks.
            (2) The term ``Assistant Secretary'' means the Assistant 
        Secretary of Defense for Energy, Installations, and 
        Environment.
            (3) The term ``American contracted entity'' means an 
        entity--
                    (A) organized in the United States and with its 
                principal place of business located within the United 
                States;
                    (B) majority-owned and controlled by a United 
                States citizen, a lawful permanent resident, or 
                publicly traded on a United States stock exchange and 
                subject to United States laws and jurisdiction;
                    (C) that employs primarily personnel based in the 
                United States to perform management, engineering, 
                operations, and customer support functions, including 
                staffing key operational and decision-making roles 
                within the United States;
                    (D) that procures equipment and technology through 
                a supply chain compliant with sections 889 and 1260H of 
                the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
                2021 (Public Law 116-283), including the avoidance of 
                prohibited or restricted telecommunications and video 
                surveillance equipment and services; and
                    (E) that complies with section 8302 of title 41, 
                United States Code, whenever practicable, prioritizing 
                United States manufactured products, United States 
                sourced components, and United States based 
                subcontractors and suppliers wherever and whenever 
                possible, consistent with project requirements, 
                availability and cost reasonableness.
            (4) The term ``broadband internet access service'' has the 
        meaning given such term in section 8.1(b), title 47, Code of 
        Federal Regulations, or any successor regulation.
            (5) The term ``cloud only deployment model'' means a 
        deployment model in which the network management system is 
        delivered solely as a vendor-managed software-as-a-service 
        offering, with no option for self-hosted, on-premises, or 
        private cloud deployment.
            (6) The term ``covered military installation'' means a 
        military installation as defined in section 2801 of title 10, 
        United States Code, under the jurisdiction of the Secretary of 
        the Army, the Secretary of the Air Force, or the Secretary of 
        the Navy and located in the Middle East.
            (7) The term ``covered population'' means active duty 
        members of the Armed Forces, as defined in section 101(d)(1) of 
        title 10, United States Code, but may be expanded to include 
        employees of a Defense Agency as defined in section 101(a)(11) 
        of title 10, United States Code, by the tenant command of a 
        covered military installation through the telecommunications 
        officer of the covered military installation.
            (8) The term ``host nation carrier'' means a 
        telecommunications provider that is--
                    (A) licensed or authorized to operate in the 
                foreign nation in which the covered military 
                installation is located; and
                    (B) provides broadband internet access, data, or 
                mobile communication services within the foreign 
                nation.
            (9) The term ``hybrid-capable network management system'' 
        means a common architectural framework that supports both 
        broadband internet access service and private or hybrid public 
        and P5G mobile connectivity services, as required and is not 
        limited to a public only deployment model or a cloud only 
        deployment model.
            (10) The term ``integrated connectivity service'' means a 
        fixed, high-speed broadband internet access service, and may 
        include private or hybrid mobile connectivity, including P5G, 
        as required by the Secretary to meet operational requirements.
            (11) The term ``Mbps'' means one million bits per second.
            (12) The term ``P5G'' means a private mobile network 
        service using 5G mobile network technology and available only 
        to members of the Armed Forces stationed on covered military 
        installations participating in the pilot program established in 
        subsection (a).
            (13) The term ``private network management system'' means a 
        network management system that is compliant with the 
        requirements for a cyber security maturity model certification 
        and which is not cloud-based.
            (14) The term ``public only deployment model'' means a 
        deployment model in which the network management system is 
        hosted exclusively in a third-party public cloud environment, 
        including AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud and cannot be deployed 
        or operated on customer-owned or on-premises infrastructure.
            (15) the term ``pure public cloud only network management 
        system'' means a network management platform hosted and 
        operated exclusively within a third-party public cloud 
        environment and delivered solely as a cloud-based service, with 
        no capability for deployment, operation, or control within on-
        premises or private cloud infrastructure.
            (16) The term ``telecommunications operator'' means an 
        American contracted entity responsible for the design, 
        installation, and ongoing operations and maintenance of the 
        broadband internet access service and P5G mobile network access 
        to be provided on a covered military installation.

                 Subtitle F--Miscellaneous Authorities

SEC. 2851. AUTHORITY FOR SECRETARY OF DEFENSE TO ACQUIRE REAL PROPERTY 
              AND FACILITIES IN THE NATIONAL CAPITAL REGION AND TO 
              ADMINISTER SUCH PROPERTY AS PART OF THE PENTAGON 
              RESERVATION.

    (a) Authority of the Secretary of Defense to Acquire Real Property 
and Facilities in National Capital Region.--Chapter 159 of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended by inserting before section 2674 the 
following new section:
``Sec. 2673. Acquisition by Secretary of Defense of real property and 
              facilities in the National Capital Region
    ``(a) Authority.--Notwithstanding section 2682 of this title, the 
Secretary of Defense may acquire real property and facilities in the 
National Capital Region for an element of the Department of Defense 
other than a military department.
    ``(b) Authorization by Law Required for Above-threshold 
Acquisition.--If the cost to acquire real property or facilities under 
subsection (a) exceeds the limitations specified in section 2663(c) of 
this title for an acquisition of interests in land, the Secretary may 
acquire the real property or facilities only if the acquisition is 
specifically authorized by law.
    ``(c) Definitions.--In this section, the terms `National Capital 
Region' and `Pentagon Reservation' have the meanings given those terms 
in section 2674(f) of this title.''.
    (b) Acquired Real Property Included in Authorities Applicable to 
Pentagon Reservation.--Section 2674(f)(1) of such title is amended by 
striking ``means the'' and all that follows and inserting the 
following: ``means the following:
                    ``(A) The Pentagon.
                    ``(B) The Mark Center Campus.
                    ``(C) The Raven Rock Mountain Complex.
                    ``(D) Any real property or facility acquired under 
                section 2673 of this title.''.

SEC. 2852. ESTABLISHMENT OF A DASHBOARD FOR MILITARY CONSTRUCTION 
              PROJECTS FOR RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION 
              FACILITIES.

    (a) In General.--Not later than one year after the enactment of 
this section, the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and 
Engineering, in coordination with each Secretary of a military 
department, shall establish a central dashboard to monitor and track 
Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation facility data related to 
military construction planning, design, and execution metrics across 
the military departments.
    (b) Requirements.--The database shall--
            (1) use existing financial management tools;
            (2) display relevant data for Research, Development, Test, 
        and Evaluation facilities including, at a minimum, facility 
        location, manager of the facility, building number, plant 
        replacement value, age, size, building condition index, mission 
        dependency index, civil engineering projects programmed for the 
        facility, and value of each such projects;
            (3) track unfunded facility requirements;
            (4) summarize laboratory real property and non-real 
        property data and metrics;
            (5) use Real Property Unique Identifiers (or a similar 
        identifier for real property or other assets authorized by the 
        Secretary of Defense) for Equipment Replacement Value of 
        equipment that is not real property; and
            (6) display trends across any data included in the 
        database.
    (c) Notification to Congress.--Not later than 30 days after the 
date on which the dashboard required by subsection (a) is established, 
the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering shall 
submit to the congressional defense committees a certification that the 
dashboard is operational and meets the requirements of subsection (b).
    (d) Recommendation.--Not later than three years after the enactment 
of this section, the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and 
Engineering shall submit to the Secretary of Defense a recommendation 
on whether use of the dashboard should be continued. Not later than 15 
days after making such submission, the Under Secretary shall submit to 
the congressional defense committees a notice of such recommendation.
    (e) Termination.--The authority under this section terminates on 
December 30, 2030.
    (f) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation 
        facility'' means a laboratory facility or a test and evaluation 
        facility.
            (2) The term ``Equipment Replacement Value'' means the 
        estimated cost to replace the non-real property installed test 
        equipment within a ground test infrastructure asset.

SEC. 2853. ADDITIONAL AUTHORITY FOR DEFENSE SITE REIMBURSEMENT IN THE 
              FEDERATED STATES OF MICRONESIA.

    Using amounts authorized to be appropriated on or after the date of 
enactment of this Act for such purposes, the Department of Defense is 
authorized to reimburse the Federal States of Micronesia for land 
acquisition costs for defense sites in Yap.

SEC. 2854. RECOGNITION OF CERTAIN ASPECTS OF THE NATIONAL NAVY UDT-SEAL 
              MUSEUM IN FORT PIERCE, FLORIDA, AS A NATIONAL MEMORIAL, 
              NATIONAL MEMORIAL GARDEN, AND NATIONAL K9 MEMORIAL.

    The Secretary of the Navy shall recognize the National Navy SEAL 
Museum Memorial, the Memorial Garden and Living Beach, and the Naval 
Special Warfare K9 Memorial of the National Navy UDT-SEAL Museum, 
located at 3300 North Highway A1A, North Hutchinson Island, in Fort 
Pierce, Florida, as a national memorial, national memorial garden, and 
national K9 memorial, respectively, of the Navy SEALs.

                 Subtitle G--Reports and Other Matters

SEC. 2861. ANNUAL REPORT ON SUPERVISION, INSPECTION, AND OVERHEAD COSTS 
              FOR MILITARY CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS.

    Subchapter III of chapter 169 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by inserting after section 2851a the following new section:
``Sec. 2851b. Annual report on supervision, inspection, and overhead 
              costs of military construction projects
    ``(a) In General.--Not later than the date on which the budget of 
the President for fiscal year 2028 is submitted to Congress pursuant to 
section 1105 of title 31, and on an annual basis thereafter, the 
Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the Assistant Secretary of 
Defense for Energy, Installations, and Environment, shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report with respect to supervision, 
inspection, and overhead costs for military construction projects 
during the fiscal year immediately preceding the fiscal year in which 
the report is submitted.
    ``(b) Elements.--Each report required under subsection (a) shall 
include, with respect to the period covered by the report, the 
following:
            ``(1) The total amount of supervision, inspection, and 
        overhead costs accrued, disaggregated by--
                    ``(A) military department; and
                    ``(B) construction agent.
            ``(2) A description of how amounts appropriated for 
        supervision, inspection, and overhead for military construction 
        projects were expended during such period, disaggregated by--
                    ``(A) direct project supervision and inspection 
                costs;
                    ``(B) field office overhead;
                    ``(C) regional office overhead; and
                    ``(D) headquarters overhead.
            ``(3) The supervision, inspection, and overhead rate in 
        effect during the fiscal year immediately preceding such 
        period.
            ``(4) If the supervision, inspection, and overhead rate in 
        effect as of the date of the submission of the report is 
        different than the rate described in paragraph (3)--
                    ``(A) a summary of the changes to such rate; and
                    ``(B) the justification for such changes.
            ``(5) A summary that compares the total amount of 
        supervision, inspection, and overhead costs accrued to the 
        total amount of supervision, inspection, and overhead funds 
        expended, including--
                    ``(A) an identification of any surplus or shortfall 
                in such funds; and
                    ``(B) a description of how any surplus of such 
                funds was used.
            ``(6) The total amount of any similar overhead cost 
        assessed on operation and maintenance funds used for facility 
        sustainment, restoration, and modernization projects, 
        disaggregated by military department, and a description of the 
        facility sustainment, restoration, and modernization projects 
        for which such operation and maintenance funds were expended.
            ``(7) Any recommendations of the Secretary with respect to 
        adjustments to the supervision, inspection, and overhead rate 
        for the fiscal year immediately succeeding the fiscal year 
        during which such report is submitted, including the 
        justification for any such recommendations.
    ``(c) Data Submission by Construction Agents.--Not later than 90 
days before the deadline for each report required under subsection (a), 
the Chief of Engineers of the United States Army Corps of Engineers and 
the Commander of the Naval Facilities Engineering Systems Command shall 
submit to the Secretary of Defense such data as the Secretary 
determines necessary to prepare such report, in such form as the 
Secretary determines appropriate.
    ``(d) Construction Agent Defined.--In this section, the term 
`construction agent' means--
            ``(1) the United States Army Corps of Engineers;
            ``(2) the Naval Facilities Engineering Systems Command; or
            ``(3) any other entity designated to supervise a military 
        construction project pursuant to section 2851 of this title.''.

SEC. 2862. REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO THE MULTI-MISSION DRY DOCK MILITARY 
              CONSTRUCTION PROJECT AT PUGET SOUND NAVAL SHIPYARD, 
              WASHINGTON.

    (a) Designation.--The Secretary of the Navy shall designate the 
Multi-Mission Dry Dock military construction project at Puget Sound 
Naval Shipyard, Washington, authorized under section 2201 of the 
Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2027, to be a 
subprogram of a major defense acquisition program (as defined in 
section 4201 of title 10, United States Code).
    (b) Submission.--Not later than six months after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees--
            (1) a Baseline Estimate (as defined in section 4371(a)(4) 
        of title 10, United States Code) for the project described in 
        subsection (a); and
            (2) the report described in section 4351 of title 10, 
        United States Code, for the most recently concluded fiscal year 
        quarter for such project.

SEC. 2863. COMPTROLLER GENERAL REVIEW OF SHIPYARD INFRASTRUCTURE 
              OPTIMIZATION PROGRAM.

    (a) Review.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, and annually until Jan 1, 2031, the Comptroller 
General of the United States shall review the following:
            (1) The costs, timeframes, risks, and progress of the 
        Shipyard Infrastructure Optimization Program of the Department 
        of the Navy.
            (2) The status of each project conducted under the Shipyard 
        Infrastructure Optimization Program.
    (b) Briefing.--Not later than March 1, 2027, and annually 
thereafter until March 1, 2031, the Comptroller General shall provide 
to the congressional defense committees a briefing on findings from the 
review required under subsection (a).
    (c) Report.--Not later than June 1, 2031, the Comptroller General 
shall provide to the congressional defense committees a report on the 
findings from the review required under subsection (a).

SEC. 2864. CONDITIONS ON TRANSFER OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE POWER GRID 
              INFRASTRUCTURE IN GUAM.

    (a) Grid Infrastructure Transfer Pending Requirements.--The 
Secretary of Defense may not transfer ownership of any power generation 
infrastructure or power transmission infrastructure located in Guam to 
the Guam Power Authority until the Secretary certifies to the 
congressional defense committees that such infrastructure is sufficient 
to meet projected mission requirements of the Department of Defense for 
power generation and transmission capacity in Guam through fiscal year 
2036.
    (b) Underground Transmission Requirement.--Not less than 50 percent 
of the total linear miles of power transmission lines transferred to 
the Guam Power Authority pursuant to any agreement with the Secretary 
of Defense shall consist of underground transmission lines. For 
purposes of this subsection, transmission lines supported by above-
ground concrete poles shall not be considered to be underground 
transmission lines.
    (c) Authorization to Use Operation and Maintenance and Military 
Construction Funds.--
            (1) Amounts described.--The Secretary of Defense may use 
        amounts authorized to be appropriated or otherwise made 
        available in fiscal year 2027 or subsequent fiscal years for 
        Operation and Maintenance accounts and for Military 
        Construction accounts to carry out upgrades, repairs, 
        modernization, hardening, or undergrounding of transmission 
        lines, capacity expansion, or other improvements necessary to 
        ensure that power generation infrastructure and power 
        transmission infrastructure in Guam meets the requirements set 
        forth in this section before the Secretary transfers ownership 
        of any such infrastructure to the Guam Power Authority. This 
        paragraph shall apply to infrastructure owned by the Secretary 
        of Defense, including infrastructure that is currently leased 
        to, operated by, or otherwise made available for use by the 
        Guam Power Authority.
            (2) Use of amounts.--Amounts described in paragraph (1) may 
        be obligated or expended for planning, design, environmental 
        review, construction, recapitalization, equipment procurement, 
        cybersecurity enhancements, resiliency measures, and related 
        project management costs for power generation infrastructure 
        and power transmission infrastructure necessary to achieve 
        compliance with this section, regardless of whether such 
        infrastructure is under direct control of the Secretary of 
        Defense or subject to a lease or operating agreement with the 
        Guam Power Authority at the time such funds are obligated.
            (3) Applicability.--The authority provided by this 
        subsection is in addition to any other authority available to 
        the Secretary of Defense and shall not be construed to limit 
        the availability or use of amounts otherwise authorized to be 
        appropriated or otherwise made available by law for Operation 
        and Maintenance accounts and for Military Construction 
        accounts.
    (d) Guam Power Authority Defined.--In this section, the term ``Guam 
Power Authority'' means the public corporation of the Government of 
Guam responsible for electric generation and transmission services in 
Guam.

SEC. 2865. ANNUAL REPORT ON MILITARY CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS SUPPORTING 
              READINESS AND PUBLIC INTEREST IN GUAM.

    Not later than December 31 of the first calendar year beginning 
after the date of the enactment of this section, and on an annual basis 
thereafter for five years, the Commander of Joint Region Marianas, in 
consultation with the Governor of Guam, shall submit to the Committee 
on Armed Services of the House of Representatives a report on military 
construction projects in progress as of the date of the enactment of 
this Act that support military readiness and public interests in Guam. 
Such report shall include military construction projects carried out--
            (1) pursuant to--
                    (A) section 2802 of title 10, United States Code;
                    (B) section 2805 of such title;
                    (C) section 2815 of such title;
                    (D) section 2391(d) of such title; or
                    (E) any other provision of law granting authority 
                to the Commander to carry out such a military 
                construction project;
            (2) using amounts authorized to be appropriated for the 
        fiscal year covered by the report for operation and 
        maintenance; and
            (3) under any authority under which the Department of 
        Defense transfers funds to other Federal agencies.

SEC. 2866. ANNUAL REPORT ON EFFECTS OF EXTREME WEATHER ON DEPARTMENT OF 
              DEFENSE MILITARY INSTALLATIONS AND COMBATANT COMMANDER 
              REQUIREMENTS.

    (a) Annual Report.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, and on an annual basis thereafter, 
        the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional 
        defense committees a report on vulnerabilities to military 
        installations and combatant commander requirements resulting 
        from extreme weather.
            (2) Consideration.--In developing the first report required 
        under paragraph (1), the Secretary shall--
                    (A) consider the report submitted under section 
                335(c) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
                Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 131 Stat. 1358); 
                and
                    (B) expand upon the elements described in 
                subsection (c) of such section that were included in 
                such report.
    (b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall include 
the following:
            (1) An assessment of how extreme weather affects--
                    (A) low-lying military installations;
                    (B) military installations under the jurisdiction 
                of the Secretary of the Navy;
                    (C) military installations located outside the 
                United States;
                    (D) the ability of members of the Armed Forces to 
                use training ranges on military installations; and
                    (E) housing safety and food security on military 
                installations.
            (2) With respect to military installations located outside 
        the United States, an assessment of the collaboration between 
        the Department and the military or civilian agencies of the 
        government of that country or nongovernmental organizations 
        operating in that country to adapt to risks from extreme 
        weather.
            (3) An assessment of the strategic benefits to the national 
        defense of the United States derived from--
                    (A) the segregation of Department infrastructure 
                located in the United States from the national electric 
                grid; and
                    (B) the use of energy-efficient, distributed, and 
                smart power grids by the Armed Forces in the United 
                States and overseas to ensure affordable access to 
                electricity.
            (4) For each military department, a list of the ten 
        military installations under the jurisdiction of the department 
        that are most vulnerable to extreme weather based on the 
        effects of--
                    (A) geographic location;
                    (B) rising sea tides and sea levels;
                    (C) increased flooding;
                    (D) drought;
                    (E) desertification;
                    (F) wildfires;
                    (G) thawing permafrost; and
                    (H) such other categories as the Secretary 
                determines necessary.
            (5) A summary of efforts to mitigate the effects listed in 
        subparagraphs (A) through (H) of paragraph (4), in addition to 
        efforts undertaken by the Department as of the date of the 
        enactment of this section, that the Secretary determines may be 
        necessary to--
                    (A) ensure the continued operational viability of 
                the military installations identified under such 
                paragraph; and
                    (B) increase the resilience of such military 
                installations.
            (6) An estimation of the costs to the United States of such 
        the efforts described in paragraph (5).
            (7) An assessment of how adapting to extreme weather 
        affects the readiness of the Armed Forces to address the 
        threats posed by Russia, China, Iran, North Korea, and violent 
        extremism.
    (c) Form.--Each report required by subsection (a) shall be 
submitted in unclassified form but may contain a classified annex.
    (d) Publication.--Upon submission of a report required by 
subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense shall publish the unclassified 
portion of the report on a publicly-available Internet website of the 
Department of Defense.
    (e) United States Defined.--In this section, the term ``United 
States'' means the several States, the District of Columbia, and any 
territory or possession of the United States.

SEC. 2867. REPORTS TO CENSUS BUREAU WITH RESPECT TO MILITARY AND 
              CIVILIAN PERSONNEL ON MILITARY INSTALLATIONS.

    (a) Reports Required.--Prior to the completion of each decennial 
census, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the Director of the 
Census a report that identifies, with respect to each military 
installation located in the contiguous United States, the number of--
            (1) military personnel who reside on such installation; and
            (2) civilian personnel who reside on such installation.
    (b) Coordination.--In carrying out subsection (a), the Secretary of 
Defense shall coordinate with the Secretaries of the military 
departments.
    (c) Military Installation Defined.--In this section, the term 
``military installation'' has the meaning given that term in section 
2801 of title 10, United States Code.

 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 2027 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 27-D-512 Plutonium Engineering Support Building, 
        Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, New Mexico, 
        $88,700,000.

SEC. 3102. DEFENSE ENVIRONMENTAL CLEANUP.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated to the Department of 
Energy for fiscal year 2027 for defense environmental cleanup 
activities in carrying out programs as specified in the funding table 
in section 4701.

SEC. 3103. OTHER DEFENSE ACTIVITIES.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated to the Department of 
Energy for fiscal year 2027 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 2027 for nuclear energy as specified in the 
funding table in section 4701.

   Subtitle B--Program Authorizations, Restrictions, and Limitations

SEC. 3111. MODIFICATIONS TO REQUIREMENTS FOR PLUTONIUM PIT PRODUCTION 
              CAPACITY.

    Section 6128 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
    ``(a) Requirement.--Consistent with the requirements of the 
Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of Energy shall ensure that, by not 
later than 2050, the nuclear security enterprise has the capability to 
reliably produce no fewer than 180 war reserve plutonium pits 
annually.''; and
            (2) in subsection (e)--
                    (A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``each year'' and 
                inserting ``each odd numbered year''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (2)(D), by striking ``as compared 
                to the report submitted during the previous year'' and 
                inserting ``as compared to the preceding report''.

SEC. 3112. MODIFICATION TO IMPLEMENTATION OF PROGRAMS FOR ACCELERATION 
              OF REPLACEMENT OF CESIUM BLOOD IRRADIATION SOURCES.

    Section 6156(b)(2) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``50 percent of the per-device cost'' and inserting ``100 
percent of the cost''.

SEC. 3113. OTHER TRANSACTION AUTHORITY.

    Chapter 608 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
inserting after section 6328 the following new section:
``Sec. 6329. Other transaction authority
    ``(a) Authority.--In addition to other acquisition authorities, the 
Administrator may exercise the acquisition authorities referred to in 
sections 4021 and 4022 of this title to enhance the mission 
effectiveness of the Administration or to improve the nuclear security 
enterprise, subject to the provisions of this section.
    ``(b) Administering Authority.--In carrying out this section, 
section 4021 and 4022 of this title shall be applied as follows:
            ``(1) By substituting `Administrator' for `Secretary of 
        Defense', `Secretary', and `covered official'.
            ``(2) By substituting `Administration' for `Department of 
        Defense' and `agency'.
            ``(3) By substituting `nontraditional government 
        contractor' for `nontraditional defense contractor'.
            ``(4) By substituting `construction' for `military 
        construction'.
    ``(c) Delegation.--The Administrator may not delegate the authority 
under subsection (a) to any official other than the Principal Deputy 
Administrator.
    ``(d) Annual Report.--(1) Not later than March 1, 2028, and 
annually thereafter, the Administrator shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report detailing the use by the 
Administrator of the authority under subsection (a).
    ``(2) Each report under paragraph (1) shall contain the following:
            ``(A) The number of transactions entered into using the 
        authority under subsection (a).
            ``(B) The participants to each such transaction.
            ``(C) The purpose of each such the transaction.
            ``(D) The amount of each such transaction.
            ``(E) Any recommendations by the Administrator for 
        legislative changes to improve the use of such authority.''.

SEC. 3114. EXTENSION OF ALTERNATIVE PERSONNEL SYSTEM OF THE NATIONAL 
              NUCLEAR SECURITY ADMINISTRATION.

    Section 3116 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 50 U.S.C. 2441 note prec.) is--
            (1) amended in subsection (a)(1), by striking ``until the 
        date that is 10 years after the date of the enactment of this 
        Act'' and inserting ``through December 31, 2032'';
            (2) transferred to subtitle C of the National Nuclear 
        Security Administration Act (50 U.S.C. 2441 et seq.);
            (3) inserted after section 3241A of such Act; and
            (4) redesignated as section 3242.

SEC. 3115. DEADLINE FOR COMMENCEMENT OF HIGH EXPLOSIVE SYNTHESIS, 
              FORMULATION, AND PRODUCTION FACILITY.

    Section 3127(a)(1) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2024 (Public Law 118-31; 137 Stat. 794) is amended by 
striking ``2034'' and inserting ``2032''.

SEC. 3116. CONTRACTING AUTHORITY TO ACQUIRE COMMERCIAL TESTING SERVICES 
              FOR EFFECTS OF RADIATION.

    (a) In General.--The Administrator of the National Nuclear Security 
Administration, in coordination with the Secretary of Defense, may seek 
to enter into contractual arrangements with private entities to acquire 
services to test the effects of radiation in support of National 
Nuclear Security Administration and Department of Defense mission 
requirements for--
            (1) nuclear deterrence;
            (2) strategic systems survivability; and
            (3) weapons component qualification testing.
    (b) Reporting Requirement.--Not later than 180 days after the first 
contractual agreement is executed under this section, and annually 
thereafter, the Administrator, in coordination with the Secretary, 
shall submit to Congress a report that includes--
            (1) an assessment on the contractual arrangements best 
        suited for accelerating timelines and delivering capabilities, 
        to include, with respect to the number of parts to be tested, 
        the--
                    (A) cost per radiation shot;
                    (B) cost per qualification; or
                    (C) cost per dose rate or fluence;
            (2) testing capabilities acquired under the contractual 
        agreement and the cost of such testing capabilities;
            (3) an identification of the entities that will use such 
        testing capabilities;
            (4) cost comparison analysis relative to Government-owned 
        facilities;
            (5) test execution timelines compared to Government-owned 
        facilities; and
            (6) an assessment of how commercial entities can complement 
        ongoing Government-owned facilities; and
            (7) any recommendations for additional authorities or 
        resources that the Administrator or the Secretary determines is 
        necessary to support the implementation of this section.

SEC. 3117. PROHIBITION RELATING TO RECLASSIFICATION OF HIGH-LEVEL 
              WASTE.

    None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or 
otherwise made available for fiscal year 2027 for the Department of 
Energy may be obligated or expended by the Secretary of Energy to apply 
the interpretation of high-level radioactive waste described in the 
notice published by the Secretary titled ``Supplemental Notice 
Concerning U.S. Department of Energy Interpretation of High-Level 
Radioactive Waste'' (84 Fed. Reg. 26835), or successor notice, with 
respect to such waste located in the State of Washington.

                 Subtitle C--Reports and Other Matters

SEC. 3121. TECHNICAL AND CONFORMING AMENDMENTS RELATING TO CODIFICATION 
              OF ATOMIC ENERGY DEFENSE PROVISIONS.

    (a) Section 6114.--Section 6114 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) in subsection (c)(9), by striking ``summary or''; and
            (2) in subsection (d)(1)(A)--
                    (A) in clause (i), by striking ``subsection 
                (d)(4)(A)(i)'' and inserting ``subsection 
                (c)(4)(A)(i)''; and
                    (B) in clause (ii)--
                            (i) by striking ``subsection (d)(4)'' and 
                        inserting ``subsection (c)(4)''; and
                            (ii) by striking ``subparagraph (B)'' and 
                        inserting ``subparagraph (C)''.
    (b) Section 6125.--Section 6125 of such title is amended in the 
section heading by striking ``acquisition reports'' and inserting 
``Acquisition Reports''.
    (c) Section 6171.--Section 6171 of such title is amended in the 
section heading by striking ``environmental cleanup account'' and 
inserting ``Environmental Cleanup Account''.
    (d) Section 6180.--Section 6180(c) of such title is amended to read 
as follows:
    ``(c) Coordination.--In carrying out this section, the Secretary 
shall act through the Deputy Secretary of Energy, in coordination with 
such other officials of the Department as the Deputy Secretary 
determines appropriate.''.
    (e) Section 6222.--Section 6222(c)(2)(D) of such title is amended 
by inserting ``pursuant'' after ``completed''.
    (f) Section 6226.--Section 6226 of such title is amended in the 
section heading by striking ``Annual'' and inserting ``Biennial''.
    (g) Section 6272.--Section 6272(a) of such title is amended by 
striking ``sections 5791 and 5792'' and inserting ``sections 6281 and 
6282''.
    (h) Section 6322.--Section 6322 of such title is amended in the 
section heading by striking ``and report''.
    (i) Section 6332.--Section 6332 of such title is amended--
            (1) by striking ``Of the funds'' and inserting ``(a) 
        Authority.--Of the funds'';
            (2) by striking ``in this Act or subsequent'' and inserting 
        ``in any'';
            (3) by striking ``Acts,'' and inserting ``Act,'';
            (4) by striking ``: Provided, That the'' and inserting ``. 
        The'';
            (5) by striking ``: Provided further, That'' and inserting 
        a period; and
            (6) by striking ``notwithstanding Department'' and 
        inserting the following:
    ``(b) Eligibility.--Notwithstanding Department''.
    (j) Section 6334.--Section 6334 of such title is amended--
            (1) by striking ``Of the funds'' and inserting ``Beginning 
        October 1, 2015, of the funds'';
            (2) by striking ``this or any subsequent Act'' and 
        inserting ``any Act''; and
            (3) by striking the colon and all that follows through 
        ``2015''.
    (k) Section 6353.--Section 6353 of such title is amended--
            (1) by striking ``The Administrator may'' and inserting 
        ``(a) Authority.--The Administrator may'';
            (2) by striking ``: Provided,'' and inserting a period;
            (3) by striking ``That of the amount'' and inserting the 
        following:
    ``(b) Amounts.--Of the amount'';
            (4) in subsection (b), as so designated--
                    (A) by striking ``these activities'' and inserting 
                ``the activities under subsection (a)'';
                    (B) by striking ``: Provided further, That'' and 
                inserting a period; and
                    (C) by striking ``for purposes of this section,'' 
                and inserting the following:
    ``(c) Covered Nuclear Weapons Facility Defined.--In this 
section:''; and
            (5) in paragraph (5) of subsection (c), as so designated, 
        by striking ``Nevada Test Site'' and inserting ``Nevada 
        National Security Site''.

SEC. 3122. MODIFICATION OF SUBMISSION DEADLINE FOR CERTAIN SELECTED 
              ACQUISITION REPORTS.

    Section 6125(a)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``At the end of the first quarter of each fiscal year'' and 
inserting ``Not later than 30 days after the date on which the 
President transmits to Congress the budget for the following fiscal 
year pursuant to section 1105 of title 31''.

          TITLE XXXII--DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD

SEC. 3201. AUTHORIZATION.

    There are authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2027, 
$45,000,000 for the operation of the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety 
Board under chapter 21 of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 (42 U.S.C. 2286 
et seq.).

                 TITLE XXXIV--NAVAL PETROLEUM RESERVES

SEC. 3401. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

    (a) Amount.--There are authorized to be appropriated to the 
Secretary of Energy $13,000,000 for fiscal year 2027 for the purpose of 
carrying out activities under chapter 869 of title 10, United States 
Code, relating to the naval petroleum reserves.
    (b) Period of Availability.--Funds appropriated pursuant to the 
authorization of appropriations in subsection (a) shall remain 
available until expended.

                  TITLE XXXV--MARITIME ADMINISTRATION

              Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations

                  Subtitle A--Maritime Administration

SEC. 3501. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS FOR MARITIME ADMINISTRATION.

    (a) In General.--There are authorized to be appropriated to the 
Department of Transportation for fiscal year 2027, for programs 
associated with maintaining the United States Merchant Marine, the 
following amounts:
            (1) For expenses necessary to support the United States 
        Merchant Marine Academy, $873,500,000 of which--
                    (A) $129,500,000 shall be for Academy operations;
                    (B) $120,000,000 shall be for construction of 
                facilities and infrastructure at the United States 
                Merchant Marine Academy in accordance with the Campus 
                Modernization Plan and for facilities maintenance and 
                repair and equipment; and
                    (C) $624,000,000 shall be for construction of 
                capital improvement projects at the United States 
                Merchant Marine Academy, provided that such 
                authorization shall expire on the later of--
                            (i) October 1, 2031; or
                            (ii) the date of the enactment of an Act 
                        authorizing funds for the United States 
                        Merchant Marine Academy for fiscal year 2032.
            (2) For expenses necessary to support the State maritime 
        academies, $53,400,000, of which--
                    (A) $9,400,000 shall be for the Student Incentive 
                Payment Program;
                    (B) $7,000,000 shall be for direct payments for 
                State maritime academies;
                    (C) $12,000,000 shall be for training ship fuel 
                assistance;
                    (D) $4,000,000 shall be for offsetting the costs of 
                training ship sharing; and
                    (E) $21,000,000 shall be for maintenance and repair 
                of State maritime academy training vessels.
            (3) For expenses necessary to support the National Security 
        Multi-Mission Vessel program, including funds for construction 
        and necessary expenses to construct shoreside infrastructure to 
        support such vessels, $75,000,000.
            (4) For expenses necessary to support Maritime 
        Administration operations and programs, $105,760,000, of 
        which--
                    (A) $15,000,000 shall be for the maritime 
                environmental and technical assistance program under 
                section 50307 of title 46, United States Code;
                    (B) $15,000,000 shall be for the United States 
                marine highway program, including to make grants 
                authorized under section 55601 of title 46, United 
                States Code;
                    (C) $2,000,000 shall be for the Office of 
                Environment and Compliance, including to assist in the 
                environmental review of grant and permit programs 
                administered by the Maritime Administration; and
                    (D) $73,760,000 shall be for headquarters 
                operations expenses.
            (5) For expenses necessary for the disposal of obsolete 
        vessels in the National Defense Reserve Fleet of the Maritime 
        Administration, $6,000,000.
            (6) For expenses necessary to maintain and preserve a 
        United States flag merchant marine to serve the national 
        security needs of the United States under chapter 531 of title 
        46, United States Code, $400,500,000.
            (7) For expenses necessary to maintain a Cable Security 
        Fleet to serve the national security needs of the United States 
        under chapter 532 of title 46, United States Code, $30,000,000.
            (8) For expenses necessary to maintain and preserve a 
        United States flag merchant marine to serve the national 
        security needs of the United States under chapter 534 of title 
        46, United States Code, $167,600,000.
            (9) For expenses necessary for the loan guarantee program 
        authorized under chapter 537 of title 46, United States Code, 
        $33,700,000, of which--
                    (A) $30,000,000 may be used for the cost (as such 
                term is defined in section 502(5) of the Federal Credit 
                Reform Act of 1990 (2 U.S.C. 661a(5)) of loan 
                guarantees under the program; and
                    (B) $3,700,000 may be used for administrative 
                expenses relating to loan guarantee commitments under 
                the program.
            (10) For expenses necessary to provide assistance to small 
        shipyards and for maritime training programs authorized under 
        section 54101 of title 46, United States Code, $105,000,000.
            (11) For expenses necessary to implement the port 
        infrastructure development program, as authorized under section 
        54301 of title 46, United States Code, subject to the 
        limitation under subsection (b), $550,000,000, to remain 
        available until expended.
            (12) For maritime incentive payments to centers of 
        excellence designated under section 51706 of title 46, United 
        States Code, $300,000,000.
    (b) Limitation.--
            (1) In general.--No funds may be obligated or expended for 
        the port infrastructure development program pursuant to 
        subsection (a)(10) to make a grant to be used for the purchase 
        of fully automated cargo handling equipment that is remotely 
        operated or remotely monitored with or without the exercise of 
        human intervention or control, if the Secretary of 
        Transportation determines such equipment would result in a net 
        loss of jobs within a port or port terminal.
            (2) Report.--If the Secretary makes a determination 
        pursuant to paragraph (1), not later than three days after the 
        date on which such determination is made, the Secretary shall 
        submit to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and 
        Transportation of the Senate and the Committee on 
        Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of 
        Representatives a report that includes the data and analysis 
        used by the Secretary in making such determination.

                  Subtitle B--Merchant Marine Academy

SEC. 3511. TRANSFERRING THE ADMINISTRATION OF THE UNITED STATES 
              MERCHANT MARINE ACADEMY TO THE DEPARTMENT.

    Chapter 513 of title 46, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in section 51301(c)(1), by striking ``of the Maritime 
        Administrator under the'' and inserting ``and'';
            (2) in section 51307--
                    (A) in subsection (b)--
                            (i) in paragraph (1) by striking ``if 
                        available'' and inserting ``if assigned to such 
                        vessel by the Superintendent of the Academy''; 
                        and
                            (ii) in paragraphs (2) and (3) by striking 
                        ``Maritime Administrator'' each place it 
                        appears and inserting ``Secretary''; and
                    (B) in subsection (c)(1) by striking ``if 
                available'' and inserting ``if assigned to such vessel 
                by the Superintendent of the Academy'';
            (3) in section 51309--
                    (A) in subsection (a)(1) by striking ``United 
                States Merchant Marine''; and
                    (B) in subsection (b) by striking ``Maritime 
                Administration's Operations and Training'' and 
                inserting ``Superintendent of the Academy's'';
            (4) in section 51310 by striking ``of the military 
        department that has jurisdiction over the service'' and 
        inserting ``concerned, as defined in section 101(a)(9) of title 
        10,'';
            (5) in section 51312(g)(3) by striking ``Maritime 
        Administrator and'';
            (6) in section 51313(a) by striking ``the Maritime 
        Administrator and'';
            (7) in section 51314(b) by striking ``Maritime 
        Administration's Operations and Training'' and inserting 
        ``Superintendent of the Academy's'';
            (8) in section 51315--
                    (A) by striking ``Maritime Administrator'' in each 
                place it appears and inserting ``Superintendent of the 
                Academy'';
                    (B) in subsection (a)--
                            (i) by striking ``Merchant Marine'' and 
                        inserting ``such''; and
                            (ii) by striking ``Administrator's'' and 
                        inserting ``Superintendent's''; and
                    (C) in subsection (b) by striking ``Academy Gift 
                Fund'' and inserting ``United States Merchant Marine 
                Academy Gift Fund'' each place it appears;
            (9) in section 51316 by striking ``Maritime Administrator'' 
        and inserting ``Secretary'';
            (10) in section 51317 by striking ``Maritime 
        Administrator'' and inserting ``Superintendent of the Academy'' 
        each place it appears;
            (11) in section 51318--
                    (A) in subsection (a)(3)(A) by striking ``Maritime 
                Administrator'' and inserting ``Secretary'';
                    (B) in subsection (b)--
                            (i) in paragraph (1) in the matter 
                        preceding subparagraph (A) by striking 
                        ``Maritime Administrator'' and inserting 
                        ``Secretary'';
                            (ii) in paragraph (2)(A) by striking 
                        ``Maritime Administrator'' and inserting 
                        ``Secretary''; and
                            (iii) in paragraph (3)(A) by striking 
                        ``Maritime Administrator'' and inserting 
                        ``Superintendent''; and
                    (C) by striking ``Office of Civil Rights of the 
                Maritime Administration'' and inserting ``Office of the 
                Secretary Office of Civil Rights'';
            (12) in section 51319--
                    (A) in subsection (a)--
                            (i) in paragraph (4)(A)--
                                    (I) by striking ``Not later than 90 
                                days after the date of the enactment of 
                                the National Defense Authorization Act 
                                for Fiscal Year 2018, the Maritime 
                                Administrator'' and inserting ``The 
                                Superintendent''; and
                                    (II) by striking ``Office of Civil 
                                Rights of the Maritime Administration'' 
                                and inserting ``Office of the Secretary 
                                Office of Civil Rights''; and
                            (ii) in paragraph (5)(H) by striking 
                        ``Director of the Maritime Administration 
                        Office of Civil Rights'' and inserting 
                        ``Director of the Office of the Secretary 
                        Office of Civil Rights'';
                    (B) in subsection (b)(1)--
                            (i) by amending subparagraph (A) to read as 
                        follows:
                    ``(A) Reporting.--Each sexual assault response 
                coordinator shall report directly--
                            ``(i) to the Superintendent; or
                            ``(ii) upon belief that the Superintendent 
                        is acting inappropriately regarding sexual 
                        assault prevention and response matters, to the 
                        Secretary.''; and
                            (ii) in subparagraph (B) by striking 
                        ``Maritime Administration'' and inserting 
                        ``Office of the Secretary''; and
                    (C) in subsection (e) by striking ``Administrator 
                of the Maritime Administration'' and inserting 
                ``Secretary'';
            (13) in sections 51320, 51321, 51322, 51325, and 51328 by 
        striking ``Maritime Administrator'' and inserting ``Secretary'' 
        each place it appears;
            (14) in section 51322(c)(2) by striking ``with the 
        international Convention of Safety of Life at Sea, 1974 (32 UST 
        47) and sections 8106 and 70103(c)'' and inserting the 
        following: ``with
                    ``(A) section 8106;
                    ``(B) section 70103(c); and
                    ``(C)(i) the International Convention of Safety of 
                Life at Sea, 1974 (32 UST 47); or
                    ``(ii) with a certificate of inspection issued 
                under section 3309.'';
            (15) in section 51322(e) by striking ``or staff of the 
        Maritime Administration'' each place it appears; and
            (16) in section 51326--
                    (A) in subsection (a) by striking ``Maritime 
                Administrator'' and inserting ``Secretary'';
                    (B) in subsection (c) by striking ``Maritime 
                Administrator'' and inserting ``Secretary'';
                    (C) in subsection (d) by striking ``Maritime 
                Administrator'' and inserting ``Secretary'' each place 
                it appears;
                    (D) in subsection (e) by striking ``Maritime 
                Administrator'' and inserting ``Superintendent'';
                    (E) in subsection (f)(3) by striking ``Maritime 
                Administrator'' and inserting ``Superintendent''; and
                    (F) in subsection (h) by striking ``Maritime 
                Administrator'' and inserting ``Superintendent''.

SEC. 3512. ESTABLISHMENT OF THE UNITED STATES MERCHANT MARINE ACADEMY 
              AS AN OFFICE WITHIN THE OFFICE IN THE DEPARTMENT.

    Section 102 of title 49, United States Code, is amended by adding 
at the end the following:
    ``(k) Office of the United States Merchant Marine Academy.--
            ``(1) Establishment.--There is established in the 
        Department an Office of the United States Merchant Marine 
        Academy to--
                    ``(A) operate the United States Merchant Marine 
                Academy in Kings Point, New York; and
                    ``(B) monitor the service obligations of Academy 
                graduates established under chapter 513 of title 46.
            ``(2) Leadership.--
                    ``(A) In general.--
                            ``(i) Superintendent.--The head of the 
                        Office shall be the Superintendent of the 
                        Academy appointed under section 51301(c)(2) of 
                        title 46.
                            ``(ii) Reporting.--The Superintendent shall 
                        report directly to the Secretary of 
                        Transportation to carry out the duties 
                        prescribed by the Secretary.
                    ``(B) Deputy superintendent.--
                            ``(i) In general.--A Deputy Superintendent 
                        of the Academy shall be appointed in the 
                        competitive service by the Secretary.
                            ``(ii) Duties and powers.--The Deputy 
                        Superintendent shall carry out the duties and 
                        powers prescribed by the Superintendent.
            ``(3) Elimination or consolidation of offices and office 
        functions.--The Secretary may eliminate or consolidate any 
        office or office function within the Department into the Office 
        of the United States Merchant Marine Academy that the Secretary 
        determines has duties, responsibilities, resources, or 
        expertise that support the purposes of the Office.
            ``(4) Staffing and budgetary resources.--
                    ``(A) In general.--The Secretary shall ensure that 
                the Office of the United States Merchant Marine Academy 
                is adequately staffed and funded.
                    ``(B) Staffing.--
                            ``(i) In general.--The Secretary may 
                        transfer to the Office of the United States 
                        Merchant Marine Academy a position within the 
                        Department from any office that is eliminated 
                        or consolidated under this subsection if the 
                        Secretary determines that the position is 
                        necessary to carry out the purposes of the 
                        Office.
                            ``(ii) Savings provision.--If the Secretary 
                        transfers a position to the Office under clause 
                        (i), the Secretary, in coordination with the 
                        appropriate modal administration, shall ensure 
                        that the transfer of the positions does not 
                        adversely affect the obligations of such modal 
                        administration under any Federal law.''.

