[Senate Hearing 118-786]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]




                                                        S. Hrg. 118-786

                   COAST GUARD DRUG INTERDICTION AND 
                ENFORCEMENT IN THE MARITIME ENVIRONMENT

=======================================================================



                                HEARING

                               before the

                SUBCOMMITTEE ON OCEANS, FISHERIES, CLIMATE 
                         CHANGE, AND MANUFACTURING

                                 of the

                         COMMITTEE ON COMMERCE,
                      SCIENCE, AND TRANSPORTATION
                          UNITED STATES SENATE

                    ONE HUNDRED EIGHTEENTH CONGRESS

                             SECOND SESSION
                               __________

                           SEPTEMBER 19, 2024
                               __________

Printed for the use of the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation





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                Available online: http://www.govinfo.gov
                               ______
                                 
                 U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE

63-616 PDF                WASHINGTON : 2026








       SENATE COMMITTEE ON COMMERCE, SCIENCE, AND TRANSPORTATION

                    ONE HUNDRED EIGHTEENTH CONGRESS

                             SECOND SESSION

                   MARIA CANTWELL, Washington, Chair
                   
AMY KLOBUCHAR, Minnesota             TED CRUZ, Texas, Ranking
BRIAN SCHATZ, Hawaii                 JOHN THUNE, South Dakota
EDWARD MARKEY, Massachusetts         ROGER WICKER, Mississippi
GARY PETERS, Michigan                DEB FISCHER, Nebraska
TAMMY BALDWIN, Wisconsin             JERRY MORAN, Kansas
TAMMY DUCKWORTH, Illinois            DAN SULLIVAN, Alaska
JON TESTER, Montana                  MARSHA BLACKBURN, Tennessee
KYRSTEN SINEMA, Arizona              TODD YOUNG, Indiana
JACKY ROSEN, Nevada                  TED BUDD, North Carolina
BEN RAY LUJAN, New Mexico            ERIC SCHMITT, Missouri
JOHN HICKENLOOPER, Colorado          J. D. VANCE, Ohio
RAPHAEL WARNOCK, Georgia             SHELLEY MOORE CAPITO, West 
PETER WELCH, Vermont                     Virginia
                                     CYNTHIA LUMMIS, Wyoming
                   
                   Lila Harper Helms, Staff Director
                 Melissa Porter, Deputy Staff Director
                     Jonathan Hale, General Counsel
                 Brad Grantz, Republican Staff Director
           Nicole Christus, Republican Deputy Staff Director
                     Liam McKenna, General Counsel
                     
                                 ------                                

          SUBCOMMITTEE ON OCEANS, FISHERIES, CLIMATE CHANGE, 
                           AND MANUFACTURING

TAMMY BALDWIN, Wisconsin, Chair      DAN SULLIVAN, Alaska, Ranking
BRIAN SCHATZ, Hawaii                 ROGER WICKER, Mississippi
EDWARD MARKEY, Massachusetts         JERRY MORAN, Kansas
BEN RAY LUJAN, New Mexico            MARSHA BLACKBURN, Tennessee
RAPHAEL WARNOCK, Georgia             J. D. VANCE, Ohio
PETER WELCH, Vermont








                            C O N T E N T S

                              ----------                              
                                                                   Page
Hearing held on September 19, 2024...............................     1
Statement of Senator Baldwin.....................................     1
Statement of Senator Sullivan....................................    10
Statement of Senator Cantwell....................................    28
Statement of Senator Blackburn...................................    30
Statement of Senator Budd........................................    32

                               Witnesses

Admiral Kevin E. Lunday, Vice Commandant, U.S. Coast Guard.......     3
    Prepared statement...........................................     5
Rear Admiral Jo-Ann Burdian, Director, Joint Interagency Task 
  Force South, U.S. Coast Guard..................................     8
Rear Admiral Bob Little, Director, Joint Interagency Task Force 
  West, U.S. Coast Guard.........................................    12
Heather MacLeod, Director, Homeland Security and Justice, U.S. 
  Government Accountability Office...............................    13
    Prepared statement...........................................    15

                                Appendix

Hon. Ted Cruz, U.S. Senator from Texas, prepared statement.......    39
Response to written questions submitted to Admiral Kevin E. 
  Lunday by:
    Hon. Tammy Duckworth.........................................    40
    Hon. Roger Wicker............................................    41
    Hon. Marsha Blackburn........................................    42
Response to written questions submitted to Jo-Ann F. Burdian, 
  RADM, USCG by:
    Hon. Maria Cantwell..........................................    43
    Hon. Tammy Duckworth.........................................    44
    Hon. Ted Cruz................................................    44
    Hon. Roger Wicker............................................    45
    Hon. Dan Sullivan............................................    45
Response to written questions submitted to RADM Bob Little by:
    Hon. Maria Cantwell..........................................    46
    Hon. Tammy Duckworth.........................................    47
    Hon. Ted Cruz................................................    48
    Hon. Dan Sullivan............................................    48
Response to written questions submitted to Heather MacLeod by:
    Hon. Maria Cantwell..........................................    49
    Hon. Ted Cruz................................................    51








 
                   COAST GUARD DRUG INTERDICTION AND 
                ENFORCEMENT IN THE MARITIME ENVIRONMENT

                              ----------                              


                      THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2024

                               U.S. Senate,
Subcommittee on Oceans, Fisheries, Climate Change, 
                                 and Manufacturing,
        Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation,
                                                    Washington, DC.
    The Subcommittee met, pursuant to notice, at 10 a.m., in 
room SR-253, Russell Senate Office Building, Hon. Tammy 
Baldwin, Chairwoman of the Subcommittee, presiding.
    Present: Senators Baldwin [presiding], Cantwell, Sullivan, 
Wicker, and Blackburn.
    Also present: Senator Budd.

           OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. TAMMY BALDWIN, 
                  U.S. SENATOR FROM WISCONSIN