SEC. 3513. SUPPORT FOR ATHLETIC PROGRAMS OF THE UNITED STATES MERCHANT 
              MARINE ACADEMY.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 513 of title 46, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following:
``Sec. 51329. Support for athletic programs of the United States 
              Merchant Marine Academy
    ``(a) Corporation for Support Authorized.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary may, in accordance with 
        the laws of the State of New York, establish a corporation (in 
        this section referred to as the `corporation') to support the 
        athletic programs of the United States Merchant Marine Academy. 
        All stock of the corporation shall be owned by the United 
        States and held in the name of and voted by the Secretary.
            ``(2) Operation.--The corporation shall operate exclusively 
        for charitable, educational, and civic purposes to support the 
        athletic programs of the United States Merchant Marine Academy.
    ``(b) Corporate Organization.--The corporation shall be organized 
and operated--
            ``(1) as a nonprofit corporation under section 501(c)(3) of 
        the Internal Revenue Code of 1986;
            ``(2) in accordance with this section; and
            ``(3) pursuant to the laws of the State of New York, its 
        articles of incorporation, and its bylaws.
    ``(c) Corporate Board of Directors.--
            ``(1) In general.--The members of the board of directors of 
        the corporation shall serve without compensation as members of 
        the board, except for reasonable travel and other related 
        expenses for attendance at meetings of the board.
            ``(2) Department of transportation employees.--The 
        Secretary may authorize employees of the Department of 
        Transportation to serve, in their official capacities, as 
        members of the board of directors of the corporation, but such 
        employees shall not hold more than one-third of the 
        directorships. Such authorization to participate in the 
        management of the corporation shall be without compensation and 
        may be made only for the purpose of providing oversight and 
        advice to, and coordination with, the corporation. 
        Participation of the employee in the activities of the 
        corporation may not extend to participation in the day-to-day 
        operations of the corporation.
    ``(d) Contracts and Cooperative Agreements.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary may enter contract and 
        cooperative agreements with the corporation for the purpose of 
        supporting the athletic programs of the United States Merchant 
        Marine Academy.
            ``(2) Authority.--Notwithstanding section 3105 of title 41, 
        the Secretary may enter into such contracts and cooperative 
        agreements on a sole source basis pursuant to section 3304(a) 
        of title 41.
            ``(3) Acquisitions.--Notwithstanding chapter 63 of title 
        31, a cooperative agreement under this section may be used to 
        acquire property, services, or travel for the direct benefit or 
        use of the United States Merchant Marine Academy.
    ``(e) Leases.--For the purpose of supporting the athletic programs 
of the United States Merchant Marine Academy, in consultation with the 
General Services Administration, the Secretary may rent or lease real 
property located at the United States Merchant Marine Academy, under 
such terms and conditions as are deemed advisable, for a period not 
exceeding 5 years, such real property as may not be required for 
immediate use by the United States Merchant Marine Academy, to the 
corporation, and that proceeds from such a lease shall be retained and 
expended in accordance with subsection (j).
    ``(f) Support Services.--
            ``(1) Authority.--To the extent required by a contract or 
        cooperative agreement under subsection (a), the Secretary may 
        provide support services to the corporation while the 
        corporation conducts support activities at the United States 
        Merchant Marine Academy only if the Secretary determines that 
        the provision of such services is essential for the support of 
        the athletic programs of the United States Merchant Marine 
        Academy.
            ``(2) No liability of the united states.--Support services 
        may only be provided without any liability of the United States 
        to the corporation.
            ``(3) Support services defined.--In this subsection, the 
        term `support services' includes utilities, office furnishings 
        and equipment, communications services, records staging and 
        archiving, audio and video support, and security systems, in 
        conjunction with the leasing or licensing of property.
    ``(g) Transfers From Nonappropriated Fund Operation.--
            ``(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), the 
        Secretary may, subject to the acceptance of the corporation, 
        transfer to the corporation all title to and ownership of the 
        assets and liabilities of the United States Merchant Marine 
        Academy nonappropriated fund instrumentality, the function of 
        which includes providing support for the athletic programs of 
        the United States Merchant Marine Academy, including bank 
        accounts and financial reserves in the accounts of such fund 
        instrumentality, equipment, supplies, and other personal 
        property.
            ``(2) Limitation.--The Secretary may not transfer under 
        paragraph (1) any interest in real property.
    ``(h) Acceptance of Support.--
            ``(1) In general.--Notwithstanding section 1342 of title 
        31, the Secretary may accept from the corporation funds, 
        supplies, and services for the support of the athletic programs 
        of the United States Merchant Marine Academy.
            ``(2) Employees of the corporation.--For purposes of this 
        section, employees or personnel of the corporation may not be 
        considered to be employees of the United States.
            ``(3) Funds received from other sources.--The Secretary may 
        charge fees for the support of athletic programs of the United 
        States Merchant Marine Academy. To support the athletic 
        programs of the United States Merchant Marine Academy, the 
        Secretary may accept funds from the National Collegiate 
        Athletic Association, funds from athletic conferences, game 
        guarantees from other educational institutions, fees for 
        ticketing and licensing, and other consideration provided 
        incidental to the execution of the athletic programs of the 
        United States Merchant Marine Academy.
            ``(4) Limitation.--The Secretary shall ensure that 
        contributions under this subsection and expenditure of funds 
        pursuant to subsection (j) do not--
                    ``(A) reflect unfavorably on the ability of the 
                Department of Transportation or any employee of the 
                Department of Transportation to carry out any 
                responsibility or duty in a fair and objective manner; 
                or
                    ``(B) compromise the integrity or appearance of 
                integrity of any program of the Department of 
                Transportation, or any individual involved in such a 
                program.
    ``(i) Trademarks and Service Marks.--
            ``(1) Licensing, marketing, and sponsorship agreements.--An 
        agreement under subsection (d) may, consistent with section 
        51330, authorize the corporation to enter into licensing, 
        marketing, and sponsorship agreements relating to trademarks 
        and service marks identifying the United States Merchant Marine 
        Academy, subject to the approval of the Secretary.
            ``(2) Limitations.--A licensing, marketing, or sponsorship 
        agreement may not be entered into under paragraph (1) if--
                    ``(A) such agreement would reflect unfavorably on 
                the ability of the Department of Transportation or any 
                employee of the Department of Transportation to carry 
                out any responsibility or duty in a fair and objective 
                manner; or
                    ``(B) the Secretary determines that the use of the 
                trademark or service mark would compromise the 
                integrity or appearance of integrity of any program of 
                the Department of Transportation or any individual 
                involved in such a program.
    ``(j) Retention and Use of Funds.--Funds received by the Secretary 
under this section may be retained for use to support the athletic 
programs of the United States Merchant Marine Academy and shall remain 
available until expended.
``Sec. 51330. Licensing of intellectual property
    ``(a) Authority.--The Secretary may license trademarks and service 
marks owned or controlled by the Secretary with respect to the United 
States Merchant Marine Academy and may retain and expend fees received 
from such licensing in accordance with this section.
    ``(b) Designated Marks.--The Secretary shall designate the 
trademarks and service marks regarding which the Secretary will 
exercise the authority to retain licensing fees under this section.
    ``(c) Use of Fees.--The Secretary shall use fees retained under 
this section for the following purposes:
            ``(1) For payment of costs incurred by the Secretary of 
        securing trademark registrations and of operating the licensing 
        program under this section.
            ``(2) For support of athletic programs and recruiting 
        activities of the United States Merchant Marine Academy under 
        the jurisdiction of the Secretary, to the extent (if any) that 
        the total amount of the licensing fees available under this 
        section for a fiscal year exceed the total amount needed for 
        such fiscal year under paragraph (1).
    ``(d) Availability.--Fees received in a fiscal year and retained 
under this section shall be available until expended.
    ``(e) Definitions.--In this section, the terms `trademark' and 
`service mark' have the meanings given such terms in section 45 of the 
Act of July 5, 1946 (commonly referred to as the Trademark Act of 1946; 
15 U.S.C. 1127).''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of 
such chapter is amended by adding at the end the following new items:

``51329. Support for athletic programs of the United States Merchant 
                            Marine Academy.
``51330. Licensing of intellectual property.''.

                       Subtitle C--Other Matters

SEC. 3521. LIMITATION ON WAIVER OF NAVIGATION AND VESSEL-INSPECTION 
              LAWS TO ADDRESS FOREIGN ENTITIES OF CONCERN.

    (a) Limitation.--Section 501 of title 46, 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) Limitation Relating to Foreign Entities of Concern.--No 
vessel may operate under a waiver issued under this section until--
            ``(1) the owner or operator of the vessel and the 
        individual requesting such waiver (if not the owner or operator 
        of the vessel) submits to the Maritime Administrator sufficient 
        proof that the vessel is not owned, operated, or crewed by a 
        foreign entity of concern, as such term is defined in section 
        10612 of the CHIPS Act of 2022 (Public Law 117-167; 42 U.S.C. 
        19221); and
            ``(2) the Maritime Administrator confirms the validity of 
        the proof submitted under paragraph (1).''.
    (b) Applicability.--The amendments made by subsection (a) shall 
apply with respect to vessels operating on or after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, regardless of whether a waiver governing such 
operation has been issued under section 501 of title 46, United States 
Code, prior to such date of enactment.

SEC. 3522. FINANCING OF FISHING VESSELS.

    (a) Definitions.--Section 53701 of title 46, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) by redesignating paragraphs (5) through (15) as 
        paragraphs (6) through (16), respectively;
            (2) by inserting after paragraph (4) the following:
            ``(5) Fishing.--The term `fishing' has the meaning given 
        such term in section 3 of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery 
        Conservation and Management Act (16 U.S.C. 1802).''; and
            (3) in paragraph (14), as so redesignated, by inserting 
        ``used'' before ``fishing vessels''.
    (b) Direct Loans.--Section 53702(b) of title 46, United States 
Code, is amended--
            (1) in the subsection heading by striking ``DIRECT LOANS 
        FOR FISHERIES'' and inserting ``DIRECT LOANS'';
            (2) in paragraph (1) by inserting ``used'' before ``fishing 
        vessel''; and
            (3) in paragraph (4) by striking ``the purpose of'' and all 
        that follows through ``financing the purchase'' and inserting 
        ``the purpose of financing the purchase''.
    (c) Funding Limits.--Section 53704(a) of title 46, United States 
Code, is amended by striking ``obligations related to fishing vessels 
and fishery facilities'' and inserting ``obligations by the Secretary 
related to fishing facilities, and used fishing vessels''.
    (d) Eligible Purposes of Obligations.--Section 53706(a)(1)(A) of 
title 46, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in clause (iv) by striking the second ``or'';
            (2) in clause (v) by striking the period and inserting ``; 
        or''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following:
                            ``(vi) in the fishing industry or seafood 
                        related trade.''.
    (e) Findings Related to Obligors and Operators.--Section 53707(c) 
of title 46, United States Code, is amended by inserting ``or 
Administrator'' after ``Secretary''.
    (f) Findings Related to Economic Soundness.--Section 53708 of title 
46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:
    ``(f) Limitation.--The Administrator may not guarantee or make a 
commitment to guarantee an obligation under this chapter if the 
Secretary determines such guarantee or commitment is inconsistent with 
the wise use of the fisheries resources and the development, 
advancement, management, conservation, and protection of the fisheries 
resources consistent with the Magnuson Stevens Fishery Conservation and 
Management Act (16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.).''.
    (g) Amount of Obligations.--Section 53709 of title 46, United 
States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (b)(3)--
                    (A) by striking ``For a fishing vessel or fishery 
                facility'' and inserting the following:
                    ``(A) In general.--For a used fishing vessel or 
                fishery facility''; and
                    (B) by adding at the end the following:
                    ``(B) Increased limitation.--For a fishing vessel 
                for which the Administrator guarantees an obligation, 
                the principal amount may not exceed 87.5 percent of the 
                actual cost or depreciated cost.''; and
            (2) in subsection (e) by inserting ``or Administrator'' 
        after ``Secretary''.
    (h) Replacement of Vessels Because of Changes in Operating 
Standards.--Section 53734 of title 46, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)(1) by inserting ``fishing, or other 
        seafood related,'' before ``coastwise, intercoastal, or foreign 
        trade'';
            (2) in subsection (b)(2) by striking ``construction or 
        reconstruction of the vessel'' and inserting ``construction or 
        refinancing and reconstruction of the vessel''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following:
    ``(f) Applicability.--Guarantees made under subsection (a) for the 
construction or refinancing and reconstruction of a vessel designed and 
to be used in fishing or seafood related trade shall be made only with 
funds, including funds for the cost of guaranteed loans, appropriated 
on or after the date of enactment of the National Defense Authorization 
Act for Fiscal Year 2026.''.
    (i) Eligibility.--Notwithstanding any requirements that such vessel 
be reconstructed, reconditioned, or repaired to qualify for a guarantee 
of an obligation, for a period of 2 years after the date of enactment 
of this Act, a fishing vessel greater than 79 feet overall in length 
built and documented after January 1, 2021, shall be eligible for a 
guarantee of an obligation from the Administrator under chapter 537 of 
title 46, United States Code.
    (j) Savings Clause.--Nothing in this section, or the amendments 
made by this section, shall limit the authority of the Secretary of 
Commerce to provide direct loan obligations authorized by section 
211(e) of the American Fisheries Act (Public Law 105-277).

SEC. 3523. CRANES; SHORE POWER.

    Section 54301 of title 46, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)(3)(A)(ii)(III)--
                    (A) by striking ``including projects to improve 
                port resilience;'' and inserting ``including--''; and
                    (B) by adding at the end the following:
                                            ``(aa) projects to improve 
                                        port resilience; and
                                            ``(bb) projects to upgrade 
                                        port cranes or parts of port 
                                        cranes (including hardware and 
                                        software) that--

                                                    ``(AA) were 
                                                installed or provided 
                                                by the People's 
                                                Republic of China or 
                                                any department, 
                                                ministry, center, 
                                                agency, or 
                                                instrumentality of the 
                                                Government of the 
                                                People's Republic of 
                                                China; or

                                                    ``(BB) are 
                                                maintained, controlled, 
                                                or sponsored by the 
                                                People's Republic of 
                                                China or any 
                                                department, ministry, 
                                                center, agency, or 
                                                instrumentality of the 
                                                Government of the 
                                                People's Republic of 
                                                China;''; and

            (2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(d) Eligibility of Shore Power Projects.--
            ``(1) In general.--In making port infrastructure 
        development grants under this section, the Secretary shall 
        treat a project described in paragraph (2) as--
                    ``(A) having met the requirements of paragraphs (1) 
                and (6)(A)(i); and
                    ``(B) being an eligible project under subsection 
                (a)(3).
            ``(2) Project described.--A project described in this 
        paragraph is a project to provide shore power at a port that 
        services both of the following:
                    ``(A) Passenger vessels described in section 
                3507(k).
                    ``(B) Vessels that move goods or freight.''.

SEC. 3524. CARGOES PROCURED, FURNISHED, OR FINANCED BY UNITED STATES 
              GOVERNMENT.

    Section 55305 of title 46, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a) by striking ``When the United States 
        Government'' and inserting ``Except as provided in subsection 
        (c), when the United States Government'';
            (2) by redesignating subsections (c) through (f) as 
        subsections (d) through (g), respectively; and
            (3) by inserting after subsection (b) the following:
    ``(c) Exception.--When the Department of Transportation procures, 
contracts for, or otherwise obtains for its own account, or provides 
financing in any way with Federal funds or advances funds or credits, 
for the furnishing or obtaining of the equipment, materials, or 
commodities, the Secretary of Transportation or recipient of such 
financing shall take steps necessary and practicable to ensure that 100 
percent of the gross tonnage of the equipment, materials, or 
commodities (computed separately for dry bulk carriers, dry cargo 
liners, and tankers) which may be transported on ocean vessels is 
transported on privately-owned commercial vessels of the United States, 
as provided under subsection (b), to the extent such vessels are 
available at fair and reasonable rates for commercial vessels of the 
United States, in a manner that will ensure a fair and reasonable 
participation of commercial vessels of the United States in those 
cargoes by geographic areas.''.

SEC. 3525. ASSISTANCE FOR SMALL SHIPYARDS.

    Section 54101 of title 46, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (c)(1)--
                    (A) in subparagraph (A) by inserting ``, including 
                through the acquisition of advanced digital 
                manufacturing capabilities,'' after ``improvements''; 
                and
                    (B) in subparagraph (B) by inserting ``, including 
                digital training technologies,'' after ``training''; 
                and
            (2) in subsection (h)--
                    (A) by striking ``Small Shipyard Defined'' and all 
                that follows through ``the term'' and inserting the 
                following: ``Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) Small shipyard.--The term''; and
                    (B) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(2) Advanced digital manufacturing capabilities.--The 
        term `advanced digital manufacturing capabilities' means 
        commercially available integrated software and hardware used to 
        plan, design, schedule, execute, and assure quality in ship 
        construction and repair, including--
                    ``(A) product lifestyle management;
                    ``(B) 3-dimensional computer aided design;
                    ``(C) computer aided manufacturing;
                    ``(D) manufacturing execution systems;
                    ``(E) quality management systems;
                    ``(F) digital twin and internet of things sensors 
                and gateways;
                    ``(G) automation systems;
                    ``(H) open data standards for interoperability;
                    ``(I) cybersecurity controls; and
                    ``(J) integration, commissioning, and data-
                migration services necessary for operational use.
            ``(3) Digital training technologies.--The term `digital 
        training technologies' means the use of digital tools and 
        platforms, such as simulation, augmented or virtual reality, 
        digital work instructions, e-learning, and learning management 
        systems, to deliver and assess training in shipbuilding and 
        ship repair competencies.''.

SEC. 3526. COMMITTEE ON THE MARINE TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM.

    Section 50401 of title 46, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating and transferring such section to 
        appear after subsection (k) of section 102 of title 49, United 
        States Code (as added by this Act), as subsection (j), 
        including by redesignating each subordinate provision 
        appropriately to reflect the transfer and by amending the 
        enumerator, subsection catchline, typeface, and typestyle to 
        conform to those appearing in other subsections of such 
        section;
            (2) in paragraph (1), as so redesignated, by inserting ``in 
        the Department within the Office of the Deputy Secretary'' 
        after ``established''; and
            (3) in paragraph (4), as so redesignated--
                    (A) in subparagraph (A), as so redesignated, by 
                adding at the end the following:
                            ``(iii) Work plan.--The Coordinating Board 
                        shall approve annually a yearly work plan and 
                        to carry out the activities of the 
                        Committee.'';
                    (B) in subparagraph (B)--
                            (i) by striking ``The Secretary of 
                        Transportation'' and inserting the following:
                            ``(i) In general.--The Secretary of 
                        Transportation''; and
                            (ii) by adding at the end the following:
                            ``(ii) Reporting.--The Executive Director 
                        report directly to the Deputy Secretary.''; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following:
                    ``(D) Executive secretariat.--The Executive 
                Secretariat shall provide administrative, analytical, 
                and operational support to the Executive Director to 
                accomplish the purpose and activities of the Committee. 
                The Secretary of Transportation, the Secretary of 
                Defense, the Secretary of Homeland Security, and the 
                Secretary of Commerce, shall each provide a minimum of 
                one full-time staff member to the Executive 
                Secretariat. Any head of any other member agency may 
                provide additional staff support.''.

SEC. 3527. ASSESSMENT OF CHANNEL DEPTHS AND PLACEMENT OF AIDS TO 
              NAVIGATION.

    Not later than 90 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the 
President shall submit to the Committee on Transportation and 
Infrastructure and the Committee on Natural Resources of the House of 
Representative and the Committee on Commerce, Science, and 
Transportation and the Committee on Environment and Public Works of the 
Senate a proposal to improve coordination between the Army Corps of 
Engineers, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and the 
Coast Guard with respect to the measurement and publication of channel 
depths and real time physical oceanographic data with respect to 
Federal navigation channels and the timely marking of such channels 
with aids to navigation especially after any changes to such channels 
as a result of construction or a natural disaster.

SEC. 3528. WAIVER.

    Section 501 of title 46, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)(2) by inserting ``, and the waiver'' 
        after ``without such a waiver''; and
            (2) in subsection (b)(4)(B) by inserting ``the waiver and'' 
        after ``subparagraph (A)(ii)''.

SEC. 3529. NATIONAL MARITIME WORKFORCE ADVISORY COMMITTEE.

    Chapter 151 of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding 
at the end the following:
``Sec. 15110. Maritime Workforce Advisory Committee
    ``(a) Establishment.--There is established a National Maritime 
Workforce Advisory Committee (in this section referred to as the 
`Committee').
    ``(b) Function.--The Committee shall advise the Secretary on 
matters relating to the skills, training, and numbers of workers 
necessary to maintain the United States maritime industrial base 
workforce, including the merchant marine, shipyards, and associated 
activities.
    ``(c) Membership.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Committee shall consist of not more 
        than 25 members appointed by the Secretary in accordance with 
        this section and section 15109 of this chapter.
            ``(2) Expertise.--Each member of the Committee shall have 
        particular expertise, knowledge, and experience in matters 
        relating to the function of the Committee.
            ``(3) Representation.--At least 1 member of the Committee 
        shall represent 1 of the following:
                    ``(A) Ocean Common Carriers.
                    ``(B) State Maritime Academies.
                    ``(C) Centers of excellence designated under 
                section 54101.
                    ``(D) Unlicensed Merchant Mariner Labor Unions.
                    ``(E) Licensed Merchant Mariner Labor Unions.
                    ``(F) Shipyard Labor Unions.
                    ``(G) Shipyards.
                    ``(H) Vessel design and construction entities.
                    ``(I) Post-Secondary Education Vocational Training.
                    ``(J) Secondary Education Vocational Training.
                    ``(K) Offshore Energy Production.
                    ``(L) Offshore Support.''.

SEC. 3530. ENHANCING UNITED STATES MARITIME WORKFORCE.

    (a) Proposals.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the President shall submit to the appropriate 
congressional committees proposals to implement the recommendations set 
forth in the Maritime Action Plan issued by the White House and dated 
February, 2026, with respect to--
            (1) maximizing the credits for military training and sea 
        service eligible to count toward merchant mariner credential 
        endorsements and expanding associated fee exemptions to all 
        members of the Armed Forces;
            (2) in consultation with the National Merchant Marine 
        Personnel Advisory Committee established under section 15103 of 
        title 46, United States Code, formalizing equivalency guidance 
        with respect to such credits and credentials;
            (3) continuing to approve reciprocity for military courses 
        to meet training requirements for such credentials;
            (4) strengthening outreach and counseling to enable members 
        of the Armed Forces eligible for preseparation counseling under 
        section 1142 of title 10, United States Code, to efficiently 
        convert relevant skills of such members to qualifications 
        necessary for such credentials;
            (5) streamlining and clarifying the processes for merchant 
        mariner credentialing;
            (6) streamlining training approvals for such credentials, 
        including with respect to the approval of training involving 
        simulators and other modern innovations, to safely accelerate 
        the acquisition of skills and qualifications necessary for such 
        credentials; and
            (7) streamlining training requirements and provider 
        accreditation to accelerate merchant mariner credentialing.
    (b) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``appropriate congressional committees'' 
        means--
                    (A) the Committee on Armed Services and the 
                Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the 
                House of Representatives; and
                    (B) the Committee on Armed Services and the 
                Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of 
                the Senate.
            (2) The term ``merchant mariner credential'' has the 
        meaning given such term in section 2101 of title 46, United 
        States Code.

SEC. 3531. ENHANCING UNITED STATES SHIPYARDS AND SHIPBUILDING.

    (a) Proposals.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the President shall submit to the appropriate 
congressional committees proposals to implement the recommendations set 
forth in the Maritime Action Plan issued by the White House and dated 
February, 2026, with respect to--
            (1) blending Federal and private resources for durable 
        shipyards and shipbuilding component fabrication;
            (2) simplifying and standardizing requirements relating to 
        applications, eligibility, and compliance across programs of 
        the Federal Government that provide assistance or financing for 
        shipyards or shipbuilding;
            (3) employing commercially available technologies and 
        solutions in shipbuilding by the Federal Government;
            (4) establishing a Federal Government-wide shipbuilding 
        plan;
            (5) expanding eligibility, improving efficiency, and 
        streamlining program administration with respect to Federal 
        funding and other incentives for shipbuilding, to align such 
        funding and incentives with modern program management and 
        business practices; and
            (6) promulgating, revising, or rescinding such regulations 
        as may be necessary to prioritize shipbuilding in the United 
        States and repairs at domestic shipyards.
    (b) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on 
        Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of 
        Representatives; and
            (2) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on 
        Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate.

                     TITLE XXXVI--SHIPS FOR AMERICA

SEC. 3601. REPORT ON PRIVILEGE.

    (a) In General.--Not later than March 1, 2026, the Secretary of 
Transportation, in consultation with the Secretary of Commerce, the 
Chair of the Federal Maritime Commission, and the Director of the 
Office of Management and Budget, shall submit to the appropriate 
committees of Congress a report including ways to ensure vessels of the 
United States operating in foreign commerce are privileged in 
regulation, taxation, fees, insurance, and policy compared to foreign 
vessels conducting trade with a United States domiciled entity, while 
remaining consistent with the international obligations of the United 
States.
    (b) Contents.--In submitting the report under subsection (a), the 
Secretary of Transportation shall include options for regulating trade 
with foreign vessels in order to sustain and grow the Maritime Security 
Fleet under chapter 531 of title 56, United States Code, the Cable 
Security Fleet under chapter 532 of such title, the Tanker Security 
Fleet under chapter 534 of such title, and other vessels of the United 
States operating in foreign commerce.

SEC. 3602. FLEET TESTING AND BRIEFING REQUIREMENT.

    (a) Test.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment 
of this Act, the Commander of the United States Transportation Command, 
in coordination with the Secretary of the Navy and the Maritime 
Administrator, shall devise a tabletop exercise to test the effective 
control of the Maritime Security Fleet under chapter 531 of title 46, 
United States Code, and the Tanker Security Fleet under chapter 534 of 
such title, in case of crisis or war.
    (b) Briefing.--After completion of the tabletop exercise under 
subsection (a), the Commander shall submit to the appropriate 
committees of Congress a briefing on the results of such tabletop 
exercise.
    (c) Annual Testing.--Beginning not later than 1 year after the 
briefing is submitted under subsection (b), the Commander shall--
            (1) carry out tabletop drills to test effective control of 
        the Maritime Security Fleet under chapter 531 of title 46, 
        United States Code, and the Tanker Security Fleet under chapter 
        534 of such title; and
            (2) provide to the appropriate committees of Congress a 
        briefing after each such drill on the results of such drill.

SEC. 3603. ASSESSMENT OF THE USE OF COMMERCIAL BEST PRACTICES FOR NAVY 
              SHIPBUILDING.

    (a) Assessment.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of the Navy, in coordination 
        with the Secretary of Transportation and the Secretary of the 
        Department in which the Coast Guard is operating, shall--
                    (A) conduct an assessment of best practices used in 
                the construction and repair of commercial, oceangoing 
                maritime vessels; and
                    (B) identify--
                            (i) opportunities for the Navy and Coast 
                        Guard to leverage those best practices to make 
                        ship construction and repair efforts of 
                        combatant and non-combatant vessels more 
                        efficient; and
                            (ii) advanced technologies that can be 
                        leveraged to improve the overall readiness and 
                        dominance of the United States maritime fleet 
                        (both commercial and military), to specifically 
                        include small modular reactors for ship power 
                        and propulsion.
            (2) Elements.--The assessment required by paragraph (1) 
        shall include the following:
                    (A) An evaluation of the best practices described 
                in subparagraph (A) of such paragraph, including best 
                practices used by commercial shipyards in foreign 
                allied countries, consideration of commercial design 
                standards, and the vessel construction manager model 
                used to construct the National Security Multi Mission 
                Vessel Program, that could improve the efficiency of 
                shipbuilding and repair by the Navy and Coast Guard.
                    (B) An identification of commercial-grade 
                components and capabilities being used in state-of-the-
                art commercial, oceangoing maritime vessels and an 
                assessment of whether the Navy and Coast Guard could 
                better use commercial off-the-shelf components or 
                capabilities to reduce costs, improve efficiencies, or 
                enhance capabilities in the construction of new naval 
                vessels and cutters, and in repair of naval vessels and 
                cutters.
                    (C) A determination as to whether shipbuilding and 
                acquisition programs of the Navy and Coast Guard use 
                modern best practices from the commercial maritime 
                industry in terms of contracting, ship design, 
                construction, overhaul, and maintenance.
                    (D) An identification of technologies and 
                procedures that are used in commercial shipbuilding 
                that, if used by the Navy and Coast Guard, would 
                improve the efficiency of designing and constructing 
                new naval vessels.
                    (E) An identification of technologies and 
                procedures that are used in commercial shipbuilding and 
                repair that, if used by the Navy and Coast Guard, would 
                improve the efficiency of repairing naval vessels.
                    (F) An identification of opportunities to improve 
                commonality in ship design, ship components, and 
                shipbuilding procedures between commercial, oceangoing 
                maritime vessels, naval vessels, and cutters that could 
                lead to improved efficiencies and a more resilient 
                industrial base to support shipbuilding and repair for 
                military and civil maritime vessels.
                    (G) An identification of advanced nuclear 
                technologies that are under development for use in 
                commercial shipbuilding that, if used by the Navy and 
                Coast Guard, would improve the operational capability 
                of naval vessels and cutters.
                    (H) An identification of the barriers preventing or 
                making prohibitive the use of small modular reactors in 
                naval or commercial, oceangoing maritime vessels, 
                including--
                            (i) ambiguity in regulations governing 
                        nuclear propulsion restricting the commercial 
                        maritime industry from utilizing nuclear 
                        propulsion or collaborating between United 
                        States and foreign entities under export 
                        controls requirements, including section 744.5 
                        of title 15, Code of Federal Regulations (or a 
                        similar successor regulation); and
                            (ii) a lack of clarity in the meaning of 
                        ``maritime (civil) nuclear propulsion plant 
                        projects'' contained in the Export 
                        Administration Regulations and ``Naval Nuclear 
                        Propulsion'' contained in the International 
                        Traffic in Arms Regulations (Cat VI).
                    (I) An evaluation of education and technology 
                development best practices used by commercial shipyards 
                in foreign allied countries, and an identification of 
                education and technology development opportunities, 
                that could improve the efficiency of shipbuilding and 
                repair by the Navy and Coast Guard.
                    (J) An evaluation of whether adoption of the best 
                practices evaluated under subparagraph (A) for the 
                construction and repair of naval vessels and cutters 
                would support the domestic commercial maritime 
                shipbuilding industry, the commercial maritime 
                industrial base, and the merchant marine of the United 
                States.
    (b) Briefing.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall provide to the 
congressional defense committees a briefing on--
            (1) the results of the assessment required by subsection 
        (a); and
            (2) a plan to execute any measures pursuant to such 
        assessment.
    (c) Strategy Required.--Not later than 1 year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, and biennially thereafter, the Secretary of the 
Navy and Secretary of the Department in which the Coast Guard is 
operating shall--
            (1) provide to the appropriate committees of Congress 
        strategies describing how measures identified as a result of 
        the assessment required by subsection (a) will be incorporated 
        into shipbuilding programs for the Navy and Coast Guard; and
            (2) publish a public version of the strategies.

SEC. 3604. MILITARY SEALIFT COMMAND.

    (a) Authority To Offer Increased Paid Leave Accrual.--The Secretary 
of the Navy is authorized to offer government merchant mariners 
employed by Military Sealift Command paid leave accrual at a faster 
rate than provided pursuant to the standard General Schedule (GS) 
system to make government seafaring jobs more competitive with the 
commercial sector.
    (b) Report on Recruiting and Retention Efforts.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, and annually thereafter, the 
        Secretary of the Navy, in coordination with the Commander of 
        the Military Sealift Command and the Maritime Security Board, 
        and in consultation with the Commander of United States 
        Transportation Command, the Commander of United States Fleet 
        Forces Command, and the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for 
        Research, Development and Acquisition, shall submit to the 
        appropriate committees of Congress a report on efforts to 
        improve recruitment and retention of Military Sealift Command 
        Mariners.
            (2) Elements.--The report required under paragraph (1) 
        shall consider--
                    (A) opportunities to enhance the integration of 
                Military Sealift Command civilian mariners into the 
                military command structure;
                    (B) providing training on the roles and 
                significance of Military Sealift Command civilian 
                mariner workforce to relevant military commands; and
                    (C) authorities required to improve recruitment and 
                retention of civilian mariners in Military Sealift 
                Command.
    (c) Report on Extending Charter Durations.--Not later than 90 days 
after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy 
shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a report 
assessing the merits of extending the maximum charter durations of 
commercial and specialty vessels for the Military Sealift Command.

SEC. 3605. ASSESSMENT ON MARITIME INFRASTRUCTURE READINESS.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Maritime Administrator shall submit to the 
appropriate congressional committees a report on the status and 
resources and authorities needed to execute and complete necessary 
vessels, harborcraft, port, shipyard, and other infrastructure 
improvements to ensure the national security interests of the United 
States and support the domestic and foreign commerce of the United 
States.
    (b) Contents.--The report under subsection (a) shall include--
            (1) consideration of existing literature and reporting from 
        Federal and non-Federal sources;
            (2) an assessment of the number of commercial shipping 
        vessels by class required to sustain a peace-time and wartime 
        national economy;
            (3) an assessment of opportunities to leverage private 
        sector funding to enhance the capability of marine 
        infrastructure of the United States;
            (4) an evaluation of future infrastructure needs to support 
        alternative fuels for vessels and harborcraft;
            (5) an assessment of an ability to construct and repair 
        seaports and shipyards during national security emergencies, 
        including readiness to construct temporary facilities, and 
        carry out marine salvage and firefighting operations; and
            (6) an evaluation of the possible effects on the commercial 
        operations of United States ports and other critical 
        infrastructure of prohibiting any entity that owns or operates 
        a port or terminal in the United States from using or sharing 
        data with--
                    (A) LOGINK;
                    (B) any logistics platform controlled by, 
                affiliated with, or subject to the jurisdiction of the 
                Chinese Communist Party or the Government of the 
                People's Republic of China; or
                    (C) any logistics platform that shares data with a 
                system described in subparagraph (A) or (B).
    (c) Definitions.--
            (1) The term ``appropriate congressional committees'' 
        means--
                    (A) the Committee on Armed Services and the 
                Committee on Commerce of the Senate; and
                    (B) the Committee on Armed Services and the 
                Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the 
                House of Representatives.
            (2) The term ``critical infrastructure'' has the meaning 
        given the term in section 721(a) of the Defense Production Act 
        of 1950 (50 U.S.C. 4565(a)).
            (3) The term ``LOGINK'' means the public, open, shared 
        logistics information network known as the National Public 
        Information Platform for Transportation and Logistics by the 
        Ministry of Transport of the People's Republic of China.

SEC. 3606. UNITED STATES MERCHANT MARINE ACADEMY INFRASTRUCTURE AND 
              FACILITIES MODERNIZATION.

    Congress finds the following:
            (1) The United States Merchant Marine Academy plays a 
        critical role in training service-obligated licensed merchant 
        mariners to operate commercial vessels, in peacetime and during 
        times of conflict.
            (2) The United States Merchant Marine Academy is 1 of the 5 
        Federal service academies and plays a critical role in 
        maintaining a domestic, commercial maritime industry, with each 
        graduate having a commitment to serve not less than 8 years in 
        the foreign and domestic commerce and the national defense of 
        the United States, which may include service on a merchant 
        vessel documented under chapter 121 of title 46, and graduates 
        make up more than 80 percent of the United States Navy's 
        Strategic Sealift Officer Program.
            (3) The United States defense readiness and economic 
        security relies on a strong investment in training and 
        cultivating United States Merchant Marine officers at the 
        United States Merchant Marine Academy.
            (4) Most of the facilities at the United States Merchant 
        Marine Academy date back to the Academy's founding, have not 
        been modernized since, and are not conducive to the immersive 
        training and demanding coursework today's Midshipmen are 
        required to complete.
            (5) Rehabilitating and modernizing the campus 
        infrastructure at the United States Merchant Marine Academy is 
        necessary to ensuring current and future generations of 
        Midshipmen receive a first-class education.

SEC. 3607. UNITED STATES MERCHANT MARINE ACADEMY.

    (a) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the United States Merchant Marine Academy, one of our 
        Nation's 5 Federal service academies, is vital to our national 
        security, and modernizing the Academy's aging infrastructure 
        and investing in faculty and students must be congressional 
        priorities;
            (2) sufficient funding must be provided to enable the 
        maximum student enrollment that the campus infrastructure of 
        the United States Merchant Marine Academy can support; and
            (3) considering the Academy's role as a co-equal military 
        service academy, the United States Merchant Marine Academy 
        should be included in the rotation of presidential attendance 
        at graduations.
    (b) Report on Enrollment.--Not later than 180 days after the date 
of the enactment of this Act, the Maritime Administrator shall submit a 
report to the appropriate committees of Congress identifying the 
additional resources needed to increase enrollment at the United States 
Merchant Marine Academy.

SEC. 3608. STATE MARITIME ACADEMIES.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 1 year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Maritime Administrator shall submit a report 
to Congress containing the results of a study to evaluate the 
additional resources needed to allow State maritime academies to 
increase enrollment and produce additional mariners.
    (b) Need for Additional State Maritime Academies.--Such study shall 
consider whether there is a need for additional State maritime 
academies in States that do not operate a maritime academy.

SEC. 3609. ENFORCEMENT OF SERVICE OBLIGATION REQUIREMENTS.

    (a) In General.--The Maritime Administrator shall ensure that--
            (1) each citizen who is appointed as a cadet at the United 
        States Merchant Marine Academy and signs a cadet commitment 
        agreement under section 51306 of title 46, United States Code, 
        meets the service obligation requirements of that agreement; 
        and
            (2) each individual that signs a student incentive payment 
        agreement under section 51509 of title 46, United States Code, 
        meets the service obligation requirements under that agreement.
    (b) Reporting Requirement.--The Maritime Administrator shall 
establish an electronic system through which each individual with a 
service obligation under such section 51306 or 51509 (referred to in 
this section as a ``service-obligated mariner'') shall annually 
demonstrate that they are meeting their service obligation or have a 
valid deferment consistent with section 51310 of title 46, United 
States Code, or section 51510 of title 46, United States Code, as 
applicable.
    (c) Notification of Violation.--The Maritime Administrator shall 
transmit a written notice to each service-obligated mariner who fails 
to meet the reporting requirement of subsection (b), notifying such 
individual of the applicable penalties established under section 51306 
of title 46, United States Code, or section 51509 of title 46, United 
States Code, for failure to carry out the applicable service 
requirements, including cost recovery.
    (d) Report to Congress.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
enactment of this section, and annually thereafter, the Maritime 
Administrator shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a 
report on the status of all service-obligated mariners, which shall 
include--
            (1) information about how each service-obligated mariner is 
        meeting their service obligation requirement, which shall be 
        based on the results of the data collected under subsection 
        (b);
            (2) the number of service-obligated mariners who have not 
        met their service obligation and have not complied with the 
        reporting requirement under subsection (b); and
            (3) the number of actions taken by the Maritime 
        Administrator under sections 51306(b), 51306(d), 51306(f), and 
        51509(g) to recover costs from service-obligated mariners who 
        have not demonstrated that they have met their service 
        obligation requirements.

SEC. 3610. STATE MARITIME ACADEMY SEA TERM SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAMS.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 515 of title 46, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following:
``Sec. 51512. State Maritime Academy Sea Term Scholarship Programs
    ``(a) In General.--The Maritime Administrator shall work with 
private entities in the maritime industry to establish a scholarship 
program--
            ``(1) for students at State maritime academies to offset 
        expenses associated with completion of a summer sea term to 
        receive sea-time required to earn a Coast Guard license; and
            ``(2) which is entirely or predominantly funded through 
        contributions from a private entity.
    ``(b) Contributed Funds.--The Maritime Administrator shall enter 
into a cooperative agreement, or other agreement, with private entities 
in the maritime industry to accept funding from private entities for 
the purpose of establishing such a scholarship program. The cooperative 
agreement may include any terms considered necessary by the Maritime 
Administrator.
    ``(c) Privileges.--The Maritime Administrator may provide certain 
privileges to a private entity who contributes funds for a scholarship 
program under this section, including opportunities to provide 
information about employment opportunities with the private entity to 
students enrolled in the scholarship program.
    ``(d) Structure.--In establishing a scholarship program to offset 
expenses associated with a summer sea term--
            ``(1) the Maritime Administrator may enter into an 
        agreement with a student at a State maritime academy that has 
        an agreement with the Secretary of Transportation under section 
        51505 of this title, to offset expenses associated with 
        completion of a summer sea term; or
            ``(2) the Maritime Administrator may enter into an 
        agreement with a State maritime academy that has an agreement 
        with the Secretary of Transportation under section 51505 of 
        this title, to offset expenses for all students who participate 
        in a summer sea term program.
    ``(e) Relationship to Financial Assistance Programs.--Recognizing 
the need for licensed merchant mariners, the Maritime Administrator 
shall encourage participants of the financial assistance programs under 
part C of this subtitle, to enter into agreements under this section to 
establish scholarship programs to offset expenses associated with 
summer sea term.
    ``(f) Requirements for Students.--Any student who benefits from a 
scholarship program under this section shall enter into an agreement 
with the Maritime Administrator which requires the student to--
            ``(1) complete the course of instruction at the academy the 
        individual is attending;
            ``(2) obtain a merchant mariner license, without limitation 
        as to tonnage or horsepower, from the Coast Guard as an officer 
        in the merchant marine of the United States, accompanied by the 
        appropriate national and international endorsements and 
        certification required by the Coast Guard for service aboard 
        vessels on domestic and international voyages, without 
        limitation, within 3 months of completion of the course of 
        instruction at the academy the individual is attending;
            ``(3) serve in a position that supports the foreign and 
        domestic commerce and the national defense of the United States 
        for at least 1 year after graduation from the academy--
                    ``(A) as a merchant marine officer on a documented 
                vessel or a vessel owned and operated by the United 
                States Government or by a State; or
                    ``(B) as a commissioned officer on active duty in 
                an Armed Force of the United States, as a commissioned 
                officer in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric 
                Administration, or in other maritime-related Federal 
                employment which serves the national security interests 
                of the United States, as determined by the Maritime 
                Administrator; and
            ``(4) report to the Maritime Administrator on compliance 
        with this subsection.''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections for chapter 515 of 
title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the 
following:

``51512. State Maritime Academy Sea Term Scholarship Programs.''.

SEC. 3611. IMPLEMENTATION PLAN.

    (a) Implementation Plan Required.--Not later than 60 days after the 
date of the enactment of this Act, the Maritime Administrator and the 
Secretary of the department in which the Coast Guard is operating shall 
each submit to the appropriate committees of Congress and the Maritime 
Security Board a separate implementation plan for carrying out this 
title, and the amendments made by this title.
    (b) Elements.--Each implementation plan required under subsection 
(a) shall include, for each action required of the Maritime 
Administrator and the Secretary of the department in which the Coast 
Guard is operating (as applicable) in this title, including the 
amendments made by this title--
            (1) an identification of all administrative restructuring 
        requirements;
            (2) an identification of each office or division within the 
        Maritime Administration or Coast Guard principally responsible 
        for each relevant section of this title;
            (3) an identification of additional personnel needed to 
        sufficiently implement this title, a hiring plan, and a 
        training plan;
            (4) an identification of any barrier (including any policy, 
        law, or regulation) to implementation of any section of this 
        title, and recommendations to address those barriers;
            (5) a descriptive implementation timeline, taking into 
        account the administrative needs of the Maritime Administration 
        or the Coast Guard; and
            (6) any additional components determined appropriate by the 
        Maritime Administrator or such Secretary to ensure the success 
        of implementation of this title.
    (c) Briefing.--Not later than 15 days after submitting each 
implementation plan required under subsection (a), the Maritime 
Administrator and the Secretary of the department in which the Coast 
Guard is operating shall provide a briefing to the appropriate 
committees of Congress on the status of that implementation plan 
required under subsection (a).
    (d) Biannual Update.--Not less frequently than biannually following 
the submission of the plans under subsection (a) and for 2 years 
thereafter, the Maritime Administrator and the Secretary of the 
department in which the Coast Guard is operating shall submit to the 
appropriate committees of Congress separate reports containing any 
updates on the implementation of such plans.
    (e) GAO Review.--The Comptroller General of the United States 
shall--
            (1) not later than 2 years after the date of enactment of 
        this Act, and biennially thereafter for 10 years, conduct a 
        review of the activities carried out in accordance with this 
        title, and the amendments made by this title; and
            (2) submit to the appropriate committees of Congress the 
        results of each review.

                       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 3201 and 4024 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 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 or 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 2027          House
      Line                 Item              Request        Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                  AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT,
                   ARMY
                  FIXED WING
003               SMALL UNMANNED                291,472         306,472
                   AIRCRAFT SYSTEMS.
                      Fiber Optic Drone                          [5,000]
                      Procurement.
                      Program decrease.                         [-5,000]
                      Solid Oxide                               [15,000]
                      Powered Long
                      Range
                      Reconnaissance
                      Aircraft
                      Procurement.
004               UNMANNED AIRCRAFT              52,398          52,398
                   SYSTEMS (UAS).
005               HADES PLATFORM,               227,569         227,569
                   PAYLOADS/PED, AND
                   INTEGRATION.
                  ROTARY
007               AH-64 APACHE BLOCK              1,552           1,552
                   IIIA REMAN.
009               FUTURE VERTICAL LIFT          127,217               0
                   FAMILY OF SYSTEMS AP.
                      Program                                 [-127,217]
                      realignment for
                      operational test
                      aircraft.
010               UH-60 BLACKHAWK M              39,257         289,257
                   MODEL (MYP).
                      6 additional                             [250,000]
                      aircraft.
012               CH-47 HELICOPTER.....         210,645         591,645
                      7 additional                             [381,000]
                      aircraft.
                  MODIFICATION OF
                   AIRCRAFT
015               MQ-1 PAYLOAD.........          53,190          53,190
016               GRAY EAGLE MODS2.....           2,556           2,556
017               AH-64 MODS...........         251,645         251,645
018               SCALABLE CONTROL                2,061           2,061
                   INTERFACE (SCI).
019               CH-47 CARGO                   108,408         108,408
                   HELICOPTER MODS
                   (MYP).
020               UTILITY HELICOPTER            120,013         125,013
                   MODS.
                      UH-72 Limited                              [5,000]
                      User Test for
                      ARNG helicopters.
021               NETWORK AND MISSION            29,235          29,235
                   PLAN.
022               COMMS, NAV                     14,384          14,384
                   SURVEILLANCE.
024               AVIATION ASSURED PNT.          55,055          55,055
                  GROUND SUPPORT
                   AVIONICS
027               AIRCRAFT                      125,050         125,050
                   SURVIVABILITY
                   EQUIPMENT.
028               CMWS.................          21,511          21,511
029               COMMON INFRARED               140,636         140,636
                   COUNTERMEASURES
                   (CIRCM).
                  OTHER SUPPORT
030               COMMON GROUND                  29,778          29,778
                   EQUIPMENT.
031               AIRCREW INTEGRATED             15,229          15,229
                   SYSTEMS.
032               AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL..          11,044          11,044
033               LAUNCHER, 2.75 ROCKET           3,864           3,864
                       TOTAL AIRCRAFT         1,933,769       2,457,552
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       ARMY.
 
                  MISSILE PROCUREMENT,
                   ARMY
                  SURFACE-TO-AIR
                   MISSILE SYSTEM
001               LOWER TIER AIR AND          2,036,358       2,036,358
                   MISSILE DEFENSE
                   (AMD) SEN.
002               TERMINAL HIGH                 907,162         907,162
                   ALTITUDE AREA
                   DEFENSE (THAAD).
003               M-SHORAD--PROCUREMENT         712,690         712,690
004               MSE MISSILE..........       1,297,528       1,297,528
005               PRECISION STRIKE            1,226,526       1,226,526
                   MISSILE (PRSM).
006               INDIRECT FIRE               1,626,004       1,556,004
                   PROTECTION
                   CAPABILITY INC 2-I.
                      Unjustified                              [-70,000]
                      growth.
007               MID-RANGE CAPABILITY          370,351         370,351
                   (MRC).
                  AIR-TO-SURFACE
                   MISSILE SYSTEM
009               JOINT AIR-TO-GROUND           104,059         104,059
                   MSLS (JAGM).
011               LONG-RANGE HYPERSONIC         301,777         301,777
                   WEAPON.
                  ANTI-TANK/ASSAULT
                   MISSILE SYS
012               JAVELIN (AAWS-M)              417,031         417,031
                   SYSTEM SUMMARY.
014               GUIDED MLRS ROCKET          1,014,937       1,014,937
                   (GMLRS).
015               GUIDED MLRS ROCKET             49,106          49,106
                   (GMLRS) AP.
016               MLRS REDUCED RANGE              7,412           7,412
                   PRACTICE ROCKETS
                   (RRPR).
017               HIGH MOBILITY                 745,682         745,682
                   ARTILLERY ROCKET
                   SYSTEM (HIMARS.
020               FAMILY OF LOW                 139,191         139,191
                   ALTITUDE UNMANNED
                   SYSTEMS.
                  MODIFICATIONS
021               PATRIOT MODS.........         796,837         796,837
022               STINGER MODS.........          10,786          10,786
023               AVENGER MODS.........           6,823           6,823
024               MLRS MODS............         289,496         289,496
025               HIMARS MODIFICATIONS.          54,363          54,363
                  SPARES AND REPAIR
                   PARTS
026               SPARES AND REPAIR               6,698           6,698
                   PARTS.
                  SUPPORT EQUIPMENT &
                   FACILITIES
027               AIR DEFENSE TARGETS..           9,613           9,613
                       TOTAL MISSILE         12,130,430      12,060,430
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       ARMY.
 
                  PROCUREMENT OF
                   WEAPONS AND TRACKED
                   COMBAT VEHICLES,
                   ARMY
                  TRACKED COMBAT
                   VEHICLES
001               ARMORED MULTI PURPOSE       1,150,759       1,150,759
                   VEHICLE (AMPV).
003               ASSAULT BREACHER               17,807          17,807
                   VEHICLE (ABV).
005               XM30 MECHANIZED               546,990         546,990
                   INFANTRY COMBAT
                   VEHICLE (MICV.
                  MODIFICATION OF
                   TRACKED COMBAT
                   VEHICLES
007               STRYKER UPGRADE......          45,725          45,725
008               BRADLEY FIRE SUPPORT            4,863           4,863
                   TEAM (BFIST) VEHICLE.
009               BRADLEY PROGRAM (MOD)         161,979         161,979
010               M109 FOV                       74,070          74,070
                   MODIFICATIONS.
011               PALADIN INTEGRATED             84,193         260,193
                   MANAGEMENT (PIM).
                      Program increase.                        [176,000]
012               IMPROVED RECOVERY             106,036         106,036
                   VEHICLE (M88
                   HERCULES).
013               JOINT ASSAULT BRIDGE.         163,354         163,354
014               ABRAMS UPGRADE                654,969         654,969
                   PROGRAM.
015               VEHICLE PROTECTION             16,134          16,134
                   SYSTEMS (VPS).
                  WEAPONS & OTHER
                   COMBAT VEHICLES
019               MORTAR SYSTEMS.......           3,575          13,575
                      Modular Turreted                          [10,000]
                      Mortar System.
020               LOCATION & AZIMUTH             10,420          10,420
                   DETERMINATION SYSTEM
                   (LADS.
024               NEXT GENERATION SQUAD         372,641         372,641
                   WEAPON.
                  MOD OF WEAPONS AND
                   OTHER COMBAT VEH
028               M777 MODS............           1,569           1,569
030               M119 MODIFICATIONS...           4,453           4,453
                  SUPPORT EQUIPMENT &
                   FACILITIES
031               ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M             512             512
                   (WOCV-WTCV).
032               PRODUCTION BASE               308,110         308,110
                   SUPPORT (WOCV-WTCV).
                       TOTAL                  3,728,159       3,914,159
                       PROCUREMENT OF
                       WEAPONS AND
                       TRACKED COMBAT
                       VEHICLES, ARMY.
 
                  PROCUREMENT OF
                   AMMUNITION, ARMY
                  SMALL/MEDIUM CAL
                   AMMUNITION
001               CTG, 5.56MM, ALL              114,418         134,418
                   TYPES.
                      Program decrease.                        [-30,000]
                      Program increase.                         [50,000]
002               CTG, 7.62MM, ALL               41,356          66,356
                   TYPES.
                      Program decrease.                        [-15,000]
                      Program increase.                         [40,000]
003               NEXT GENERATION SQUAD         536,695         556,695
                   WEAPON AMMUNITION.
                      6.8mm............                         [20,000]
004               CTG, HANDGUN, ALL               6,719           6,719
                   TYPES.
005               CTG, .50 CAL, ALL              50,861         115,861
                   TYPES.
                      Program increase.                         [65,000]
006               CTG, 20MM, ALL TYPES.           9,427           9,427
007               CTG, 25MM, ALL TYPES.          34,038          34,038
008               CTG, 30MM, ALL TYPES.         164,116         164,116
009               CTG, 40MM, ALL TYPES.         146,105         146,105
010               CTG, 50MM, ALL TYPES.          58,221          58,221
                  MORTAR AMMUNITION
011               60MM MORTAR, ALL               67,727          67,727
                   TYPES.
012               81MM MORTAR, ALL              123,745         123,745
                   TYPES.
013               120MM MORTAR, ALL             192,826         192,826
                   TYPES.
                  TANK AMMUNITION
014               CARTRIDGES, TANK,             421,735         421,735
                   105MM AND 120MM, ALL
                   TYPES.
                  ARTILLERY AMMUNITION
015               ARTILLERY CARTRIDGES,          48,841          48,841
                   75MM & 105MM, ALL
                   TYPES.
016               ARTILLERY PROJECTILE,         120,703         120,703
                   155MM, ALL TYPES.
018               ARTILLERY                     431,328         431,328
                   PROPELLANTS, FUZES
                   AND PRIMERS, ALL.
                  MINES
019               MINES & CLEARING               47,012          47,012
                   CHARGES, ALL TYPES.
021               MINE, AT, VOLCANO,              4,026           4,026
                   ALL TYPES.
                  ROCKETS
022               SHOULDER LAUNCHED              50,235          50,235
                   MUNITIONS, ALL TYPES.
023               ROCKET, HYDRA 70, ALL          92,772          92,772
                   TYPES.
                  OTHER AMMUNITION
024               CAD/PAD, ALL TYPES...          11,615          11,615
025               DEMOLITION MUNITIONS,          21,691          21,691
                   ALL TYPES.
026               GRENADES, ALL TYPES..          66,845          66,845
027               SIGNALS, ALL TYPES...          44,927          44,927
028               SIMULATORS, ALL TYPES          11,508          11,508
                  MISCELLANEOUS
030               AMMO COMPONENTS, ALL            4,109           4,109
                   TYPES.
031               ITEMS LESS THAN $5             16,290          16,290
                   MILLION (AMMO).
032               AMMUNITION PECULIAR            14,007          14,007
                   EQUIPMENT.
033               FIRST DESTINATION              18,712          18,712
                   TRANSPORTATION
                   (AMMO).
034               CLOSEOUT LIABILITIES.             101             101
                  PRODUCTION BASE
                   SUPPORT
035               INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES       2,331,763       2,351,763
                      6.8mm equipping                           [10,000]
                      support.
                      6.8mm facilities.                         [10,000]
036               CONVENTIONAL                  161,179         161,179
                   MUNITIONS
                   DEMILITARIZATION.
037               ARMS INITIATIVE......           3,935           3,935
                       TOTAL                  5,469,588       5,619,588
                       PROCUREMENT OF
                       AMMUNITION, ARMY.
 
                  OTHER PROCUREMENT,
                   ARMY
                  TACTICAL VEHICLES
001               FAMILY OF                     129,602         129,602
                   SEMITRAILERS.
003               GROUND MOBILITY               526,796         526,796
                   VEHICLES (GMV).
004               ARNG HMMWV                                    100,000
                   MODERNIZATION
                   PROGRAM.
                      HMMWV ABS/ESC                            [100,000]
                      Rollover
                      Mitigation.
006               TRUCK, DUMP, 20T               17,030          35,030
                   (CCE).
                      M917A3 Heavy Dump                         [18,000]
                      Truck for the
                      ARNG.
007               FAMILY OF MEDIUM              283,344         283,344
                   TACTICAL VEH (FMTV).
008               FAMILY OF COLD                 38,294          38,294
                   WEATHER ALL-TERRAIN
                   VEHICLE (C.
009               FIRETRUCKS &                   40,203          40,203
                   ASSOCIATED
                   FIREFIGHTING EQUIP.
010               FAMILY OF HEAVY               169,404         169,404
                   TACTICAL VEHICLES
                   (FHTV).
011               FAMILY OF COMMON               80,187          80,187
                   TACTICAL TRUCKS.
013               MODIFICATION OF IN             28,583          88,583
                   SVC EQUIP.
                      Ground combat                             [60,000]
                      vehicle Organic
                      Industrial Base.
                  NON-TACTICAL VEHICLES
014               NONTACTICAL VEHICLES,          12,029          12,029
                   OTHER.
                  COMM--JOINT
                   COMMUNICATIONS
016               C2 INFRASTRUCTURE....       1,293,203         933,203
                      Program decrease.                       [-360,000]
017               C2 TRANSPORT.........       1,581,863       1,121,863
                      Program decrease.                       [-460,000]
018               JCSE EQUIPMENT                     39              39
                   (USRDECOM).
                  COMM--SATELLITE
                   COMMUNICATIONS
021               DEFENSE ENTERPRISE             73,959          73,959
                   WIDEBAND SATCOM
                   SYSTEMS.
022               ASSURED POSITIONING,          243,303         243,303
                   NAVIGATION AND
                   TIMING.
                  COMM--COMBAT
                   COMMUNICATIONS
025               HANDHELD MANPACK              516,045         516,045
                   SMALL FORM FIT (HMS).
026               ARMY LINK 16 SYSTEMS.          33,711          33,711
027               UNIFIED COMMAND SUITE          20,187          20,187
028               COTS COMMUNICATIONS             5,188           5,188
                   EQUIPMENT.
030               ARMY COMMUNICATIONS &          54,428          54,428
                   ELECTRONICS.
                  COMM--INTELLIGENCE
                   COMM
031               CI AUTOMATION                  16,382          16,382
                   ARCHITECTURE-INTEL.
032               MULTI-DOMAIN                  243,732         208,732
                   INTELLIGENCE.
                      Program decrease.                        [-35,000]
                  INFORMATION SECURITY
033               INFORMATION SYSTEM                853             853
                   SECURITY PROGRAM-
                   ISSP.
034               COMMUNICATIONS                145,507         145,507
                   SECURITY (COMSEC).
035               BIOMETRIC ENABLING                 65              65
                   CAPABILITY (BEC).
                  COMM--BASE
                   COMMUNICATIONS
036               INFORMATION SYSTEMS..         133,046         127,046
                      Unjustified                               [-6,000]
                      growth.
037               BASE EMERGENCY                 50,644          50,644
                   COMMUNICATION.
038               INSTALLATION INFO             335,050         326,050
                   INFRASTRUCTURE MOD
                   PROGRAM.
                      Program decrease.                         [-9,000]
                  ELECT EQUIP--TACT INT
                   REL ACT (TIARA)
042               TITAN................         368,672         358,672
                      Program decrease.                        [-10,000]
043               TERRESTRIAL LAYER             172,558         147,558
                   SYSTEMS (TLS).
                      Program decrease.                        [-25,000]
044               COLLECTION CAPABILITY           5,914           5,914
046               DCGS-A-INTEL.........           1,075           1,075
047               TROJAN...............          48,885          48,885
048               MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP            12,441          12,441
                   (INTEL SPT).
                  ELECT EQUIP--
                   ELECTRONIC WARFARE
                   (EW)
050               AIR VIGILANCE (AV)...         106,497         106,497
052               ELECTRONIC WARFARE             46,570          46,570
                   PLANNING & MGMT
                   TOOLS (EWP.
053               FAMILY OF PERSISTENT              163             163
                   SURVEILLANCE CAP..
054               COUNTERINTELLIGENCE/            8,427           8,427
                   SECURITY
                   COUNTERMEASURES.
                  ELECT EQUIP--TACTICAL
                   SURV. (TAC SURV)
056               SENTINEL MODS........         485,840         485,840
059               BASE EXPEDITIARY                1,818           1,818
                   TARGETING AND SURV
                   SYS.
060               INDIRECT FIRE                  18,000          18,000
                   PROTECTION FAMILY OF
                   SYSTEMS.
061               FAMILY OF WEAPON               15,340          15,340
                   SIGHTS (FWS).
062               ENHANCED PORTABLE              13,228          13,228
                   INDUCTIVE ARTILLERY
                   FUZE SE.
063               SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS.           9,848           9,848
064               FORWARD LOOKING                84,134          84,134
                   INFRARED (IFLIR).
065               COUNTER SMALL                 994,127       1,009,127
                   UNMANNED AERIAL
                   SYSTEM (C-SUAS).
                      Non-kinetic c-UAS                         [15,000]
                      swarm solutions.
067               JOINT EFFECTS                   7,663           7,663
                   TARGETING SYSTEM
                   (JETS).
068               COMPUTER BALLISTICS:            6,382           6,382
                   LHMBC XM32.
069               MORTAR FIRE CONTROL             2,391           2,391
                   SYSTEM.
070               MORTAR FIRE CONTROL             7,139           7,139
                   SYSTEMS
                   MODIFICATIONS.
071               COUNTERFIRE RADARS...         196,522         176,522
                      Program decrease.                        [-10,000]
                      Unjustified                              [-10,000]
                      growth.
072               ADVANCED SITUATIONAL          397,286         397,286
                   AWARENESS SYSTEMS.
                  ELECT EQUIP--TACTICAL
                   C2 SYSTEMS
074               FIRE SUPPORT C2                 3,559           3,559
                   FAMILY.
075               AIR & MSL DEFENSE              61,127          61,127
                   PLANNING & CONTROL
                   SYS.
076               IAMD BATTLE COMMAND         1,052,868         982,868
                   SYSTEM.
                      Unjustified                              [-70,000]
                      growth.
077               AIAMD FAMILY OF                16,446          16,446
                   SYSTEMS (FOS)
                   COMPONENTS.
078               LIFE CYCLE SOFTWARE             5,265           5,265
                   SUPPORT (LCSS).
082               MOD OF IN-SVC                  16,673          16,673
                   EQUIPMENT (ENFIRE).
                  ELECT EQUIP--
                   AUTOMATION
083               ARMY TRAINING                   4,303           4,303
                   MODERNIZATION.
084               AUTOMATED DATA                 99,039          99,039
                   PROCESSING EQUIP.
086               HIGH PERF COMPUTING            75,004          75,004
                   MOD PGM (HPCMP).
                  CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
087A              CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..           1,577           1,577
                  CHEMICAL DEFENSIVE
                   EQUIPMENT
088               BASE DEFENSE SYSTEMS              143             143
                   (BDS).
089               CBRN DEFENSE.........          65,020          65,020
                  BRIDGING EQUIPMENT
090               TACTICAL BRIDGE,               35,806          35,806
                   FLOAT-RIBBON.
                  ENGINEER (NON-
                   CONSTRUCTION)
                   EQUIPMENT
092               ROBOTICS AND APPLIQUE          84,303          69,303
                   SYSTEMS.
                      Program decrease.                        [-15,000]
093               RENDER SAFE SETS KITS          12,461          12,461
                   OUTFITS.
094               FAMILY OF BOATS AND             8,028           8,028
                   MOTORS.
                  COMBAT SERVICE
                   SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
095               HEATERS AND ECU'S....          15,021          15,021
097               GROUND SOLDIER SYSTEM         193,491         193,491
101               CARGO AERIAL DEL &             39,505          39,505
                   PERSONNEL PARACHUTE
                   SYSTEM.
103               ITEMS LESS THAN $5M             4,129           4,129
                   (ENG SPT).
                  PETROLEUM EQUIPMENT
104               DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS,         133,881         133,881
                   PETROLEUM & WATER.
                  MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
105               COMBAT SUPPORT                 93,705         103,705
                   MEDICAL.
                      Modernization of                          [10,000]
                      field deployed
                      mobile X-rays.
                  MAINTENANCE EQUIPMENT
106               MOBILE MAINTENANCE             58,997          58,997
                   EQUIPMENT SYSTEMS.
                  CONSTRUCTION
                   EQUIPMENT
107               CONSTRUCTION                   72,582          72,582
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  RAIL FLOAT
                   CONTAINERIZATION
                   EQUIPMENT
108               ARMY WATERCRAFT ESP..          75,717          75,717
109               MANEUVER SUPPORT              104,705         166,705
                   VESSEL (MSV).
                      Army Autonomous                           [62,000]
                      Resupply Vessel.
110               ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M          22,021          22,021
                   (FLOAT/RAIL).
                  GENERATORS
111               GENERATORS AND                 79,456          79,456
                   ASSOCIATED EQUIP.
                  MATERIAL HANDLING
                   EQUIPMENT
112               FAMILY OF FORKLIFTS..           6,238           6,238
                  TRAINING EQUIPMENT
113               COMBAT TRAINING               141,848         141,848
                   CENTERS SUPPORT.
114               TRAINING DEVICES,             140,860         140,860
                   NONSYSTEM.
115               SYNTHETIC TRAINING            115,535         115,535
                   ENVIRONMENT (STE).
116               GAMING TECHNOLOGY IN            4,180           4,180
                   SUPPORT OF ARMY
                   TRAINING.
                  TEST MEASURE AND DIG
                   EQUIPMENT (TMD)
117               INTEGRATED FAMILY OF           18,570          18,570
                   TEST EQUIPMENT
                   (IFTE).
118               TEST EQUIPMENT                 53,597          53,597
                   MODERNIZATION
                   (TEMOD).
                  OTHER SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT
119               PHYSICAL SECURITY             137,271         137,271
                   SYSTEMS (OPA3).
120               BASE LEVEL COMMON              19,889          19,889
                   EQUIPMENT.
121               MODIFICATION OF IN-            41,358          41,358
                   SVC EQUIPMENT (OPA-
                   3).
122               PRODUCTION BASE               362,356         362,356
                   SUPPORT (OTH).
123               BUILDING, PRE-FAB,             10,878          10,878
                   RELOCATABLE.
124               SPECIAL EQUIPMENT FOR          88,721          88,721
                   TEST AND EVALUATION.
                  OPA2
126               INITIAL SPARES--C&E..           7,323           7,323
                       TOTAL OTHER           12,667,053      11,922,053
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       ARMY.
 
                  AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT,
                   NAVY
                  COMBAT AIRCRAFT
001               F/A-18E/F (FIGHTER)            49,088          49,088
                   HORNET.
002               JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER          995,707         995,707
                   CV.
003               JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER          651,081         651,081
                   CV AP.
004               JSF STOVL............          62,363          62,363
005               JSF STOVL AP.........          77,963          77,963
006               CH-53K (HEAVY LIFT)..       3,044,450       3,044,450
007               CH-53K (HEAVY LIFT)           429,295         429,295
                   AP.
009               H-1 UPGRADES (UH-1Y/            5,974           5,974
                   AH-1Z).
010               P-8A POSEIDON........       4,227,350       4,227,350
011               E-2D ADV HAWKEYE.....       2,075,025       1,725,025
                      E-2D Multi-Year                         [-350,000]
                      Procurement Cost
                      Savings.
012               E-2D ADV HAWKEYE AP..         550,000         495,000
                      Excess to need...                        [-55,000]
                  OTHER AIRCRAFT
015               KC-130J..............       1,601,906       1,601,906
016               MQ-4 TRITON..........         104,326         104,326
017               MQ-25................         771,177         771,177
018               MQ-25 AP.............          80,965          80,965
019               MARINE GROUP 5 UAS...         118,600         118,600
020               OTHER SUPPORT                 204,476         204,476
                   AIRCRAFT.
                  MODIFICATION OF
                   AIRCRAFT
021               F-18 A-D UNIQUE......          36,951          36,951
022               F-18E/F AND EA-18G            563,832         563,832
                   MODERNIZATION AND
                   SUSTAINM.
023               MARINE GROUP 5 UAS            179,603         179,603
                   SERIES.
024               AEA SYSTEMS..........          37,125          37,125
026               INFRARED SEARCH AND           171,345         171,345
                   TRACK (IRST).
027               ADVERSARY............          24,732          24,732
028               F-18 SERIES..........         858,716         858,716
029               H-53 SERIES..........          91,903          91,903
030               MH-60 SERIES.........         236,555         236,555
031               H-1 SERIES...........         304,267         304,267
032               E-2 SERIES...........          96,428          96,428
033               TRAINER A/C SERIES...          12,359          12,359
034               C-130 SERIES.........         185,266         185,266
036               CARGO/TRANSPORT A/C            20,100          20,100
                   SERIES.
037               E-6 SERIES...........         270,832         270,832
038               EXECUTIVE HELICOPTERS          57,319          57,319
                   SERIES.
039               T-45 SERIES..........         191,139         191,139
040               POWER PLANT CHANGES..          23,765          23,765
041               JPATS SERIES.........          28,059          28,059
043               COMMON ECM EQUIPMENT.         365,990         365,990
044               COMMON AVIONICS               246,728         222,056
                   CHANGES.
                      Program decrease.                        [-24,672]
045               COMMON DEFENSIVE               11,028          11,028
                   WEAPON SYSTEM.
046               ID SYSTEMS...........           3,199           3,199
047               P-8 SERIES...........         381,014         381,014
048               MAGTF EW FOR AVIATION          20,686          20,686
049               V-22 (TILT/ROTOR              641,715         641,715
                   ACFT) OSPREY.
050               NEXT GENERATION               458,658         458,658
                   JAMMER (NGJ).
051               F-35 STOVL SERIES....         428,881         428,881
052               F-35 CV SERIES.......         135,612         135,612
053               QRC..................          27,686          27,686
054               MQ-4 SERIES..........         157,849         157,849
                  AIRCRAFT SPARES AND
                   REPAIR PARTS
058               SPARES AND REPAIR           4,511,417       4,811,417
                   PARTS.
                      F-35B Spare Parts                        [150,000]
                      F-35C Spare Parts                        [150,000]
                  AIRCRAFT SUPPORT
                   EQUIP & FACILITIES
059               COMMON GROUND                 666,140         632,833
                   EQUIPMENT.
                      Program decrease.                        [-33,307]
060               AIRCRAFT INDUSTRIAL           113,513         113,513
                   FACILITIES.
061               WAR CONSUMABLES......          56,577          56,577
062               OTHER PRODUCTION               61,970          61,970
                   CHARGES.
063               SPECIAL SUPPORT               218,318         207,903
                   EQUIPMENT.
                      Program decrease.                        [-10,415]
                       TOTAL AIRCRAFT        26,947,023      26,773,629
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       NAVY.
 
                  WEAPONS PROCUREMENT,
                   NAVY
                  BALLISTIC MISSILES
001               CONVENTIONAL PROMPT           750,387         750,387
                   STRIKE.
                  MODIFICATION OF
                   MISSILES
002               TRIDENT II MODS......       3,912,267       3,912,267
                  STRATEGIC MISSILES
004               TOMAHAWK.............       1,015,106       1,015,106
                  TACTICAL MISSILES
005               AMRAAM...............         167,439         167,439
006               SIDEWINDER...........         174,750         174,750
007               JOINT ADVANCE                 557,806         557,806
                   TACTICAL MISSILE
                   (JATM).
008               STANDARD MISSILE.....         733,159         733,159
010               SMALL DIAMETER BOMB           166,688         166,688
                   II.
011               RAM..................         119,166         119,166
012               MSE MISSILE..........          97,835          97,835
013               JOINT AIR GROUND               73,226          73,226
                   MISSILE (JAGM).
015               AERIAL TARGETS.......         179,931         179,931
016               OTHER MISSILE SUPPORT           3,877           3,877
017               LRASM................         670,456         606,456
                      Transfer to RDN-                         [-64,000]
                      95.
018               NAVAL STRIKE MISSILE           75,972          75,972
                   (NSM).
019               NAVAL STRIKE MISSILE            2,103           2,103
                   (NSM) AP.
021               PRECISION ATTACK                4,019           4,019
                   STRIKE MUNITION
                   (PASM).
                  MODIFICATION OF
                   MISSILES
022               TOMAHAWK MODS........         799,139         799,139
023               ESSM.................         521,006         521,006
024               AARGM-ER.............              20              20
025               AARGM-ER AP..........           5,210           5,210
026               STANDARD MISSILES              69,579          69,579
                   MODS.
                  SUPPORT EQUIPMENT &
                   FACILITIES
027               WEAPONS INDUSTRIAL             62,403          62,403
                   FACILITIES.
028               INDUSTRIAL                        640             640
                   PREPAREDNESS.
                  ORDNANCE SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT
029               ORDNANCE SUPPORT               43,261          43,261
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  TORPEDOES AND RELATED
                   EQUIP
030               SSTD.................           3,969           3,969
031               MK-48 TORPEDO........         571,274         571,274
032               ASW TARGETS..........          47,277          47,277
                  MOD OF TORPEDOES AND
                   RELATED EQUIP
033               MK-54 TORPEDO MODS...         112,126         112,126
034               MK-48 TORPEDO ADCAP            67,279          67,279
                   MODS.
035               MARITIME MINES.......         251,724         251,724
                  SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
036               TORPEDO SUPPORT               160,445         160,445
                   EQUIPMENT.
037               ASW RANGE SUPPORT....           4,438           4,438
                  DESTINATION
                   TRANSPORTATION
038               FIRST DESTINATION               6,011           6,011
                   TRANSPORTATION.
                  GUNS AND GUN MOUNTS
039               SMALL ARMS AND                 13,946          13,946
                   WEAPONS.
                  MODIFICATION OF GUNS
                   AND GUN MOUNTS
040               CIWS MODS............           7,939           7,939
041               COAST GUARD WEAPONS..          49,537          49,537
042               GUN MOUNT MODS.......          84,004          84,004
043               LCS MODULE WEAPONS...           2,190           2,190
044               AIRBORNE MINE                  14,265          14,265
                   NEUTRALIZATION
                   SYSTEMS.
                  SPARES AND REPAIR
                   PARTS
046               SPARES AND REPAIR             167,242         167,242
                   PARTS.
                       TOTAL WEAPONS         11,769,111      11,705,111
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       NAVY.
 
                  PROCUREMENT OF
                   AMMUNITION, NAVY AND
                   MARINE CORPS
                  NAVY AMMUNITION
001               GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS          45,607          45,607
002               JDAM.................          96,935          96,935
003               AIRBORNE ROCKETS, ALL          92,145          92,145
                   TYPES.
004               MACHINE GUN                    14,832          14,832
                   AMMUNITION.
005               PRACTICE BOMBS.......          46,782          46,782
006               CARTRIDGES & CART              63,064          63,064
                   ACTUATED DEVICES.
007               AIR EXPENDABLE                121,059         121,059
                   COUNTERMEASURES.
008               JATOS................           8,179           8,179
009               5 INCH/54 GUN                  44,136          44,136
                   AMMUNITION.
010               INTERMEDIATE CALIBER           40,095          40,095
                   GUN AMMUNITION.
011               OTHER SHIP GUN                 43,106          43,106
                   AMMUNITION.
012               SMALL ARMS & LANDING           48,801          48,801
                   PARTY AMMO.
013               PYROTECHNIC AND                 9,510           9,510
                   DEMOLITION.
015               AMMUNITION LESS THAN            1,692           1,692
                   $5 MILLION.
016               EXPEDITIONARY                 165,662         165,662
                   LOITERING MUNITIONS.
                  MARINE CORPS
                   AMMUNITION
017               MORTARS..............         181,464         181,464
018               DIRECT SUPPORT                 29,715          29,715
                   MUNITIONS.
019               INFANTRY WEAPONS              142,179         142,179
                   AMMUNITION.
020               COMBAT SUPPORT                 12,510          12,510
                   MUNITIONS.
021               AMMO MODERNIZATION...          19,009          19,009
022               ARTILLERY MUNITIONS..         723,278         713,278
                      Unjustified                              [-10,000]
                      growth.
023               ITEMS LESS THAN $5              8,837           8,837
                   MILLION.
                       TOTAL                  1,958,597       1,948,597
                       PROCUREMENT OF
                       AMMUNITION, NAVY
                       AND MARINE CORPS.
 
                  SHIPBUILDING AND
                   CONVERSION, NAVY
                  FLEET BALLISTIC
                   MISSILE SHIPS
001               COLUMBIA CLASS             10,233,832      10,233,832
                   SUBMARINE.
002               COLUMBIA CLASS              4,763,342       4,888,342
                   SUBMARINE AP.
                      Additive                                  [45,000]
                      manufacturing
                      planning for
                      submarine
                      industrial base
                      resilience.
                      Scaling of Low-                           [10,000]
                      Cost Titanum
                      Manufacturing for
                      Submarine
                      Construction.
                      Submarine                                 [70,000]
                      Workforce
                      Pipeline.
                  OTHER WARSHIPS
003               CARRIER REPLACEMENT           641,907         641,907
                   PROGRAM.
004               CARRIER REPLACEMENT         1,940,566       1,940,566
                   PROGRAM AP.
005               CVN-81...............       1,447,882       1,447,882
006               VIRGINIA CLASS              8,402,316       8,402,316
                   SUBMARINE.
007               VIRGINIA CLASS              4,143,618       4,143,618
                   SUBMARINE AP.
009               BBG(X) AP............       1,000,000       1,000,000
010               CVN REFUELING               4,418,902       4,418,902
                   OVERHAULS.
011               CVN REFUELING                  53,070          53,070
                   OVERHAULS AP.
012               DDG 1000.............          66,516          66,516
013               DDG-51...............       2,954,238       3,954,238
                      Incremental                            [1,000,000]
                      funding for an
                      additional DDG-51.
017               FF(X)................       1,429,000       1,429,000
                  AMPHIBIOUS SHIPS
018               LPD FLIGHT II........       2,188,700       2,188,700
019               LPD FLIGHT II AP.....         355,950         355,950
021               LHA REPLACEMENT......       3,850,319       3,850,319
                  AUXILIARIES, CRAFT
                   AND PRIOR YR PROGRAM
                   COST
026               AS SUBMARINE TENDER..       4,444,000       3,564,000
                      Program decrease.                       [-380,000]
                      Reduction for                           [-500,000]
                      incremental
                      funding of
                      submarine tender
                      contract.
028               TAO FLEET OILER......       1,946,063       1,946,063
031               TAGOS SURTASS SHIPS..         610,664         580,664
                      Program decrease.                        [-30,000]
035               STRATEGIC SEALIFT....         450,000         450,000
036               OUTFITTING...........         741,270         741,270
037               SHIP TO SHORE                 733,895         733,895
                   CONNECTOR.
038               SERVICE CRAFT........         177,079         259,079
                      Additional Yard,                          [82,000]
                      Repair, Berthing
                      and Messing
                      Barges.
039               AUXILIARY PERSONNEL            83,000          83,000
                   LIGHTER.
040               BULK FUEL VESSEL.....         450,000         450,000
043               LCAC SLEP............          37,998          37,998
045               COMPLETION OF PY            2,611,990       2,599,990
                   SHIPBUILDING
                   PROGRAMS.
                      Program decrease.                        [-12,000]
                       TOTAL                 60,176,117      60,461,117
                       SHIPBUILDING AND
                       CONVERSION, NAVY.
 
                  OTHER PROCUREMENT,
                   NAVY
                  SHIP PROPULSION
                   EQUIPMENT
001               SURFACE POWER                  22,668          22,668
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  GENERATORS
002               SURFACE COMBATANT             103,871         103,871
                   HM&E.
                  NAVIGATION EQUIPMENT
003               OTHER NAVIGATION               83,510          83,510
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  OTHER SHIPBOARD
                   EQUIPMENT
004               SUB PERISCOPE,                344,885         344,885
                   IMAGING AND SUPT
                   EQUIP PROG.
005               DDG MOD..............       1,000,278       1,000,278
006               FIREFIGHTING                  177,708         177,708
                   EQUIPMENT.
007               COMMAND AND CONTROL             2,259           2,259
                   SWITCHBOARD.
008               LHA/LHD MIDLIFE......         131,315         131,315
009               LCC 19/20 EXTENDED                766             766
                   SERVICE LIFE PROGRAM.
010               POLLUTION CONTROL              22,506          22,506
                   EQUIPMENT.
011               SUBMARINE SUPPORT             330,951         330,951
                   EQUIPMENT.
012               VIRGINIA CLASS                 83,297          83,297
                   SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.
013               LCS CLASS SUPPORT              15,815          15,815
                   EQUIPMENT.
014               SUBMARINE BATTERIES..          26,211          26,211
015               LPD CLASS SUPPORT             213,723         213,723
                   EQUIPMENT.
016               DDG 1000 CLASS                 58,284          58,284
                   SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.
017               STRATEGIC PLATFORM             72,163          72,163
                   SUPPORT EQUIP.
018               DSSP EQUIPMENT.......           7,440           7,440
019               SMALL UNMANNED                    585             585
                   SURFACE VEHICLES.
020               LCAC.................          22,515          22,515
021               UNDERWATER EOD                 20,575          20,575
                   EQUIPMENT.
022               ITEMS LESS THAN $5             69,425          69,425
                   MILLION.
023               CHEMICAL WARFARE                2,425           2,425
                   DETECTORS.
                  REACTOR PLANT
                   EQUIPMENT
024               SHIP MAINTENANCE,           2,737,140       2,737,140
                   REPAIR AND
                   MODERNIZATION.
025               REACTOR COMPONENTS...         519,821         519,821
                  OCEAN ENGINEERING
026               DIVING AND SALVAGE             33,013          33,013
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  SMALL BOATS
027               MEDIUM UNMANNED               121,130         121,130
                   SURFACE VEHICLE
                   (MUSVS).
028               STANDARD BOATS.......          97,746         152,746
                      Additional 40ft                           [55,000]
                      Patrol Boats.
                  PRODUCTION FACILITIES
                   EQUIPMENT
029               OPERATING FORCES IPE.         492,100         492,100
                  OTHER SHIP SUPPORT
030               LCS COMMON MISSION             30,565          30,565
                   MODULES EQUIPMENT.
031               LCS MCM MISSION                65,113          65,113
                   MODULES.
032               LCS SUW MISSION                 1,719           1,719
                   MODULES.
033               LCS IN-SERVICE                315,272         125,272
                   MODERNIZATION.
                      Insufficient                             [-35,000]
                      justification.
                      Program decrease.                       [-155,000]
034               SMALL & MEDIUM UUV...         110,955         110,955
035               LARGE UUV............         222,998         256,998
                      Procurement of                            [34,000]
                      dual modality
                      large
                      displacement
                      unmanned undersea
                      vehicles.
036               EXTRA LARGE UUV......         135,802         135,802
                  LOGISTIC SUPPORT
037               LSD MIDLIFE &                     240             240
                   MODERNIZATION.
                  SHIP SONARS
039               AN/SQQ-89 SURF ASW            142,355         142,355
                   COMBAT SYSTEM.
040               SSN ACOUSTIC                  454,161         454,161
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  ASW ELECTRONIC
                   EQUIPMENT
042               SUBMARINE ACOUSTIC             68,881          68,881
                   WARFARE SYSTEM.
043               SSTD.................          14,857          14,857
044               FIXED SURVEILLANCE            490,548         490,548
                   SYSTEM.
045               SURTASS..............          72,190          72,190
                  ELECTRONIC WARFARE
                   EQUIPMENT
046               AN/SLQ-32............         653,483         653,483
                  RECONNAISSANCE
                   EQUIPMENT
047               SHIPBOARD IW EXPLOIT.         701,667         701,667
048               MARITIME BATTLESPACE            8,652           8,652
                   AWARENESS.
                  OTHER SHIP ELECTRONIC
                   EQUIPMENT
049               COOPERATIVE                    33,932          33,932
                   ENGAGEMENT
                   CAPABILITY.
050               NAVAL TACTICAL                 10,108          10,108
                   COMMAND SUPPORT
                   SYSTEM (NTCSS).
051               ATDLS................          52,758          52,758
052               NAVY COMMAND AND               16,167          16,167
                   CONTROL SYSTEM
                   (NCCS).
053               MINESWEEPING SYSTEM            14,879          14,879
                   REPLACEMENT.
054               NAVSTAR GPS RECEIVERS          43,097          43,097
                   (SPACE).
055               AMERICAN FORCES RADIO             289             289
                   AND TV SERVICE.
                  AVIATION ELECTRONIC
                   EQUIPMENT
056               ASHORE ATC EQUIPMENT.          83,057          83,057
057               AFLOAT ATC EQUIPMENT.          62,581          62,581
058               ID SYSTEMS...........          35,620          35,620
059               JOINT PRECISION                 2,976           2,976
                   APPROACH AND LANDING
                   SYSTEM (.
060               NAVAL MISSION                  54,487          54,487
                   PLANNING SYSTEMS.
                  OTHER SHORE
                   ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT
062               TACTICAL/MOBILE C4I            48,262          48,262
                   SYSTEMS.
063               INTELLIGENCE                   11,824          11,824
                   SURVEILLANCE AND
                   RECONNAISSANCE (ISR).
064               CANES................         493,046         486,046
                      Program decrease.                         [-7,000]
065               RADIAC...............          38,000          38,000
066               CANES-INTELL.........          43,028          43,028
067               GPETE................          31,462          31,462
068               MASF.................           5,822           5,822
069               INTEG COMBAT SYSTEM             6,454           6,454
                   TEST FACILITY.
070               EMI CONTROL                     3,435           3,435
                   INSTRUMENTATION.
071               IN-SERVICE RADARS AND         338,946         338,946
                   SENSORS.
                  SHIPBOARD
                   COMMUNICATIONS
072               BATTLE FORCE TACTICAL         125,661         125,661
                   NETWORK.
073               SHIPBOARD TACTICAL             50,350          50,350
                   COMMUNICATIONS.
074               SHIP COMMUNICATIONS           156,605         156,605
                   AUTOMATION.
075               COMMUNICATIONS ITEMS           15,097          15,097
                   UNDER $5M.
                  SUBMARINE
                   COMMUNICATIONS
076               SUBMARINE BROADCAST           173,069         173,069
                   SUPPORT.
077               SUBMARINE                      88,071          88,071
                   COMMUNICATION
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  SATELLITE
                   COMMUNICATIONS
078               SATELLITE                      57,961          57,961
                   COMMUNICATIONS
                   SYSTEMS.
079               NAVY MULTIBAND                 57,768          57,768
                   TERMINAL (NMT).
080               MOBILE ADVANCED EHF           202,305         202,305
                   TERMINAL (MAT).
                  CRYPTOGRAPHIC
                   EQUIPMENT
082               INFO SYSTEMS SECURITY         349,099         349,099
                   PROGRAM (ISSP).
083               MIO INTEL                       1,063           1,063
                   EXPLOITATION TEAM.
                  CRYPTOLOGIC EQUIPMENT
084               CRYPTOLOGIC                     7,419           7,419
                   COMMUNICATIONS EQUIP.
                  OTHER ELECTRONIC
                   SUPPORT
091               COAST GUARD EQUIPMENT          67,106          67,106
                  DRUG INTERDICTION
                   SUPPORT
092               OTHER DRUG                     57,568          57,568
                   INTERDICTION SUPPORT.
                  SONOBUOYS
093               SONOBUOYS--ALL TYPES.         300,151         550,151
                      Additional                               [250,000]
                      Procurement of
                      Sonobuoys.
                  AIRCRAFT SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT
094               MINOTAUR.............           4,831           4,831
095               WEAPONS RANGE SUPPORT         119,900         119,900
                   EQUIPMENT.
096               AIRCRAFT SUPPORT               69,065          69,065
                   EQUIPMENT.
097               ADVANCED ARRESTING             23,551          23,551
                   GEAR (AAG).
098               ELECTROMAGNETIC                36,908          36,908
                   AIRCRAFT LAUNCH
                   SYSTEM (EMALS.
099               METEOROLOGICAL                  7,477           7,477
                   EQUIPMENT.
100               AIRBORNE MCM.........           9,507           9,507
101               AVIATION SUPPORT              116,873         116,873
                   EQUIPMENT.
102               UMCS-UNMAN CARRIER            211,216         211,216
                   AVIATION(UCA)MISSION
                   CNTRL.
                  SHIP GUN SYSTEM
                   EQUIPMENT
103               SHIP GUN SYSTEMS                6,962           6,962
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  SHIP MISSILE SYSTEMS
                   EQUIPMENT
104               HARPOON SUPPORT                   195             195
                   EQUIPMENT.
105               SHIP MISSILE SUPPORT          431,069         416,069
                   EQUIPMENT.
                      Insufficient                             [-15,000]
                      justification.
106               TOMAHAWK SUPPORT              116,208         116,208
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  FBM SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
107               CPS SUPPORT EQUIPMENT         188,430         188,430
108               STRATEGIC MISSILE             327,941         327,941
                   SYSTEMS EQUIP.
                  ASW SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
109               SSN COMBAT CONTROL            165,416         165,416
                   SYSTEMS.
110               ASW SUPPORT EQUIPMENT          25,105          25,105
                  OTHER ORDNANCE
                   SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
111               EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE             48,252          48,252
                   DISPOSAL EQUIP.
113               ITEMS LESS THAN $5              2,592           2,592
                   MILLION.
                  OTHER EXPENDABLE
                   ORDNANCE
114               ANTI-SHIP MISSILE             606,241         606,241
                   DECOY SYSTEM.
115               SUBMARINE TRAINING             73,681          73,681
                   DEVICE MODS.
116               SURFACE TRAINING              218,181         218,181
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  CIVIL ENGINEERING
                   SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
117               PASSENGER CARRYING              3,567           3,567
                   VEHICLES.
118               GENERAL PURPOSE                 4,801           4,801
                   TRUCKS.
120               CONSTRUCTION &                 91,269          91,269
                   MAINTENANCE EQUIP.
121               FIRE FIGHTING                  17,107          17,107
                   EQUIPMENT.
122               TACTICAL VEHICLES....          46,796          46,796
123               AMPHIBIOUS EQUIPMENT.          53,916          53,916
124               POLLUTION CONTROL               3,586           3,586
                   EQUIPMENT.
125               ITEMS LESS THAN $5            131,449         131,449
                   MILLION.
126               PHYSICAL SECURITY                 998             998
                   VEHICLES.
                  SUPPLY SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT
127               SUPPLY EQUIPMENT.....          67,828          67,828
128               FIRST DESTINATION               4,732           4,732
                   TRANSPORTATION.
129               SPECIAL PURPOSE               323,644         323,644
                   SUPPLY SYSTEMS.
                  TRAINING DEVICES
130               TRAINING SUPPORT               10,608          10,608
                   EQUIPMENT.
131               TRAINING AND                  331,016         331,016
                   EDUCATION EQUIPMENT.
                  COMMAND SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT
132               COMMAND SUPPORT                55,202          55,202
                   EQUIPMENT.
133               MEDICAL SUPPORT                54,862          54,862
                   EQUIPMENT.
135               NAVAL MIP SUPPORT               5,213           5,213
                   EQUIPMENT.
136               OPERATING FORCES               15,107          15,107
                   SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.
137               C4ISR EQUIPMENT......          33,975          33,975
138               ENVIRONMENTAL SUPPORT          60,467          60,467
                   EQUIPMENT.
139               PHYSICAL SECURITY             218,037         191,037
                   EQUIPMENT.
                      Insufficient                             [-27,000]
                      justification.
140               ENTERPRISE                     40,490          40,490
                   INFORMATION
                   TECHNOLOGY.
                  OTHER
142               NEXT GENERATION               223,647         216,647
                   ENTERPRISE SERVICE.
                      Unjustified                               [-7,000]
                      growth.
143               CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES           7,131           7,131
                  CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
143A              CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..          42,813          42,813
                  SPARES AND REPAIR
                   PARTS
144               SPARES AND REPAIR             765,711         765,711
                   PARTS.
                       TOTAL OTHER           18,866,679      18,959,679
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       NAVY.
 
                  PROCUREMENT, MARINE
                   CORPS
                  TRACKED COMBAT
                   VEHICLES
002               AMPHIBIOUS COMBAT             237,336         237,336
                   VEHICLE FAMILY OF
                   VEHICLES.
003               LAV PIP..............          68,825          68,825
                  ARTILLERY AND OTHER
                   WEAPONS
004               155MM LIGHTWEIGHT               5,709           5,709
                   TOWED HOWITZER.
005               ARTILLERY WEAPONS             341,085         341,085
                   SYSTEM.
006               WEAPONS AND COMBAT             50,299          50,299
                   VEHICLES UNDER $5
                   MILLION.
                  GUIDED MISSILES
008               NAVAL STRIKE MISSILE          204,639         204,639
                   (NSM).
009               NAVAL STRIKE MISSILE           14,391          14,391
                   (NSM) AP.
010               GROUND BASED AIR            1,274,446       1,254,446
                   DEFENSE.
                      Unjustified                              [-20,000]
                      growth.
011               ANTI-ARMOR MISSILE-            63,020          63,020
                   JAVELIN.
012               FAMILY ANTI-ARMOR                 808             808
                   WEAPON SYSTEMS
                   (FOAAWS).
013               ANTI-ARMOR MISSILE-             1,265           1,265
                   TOW.
014               GUIDED MLRS ROCKET             61,355          61,355
                   (GMLRS).
                  REPAIR AND TEST
                   EQUIPMENT
016               REPAIR AND TEST                65,665          65,665
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  OTHER SUPPORT (TEL)
017               MODIFICATION KITS....           1,047           1,047
                  COMMAND AND CONTROL
                   SYSTEM (NON-TEL)
018               ITEMS UNDER $5                140,929         140,929
                   MILLION (COMM &
                   ELEC).
                  RADAR + EQUIPMENT
                   (NON-TEL)
020               GROUND/AIR TASK                55,622          60,622
                   ORIENTED RADAR (G/
                   ATOR).
                      Program increase.                          [5,000]
                  INTELL/COMM EQUIPMENT
                   (NON-TEL)
021               ELECTRO MAGNETIC               79,269          79,269
                   SPECTRUM OPERATIONS
                   (EMSO).
022               GCSS-MC..............           3,435           3,435
023               FIRE SUPPORT SYSTEM..         136,070         146,070
                      Fiber Optic Drone                         [10,000]
                      Procurement.
024               INTELLIGENCE SUPPORT          395,854         395,854
                   EQUIPMENT.
026               UNMANNED AIR SYSTEMS          262,815         262,815
                   (INTEL).
028               UAS PAYLOADS.........          14,834          14,834
                  OTHER SUPPORT (NON-
                   TEL)
029               MARINE CORPS                  190,282         190,282
                   ENTERPRISE NETWORK
                   (MCEN).
030               COMMON COMPUTER                15,950          15,950
                   RESOURCES.
031               COMMAND POST SYSTEMS.         442,308         442,308
032               RADIO SYSTEMS........         764,001         764,001
034               COMM & ELEC                    37,640          37,640
                   INFRASTRUCTURE
                   SUPPORT.
035               CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES          19,854          19,854
036               UNMANNED                        1,001           1,001
                   EXPEDITIONARY
                   SYSTEMS.
                  CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
039A              CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..           2,029           2,029
                  ADMINISTRATIVE
                   VEHICLES
040               COMMERCIAL CARGO               27,582          27,582
                   VEHICLES.
                  TACTICAL VEHICLES
041               MOTOR TRANSPORT                22,460          22,460
                   MODIFICATIONS.
042               JOINT LIGHT TACTICAL          244,941         244,941
                   VEHICLE.
043               TRAILERS.............         136,438         136,438
                  ENGINEER AND OTHER
                   EQUIPMENT
044               TACTICAL FUEL SYSTEMS         112,197         112,197
045               POWER EQUIPMENT                34,219          34,219
                   ASSORTED.
046               AMPHIBIOUS SUPPORT             29,042          29,042
                   EQUIPMENT.
047               EOD SYSTEMS..........          24,297          24,297
                  MATERIALS HANDLING
                   EQUIPMENT
048               PHYSICAL SECURITY             151,740         151,740
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  GENERAL PROPERTY
049               FIELD MEDICAL                 227,761         227,761
                   EQUIPMENT.
050               TRAINING DEVICES.....         136,639         136,639
051               FAMILY OF                     115,681         115,681
                   CONSTRUCTION
                   EQUIPMENT.
052               ULTRA-LIGHT TACTICAL              972             972
                   VEHICLE (ULTV).
                  OTHER SUPPORT
053               ITEMS LESS THAN $5             54,228          54,228
                   MILLION.
                  SPARES AND REPAIR
                   PARTS
054               SPARES AND REPAIR              18,925          18,925
                   PARTS.
                       TOTAL                  6,288,905       6,283,905
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       MARINE CORPS.
 
                  AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT,
                   AIR FORCE
                  STRATEGIC OFFENSIVE
001               B-21 RAIDER..........       2,230,615       2,230,615
002               B-21 RAIDER AP.......       1,005,667       1,005,667
                  TACTICAL FORCES
003               F-35.................       2,393,723       2,393,723
004               F-35 AP..............         738,103         738,103
005               COLLABORATIVE COMBAT          996,528         996,528
                   AIRCRAFT.
006               COLLABORATIVE COMBAT          150,500         150,500
                   AIRCRAFT AP.
007               F-15EX...............       2,656,716       2,656,716
009               JOINT SIMULATION               52,695          52,695
                   ENVIRONMENT.
                  TACTICAL AIRLIFT
010               KC-46A MDAP..........       3,520,530       3,470,530
                      BTAR early to                            [-50,000]
                      need.
                  OTHER AIRLIFT
011               C-130J...............         636,680         916,680
                      Additional C-130J                         [20,000]
                      weapon system
                      trainer.
                      Two additional                           [260,000]
                      aircraft.
                  UPT TRAINERS
012               ADVANCED PILOT                529,464         529,464
                   TRAINING T-7A.
013               ADVANCED PILOT                 69,690          69,690
                   TRAINING T-7A AP.
                  HELICOPTERS
014               MH-139A..............         252,949         380,578
                      Four additional                          [127,629]
                      aircraft.
015               COMBAT RESCUE                  69,395          69,395
                   HELICOPTER.
                  MISSION SUPPORT
                   AIRCRAFT
016               C-37A................         208,000         208,000
018               CIVIL AIR PATROL A/C.           3,219           3,219
                  OTHER AIRCRAFT
020               TARGET DRONES........          31,912          31,912
021               COMPASS CALL.........         660,000         660,000
024               RQ-20B PUMA..........          15,513          15,513
                  STRATEGIC AIRCRAFT
025               B-2A.................         178,668         178,668
026               B-1B.................         146,862         106,862
                      Excessive growth.                        [-40,000]
027               B-52.................         422,399         422,399
028               LARGE AIRCRAFT                 66,638          66,638
                   INFRARED
                   COUNTERMEASURES.
                  TACTICAL AIRCRAFT
029               COLLABORATIVE COMBAT              822             822
                   AIRCRAFT MODS.
031               F-15.................         140,204         140,204
032               F-15EX...............         214,176         214,176
033               F-16 MODIFICATIONS...         946,747         946,747
034               F-22A................       1,052,088       1,052,088
035               F-35 MODIFICATIONS...         335,973         335,973
036               F-15 EPAW............         141,233         141,233
037               KC-46A MDAP..........          85,515          85,515
                  AIRLIFT AIRCRAFT
038               C-5..................          10,308          10,308
039               C-17A................          59,867          59,867
042               OSA-EA MODIFICATIONS.         136,786         136,786
                  TRAINER AIRCRAFT
043               GLIDER MODS..........             164             164
044               T-6..................         131,747         131,747
046               T-38.................          84,452          84,452
                  OTHER AIRCRAFT
047               U-2 MODS.............             297          10,297
                      Program increase.                         [10,000]
050               C-130................          23,546          23,546
051               C-130J MODS..........         315,308         315,308
052               C-135................         158,715         148,715
                      Slow execution...                        [-10,000]
053               COMPASS CALL.........         506,265         506,265
054               CVR (CONNON ULF                    18              18
                   RECEIVER) INC 2.
055               RC-135...............         252,846         252,846
056               E-3..................             841             841
057               E-4..................          30,779          30,779
058               H-1..................          17,872          17,872
059               MH-139A MOD..........           5,021           5,021
061               HH60W MODIFICATIONS..          46,662          46,662
062               HC/MC-130                     257,742         257,742
                   MODIFICATIONS.
063               OTHER AIRCRAFT.......         102,052          91,847
                      Program decrease.                        [-10,205]
064               MQ-9 MODS............         105,966         105,966
065               SOFTWARE DEFINED USER          25,847          25,847
                   EQUIPMENT.
066               SENIOR LEADER C3               32,654          32,654
                   SYSTEM--AIRCRAFT.
067               CV-22 MODS...........         168,042         168,042
                  AIRCRAFT SPARES AND
                   REPAIR PARTS
068               INITIAL SPARES/REPAIR       1,441,052       1,741,052
                   PARTS.
                      F-35A Spare Parts                        [300,000]
                  COMMON SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT
071               AIRCRAFT REPLACEMENT          252,808         227,528
                   SUPPORT EQUIP.
                      Program decrease.                        [-25,280]
                  POST PRODUCTION
                   SUPPORT
073               B-2B.................          95,457          95,457
074               B-52.................             114             114
075               C-17A................           3,027           3,027
076               CV-22 POST PRODUCTION           5,088           5,088
                   SUPPORT.
079               F-15EX...............          16,930          16,930
080               F-16 POST PRODUCTION           57,781          57,781
                   SUPPORT.
081               HC/MC-130 POST PROD..          20,415          20,415
083               MQ-9 POST PROD.......          15,365          15,365
                  INDUSTRIAL
                   PREPAREDNESS
084               INDUSTRIAL                     20,590          20,590
                   RESPONSIVENESS.
                  WAR CONSUMABLES
085               WAR CONSUMABLES......          85,387          85,387
                  OTHER PRODUCTION
                   CHARGES
086               OTHER PRODUCTION            2,528,401       2,528,401
                   CHARGES.
                  CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
088A              CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..          15,800          15,800
                       TOTAL AIRCRAFT        26,985,236      27,567,380
                       PROCUREMENT, AIR
                       FORCE.
 