    Senator Baldwin. Good morning.
    I am calling the Subcommittee on Oceans, Fisheries, Climate 
Change, and Manufacturing hearing to order, and good morning 
and thank you all for your time this morning and for your 
attention to a very important topic.
    I called for this hearing today because I am committed to 
fighting the deadly fentanyl epidemic on all fronts. The United 
States is facing the worst drug crisis in history with a 
majority of overdose deaths caused by fentanyl, and while we 
talk about these drugs in a more global sense, make no mistake 
this has very real impacts on people's lives.
    Too many kitchen tables have an empty chair because of this 
scourge and I will leave no stone unturned to end it. In recent 
years fentanyl has killed thousands of Wisconsinites, 
devastating families and communities in every part of my state.
    I have heard from mothers who lost children, cops and 
paramedics on the front lines, and advocates all demanding that 
we do more to end this crisis, and I know my colleagues hear 
the same resounding message in their states.
    This Congress we took a step in the right direction when we 
passed bipartisan legislation to crack down on precursor 
chemical suppliers in China and drug cartels in Mexico that are 
producing these drugs and fueling this epidemic.
    But there is more work to do. We must make sure we are 
putting every resource possible toward protecting Americans and 
stopping the movement of deadly illicit substances across our 
border.
    In today's threat environment malign actors ship precursor 
chemicals from China to ports in the Western Hemisphere. Upon 
arrival criminal organizations process these chemicals into 
drugs including the synthetic opioid fentanyl that transit 
through the continent and devastate communities.
    We are also increasingly seeing fentanyl-laced cocaine or 
other substances moving through our hemisphere, causing a 
dramatic rise in fatalities. The fentanyl crisis demands a 
whole of government effort.
    The families I work for expect that all law enforcement and 
armed forces are working in lockstep, and today we are 
examining the role of the United States Coast Guard.
    One of the Coast Guard's statutory missions is drug 
interdiction. Historically, this mission has been focused on 
cocaine, the primary illicit narcotic shipped via maritime 
transportation.
    In recent years the Coast Guard has demonstrated the 
ability to play a role in the tracking and removal of fentanyl 
and its precursor chemicals. Given the crisis in our country we 
need to substantially increase this effort and I look forward 
to hearing recommendations from our witnesses.
    The United States Coast Guard gathers intelligence, 
contributes assets, and conducts boardings of vessels of 
interest to identify, seize, or destroy illicit substances, 
primarily consisting of cocaine, methamphetamines or heroin.
    The Coast Guard also contributes sea, air, and personnel 
assets to the joint interagency task forces to assist in 
tracking shipments of precursor chemicals and referring them to 
law enforcement and other partners for action.
    Today I hope to hear about the Coast Guard's role in 
disrupting the fentanyl supply chain and opportunities to 
expand the Coast Guard's operational and intelligence 
capabilities to stop global drug movement.
    Part of improving our approach means ensuring that the 
Coast Guard has the needed resources and tools at their 
disposal. Transnational criminal organizations have 
dramatically increased the quantity of cocaine they are 
smuggling through maritime routes. Yet, we have seen a decline 
in cocaine removals at the same time.
    The Coast Guard is devoting fewer assets to the drug 
interdiction mission due to competing priorities and resource 
constraints.
    We must align sufficient resources to this mission so that 
we can stop cocaine shipments on water where they are shipped 
in bulk quantities before they reach land and become much more 
difficult to interdict.
    At the same time, the Coast Guard is experiencing 
acquisition delays, the most notable of which is the four-year 
delay in the offshore patrol cutter procurement program.
    I am concerned that we are not seizing every opportunity we 
can to stop precursor chemicals while they are being shipped 
from China.
    And, finally, I am concerned about our most valuable asset, 
our people. As a part of my commitment to keeping Americans 
safe from illicit substances I want to identify ways to protect 
our Coast Guard men and women and the maritime public from 
exposure to dangerous drugs or chemicals during the course of 
their regular Coast Guard duties.
    I am, therefore, including in this year's Coast Guard 
Authorization Act a provision that would require all Coast 
Guard teams to carry Naloxone or other opioid antagonists. In 
addition, the Coast Guard is currently 10 percent short of its 
enlisted workforce and has missed recruiting goals from Fiscal 
Year 2019 to Fiscal Year 2023.
    This personnel shortage is felt across the services and 
impacts every mission including causing the closure of three 
seasonal stations in the state of Wisconsin.
    The Coast Guard has laid up ships before their expected 
retirement date because there are not enough people to operate 
them. That means we have fewer ships to execute Coast Guard 
missions including the critical counterdrug mission.
    It is imperative that the Coast Guard addresses workforce 
recruitment and retention challenges and that includes enacting 
reforms to ensure that the Coast Guard is a safe environment to 
work in--an environment that does not allow sexual harassment 
or sexual assault.
    In addition, efforts to improve the culture of the services 
the Coast Guard must do more to keep its commitment to members 
and that commitment includes access to quality and affordable 
housing, medical care, and child care.
    It is important to note that these impacts are particularly 
severe for junior enlisted families, the very ranks we need 
most today. I am working to include provisions in the Coast 
Guard Authorization Act that support these quality of life 
concerns because we want to help the Coast Guard attract and 
retain a qualified and dedicated workforce.
    We owe the American public nothing short of the most 
exhaustive effort to stem the flow of deadly substances into 
our country.
    I am now going to call upon our witnesses today. Ranking 
Member Sullivan is on his way and will be recognized for his 
opening statement when he arrives.
    But we will hear from the witnesses and they will speak in 
order of rank: Admiral Lunday, Rear Admiral Burdian, Rear 
Admiral Little, and then Ms. MacLeod.
    I thank you in advance for your opening statements and 
recognize Admiral Lunday.

              STATEMENT OF ADMIRAL KEVIN LUNDAY, 
               VICE COMMANDANT, U.S. COAST GUARD

    Admiral Lunday. Good morning, Chair Baldwin, members of the 
Committee.
    Chair, I request that my written testimony be entered into 
the record.
    Senator Baldwin. Agreed.
    Admiral Lunday. Thank you, Chair Baldwin.
    Thank you for inviting me to appear for you before today to 
discuss Coast Guard drug interdiction and enforcement 
operations, and thank you for your enduring and strong support 
for the Coast Guard and our men and women, these young 
sentinels who have dedicated themselves to serve our Nation. 
They are the best from across our great United States and I am 
incredibly proud to serve with them.
    Today our service is in greater demand than ever before by 
the American people, first for the operations we conduct across 
the United States and in U.S. territories, protecting and 
defending our borders and through counterdrug operations and 
other operations, and our marine transportation system that is 
made up of our ports and waterways that are so vital to U.S. 
economic prosperity and national security, and also for the 
Coast Guard's increasing global presence in Latin America, the 
Arctic, and the Indo-Pacific and in other places where our 
authorities, capabilities, and our operations make us a trusted 
and reliable partner across the interagency and with our allies 
and other nations who share our values.
    The Coast Guard provides a unique and enduring value to the 
American people. Central to the Coast Guard's missions are 
maritime drug interdiction and enforcement operations.
    Transnational criminal organizations are highly 
sophisticated and finance criminal cartels that operate across 
national boundaries smuggling drugs into the United States.
    Cartels operating in Mexico receive the majority of cocaine 
sourced from Colombia and Ecuador and move it on transshipment 
routes through the eastern Pacific Ocean and the Caribbean Sea 
for further transshipment to the United States.
    Cocaine and other plant-based narcotics remain a mainstay 
of these criminal cartels but, as you noted, Chair Baldwin, 
they are also engaged in the manufacture and smuggling of 
deadly fentanyl into the United States, principally across the 
land ports of entry.
    They also engage in human trafficking and weapons 
smuggling. This not only harms the United States, it also 
creates security challenges and destabilizes other nations in 
the region, and that fuels conditions that increase human 
insecurity and it spurs irregular migration that threaten our 
U.S. border.
    The Coast Guard conducts drug interdiction enforcement at 
sea where the cartels are most vulnerable and where we have the 
advantage. We do this at sea present with at-sea presence of 
our major cutters, boats, and aircraft and our specialized law 
enforcement teams.
    We do not do it alone. We work closely with the Department 
of Defense, represented here by Admiral Burdian and Admiral 
Little, with DHS partners like DHS Joint Task Force East, 
Customs and Border Protection, and Homeland Security 
investigations, and along with the Departments of Justice 
including DEA and the Department of State.
    We work with allies and partner nations, sharing threat 
intelligence information and conducting combined operations at 
sea in the eastern Pacific and the Caribbean.
    Over the past decade illicit trade in fentanyl and other 
synthetic drugs has surpassed cocaine as the most dangerous 
threat to the American people and we remain focused on any 
movement of drugs that are coming toward the U.S. and stopping 
that movement.
    Although we have not seen yet significant amounts of 
fentanyl smuggled in noncommercial means by sea we remain 
vigilant for that to change, and because these same cartels 
that smuggle drugs by sea also smuggle fentanyl. Coast Guard 
drug interdiction operations are essential to disrupting their 
revenue stream and also fostering information that we can use 
in criminal investigations to target their activities on 
fentanyl production and smuggling.
    Our continued successful drug interdiction and enforcement 
operations also depend on the readiness of our people and our 
assets. That is both readiness to operate today and future 
readiness.
    Our Coast Guard women and men, conduct these operations in 
a dangerous and unforgiving maritime environment against 
criminal smugglers who would do them harm.
    They place themselves at risk to stop illicit narcotics 
from reaching our streets and harming the American people. We 
owe it to our workforce to provide them the best leadership 
training and tools to enable them to get the mission done and 
safely return.
    I am grateful for your continued support in this effort. 
Thank you for the opportunity to appear before you here today 
and I look forward to your questions.
    [The prepared statement of Admiral Lunday follows:]