                  MISSILE PROCUREMENT,
                   AIR FORCE
                  MISSILE REPLACEMENT
                   EQUIPMENT--BALLISTIC
001               MISSILE REPLACEMENT            27,006          27,006
                   EQ-BALLISTIC.
                  BALLISTIC MISSILES
003               GROUND BASED                  107,602         107,602
                   STRATEGIC DETERRENT.
                  STRATEGIC
005               LONG RANGE STAND-OFF          506,047         506,047
                   WEAPON.
006               LONG RANGE STAND-OFF          456,810         456,810
                   WEAPON AP.
                  TACTICAL
007               REPLAC EQUIP & WAR             23,575          23,575
                   CONSUMABLES.
009               AGM-183A AIR-LAUNCHED         452,035         452,035
                   RAPID RESPONSE
                   WEAPON.
010               FAMILY OF AFFORDABLE           55,000          55,000
                   MASS MISSILE (FAMM).
011               HYPERSONIC ATTACK             403,974         403,974
                   CRUISE MISSILE.
012               JOINT AIR-SURFACE             967,866         967,866
                   STANDOFF MISSILE.
013               JOINT ADVANCED                608,743         608,743
                   TACTICAL MISSILE.
014               JOINT STRIKE MISSILE.         384,607         384,607
015               LRASM0...............         500,916         500,916
016               SIDEWINDER (AIM-9X)..         419,238         419,238
017               AMRAAM...............         115,856         115,856
019               SMALL DIAMETER BOMB..          44,596          44,596
020               SMALL DIAMETER BOMB           194,509         194,509
                   II.
021               STAND-IN ATTACK               401,607         401,607
                   WEAPON (SIAW).
                  INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES
022               INDUSTRIAL                        931             931
                   PREPAREDNESS/POL
                   PREVENTION.
                  CLASS IV
023               ICBM FUZE MOD........         169,747         169,747
025               MM III MODIFICATIONS.           9,865           9,865
026               AIR LAUNCH CRUISE              30,407          30,407
                   MISSILE (ALCM).
                  MISSILE SPARES AND
                   REPAIR PARTS
027               MSL SPRS/REPAIR PARTS          15,621          15,621
                   (INITIAL).
028               MSL SPRS/REPAIR PARTS         123,224         123,224
                   (REPLEN).
                  SPECIAL PROGRAMS
030               SPECIAL UPDATE                168,578         168,578
                   PROGRAMS.
                  CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
030A              CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..         622,814         622,814
                       TOTAL MISSILE          6,811,174       6,811,174
                       PROCUREMENT, AIR
                       FORCE.
 
                  PROCUREMENT OF
                   AMMUNITION, AIR
                   FORCE
                  ROCKETS
001               ROCKETS..............         102,059         102,059
                  CARTRIDGES
002               CARTRIDGES...........         157,508         157,508
                  BOMBS
003               GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS         168,469         168,469
004               MASSIVE ORDNANCE                  755             755
                   PENETRATOR (MOP).
005               JOINT DIRECT ATTACK           129,568         129,568
                   MUNITION.
006               B61-12 TRAINER.......          24,226          24,226
                  OTHER ITEMS
007               CAD/PAD..............          45,448          45,448
008               EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE              7,168           7,168
                   DISPOSAL (EOD).
009               SPARES AND REPAIR                 626             626
                   PARTS.
010               FIRST DESTINATION               2,873           2,873
                   TRANSPORTATION.
011               ITEMS LESS THAN                 5,468           5,468
                   $5,000,000.
                  FLARES
013               EXPENDABLE                     99,180          99,180
                   COUNTERMEASURES.
                  FUZES
014               FUZES................         141,149         141,149
                  SMALL ARMS
015               SMALL ARMS...........          25,619          25,619
                       TOTAL                    910,116         910,116
                       PROCUREMENT OF
                       AMMUNITION, AIR
                       FORCE.
 
                  OTHER PROCUREMENT,
                   AIR FORCE
                  SPECIAL PURPOSE
                   VEHICLES
005               JOINT LIGHT TACTICAL          103,304         103,304
                   VEHICLE.
                  MATERIALS HANDLING
                   EQUIPMENT
009               MATERIALS HANDLING              2,132           2,132
                   VEHICLES.
                  MISSION SUPPORT
                   VEHICLES
012               MISSION SUPPORT               439,892         439,892
                   VEHICLES.
                  COMM SECURITY
                   EQUIPMENT(COMSEC)
014               COMSEC EQUIPMENT.....         374,613         374,613
                  INTELLIGENCE PROGRAMS
016               INTERNATIONAL INTEL            19,060          19,060
                   TECH & ARCHITECTURES.
017               INTELLIGENCE TRAINING           5,531           5,531
                   EQUIPMENT.
018               INTELLIGENCE COMM              37,717          37,717
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  ELECTRONICS PROGRAMS
019               AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL &          58,313          58,313
                   LANDING SYS.
021               BATTLE CONTROL                  3,391           3,391
                   SYSTEM--FIXED.
022               THEATER AIR CONTROL            11,640          11,640
                   SYS IMPROVEMEN.
023               3D EXPEDITIONARY LONG-        430,607         430,607
                   RANGE RADAR.
024               WEATHER OBSERVATION            33,111          33,111
                   FORECAST.
025               STRATEGIC COMMAND AND          89,931          89,931
                   CONTROL.
026               CHEYENNE MOUNTAIN               7,434           7,434
                   COMPLEX.
027               MISSION PLANNING               23,927          23,927
                   SYSTEMS.
028               STRATEGIC MISSION               9,435           9,435
                   PLANNING & EXECUTION
                   SYSTEM.
                  SPCL COMM-ELECTRONICS
                   PROJECTS
029               GENERAL INFORMATION           234,417         234,417
                   TECHNOLOGY.
033               AIR FORCE PHYSICAL          1,770,698       1,660,698
                   SECURITY SYSTEM.
                      Program decrease.                       [-110,000]
034               SAMTEC COMMUNICATIONS          17,641          17,641
035               COMBAT TRAINING                94,378          95,878
                   RANGES.
                      BMGR LMR Upgrades                          [1,500]
036               MINIMUM ESSENTIAL             279,516         279,516
                   EMERGENCY COMM N.
037               WIDE AREA                      17,000          17,000
                   SURVEILLANCE (WAS).
038               C3 COUNTERMEASURES...         163,127         163,127
040               THEATER BATTLE MGT C2             460             460
                   SYSTEM.
041               AIR & SPACE                    23,778          23,778
                   OPERATIONS CENTER
                   (AOC).
                  AIR FORCE
                   COMMUNICATIONS
042               BASE INFORMATION              125,702         125,702
                   TRANSPT INFRAST
                   (BITI) WIRED.
043               AFNET................         325,839         322,839
                      Unjustified                               [-3,000]
                      growth.
044               JOINT COMMUNICATIONS           16,267          16,267
                   SUPPORT ELEMENT
                   (JCSE).
045               USCENTCOM............          15,328          15,328
046               USSTRATCOM...........           5,013           5,013
047               USSPACECOM...........         195,370         195,370
                  ORGANIZATION AND BASE
048               TACTICAL C-E                  162,835         162,835
                   EQUIPMENT.
049               NEXT GENERATION                80,321          80,321
                   SURVIVAL RADIO
                   (NGSR).
051               RADIO EQUIPMENT......          36,874          36,874
052               BASE COMM                     158,113         158,113
                   INFRASTRUCTURE.
                  MODIFICATIONS
053               COMM ELECT MODS......         220,855         220,855
                  PERSONAL SAFETY &
                   RESCUE EQUIP
054               PERSONAL SAFETY AND            87,994          87,994
                   RESCUE EQUIPMENT.
                  DEPOT PLANT+MTRLS
                   HANDLING EQ
055               POWER CONDITIONING             14,444          14,444
                   EQUIPMENT.
056               MECHANIZED MATERIAL            24,594          24,594
                   HANDLING EQUIP.
                  BASE SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT
057               BASE PROCURED                  81,686          81,686
                   EQUIPMENT.
058               ENGINEERING AND EOD           247,989         247,989
                   EQUIPMENT.
059               MOBILITY EQUIPMENT...         288,930         268,930
                      Program decrease.                        [-20,000]
060               FUELS SUPPORT                  81,066          81,066
                   EQUIPMENT (FSE).
061               BASE MAINTENANCE AND           68,127          68,127
                   SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.
                  SPECIAL SUPPORT
                   PROJECTS
063               DARP RC135...........          31,496          31,496
064               DCGS-AF..............         316,157         306,157
                      Unjustified                              [-10,000]
                      growth.
066               SPECIAL UPDATE              5,099,420       5,099,420
                   PROGRAM.
                  CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
066A              CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..      27,241,704      27,241,704
                  SPARES AND REPAIR
                   PARTS
067               SPARES AND REPAIR               8,657           8,657
                   PARTS (CYBER).
068               SPARES AND REPAIR              14,129          14,129
                   PARTS.
                       TOTAL OTHER           39,199,963      39,058,463
                       PROCUREMENT, AIR
                       FORCE.
 
                  PROCUREMENT, SPACE
                   FORCE
                  SPACE PROCUREMENT, SF
001               AF SATELLITE COMM              54,391          54,391
                   SYSTEM.
003               AUXILIARY PAYLOADS...         241,076         241,076
005               COUNTERSPACE SYSTEMS.         459,466         459,466
007               EVOLVED STRATEGIC             139,700         139,700
                   SATCOM (ESS) AP.
011               GROUND MOVING TARGET        1,016,612       1,016,612
                   INDICATOR (GMTI).
013               GENERAL INFORMATION            14,895          14,895
                   TECH--SPACE.
014               GPSIII FOLLOW ON.....         680,875         680,875
017               SPACEBORNE EQUIP               95,061          95,061
                   (COMSEC).
018               MILSATCOM............          38,067          38,067
020               SPECIAL SPACE               2,021,299       2,021,299
                   ACTIVITIES.
021               MOBILE USER OBJECTIVE          50,640          50,640
                   SYSTEM.
022               NATIONAL SECURITY           3,370,958       3,370,958
                   SPACE LAUNCH.
024               PTES HUB.............          12,046          12,046
025               SPACE DEVELOPMENT             835,197         835,197
                   AGENCY LAUNCH.
026               SPACE DIGITAL                   5,119           5,119
                   INTEGRATED NETWORK
                   (SDIN).
027               SPACE MODS...........         448,674         448,674
028               SPACELIFT RANGE                64,885          64,885
                   SYSTEM SPACE.
029               WIDEBAND SATCOM                81,483          81,483
                   OPERATIONAL
                   MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS.
                  SPARES
030               SPARES AND REPAIR                 971             971
                   PARTS.
                  NON-TACTICAL VEHICLES
031               USSF VEHICLES........           6,032           6,032
                  SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
033               POWER CONDITIONING              7,906           7,906
                   EQUIPMENT.
                       TOTAL                  9,645,353       9,645,353
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       SPACE FORCE.
 
                  PROCUREMENT, DEFENSE-
                   WIDE
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT, OSD
002               MAJOR EQUIPMENT, OSD.         213,031         208,031
                      Program decrease.                         [-5,000]
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT, WHS
006               MAJOR EQUIPMENT, WHS.             453             453
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DISA
007               INFORMATION SYSTEMS            27,652          27,652
                   SECURITY.
008               TELEPORT PROGRAM.....          93,512          93,512
009               ITEMS LESS THAN $5             24,013          24,013
                   MILLION.
010               DEFENSE INFORMATION           392,650         392,650
                   SYSTEM NETWORK.
012               WHITE HOUSE                   611,216         611,216
                   COMMUNICATION AGENCY.
013               SENIOR LEADERSHIP              81,584          81,584
                   ENTERPRISE.
015               JOINT SERVICE                  53,596          53,596
                   PROVIDER.
016               FOURTH ESTATE NETWORK          60,808          60,808
                   OPTIMIZATION (4ENO).
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DLA
022               MAJOR EQUIPMENT......          19,707          19,707
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT, TJS
024               MAJOR EQUIPMENT, TJS.          11,689          11,689
025               COUNTER-SMALL                 800,000         800,000
                   UNMANNED AIRCRAFT
                   SYSTEMS.
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT,
                   MISSILE DEFENSE
                   AGENCY
029               BMDS AN/TPY-2 RADARS.          17,840          17,840
030               SM-3 IIAS............         778,964         778,964
031               ARROW 3 UPPER TIER            150,000         150,000
                   SYSTEMS.
032               SHORT RANGE BALLISTIC          30,000          30,000
                   MISSILE DEFENSE
                   (SRBMD).
035               IRON DOME............          20,000          20,000
036               AEGIS BMD HARDWARE             39,256          39,256
                   AND SOFTWARE.
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DHRA
037               PERSONNEL                      82,438          82,438
                   ADMINISTRATION.
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT,
                   DEFENSE THREAT
                   REDUCTION AGENCY
040               VEHICLES.............              99              99
041               OTHER MAJOR EQUIPMENT           8,963           8,963
042               DTRA CYBER ACTIVITIES             900             900
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT,
                   DMACT
044               MAJOR EQUIPMENT......           6,854           6,854
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT,
                   USCYBERCOM
045               CYBERSPACE OPERATIONS         103,855         103,855
                  CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
045A              CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..       3,587,405       3,587,405
                  AVIATION PROGRAMS
050               ROTARY WING UPGRADES          185,930         185,930
                   AND SUSTAINMENT.
051               SKYRAIDER II.........          59,894         279,894
                      Program increase.                        [220,000]
053               NON-STANDARD AVIATION          72,650         110,290
                      Non-Standard                              [37,640]
                      Aviations (NSAv).
055               MH-47 CHINOOK........         168,411         168,411
056               CV-22 MODIFICATION...           9,479           9,479
057               MQ-9 UNMANNED AERIAL           75,841          75,841
                   VEHICLE.
059               AC/MC-130J...........         366,857         366,857
                  SHIPBUILDING
060               UNDERWATER SYSTEMS...          76,879          76,879
                  AMMUNITION PROGRAMS
061               ORDNANCE ITEMS <$5M..         237,153         380,683
                      Ground Organic                            [25,519]
                      Precision Strike
                      Systems (GOPSS).
                      Munitions War                            [118,011]
                      Reserves.
                  OTHER PROCUREMENT
                   PROGRAMS
062               INTELLIGENCE SYSTEMS.         319,241         319,241
064               OTHER ITEMS <$5M.....         119,047         119,047
065               COMBATANT CRAFT                33,858          33,858
                   SYSTEMS.
066               SPECIAL PROGRAMS.....         130,462         130,462
067               TACTICAL VEHICLES....          36,983          36,983
068               WARRIOR SYSTEMS <$5M.         511,016         635,125
                      Advanced Tactical                          [5,000]
                      Pants.
                      Electromagnetic                           [79,945]
                      Warfare (EW)
                      Family of Systems.
                      Ground Infil                              [39,164]
                      Protection
                      Systems(GIPS).
069               COMBAT MISSION                  4,988           4,988
                   REQUIREMENTS.
070               OPERATIONAL                    28,074          28,074
                   ENHANCEMENTS
                   INTELLIGENCE.
071               OPERATIONAL                   360,595         408,595
                   ENHANCEMENTS.
                      Accelerated                               [36,000]
                      Fielding of Group
                      3 Unmanned Aerial
                      System (UAS)
                      Capability.
                      Ground Infil                              [12,000]
                      Protection
                      Systems(GIPS).
                  CBDP
072               CHEMICAL BIOLOGICAL           223,166         223,166
                   SITUATIONAL
                   AWARENESS.
073               CB PROTECTION &               117,859         117,859
                   HAZARD MITIGATION.
                       TOTAL                 10,354,868      10,923,147
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       DEFENSE-WIDE.
 
                  NATIONAL GUARD AND
                   RESERVE EQUIPMENT
                  ARMY RESERVE
001               MISC EQUIPMENT--ARMY          155,000         155,000
                   RESERVE.
                  NAVY RESERVE
002               MISC EQUIPMENT--NAVY           57,000          57,000
                   RESERVE.
                  MARINE CORPS RESERVE
003               MISC EQUIPMENT--               23,000          23,000
                   MARINE CORPS RESERVE.
                  AIR FORCE RESERVE
004               MISC EQUIPMENT--AF            155,000         155,000
                   RESERVE.
                  ARMY NATIONAL GUARD
005               MISC EQUIPMENT--ARMY          305,000         305,000
                   NATIONAL GUARD.
                  AIR NATIONAL GUARD
006               MISC EQUIPMENT--AIR           305,000         305,000
                   FORCE NATIONAL GUARD.
                       TOTAL NATIONAL         1,000,000       1,000,000
                       GUARD AND
                       RESERVE
                       EQUIPMENT.
 
                  DEFENSE STRATEGIC
                   CAPITAL CREDIT
                   PROGRAM
                  DEFENSE STRATEGIC
                   CAPITAL CREDIT
                   PROGRAM
001               OFFICE OF STRATEGIC           216,000         216,000
                   CAPITAL LOAN PROGRAM.
                       TOTAL DEFENSE            216,000         216,000
                       STRATEGIC
                       CAPITAL CREDIT
                       PROGRAM.
 
                       TOTAL                257,058,141     258,237,453
                       PROCUREMENT.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

        TITLE XLII--RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION

SEC. 4201. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                SEC. 4201. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION (In Thousands of Dollars)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                     FY 2027          House
  Line             Program Element                          Item                     Request        Authorized
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         ..................................  RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST AND
                                              EVALUATION, ARMY
         ..................................  BASIC RESEARCH
   001   0601102A                            DEFENSE RESEARCH SCIENCES.........         215,322         225,322
         ..................................      Program increase..............                         [10,000]
   002   0601103A                            UNIVERSITY RESEARCH INITIATIVES...          63,102          83,102
         ..................................      Program increase..............                         [20,000]
   003   0601104A                            UNIVERSITY AND INDUSTRY RESEARCH            53,598          71,098
                                              CENTERS.
         ..................................      Foundational Research for                               [5,000]
                                                 biotechnology.
         ..................................      Program increase..............                         [10,000]
         ..................................      Research Center of Excellence                           [2,500]
                                                 Partnership.
   005   0601275A                            ELECTRONIC WARFARE BASIC RESEARCH.          64,031          64,031
   006   0601601A                            ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND                                  2,500
                                              MACHINE LEARNING BASIC RESEARCH.
         ..................................      Army AI Integration Center....                          [2,500]
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL BASIC RESEARCH........         396,053         446,053
         ..................................
         ..................................  APPLIED RESEARCH
   009   0602135A                            COUNTER SMALL UNMANNED AERIAL               26,523          29,023
                                              SYSTEMS (C-SUAS) APPLIED RESEARCH.
         ..................................      Enhanced Acoustic UAS                                   [2,500]
                                                 Detection and Tracking.
   010   0602141A                            LETHALITY TECHNOLOGY..............         232,046         239,546
         ..................................      Applied Armaments Tech for                              [2,500]
                                                 Distributed Lethality.
         ..................................      Dynamic Digital Definition of                           [2,500]
                                                 Armaments Systems.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-2,500]
         ..................................      Rapid Apt Processing                                    [5,000]
                                                 Technologies for Hypersonics.
   011   0602143A                            SOLDIER LETHALITY TECHNOLOGY......          68,018          90,518
         ..................................      Advance Medical Simulation                             [15,000]
                                                 Science and Technologies for
                                                 Warfighters.
         ..................................      Isostatic Pressure Advanced                             [2,500]
                                                 Armor Development.
         ..................................      Next Generation Ballistic                               [2,500]
                                                 Plate.
         ..................................      Pathfinder Air Assault........                          [2,500]
   012   0602144A                            GROUND TECHNOLOGY.................          44,146          46,646
         ..................................      Research on the Soil-Structure                          [2,500]
                                                 Interaction of Buildings
                                                 Subjected to Blast Loading
                                                 from Hypersonic Strike
                                                 Vehicles.
   013   0602145A                            NEXT GENERATION COMBAT VEHICLE              70,540          75,540
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
         ..................................      Standardized Army Battery for                           [5,000]
                                                 Enhanced Performance and
                                                 Safety.
   014   0602146A                            NETWORK C3I TECHNOLOGY............          53,373          70,873
         ..................................      Autonomous EMS Dominance &                              [2,500]
                                                 Edge Resilience.
         ..................................      Distributed Aperture Spectrum                           [5,000]
                                                 Dominance.
         ..................................      Enhancing Planning and                                  [5,000]
                                                 Rehearsal for Large-Scale
                                                 Combat Operations.
         ..................................      Group 3 autonomous operations                           [5,000]
                                                 in RF-contested environments.
   015   0602147A                            LONG RANGE PRECISION FIRES                  24,086          31,586
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
         ..................................      Digital Arsenal for Solid                               [2,500]
                                                 Rocket Motors.
         ..................................      PRESTO-Fires Testbed..........                          [5,000]
   016   0602148A                            FUTURE VERTICLE LIFT TECHNOLOGY...          17,727          20,227
         ..................................      UxS Platform Agnostic                                   [2,500]
                                                 Intelligent Robotic Core.
   017   0602150A                            AIR AND MISSILE DEFENSE TECHNOLOGY          36,113          43,613
         ..................................      AI Integration and Security                             [5,000]
                                                 for IBCS.
         ..................................      C-UAS Testing and Research                              [2,500]
                                                 Center.
   021   0602183A                            AIR PLATFORM APPLIED RESEARCH.....          43,700          53,700
         ..................................      Ion-trap quantum computing                             [10,000]
                                                 systems.
   022   0602184A                            SOLDIER APPLIED RESEARCH..........           2,429           2,429
   023   0602213A                            C3I APPLIED CYBER.................              63              63
   024   0602275A                            ELECTRONIC WARFARE APPLIED                  51,184          46,184
                                              RESEARCH.
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                         [-5,000]
   025   0602276A                            ELECTRONIC WARFARE CYBER APPLIED             9,857           9,857
                                              RESEARCH.
   026   0602345A                            UNMANNED AERIAL SYSTEMS LAUNCHED            22,871          22,871
                                              EFFECTS APPLIED RESEARCH.
   027   0602386A                            BIOTECHNOLOGY FOR MATERIALS--               14,979          14,979
                                              APPLIED RESEARCH.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-2,500]
         ..................................      Program increase..............                          [2,500]
   029   0602785A                            MANPOWER/PERSONNEL/TRAINING                 14,275          14,275
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   030   0602787A                            MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY................         149,221         142,221
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-7,000]
  030A   9999999999                          CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............          32,883          32,883
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL APPLIED RESEARCH......         914,034         987,034
         ..................................
         ..................................  ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT
   031   0603002A                            MEDICAL ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY.......          17,876          17,876
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                         [-5,000]
         ..................................      Wearable Blast Overpressure                             [5,000]
                                                 Monitoring System.
   032   0603007A                            MANPOWER, PERSONNEL AND TRAINING            11,113          11,113
                                              ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY.
   033   0603025A                            ARMY AGILE INNOVATION AND                    3,325           5,825
                                              DEMONSTRATION.
         ..................................      Army EW Sensing and Hunting                             [2,500]
                                                 UAS Payload.
   035   0603041A                            ALL DOMAIN CONVERGENCE ADVANCED              3,575           3,575
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   036   0603042A                            C3I ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY...........           1,211           3,711
         ..................................      Imaging Cold Environments                               [2,500]
                                                 using Multispectral Airborne
                                                 Networks.
   037   0603043A                            AIR PLATFORM ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY..          23,471          20,471
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-3,000]
   038   0603044A                            SOLDIER ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY.......           3,951           3,951
   039   0603116A                            LETHALITY ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY.....          31,812          39,312
         ..................................      Drone Netting Enclosure System                          [2,500]
                                                 for Counter UAS Testing.
         ..................................      Future Armaments Scalable                               [2,500]
                                                 Technologies.
         ..................................      Secure Hypersonic Prototype                             [2,500]
                                                 Manufacturing.
   040   0603118A                            SOLDIER LETHALITY ADVANCED                 125,121         120,121
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
         ..................................      Automated Paragliders for                               [5,000]
                                                 Paratroopers.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-10,000]
   041   0603119A                            GROUND ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY........          25,043          40,043
         ..................................      Fuel cell multi-modular use                            [10,000]
                                                 development.
         ..................................      Intelligent Runway Technology                           [2,500]
                                                 Program.
         ..................................      Next Generation Cracked Armor                           [2,500]
                                                 Laminated Patch Repair
                                                 Technology.
   043   0603135A                            COUNTER SMALL UNMANNED AERIAL              156,520         154,020
                                              SYSTEMS (C-SUAS) ADVANCED
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-2,500]
   044   0603275A                            ELECTRONIC WARFARE ADVANCED                156,326         149,326
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                         [-7,000]
   045   0603276A                            ELECTRONIC WARFARE CYBER ADVANCED           15,278          15,278
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   046   0603345A                            UNMANNED AERIAL SYSTEMS LAUNCHED            33,129          33,129
                                              EFFECTS ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   047   0603386A                            BIOTECHNOLOGY FOR MATERIALS--               22,402          22,402
                                              ADVANCED RESEARCH.
   048   0603457A                            C3I CYBER ADVANCED DEVELOPMENT....           8,509           8,509
   049   0603461A                            HIGH PERFORMANCE COMPUTING                 215,090         210,090
                                              MODERNIZATION PROGRAM.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-5,000]
   050   0603462A                            NEXT GENERATION COMBAT VEHICLE             118,207         143,607
                                              ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY.
         ..................................      Advanced Passive Fire                                   [5,400]
                                                 Protection Technologies.
         ..................................      Discontinuous thermoplastic                            [10,000]
                                                 materials.
         ..................................      Ground Vehicle Systems Center.                         [10,000]
   051   0603463A                            NETWORK C3I ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY...          48,490          93,790
         ..................................      Development and demonstration                          [15,000]
                                                 of prototype communications
                                                 solutions at overseas
                                                 installations.
         ..................................      Modular Radio Frequency (RF)                            [7,000]
                                                 Communications Technology.
         ..................................      OTM SATCOM Terminals..........                         [23,300]
   052   0603464A                            LONG RANGE PRECISION FIRES                 422,590         430,090
                                              ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY.
         ..................................      Missile Delivered Launched                              [7,500]
                                                 Effects- Virtual Test Range.
   053   0603465A                            FUTURE VERTICAL LIFT ADVANCED               14,984          19,984
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
         ..................................      Program increase..............                          [5,000]
   054   0603466A                            AIR AND MISSILE DEFENSE ADVANCED            63,924          78,924
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
         ..................................      CWS Enhanced Swarm Defeat                              [15,000]
                                                 Capability.
   056   0603920A                            HUMANITARIAN DEMINING.............           7,619           7,619
  056A   9999999999                          CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............          80,717          80,717
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY          1,610,283       1,713,483
                                                DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................
         ..................................  ADVANCED COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT AND
                                              PROTOTYPES
   058   0603305A                            ARMY MISSLE DEFENSE SYSTEMS                  8,367          12,367
                                              INTEGRATION.
         ..................................      High Power Microwave (HPM)                              [4,000]
                                                 Against Lethal Threats (HALT).
   059   0603308A                            ARMY SPACE SYSTEMS INTEGRATION....          59,573          91,573
         ..................................      Gliding Offensive Lightweight                          [32,000]
                                                 Unmanned Munition (GOLUM).
   061   0603619A                            LANDMINE WARFARE AND BARRIER--ADV           31,374          31,374
                                              DEV.
   062   0603627A                            SMOKE, OBSCURANT AND TARGET                  5,596           5,596
                                              DEFEATING SYS-ADV DEV.
   063   0603639A                            TANK AND MEDIUM CALIBER AMMUNITION         277,248         257,248
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                        [-20,000]
   064   0603645A                            ARMORED SYSTEM MODERNIZATION--ADV           23,594          23,594
                                              DEV.
   065   0603747A                            SOLDIER SUPPORT AND SURVIVABILITY.           4,109           4,109
   066   0603766A                            TACTICAL ELECTRONIC SURVEILLANCE            98,331         113,331
                                              SYSTEM--ADV DEV.
         ..................................      Harsh Environment                                      [15,000]
                                                 Microelectronics Innovation.
   067   0603774A                            NIGHT VISION SYSTEMS ADVANCED                5,310           5,310
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   068   0603779A                            ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY TECHNOLOGY--          19,499          19,499
                                              DEM/VAL.
   069   0603790A                            NATO RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT.....           5,145           5,145
   071   0603804A                            LOGISTICS AND ENGINEER EQUIPMENT--          12,822          12,822
                                              ADV DEV.
   072   0603807A                            MEDICAL SYSTEMS--ADV DEV..........           1,017           1,017
   073   0603827A                            SOLDIER SYSTEMS--ADVANCED                   56,122          56,122
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   074   0604017A                            ROBOTICS DEVELOPMENT..............          20,290          20,290
   075   0604019A                            EXPANDED MISSION AREA MISSILE              235,593         210,593
                                              (EMAM).
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-25,000]
   077   0604035A                            LOW EARTH ORBIT (LEO) SATELLITE                319             319
                                              CAPABILITY.
   078   0604036A                            MULTI-DOMAIN SENSING SYSTEM (MDSS)          99,471          99,471
                                              ADV DEV.
   079   0604037A                            TACTICAL INTEL TARGETING ACCESS              4,123           4,123
                                              NODE (TITAN) ADV DEV.
   080   0604100A                            ANALYSIS OF ALTERNATIVES..........          10,077          10,077
   084   0604114A                            LOWER TIER AIR MISSILE DEFENSE             162,074         162,074
                                              (LTAMD) SENSOR.
   085   0604115A                            TECHNOLOGY MATURATION INITIATIVES.         314,671         304,271
         ..................................      3D printed non-traditional                              [5,000]
                                                 battery manufacturing.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-15,400]
   086   0604117A                            MANEUVER--SHORT RANGE AIR DEFENSE          460,980         460,980
                                              (M-SHORAD).
   087   0604120A                            ASSURED POSITIONING, NAVIGATION             18,993          18,993
                                              AND TIMING (PNT).
   088   0604121A                            SYNTHETIC TRAINING ENVIRONMENT             219,137         219,137
                                              REFINEMENT & PROTOTYPING.
   089   0604129A                            ADVANCED POWER APPLICATIONS.......          48,000          48,000
   091   0604135A                            STRATEGIC MID-RANGE FIRES.........         211,848         211,848
   092   0604182A                            HYPERSONICS.......................          82,939          82,939
   099   0305251A                            CYBERSPACE OPERATIONS FORCES AND            22,889          21,889
                                              FORCE SUPPORT.
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                         [-1,000]
  099A   9999999999                          CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............         261,466         261,466
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL ADVANCED COMPONENT           2,780,977       2,775,577
                                                DEVELOPMENT AND PROTOTYPES.
         ..................................
         ..................................  SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT AND
                                              DEMONSTRATION
   100   0604201A                            AIRCRAFT AVIONICS.................          30,658          35,658
         ..................................      Enhancing Cyber Resilience for                          [5,000]
                                                 Mission Assurance and Supply
                                                 Chain Security.
   101   0604270A                            ELECTRONIC WARFARE DEVELOPMENT....           2,807           2,807
   102   0604601A                            INFANTRY SUPPORT WEAPONS..........          55,296          64,296
         ..................................      Combat Aviation Aircrew                                 [4,000]
                                                 Enhancement - Safety and
                                                 Lethality.
         ..................................      Operational evaluation of an                            [5,000]
                                                 omnidirectional tactical
                                                 throwable camera.
   103   0604604A                            MEDIUM TACTICAL VEHICLES..........          23,763          23,763
   104   0604611A                            JAVELIN...........................          10,217          10,217
   105   0604622A                            FAMILY OF HEAVY TACTICAL VEHICLES.          43,003          43,003
   108   0604642A                            LIGHT TACTICAL WHEELED VEHICLES...           6,142           6,142
   110   0604710A                            NIGHT VISION SYSTEMS--ENG DEV.....         418,427         418,427
   111   0604713A                            COMBAT FEEDING, CLOTHING, AND                6,701           6,701
                                              EQUIPMENT.
   112   0604715A                            NON-SYSTEM TRAINING DEVICES--ENG            29,685          31,685
                                              DEV.
         ..................................      AI-Enabled Weapon System                                [2,000]
                                                 Sensor Integration for
                                                 Training.
   113   0604741A                            AIR DEFENSE COMMAND, CONTROL AND            14,276          14,276
                                              INTELLIGENCE--ENG DEV.
   114   0604742A                            CONSTRUCTIVE SIMULATION SYSTEMS              5,618           5,618
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   115   0604746A                            AUTOMATIC TEST EQUIPMENT                     9,625           9,625
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   116   0604760A                            DISTRIBUTIVE INTERACTIVE                     7,883           7,883
                                              SIMULATIONS (DIS)--ENG DEV.
   117   0604798A                            BRIGADE ANALYSIS, INTEGRATION AND           26,602          26,602
                                              EVALUATION.
   118   0604802A                            WEAPONS AND MUNITIONS--ENG DEV....         124,881         174,881
         ..................................      Battalion Mortar System                                [10,000]
                                                 Modernization.
         ..................................      Development of 120mm APFSDS                            [10,000]
                                                 Propellant.
         ..................................      Medium Caliber Ammunition                               [5,000]
                                                 Fuzing.
         ..................................      Solid Rocket Second Source                             [25,000]
                                                 Qualification Increase.
   119   0604804A                            LOGISTICS AND ENGINEER EQUIPMENT--          65,238          65,238
                                              ENG DEV.
   120   0604805A                            COMMAND, CONTROL, COMMUNICATIONS             5,541           5,541
                                              SYSTEMS--ENG DEV.
   121   0604807A                            MEDICAL MATERIEL/MEDICAL                     9,744           9,744
                                              BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE EQUIPMENT--ENG
                                              DEV.
   122   0604808A                            LANDMINE WARFARE/BARRIER--ENG DEV.          17,586          17,586
   123   0604818A                            ARMY TACTICAL COMMAND & CONTROL             42,584          42,584
                                              HARDWARE & SOFTWARE.
   124   0604820A                            RADAR DEVELOPMENT.................          58,260          58,260
   126   0604827A                            SOLDIER SYSTEMS--WARRIOR DEM/VAL..           5,663           5,663
   127   0604852A                            SUITE OF SURVIVABILITY ENHANCEMENT          78,331          78,331
                                              SYSTEMS--EMD.
   128   0604854A                            ARTILLERY SYSTEMS--EMD............         709,192         651,692
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-7,500]
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                        [-50,000]
   129   0605013A                            INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT         121,525         116,525
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-5,000]
   130   0605018A                            INTEGRATED PERSONNEL AND PAY               102,694         102,694
                                              SYSTEM-ARMY (IPPS-A).
   131   0605030A                            JOINT TACTICAL NETWORK CENTER               21,561          21,561
                                              (JTNC).
   132   0605031A                            JOINT TACTICAL NETWORK (JTN)......          50,390          50,390
   133   0605035A                            COMMON INFRARED COUNTERMEASURES             11,573          11,573
                                              (CIRCM).
   134   0605036A                            COMBATING WEAPONS OF MASS                    5,605           5,605
                                              DESTRUCTION (CWMD).
   135   0605037A                            EVIDENCE COLLECTION AND DETAINEE             5,513           5,513
                                              PROCESSING.
   136   0605038A                            NUCLEAR BIOLOGICAL CHEMICAL                 13,864          13,864
                                              RECONNAISSANCE VEHICLE (NBCRV)
                                              SENSOR SUITE.
   137   0605041A                            DEFENSIVE CYBER TOOL DEVELOPMENT..           3,519           3,519
   138   0605042A                            TACTICAL NETWORK RADIO SYSTEMS               3,804           3,804
                                              (LOW-TIER).
   139   0605047A                            CONTRACT WRITING SYSTEM...........           4,777           4,777
   141   0605051A                            AIRCRAFT SURVIVABILITY DEVELOPMENT         106,621          96,621
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-10,000]
   142   0605052A                            INDIRECT FIRE PROTECTION                   175,352         175,352
                                              CAPABILITY INC 2--BLOCK 1.
   143   0605053A                            GROUND ROBOTICS...................         192,185         182,185
         ..................................      Low expenditure rates.........                        [-10,000]
   144   0605054A                            EMERGING TECHNOLOGY INITIATIVES...         147,881         164,881
         ..................................      Vertically integrated advanced                         [17,000]
                                                 processes.
   145   0605058A                            TERMINAL HIGH ALTITUDE AREA              1,053,983       1,053,983
                                              DEFENSE (THAAD) RDTE.
   146   0605144A                            NEXT GENERATION LOAD DEVICE--                2,380           2,380
                                              MEDIUM.
   147   0605148A                            TACTICAL INTEL TARGETING ACCESS             35,769          35,769
                                              NODE (TITAN) EMD.
   151   0605224A                            MULTI-DOMAIN INTELLIGENCE.........          49,594          49,594
   152   0605231A                            PRECISION STRIKE MISSILE (PRSM)...         288,304         288,304
   153   0605232A                            HYPERSONICS EMD...................         446,616         446,616
   154   0605233A                            ACCESSIONS INFORMATION ENVIRONMENT          33,770          33,770
                                              (AIE).
   155   0605235A                            STRATEGIC MID-RANGE CAPABILITY....          82,550          82,550
   157   0605241A                            FUTURE LONG RANGE ASSAULT AIRCRAFT       2,140,569       2,267,786
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................      Program realignment for                               [127,217]
                                                 operational test aircraft.
   159   0605244A                            JOINT REDUCED RANGE ROCKET (JR3)..          16,014          16,014
   161   0605275A                            ELECTRONIC WARFARE SYSTEMS                  99,691          99,691
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   162   0605330A                            C2 TRANSPORT......................          45,370          45,370
   163   0605331A                            C2 APPLICATIONS...................         488,401         488,401
   164   0605332A                            C2 DATA...........................         306,019         306,019
   165   0605333A                            C2 INFRASTRUCTURE.................          64,849          64,849
   166   0605345A                            UNMANNED AERIAL SYSTEMS LAUNCHED           816,433         816,433
                                              EFFECTS SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT.
   167   0605347A                            COUNTER UNMANNED AERIAL SYSTEMS            359,182         359,182
                                              (UAS) DEVELOPMENT.
   169   0605457A                            ARMY INTEGRATED AIR AND MISSILE            126,623         126,623
                                              DEFENSE (AIAMD).
   170   0605531A                            COUNTER--SMALL UNMANNED AIRCRAFT               695             695
                                              SYSTEMS SYS DEV & DEMONSTRATION.
   172   0605625A                            MANNED GROUND VEHICLE.............         290,069         290,069
   173   0605766A                            NATIONAL CAPABILITIES INTEGRATION           17,211          17,211
                                              (MIP).
   174   0605812A                            JOINT LIGHT TACTICAL VEHICLE                 2,749           2,749
                                              (JLTV) ENGINEERING AND
                                              MANUFACTURING DEVELOPMENT PHASE
                                              (EMD).
   175   0605830A                            AVIATION GROUND SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.             951             951
   176   0303032A                            TROJAN--RH12......................           3,946           3,946
   178   0304270A                            ELECTRONIC WARFARE DEVELOPMENT....         125,301         125,301
  178A   9999999999                          CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............          89,121          89,121
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT AND       9,760,747       9,888,464
                                                DEMONSTRATION.
         ..................................
         ..................................  MANAGEMENT SUPPORT
   179   0604256A                            THREAT SIMULATOR DEVELOPMENT......          60,233          60,233
   180   0604258A                            TARGET SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT........          16,488          16,488
   181   0604759A                            MAJOR T&E INVESTMENT..............         106,140         106,140
   182   0605103A                            RAND ARROYO CENTER................          10,737          10,737
   183   0605301A                            ARMY KWAJALEIN ATOLL..............           7,051           7,051
   184   0605326A                            CONCEPTS EXPERIMENTATION PROGRAM..          55,596          55,596
   186   0605601A                            ARMY TEST RANGES AND FACILITIES...         469,723         479,723
         ..................................      Space Layer Representation to                          [10,000]
                                                 Enhance Near-Peer Readiness.
   187   0605602A                            ARMY TECHNICAL TEST                         62,303          62,303
                                              INSTRUMENTATION AND TARGETS.
   188   0605604A                            SURVIVABILITY/LETHALITY ANALYSIS..          31,283          31,283
   189   0605606A                            AIRCRAFT CERTIFICATION............           1,983           1,983
   190   0605706A                            MATERIEL SYSTEMS ANALYSIS.........          19,013          19,013
   191   0605709A                            EXPLOITATION OF FOREIGN ITEMS.....          10,481          10,481
   192   0605712A                            SUPPORT OF OPERATIONAL TESTING....          60,733          60,733
   193   0605716A                            ARMY EVALUATION CENTER............          65,565          65,565
   194   0605718A                            ARMY MODELING & SIM X-CMD                   15,608          15,608
                                              COLLABORATION & INTEG.
   195   0605801A                            PROGRAMWIDE ACTIVITIES............          52,978          52,978
   196   0605803A                            TECHNICAL INFORMATION ACTIVITIES..          27,004          27,004
   197   0605805A                            MUNITIONS STANDARDIZATION,                  44,851          62,351
                                              EFFECTIVENESS AND SAFETY.
         ..................................      Demilitarization Process for                           [10,000]
                                                 White Phosphorus Ammunition
                                                 Items.
         ..................................      Production of Critical                                  [7,500]
                                                 Chemicals in a Flexible
                                                 Manufacturing Facility.
   198   0605857A                            ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY TECHNOLOGY             3,256           3,256
                                              MGMT SUPPORT.
   199   0605898A                            ARMY DIRECT REPORT HEADQUARTERS--           54,276          54,276
                                              R&D - MHA.
   200   0606002A                            RONALD REAGAN BALLISTIC MISSILE            118,585         118,585
                                              DEFENSE TEST SITE.
   201   0606003A                            COUNTERINTEL AND HUMAN INTEL                 5,802           5,802
                                              MODERNIZATION.
   202   0606118A                            AIAMD SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT &               653,653         646,653
                                              INTEGRATION.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-7,000]
   203   0606942A                            ASSESSMENTS AND EVALUATIONS CYBER            6,468           6,468
                                              VULNERABILITIES.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL MANAGEMENT SUPPORT....       1,959,810       1,980,310
         ..................................
         ..................................  OPERATIONAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT
   205   0603778A                            MLRS PRODUCT IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM..          17,780          17,780
   206   0605024A                            ANTI-TAMPER TECHNOLOGY SUPPORT....           6,613          16,613
         ..................................      Secure Microelectronics for                            [10,000]
                                                 Anti-Tamper and Resilient
                                                 Technology.
   207   0607101A                            COMBATING WEAPONS OF MASS                      488             488
                                              DESTRUCTION (CWMD) PRODUCT
                                              IMPROVEMENT.
   208   0607131A                            WEAPONS AND MUNITIONS PRODUCT               21,553          21,553
                                              IMPROVEMENT PROGRAMS.
   209   0607136A                            BLACKHAWK PRODUCT IMPROVEMENT               35,147          35,147
                                              PROGRAM.
   210   0607137A                            CHINOOK PRODUCT IMPROVEMENT                  7,277           7,277
                                              PROGRAM.
   211   0607139A                            IMPROVED TURBINE ENGINE PROGRAM...                         100,000
         ..................................      Program increase..............                        [100,000]
   213   0607145A                            APACHE FUTURE DEVELOPMENT.........          30,759          30,759
   214   0607148A                            AN/TPQ-53 COUNTERFIRE TARGET                90,981          80,981
                                              ACQUISITION RADAR SYSTEM.
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                        [-10,000]
   215   0607150A                            INTEL CYBER DEVELOPMENT...........          13,694          13,694
   216   0607212A                            TENCAP ENHANCEMENTS...............          20,982          20,982
   219   0607665A                            FAMILY OF BIOMETRICS..............           1,640           1,640
   220   0607865A                            PATRIOT PRODUCT IMPROVEMENT.......         219,046         219,046
   221   0203728A                            JOINT AUTOMATED DEEP OPERATION              11,255          11,255
                                              COORDINATION SYSTEM (JADOCS).
   222   0203735A                            COMBAT VEHICLE IMPROVEMENT                 492,364         502,364
                                              PROGRAMS.
         ..................................      Development and qualification                          [10,000]
                                                 of AGT1500 Abrams tank engine
                                                 parts.
   224   0203752A                            AIRCRAFT ENGINE COMPONENT                      239             239
                                              IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.
   225   0203758A                            DIGITIZATION......................           1,615           1,615
   226   0203801A                            MISSILE/AIR DEFENSE PRODUCT                  2,054           2,054
                                              IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.
   229   0205778A                            GUIDED MULTIPLE-LAUNCH ROCKET               73,639          73,639
                                              SYSTEM (GMLRS).
   232   0303140A                            INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY                15,932          15,932
                                              PROGRAM.
   234   0303142A                            SATCOM GROUND ENVIRONMENT (SPACE).           4,870           4,870
   237   0305179A                            INTEGRATED BROADCAST SERVICE (IBS)           6,870           6,870
   238   0305219A                            MQ-1 GRAY EAGLE UAV...............           2,590           2,590
   239   0708045A                            END ITEM INDUSTRIAL PREPAREDNESS            68,097          85,097
                                              ACTIVITIES.
         ..................................      Army depot directed energy                              [5,000]
                                                 readiness.
         ..................................      Digital Forge.................                         [12,000]
  239A   9999999999                          CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............          47,342          47,342
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL OPERATIONAL SYSTEM           1,192,827       1,319,827
                                                DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................
         ..................................  SOFTWARE AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY
                                              PILOT PROGRAMS
   240   0608041A                            DEFENSIVE CYBER--SOFTWARE                   94,095          91,095
                                              PROTOTYPE DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-3,000]
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL SOFTWARE AND DIGITAL            94,095          91,095
                                                TECHNOLOGY PILOT PROGRAMS.
         ..................................
         ..................................       TOTAL RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT,       18,708,826      19,201,843
                                                  TEST AND EVALUATION, ARMY.
         ..................................
         ..................................  RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST AND
                                              EVALUATION, NAVY
         ..................................  BASIC RESEARCH
   001   0601103N                            UNIVERSITY RESEARCH INITIATIVES...                          47,500
         ..................................      Artificial Intelligence                                 [2,500]
                                                 Maritime Maneuvering.
         ..................................      Multi-Frequency Satellite Data                          [5,000]
                                                 Reception and Technological
                                                 Upgrades.
         ..................................      Program increase..............                         [40,000]
   002   0601153N                            DEFENSE RESEARCH SCIENCES.........         525,399         527,899
         ..................................      Physiological Stress Response                           [2,500]
                                                 Program.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL BASIC RESEARCH........         525,399         575,399
         ..................................
         ..................................  APPLIED RESEARCH
   003   0602114N                            POWER PROJECTION APPLIED RESEARCH.          38,838          43,838
         ..................................      Hypersonics Correlation                                 [5,000]
                                                 Modeling and Simulation.
   004   0602123N                            FORCE PROTECTION APPLIED RESEARCH.         137,779         145,279
         ..................................      Arctic Unmanned Resilient                               [5,000]
                                                 Offshore Reconnaissance Asset
                                                 (AURORA) USV Study.
         ..................................      Talent and Technology for Navy                          [2,500]
                                                 Power Systems.
   005   0602131M                            MARINE CORPS LANDING FORCE                  57,567          60,067
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
         ..................................      Unmanned Logistics............                          [2,500]
   006   0602235N                            COMMON PICTURE APPLIED RESEARCH...          40,433          40,433
   007   0602236N                            WARFIGHTER SUSTAINMENT APPLIED              60,350          60,350
                                              RESEARCH.
   008   0602271N                            ELECTROMAGNETIC SYSTEMS APPLIED             74,603          74,603
                                              RESEARCH.
   009   0602435N                            OCEAN WARFIGHTING ENVIRONMENT               64,693          64,693
                                              APPLIED RESEARCH.
   010   0602651M                            JOINT NON-LETHAL WEAPONS APPLIED             4,105           4,105
                                              RESEARCH.
   011   0602747N                            UNDERSEA WARFARE APPLIED RESEARCH.          52,515          55,015
         ..................................      Academic Partnerships for                               [2,500]
                                                 Submarine and Undersea Vehicle
                                                 Research and Manufacturing.
   012   0602750N                            FUTURE NAVAL CAPABILITIES APPLIED          305,357         300,357
                                              RESEARCH.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-5,000]
   013   0602782N                            MINE AND EXPEDITIONARY WARFARE              24,634          34,634
                                              APPLIED RESEARCH.
         ..................................      Procurement of undersea                                [10,000]
                                                 attritable systems.
   015   0602861N                            SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT--         74,378          74,378
                                              ONR FIELD ACITIVITIES.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL APPLIED RESEARCH......         935,252         957,752
         ..................................
         ..................................  ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT
   016   0603123N                            FORCE PROTECTION ADVANCED                   50,869          50,869
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   017   0603271N                            ELECTROMAGNETIC SYSTEMS ADVANCED             8,635           8,635
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   018   0603273N                            SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY FOR NUCLEAR           114,767         114,767
                                              RE-ENTRY SYSTEMS.
   019   0603640M                            USMC ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY                   287,897         292,897
                                              DEMONSTRATION (ATD).
         ..................................      Advanced Technology                                     [5,000]
                                                 Demonstration.
   020   0603651M                            JOINT NON-LETHAL WEAPONS                     8,727           8,727
                                              TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT.
   021   0603673N                            FUTURE NAVAL CAPABILITIES ADVANCED         445,977         440,977
                                              TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-5,000]
   022   0603680N                            MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM..          79,132         116,632
         ..................................      Pilot Program for Adaptive                              [2,500]
                                                 Electronic Warfare-Resilient
                                                 and Quantum-Secure Autonomy
                                                 small UAS Architecture Testing.
         ..................................      Solid Rocket Second Source                             [25,000]
                                                 Qualification Increase.
         ..................................      Trusted Radiation-hardened                             [10,000]
                                                 integrated electronics.
   024   0603758N                            NAVY WARFIGHTING EXPERIMENTS AND            66,395          76,395
                                              DEMONSTRATIONS.
         ..................................      Deployable data centers that                           [10,000]
                                                 deliver remote and resilient
                                                 edge computing.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY          1,062,399       1,109,899
                                                DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................
         ..................................  ADVANCED COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT AND
                                              PROTOTYPES
   027   0603128N                            UNMANNED AERIAL SYSTEM............          35,706          35,706
   029   0603207N                            AIR/OCEAN TACTICAL APPLICATIONS...          76,141          76,141
   030   0603216N                            AVIATION SURVIVABILITY............          20,010          20,010
   031   0603239N                            NAVAL CONSTRUCTION FORCES.........           7,726           7,726
   032   0603254N                            ASW SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT...........          20,070          20,070
   033   0603261N                            TACTICAL AIRBORNE RECONNAISSANCE..           3,239           3,239
   034   0603382N                            ADVANCED COMBAT SYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY          32,263          38,263
         ..................................      C-C Embedded Hypersonics                                [6,000]
                                                 Alternative PNT.
   035   0603502N                            SURFACE AND SHALLOW WATER MINE              32,451          32,451
                                              COUNTERMEASURES.
   036   0603506N                            SURFACE SHIP TORPEDO DEFENSE......           9,920           9,920
   037   0603512N                            CARRIER SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT.......           8,806           8,806
   038   0603525N                            PILOT FISH........................       1,339,052       1,339,052
   039   0603536N                            RETRACT JUNIPER...................         275,300         275,300
   040   0603542N                            RADIOLOGICAL CONTROL..............             704             704
   042   0603561N                            UNDERSEA WARFARE SYSTEM                    132,885         138,885
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................      Automated System Operational                            [6,000]
                                                 Verification Test Capability
                                                 for AN/BYG-1.
   044   0603563N                            SHIP CONCEPT ADVANCED DESIGN......         353,893         363,893
         ..................................      Hybrid Robotic Automation                              [10,000]
                                                 Demonstration.
   045   0603564N                            SHIP PRELIMINARY DESIGN &                  666,640         666,640
                                              FEASIBILITY STUDIES.
   046   0603570N                            ADVANCED NUCLEAR POWER SYSTEMS....         392,426         392,426
   047   0603573N                            ADVANCED SURFACE MACHINERY SYSTEMS         269,961         274,961
         ..................................      Integration of Insulated Bus                            [5,000]
                                                 Pipe (IBP) Into Warship
                                                 Designs.
   048   0603576N                            CHALK EAGLE.......................         149,351         149,351
   049   0603581N                            LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP (LCS)........          12,576           7,576
         ..................................      Insufficient justification....                         [-5,000]
   050   0603582N                            COMBAT SYSTEM INTEGRATION.........          18,819          18,819
   051   0603595N                            OHIO REPLACEMENT..................         331,577         346,577
         ..................................      Large-Scale Superstructures                            [15,000]
                                                 Cooperative Processing.
   052   0603596N                            LCS MISSION MODULES...............          46,239          16,239
         ..................................      Insufficient justification....                        [-30,000]
   053   0603597N                            AUTOMATED TEST AND RE-TEST (ATRT).          18,070          18,070
   054   0603598N                            ATRT ENTERPRISE RAPID CAPABILITY..          87,585          97,585
         ..................................      Digital Combat Console                                 [10,000]
                                                 Capability for Aegis Low
                                                 Altitude Air Defense
                                                 Integration.
   055   0603599N                            FRIGATE DEVELOPMENT...............         212,041         212,041
   056   0603609N                            CONVENTIONAL MUNITIONS............          10,216          10,216
   057   0603635M                            MARINE CORPS GROUND COMBAT/SUPPORT         521,995         501,995
                                              SYSTEM.
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                        [-20,000]
   058   0603654N                            JOINT SERVICE EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE            43,568          43,568
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   059   0603713N                            OCEAN ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY                15,903          25,903
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................      Expeditionary Lock-Out Dive                            [10,000]
                                                 Trainer.
   060   0603721N                            ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION..........          19,347          19,347
   061   0603724N                            NAVY ENERGY PROGRAM...............          59,591         156,591
         ..................................      Program increase..............                         [97,000]
   062   0603725N                            FACILITIES IMPROVEMENT............          13,738          18,738
         ..................................      Robotic Navy Firefighting.....                          [5,000]
   063   0603734N                            CHALK CORAL.......................         995,658         995,658
   064   0603739N                            NAVY LOGISTIC PRODUCTIVITY........             929             929
   065   0603746N                            RETRACT MAPLE.....................         655,551         655,551
   066   0603748N                            LINK PLUMERIA.....................         498,853         498,853
   067   0603751N                            RETRACT ELM.......................          87,999          87,999
   068   0603764M                            LINK EVERGREEN....................         593,835         593,835
   069   0603790N                            NATO RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT.....           5,513           5,513
   070   0603795N                            LAND ATTACK TECHNOLOGY............             985             985
   071   0603851M                            JOINT NON-LETHAL WEAPONS TESTING..          14,152          14,152
   072   0603860N                            JOINT PRECISION APPROACH AND                73,813          73,813
                                              LANDING SYSTEMS--DEM/VAL.
   073   0603889N                            COUNTERDRUG RDT&E PROJECTS........           6,500           6,500
   074   0603925N                            DIRECTED ENERGY AND ELECTRIC                94,825          97,325
                                              WEAPON SYSTEMS.
         ..................................      Containerized High Energy                               [5,000]
                                                 Laser with Integrated Optical-
                                                 dazzler and Surveillance.
         ..................................      Containerized Maritime High                             [2,500]
                                                 Energy Laser Weapon System.
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                         [-5,000]
   076   0604027N                            DIGITAL WARFARE OFFICE............         182,205         176,205
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                         [-6,000]
   077   0604028N                            SMALL AND MEDIUM UNMANNED UNDERSEA          24,598          24,598
                                              VEHICLES.
   078   0604029N                            UNMANNED UNDERSEA VEHICLE CORE              62,460          62,460
                                              TECHNOLOGIES.
   081   0604112N                            GERALD R. FORD CLASS NUCLEAR               111,241         111,241
                                              AIRCRAFT CARRIER (CVN 78--80).
   082   0604127N                            SURFACE MINE COUNTERMEASURES......          17,762          17,762
   083   0604272N                            TACTICAL AIR DIRECTIONAL INFRARED           14,974          14,974
                                              COUNTERMEASURES (TADIRCM).
   084   0604286N                            NAVY ADVANCED MANUFACTURING.......          10,016          10,016
   085   0604289M                            NEXT GENERATION LOGISTICS.........              24              24
   086   0604292N                            FUTURE VERTICAL LIFT (MARITIME               5,314           5,314
                                              STRIKE).
   087   0604295M                            MARINE AVIATION DEMONSTRATION/              47,152          95,152
                                              VALIDATION.
         ..................................      Vertical Takeoff and Landing                           [48,000]
                                                 Development for autonomous
                                                 logistics in contested
                                                 environments.
   088   0604320M                            RAPID TECHNOLOGY CAPABILITY                125,999         125,999
                                              PROTOTYPE.
   089   0604454N                            LX (R)............................          18,574          18,574
   090   0604536N                            ADVANCED UNDERSEA PROTOTYPING.....         164,512         164,512
   091   0604545N                            ADVANCED SHIP BUILDING INDUSTRIAL                           20,000
                                              BASE AND FUTURE SHIP EXPERIMENTAL.
         ..................................      Fielding of Uncrewed                                   [20,000]
                                                 Surveillance Systems.
   092   0604636N                            COUNTER UNMANNED AIRCRAFT SYSTEMS           20,833          20,833
                                              (C-UAS).
   093   0604659N                            PRECISION STRIKE WEAPONS                   206,873         206,873
                                              DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM.
   094   0604707N                            SPACE AND ELECTRONIC WARFARE (SEW)           8,657           8,657
                                              ARCHITECTURE/ENGINEERING SUPPORT.
   095   0604786N                            OFFENSIVE ANTI-SURFACE WARFARE             104,527         168,527
                                              WEAPON DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................      Transfer from WPN-17..........                         [64,000]
   097   0605513N                            UNMANNED SURFACE VEHICLE ENABLING          255,135         255,135
                                              CAPABILITIES.
   098   0605514M                            GROUND BASED ANTI-SHIP MISSILE....          16,307          16,307
   100   0605518N                            CONVENTIONAL PROMPT STRIKE (CPS)..       1,341,416       1,341,416
   101   0105519N                            NUCLEAR-ARMED SEA-LAUNCHED CRUISE                          175,000
                                              MISSILE (SLCM-N) SUPPORT.
         ..................................      Program adjustment............                        [175,000]
   102   0207147M                            COLLABORATIVE COMBAT AIRCRAFT.....         213,934         213,934
   104   0303354N                            ASW SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT--MIP......           3,206           3,206
   105   0304240M                            ADVANCED TACTICAL UNMANNED                   1,979           1,979
                                              AIRCRAFT SYSTEM.
   107   0304797N                            UNDERSEA ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE /          13,563          13,563
                                              MACHINE LEARNING (AI/ML).
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL ADVANCED COMPONENT          11,237,683      11,650,183
                                                DEVELOPMENT AND PROTOTYPES.
         ..................................
         ..................................  SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT AND
                                              DEMONSTRATION
   108   0603208N                            TRAINING SYSTEM AIRCRAFT..........          80,617          80,617
   109   0604038N                            MARITIME TARGETING CELL...........         216,514         216,514
   110   0604212N                            OTHER HELO DEVELOPMENT............             976             976
   112   0604215N                            STANDARDS DEVELOPMENT.............           4,399           4,399
   113   0604216N                            MULTI-MISSION HELICOPTER UPGRADE            88,855          88,855
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   114   0604230N                            WARFARE SUPPORT SYSTEM............          73,080          73,080
   115   0604231N                            COMMAND AND CONTROL SYSTEMS.......          73,534          73,534
   116   0604234N                            ADVANCED HAWKEYE..................         390,260         390,260
   117   0604245M                            H-1 UPGRADES......................          66,446          66,446
   118   0604261N                            ACOUSTIC SEARCH SENSORS...........          48,875          48,875
   119   0604262N                            V-22..............................         252,335         252,335
   120   0604264N                            AIR CREW SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT......          21,582          21,582
   121   0604269N                            EA-18.............................         131,683         131,683
   122   0604270N                            ELECTRONIC WARFARE DEVELOPMENT....         168,985         168,985
   123   0604273M                            EXECUTIVE HELO DEVELOPMENT........          69,438          69,438
   124   0604274N                            NEXT GENERATION JAMMER (NGJ)......          50,332          50,332
   125   0604280N                            JOINT TACTICAL RADIO SYSTEM--NAVY          409,318         412,318
                                              (JTRS-NAVY).
         ..................................      TIMEly Undersea Communications                          [3,000]
                                                 Network.
   126   0604282N                            NEXT GENERATION JAMMER (NGJ)               497,011         457,011
                                              INCREMENT II.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-40,000]
   127   0604307N                            SURFACE COMBATANT COMBAT SYSTEM            425,060         425,060
                                              ENGINEERING.
   128   0604329N                            SMALL DIAMETER BOMB (SDB).........          64,428          64,428
   129   0604366N                            STANDARD MISSILE IMPROVEMENTS.....         539,279         539,279
   130   0604373N                            AIRBORNE MCM......................           8,567           8,567
   131   0604378N                            NAVAL INTEGRATED FIRE CONTROL--             42,177          42,177
                                              COUNTER AIR SYSTEMS ENGINEERING.
   132   0604501N                            ADVANCED ABOVE WATER SENSORS......          67,900          67,900
   133   0604503N                            SUBMARINE SWFTS MODERNIZATION.....         195,361         195,361
   134   0604504N                            AIR CONTROL.......................          41,610          41,610
   135   0604512N                            SHIPBOARD AVIATION SYSTEMS........          30,970          30,970
   136   0604516N                            SHIP SURVIVABILITY................           7,861           7,861
   138   0604522N                            AIR AND MISSILE DEFENSE RADAR               96,642          96,642
                                              (AMDR) SYSTEM.
   139   0604530N                            ADVANCED ARRESTING GEAR (AAG).....          60,518          60,518
   140   0604558N                            NEW DESIGN SSN....................         237,103         237,103
   142   0604567N                            SHIP CONTRACT DESIGN/ LIVE FIRE             19,429          19,429
                                              T&E.
   143   0604574N                            NAVY TACTICAL COMPUTER RESOURCES..           3,415           3,415
   144   0604601N                            MINE DEVELOPMENT..................         158,666         158,666
   145   0604610N                            LIGHTWEIGHT TORPEDO DEVELOPMENT...         102,159         102,159
   146   0604654N                            JOINT SERVICE EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE             8,509           8,509
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   147   0604657M                            USMC GROUND COMBAT/SUPPORTING ARMS          69,478          69,478
                                              SYSTEMS--ENG DEV.
   148   0604703N                            PERSONNEL, TRAINING, SIMULATION,             8,316           8,316
                                              AND HUMAN FACTORS.
   149   0604727N                            JOINT STANDOFF WEAPON SYSTEMS.....           1,447           1,447
   150   0604755N                            SHIP SELF DEFENSE (DETECT &                156,167         156,167
                                              CONTROL).
   151   0604756N                            SHIP SELF DEFENSE (ENGAGE: HARD            296,261         296,261
                                              KILL).
   152   0604757N                            SHIP SELF DEFENSE (ENGAGE: SOFT            196,761         196,761
                                              KILL/EW).
   153   0604761N                            INTELLIGENCE ENGINEERING..........           6,426           6,426
   154   0604771N                            MEDICAL DEVELOPMENT...............           6,900           6,900
   155   0604777N                            NAVIGATION/ID SYSTEM..............           3,388           3,388
   156   0604850N                            SSN(X)............................         315,914         315,914
   157   0605013M                            INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT          14,380          14,380
   158   0605013N                            INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT         149,089         149,089
   159   0605024N                            ANTI-TAMPER TECHNOLOGY SUPPORT....           3,459           3,459
   160   0605180N                            TACAMO MODERNIZATION..............       1,662,723       1,552,723
         ..................................      Contract delay................                       [-110,000]
   161   0605212M                            CH-53K RDTE.......................         139,273         139,273
   162   0605215N                            MISSION PLANNING..................          82,618          82,618
   163   0605217N                            COMMON AVIONICS...................         133,855         133,855
   164   0605220N                            SHIP TO SHORE CONNECTOR (SSC).....           4,519           4,519
   165   0605285N                            NEXT GENERATION FIGHTER...........          68,498          68,498
   167   0605450M                            JOINT AIR-TO-GROUND MISSILE (JAGM)         189,866         189,866
   168   0605500N                            MULTI-MISSION MARITIME AIRCRAFT             87,173          87,173
                                              (MMA).
   169   0605504N                            MULTI-MISSION MARITIME (MMA)                52,951          52,951
                                              INCREMENT III.
   170   0605516N                            LONG RANGE FIRES..................         186,735         186,735
   171   0605611M                            MARINE CORPS ASSAULT VEHICLES               12,461          12,461
                                              SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT &
                                              DEMONSTRATION.
   172   0605813M                            JOINT LIGHT TACTICAL VEHICLE                 2,413           2,413
                                              (JLTV) SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT &
                                              DEMONSTRATION.
   173   0204202N                            DESTROYERS GUIDED MISSILE (DDG-             50,166          50,166
                                              1000).
   174   0301377N                            COUNTERING ADVANCED CONVENTIONAL            15,563          15,563
                                              WEAPONS (CACW).
   175   0302315N                            NON-KINETIC COUNTERMEASURE SUPPORT          23,146          23,146
   181   0304785N                            ISR & INFO OPERATIONS.............         274,478         274,478
   183   0306250M                            CYBER OPERATIONS TECHNOLOGY                  8,962           8,962
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT AND       8,977,280       8,830,280
                                                DEMONSTRATION.
         ..................................
         ..................................  MANAGEMENT SUPPORT
   184   0604256N                            THREAT SIMULATOR DEVELOPMENT......          16,453          16,453
   185   0604258N                            TARGET SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT........          22,653          17,653
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                         [-5,000]
   186   0604759N                            MAJOR T&E INVESTMENT..............         112,458         104,458
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                         [-8,000]
   187   0605152N                            STUDIES AND ANALYSIS SUPPORT--NAVY           4,336           4,336
   188   0605154N                            CENTER FOR NAVAL ANALYSES.........          28,310          28,310
   191   0605853N                            MANAGEMENT, TECHNICAL &                    124,898         124,898
                                              INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT.
   192   0605856N                            STRATEGIC TECHNICAL SUPPORT.......           4,260           4,260
   193   0605863N                            RDT&E SHIP AND AIRCRAFT SUPPORT...         170,699         170,699
   194   0605864N                            TEST AND EVALUATION SUPPORT.......         470,492         470,492
   195   0605865N                            OPERATIONAL TEST AND EVALUATION             31,902          31,902
                                              CAPABILITY.
   196   0605866N                            NAVY SPACE AND ELECTRONIC WARFARE           21,498          21,498
                                              (SEW) SUPPORT.
   197   0605867N                            SEW SURVEILLANCE/RECONNAISSANCE             25,144          25,144
                                              SUPPORT.
   198   0605873M                            MARINE CORPS PROGRAM WIDE SUPPORT.          70,013          70,013
   199   0605898N                            MANAGEMENT HQ--R&D................          33,533          33,533
   200   0606295M                            MARINE AVIATION DEVELOPMENTAL               19,165          19,165
                                              MANAGEMENT AND SUPPORT.
   201   0606355N                            WARFARE INNOVATION MANAGEMENT.....          35,931          35,931
   202   0606942N                            ASSESSMENTS AND EVALUATIONS CYBER           11,282          11,282
                                              VULNERABILITIES.
   203   0305327N                            INSIDER THREAT....................           2,214           2,214
   204   0902498N                            MANAGEMENT HEADQUARTERS                      2,054           2,054
                                              (DEPARTMENTAL SUPPORT ACTIVITIES).
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL MANAGEMENT SUPPORT....       1,207,295       1,194,295
         ..................................
         ..................................  OPERATIONAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT
   208   0604840M                            F-35 C2D2.........................         469,779         469,779
   209   0604840N                            F-35 C2D2.........................         428,545         428,545
   210   0605520M                            MARINE CORPS AIR DEFENSE WEAPONS           133,041         133,041
                                              SYSTEMS.
   211   0607658N                            COOPERATIVE ENGAGEMENT CAPABILITY          120,782         120,782
                                              (CEC).
   212   0101221N                            STRATEGIC SUB & WEAPONS SYSTEM           1,051,736       1,051,736
                                              SUPPORT.
   213   0101224N                            SSBN SECURITY TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM..          65,856          65,856
   214   0101226N                            SUBMARINE ACOUSTIC WARFARE                 114,279         114,279
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   215   0101402N                            NAVY STRATEGIC COMMUNICATIONS.....          88,572          88,572
   216   0204136N                            F/A-18 SQUADRONS..................         271,429         278,429
         ..................................      Spiking Neuromorphic Advanced                           [7,000]
                                                 Processing.
   218   0204229N                            TOMAHAWK AND TOMAHAWK MISSION               76,653          76,653
                                              PLANNING CENTER (TMPC).
   219   0204311N                            INTEGRATED SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM....          71,901          71,901
   220   0204313N                            SHIP-TOWED ARRAY SURVEILLANCE                  954             954
                                              SYSTEMS.
   221   0204413N                            AMPHIBIOUS TACTICAL SUPPORT UNITS            1,526           1,526
                                              (DISPLACEMENT CRAFT).
   222   0204460M                            GROUND/AIR TASK ORIENTED RADAR (G/          66,255          66,255
                                              ATOR).
   223   0204571N                            CONSOLIDATED TRAINING SYSTEMS              115,839         115,839
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   224   0204575N                            ELECTRONIC WARFARE (EW) READINESS          198,560         198,560
                                              SUPPORT.
   225   0205601N                            ANTI-RADIATION MISSILE IMPROVEMENT          80,491          72,442
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-8,049]
   227   0205632N                            MK-48 ADCAP.......................         123,011         123,011
   228   0205633N                            AVIATION IMPROVEMENTS.............         108,505          97,655
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-10,850]
   229   0205675N                            OPERATIONAL NUCLEAR POWER SYSTEMS.         252,893         252,893
   230   0206313M                            MARINE CORPS COMMUNICATIONS                268,983         248,983
                                              SYSTEMS.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-20,000]
   232   0206623M                            MARINE CORPS GROUND COMBAT/                 79,031          79,031
                                              SUPPORTING ARMS SYSTEMS.
   233   0206624M                            MARINE CORPS COMBAT SERVICES                19,915          19,915
                                              SUPPORT.
   234   0206625M                            USMC INTELLIGENCE/ELECTRONIC               149,055         139,055
                                              WARFARE SYSTEMS.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-10,000]
   235   0207161N                            TACTICAL AIM MISSILES.............         122,518         110,267
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-12,251]
   236   0207163N                            ADVANCED MEDIUM RANGE AIR-TO-AIR            24,675          24,675
                                              MISSILE (AMRAAM).
   237   0207255N                            MQ-25 STINGRAY....................         513,308         513,308
   238   0208043N                            PLANNING AND DECISION AID SYSTEM             3,491           3,491
                                              (PDAS).
   242   0303138N                            AFLOAT NETWORKS...................          68,369          68,369
   243   0303140N                            INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY                79,128          79,128
                                              PROGRAM.
   244   0305192N                            MILITARY INTELLIGENCE PROGRAM                5,187           5,187
                                              (MIP) ACTIVITIES.
   247   0305220N                            MQ-4C TRITON......................          10,515          10,515
   248   0305232M                            RQ-11 UAV.........................          19,842          19,842
   249   0305241N                            MULTI-INTELLIGENCE SENSOR                   49,898          49,898
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   250   0305242M                            UNMANNED AERIAL SYSTEMS (UAS)               20,750          20,750
                                              PAYLOADS (MIP).
   251   0305421N                            MQ-4C TRITON MODERNIZATION........         344,890         344,890
   252   0307577N                            INTELLIGENCE MISSION DATA (IMD)...             787             787
   253   0308601N                            MODELING AND SIMULATION SUPPORT...          16,401          16,401
   254   0702207N                            DEPOT MAINTENANCE (NON-IF)........           8,097           8,097
   255   0708730N                            MARITIME TECHNOLOGY (MARITECH)....           1,710           1,710
  255A   9999999999                          CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............       2,755,838       2,755,838
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL OPERATIONAL SYSTEM           8,402,995       8,348,845
                                                DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................
         ..................................  SOFTWARE AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY
                                              PILOT PROGRAMS
   256   0608013N                            RISK MANAGEMENT INFORMATION--               13,017          13,017
                                              SOFTWARE PILOT PROGRAM.
   257   0608231N                            MARITIME TACTICAL COMMAND AND               25,299          25,299
                                              CONTROL (MTC2)--SOFTWARE PILOT
                                              PROGRAM.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL SOFTWARE AND DIGITAL            38,316          38,316
                                                TECHNOLOGY PILOT PROGRAMS.
         ..................................
         ..................................       TOTAL RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT,       32,386,619      32,704,969
                                                  TEST AND EVALUATION, NAVY.
         ..................................
         ..................................  RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST AND
                                              EVALUATION, AIR FORCE
         ..................................  BASIC RESEARCH
   001   0601102F                            DEFENSE RESEARCH SCIENCES.........         296,535         301,535
         ..................................      Program increase..............                          [5,000]
   002   0601103F                            UNIVERSITY RESEARCH INITIATIVES...          91,394          96,394
         ..................................      Program increase..............                          [5,000]
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL BASIC RESEARCH........         387,929         397,929
         ..................................
         ..................................  APPLIED RESEARCH
   003   0602020F                            FUTURE AF CAPABILITIES APPLIED              44,029          44,029
                                              RESEARCH.
   005   0602102F                            MATERIALS.........................         139,872         152,872
         ..................................      Advanced Composites in                                 [10,000]
                                                 Hypersonics and Attritable
                                                 Aircraft Research.
         ..................................      Metals Affordability                                    [3,000]
                                                 Initiative.
   007   0602202F                            HUMAN EFFECTIVENESS APPLIED                103,170         103,170
                                              RESEARCH.
   008   0602203F                            AEROSPACE SYSTEMS TECHNOLOGIES....         397,809         402,809
         ..................................      Reusable Hypersonics                                    [5,000]
                                                 Development and Transition.
   009   0602204F                            AEROSPACE SENSORS.................         164,962         169,962
         ..................................      Microelectronic manufacturing                           [5,000]
                                                 development.
   011   0602298F                            SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT--         10,285          10,285
                                               MAJOR HEADQUARTERS ACTIVITIES.
   012   0602336F                            NUCLEAR DELIVERY SYSTEMS TECH               27,031          27,031
                                              EXPLORATION.
   013   0602602F                            CONVENTIONAL MUNITIONS............         130,146         125,146
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-5,000]
   014   0602605F                            DIRECTED ENERGY TECHNOLOGY........          91,798          91,798
   015   0602788F                            DOMINANT INFORMATION SCIENCES AND          149,174         174,174
                                              METHODS.
         ..................................      Autonomous Battle Management                            [2,500]
                                                 Across the full Spectrum of
                                                 Conflict.
         ..................................      Distributed Quantum Networking                          [2,500]
                                                 Testbed and Quantum Cloud
                                                 Computing Environment.
         ..................................      Future Flag Operational                                 [2,500]
                                                 Experimentation Testbed.
         ..................................      Ion-Trap Quantum Computer for                           [5,000]
                                                 Air Platform Applied Research
                                                 activities.
         ..................................      Photonic Quantum Computing....                          [2,500]
         ..................................      Quantum entanglement                                   [10,000]
                                                 distribution research.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL APPLIED RESEARCH......       1,258,276       1,301,276
         ..................................
         ..................................  ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT
   016   0603032F                            FUTURE AF INTEGRATED TECHNOLOGY            282,004         282,004
                                              DEMOS.
   017   0603112F                            ADVANCED MATERIALS FOR WEAPON               32,808          37,808
                                              SYSTEMS.
         ..................................      Hypersonics manufacturing                               [5,000]
                                                 development.
   018   0603199F                            SUSTAINMENT SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY          13,277          13,277
                                              (S&T).
   019   0603203F                            ADVANCED AEROSPACE SENSORS........          72,149          72,149
   020   0603211F                            AEROSPACE TECHNOLOGY DEV/DEMO.....         260,212         312,712
         ..................................      Advanced High Mach Turbine                              [2,500]
                                                 Engines Using Additive
                                                 Manufacturing.
         ..................................      CCA Propulsion Integration....                         [20,000]
         ..................................      Hybrid Integrated Turret for                            [2,500]
                                                 Extended-Capability High-
                                                 Energy Lasers.
         ..................................      Solid Rocket Second Source                             [25,000]
                                                 Qualification Increase.
         ..................................      Turboelectric Adaptive Engine                           [2,500]
                                                 Demonstration.
   022   0603273F                            SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY FOR NUCLEAR           165,949         172,949
                                              RE-ENTRY SYSTEMS.
         ..................................      Smart Thermal Protection                                [7,000]
                                                 Systems (TPS) for Next-Gen
                                                 Systems.
   023   0603456F                            HUMAN EFFECTIVENESS ADVANCED                20,338          20,338
                                              TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT.
   024   0603601F                            CONVENTIONAL WEAPONS TECHNOLOGY...         131,397         128,397
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-3,000]
   025   0603605F                            ADVANCED WEAPONS TECHNOLOGY.......          13,744          13,744
   026   0603680F                            MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM..          99,908         102,408
         ..................................      Virtual, Augmented, and Mixed                           [2,500]
                                                 Reality Readiness.
   027   0603788F                            BATTLESPACE KNOWLEDGE DEVELOPMENT           31,938          46,938
                                              AND DEMONSTRATION.
         ..................................      Nationwide Integration of Time                          [2,500]
                                                 Resiliency for Operations.
         ..................................      Scalable Collaborative                                  [2,500]
                                                 Autonomy for Unmanned Systems.
         ..................................      Secure Hardened Architecture                           [10,000]
                                                 for Radiation Environments.
   028   0604776F                            DEPLOYMENT & DISTRIBUTION                   29,109          24,109
                                              ENTERPRISE R&D.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-5,000]
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY          1,152,833       1,226,833
                                                DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................
         ..................................  ADVANCED COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT AND
                                              PROTOTYPES
   030   0603036F                            MODULAR ADVANCED MISSILE..........          15,099          15,099
   031   0603260F                            INTELLIGENCE ADVANCED DEVELOPMENT.           4,012           4,012
   033   0603742F                            COMBAT IDENTIFICATION TECHNOLOGY..          25,888          25,888
   034   0603790F                            NATO RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT.....           2,320           2,320
   035   0603851F                            INTERCONTINENTAL BALLISTIC                  72,112          72,112
                                              MISSILE--DEM/VAL.
   036   0604001F                            NC3 ADVANCED CONCEPTS.............          14,394          14,394
   037   0604003F                            ADVANCED BATTLE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM        1,040,945       1,035,945
                                              (ABMS).
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-5,000]
   039   0604005F                            NC3 COMMERCIAL DEVELOPMENT &                61,355          61,355
                                              PROTOTYPING.
   041   0604009F                            AFWERX............................           3,589           6,089
         ..................................      Ultra-Short Takeoff and                                 [2,500]
                                                 Landing Aircraft Development.
   042   0604010F                            NEXT GENERATION ADAPTIVE                   513,681         462,313
                                              PROPULSION.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-51,368]
   043   0604015F                            LONG RANGE STRIKE--BOMBER.........       2,862,677       2,862,677
   046   0604033F                            HYPERSONICS PROTOTYPING...........         345,769         345,769
   047   0604041F                            FAMILY OF AFFORDABLE MASS MISSILES         525,223         472,701
                                              (FAMM).
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-52,522]
   048   0604060F                            NORAD & USNORTHCOM (N&NC)                   39,257          39,257
                                              EXPERIMENTATION.
   049   0604183F                            HYPERSONICS PROTOTYPING--                  806,142         806,142
                                              HYPERSONIC ATTACK CRUISE MISSILE
                                              (HACM).
   050   0604257F                            ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY AND SENSORS...          38,756          38,756
   052   0604317F                            TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER...............           2,196           2,196
   053   0604327F                            HARD AND DEEPLY BURIED TARGET              186,385         186,385
                                              DEFEAT SYSTEM (HDBTDS) PROGRAM.
   054   0604336F                            NUCLEAR DELIVERY SYSTEMS                    91,550          91,550
                                              PROTOTYPING.
   055   0604343F                            ADVANCED TANKER SYSTEMS...........          13,036          13,036
   056   0604414F                            CYBER RESILIENCY OF WEAPON SYSTEMS-         44,377          44,377
                                              ACS.
   057   0604609F                            REQUIREMENTS ANALYSIS & CONCEPT             57,575          57,575
                                              MATURATION.
   058   0604668F                            JOINT TRANSPORTATION MANAGEMENT             57,802          57,802
                                              SYSTEM (JTMS).
   059   0604776F                            DEPLOYMENT & DISTRIBUTION                    5,136           5,136
                                              ENTERPRISE R&D.
   060   0604858F                            TECH TRANSITION PROGRAM...........         166,061         163,455
         ..................................      AI Hardware and Software for                            [5,000]
                                                 Sensors and Countermeasures.
         ..................................      Critical Additive Advanced                              [9,000]
                                                 Manufacturing.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-16,606]
   061   0604860F                            OPERATIONAL ENERGY AND                      61,000         183,000
                                              INSTALLATION RESILIENCE.
         ..................................      Program increase..............                        [122,000]
   064   0606004F                            NUCLEAR ENTERPRISE RESEARCH &                1,105          26,105
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................      B-52 Agile Pod Advanced Sensor                         [25,000]
                                                 Fusion Software Development.
   065   0606005F                            DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION OFFICE.....         183,398         183,398
   067   0207147F                            COLLABORATIVE COMBAT AIRCRAFT.....       1,373,740       1,236,366
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                       [-137,374]
   068   0207179F                            AUTONOMOUS COLLABORATIVE PLATFORMS          57,217          51,496
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-5,721]
   069   0207420F                            COMBAT IDENTIFICATION.............           1,692           1,692
   071   0207455F                            THREE DIMENSIONAL LONG-RANGE RADAR          22,335          22,335
                                              (3DELRR).
   072   0207522F                            AIRBASE AIR DEFENSE SYSTEMS                 85,305          85,305
                                              (ABADS).
   073   0207606F                            JOINT SIMULATION ENVIRONMENT (JSE)         302,801         302,801
   074   0208030F                            WAR RESERVE MATERIEL--AMMUNITION..          14,663          14,663
   075   0302060F                            LOOKING GLASS NEXT................          65,277          65,277
   076   0303010F                            AF ISR DIGITAL INFRASTRUCTURE.....          24,455          24,455
   077   0305236F                            COMMON DATA LINK EXECUTIVE AGENT            26,401          23,761
                                              (CDL EA).
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-2,640]
   079   0305913F                            PERSISTENT SURVEILLANCE...........          29,325          29,325
   080   0701200F                            ENTERPRISE SELECT CLASS II........             949             949
   081   0708051F                            RAPID SUSTAINMENT MODERNIZATION             27,475          27,475
                                              (RSM).
   082   0808736F                            SPECIAL VICTIM ACCOUNTABILITY AND            1,652           1,652
                                              INVESTIGATION.
   083   0808737F                            INTEGRATED PRIMARY PREVENTION.....           4,271           4,271
   084   0901410F                            CONTRACTING INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY          25,815          25,815
                                              SYSTEM.
   085   1206415F                            U.S. SPACE COMMAND RESEARCH AND             34,719          34,719
                                              DEVELOPMENT SUPPORT.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL ADVANCED COMPONENT           9,338,932       9,231,201
                                                DEVELOPMENT AND PROTOTYPES.
         ..................................
         ..................................  SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT AND
                                              DEMONSTRATION
   086   0604200F                            FUTURE ADVANCED WEAPON ANALYSIS &           35,142          35,142
                                              PROGRAMS.
   087   0604201F                            PNT RESILIENCY, MODS, AND                  710,780         710,780
                                              IMPROVEMENTS.
   088   0604222F                            NUCLEAR WEAPONS SUPPORT...........          86,921          86,921
   089   0604270F                            ELECTRONIC WARFARE DEVELOPMENT....         260,233         220,233
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-40,000]
   090   0604281F                            TACTICAL DATA NETWORKS ENTERPRISE.         110,151         110,151
   091   0604287F                            PHYSICAL SECURITY EQUIPMENT.......           8,743           8,743
   092   0604288F                            SURVIVABLE AIRBORNE OPERATIONS           2,218,921       2,218,921
                                              CENTER (SAOC).
   093   0604602F                            ARMAMENT/ORDNANCE DEVELOPMENT.....          96,762          87,086
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-9,676]
   094   0604604F                            SUBMUNITIONS......................           3,599           3,599
   095   0604617F                            AGILE COMBAT SUPPORT..............          19,348          19,348
   096   0604706F                            LIFE SUPPORT SYSTEMS..............          21,328          21,328
   097   0604735F                            COMBAT TRAINING RANGES............         132,783         119,505
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-13,278]
   098   0604932F                            LONG RANGE STANDOFF WEAPON........         565,679         565,679
   100   0605056F                            OPEN ARCHITECTURE MANAGEMENT......          43,482          39,134
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-4,348]
   101   0605223F                            ADVANCED PILOT TRAINING...........          72,174          64,957
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-7,217]
   102   0605238F                            GROUND BASED STRATEGIC DETERRENT         4,521,370       4,521,370
                                              EMD.
   103   0605296F                            MICROELECTRONICS SECURE ENCLAVE...         224,664         220,664
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                         [-4,000]
   104   0101125F                            NUCLEAR WEAPONS MODERNIZATION.....          23,066          23,066
   105   0102417F                            OVER-THE-HORIZON BACKSCATTER RADAR         173,975         173,975
   106   0207039F                            COGNITIVE ELECTROMAGNETIC WARFARE.          50,496          50,496
   107   0207110F                            F-47..............................       5,037,904       4,971,525
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-66,379]
   108   0207279F                            ISOLATED PERSONNEL SURVIVABILITY            16,001          16,001
                                              AND RECOVERY.
   109   0207328F                            STAND IN ATTACK WEAPON............         115,882         115,882
   110   0207407F                            ELECTROMAGNETIC BATTLE MANAGEMENT           45,322          45,322
                                              (EMBM).
   111   0207701F                            FULL COMBAT MISSION TRAINING......           6,501           6,501
   112   0303008F                            SATURN............................           4,771           4,771
   116   0305282F                            JOINT FIRES NETWORK (JFN).........         313,982         313,982
   117   0401221F                            KC-46A TANKER SQUADRONS...........         543,788         315,788
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                       [-228,000]
   118   0401319F                            VC-25B............................         555,195         555,195
   119   0401334F                            LARGE AIRCRAFT SURVIVABILITY                17,996          17,996
                                              SYSTEMS (LASS).
   120   0701212F                            AUTOMATED TEST SYSTEMS............          15,900          15,900
   121   0804772F                            TRAINING DEVELOPMENTS.............           4,947           4,947
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT AND      16,057,806      15,684,908
                                                DEMONSTRATION.
         ..................................
         ..................................  MANAGEMENT SUPPORT
   123   0604256F                            THREAT SIMULATOR DEVELOPMENT......          44,526          44,526
   124   0604759F                            MAJOR T&E INVESTMENT..............         235,405         220,405
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-15,000]
   125   0605101F                            RAND PROJECT AIR FORCE............          13,312          13,312
   127   0605712F                            INITIAL OPERATIONAL TEST &                  13,562          13,562
                                              EVALUATION.
   128   0605807F                            TEST AND EVALUATION SUPPORT.......       1,802,502       1,747,802
         ..................................      Digital Knowledge Model                                 [5,300]
                                                 Upgrades.
         ..................................      Hypersonic Ground Testing                              [30,000]
                                                 Modernization.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-90,000]
   131   0605829F                            ACQ WORKFORCE- CYBER, NETWORK, &           439,592         437,592
                                              BUS SYS.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-2,000]
   132   0605831F                            ACQ WORKFORCE- CAPABILITY                1,206,669       1,206,669
                                              INTEGRATION.
   134   0605833F                            ACQ WORKFORCE- NUCLEAR SYSTEMS....         342,650         342,650
   135   0605898F                            MANAGEMENT HQ--R&D................           6,209           6,209
   136   0605976F                            FACILITIES RESTORATION AND                 367,369         367,369
                                              MODERNIZATION--TEST AND
                                              EVALUATION SUPPORT.
   137   0605978F                            FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT--TEST AND           298,924         298,924
                                              EVALUATION SUPPORT.
   138   0606017F                            REQUIREMENTS ANALYSIS AND                   21,678          19,511
                                              MATURATION.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-2,167]
   139   0606398F                            MANAGEMENT HQ--T&E................           7,507           7,507
   140   0208201F                            OFFENSIVE SMALL UNMANNED AIRCRAFT           30,187          30,187
                                              SYSTEMS (SUAS).
   141   0303255F                            COMMAND, CONTROL, COMMUNICATION,            18,068          18,068
                                              AND COMPUTERS (C4)--STRATCOM.
   142   0308602F                            ENTEPRISE INFORMATION SERVICES              80,342          80,342
                                              (EIS).
   143   0702806F                            ACQUISITION AND MANAGEMENT SUPPORT          12,132          10,919
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-1,213]
   144   0804776F                            ADVANCED DISTRIBUTED LEARNING.....             238             238
   145   0901215F                            PRODUCTIVITY INVESTMENTS..........           4,017           4,017
   147   1001004F                            INTERNATIONAL ACTIVITIES..........           4,514           4,514
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL MANAGEMENT SUPPORT....       4,949,403       4,874,323
         ..................................
         ..................................  OPERATIONAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT
   148   0604222F                            NUCLEAR WEAPONS SUPPORT...........          10,029          10,029
   149   0604233F                            SPECIALIZED UNDERGRADUATE FLIGHT            22,071          22,071
                                              TRAINING.
   150   0604283F                            BATTLE MGMT COM & CTRL SENSOR               44,187          44,187
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   152   0604840F                            F-35 C2D2.........................       1,128,748       1,138,748
         ..................................      Supply Chain Advanced                                  [10,000]
                                                 Manufacturing.
   153   0605018F                            AF INTEGRATED PERSONNEL AND PAY             31,777          31,777
                                              SYSTEM (AF-IPPS).
   154   0605024F                            ANTI-TAMPER TECHNOLOGY EXECUTIVE           130,610         117,549
                                              AGENCY.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-13,061]
   155   0605117F                            FOREIGN MATERIEL ACQUISITION AND             4,676           4,676
                                              EXPLOITATION.
   156   0605229F                            HH-60W............................          87,881          87,881
   157   0605278F                            HC/MC-130 RECAP RDT&E.............          34,932          34,932
   158   0606018F                            NC3 INTEGRATION...................          36,521          36,521
   159   0101113F                            B-52 SQUADRONS....................       1,478,648       1,478,648
   160   0101122F                            AIR-LAUNCHED CRUISE MISSILE (ALCM)             570             570
   161   0101126F                            B-1B SQUADRONS....................         273,552         273,552
   162   0101127F                            B-2 SQUADRONS.....................         418,178         398,178
         ..................................      Slow execution................                        [-20,000]
   163   0101213F                            MINUTEMAN SQUADRONS...............          79,313          79,313
   164   0101316F                            WORLDWIDE JOINT STRATEGIC                   44,424          44,424
                                              COMMUNICATIONS.
   165   0101318F                            SERVICE SUPPORT TO STRATCOM--               56,203          56,203
                                              GLOBAL STRIKE.
   166   0101328F                            ICBM REENTRY VEHICLES.............         733,182         733,182
   168   0102110F                            MH-139A...........................           7,046           7,046
   169   0102326F                            REGION/SECTOR OPERATION CONTROL                709             709
                                              CENTER MODERNIZATION PROGRAM.
   171   0202834F                            AVIATION SUPPORT EQUIPMENT--                 1,028           1,028
                                              GENERAL.
   172   0203345F                            OPERATIONS SECURITY (OPSEC).......          45,000          45,000
   173   0205219F                            MQ-9 UAV..........................          16,723          16,723
   174   0205671F                            JOINT COUNTER RCIED ELECTRONIC               2,816           2,816
                                              WARFARE.
   176   0207133F                            F-16 SQUADRONS....................         527,739         527,739
   177   0207134F                            F-15E SQUADRONS...................         322,889         322,889
   178   0207136F                            MANNED DESTRUCTIVE SUPPRESSION....           8,128           8,128
   179   0207138F                            F-22A SQUADRONS...................         950,375         950,375
   180   0207142F                            F-35 SQUADRONS....................          47,388          47,388
   181   0207146F                            F-15EX............................         133,274         133,274
   182   0207161F                            TACTICAL AIM MISSILES.............          98,861          93,975
         ..................................      Dual Mode APKWS...............                          [5,000]
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-9,886]
   183   0207163F                            ADVANCED MEDIUM RANGE AIR-TO-AIR            53,277          53,277
                                              MISSILE (AMRAAM).
   184   0207172F                            JOINT ADVANCED TACTICAL MISSILE            500,422         500,422
                                              (JATM).
   187   0207242F                            SPECIAL PROGRAM APPLICATIONS......          35,149          35,149
   188   0207247F                            AF TENCAP.........................          50,913          50,913
   189   0207249F                            PRECISION ATTACK SYSTEMS                    14,602          14,602
                                              PROCUREMENT.
   190   0207253F                            COMPASS CALL......................          66,514          66,514
   191   0207268F                            AIRCRAFT ENGINE COMPONENT                  205,938         205,938
                                              IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.
   192   0207325F                            JOINT AIR-TO-SURFACE STANDOFF              133,092         133,092
                                              MISSILE (JASSM).
   193   0207327F                            SMALL DIAMETER BOMB (SDB).........          25,497          25,497
   194   0207410F                            AIR & SPACE OPERATIONS CENTER              158,871         142,984
                                              (AOC).
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-15,887]
   195   0207412F                            CONTROL AND REPORTING CENTER (CRC)          18,137          18,137
   196   0207418F                            AFSPECWAR--TACP...................           5,206           5,206
   198   0207431F                            COMBAT AIR INTELLIGENCE SYSTEM              33,700          33,700
                                              ACTIVITIES.
   199   0207438F                            THEATER BATTLE MANAGEMENT (TBM)              7,014           7,014
                                              C4I.
   200   0207439F                            ELECTROMAGNETIC WARFARE INT REPROG          73,523          73,523
                                              (EWIR).
   202   0207452F                            DCAPES............................           5,254           5,254
   203   0207457F                            AIR FORCE SPECIAL WARFARE                   24,423          24,423
                                              (SPECWAR).
   204   0207461F                            FLIGHT OPERATIONS SYSTEMS.........          15,978          15,978
   205   0207521F                            AIR FORCE CALIBRATION PROGRAMS....           2,220           2,220
   207   0207590F                            SEEK EAGLE........................          36,710          36,710
   208   0207611F                            READINESS DECISION SUPPORT                   6,823           6,823
                                              ENTERPRISE.
   209   0207697F                            DISTRIBUTED TRAINING AND EXERCISES          83,659          73,659
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-10,000]
   210   0207701F                            FULL COMBAT MISSION TRAINING......           6,644          28,644
         ..................................      AI-enabled maintenance                                 [22,000]
                                                 intelligence platforms across
                                                 air education and training
                                                 command.
   211   0208006F                            MISSION PLANNING SYSTEMS..........         122,175         109,958
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-12,217]
   212   0208007F                            TACTICAL DECEPTION................          48,857          43,972
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-4,885]
   213   0208087F                            DISTRIBUTED CYBER WARFARE                   71,868          69,868
                                              OPERATIONS.
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                         [-2,000]
   214   0208088F                            AF DEFENSIVE CYBERSPACE OPERATIONS          76,758          76,758
   218   0208288F                            INTEL DATA APPLICATIONS...........           7,511          17,511
         ..................................      FireFly algorithm development.                         [10,000]
   219   0301025F                            GEOBASE...........................             403             403
   226   0301377F                            COUNTERING ADVANCED CONVENTIONAL             1,343           1,343
                                              WEAPONS (CACW).
   228   0301401F                            AF MULTI-DOMAIN NON-TRADITIONAL              2,754           2,754
                                              ISR BATTLESPACE AWARENESS.
   229   0302015F                            E-4B NATIONAL AIRBORNE OPERATIONS           50,873          50,873
                                              CENTER (NAOC).
   230   0302315F                            NON-KINETIC COUNTERMEASURE SUPPORT           4,024           4,024
   233   0303131F                            MINIMUM ESSENTIAL EMERGENCY                254,837         254,837
                                              COMMUNICATIONS NETWORK (MEECN).
   234   0303133F                            HIGH FREQUENCY RADIO SYSTEMS......          33,215          33,215
   235   0303140F                            INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY               117,658         117,658
                                              PROGRAM.
   236   0303248F                            ALL DOMAIN COMMON PLATFORM........          71,312          71,312
   238   0304100F                            STRATEGIC MISSION PLANNING &                89,663          89,663
                                              EXECUTION SYSTEM (SMPES).
   239   0304109F                            THRESHER..........................             109             109
   242   0304260F                            AIRBORNE SIGINT ENTERPRISE........          98,319          98,319
   243   0304310F                            COMMERCIAL ECONOMIC ANALYSIS......           1,713           1,713
   246   0304784F                            LONG ENDURANCE--AIRBORNE ISR......          16,570          16,570
   249   0305022F                            ISR MODERNIZATION & AUTOMATION              16,188          16,188
                                              DVMT (IMAD).
   250   0305099F                            GLOBAL AIR TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT                4,210           4,210
                                              (GATM).
   251   0305103F                            CYBER SECURITY INITIATIVE.........             318             318
   252   0305111F                            WEATHER SERVICE...................          29,331          29,331
   253   0305114F                            AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL, APPROACH, AND          61,895          61,895
                                              LANDING SYSTEM (ATCALS).
   254   0305116F                            AERIAL TARGETS....................           1,704           1,704
   257   0305128F                            SECURITY AND INVESTIGATIVE                   9,642           9,642
                                              ACTIVITIES.
   258   0305146F                            DEFENSE JOINT COUNTERINTELLIGENCE            2,469           2,469
                                              ACTIVITIES.
   259   0305155F                            THEATER NUCLEAR WEAPON STORAGE &            24,364          24,364
                                              SECURITY SYSTEM.
   261   0305179F                            INTEGRATED BROADCAST SERVICE (IBS)          18,266          18,266
   262   0305206F                            AIRBORNE RECONNAISSANCE SYSTEMS...          34,273          34,273
   263   0305207F                            MANNED RECONNAISSANCE SYSTEMS.....          17,114          17,114
   264   0305208F                            DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND/SURFACE           85,365          85,365
                                              SYSTEMS.
   266   0305221F                            NETWORK-CENTRIC COLLABORATIVE                9,146           9,146
                                              TARGETING.
   268   0305240F                            ISR TRANSPORT AND PROCESSING......         312,037         277,037
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-35,000]
   269   0305249F                            AF JWICS ENTERPRISE...............          19,324          19,324
   270   0305600F                            INTERNATIONAL INTELLIGENCE                  62,000          62,000
                                              TECHNOLOGY AND ARCHITECTURES.
   271   0305836F                            C2IMERA...........................          11,393          11,393
   272   0305903F                            COCOM MOBILE COMMAND AND CONTROL             2,013           2,013
                                              CENTERS (MCCCS).
   273   0305984F                            PERSONNEL RECOVERY COMMAND & CTRL            1,783           1,783
                                              (PRC2).
   274   0307577F                            INTELLIGENCE MISSION DATA (IMD)...           3,151           3,151
   275   0401119F                            C-5 AIRLIFT SQUADRONS (IF)........          76,233          76,233
   276   0401130F                            C-17 AIRCRAFT (IF)................         178,130         198,130
         ..................................      C-17 Mobility Connectivity                             [20,000]
                                                 increase.
   277   0401132F                            C-130J PROGRAM....................          16,628          16,628
   278   0401134F                            LARGE AIRCRAFT IR COUNTERMEASURES           12,323          12,323
                                              (LAIRCM).
   279   0401218F                            KC-135S...........................         121,742         141,742
         ..................................      KC-135 Mobility Connectivity                           [20,000]
                                                 increase.
   280   0401318F                            CV-22.............................          45,699          45,699
   281   0401334F                            LARGE AIRCRAFT SURVIVABILITY                50,111          50,111
                                              SYSTEMS (LASS).
   283   0708610F                            LOGISTICS INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY            21,518          21,518
                                              (LOGIT).
   284   0801380F                            AF LVC OPERATIONAL TRAINING (LVC-           23,472          23,472
                                              OT).
   285   0804743F                            OTHER FLIGHT TRAINING.............           1,950           1,950
   286   0901202F                            JOINT PERSONNEL RECOVERY AGENCY...           2,035           2,035
   287   0901218F                            CIVILIAN COMPENSATION PROGRAM.....           4,248           4,248
   288   0901220F                            PERSONNEL ADMINISTRATION..........           2,678           2,678
   289   0901226F                            AIR FORCE STUDIES AND ANALYSIS              81,252          65,002
                                              AGENCY.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-16,250]
   291   0901538F                            FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT INFORMATION             3,316           3,316
                                              SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT.
   292   0901554F                            DEFENSE ENTERPRISE ACNTNG AND MGT           38,301          38,301
                                              SYS (DEAMS).
   293   1201921F                            SERVICE SUPPORT TO STRATCOM--SPACE             700             700
                                              ACTIVITIES.
  293A   9999999999                          CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............      29,113,107      29,113,107
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL OPERATIONAL SYSTEM          39,930,435      39,878,249
                                                DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................
         ..................................       TOTAL RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT,       73,075,614      72,594,719
                                                  TEST AND EVALUATION, AIR
                                                  FORCE.
         ..................................
         ..................................  RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND
                                              EVALUATION, SPACE FORCE
         ..................................  BASIC RESEARCH
   001   0601102SF                           DEFENSE RESEARCH SCIENCES.........          20,833          20,833
   002   0601103SF                           UNIVERSITY RESEARCH INITIATIVES...          14,426          14,426
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL BASIC RESEARCH........          35,259          35,259
         ..................................
         ..................................  APPLIED RESEARCH
   004   1206601SF                           SPACE TECHNOLOGY..................         234,190         256,690
         ..................................      Hypersonic weapons advancement                          [2,500]
         ..................................      In-Space Operational                                   [10,000]
                                                 Technologies.
         ..................................      Positioning, Navigation, and                           [10,000]
                                                 Timing (PNT) Quantum System
                                                 demonstration.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL APPLIED RESEARCH......         234,190         256,690
         ..................................
         ..................................  ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT
   005   1206310SF                           SPACE SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY               313,738         313,738
                                              RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT.
   006   1206616SF                           SPACE ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY                  126,427         139,927
                                              DEVELOPMENT/DEMO.
         ..................................      Operational Spacecraft                                 [13,500]
                                                 Capability Bridge Effort.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY            440,165         453,665
                                                DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................
         ..................................  ADVANCED COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT AND
                                              PROTOTYPES
   007   0604002SF                           SPACE FORCE WEATHER SERVICES                 3,581           6,581
                                              RESEARCH.
         ..................................      Enhancing U.S. Air Force                                [3,000]
                                                 Academy Rocket Propulsion
                                                 Curriculum.
   008   1203010SF                           SPACE FORCE IT, DATA ANALYTICS,             45,971          45,971
                                              DIGITAL SOLUTIONS.
   010   1203622SF                           SPACE WARFIGHTING ANALYSIS........         128,546         128,546
   011   1203710SF                           EO/IR WEATHER SYSTEMS.............         144,434         144,434
   012   1203955SF                           SPACE ACCESS, MOBILITY & LOGISTICS           9,724           9,724
                                              (SAML).
   013   1206410SF                           SPACE TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT AND         1,246,316       1,246,316
                                              PROTOTYPING.
   014   1206427SF                           SPACE SYSTEMS PROTOTYPE                     87,730          87,730
                                              TRANSITIONS (SSPT).
   015   1206438SF                           SPACE CONTROL TECHNOLOGY..........          62,031          62,031
   016   1206458SF                           TECH TRANSITION (SPACE)...........         241,056         241,056
   017   1206617SF                           OPERATIONAL TEST & TRAINING                265,215         265,215
                                              INFRASTRUCTURE.
   018   1206730SF                           SPACE SECURITY AND DEFENSE PROGRAM         102,140         102,140
   019   1206760SF                           PROTECTED TACTICAL ENTERPRISE              155,885         155,885
                                              SERVICE (PTES).
   020   1206761SF                           PROTECTED TACTICAL SERVICE (PTS)..         449,434         449,434
   022   1206857SF                           SPACE RAPID CAPABILITIES OFFICE...           9,950           9,950
   023   1206862SF                           TACTICALLY RESPONSIVE SPACE.......          86,306          86,306
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL ADVANCED COMPONENT           3,038,319       3,041,319
                                                DEVELOPMENT AND PROTOTYPES.
         ..................................
         ..................................  SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT AND
                                              DEMONSTRATION
   024   1203269SF                           GPS III FOLLOW-ON (GPS IIIF)......         123,793         123,793
   025   1206421SF                           COUNTERSPACE SYSTEMS..............          43,702          43,702
   026   1206422SF                           WEATHER SYSTEM FOLLOW-ON..........          34,756          34,756
   027   1206425SF                           SPACE SITUATION AWARENESS SYSTEMS.       1,317,841       1,317,841
   028   1206431SF                           ADVANCED EHF MILSATCOM (SPACE)....          10,157          10,157
   030   1206440SF                           NEXT-GEN OPIR--GROUND.............         761,425         761,425
   031   1206442SF                           NEXT GENERATION OPIR..............         209,851         209,851
   032   1206443SF                           NEXT-GEN OPIR--GEO................         485,703         485,703
   033   1206444SF                           NEXT-GEN OPIR--POLAR..............                         415,000
         ..................................      Next Generation OPIR, Block 0                         [415,000]
                                                 Polar.
   034   1206445SF                           COMMERCIAL SATCOM (COMSATCOM)               68,554          68,554
                                              INTEGRATION.
   035   1206446SF                           RESILIENT MISSILE WARNING MISSILE        3,564,176       3,564,176
                                              TRACKING--LOW EARTH ORBIT (LEO).
   036   1206447SF                           RESILIENT MISSILE WARNING MISSILE        1,413,662       1,413,662
                                              TRACKING--MEDIUM EARTH ORBIT
                                              (MEO).
   037   1206771SF                           COMMERCIAL SERVICES...............          23,752          73,752
         ..................................      Program increase..............                         [50,000]
   038   1206853SF                           NATIONAL SECURITY SPACE LAUNCH               2,748           2,748
                                              PROGRAM (SPACE)--EMD.
   039   1206855SF                           EVOLVED STRATEGIC SATCOM (ESS)....       1,838,718       1,838,718
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT AND       9,898,838      10,363,838
                                                DEMONSTRATION.
         ..................................
         ..................................  MANAGEMENT SUPPORT
   042   1206392SF                           ACQ WORKFORCE--SPACE & MISSILE             260,731         260,731
                                              SYSTEMS.
   043   1206398SF                           SPACE & MISSILE SYSTEMS CENTER--            13,717          13,717
                                              MHA.
   044   1206399SF                           SSC ENTERPRISE ENGINEERING &               230,848         230,848
                                              INTEGRATION.
   045   1206759SF                           MAJOR T&E INVESTMENT--SPACE.......          65,731          65,731
   046   1206860SF                           ROCKET SYSTEMS LAUNCH PROGRAM               19,965          19,965
                                              (SPACE).
   047   1206864SF                           SPACE TEST PROGRAM (STP)..........          29,598          29,598
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL MANAGEMENT SUPPORT....         620,590         620,590
         ..................................
         ..................................  OPERATIONAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT
   049   1201212SF                           SERVICE-WIDE SUPPORT (NOT                   28,425          28,425
                                              OTHERWISE ACCOUNTED FOR).
   051   1203040SF                           DCO-SPACE.........................         481,251         481,251
   052   1203109SF                           NARROWBAND SATELLITE                       855,860         855,860
                                              COMMUNICATIONS.
   053   1203110SF                           SATELLITE CONTROL NETWORK (SPACE).          92,537          92,537
   054   1203154SF                           LONG RANGE KILL CHAINS............       1,392,025       1,392,025
   055   1203155SF                           SPACE-BASED MOVING TARGET                  253,355         253,355
                                              INDICATOR.
   056   1203156SF                           DATA TRANSPORT AND NETWORKING.....         164,974         164,974
   057   1203165SF                           NAVSTAR GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM          115,000         115,000
                                              (SPACE AND CONTROL SEGMENTS).
   058   1203173SF                           SPACE AND MISSILE TEST AND                  22,487          22,487
                                              EVALUATION CENTER.
   059   1203174SF                           SPACE INNOVATION, INTEGRATION AND           10,538          10,538
                                              RAPID TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT.
   060   1203182SF                           SPACELIFT RANGE SYSTEM (SPACE)....          56,781          56,781
   061   1203330SF                           SPACE SUPERIORITY ISR.............          64,290          64,290
   064   1203906SF                           NCMC--ITW/AA SYSTEM...............          25,092          25,092
   065   1203909SF                           BALLISTIC MISSILE EARLY WARNING            128,630         128,630
                                              SYSTEM (BMEWS).
   066   1203913SF                           NUDET DETECTION SYSTEM (SPACE)....         114,004         114,004
   067   1203940SF                           SPACE SITUATION AWARENESS                  294,902         294,902
                                              OPERATIONS.
   068   1206423SF                           GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM III--            332,313         332,313
                                              OPERATIONAL CONTROL SEGMENT.
   072   1206772SF                           RAPID RESILIENT COMMAND AND                109,190         109,190
                                              CONTROL (R2C2).
   073   1207440SF                           AUTOMATE SAT C2...................       1,524,300         804,900
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                       [-719,400]
   074   1208053SF                           JOINT TACTICAL GROUND SYSTEM......          92,731          92,731
  074A   9999999999                          CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............      17,330,381      17,330,381
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL OPERATIONAL SYSTEM          23,489,066      22,769,666
                                                DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................
         ..................................  SOFTWARE AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY
                                              PILOT PROGRAMS
   075   1208248SF                           SPACE DOMAIN AWARENESS/PLANNING/           617,062         631,062
                                              TASKING SW.
         ..................................      Expanded Commercial Space                               [9,000]
                                                 Domain Awareness.
         ..................................      Space Command & Control--                               [5,000]
                                                 Software Pilot Program.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL SOFTWARE AND DIGITAL           617,062         631,062
                                                TECHNOLOGY PILOT PROGRAMS.
         ..................................
         ..................................       TOTAL RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT,       38,373,489      38,172,089
                                                  TEST, AND EVALUATION, SPACE
                                                  FORCE.
         ..................................
         ..................................  RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST AND
                                              EVALUATION, DEFENSE-WIDE
         ..................................  BASIC RESEARCH
   001   0601000BR                           DTRA BASIC RESEARCH...............          15,070          15,070
   003   0601108D8Z                          HIGH ENERGY LASER RESEARCH                  17,667          17,667
                                              INITIATIVES.
   004   0601110D8Z                          BASIC RESEARCH INITIATIVES........          87,091          97,091
         ..................................      Program increase..............                         [10,000]
   006   0601120D8Z                          NATIONAL DEFENSE EDUCATION PROGRAM         165,488         215,488
         ..................................      Pilot Program To Support                               [50,000]
                                                 Advanced Technology Centers At
                                                 Community Colleges.
   007   0601122E                            EMERGING OPPORTUNITIES............         387,633         387,633
   008   0601228D8Z                          HISTORICALLY BLACK COLLEGES AND             99,706         125,706
                                              UNIVERSITIES/MINORITY
                                              INSTITUTIONS.
         ..................................      Program increase..............                         [26,000]
   009   0601384BP                           CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE             27,425          27,425
                                              PROGRAM.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL BASIC RESEARCH........         800,080         886,080
         ..................................
         ..................................  APPLIED RESEARCH
   011   0602000D8Z                          JOINT MUNITIONS TECHNOLOGY........          32,145          32,145
   012   0602023E                            ACCESS AND AWARENESS..............         110,096         110,096
   013   0602024E                            WARFIGHTING PERFORMANCE...........         364,141         364,141
   014   0602025E                            MAKING, MAINTAINING, SUPPLY CHAIN        1,624,523       1,624,523
                                              AND LOGISTICS.
   017   0602128D8Z                          PROMOTION AND PROTECTION                     4,260           4,260
                                              STRATEGIES.
   018   0602230D8Z                          DEFENSE TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION.....          43,405          43,405
   019   0602234D8Z                          LINCOLN LABORATORY RESEARCH                 10,045          18,045
                                              PROGRAM.
         ..................................      Program increase..............                          [8,000]
   020   0602251D8Z                          APPLIED RESEARCH FOR THE                    59,560          59,560
                                              ADVANCEMENT OF S&T PRIORITIES.
   022   0602384BP                           CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE            207,186         197,186
                                              PROGRAM.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-10,000]
   023   0602668D8Z                          CYBER SECURITY RESEARCH...........          18,575          23,575
         ..................................      Pacific Intelligence and                                [5,000]
                                                 Innovation Initiative.
   029   0602718BR                           COUNTER WEAPONS OF MASS                    157,287         157,287
                                              DESTRUCTION APPLIED RESEARCH.
   030   0602751D8Z                          SOFTWARE ENGINEERING INSTITUTE               7,069           7,069
                                              (SEI) APPLIED RESEARCH.
   031   0602890D8Z                          HIGH ENERGY LASER RESEARCH........          50,408          50,408
   032   0602891D8Z                          FSRM MODELLING....................           6,635           6,635
   033   1160401BB                           SOF TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT........          50,856          55,856
         ..................................      Radio Consolidation and                                 [5,000]
                                                 Procurement.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL APPLIED RESEARCH......       2,746,191       2,754,191
         ..................................
         ..................................  ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT
   034   0603000D8Z                          JOINT MUNITIONS ADVANCED                    64,251          64,251
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   036   0603055D8Z                          OPERATIONAL ENERGY CAPABILITY              165,060         205,060
                                              IMPROVEMENT.
         ..................................      Program increase..............                         [20,000]
         ..................................      TRISO development.............                         [20,000]
   038   0603122D8Z                          COMBATING TERRORISM TECHNOLOGY              73,618         323,618
                                              SUPPORT.
         ..................................      Emerging Tech Cooperation.....                         [50,000]
         ..................................      Israel Counter UXS Program....                        [100,000]
         ..................................      Israel Subterranean                                   [100,000]
                                                 Cooperation.
   039   0603133D8Z                          FOREIGN COMPARATIVE TESTING.......          24,950          24,950
   040   0603142D8Z                          MISSION ENGINEERING & INTEGRATION          144,454         144,454
                                              (ME&I).
   041   0603160BR                           COUNTER WEAPONS OF MASS                    509,160         509,160
                                              DESTRUCTION ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   043   0603180C                            ADVANCED RESEARCH.................         482,573         545,573
         ..................................      Hypersonic and counter-                                [60,000]
                                                 hypersonic testing from
                                                 unmanned surface vessels.
         ..................................      power source for directed                               [3,000]
                                                 energy missile defense
                                                 satellite system.
   044   0603183D8Z                          JOINT HYPERSONIC TECHNOLOGY                424,422         454,422
                                              DEVELOPMENT &TRANSITION.
         ..................................      Acceleration of hypersonic                             [10,000]
                                                 system development.
         ..................................      AI Enhanced Hypersonic Seeker.                         [10,000]
         ..................................      UCAH Classified AI/ML and                              [10,000]
                                                 Quantum Computing
                                                 Infrastructure Project.
   045   0603225D8Z                          JOINT DOD-DOE MUNITIONS TECHNOLOGY          45,375          45,375
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   048   0603288D8Z                          ANALYTIC ASSESSMENTS..............          36,917          36,917
   049   0603289D8Z                          ADVANCED INNOVATIVE ANALYSIS AND            51,960          51,960
                                              CONCEPTS.
   050   0603330D8Z                          QUANTUM APPLICATION...............          60,333          60,333
   051   0603331D8Z                          FUTURE GENERATION WIRELESS                   5,000           5,000
                                              TECHNOLOGIES.
   052   0603342D8Z                          DEFENSE INNOVATION UNIT (DIU).....         522,559         540,559
         ..................................      Off Grid Tactical Power                                [10,000]
                                                 Systems Pilot Program.
         ..................................      ONRAMP expansion and                                    [3,000]
                                                 innovation acceleration
                                                 activities.
         ..................................      Operator Embedded National                              [5,000]
                                                 Security Innovation
                                                 Partnerships.
   053   0603375D8Z                          TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION.............         982,694         917,694
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-45,000]
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                        [-20,000]
   054   0603379D8Z                          ADVANCED TECHNICAL INTEGRATION....          79,268          79,268
   055   0603384BP                           CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE            310,308         310,308
                                              PROGRAM--ADVANCED DEVELOPMENT.
   056   0603467E                            DARPA ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY                1,568,124       1,568,124
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   057   0603468E                            ADVANCED COMPLEX SYSTEMS..........         540,362         540,362
   058   0603469E                            ADVANCED ENABLING TECHNOLOGIES....         331,007         331,007
   059   0603618D8Z                          JOINT ELECTRONIC ADVANCED                   49,083          49,083
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   060   0603662D8Z                          NETWORKED COMMUNICATIONS                   696,297         661,297
                                              CAPABILITIES.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-20,000]
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                        [-15,000]
   062   0603680D8Z                          DEFENSE-WIDE MANUFACTURING SCIENCE         581,847         599,347
                                              AND TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM.
         ..................................      Advanced Robotics and                                  [10,000]
                                                 Maintenance Automation.
         ..................................      Manufacturing Advancement for                           [5,000]
                                                 Novel Technology Innovation
                                                 and Sustainment.
         ..................................      Manufacturing of advanced                               [2,500]
                                                 composites for hypersonics
                                                 aided by digital engineering.
   063   0603680S                            MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM..          49,787          52,287
         ..................................      Domestic Tantalum processing                            [2,500]
                                                 capability.
   064   0603712S                            GENERIC LOGISTICS R&D TECHNOLOGY            18,791          18,791
                                              DEMONSTRATIONS.
   065   0603716D8Z                          STRATEGIC ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH            60,774          60,774
                                              PROGRAM.
   066   0603720S                            MICROELECTRONICS TECHNOLOGY                139,923         139,923
                                              DEVELOPMENT AND SUPPORT.
   072   0603781D8Z                          SOFTWARE ENGINEERING INSTITUTE....          10,227          10,227
   073   0603834D8Z                          BIOSURVEILLANCE PROGRAM ADVANCED             9,800           9,800
                                              TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT.
   074   0603838D8Z                          DEFENSE INNOVATION ACCELERATION            310,977         293,477
                                              (DIA).
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-22,500]
         ..................................      UAS Affordable Domestic                                 [5,000]
                                                 Propulsion.
   075   0603924D8Z                          HIGH ENERGY LASER ADVANCED                 201,125         206,125
                                              TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM.
         ..................................      Ultra-Short Pulsed Laser                                [5,000]
                                                 (USPL) Weapons.
   076   0603941D8Z                          TEST & EVALUATION SCIENCE &              3,834,080       3,580,302
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
         ..................................      Common Enterprise Range                                 [5,000]
                                                 Network.
         ..................................      Hypersonics Testing and                                [10,000]
                                                 Evaluation Workforce
                                                 Development.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                       [-233,778]
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                        [-35,000]
   077   0603945D8Z                          INTERNATIONAL INNOVATION                   158,345         154,345
                                              INITIATIVES.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-4,000]
   080   1160402BB                           SOF ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY                    126,085         126,085
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY         12,669,536      12,720,258
                                                DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................
         ..................................  ADVANCED COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT AND
                                              PROTOTYPES
   081   0603161D8Z                          NUCLEAR MATTERS, ADVANCED                   44,685          44,685
                                              COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT &
                                              PROTOTYPES.
   082   0603600D8Z                          WALKOFF...........................         227,158         227,158
   083   0603851D8Z                          ENVIRONMENTAL SECURITY TECHNICAL           125,066         125,066
                                              CERTIFICATION PROGRAM.
   085   0603882C                            BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE                1,360,611       1,360,611
                                              MIDCOURSE DEFENSE SEGMENT.
   086   0603884BP                           CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE            391,307         391,307
                                              PROGRAM--DEM/VAL.
   087   0603884C                            BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE SENSORS.         865,420         868,420
         ..................................      Deep Sentry...................                          [3,000]
   088   0603890C                            BMD ENABLING PROGRAMS.............       1,457,437       1,180,437
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                       [-277,000]
   089   0603891C                            SPECIAL PROGRAMS--MDA.............       1,742,778       1,742,778
   090   0603892C                            AEGIS BMD.........................         927,870         979,870
         ..................................      Aegis Guam Weapon System (AGS)                         [52,000]
                                                 capability enhancements,
                                                 threat sets.
   091   0603896C                            BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE COMMAND          939,987         939,987
                                              AND CONTROL, BATTLE MANAGEMENT
                                              AND COMMUNICATIONS (C2BMC).
   092   0603898C                            BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE JOINT             50,430          50,430
                                              WARFIGHTER SUPPORT.
   093   0603904C                            MISSILE DEFENSE INTEGRATION &               57,892          57,892
                                              OPERATIONS CENTER (MDIOC).
   094   0603906C                            REGARDING TRENCH..................          29,807          29,807
   095   0603907C                            SEA BASED X-BAND RADAR (SBX)......         274,204         274,204
   096   0603913C                            ISRAELI COOPERATIVE PROGRAMS......         300,000         300,000
   097   0603914C                            BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE TEST....       1,065,474       1,065,474
   098   0603915C                            BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE TARGETS.         518,506         538,506
         ..................................      Advanced Target Front End                              [10,000]
                                                 (ATFE) Configuration 3 (C3)
                                                 Risk Reduction.
         ..................................      Unmanned sea-based launch                              [10,000]
                                                 platforms.
   099   0603923D8Z                          COALITION WARFARE.................          10,082          10,082
   101   0604016D8Z                          DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE CORROSION              2,675           2,675
                                              PROGRAM.
   102   0604023D8Z                          JOINT MUNITIONS COMPONENT                    7,893           7,893
                                              PROTOTYPING.
   103   0604102C                            GUAM DEFENSE DEVELOPMENT..........         212,413         232,413
         ..................................      Program acceleration..........                         [20,000]
   104   0604115C                            TECHNOLOGY MATURATION INITIATIVES.          59,700          84,700
         ..................................      Solid Rocket Second Source                             [25,000]
                                                 Qualification Increase.
   106   0604125D8Z                          ADVANCED MANUFACTURING COMPONENTS           52,122          52,122
                                              AND PROTOTYPES.
   107   0604162D8Z                          CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL WEAPONS                945             945
                                              ELIMINATION TECHNOLOGY
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   108   0604181C                            HYPERSONIC DEFENSE................         213,783         263,783
         ..................................      GPI Acceleration..............                         [50,000]
   109   0604250D8Z                          ADVANCED INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGIES..       2,626,130       2,626,130
   110   0604294D8Z                          TRUSTED & ASSURED MICROELECTRONICS         156,743         159,243
         ..................................      Pilot Program on Semiconductor                          [2,500]
                                                 Antitampering and Authenticity
                                                 Validation.
   111   0604331D8Z                          RAPID PROTOTYPING PROGRAM.........         238,800         308,800
         ..................................      Multi-Mission Optionally                               [70,000]
                                                 Piloted Vessel prototyping.
   114   0604400D8Z                          DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE (DOD)                  2,024           2,024
                                              UNMANNED SYSTEM COMMON
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   115   0604539D8Z                          DEFENSE AUTONOMOUS WARFARE GROUP..       1,000,000       1,000,000
   116   0604551BR                           CATAPULT INFORMATION SYSTEM.......           7,500           7,500
   117   0604555D8Z                          OPERATIONAL ENERGY PROTOTYPING--            53,505          93,505
                                              NON S&T.
         ..................................      Program increase..............                         [40,000]
   119   0604679D8Z                          OFFICE OF STRATEGIC CAPITAL (OSC).          18,955          18,955
   120   0604682D8Z                          SUPPORT FOR STRATEGIC ANALYSIS....           2,802           2,802
   122   0604791D8Z                          MULTI-DOMAIN JOINT OPERATIONS               32,001          32,001
                                              (MDJO).
   123   0604797D8Z                          JOINT ENERGETIC TRANSITION OFFICE.           6,278           6,278
   124   0604826J                            JOINT C5 CAPABILITY DEVELOPMENT,            28,314          28,314
                                              INTEGRATION AND INTEROPERABILITY
                                              ASSESSMENTS.
   125   0604834D8Z                          BIOSURVEILLANCE PROGRAM                      7,000           7,000
                                              DEVELOPMENT & PROTOTYPING.
   126   0604873C                            LONG RANGE DISCRIMINATION RADAR            125,074         125,074
                                              (LRDR).
   127   0604874C                            IMPROVED HOMELAND DEFENSE                1,344,824       1,344,824
                                              INTERCEPTORS.
   129   0604878C                            AEGIS BMD TEST....................          61,969          61,969
   130   0604879C                            BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE SENSOR            52,919          52,919
                                              TEST.
   131   0604880C                            LAND-BASED SM-3 (LBSM3)...........          25,102          25,102
   132   0604887C                            BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE                   53,761          53,761
                                              MIDCOURSE SEGMENT TEST.
   133   0604924D8Z                          HIGH ENERGY LASER ADVANCED                  44,485          44,485
                                              COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT & PROTOTYPE.
   134   0202057C                            SAFETY PROGRAM MANAGEMENT.........           2,146           2,146
   135   0208059JCY                          CYBERCOM ACTIVITIES...............          31,735          31,735
   137   0208086JCY                          CYBER TRAINING ENVIRONMENT (CTE)..         120,814         111,814
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-9,000]
   139   0305103C                            CYBER SECURITY INITIATIVE.........           2,160           2,160
   140   0305245D8Z                          INTELLIGENCE CAPABILITIES AND               15,047          15,047
                                              INNOVATION INVESTMENTS.
   142   1206895C                            BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE SYSTEM            95,819          95,819
                                              SPACE PROGRAMS.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL ADVANCED COMPONENT          17,094,152      17,090,652
                                                DEVELOPMENT AND PROTOTYPES.
         ..................................
         ..................................  SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT AND
                                              DEMONSTRATION
   144   0604123D8Z                          CHIEF DIGITAL AND ARTIFICIAL                11,197          11,197
                                              INTELLIGENCE OFFICER (CDAO)--DEM/
                                              VAL ACTIVITIES.
   145   0604133D8Z                          ALPHA-1 DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES....         969,825         929,825
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-10,000]
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                        [-30,000]
   146   0604161D8Z                          NUCLEAR MATTERS, SYSTEM                     14,919          14,919
                                              DEVELOPMENT & DEMONSTRATION.
   147   0604384BP                           CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE            261,947         234,447
                                              PROGRAM--EMD.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-27,500]
   148   0604771D8Z                          JOINT TACTICAL INFORMATION                  10,200          10,200
                                              DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM (JTIDS).
   149   0605000BR                           COUNTER WEAPONS OF MASS                     16,713          16,713
                                              DESTRUCTION SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT.
   150   0605013BL                           INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT          13,620          13,620
   151   0605021SE                           HOMELAND PERSONNEL SECURITY                  9,334           9,334
                                              INITIATIVE.
   152   0605022D8Z                          DEFENSE EXPORTABILITY PROGRAM.....           5,943           5,943
   153   0605027D8Z                          OUSD(C) IT DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVES         273,253         268,253
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-5,000]
   154   0605080S                            DEFENSE AGENCY INITIATIVES (DAI)--          51,265          51,265
                                              FINANCIAL SYSTEM.
   156   0605210D8Z                          DEFENSE-WIDE ELECTRONIC                      7,918           7,918
                                              PROCUREMENT CAPABILITIES.
   157   0605294D8Z                          TRUSTED & ASSURED MICROELECTRONICS          51,202          51,202
   158   0605310D8Z                          MILITARY AVIATION AND INSTALLATION           4,072           4,072
                                              ASSURANCE SITING CLEARINGHOUSE.
   159   0605649D8Z                          ACQUISITION INTEGRATION AND                 92,689          92,689
                                              INTEROPERABILITY (AI2).
   160   0605755D8Z                          RADIOLOGICAL AND NUCLEAR DEFENSE             3,090           3,090
                                              MODERNIZATION SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT
                                              AND DEMONSTRATION.
   161   0605772D8Z                          NUCLEAR COMMAND, CONTROL, &                  2,985           2,985
                                              COMMUNICATIONS.
   162   0205401JCA                          COUNTER--SMALL UNMANNED AIRCRAFT           580,348         580,348
                                              SYSTEMS (JIATF-401).
   164   0305282K                            JOINT FIRES NETWORK (JFN).........          35,000          35,000
   165   0305304D8Z                          REAL PROPERTY ANALYTICS...........           2,573           2,573
   166   0305310D8Z                          COUNTERPROLIFERATION ADVANCED               12,751          12,751
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT AND       2,430,844       2,358,344
                                                DEMONSTRATION.
         ..................................
         ..................................  MANAGEMENT SUPPORT
   168   0603829J                            JOINT CAPABILITY EXPERIMENTATION..          12,332          12,332
   169   0604122D8Z                          JADC2 DEVELOPMENT AND                    2,109,895       2,079,895
                                              EXPERIMENTATION ACTIVITIES.
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                        [-30,000]
   171   0604774D8Z                          DEFENSE READINESS REPORTING SYSTEM           8,921           8,921
                                              (DRRS).
   172   0604875D8Z                          JOINT SYSTEMS ARCHITECTURE                  11,094          11,094
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   173   0604940D8Z                          CENTRAL TEST AND EVALUATION              1,153,754       1,113,754
                                              INVESTMENT DEVELOPMENT (CTEIP).
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-15,000]
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                        [-25,000]
   175   0605001E                            MISSION SUPPORT...................         108,101         108,101
   176   0605100D8Z                          JOINT MISSION ENVIRONMENT TEST             234,700         234,700
                                              CAPABILITY (JMETC).
   177   0605126J                            JOINT INTEGRATED AIR AND MISSILE            69,820          69,820
                                              DEFENSE ORGANIZATION (JIAMDO).
   179   0605131D8Z                          LIVE FIRE TESTING.................           9,020           9,020
   180   0605142D8Z                          SYSTEMS ENGINEERING...............          21,992          21,992
   181   0605151D8Z                          STUDIES AND ANALYSIS SUPPORT--OSD.           5,255           5,255
   182   0605161D8Z                          NUCLEAR MATTERS MANAGEMENT SUPPORT          21,862          21,862
   183   0605170D8Z                          SUPPORT TO NETWORKS AND                     26,878          26,878
                                              INFORMATION INTEGRATION.
   184   0605200D8Z                          GENERAL SUPPORT TO                          10,695          10,695
                                              OUSD(INTELLIGENCE AND SECURITY).
   185   0605384BP                           CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE             89,467          89,467
                                              PROGRAM.
   192   0605711D8Z                          CRITICAL TECHNOLOGY ANALYSIS......          10,913          10,913
   193   0605790D8Z                          SMALL BUSINESS INNOVATION RESEARCH           8,435           8,435
                                              (SBIR)/ SMALL BUSINESS TECHNOLOGY
                                              TRANSFER (STTR) ADMINISTRATION.
   194   0605797D8Z                          MAINTAINING TECHNOLOGY ADVANTAGE..          35,512          35,512
   195   0605798D8Z                          DEFENSE TECHNOLOGY ANALYSIS.......         165,450         165,450
   196   0605801KA                           DEFENSE TECHNICAL INFORMATION               57,576          57,576
                                              CENTER (DTIC).
   197   0605803SE                           R&D IN SUPPORT OF DOD ENLISTMENT,           34,359          34,359
                                              TESTING AND EVALUATION.
   198   0605804D8Z                          DEVELOPMENT TEST AND EVALUATION...          35,106          35,106
   199   0605898E                            MANAGEMENT HQ--R&D................           5,383           5,383
   200   0605998KA                           MANAGEMENT HQ--DEFENSE TECHNICAL             3,489           3,489
                                              INFORMATION CENTER (DTIC).
   201   0606005D8Z                          SPECIAL ACTIVITIES................          19,260          19,260
   202   0606100D8Z                          BUDGET AND PROGRAM ASSESSMENTS....          10,678          10,678
   203   0606114D8Z                          ANALYSIS WORKING GROUP (AWG)                11,668          11,668
                                              SUPPORT.
   205   0606220D8Z                          OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF WAR              75,000          77,000
                                              ENTERPRISE TRANSFORMATION AND
                                              MODERNIZATION.
         ..................................      Acquisition Workforce Data                              [2,000]
                                                 Analytics Capability.
   206   0606225D8Z                          ODNA TECHNOLOGY AND RESOURCE                 3,264           3,264
                                              ANALYSIS.
   207   0606300D8Z                          DEFENSE SCIENCE BOARD.............           6,307           6,307
   208   0606301D8Z                          AVIATION SAFETY TECHNOLOGIES......             986          15,986
         ..................................      Health and Usage Monitoring                            [10,000]
                                                 Systems modernization.
         ..................................      HUMS..........................                          [5,000]
   209   0606771D8Z                          CYBER RESILIENCY AND CYBERSECURITY          30,746          30,746
                                              POLICY.
   211   0606775D8Z                          JOINT PRODUCTION ACCELERATOR CELL            6,215           6,215
                                              (JPAC).
   212   0606829D8Z                          SUSTAINMENT TRANSITION                      29,408          29,408
                                              CAPABILITIES.
   215   0204571J                            JOINT STAFF ANALYTICAL SUPPORT....           5,088           5,088
   216   0207834D8Z                          BIOSURVEILLANCE PROGRAM...........           7,000           7,000
   217   0208045K                            C4I INTEROPERABILITY..............          72,581          72,581
   218   0303169D8Z                          INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY RAPID                 6,416           6,416
                                              ACQUISITION.
   219   0305172K                            COMBINED ADVANCED APPLICATIONS....           5,566           5,566
   221   0305208K                            DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND/SURFACE            2,951           2,951
                                              SYSTEMS.
   222   0305248J                            JOINT STAFF OFFICE OF THE CHIEF             67,007          67,007
                                              DATA OFFICER (OCDO) ACTIVITIES.
   223   0804768J                            COCOM EXERCISE ENGAGEMENT AND               90,424          90,424
                                              TRAINING TRANSFORMATION (CE2T2)--
                                              NON-MHA.
   225   0808737SE                           INTEGRATED PRIMARY PREVENTION.....           5,768           5,768
   226   0901598C                            MANAGEMENT HQ--MDA................          31,863          31,863
  228A   9999999999                          CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............          36,977          36,977
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL MANAGEMENT SUPPORT....       4,775,182       4,722,182
         ..................................
         ..................................  OPERATIONAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT
   229   0604011D8Z                          NEXT GENERATION INFORMATION                  5,893           5,893
                                              COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGY (5G).
   231   0604538D8Z                          ECONOMIC DEFENSE UNIT (EDU).......         403,903         403,903
   232   0607162D8Z                          CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL WEAPONS              2,931           2,931
                                              ELIMINATION TECHNOLOGY
                                              IMPROVEMENT.
   233   0607210D8Z                          INDUSTRIAL BASE ANALYSIS AND             1,177,356       1,234,856
                                              SUSTAINMENT SUPPORT.
         ..................................      Digital Twin Center of                                  [2,500]
                                                 Excellence For Army Ground
                                                 Vehicles Center and Naval
                                                 Special Warfare Systems.
         ..................................      Domestic manufacturing                                 [40,000]
                                                 capability for advanced
                                                 reactive materials.
         ..................................      Expanding Engineering Research                          [5,000]
                                                 & Development Capability for
                                                 Maritime Industrial Base.
         ..................................      Next Generation Fiber                                   [2,500]
                                                 Production Line.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-2,500]
         ..................................      Public-Private Advanced                                [10,000]
                                                 Manufacturing Initiative in
                                                 the Indo-Pacific.
   234   0607310D8Z                          COUNTERPROLIFERATION MODERNIZATION          11,304          11,304
   235   0607327T                            GLOBAL THEATER SECURITY                      6,010           6,010
                                              COOPERATION MANAGEMENT
                                              INFORMATION SYSTEMS (G-TSCMIS).
   236   0607384BP                           CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE             82,695          82,695
                                              (OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT).
   237   0607385BR                           COUNTER WEAPONS OF MASS                      4,108           9,108
                                              DESTRUCTION OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................      Operational Rapid Multi-                                [5,000]
                                                 Pathogen Diagnostic Tool.
   238   0607757D8Z                          RADIOLOGICAL AND NUCLEAR DEFENSE             2,794           2,794
                                              MODERNIZATION OPERATIONAL SYSTEM
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   239   0208085JCY                          ROBUST INFRASTRUCTURE AND ACCESS..         155,613         155,613
   240   0208097JCY                          CYBER COMMAND AND CONTROL (CYBER            85,958          85,958
                                              C2).
   241   0208099JCY                          DATA AND UNIFIED PLATFORM (D&UP)..          84,687          84,687
   245   0302019K                            DEFENSE INFO INFRASTRUCTURE                 13,312          13,312
                                              ENGINEERING AND INTEGRATION.
   246   0302609V                            COUNTERING THREATS AUTOMATED                11,710          11,710
                                              PLATFORM.
   247   0303126K                            LONG-HAUL COMMUNICATIONS--DCS.....          10,508          10,508
   248   0303131K                            MINIMUM ESSENTIAL EMERGENCY                 10,307          10,307
                                              COMMUNICATIONS NETWORK (MEECN).
   250   0303140D8Z                          INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY                35,214          35,214
                                              PROGRAM.
   252   0303140K                            INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY                33,502          33,502
                                              PROGRAM.
   253   0303153K                            DEFENSE SPECTRUM ORGANIZATION.....          49,466          49,466
   254   0303171K                            JOINT PLANNING AND EXECUTION                10,615          10,615
                                              SERVICES.
   257   0303430V                            FEDERAL INVESTIGATIVE SERVICES              50,900          50,900
                                              INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY.
   265   0305104D8Z                          DEFENSE INDUSTRIAL BASE (DIB)               17,077          17,077
                                              CYBER SECURITY INITIATIVE.
   269   0305146V                            DEFENSE JOINT COUNTERINTELLIGENCE            6,751           6,751
                                              ACTIVITIES.
   270   0305172D8Z                          COMBINED ADVANCED APPLICATIONS....          18,912          18,912
   272   0305186D8Z                          POLICY R&D PROGRAMS...............          11,740          11,740
   275   0305199D8Z                          NET CENTRICITY....................          55,673          55,673
   282   0305387D8Z                          HOMELAND DEFENSE TECHNOLOGY                  1,730           1,730
                                              TRANSFER PROGRAM.
   283   0305601K                            MISSION PARTNER ENVIRONMENTS......          15,464          15,464
   293   0306250JCY                          CYBER OPERATIONS TECHNOLOGY              1,303,094       1,308,094
                                              SUPPORT.
         ..................................      Pathfinder....................                         [15,000]
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                        [-10,000]
   294   0307609V                            NATIONAL INDUSTRIAL SECURITY                19,840          19,840
                                              SYSTEMS (NISS).
   297   0708012K                            LOGISTICS SUPPORT ACTIVITIES......           2,051           2,051
   298   0708012S                            PACIFIC DISASTER CENTERS..........                           2,500
         ..................................      Program increase..............                          [2,500]
   299   0708047S                            DEFENSE PROPERTY ACCOUNTABILITY              2,829           2,829
                                              SYSTEM.
   302   1160403BB                           AVIATION SYSTEMS..................         216,781         216,781
   303   1160405BB                           INTELLIGENCE SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT..         109,227         109,227
   304   1160408BB                           OPERATIONAL ENHANCEMENTS..........         279,478         310,178
         ..................................      Ground Infil Protection                                [25,700]
                                                 Systems(GIPS).
         ..................................      Next Generation Geospatial                              [5,000]
                                                 Intelligence Data Awareness.
   305   1160431BB                           WARRIOR SYSTEMS...................         435,074         468,108
         ..................................      Electromagnetic Warfare (EW)                            [3,500]
                                                 Family of Systems.
         ..................................      Ground Infil Protection                                 [4,000]
                                                 Systems(GIPS).
         ..................................      Ground Organic Precision                                [5,000]
                                                 Strike Systems (GOPSS).
         ..................................      Low Cost, Platform Agnostic                            [12,000]
                                                 Lethal Packages (Warhead and
                                                 Electronic Safe and Arm Device
                                                 (ESAD)) for Group 1 Drones.
         ..................................      Munitions War Reserves........                          [8,534]
   306   1160432BB                           SPECIAL PROGRAMS..................          25,761          25,761
   309   1160483BB                           MARITIME SYSTEMS..................         351,721         351,721
   310   1160490BB                           OPERATIONAL ENHANCEMENTS                    25,747          40,747
                                              INTELLIGENCE.
         ..................................      Hybrid Threats Analytical                              [15,000]
                                                 Platform (HTAP).
   311   1203610K                            TELEPORT PROGRAM..................          22,244          22,244
  311A   9999999999                          CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............       8,923,353       9,102,253
         ..................................      Foreign Materiel Program......                        [168,900]
         ..................................      Forward Based Theater Foreign                          [10,000]
                                                 Materiel Exploitation.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL OPERATIONAL SYSTEM          14,093,333      14,420,967
                                                DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................
         ..................................  SOFTWARE AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY
                                              PILOT PROGRAMS
   312   0608140D8Z                          ENTERPRISE PLATFORMS AND                   481,775         475,775
                                              CAPABILITIES--SOFTWARE PILOT
                                              PROGRAM.
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                         [-6,000]
   313   0608500D8Z                          WEAPONEERING CODE SUSTAINMENT.....          23,071          23,071
   314   0608648D8Z                          ACQUISITION VISIBILITY--SOFTWARE            64,364          64,364
                                              PILOT PROGRAM.
   316   0608776D8Z                          DEFENSE INNOVATION UNIT FIELDING..         433,867         430,867
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-3,000]
   317   0303150K                            GLOBAL COMMAND AND CONTROL SYSTEM.         124,329         124,329
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL SOFTWARE AND DIGITAL         1,127,406       1,118,406
                                                TECHNOLOGY PILOT PROGRAMS.
         ..................................
         ..................................       TOTAL RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT,       55,736,724      56,071,080
                                                  TEST AND EVALUATION, DEFENSE-
                                                  WIDE.
         ..................................
         ..................................  GOLDEN DOME FOR AMERICA FUND
         ..................................  RESEARCH, DEV, TEST & EVAL*
   009   0604139D8Z                          GOLDEN DOME FOR AMERICA--MDA......         367,000         367,000
   015   0901159D8Z                          GOLDEN DOME FOR AMERICA...........          30,971          30,971
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL RESEARCH, DEV, TEST &          397,971         397,971
                                                EVAL*.
         ..................................
         ..................................       TOTAL GOLDEN DOME FOR AMERICA         397,971         397,971
                                                  FUND.
         ..................................
         ..................................  OPERATIONAL TEST AND EVALUATION,
                                              DEFENSE
         ..................................  MANAGEMENT SUPPORT
   001   0605118OTE                          OPERATIONAL TEST AND EVALUATION...         101,365         151,542
         ..................................      Program increase..............                         [50,177]
   002   0605131OTE                          LIVE FIRE TEST AND EVALUATION.....          11,000         108,109
         ..................................      Program increase..............                         [97,109]
   003   0605814OTE                          OPERATIONAL TEST ACTIVITIES AND                             76,492
                                              ANALYSES.
         ..................................      Program increase..............                         [76,492]
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL MANAGEMENT SUPPORT....         112,365         336,143
         ..................................
         ..................................       TOTAL OPERATIONAL TEST AND            112,365         336,143
                                                  EVALUATION, DEFENSE.
         ..................................
         ..................................       TOTAL RDT&E..................     218,791,608     219,478,814
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                 TITLE XLIII--OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE

SEC. 4301. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                         SEC. 4301. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE (In Thousands of Dollars)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                     FY 2027          House
    Line                                    Item                                     Request        Authorized
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
             OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, ARMY
             OPERATING FORCES
       010   MANEUVER UNITS....................................................       5,309,790       5,309,790
       020   MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES..........................................         375,682         375,682
       030   ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE............................................       1,193,028       1,193,028
       040   THEATER LEVEL ASSETS..............................................       2,395,049       2,395,049
       050   LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT....................................       1,273,674       1,273,674
       060   AVIATION ASSETS...................................................       1,930,557       1,930,557
       070   FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT................................       7,186,195       7,186,195
       080   LAND FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS.....................................         888,277         888,277
       090   LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE.....................................       2,022,115       2,142,115
                 Ground combat vehicle sustainment.............................                        [120,000]
       100   MEDICAL READINESS.................................................         786,815         796,815
                 TC3Sim: Battlefield Trauma Readiness..........................                         [10,000]
       110   BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT...........................................      10,390,174      10,390,174
       120   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION...............       5,435,364       5,440,864
                 Army National Guard Controlled Humidity Preservation..........                          [5,500]
       130   MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL HEADQUARTERS...........................         287,812         287,812
       140   ADDITIONAL ACTIVITIES.............................................         383,610         383,610
       150   RESET.............................................................         117,880         117,880
       160   US AFRICA COMMAND.................................................         693,812         835,812
                 COCO ISR......................................................                         [45,000]
                 Information Operations........................................                         [94,000]
                 Technology Experimentation and Demonstration..................                          [3,000]
       170   US EUROPEAN COMMAND...............................................         510,862         513,862
                including amount for Classified Program........................                         [40,000]
                 Technology Experimentation and Demonstration..................                          [3,000]
       180   US SOUTHERN COMMAND...............................................         464,769         467,769
                 Technology Experimentation and Demonstration..................                          [3,000]
       190   US FORCES KOREA...................................................          77,775          77,775
       200   CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES--CYBERSPACE OPERATIONS......................         366,311         358,311
                 Unjustified growth............................................                         [-8,000]
       210   CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES--CYBERSECURITY..............................         579,954         579,954
                 SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.....................................      42,669,505      42,945,005
 
             MOBILIZATION
       220   STRATEGIC MOBILITY................................................          53,602          53,602
       230   ARMY PREPOSITIONED STOCKS.........................................       1,125,709       1,125,709
                including amount for maintenance of APS-2 in the USEUCOM AOR...                        [380,000]
       240   INDUSTRIAL PREPAREDNESS...........................................           3,172           3,172
                 SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION.........................................       1,182,483       1,182,483
 
             TRAINING AND RECRUITING
       250   OFFICER ACQUISITION...............................................         193,530         193,530
       260   RECRUIT TRAINING..................................................          70,431          70,431
       270   ONE STATION UNIT TRAINING.........................................          96,115          96,115
       280   SENIOR RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS............................         503,896         503,896
       290   SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING........................................       1,204,230       1,204,230
       300   FLIGHT TRAINING...................................................       1,381,437       1,381,437
       310   PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION................................         201,481         201,481
       320   TRAINING SUPPORT..................................................         609,925         609,925
       330   RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........................................         712,092         712,092
       350   OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION..................................         216,256         216,256
       360   CIVILIAN EDUCATION AND TRAINING...................................         218,683         218,683
       370   JUNIOR RESERVE OFFICER TRAINING CORPS.............................         218,598         218,598
                 SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING..............................       5,626,674       5,626,674
 
             ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES
       390   SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........................................       1,483,938       1,311,438
                 Program decrease..............................................                       [-172,500]
       400   CENTRAL SUPPLY ACTIVITIES.........................................         703,829         703,829
       410   LOGISTIC SUPPORT ACTIVITIES.......................................         634,879         634,879
       420   AMMUNITION MANAGEMENT.............................................         525,732         525,732
       430   ADMINISTRATION....................................................         402,276         393,276
                 Program decrease..............................................                         [-9,000]
       440   SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........................................       2,252,914       2,222,914
                 Program decrease..............................................                        [-30,000]
       450   MANPOWER MANAGEMENT...............................................         324,069         324,069
       460   OTHER PERSONNEL SUPPORT...........................................         961,851         961,851
       470   OTHER SERVICE SUPPORT.............................................       2,179,562       2,179,562
       480   ARMY CLAIMS ACTIVITIES............................................         139,480         139,480
       490   REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT............................................         308,271         308,271
       500   FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT AND AUDIT READINESS..........................         434,778         434,778
       510   DEF ACQUISITION WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT ACCOUNT.....................          37,654          37,654
       520   INTERNATIONAL MILITARY HEADQUARTERS...............................         760,520         760,520
       530   MISC. SUPPORT OF OTHER NATIONS....................................          28,681          28,681
      590A   CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............................................       3,457,587       3,457,587
                 SUBTOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES...........      14,636,021      14,424,521
 
             UNDISTRIBUTED
       600   UNDISTRIBUTED.....................................................                        -417,800
                 Historical unobligated balances...............................                       [-417,800]
                 SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED........................................                        -417,800
 
                  TOTAL OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, ARMY........................      64,114,683      63,760,883
 
             OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, ARMY RESERVE
             OPERATING FORCES
       010   MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES..........................................          15,213          15,213
       020   ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE............................................         674,766         674,766
       030   THEATER LEVEL ASSETS..............................................         121,223         121,223
       040   LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT....................................         664,612         664,612
       050   AVIATION ASSETS...................................................          37,490          72,490
                 Aviation force structure......................................                         [35,000]
       060   FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT................................         380,473         380,473
       070   LAND FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS.....................................          41,301          41,301
       080   LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE.....................................          37,429          37,429
       090   BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT...........................................         577,337         577,337
       100   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION...............         411,093         411,093
       110   MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL HEADQUARTERS...........................          27,810          27,810
       120   CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES--CYBERSPACE OPERATIONS......................           2,725           2,725
       130   CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES--CYBERSECURITY..............................          19,422          19,422
                 SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.....................................       3,010,894       3,045,894
 
             ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES
       140   SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........................................          15,237          11,237
                 Program decrease..............................................                         [-4,000]
       150   ADMINISTRATION....................................................          11,708          11,708
       160   SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........................................           4,165           4,165
       170   MANPOWER MANAGEMENT...............................................           7,300           7,300
       180   OTHER PERSONNEL SUPPORT...........................................          63,330          63,330
                 SUBTOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES...........         101,740          97,740
 
             UNDISTRIBUTED
       210   UNDISTRIBUTED.....................................................                         -34,700
                 Historical unobligated balances...............................                        [-34,700]
                 SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED........................................                         -34,700
 
                  TOTAL OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, ARMY RESERVE................       3,112,634       3,108,934
 
             OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, ARMY NATIONAL GUARD
             OPERATING FORCES
       010   MANEUVER UNITS....................................................         807,777         807,777
       020   MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES..........................................         233,114         233,114
       030   ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE............................................       1,143,423       1,143,423
       040   THEATER LEVEL ASSETS..............................................          84,598          84,598
       050   LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT....................................         344,161         344,161
       060   AVIATION ASSETS...................................................       1,096,948       1,096,948
       070   FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT................................         864,172         873,672
                 GAMER live training capabilty.................................                          [9,500]
       080   LAND FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS.....................................          93,367          93,367
       090   LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE.....................................         171,055         171,055
       100   BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT...........................................       1,326,854       1,326,854
       110   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION...............       1,065,363       1,065,363
       120   MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL HEADQUARTERS...........................       1,116,559       1,116,559
       130   CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES--CYBERSPACE OPERATIONS......................           6,831           6,831
       140   CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES--CYBERSECURITY..............................          24,785          24,785
                 SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.....................................       8,379,007       8,388,507
 
             ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES
       150   SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........................................           6,604           6,604
       160   ADMINISTRATION....................................................          50,221          55,221
                 Center for the Study of the National Guard....................                          [5,000]
       170   SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........................................          24,846          24,846
       180   OTHER PERSONNEL SUPPORT...........................................         239,142         239,142
       190   REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT............................................           4,004           4,004
                 SUBTOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES...........         324,817         329,817
 
             UNDISTRIBUTED
       200   UNDISTRIBUTED.....................................................                         -83,000
                 Historical unobligated balances...............................                        [-83,000]
                 SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED........................................                         -83,000
 
                  TOTAL OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, ARMY NATIONAL GUARD.........       8,703,824       8,635,324
 
             COUNTER-ISLAMIC STATE OF IRAQ AND SYRIA TRAIN AND EQUIP
             COUNTER-ISIL TRAIN AND EQUIP FUND (CTEF)
       010   COUNTER-ISIL TRAIN AND EQUIP FUND (CTEF)..........................         303,099         253,099
                 Program decrease..............................................                        [-50,000]
                 SUBTOTAL COUNTER-ISIL TRAIN AND EQUIP FUND (CTEF).............         303,099         253,099
 
                  TOTAL COUNTER-ISLAMIC STATE OF IRAQ AND SYRIA TRAIN AND EQUIP         303,099         253,099
 
             OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, NAVY
             OPERATING FORCES
       010   MISSION AND OTHER FLIGHT OPERATIONS...............................       8,324,572       8,324,572
       020   FLEET AIR TRAINING................................................       3,128,764       3,128,764
       030   AIR SYSTEMS SUPPORT...............................................       1,469,165       1,469,165
       040   AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE........................................       2,219,583       2,219,583
       050   AVIATION LOGISTICS................................................       2,664,360       2,664,360
       060   MISSION AND OTHER SHIP OPERATIONS.................................       7,424,752       7,424,752
       070   SHIP OPERATIONS SUPPORT & TRAINING................................       1,713,065       1,713,065
       080   SHIP DEPOT MAINTENANCE............................................      14,292,873      14,292,873
       090   SHIP DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT.....................................       2,597,722       2,567,722
                 Program decrease..............................................                        [-45,000]
                 Small Shipyard Grants.........................................                         [15,000]
       100   COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS AND ELECTRONIC WARFARE......................       1,821,744       1,821,744
       110   MEDICAL READINESS.................................................         661,800         661,800
       120   SPACE SYSTEMS AND SURVEILLANCE....................................         572,000         572,000
       130   WARFARE TACTICS...................................................       1,038,456       1,038,456
       140   OPERATIONAL METEOROLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY..........................         496,272         496,272
       150   COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES.............................................       2,476,987       2,476,987
       160   EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE AND DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT................          62,570          62,570
       170   COMBATANT COMMANDERS CORE OPERATIONS..............................         105,379         105,379
       180   COMBATANT COMMANDERS DIRECT MISSION SUPPORT.......................       1,994,139       1,994,139
       190   CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES.............................................         662,040         653,040
                 Unjustified growth............................................                         [-9,000]
       200   STRATEGIC AND REGIONAL STRIKE DETERRENCE..........................       2,220,083       2,220,083
       210   WEAPONS MAINTENANCE...............................................       1,833,006       1,833,006
       220   OTHER WEAPON SYSTEMS SUPPORT......................................         834,752         834,752
       230   ENTERPRISE INFORMATION............................................       2,196,932       2,185,932
                 Unjustified growth............................................                        [-11,000]
       240   SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND MODERNIZATION........................       4,891,828       4,891,828
       250   BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................       6,069,456       6,069,456
                 SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.....................................      71,772,300      71,722,300
 
             MOBILIZATION
       260   SHIP PREPOSITIONING AND SURGE.....................................         378,073         378,073
       270   READY RESERVE FORCE...............................................         881,029         881,029
       280   SHIP ACTIVATIONS/INACTIVATIONS....................................         831,641         956,641
                 Platform Supply Vessel........................................                        [125,000]
       300   COAST GUARD SUPPORT...............................................          27,729          27,729
                 SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION.........................................       2,118,472       2,243,472
 
             TRAINING AND RECRUITING
       310   OFFICER ACQUISITION...............................................         198,743         198,743
       320   RECRUIT TRAINING..................................................          17,813          27,813
                 U.S. Naval Sea Cadets.........................................                         [10,000]
       330   RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS...................................         193,797         193,797
       340   SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING........................................       1,163,755       1,173,755
                 Generative AI and Spatial Computing for Warfighter Performance                         [10,000]
       350   PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION................................         280,521         280,521
       360   TRAINING SUPPORT..................................................         504,282         504,282
       370   RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........................................         261,140         261,140
       380   OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION..................................          75,600          75,600
       390   CIVILIAN EDUCATION AND TRAINING...................................          60,191          60,191
       400   JUNIOR ROTC.......................................................          60,219          60,219
                 SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING..............................       2,816,061       2,836,061
 
             ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES
       410   ADMINISTRATION....................................................       1,396,823       1,479,056
                 Integrated Data Management Systems for Military Personnel                               [5,000]
                 Harmful Behaviors Prevention..................................
                 Support for Navy Tuition Assistance Funding...................                         [77,233]
       430   CIVILIAN MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT........................         244,308         244,308
       450   MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT........................         642,260         642,260
       470   FOREIGN CURRENCY FLUCTUATION......................................           5,517           5,517
       480   DEF ACQUISITION WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT ACCOUNT.....................          60,440          60,440
       490   SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........................................         279,134         279,134
       510   PLANNING, ENGINEERING, AND PROGRAM SUPPORT........................         605,530         605,530
       520   ACQUISITION, LOGISTICS, AND OVERSIGHT.............................         822,580         822,580
       530   INVESTIGATIVE AND SECURITY SERVICES...............................       1,076,664       1,076,664
      760A   CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............................................         728,457         728,457
                 SUBTOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES...........       5,861,713       5,943,946
 
             UNDISTRIBUTED
       770   UNDISTRIBUTED.....................................................                        -307,900
                 Historical unobligated balances...............................                       [-307,900]
                 SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED........................................                        -307,900
 
                  TOTAL OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, NAVY........................      82,568,546      82,437,879
 
             OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS
             OPERATING FORCES
       010   OPERATIONAL FORCES................................................       3,113,102       3,113,102
       020   FIELD LOGISTICS...................................................       2,807,429       2,807,429
       030   DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................................................         344,750         344,750
       040   MARITIME PREPOSITIONING...........................................         280,543         280,543
       050   CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES.............................................         351,199         351,199
       060   SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION..........................       3,629,008       3,629,008
       070   BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................       3,175,027       3,175,027
                 SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.....................................      13,701,058      13,701,058
 
             TRAINING AND RECRUITING
       080   RECRUIT TRAINING..................................................          45,521          45,521
       090   OFFICER ACQUISITION...............................................           1,346           1,346
       100   SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING........................................         242,438         242,438
       110   PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION................................          64,994          64,994
       120   TRAINING SUPPORT..................................................         838,526         838,526
       130   RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........................................         363,287         363,287
       140   OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION..................................          47,840          47,840
       150   JUNIOR ROTC.......................................................          33,292          33,292
                 SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING..............................       1,637,244       1,637,244
 
             ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES
       180   SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........................................         154,026         154,026
       190   ADMINISTRATION....................................................         416,349         416,349
      300A   CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............................................          80,140          80,140
                 SUBTOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES...........         650,515         650,515
 
             UNDISTRIBUTED
       310   UNDISTRIBUTED.....................................................                         -80,300
                 Historical unobligated balances...............................                        [-80,300]
                 SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED........................................                         -80,300
 
                  TOTAL OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS................      15,988,817      15,908,517
 
             OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, NAVY RESERVE
             OPERATING FORCES
       010   MISSION AND OTHER FLIGHT OPERATIONS...............................         787,622         787,622
       020   AIR SYSTEMS SUPPORT...............................................           9,733           9,733
       030   AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE........................................         215,547         215,547
       040   AVIATION LOGISTICS................................................          27,703          27,703
       050   COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS.............................................          19,652          19,652
       060   COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES.............................................         196,376         196,376
       070   CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES.............................................             288             288
       080   ENTERPRISE INFORMATION............................................          30,811          30,811
       090   SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND MODERNIZATION........................          59,386          59,386
       100   BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................         111,177         111,177
                 SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.....................................       1,458,295       1,458,295
 
             ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES
       110   ADMINISTRATION....................................................           2,747           2,747
       120   MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT........................          14,944          14,944
       130   ACQUISITION AND PROGRAM MANAGEMENT................................           1,230           1,230
                 SUBTOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES...........          18,921          18,921
 
             UNDISTRIBUTED
       150   UNDISTRIBUTED.....................................................                         -20,600
                 Historical unobligated balances...............................                        [-20,600]
                 SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED........................................                         -20,600
 
                  TOTAL OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, NAVY RESERVE................       1,477,216       1,456,616
 
             OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS RESERVE
             OPERATING FORCES
       010   OPERATING FORCES..................................................         142,416         142,416
       020   DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................................................          23,213          23,213
       030   SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND MODERNIZATION........................         100,709         100,709
       040   BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................         128,902         128,902
                 SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.....................................         395,240         395,240
 
             ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES
       050   ADMINISTRATION....................................................           9,440           9,440
                 SUBTOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES...........           9,440           9,440
 
             UNDISTRIBUTED
       070   UNDISTRIBUTED.....................................................                          -7,000
                 Historical unobligated balances...............................                         [-7,000]
                 SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED........................................                          -7,000
 
                  TOTAL OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS RESERVE........         404,680         397,680
 
             OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE
             OPERATING FORCES
       010   PRIMARY COMBAT FORCES.............................................       1,798,263       1,798,263
       020   COMBAT ENHANCEMENT FORCES.........................................       3,117,205       3,117,205
       030   AIR OPERATIONS TRAINING (OJT, MAINTAIN SKILLS)....................       2,770,832       2,780,832
                 Point Defense Battle Lab Program..............................                         [10,000]
       040   DEPOT PURCHASE EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE..............................       6,092,998       6,092,998
       050   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION...............       6,100,395       6,105,395
                 Advanced Nuclear Energy Demonstration Project.................                          [5,000]
       060   CYBERSPACE SUSTAINMENT............................................         320,297         320,297
       070   CONTRACTOR LOGISTICS SUPPORT AND SYSTEM SUPPORT...................      11,647,415      11,647,415
       080   FLYING HOUR PROGRAM...............................................       7,265,480       7,265,480
       090   BASE SUPPORT......................................................      11,318,037      11,318,037
       100   GLOBAL C3I AND EARLY WARNING......................................       1,214,408       1,214,408
       110   OTHER COMBAT OPS SPT PROGRAMS.....................................       2,146,977       2,121,977
                 Program decrease..............................................                        [-25,000]
       120   CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES.............................................       1,155,815       1,146,815
                 Unjustified growth............................................                         [-9,000]
       130   TACTICAL INTEL AND OTHER SPECIAL ACTIVITIES.......................       1,992,280       1,992,280
       140   MEDICAL READINESS.................................................         561,626         561,626
       150   US NORTHCOM/NORAD.................................................         746,165         746,165
       160   US STRATCOM.......................................................         656,448         656,448
       170   US CENTCOM........................................................         405,438         405,438
       180   US SOCOM..........................................................          42,261          42,261
       190   US TRANSCOM.......................................................             694             694
       210   USSPACECOM........................................................         555,147         555,147
      210A   CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............................................          81,694          81,694
                 SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.....................................      59,989,875      59,970,875
 
             MOBILIZATION
       220   AIRLIFT OPERATIONS................................................       3,782,668       3,782,668
       230   MOBILIZATION PREPAREDNESS.........................................         321,889         321,889
                 SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION.........................................       4,104,557       4,104,557
 
             TRAINING AND RECRUITING
       240   OFFICER ACQUISITION...............................................         267,971         267,971
       250   RECRUIT TRAINING..................................................          70,462          70,462
       260   RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS (ROTC)............................         143,686         143,686
       270   SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING........................................         589,549         589,549
       280   FLIGHT TRAINING...................................................       1,122,297       1,122,297
       290   PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION................................         280,908         280,908
       300   TRAINING SUPPORT..................................................         192,608         192,608
       310   RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........................................         254,720         254,720
       320   EXAMINING.........................................................           7,261           7,261
       330   OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION..................................         232,768         232,768
       340   CIVILIAN EDUCATION AND TRAINING...................................         354,678         354,678
       350   JUNIOR ROTC.......................................................         114,790         114,790
                 SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING..............................       3,631,698       3,631,698
 
             ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES
       360   LOGISTICS OPERATIONS..............................................       1,124,763       1,124,763
       370   TECHNICAL SUPPORT ACTIVITIES......................................         159,721         159,721
       380   ADMINISTRATION....................................................       1,292,758       1,294,758
                 Integrated Data Management Systems for Military Personnel                               [5,000]
                 Harmful Behaviors Prevention..................................
                 Program decrease..............................................                         [-3,000]
       390   SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........................................          43,892          43,892
       410   OTHER SERVICEWIDE ACTIVITIES......................................       1,666,547       1,666,547
       420   CIVIL AIR PATROL..................................................          32,984          32,984
       430   DEF ACQUISITION WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT ACCOUNT.....................          58,936          58,936
       440   SECURITY PROGRAMS.................................................         202,400         202,400
       450   INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT.............................................          77,853          77,853
      450A   CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............................................       1,653,652       1,653,652
                 SUBTOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES...........       6,313,506       6,315,506
 
             UNDISTRIBUTED
       460   UNDISTRIBUTED.....................................................                        -408,800
                 Historical unobligated balances...............................                       [-408,800]
                 SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED........................................                        -408,800
 
                  TOTAL OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE...................      74,039,636      73,613,836
 
             OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, SPACE FORCE
             OPERATING FORCES
       010   GLOBAL C3I & EARLY WARNING........................................       1,056,824       1,056,824
       020   SPACE LAUNCH OPERATIONS...........................................         415,322         415,322
       030   SPACE OPERATIONS..................................................       1,266,939       1,266,939
       040   EDUCATION & TRAINING..............................................         783,168         783,168
       050   SPECIAL PROGRAMS..................................................         733,761         733,761
       060   DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................................................          83,803          83,803
       070   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION...............       1,384,326       1,384,326
       080   CONTRACTOR LOGISTICS AND SYSTEM SUPPORT...........................       2,096,381       2,096,381
       090   SPACE OPERATIONS -BOS.............................................         551,196         551,196
       100   CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES.............................................         289,958         289,958
      100A   CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............................................         118,478         118,478
                 SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.....................................       8,780,156       8,780,156
 
             ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES
       110   LOGISTICS OPERATIONS..............................................          36,164          36,164
       120   ADMINISTRATION....................................................         449,597         449,597
                 SUBTOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES...........         485,761         485,761
 
             UNDISTRIBUTED
       130   UNDISTRIBUTED.....................................................                         -54,400
                 Historical unobligated balances...............................                        [-54,400]
                 SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED........................................                         -54,400
 
                  TOTAL OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, SPACE FORCE.................       9,265,917       9,211,517
 
             OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE RESERVE
             OPERATING FORCES
       010   PRIMARY COMBAT FORCES.............................................       2,138,964       2,138,964
       020   MISSION SUPPORT OPERATIONS........................................         217,542         221,542
                 Program increase..............................................                          [4,000]
       030   DEPOT PURCHASE EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE..............................         787,861         787,861
       040   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION...............         187,022         187,022
       050   CONTRACTOR LOGISTICS SUPPORT AND SYSTEM SUPPORT...................         654,233         654,233
       060   BASE SUPPORT......................................................         632,638         632,638
       070   CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES.............................................           1,655           1,655
                 SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.....................................       4,619,915       4,623,915
 
             ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES
       080   ADMINISTRATION....................................................         100,998         100,998
       090   RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........................................          11,620          11,620
       100   MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERS MGMT (ARPC)............................          15,893          15,893
       110   AUDIOVISUAL.......................................................             561             561
                 SUBTOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES...........         129,072         129,072
 
             UNDISTRIBUTED
       120   UNDISTRIBUTED.....................................................                         -52,100
                 Historical unobligated balances...............................                        [-52,100]
                 SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED........................................                         -52,100
 
                  TOTAL OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE RESERVE...........       4,748,987       4,700,887
 
             OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, AIR NATIONAL GUARD
             OPERATING FORCES
       010   AIRCRAFT OPERATIONS...............................................       2,744,277       2,744,277
       020   MISSION SUPPORT OPERATIONS........................................         663,367         663,367
       030   DEPOT PURCHASE EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE..............................       1,210,460       1,210,460
       040   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION...............         531,241         531,241
       050   CONTRACTOR LOGISTICS SUPPORT AND SYSTEM SUPPORT...................       1,632,461       1,632,461
       060   BASE SUPPORT......................................................       1,128,729       1,128,729
       070   CYBERSPACE SUSTAINMENT............................................          26,354          26,354
       080   CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES.............................................          81,720          81,720
                 SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.....................................       8,018,609       8,018,609
 
             ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES
       090   ADMINISTRATION....................................................          64,249          64,249
       100   RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........................................          47,831          47,831
                 SUBTOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES...........         112,080         112,080
 
             UNDISTRIBUTED
       110   UNDISTRIBUTED.....................................................                         -50,800
                 Historical unobligated balances...............................                        [-50,800]
                 SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED........................................                         -50,800
 
                  TOTAL OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, AIR NATIONAL GUARD..........       8,130,689       8,079,889
 
             OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, DEFENSE-WIDE
             OPERATING FORCES
       010   JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF.............................................         534,218         534,218
       020   JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF--JTEEP......................................       1,393,798       1,393,798
       030   JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF--CYBER......................................           9,103           9,103
       040   OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE--PSYOP.........................         325,609         340,609
                 AI-based IO agentic Assessment................................                         [15,000]
       050   SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND COMBAT DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES..........       2,589,383       3,017,983
                 Accelerated Fielding of Group 3 Unmanned Aerial System (UAS)                            [3,600]
                 Capability....................................................
                 Maritime Mission Support Vessel...............................                        [425,000]
       060   SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND MAINTENANCE............................       1,388,865       1,437,629
                 Electromagnetic Warfare (EW) Family of Systems................                          [1,286]
                 Ground Infil Protection Systems(GIPS).........................                         [15,340]
                 Ground Organic Precision Strike Systems (GOPSS)...............                          [3,639]
                 Munitions War Reserves........................................                          [2,888]
                 Non-Standard Aviations (NSAv).................................                         [15,611]
                 USASOC Dive Tank and Compression Chamber......................                         [10,000]
       070   SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND MANAGEMENT/OPERATIONAL HEADQUARTERS....         180,691         180,691
       080   SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND THEATER FORCES.........................       3,695,859       3,706,622
                 Cognitive Performance Initiative..............................                          [7,500]
                 Manpower for TSOC Next........................................                          [3,263]
       090   SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES..................          78,512          78,512
       100   SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND INTELLIGENCE...........................       1,130,849       1,138,849
                 Identity and Signature Management.............................                          [8,000]
       110   SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND OPERATIONAL SUPPORT....................       1,796,851       1,812,851
                 Identity and Signature Management.............................                         [11,000]
                 USSOCOM Lessons Learned Program...............................                          [5,000]
       120   CYBERSPACE OPERATIONS.............................................       1,880,381       1,872,381
                 Unjustified growth............................................                         [-8,000]
       130   USCYBERCOM HEADQUARTERS...........................................         303,726         303,726
                 SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.....................................      15,307,845      15,826,972
 
             TRAINING AND RECRUITING
       140   DEFENSE ACQUISITION UNIVERSITY....................................         193,017         193,017
       150   JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF.............................................         173,748         173,748
       160   SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND/PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION.....          30,040          30,040
                 SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING..............................         396,805         396,805
 
             ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES
       170   CIVIL MILITARY PROGRAMS...........................................         118,488         374,488
                 National Guard Youth Challenge Program (NGYCP)................                        [198,000]
                 Senator Robert J. Dole Greatest Generation Education Program..                          [5,000]
                 STARBASE......................................................                         [53,000]
       180   DEFENSE CONTRACT AUDIT AGENCY--CYBER..............................           3,825           3,825
       190   DEFENSE CONTRACT AUDIT AGENCY.....................................         611,600         611,600
       200   DEFENSE CONTRACT MANAGEMENT AGENCY................................       1,462,988       1,462,988
       210   DEFENSE CONTRACT MANAGEMENT AGENCY--CYBER.........................          42,367          42,367
       220   DEFENSE COUNTERINTELLIGENCE AND SECURITY AGENCY...................       1,035,974       1,035,974
       240   DEFENSE COUNTERINTELLIGENCE AND SECURITY AGENCY--CYBER............          16,885          16,885
       250   DEFENSE HUMAN RESOURCES ACTIVITY--CYBER...........................          49,611          49,611
       260   DEFENSE HUMAN RESOURCES ACTIVITY..................................       1,505,352       1,510,352
                 Modernization of DOD Drug Testing.............................                          [5,000]
       290   DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEMS AGENCY................................       3,873,222       3,873,222
       300   DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEMS AGENCY--CYBER.........................         602,017         602,017
       310   DEFENSE LEGAL SERVICES AGENCY.....................................         147,620         147,620
       320   DEFENSE LOGISTICS AGENCY..........................................         585,610         585,610
       330   DEFENSE MEDIA ACTIVITY............................................         207,551         207,551
       340   DEFENSE POW/MIA OFFICE............................................         160,358         160,358
       350   DEFENSE SECURITY COOPERATION AGENCY...............................       3,780,757       4,393,834
                 Additional International Security Cooperation Programs--EUCOM.                        [210,000]
                  including amount for Baltic Security Initiative..............                        [175,000]
                 Defense Institute for International Legal Studies.............                          [1,396]
                 Institute for Security Governance.............................                          [1,681]
                 Prior-year authorization......................................                        [400,000]
       360   DEFENSE TECHNOLOGY SECURITY ADMINISTRATION........................          47,101          47,101
       370   DEFENSE THREAT REDUCTION AGENCY...................................         637,514         637,514
       390   DEFENSE THREAT REDUCTION AGENCY--CYBER............................          73,477          73,477
       400   DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE EDUCATION ACTIVITY..........................       3,493,232       3,563,232
                 Impact Aid....................................................                         [50,000]
                 Impact Aid Students with Disabilities.........................                         [20,000]
       410   MISSILE DEFENSE AGENCY............................................         487,235         487,235
       420   OFFICE OF THE LOCAL DEFENSE COMMUNITY COOPERATION.................         142,597         152,597
                 Program increase..............................................                         [10,000]
       430   JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF--JIATF......................................         431,652         431,652
       470   OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE--CYBER.........................          81,163         124,163
                 DIB Cybersecurity.............................................                          [4,000]
                 Enterprise Unified Data Library...............................                         [15,000]
                 Senior Military College DoD Cyber Institutes..................                         [24,000]
       480   OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE................................       3,832,831       3,875,831
                  Readiness and Environmental Protection Integration Program                            [30,000]
                  (REPI).......................................................
                 Legacy Resource Management Program............................                          [8,000]
                 Native American Lands Environmental Mitigation Program                                  [5,000]
                 (NALEMP)......................................................
       510   WASHINGTON HEADQUARTERS SERVICES..................................         536,546         536,546
      510A   CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............................................      24,579,358      24,637,358
                 Automated Man-made Vertical Obstruction/Obstacle Detection                             [15,000]
                 Software Integration..........................................
                 Forward Based Theater Foreign Materiel Exploitation...........                         [21,100]
                 Machine Speed Intelligence Fusion.............................                          [8,000]
                 Personnel adjustments.........................................                         [13,900]
                 SUBTOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES...........      48,546,931      49,645,008
 
             UNDISTRIBUTED
       520   UNDISTRIBUTED.....................................................                      -1,380,803
                 Foreign currency fluctuations.................................                       [-900,000]
                 Historical unobligated balances...............................                       [-480,803]
                 SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED........................................                      -1,380,803
 
                  TOTAL OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, DEFENSE-WIDE................      64,251,581      64,487,982
 
             UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ARMED FORCES
             ADMINISTRATION AND ASSOCIATED ACTIVITIES
       010   US COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ARMED FORCES, DEFENSE.................          21,698          21,698
                 SUBTOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND ASSOCIATED ACTIVITIES.............          21,698          21,698
 
                  TOTAL UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ARMED FORCES....          21,698          21,698
 
             DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ACQUISITION WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT FUND
             ACQUISITION WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT
       010   ACQ WORKFORCE DEV FD..............................................          37,478          97,478
                 Defense Civilian Training Corps...............................                         [30,000]
                 IP cadre......................................................                         [30,000]
                 SUBTOTAL ACQUISITION WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT....................          37,478          97,478
 
                  TOTAL DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ACQUISITION WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT          37,478          97,478
                  FUND.........................................................
 
             OVERSEAS HUMANITARIAN, DISASTER, AND CIVIC AID
             HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE
       010   OVERSEAS HUMANITARIAN, DISASTER AND CIVIC AID.....................          78,187         115,335
                 Program increase..............................................                         [37,148]
                 SUBTOTAL HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE..............................          78,187         115,335
 
                  TOTAL OVERSEAS HUMANITARIAN, DISASTER, AND CIVIC AID.........          78,187         115,335
 
             COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION ACCOUNT
             FSU THREAT REDUCTION
       010   COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION......................................         221,332         221,332
                 SUBTOTAL FSU THREAT REDUCTION.................................         221,332         221,332
 
                  TOTAL COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION ACCOUNT...................         221,332         221,332
 
             ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, ARMY
             DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY
       050   ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, ARMY...................................         282,444         282,444
                 SUBTOTAL DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY...............................         282,444         282,444
 
                  TOTAL ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, ARMY........................         282,444         282,444
 
             ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, NAVY
             DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY
       060   ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, NAVY...................................         305,246         305,246
                 SUBTOTAL DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY...............................         305,246         305,246
 
                  TOTAL ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, NAVY........................         305,246         305,246
 
             ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, AIR FORCE
             DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE
       070   ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, AIR FORCE..............................         320,060         320,060
                 SUBTOTAL DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE..........................         320,060         320,060
 
                  TOTAL ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, AIR FORCE...................         320,060         320,060
 
             ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, DEFENSE
             DEFENSE-WIDE
       080   ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, DEFENSE................................           8,957           8,957
                 SUBTOTAL DEFENSE-WIDE.........................................           8,957           8,957
 
                  TOTAL ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, DEFENSE.....................           8,957           8,957
 
             ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, FORMERLY USED DEFENSE SITES
             DEFENSE-WIDE
       090   ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION FORMERLY USED SITES.....................         238,927         246,927
                 Program increase..............................................                          [8,000]
                 SUBTOTAL DEFENSE-WIDE.........................................         238,927         246,927
 
                  TOTAL ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, FORMERLY USED DEFENSE SITES.         238,927         246,927
 
                  TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE................................     338,624,638     337,672,520
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                     TITLE XLIV--MILITARY PERSONNEL

SEC. 4401. MILITARY PERSONNEL.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
         SEC. 4401. MILITARY PERSONNEL (In Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                            FY 2027           House
                 Item                       Request         Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Military Personnel....................     190,771,931      190,021,931
     Historical unobligated balances..                        [-750,000]
MERHCF................................      14,349,269       14,349,269
------------------------------------------------------------------------

                    TITLE XLV--OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS

SEC. 4501. OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
        SEC. 4501. OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS (In Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                              FY 2027          House
                  Item                        Request       Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
INDUSTRIAL OPERATIONS...................         20,563          20,563
SUPPLY MANAGEMENT--ARMY
   TOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, ARMY.....         20,563          20,563
 
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, NAVY
NAVAL SURFACE WARFARE CENTERS...........        266,212         266,212
   TOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, NAVY.....        266,212         266,212
 
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, AIR FORCE
TRANSPORTATION
CRITICAL SPARES.........................      4,245,563       4,245,563
SUPPLIES AND MATERIALS..................        194,851         194,851
   TOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, AIR FORCE      4,440,414       4,440,414
 
NATIONAL DEFENSE STOCKPILE TRANSACTION
 FUND
DEFENSE STOCKPILE.......................          5,700           5,700
   TOTAL NATIONAL DEFENSE STOCKPILE               5,700           5,700
   TRANSACTION FUND.....................
 
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, DEFENSE-WIDE
DEFENSE FINANCE OPERATIONS--DIRECT......        273,760         273,760
DOD MARKET FLUCTUATION ACCOUNT (FUEL)...      1,000,000       1,000,000
UNDISTRIBUTED...........................                       -400,000
     WCF cash balances..................                      [-400,000]
   TOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, DEFENSE-       1,273,760         873,760
   WIDE.................................
 
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, DEFENSE COMMISSARY
 AGENCY
COMMISSARY OPERATIONS...................      1,501,344       1,501,344
   TOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, DEFENSE        1,501,344       1,501,344
   COMMISSARY AGENCY....................
 
CHEMICAL AGENTS AND MUNITIONS
 DESTRUCTION, DEFENSE
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND                 55,972          55,972
 EVALUATION.............................
   TOTAL CHEMICAL AGENTS AND MUNITIONS           55,972          55,972
   DESTRUCTION, DEFENSE.................
 
DRUG INTERDICTION AND COUNTER-DRUG
 ACTIVITIES, DEFENSE
COUNTER-NARCOTICS SUPPORT...............        658,191         658,191
DRUG DEMAND REDUCTION PROGRAM...........        135,745         135,745
NATIONAL GUARD COUNTER-DRUG PROGRAM.....        117,418         117,418
NATIONAL GUARD COUNTER-DRUG SCHOOLS.....          6,648           9,648
     Program increase...................                         [3,000]
   TOTAL DRUG INTERDICTION AND COUNTER-         918,002         921,002
   DRUG ACTIVITIES, DEFENSE.............
 
OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE...............        501,371         501,371
OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL--CYBER..          2,073           2,073
RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND                  1,506           1,506
 EVALUATION.............................
PROCUREMENT.............................          1,393           1,393
   TOTAL OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL        506,343         506,343
 
COMBAT AND OPERATIONAL MEDICINE PROGRAM
IN-HOUSE CARE...........................     10,863,317      10,994,317
     Dental Readiness...................                       [131,000]
CONSOLIDATED HEALTH SUPPORT.............      2,375,175       2,375,175
INFORMATION MANAGEMENT..................      2,600,177       2,600,177
MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES...................        304,382         304,382
EDUCATION AND TRAINING..................        349,460         349,460
BASE OPERATIONS/COMMUNICATIONS..........      2,463,042       2,450,042
     Program decrease...................                       [-13,000]
R&D RESEARCH............................         41,924          66,924
     Endometrial cancer research........                        [25,000]
R&D EXPLORATRY DEVELOPMENT..............        185,153         185,153
R&D ADVANCED DEVELOPMENT................        361,241         428,841
     Blast Overpressure.................                         [6,000]
     Cryopreserved Platelet Development.                         [5,000]
     Freeze-Dried Platelet Hemostatics..                         [5,000]
     Joint Neuroscience Demonstration                           [10,000]
     Program............................
     Musculoskeletal resilience.........                         [7,000]
     Pathogen Reduced Freeze-Dried                               [7,600]
     Cryoprecipitate Manufacturing
     Technology.........................
     Pathogen reduction technology                               [7,000]
     Funding............................
     Physics-based Neutralizations of                            [5,000]
     Threats to Human tissues and Organs
     Research...........................
     Resilient Optimization of Load &                           [15,000]
     Integrated Neuromusculoskeletal
     Anabolism Research.................
R&D DEMONSTRATION/VALIDATION............        186,018         214,018
     Study of direct electrical nerve                           [13,000]
     stimulation on lower limb amputees.
     Thermal Burn and Concurrent                                [15,000]
     Pulmonary Therapies................
R&D ENGINEERING DEVELOPMENT.............        124,662         124,662
R&D MANAGEMENT AND SUPPORT..............        100,912         100,912
R&D CAPABILITIES ENHANCEMENT............         19,452          30,452
     Advanced Vital Intervention                                [11,000]
     Airborne Training for Emergencies
     (AVIATE)...........................
PROC INITIAL OUTFITTING.................         25,555          25,555
PROC REPLACEMENT & MODERNIZATION........        231,382         231,382
PROC JOINT OPERATIONAL MEDICINE                  31,203          31,203
 INFORMATION SYSTEM.....................
PROC MILITARY HEALTH SYSTEM--DESKTOP TO          78,588          78,588
 DATACENTER.............................
   TOTAL COMBAT AND OPERATIONAL MEDICINE     20,341,643      20,591,243
   PROGRAM..............................
 
PRIVATE SECTOR CARE PROGRAM
PRIVATE SECTOR CARE.....................     22,175,472      22,175,472
   TOTAL PRIVATE SECTOR CARE PROGRAM....     22,175,472      22,175,472
 
   TOTAL OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS...........     51,505,425      51,358,025
------------------------------------------------------------------------

                   TITLE XLVI--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION

SEC. 4601. MILITARY CONSTRUCTION.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                           SEC. 4601. MILITARY CONSTRUCTION (In Thousands of Dollars)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                State/Country and                                     FY 2027          House
          Account                 Installation               Project Title            Request        Agreement
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                            Alabama
Army                          Anniston Army Depot     Access Control Point (INC)               0          53,000
Army                          Anniston Army Depot     Consolidated Shipping and                0           5,400
                                                       Receiving Facility
                                                       (Design).
Army                          Anniston Army Depot     Welding Shop (Design).....               0           4,940
                            Alaska
Army                          Fort Wainwright         Barracks (INC 2)..........          24,000          24,000
                            Florida
Army                          Naval Air Station Key   Command and Control                160,000         160,000
                               West                    Facility (INC 2).
                            Germany
Army                          Grafenwoehr             Underground Electric Lines          12,800          12,800
                            Guam
Army                          Joint Region Marianas   PDI: Guam Def Sys, EIAMD,          190,000         190,000
                                                       PH 2 (INC 2).
Army                          Joint Region Marianas   PDI: Guam Def Sys, EIAMD,          155,000          60,000
                                                       PH 3.
Army                          Joint Region Marianas   PDI: Land Acquisition.....          29,000               0
                            Hawaii
Army                          Fort Shafter            CTC: Clearwell and Booster          71,000          71,000
                                                       Pump.
Army                          Helemano                CTC: Wells and Storage              72,000          72,000
                                                       Tanks.
Army                          Schofield Barracks      CTC: Elevated Tank and              26,000          26,000
                                                       Distribution Lines.
Army                          Schofield Barracks      CTC: Water Storage Tank...          21,000          21,000
Army                          Schofield Barracks      Fire Station..............          30,000          30,000
Army                          Wheeler Army Air Field  Aircraft Maintenance                90,000          90,000
                                                       Hangar (INC 1).
                            Italy
Army                          Caserma Renato Del Din  Access Control Point......          17,000          17,000
                            Japan
Army                          Kadena Air Base         CTC: Vehicle Maintenance            69,000          69,000
                                                       Shop.
                            Louisiana
Army                          Fort Polk               Rotational Unit Billeting                0         157,000
                                                       Area.
                            New York
Army                          Fort Drum               Automated Record Fire Plus          25,000          25,000
                                                       Range.
                            North Carolina
Army                          Fort Bragg              CTC: Aircraft Maintenance           31,000          31,000
                                                       Hangar.
                            Oklahoma
Army                          Fort Sill               Automated-Aided                          0          94,000
                                                       Instruction Building.
                            Texas
Army                          Fort Bliss              Shipping and Receiving              35,000          35,000
                                                       Building.
Army                          Fort Hood               Vehicle Maintenance Shop..               0          81,000
Army                          Joint Base San Antonio  Adv Ind Training Barracks-         303,000         103,000
                                                       METC (INC).
                            Washington
Army                          Joint Base Lewis-       Airfield Fire and Rescue            89,000          89,000
                               McChord                 Station.
                            Worldwide Unspecified
Army                          Unspecified Worldwide   Design....................         173,421         173,421
                               Locations
Army                          Unspecified Worldwide   Host Nation Support.......          53,521          53,521
                               Locations
Army                          Unspecified Worldwide   Minor Construction........         178,626         178,626
                               Locations
Army                          Unspecified Worldwide   PDI: Minor Construction...          76,270          76,270
                               Locations
                            ........................
      Military Construction, Army Total                                                1,931,638       2,002,978
                              ......................
                            Australia
Navy                          Royal Australian Air    PDI: Aircraft Maintenance           46,958          46,958
                               Force Base Darwin       Hangar (INC).
Navy                          Royal Australian Air    PDI: Maintenance Support            33,955          33,955
                               Force Base Darwin       Facs (INC).
                            California
Navy                          Marine Corps Base Camp  Fire/Emergency Response             43,000          43,000
                               Pendleton               Station (53 Area) Replace.
Navy                          Marine Corps Base Camp  Landfill Liner Phase III            53,150          53,150
                               Pendleton               and IV.
Navy                          Naval Base Coronado     Ford Class CVN                      33,000          33,000
                                                       Infrastructure Upg., Pier
                                                       Lima (INC).
Navy                          Naval Air Station       Strike Fighter Center of           155,939         155,939
                               Lemoore                 Excellence Pacific (INC).
Navy                          Naval Support Activity  Naval Innovation Center             50,000          50,000
                               Monterey                (INC).
Navy                          Naval Base Ventura      Community & Airfield Area          164,000         164,000
                               County Point Mugu       Flood Protection.
                            Connecticut
Navy                          Naval Submarine Base    Submarine Pier 8                   142,124         142,124
                               New London              Replacement (INC).
Navy                          Naval Submarine Base    Weapons Magazine &                  79,600          79,600
                               New London              Ordnance Operations Fac.
                                                       (INC).
                            District of Columbia
Navy                          Naval Research          Biomolecular Science &             157,000         157,000
                               Laboratory              Synthetic Biology Lab.
                            Federated States of
                             Micronesia
Navy                          Yap                     PDI: Yap Port and Harbor           142,235         142,235
                                                       Improvements (INC).
                            Florida
Navy                          Marine Corps Support    Communications                      46,075          46,075
                               Facility Blount         Infrastructure (INC).
                               Island
Navy                          Cape Canaveral Space    Cape Canaveral Railhead &           60,990          60,990
                               Force Station           Transfer Facilities.
Navy                          Naval Air Station       Child Development Center                 0           4,135
                               Whiting Field           (Design).
Navy                          Naval Air Station       Multi Aircraft Paint &                   0          28,225
                               Jacksonville            Strip (Design).
                            Georgia
Navy                          Albany                  Consolidated Communication          86,350          86,350
                                                       Facility.
Navy                          Naval Submarine Base    Transit Protection Program         100,000         100,000
                               Kings Bay               Facility (INC).
Navy                          Naval Submarine Base    Trident Refit Fac.                  30,000          30,000
                               Kings Bay               Expansion (Columbia Sub)
                                                       (INC).
                            Guam
Navy                          Andersen Air Force      PDI: Joint Consolidated            132,416         132,416
                               Base                    Communications Center
                                                       (INC).
Navy                          Apra Heights            PDI: Inner Apra Harbor              13,400          13,400
                                                       Resiliency (INC).
Navy                          Joint Region Marianas   PDI: Defense Access Roads                0          16,500
                                                       III (INC).
Navy                          Joint Region Marianas   PDI: Joint Communication            60,000          60,000
                                                       Upgrade (INC).
Navy                          Joint Region Marianas   PDI: Polaris Point                 122,000          22,000
                                                       Electrical Capacity
                                                       Upgrade.
Navy                          Joint Region Marianas   PDI: Polaris Point                 171,800         171,800
                                                       Submarine Pier (INC).
                            Hawaii
Navy                          Ford Island             Pacific Warfighting Center         183,760         183,760
                                                       Expansion.
Navy                          Joint Base Pearl        Dry Dock 3 Replacement             507,453         507,453
                               Harbor-Hickam           (INC).
Navy                          Joint Base Pearl        Water Treatment Plant              248,170         248,170
                               Harbor-Hickam           (INC).
Navy                          Marine Corps Base       3d Mlr Armory Expansion...          76,550          76,550
                               Kaneohe Bay
Navy                          Marine Corps Base       ATC CO M Compound.........         134,090          34,090
                               Kaneohe Bay
Navy                          Marine Corps Base       Main Gate Entry Control             49,260          49,260
                               Kaneohe Bay             Point.
Navy                          Kauai                   PDI: Airfield Pavement             142,470         142,470
                                                       Upgrades (INC).
                            Japan
Navy                          Kadena Air Base         Aircraft Intermediate               31,780          31,780
                                                       Maintenance Facility.
                            Maine
Navy                          Portsmouth Naval        Multi-Mission Drydock #1            50,755          50,755
                               Shipyard                Extension (INC).
Navy                          Portsmouth Naval        Power Reliability & Water          138,875         138,875
                               Shipyard                Resilience Upgrade (INC).
                            Maryland
Navy                          United States Naval     Storm Water Management                   0          86,020
                               Academy                 Facilities.
                            Nevada
Navy                          Naval Air Station       Range Training Complex             387,570         387,570
                               Fallon                  Improvements.
                            North Carolina
Navy                          Camp Lejeune            Amphibious Combat Vehicle                0          24,140
                                                       (ACV) Shelters (INC).
Navy                          Camp Lejeune            10th Marines Operational            77,520          77,520
                                                       Complex (INC).
Navy                          Camp Lejeune            Ammunition Supply Point             15,451          15,451
                                                       Upgrade Phase II (INC).
Navy                          Camp Lejeune            Combat Water Survival              141,880         141,880
                                                       Training Facility.
Navy                          Marine Corps Air        CTC: Aircraft Maintenance           47,560          47,560
                               Station Cherry Point    Hangar.
Navy                          Marine Corps Air        CTC: CH-53K Gearbox Repair          17,941          17,941
                               Station Cherry Point    and Test Facility.
Navy                          Marine Corps Air        F-35 Aircraft Sustainment           89,181          89,181
                               Station Cherry Point    Ctr (INC).
Navy                          Marine Corps Air        Maintenance Facility &              62,575          62,575
                               Station Cherry Point    Marine Air Group HQS
                                                       (INC).
Navy                          Marine Corps Air        2D LAAD Maintenance and                  0          19,390
                               Station Cherry Point    Operations Facilities
                                                       (Design).
                            Federated States of
                             Micronesia
Navy                          Palau                   PDI: Palau Port and Harbor         384,560         384,560
                                                       Improvements (INC).
                            Pennsylvania
Navy                          Mechanicsburg           Machinery Control                   79,140          79,140
                                                       Development Center (INC).
                            Rhode Island
Navy                          Naval Station Newport   Consolidated RDT&E                  40,000          40,000
                                                       Integration Laboratory.
Navy                          Naval Station Newport   Next Generation Submarine           73,000          73,000
                                                       Platform Facility.
Navy                          Naval Station Newport   Submarine Payload                   40,000          40,000
                                                       Integration Laboratory.
                            South Carolina
Navy                          Charleston Air Force    Nuclear Power Training Fac         161,700         161,700
                               Base                    Simulation Expan (INC).
                            Spain
Navy                          Rota                    UH for Permanent Party....          64,080          64,080
                            Virginia
Navy                          Joint Expeditionary     Child Development Center..          65,640          65,640
                               Base Little Creek--Ft
                               Story
Navy                          Naval Station Norfolk   Pier 10 Replacement                      0          15,800
                                                       (Design).
Navy                          Naval Station Norfolk   Child Development Center..          93,040          10,000
Navy                          Naval Station Norfolk   Child Development Center..          84,940          84,940
Navy                          Naval Station Norfolk   Electrical Distribution            124,965         124,965
                                                       System Upgrades (INC).
Navy                          Naval Station Norfolk   MQ-25 Aircraft Laydown              54,622          54,622
                                                       Facilities (INC).
Navy                          Oceana Naval Air        Child Development Center..         104,340          34,340
                               Station
Navy                          Portsmouth              Dry Dock 3 Modernization           189,353         189,353
                                                       (INC).
Navy                          Naval Weapons Station   CTC: Containerized Long             16,170          16,170
                               Yorktown                Weapons Storage Magazine.
Navy                          Naval Weapons Station   CTC: Conventional Prompt            13,710          13,710
                               Yorktown                Strike Test Facility.
Navy                          Naval Weapons Station   Weapons Magazines (INC)...         100,782         100,782
                               Yorktown
                            Washington
Navy                          Naval Base Kitsap-      Columbia Submarine Repair           64,000          64,000
                               Bangor                  Facility Expansion (INC).
Navy                          Naval Base Kitsap-      Columbia Submarine                  90,900          90,900
                               Bangor                  Training Facility
                                                       Expansion.
Navy                          Naval Base Kitsap-      Missile Assembly Building          195,227         195,227
                               Bremerton               Replacement.
Navy                          Puget Sound Naval       Multi-Mission Dry Dock             245,000         245,000
                               Shipyard                (INC).
Navy                          Naval Air Station       EA-18G Aircraft Regional           202,000         202,000
                               Whidbey Island          Service Facility.
                            Worldwide Unspecified
Navy                          Unspecified Worldwide   Design....................       1,163,477       1,163,477
                               Locations
Navy                          Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                  142,764         142,764
                               Locations               Construction.
Navy                          Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                  146,460         146,460
                               Locations               Construction.
                            ........................
      Military Construction, Navy Total                                                8,266,703       8,107,873
                              ......................
                            Alabama
AF                            Redstone Arsenal        Space Force Operational            250,000         250,000
                                                       Facility.
AF                            Redstone Arsenal        USSPACECOM HQ.............         450,000         450,000
                            Alaska
AF                            Eielson Air Force Base  Jparc Range Operations              91,000          50,000
                                                       Center.
AF                            Joint Base Elmendorf-   Joint Integrated Test and           42,000          42,000
                               Richardson              Training Ctr (INC).
AF                            Joint Base Elmendorf-   FTR- ADAL Field Training            56,000          56,000
                               Richardson              Detachment (Ftd).
AF                            Joint Base Elmendorf-   FTR- Conventional                  132,300         132,300
                               Richardson              Munitions Complex.
AF                            Joint Base Elmendorf-   FTR- Dormitory............         451,500         451,500
                               Richardson
AF                            Joint Base Elmendorf-   FTR- Flight Simulator.....          93,800          93,800
                               Richardson
AF                            Joint Base Elmendorf-   FTR- Fuel Cell Maintenance          31,250          31,250
                               Richardson
AF                            Joint Base Elmendorf-   FTR- Infrastructure &              422,100         422,100
                               Richardson              Utilities.
AF                            Joint Base Elmendorf-   FTR- Low Observable                 63,250          63,250
                               Richardson              Aircraft Structural
                                                       Maintenance.
AF                            Joint Base Elmendorf-   FTR- Operations and                127,500         127,500
                               Richardson              Generation Hangar.
AF                            Joint Base Elmendorf-   FTR- PGM Relocation.......         359,100         359,100
                               Richardson
AF                            Joint Base Elmendorf-   FTR- Public Traffic Route           50,000          50,000
                               Richardson              Realignment.
AF                            Joint Base Elmendorf-   FTR- Squadron 1-1 Airfield         125,250         125,250
                               Richardson              Pavements.
AF                            Joint Base Elmendorf-   FTR- Squadron 1-1                  154,000         154,000
                               Richardson              Flowthrough Hangars.
                            Arizona
AF                            Davis-Monthan Air       Hangar/Aircraft                     15,000          15,000
                               Force Base              Maintenance Unit.
                            Arkansas
AF                            Little Rock Air Force   Child Development Center..          27,000          27,000
                               Base
                            California
AF                            Edwards Air Force Base  Construct Vehicle Search                 0           4,500
                                                       Area Afrl Gate Ecp.
AF                            Beale Air Force Base    Multi-Domain Operations            126,000         126,000
                                                       Complex.
                            Colorado
AF                            Schriever Space Force   Space Force Operational            250,000         250,000
                               Base                    Facility.
                            Djibouti
AF                            Chabelley Airfield      Chabelley Power Plant and           27,000          27,000
                                                       Primary Dist.
                            Federated States of
                             Micronesia
AF                            Yap Airfield            PDI: Runway Extension               27,000          27,000
                                                       (INC).
                            Florida
AF                            Cape Canaveral Space    Base Support Warehouse....          64,000          64,000
                               Force Station
AF                            Cape Canaveral Space    Command Facility..........          85,000          85,000
                               Force Station
AF                            Cape Canaveral Space    Communications Plant                48,400          48,400
                               Force Station           Warehouse.
AF                            Cape Canaveral Space    Launch Support Facility...          84,000          84,000
                               Force Station
AF                            Cape Canaveral Space    LRS Vehicle Maintenance             80,400          80,400
                               Force Station           Facility.
AF                            Cape Canaveral Space    Security Forces Operations          48,000          48,000
                               Force Station           Facility.
AF                            Tyndall Air Force Base  AFCEC RDT&E Facilities and         160,000          80,000
                                                       Gate.
                            Georgia
AF                            Moody Air Force Base    Military Working Dog                     0          15,870
                                                       Flight Operations
                                                       Facility.
                            Hawaii
AF                            Maui                    Secure Integration Support           3,600           3,600
                                                       Lab W/ Land Acq.
                            Japan
AF                            Kadena Air Base         Theater Strategic                   99,000          60,000
                                                       Communications Hub.
                            Mississippi
AF                            Columbus Air Force      T-7A Allied Support.......          11,800          11,800
                               Base
                            Missouri
AF                            Whiteman Air Force      B-21 ADAL Field Training            89,000          89,000
                               Base                    Detachment, B152.
AF                            Whiteman Air Force      B-21 Weapons Loader                 80,000          80,000
                               Base                    Trainer.
                            Montana
AF                            Malmstrom Air Force     Sentinel Land Acquisition           43,500          43,500
                               Base                    (INC).
AF                            Malmstrom Air Force     Sentinel Operations &               95,000          95,000
                               Base                    Maint. Complex (INC).
                            Nevada
AF                            Creech Air Force Base   RPA Reconnaissance                       0          36,000
                                                       Operations/Training
                                                       Facility.
AF                            Creech Air Force Base   Mission Support Facility..               0          55,000
AF                            Nellis Air Force Base   F-47 2-Bay Fuel Cell (F-            52,000          52,000
                                                       35).
AF                            Nellis Air Force Base   F-47 Age Washrack.........             500             500
AF                            Nellis Air Force Base   F-47 Aircraft Washrack &             4,000           4,000
                                                       Support Facility.
AF                            Nellis Air Force Base   F-47 Apron Complex........         192,500         192,500
AF                            Nellis Air Force Base   F-47 Combined Operations           177,800         177,800
                                                       Maintenance Hangar (Comh).
AF                            Nellis Air Force Base   F-47 Consolidated                   32,000          32,000
                                                       Maintenance Facility.
AF                            Nellis Air Force Base   F-47 Fuel Cell............          28,000          28,000
AF                            Nellis Air Force Base   F-47 Fuel Station.........          10,000          10,000
AF                            Nellis Air Force Base   F-47 Low Observable                 38,700          38,700
                                                       Corrosion Repair Facility.
AF                            Nellis Air Force Base   F-47 Maintenance Training           29,000          29,000
                                                       Facility.
AF                            Nellis Air Force Base   F-47 R-11 East Side Shade            1,800           1,800
                                                       Structure.
AF                            Nellis Air Force Base   F-47 Repair Munitions                4,600           4,600
                                                       Admin Facility.
AF                            Nellis Air Force Base   F-47 Re-Programming Lab...          61,000          61,000
AF                            Nellis Air Force Base   F-47 Simulator Facility...          62,000          62,000
AF                            Nellis Air Force Base   F-47 Weapons Load Training          34,000          34,000
                                                       Facility.
AF                            Nellis Air Force Base   F-47 Weapons Storage                 2,800           2,800
                                                       Facility.
                            New Jersey
AF                            Joint Base McGuire-Dix- Well No.6 and Wellhouse...               0          11,500
                               Lakehurst
AF                            Joint Base McGuire-Dix- Well No.5 and Wellhouse...               0          11,000
                               Lakehurst
                            New Mexico
AF                            Cannon Air Force Base   Dormitory.................          10,000          10,000
AF                            Kirtland Air Force      Space Force Operational            250,000         250,000
                               Base                    Facility.
                            North Dakota
AF                            Grand Forks Air Force   Space Force Operational            250,000         250,000
                               Base                    Facility.
AF                            Minot Air Force Base    Sentinel Consolidated              124,000          49,000
                                                       Vehicle Maintenance
                                                       Complex.
AF                            Minot Air Force Base    Sentinel Security Forces           108,000          68,000
                                                       Operations Complex.
                            Ohio
AF                            Wright-Patterson Air    Human Performance Wing                   0          21,000
                               Force Base              Laboratory (INC).
AF                            Wright-Patterson Air    Advanced Materials                       0           9,000
                               Force Base              Research Lab (Design).
                            Oklahoma
AF                            Tinker Air Force Base   E-7 AWACS Squadron                       0          55,000
                                                       Operations Facility.
AF                            Tinker Air Force Base   Bomber Agile Common Hangar         112,000         112,000
                                                       (INC).
                            Oregon
AF                            Mountain Home Air       Homeland Defense Over-the-          33,650          33,650
                               Force Base              Horizon Radar (INC).
                            Spain
AF                            Moron                   Parking Apron.............          75,500          75,500
                            Tennessee
AF                            Arnold Air Force Base   Installation Access                      0          20,000
                                                       Control Point Gate 2
                                                       Upgrade.
                            Texas
AF                            Dyess Air Force Base    B-21 Flight Simulator               63,000          63,000
                                                       Facility.
AF                            Dyess Air Force Base    B-21 Low Observable                 74,000          74,000
                                                       Corrosion Control Fac.
AF                            Dyess Air Force Base    B-21 Utilities Site                 23,000          23,000
                                                       Improvements Electric.
AF                            Fort Sam Houston        METC--Barracks/Ships/Dorms         308,000         308,000
                                                       #1 (INC).
AF                            Goodfellow Air Force    Pipeline Student Dormitory          12,000          12,000
                               Base
AF                            Joint Base San Antonio  MWD Large Capacity Kennel.         180,000          80,000
AF                            Lackland Air Force      91 Cyber Operations Center          96,000          40,000
                               Base
                            Utah
AF                            Hill Air Force Base     F-35 Maintenance Facility,         100,000         100,000
                                                       Phase 1 (INC).
AF                            Hill Air Force Base     T-7A Depot Maintenance              72,000          72,000
                                                       Complex (INC).
                            Virginia
AF                            Joint Base Langley-     Fuel System Maintenance             49,000          49,000
                               Eustis                  Dock.
                            Wake Island
AF                            Wake Island             PDI: Aircraft Park. Apron          129,000         129,000
                                                       (Wake) Phase 1 (INC).
                            Worldwide Unspecified
AF                            Unspecified Worldwide   Design....................       1,820,607       1,849,607
                               Locations
AF                            Unspecified Worldwide   Design....................         670,005         670,005
                               Locations
AF                            Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor Military         315,810         315,810
                               Locations               Construction.
                            Wyoming
AF                            F.E. Warren Air Force   GBSD Operations Group              171,000          31,000
                               Base                    Facility.
AF                            F.E. Warren Air Force   GBSD Utility Corridor              461,158         461,158
                               Base                    (INC).
                            ........................
      Military Construction, Air Force Total                                          10,601,180      10,298,050
                              ......................
                            Alabama
Def-Wide                      Maxwell Air Force Base  Maxwell Elementary/Middle           44,000          44,000
                                                       School Addition.
Def-Wide                      Redstone Arsenal        Power Generation and                     0          90,000
                                                       Microgrid.
                            Bahrain
Def-Wide                      Naval Support Activity  Power Generation..........               0           5,900
                               Bahrain
                            Belgium
Def-Wide                      Brussels                Brussels Unit School Annex          33,000          33,000
                            California
Def-Wide                      Camp Roberts            Power Generation and                     0          79,000
                                                       Microgrid.
                            Colorado
Def-Wide                      Def Reutil and Mktg     General Purpose Warehouse.          85,000          85,000
                               Ofc-Colorado Springs
                            Florida
Def-Wide                      Eglin Air Force Base    Power Generation and                     0          43,000
                                                       Microgrid.
Def-Wide                      Homestead Air Reserve   SOF Climate Controlled              33,000          33,000
                               Base                    Tactical Storage
                                                       Warehouse.
Def-Wide                      Naval Air Station       Ambulatory Care Center              40,000          40,000
                               Jacksonville            Substance Abuse
                                                       Rehabilitation Program
                                                       (SARP) Replacement.
                            Germany
Def-Wide                      Army Garrison Ansbach   Power Generation and                     0          72,000
                                                       Microgrid.
Def-Wide                      Baumholder              Baumholder Middle/High             140,000          20,000
                                                       School.
Def-Wide                      Ramstein Air Base       Vehicle Fueling Facility..          20,500          20,500
Def-Wide                      Rhine Ordnance          Medical Center Replacement          95,002          95,002
                               Barracks                (INC 13).
                            Guam
Def-Wide                      Joint Region Marianas   PDI: GDS, Command Center            99,700          99,700
                                                       (INC).
Def-Wide                      Joint Region Marianas   PDI: GDS, EIAMD, Ph1 (INC)          75,113          75,113
Def-Wide                      Joint Region Marianas   PDI: GDS, EIAMD, PH3......         179,446         179,446
                            Japan
Def-Wide                      Camp Butler             PDI: Truck Offload                  37,900          37,900
                                                       Facilities.
Def-Wide                      Yokota Air Base         PDI: Bulk Storage Tanks PH          88,200          88,200
                                                       2.
                            Kentucky
Def-Wide                      Fort Knox               Scott Middle School.......         117,000          37,000
                            Korea
Def-Wide                      Kunsan Air Base         Ambulatory Care Center              65,000          65,000
                                                       Replacement.
                            Maryland
Def-Wide                      Bethesda Naval          MEDCEN Addition/Alteration          87,275          87,275
                               Hospital                (INC 10).
Def-Wide                      Bethesda Naval          Support Facilities                  55,000          55,000
                               Hospital                Replacement (INC).
Def-Wide                      Fort Meade              Cyber National Mission              98,411          98,411
                                                       Force Mission Operations
                                                       Facility (INC).
Def-Wide                      Fort Meade              NSAW East Campus Building          180,000         180,000
                                                       #5 (INC 2).
Def-Wide                      Fort Meade              NSAW East Campus Site               52,000          52,000
                                                       Infrastructure.
                            Nevada
Def-Wide                      Creech Air Force Base   Ambulatory Care Center              25,381          25,381
                                                       Addition/Alteration.
                            North Carolina
Def-Wide                      Fort Bragg              SOF Operations Ammunition                0          65,000
                                                       Supply Point Phase 2.
Def-Wide                      Fort Bragg              SOF Battallion Operations                0           6,400
                                                       Facility (Design).
Def-Wide                      Camp Lejeune            SOF Marine Raider                   80,000          80,000
                                                       Battalion Operations
                                                       Facility.
Def-Wide                      Camp Lejeune            SOF Operational Support             72,000          72,000
                                                       Facility.
Def-Wide                      Fort Bragg              SOF Operational Training            50,000          50,000
                                                       Facility.
                            Pennsylvania
Def-Wide                      Defense Distribution    Microgrid.................               0          58,000
                               Center, Susquehanna
                            Puerto Rico
Def-Wide                      Fort Buchanan           Emergency Water Treatment                0          33,500
                                                       System.
                            Texas
Def-Wide                      Brooks Army Medical     Power Generation and                     0          55,500
                               Center                  Energy Upgrades.
                            United Kingdom
Def-Wide                      Menwith Hill Station    Fire Station Replacement..          35,000          35,000
Def-Wide                      Royal Air Force         Hospital Replacement,               78,000          78,000
                               Lakenheath              Phase 2 (INC).
                            Utah
Def-Wide                      Camp Williams           Nsau Consolidation--                50,000          50,000
                                                       Mission Facility (INC).
                            Virginia
Def-Wide                      Joint Expeditionary     SOF Launch & Recovery               36,000          36,000
                               Base Little Creek--Ft   Facility.
                               Story
                            Wake Island
Def-Wide                      Def Fuel Spt Point      PDI: Fueling Facilities...         100,000         100,000
                               Wake Island
                            Washington
Def-Wide                      Joint Base Lewis-       SOF Tactical Equipment              35,000          35,000
                               McChord                 Maintenance Facility.
Def-Wide                      Yakima Training Center  Power Generation and                     0          73,000
                                                       Microgrid.
Def-Wide                      Naval Base Kitsap       Power Generation and                     0         132,690
                                                       Microgrid.
                            Worldwide Unspecified
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Design (DHA)..............          45,813          45,813
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Design (DODEA)............          26,625          26,625
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Design (MDA)..............          42,846          42,846
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Design (SOCOM)............          81,628          81,628
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Design (DLA)..............         100,511         100,511
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Design....................          16,783          16,783
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Design (NSA)..............          33,700          33,700
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Design--Joint Analysis               5,000           5,000
                               Locations               Center of Excellence.
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Energy Resilience &                694,307               0
                               Locations               Conservation Investment
                                                       Program.
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Design (ERCIP)............          39,346          39,346
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Exercise Related Minor              13,328          17,648
                               Locations               Construction.
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   INDOPACOM Military                  27,740          27,740
                               Locations               Construction Pilot
                                                       Program.
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Minor Construction (SOCOM)          24,500          24,500
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   PAX System Support........          13,000          13,000
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   UFC System Support........          12,000          12,000
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                   10,000          10,000
                               Locations               Construction (DODEA).
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                   14,237          14,237
                               Locations               Construction (DLA).
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                    3,000           3,000
                               Locations               Construction.
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                    9,000           9,000
                               Locations               Construction (NSA).
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                    2,659           2,659
                               Locations               Construction (MDA).
                            Wyoming
Def-Wide                      F.E. Warren Air Force   Power Generation and                     0          51,717
                               Base                    Microgrid With Geothermal
                                                       Heating and Cooling.
                            ........................
      Military Construction, Defense-Wide Total                                        3,402,951       3,278,671
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
NATO                          NATO Security           NATO Security Investment           604,270         604,270
                               Investment Program      Program.
                            ........................
      NATO Security Investment Program Total                                             604,270         604,270
                              ......................
                            Florida
Army NG                       Camp Blanding           Automated Multi Purpose             28,000          28,000
                                                       Training Range.
                            Guam
Army NG                       Barrigada               National Guard Readiness                 0          20,000
                                                       Center Alteration.
                            Idaho
Army NG                       Orchard Training Area   Mission Training Complex            27,000          27,000
                                                       (Small).
                            Indiana
Army NG                       Shelbyville Armory      Aircraft Maintenance                     0          27,500
                                                       Hangar Addition/
                                                       Alteration (INC).
                            Louisiana
Army NG                       Abbeville               National Guard Readiness            23,000          23,000
                                                       Center.
                            Massachusetts
Army NG                       Camp Edwards            National Guard Readiness            43,000          43,000
                                                       Center.
                            New York
Army NG                       Colonie Readiness       National Guard Readiness            90,000          90,000
                               Center                  Center.
                            North Carolina
Army NG                       Salisbury Readiness     Aircraft Maintenance                     0          69,000
                               Complex                 Hangar Addition/
                                                       Alteration (INC).
                            Oklahoma
Army NG                       Tulsa Army Aviation     Aircraft Maintenance Bay..          18,500          18,500
                               Support Facility
                            Washington
Army NG                       Yakima Training Center  Dining Facility...........          18,000          18,000
                            West Virginia
Army NG                       Martinsburg Readiness   National Guard Readiness            20,000          20,000
                               Center                  Center Add/Alt.
                            Worldwide Unspecified
Army NG                       Unspecified Worldwide   Design....................          71,909          71,909
                               Locations
Army NG                       Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                   19,500          19,500
                               Locations               Construction.
                            ........................
      Military Construction, Army National Guard Total                                   358,909         475,409
                              ......................
                            Colorado
Army Res                      Fort Carson             Equipment Concentration             92,000          92,000
                                                       Site.
                            Illinois
Army Res                      Fort Sheridan           Area Maintenance Support            38,000          38,000
                                                       Activity.
                            Virginia
Army Res                      Richmond Reserve        Army Reserve Center.......          48,000          48,000
                               Center
                            Worldwide Unspecified
Army Res                      Unspecified Worldwide   Design....................          10,413          10,413
                               Locations
Army Res                      Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                   21,500          21,500
                               Locations               Construction.
                            ........................
      Military Construction, Army Reserve Total                                          209,913         209,913
                              ......................
                            Florida
N/MC Res                      Naval Air Station       Ramp Expansion & Rtc......          47,000          47,000
                               Jacksonville
                            Texas
N/MC Res                      Fort Worth              Hangar 1050 Modernization           56,870          56,870
                                                       (INC).
                            Worldwide Unspecified
N/MC Res                      Unspecified Worldwide   MCNR Design...............           6,578           6,578
                               Locations
N/MC Res                      Unspecified Worldwide   MCNR Unspecified Minor               2,522           2,522
                               Locations               Construction.
N/MC Res                      Unspecified Worldwide   USMCR Design..............          19,302          19,302
                               Locations
                            ........................
      Military Construction, Naval Reserve Total                                         132,272         132,272
                              ......................
                            Alaska
Air NG                        Eielson Air Force Base  BCE Pavements and Grounds                0          16,000
                                                       Facility.
                            Iowa
Air NG                        Sioux City              Repair Runway 13-31 (INC).               0          38,500
                            Michigan
Air NG                        Selfridge Air National  Mitigate Runway                    110,000         110,000
                               Guard Base              Encroachment.
Air NG                        Selfridge Air National  Taxiway Alpha Extension...          28,000          28,000
                               Guard Base
Air NG                        Selfridge Air National  Taxiway Bravo Extension...          24,000          24,000
                               Guard Base
Air NG                        Selfridge Air National  F-15EX Maintenance Complex               0          60,000
                               Guard Base              Phase 3.
Air NG                        Selfridge Air National  F-15EX Maintenance Complex               0          65,000
                               Guard Base              Phase 2.
Air NG                        Selfridge Air National  Mcca KC-46 ADAL Aircrew                  0          35,000
                               Guard Base              Training Facility.
Air NG                        Selfridge Air National  KC-46 ASE Complex (Design)               0           4,300
                               Guard Base
Air NG                        Selfridge Air National  KC-46 ADAL Parking Apron                 0           1,400
                               Guard Base              (Design).
Air NG                        Selfridge Air National  Mcca KC-46 ADAL SQ Ops B17               0          38,000
                               Guard Base
Air NG                        Selfridge Air National  F-15EX Maintenance Complex               0          65,000
                               Guard Base              Phase 1.
Air NG                        Selfridge Air National  KC-46 Dual Bay Hangar                    0          21,200
                               Guard Base              (Design).
                            Missouri
Air NG                        Rosecrans Air National  Aircraft Parking Apron....               0          63,000
                               Guard Base
                            Oregon
Air NG                        Kingsley Air Force      F-35 FTU Academic Training          80,000          80,000
                               Base                    Center.
                            Texas
Air NG                        Naval Air Station       C-130J ADAL Maintenance             27,000          27,000
                               Joint Reserve Base      Hangar B1676.
                               Fort Worth
                            Worldwide Unspecified
Air NG                        Unspecified Worldwide   Design....................         110,656         110,656
                               Locations
Air NG                        Unspecified Worldwide   Design....................         136,565         136,565
                               Locations
Air NG                        Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                    9,000           9,000
                               Locations               Construction.
                            ........................
      Military Construction, Air National Guard Total                                    525,221         932,621
                              ......................
                            Pennsylvania
AF Res                        Pittsburgh Air Reserve  Communications Facility...          19,500          19,500
                               Station
                            Worldwide Unspecified
AF Res                        Unspecified Worldwide   Design....................           1,347           1,347
                               Locations
AF Res                        Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor Military           1,325           1,325
                               Locations               Construction.
                            ........................
      Military Construction, Air Force Reserve Total                                      22,172          22,172
                              ......................
                            Germany
FH Con Army                   South Camp Vilseck      FH Replacement                      95,060          36,060
                                                       Construction (44 Units).
                            Japan
FH Con Army                   Camp Zama               FH Improvement                     106,356         106,356
                                                       Construction (68 Units).
                            Worldwide Unspecified
FH Con Army                   Unspecified Worldwide   Family Housing Design.....          39,079          39,079
                               Locations
                            ........................
      Family Housing Construction, Army Total                                            240,495         181,495
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
FH Ops Army                   Unspecified Worldwide   Furnishings...............          18,177          18,177
                               Locations
FH Ops Army                   Unspecified Worldwide   Leased Housing............         132,820         132,820
                               Locations
FH Ops Army                   Unspecified Worldwide   Maintenance of Real                172,866         172,866
                               Locations               Property Facilities.
FH Ops Army                   Unspecified Worldwide   Management Account........          42,802          42,802
                               Locations
FH Ops Army                   Unspecified Worldwide   Military Housing                    42,026          42,026
                               Locations               Privatization Initiative.
FH Ops Army                   Unspecified Worldwide   Miscellaneous.............              92              92
                               Locations
FH Ops Army                   Unspecified Worldwide   Services..................          10,130          10,130
                               Locations
FH Ops Army                   Unspecified Worldwide   Utilities.................          49,494          49,494
                               Locations
                            ........................
      Family Housing Operation And Maintenance, Army Total                               468,407         468,407
                              ......................
                            District of Columbia
FH Con Navy                   Marine Barracks         CTC: W/H Revitalization,             1,532           1,532
                               Washington (8th         Quarters #1 (1 Units).
                               Street & I)
                            Guam
FH Con Navy                   Joint Region Marianas   CTC: Replace Andersen               25,876          25,876
                                                       Housing PH V (74 Units).
FH Con Navy                   Joint Region Marianas   CTC: Replace Andersen               44,920          44,920
                                                       Housing PH VI (52 Units).
FH Con Navy                   Joint Region Marianas   CTC: Replace Andersen               33,771          33,771
                                                       Housing Phase 8 (62
                                                       Units).
FH Con Navy                   Joint Region Marianas   Replace Andersen Housing           144,495         144,495
                                                       PH 9 (149 Units) (INC).
                            Japan
FH Con Navy                   Yokosuka Naval Base     W/H & Utility Revit, Ikego          44,128          44,128
                                                       Th Ph6 (32 Units).
                            Worldwide Unspecified
FH Con Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Design....................          14,971          14,971
                               Locations
FH Con Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Navy Southeast MHPI (2nd            52,177          52,177
                               Locations               Restructure) (100 Units).
                            ........................
      Family Housing Construction, Navy And Marine Corps Total                           361,870         361,870
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
FH Ops Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Furnishings...............          17,252          17,252
                               Locations
FH Ops Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Housing Privatization               60,997          60,997
                               Locations               Support.
FH Ops Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Leasing...................          66,242          66,242
                               Locations
FH Ops Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Maintenance...............         119,152         119,152
                               Locations
FH Ops Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Management................          54,612          54,612
                               Locations
FH Ops Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Miscellaneous.............             445             445
                               Locations
FH Ops Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Services..................          14,394          14,394
                               Locations
FH Ops Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Utilities.................          52,515          52,515
                               Locations
                            ........................
      Family Housing Operation And Maintenance, Navy And Marine Corps Total              385,609         385,609
                              ......................
                            Alaska
FH Con AF                     Joint Base Elmendorf-   MHPI Restructure--JBER             156,964         156,964
                               Richardson              Phase II (1,194 Units).
                            Japan
FH Con AF                     Yokota Air Base         Yokota PAIP 10 PH 1 (32             36,100          36,100
                                                       Units).
                            United Kingdom
FH Con AF                     Royal Air Force         Croughton (Replacement)             24,104          24,104
                               Croughton               (12 Units).
                            Worldwide Unspecified
FH Con AF                     Unspecified Worldwide   Design....................          25,854          25,854
                               Locations
                            ........................
      Family Housing Construction, Air Force Total                                       243,022         243,022
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
FH Ops AF                     Unspecified Worldwide   Furnishings...............          28,691          28,691
                               Locations
FH Ops AF                     Unspecified Worldwide   Housing Privatization.....          40,627          40,627
                               Locations
FH Ops AF                     Unspecified Worldwide   Leasing...................           5,523           5,523
                               Locations
FH Ops AF                     Unspecified Worldwide   Maintenance...............         160,528         160,528
                               Locations
FH Ops AF                     Unspecified Worldwide   Management................          64,841          64,841
                               Locations
FH Ops AF                     Unspecified Worldwide   Miscellaneous.............           2,492           2,492
                               Locations
FH Ops AF                     Unspecified Worldwide   Services..................          12,957          12,957
                               Locations
FH Ops AF                     Unspecified Worldwide   Utilities.................          51,097          51,097
                               Locations
                            ........................
      Family Housing Operation And Maintenance, Air Force Total                          366,756         366,756
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
FH Ops DW                     Unspecified Worldwide   Furnishings...............              93              93
                               Locations
FH Ops DW                     Unspecified Worldwide   Furnishings...............             566             566
                               Locations
FH Ops DW                     Unspecified Worldwide   Leasing (NSA).............          14,320          14,320
                               Locations
FH Ops DW                     Unspecified Worldwide   Leasing (DIA).............          34,693          34,693
                               Locations
FH Ops DW                     Unspecified Worldwide   Leasing (DSCA)............           8,792           8,792
                               Locations
FH Ops DW                     Unspecified Worldwide   Maintenance...............              37              37
                               Locations
FH Ops DW                     Unspecified Worldwide   Utilities (DIA)...........           4,548           4,548
                               Locations
FH Ops DW                     Unspecified Worldwide   Utilities (NSA)...........              15              15
                               Locations
                            ........................
      Family Housing Operation And Maintenance, Defense-Wide Total                        63,064          63,064
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
FHIF                          Unspecified Worldwide   Administrative Expenses--            8,412           8,412
                               Locations               FHIF.
                            ........................
      DOD Family Housing Improvement Fund Total                                            8,412           8,412
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
UHIF                          Unspecified Worldwide   Administrative Expenses--              501             501
                               Locations               UHIF.
                            ........................
      Unaccompanied Housing Improvement Fund Total                                           501             501
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
BRAC                          Base Realignment &      Base Realignment and               151,293         151,293
                               Closure, Army           Closure.
                            ........................
      Base Realignment and Closure--Army Total                                           151,293         151,293
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
BRAC                          Unspecified Worldwide   Base Realignment & Closure         108,325         158,325
                               Locations
                            ........................
      Base Realignment and Closure--Navy Total                                           108,325         158,325
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
BRAC                          Unspecified Worldwide   DOD BRAC Activities--Air           111,381         111,381
                               Locations               Force.
                            ........................
      Base Realignment and Closure--Air Force Total                                      111,381         111,381
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
BRAC                          Unspecified Worldwide   INT-4: DLA Activities.....           1,318           1,318
                               Locations
                            ........................
      Base Realignment and Closure--Defense-wide Total                                     1,318           1,318
                              ......................
      Military Construction, Total                                                    28,565,682      28,565,682
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

      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 2027        House
                   Program                       Request     Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Energy And Water Development, And Related
   Agencies
  Appropriation Summary:
    Nuclear Energy..........................       160,000       160,000
    Defense Uranium Enrichment D&D..........       253,000             0
 
    Atomic Energy Defense Activities
      National nuclear security
       administration:
        Weapons activities..................    27,441,159    27,586,159
        Defense nuclear nonproliferation....     2,389,595     2,389,595
        Naval reactors......................     2,393,692     2,243,692
        Federal salaries and expenses.......       577,097       577,097
  Total, National Nuclear Security              32,801,543    32,796,543
   Administration...........................
 
      Environmental and other defense
       activities:
        Defense environmental cleanup.......     6,983,318     7,194,318
        Other defense activities............     1,184,721     1,184,721
  Total, Environmental & other defense           8,168,039     8,379,039
   activities...............................
  Total, Atomic Energy Defense Activities...    40,969,582    41,175,582
  Total, Discretionary Funding..............    41,382,582    41,335,582
 
Nuclear Energy
  Idaho sitewide safeguards and security....       160,000       160,000
  Total, Nuclear Energy.....................       160,000       160,000
 
Defense Uranium Enrichment D&D
  Defense Uranium Enrichment D&D Program....       253,000             0
    Program decrease........................                  [-253,000]
  Total, Defense Uranium Enrichment D&D.....       253,000             0
 
Weapons Activities
  Stockpile Management
    Stockpile Major Modernization
      B61-13................................        46,428        46,428
      W80-4 LEP.............................     1,048,340     1,048,340
      W80-5 Modification Program............             0        50,000
        Program adjustment..................                    [50,000]
      W87-1 Modification Program............       913,231       913,231
      W93 Program...........................     1,106,106     1,106,106
      Future Programs.......................        99,794        99,794
  Total, Stockpile Major Modernization......     3,213,899     3,263,899
 
    Stockpile services
      Stockpile Operations..................     1,885,290     1,885,290
      Weapons Dismantlement and Disposition.        90,760        90,760
      Production Operations.................     1,146,586     1,146,586
      Nuclear Enterprise Assurance..........       121,015       121,015
  Subtotal, Stockpile Services..............     3,243,651     3,243,651
  Total, Stockpile Management...............     6,457,550     6,507,550
 
  Production Modernization
    Primary Capability Modernization
      Plutonium Modernization
        Los Alamos Plutonium Modernization
          Los Alamos Pit Production.........     1,460,791     1,460,791
          21-D-512 Plutonium Pit Production        812,100       812,100
           Project, LANL....................
          07-D-220-04 Transuranic Liquid            10,000        10,000
           Waste Facility, LANL.............
          04-D-125 Chemistry and Metallurgy        110,000       110,000
           Research Replacement Project,
           LANL.............................
  Subtotal, Los Alamos Plutonium                 2,392,891     2,392,891
   Modernization............................
        Savannah River Plutonium
         Modernization
          Savannah River Pit Production.....       302,000       302,000
          21-D-511 Savannah River Plutonium      1,946,523     1,946,523
           Processing Facility, SRS.........
  Subtotal, Savannah River Plutonium             2,248,523     2,248,523
   Modernization............................
        Enterprise Pit Production Support...       270,897       270,897
  Total, Plutonium Modernization............     4,912,311     4,912,311
      High Explosives and Energetics
          High Explosives & Energetics......       251,765       251,765
  Total, High Explosives and Energetics.....       251,765       251,765
  Total, Primary Capability Modernization...     5,164,076     5,164,076
 
    Secondary Capability Modernization
      Secondary Capability Modernization....     1,728,546     1,728,546
      06-D-141 Uranium Processing Facility,        290,000       365,000
       Y-12.................................
        Commissioning risk reduction and                        [75,000]
         early casting demonstration........
  Total, Secondary Capability Modernization.     2,018,546     2,093,546
 
    Tritium and Defense Fuels Program
      Tritium and Defense Fuels Program.....       880,781       880,781
  Total, Tritium and Defense Fuels Program..       880,781       880,781
 
    Non-Nuclear Capability Modernization
      Non-Nuclear Capability Modernization..       258,008       258,008
      26-D-511 MESA Photolithography                51,000        51,000
       Capability (MPC), SNL................
      22-D-513 Power Sources Capability, SNL       140,000       140,000
  Total, Non-Nuclear Capability                    449,008       449,008
   Modernization............................
    Capability Based Investments............       203,163       203,163
    Warhead Assembly Modernization..........        47,965        47,965
    18-D-680 Material Staging Capability, PX        22,500        42,500
      Program acceleration..................                    [20,000]
  Total, Production Modernization...........     8,786,039     8,881,039
 
 
  Stockpile Research, Technology, and
   Engineering
    Assessment Science
      Assessment Science....................     1,243,267     1,243,267
      26-D-512 LANSCE Modernization Project         15,200        15,200
       (LAMP), LANL.........................
      24-D-513 Z-pinch Experimental                 91,700        91,700
       Underground System (ZEUS) Test Bed
       Facilities Improvement (ZTBFI), NNSS.
      17-D-640 U1a Complex Enhancements            154,142       154,142
       Project, NNSS........................
  Total, Assessment Science.................     1,504,309     1,504,309
    Engineering
      Engineering...........................       230,043       230,043
      26-D-513 Combined Radiation                  105,000       105,000
       Environments for Survivability
       Testing, SNL.........................
  Total, Engineering........................       335,043       335,043
    Rapid & Advanced Capabilities...........       499,209       499,209
    Inertial Confinement Fusion
      Inertial Confinement Fusion...........       829,736       829,736
      26-D-514 NIF Enhanced Fusion Yield            84,000        84,000
       Capability, LLNL.....................
  Total, Inertial Confinement Fusion........       913,736       913,736
    Advanced Simulation and Computing.......       909,765       909,765
    Weapon Technology and Manufacturing            405,413       405,413
     Maturation.............................
  Total, Stockpile Research, Technology, and     4,567,475     4,567,475
   Engineering..............................
 
  Infrastructure and Operations
    Operations of facilities................     1,752,310     1,752,310
    Safety and environmental operations.....       217,902       217,902
    Maintenance and repair of facilities....     1,384,323     1,384,323
    Recapitalization........................     1,203,127     1,203,127
    Construction:
      27-D-512 Plutonium Engineering Support        88,700        88,700
       Building, LANL.......................
      25-D-511 PULSE New Access, NNSS.......        50,000        50,000
      23-D-517 Electrical Power Capacity            65,000        65,000
       Upgrade, LANL........................
  Total, Construction.......................       203,700       203,700
  Total, Infrastructure and operations......     4,761,362     4,761,362
 
  Secure transportation asset
    Operations and equipment................       443,075       443,075
    Program direction.......................       143,996       143,996
  Total, Secure transportation asset........       587,071       587,071
 
  Defense Nuclear Security
    Operations and Maintenance..............     1,305,793     1,305,793
  Total, Defense nuclear security...........     1,305,793     1,305,793
 
  Information technology and cybersecurity..       935,000       935,000
  Legacy contractor pensions................        40,869        40,869
  Total, Weapons Activities.................    27,441,159    27,586,159
 
 
Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation
  Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation Programs
    Material management and minimization
      Reactor Conversion and Uranium Supply.       117,820       117,820
      Nuclear Material Removal and                  68,945        68,945
       Elimination..........................
      Plutonium Disposition.................        79,039        79,039
  Total, Material management & minimization.       265,804       265,804
 
    Global material security
      International nuclear security........        61,013        61,013
      Radiological security.................       193,104       193,104
      Nuclear smuggling detection and              136,457       136,457
       deterrence...........................
  Total, Global material security...........       390,574       390,574
 
    Nonproliferation and arms control.......       214,494       214,494
 
    Defense nuclear nonproliferation R&D
      Proliferation Detection...............       296,170       296,170
      Nuclear Detonation Detection..........       318,447       318,447
      Forensics R&D.........................        30,000        30,000
      Nonproliferation Stewardship Program..       174,383       174,383
  Total, Defense nuclear nonproliferation          819,000       819,000
   R&D......................................
  Total, Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation        1,689,872     1,689,872
   Programs.................................
 
    Nuclear counterterrorism and incident
     response program
      Emergency Management..................        35,045        35,045
      Counterterrorism and                         650,550       650,550
       Counterproliferation.................
  Total, Nuclear Counterterrorism and              685,595       685,595
   Incident Response Program................
 
  Legacy contractor pensions................        14,128        14,128
  Total, Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation...     2,389,595     2,389,595
 
 
Naval Reactors
  Naval reactors operating..................     1,551,574     1,551,574
  Program direction.........................        71,841        71,841
  Construction:
    25-D-530 Naval Examination Acquisition          80,000        80,000
     Project................................
    14-D-901 Spent Fuel Handling                   691,953       541,953
     Recapitalization Project, NRF..........
      Program decrease......................                  [-150,000]
  Total, Construction.......................       771,953       621,953
  Use of prior-year balances................        -1,676        -1,676
  Total, Naval Reactors.....................     2,393,692     2,243,692
 
 
Federal Salaries And Expenses
  Program Direction.........................       577,097       577,097
  Total, Federal Salaries And Expenses......       577,097       577,097
 
 
Defense Environmental Cleanup
  Closure sites:
    Closure sites administration............           500           500
 
  Richland:
    River corridor and other cleanup                69,000       134,000
     operations.............................
      Project increase......................                    [65,000]
    Central plateau remediation.............       795,124       795,124
    Richland community and regulatory               12,000        12,000
     support................................
    Construction:...........................                           0
      24-D-401 Environmental Restoration                 0         6,000
       Disposal Facility Supercell 11
       Expansion Proj.......................
        Project increase....................                     [6,000]
  Total, Construction--Richland.............             0         6,000
  Total, Richland...........................       876,124       947,124
 
  Office of River Protection:
    Waste Treatment Immobilization Plant           466,000       466,000
     Commissioning..........................
    Rad liquid tank waste stabilization and        984,000       984,000
     disposition............................
    Construction:
      01-D-16D High-Level Waste Facility....       330,000       430,000
        Project increase....................                   [100,000]
      15-D-409 Low Activity Waste                   75,000        75,000
       Pretreatment System..................
      23-D-403, Hanford 200 West Area Tank          90,000        90,000
       Farms Risk Management Project........
  Total, Construction--Office of River             495,000       595,000
   Protection ..............................
 
  Total, Office of River Protection.........     1,945,000     2,045,000
 
  Idaho National Laboratory:
    Idaho cleanup and waste disposition.....       472,726       472,726
    Idaho community and regulatory support..         3,295         3,295
      Construction:
        22-D-403 Idaho Spent Nuclear Fuel            2,000         2,000
         Staging Facility...................
        23-D-402--Calcine Construction......         2,000         2,000
  Total, Construction--Idaho................         4,000         4,000
  Total, Idaho National Laboratory..........       480,021       480,021
 
  NNSA sites and Nevada off-sites
    Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory..         1,955         1,955
    Nuclear facility D & D
      Separations Process Research Unit.....           950           950
      Nevada Site...........................        64,835        64,835
      Sandia National Laboratories..........         1,030         1,030
      Los Alamos National Laboratory........       293,937       293,937
  Total, NNSA sites and Nevada off-sites....       362,707       362,707
 
  Oak Ridge Reservation:
    OR Nuclear facility D & D...............       289,297       289,297
  Total, OR Nuclear facility D & D..........       289,297       289,297
 
    U233 Disposition Program................        70,000        70,000
    OR cleanup and disposition..............        85,800        85,800
      Construction:
        17-D-401 On-site waste disposal             57,828        57,828
         facility...........................
  Total, Construction--Oak Ridge............        57,828        57,828
  Total, OR cleanup and waste disposition...       213,628       213,628
 
    OR community & regulatory support.......         5,100         5,100
    OR technology development and deployment         3,500         3,500
  Total, Oak Ridge Reservation..............       511,525       511,525
 
  Savannah River Sites:
    Savannah River risk management                 465,620       465,620
     operations.............................
  Total, Savannah River Risk Management            465,620       465,620
   Operations...............................
 
    SR Community and Regulatory Support.....         5,450         5,450
    Savannah River National Laboratory              90,719        90,719
     Operations & Maintenance...............
    Radioactive Liquid Tank Waste                1,066,000     1,106,000
     Stabilization and Disposition..........
      Program increase......................                    [40,000]
      Construction:
        20-D-401 Saltstone Disposal Unit            82,500        82,500
         #10, 11, 12........................
  Total, Construction--Savannah River sites.        82,500        82,500
  Total, Savannah River sites...............     1,710,289     1,750,289
 
  Waste Isolation Pilot Plant
    Waste Isolation Pilot Plant.............       400,020       400,020
    Construction:
      21-D-401 Hoisting Capability Project..        72,000        72,000
  Total, Construction--Waste Isolation Pilot        72,000        72,000
   Plant....................................
  Total, Waste Isolation Pilot Plant........       472,020       472,020
 
  Program Direction.........................       297,318       297,318
  Program Support...........................        20,320        20,320
  Safeguards and Security...................       291,482       291,482
  Technology Development and Deployment.....        16,012        16,012
  Total, Defense Environmental Cleanup......     6,983,318     7,194,318
 
Other Defense Activities
  Environment, health, safety and security
    Program direction.......................        81,179        81,179
    Environment, Health, Safety & Security..       150,761       150,761
  Total, Environment, Health, safety and           231,940       231,940
   security.................................
 
  Office of Enterprise Assessments
    Program direction.......................        56,632        56,632
    Enterprise Assessments..................        32,183        32,183
  Total, Office of Enterprise Assessments...        88,815        88,815
 
  Specialized security activities...........       471,082       471,082
 
  Office of Legacy Management
    Legacy management.......................       177,716       177,716
    Program direction.......................        22,670        22,670
  Total, Office of Legacy Management........       200,386       200,386
 
  Defense-related administrative support....       187,475       187,475
 
  Office of hearings and appeals............         5,023         5,023
  Subtotal, Other Defense Activities........     1,184,721     1,184,721
  Total, Other Defense Activities...........     1,184,721     1,184,721
------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                 Union Calendar No. 606

119th CONGRESS

  2d Session

                               H. R. 8800

                          [Report No. 119-698]

_______________________________________________________________________

                                 A BILL

     To authorize appropriations for fiscal year 2027 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 15, 2026

  Reported with an amendment, committed to the Committee of the Whole 
       House on the State of the Union, and ordered to be printed