    Prepared Statement of Admiral Kevin E. Lunday, Vice Commandant, 
                            U.S. Coast Guard
Introduction
    Chair Baldwin, Ranking Member Sullivan, and distinguished Members 
of the Subcommittee, thank you for inviting me to testify. Thank you 
for your continued support of the United States Coast Guard. I look 
forward to discussing the Coast Guard's maritime drug interdiction 
operations. We have a proud history of protecting and defending our 
Nation by ensuring our economic prosperity and national security in the 
maritime domain since the founding of the Revenue Marine in 1790 and 
our efforts remain focused on guarding our Nation against maritime 
border threats and conducting all of the Coast Guard's 11 statutory 
missions.
    Drug interdiction is a priority Coast Guard mission and one for 
which the Service is uniquely qualified. In Fiscal Year 2023, the Coast 
Guard removed over 96 metric tons of cocaine, bringing our six-year 
total to 977 metric tons removed. While this is a substantial amount, 
it falls short of our annual goals for several reasons, including fewer 
available surface interdiction assets--Coast Guard cutters and Navy 
ships--and increased demands from the Coast Guard's other missions. 
Those competing demands include elevating cutter presence in support of 
Homeland Security Task Force Southeast to counter historic levels of 
irregular maritime migration, increasing support to national priorities 
in the Indo-Pacific, providing critical Coast Guard assets in the 
Bering Sea and Gulf of Alaska to meet Russia and People's Republic of 
China presence, and advancing the global effort to counter illegal, 
unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing. The Coast Guard continuously 
assesses those demands and strategically employs our assets to maximize 
effectiveness and mitigate risk to the Nation. The trafficking of 
illegal narcotics poses a real threat to the American people, and I am 
proud of the work the Coast Guard does to remove cocaine and other 
narcotics before they reach our shores.
    As important as the amount of cocaine removed are the 267 drug 
trafficking smugglers detained for U.S. or foreign prosecution in 2023, 
as these individuals and associated evidence provide critical 
information for Department of Justice (DOJ) and Department of Homeland 
Security (DHS) investigations into the smuggling networks that present 
a larger threat to U.S. border security. The same transnational 
criminal organizations (TCOs) engaging in cocaine smuggling are also 
responsible for trafficking people and other drugs, including fentanyl 
and its precursors, into the U.S, as well as creating instability in 
source and transit zones in Latin America and the Caribbean, at the 
Southwest Border, and throughout the region. Not only do Coast Guard 
interdictions of incoming cocaine loads impact profit margins, those 
interdictions provide valuable information on the broader smuggling 
networks for our U.S investigative partners to leverage. We know the 
TCOs are most vulnerable when trafficking at sea, where the Coast Guard 
is most effective at disrupting illegal activities.
Drug Trafficking--Overview
    Mexican TCOs traffic most of the cocaine consumed in the U.S., 
sourcing it from Colombia, often via transshipment through Central 
America and the Caribbean. The Coast Guard's cutter fleet and versatile 
tactical law enforcement teams, operating from U.S. Navy and allied 
warships, target bulk cocaine movements typically originating from 
Colombia, Ecuador, and Venezuela. Two major drug transit corridors 
exist in the Western Hemisphere, the Eastern Pacific and the Caribbean. 
In the Eastern Pacific, there are multiple vectors used to move bulk 
cocaine, but traffickers generally land contraband between Costa Rica 
and Mexico for further shipment to the U.S. southwest land border. In 
the western Caribbean Sea, bulk cocaine is typically shipped via 
Honduras or Nicaragua and on to Mexico for shipment across the U.S. 
Southwest Border. In the central and eastern Caribbean, the bulk 
smuggling destination is typically the Dominican Republic or Puerto 
Rico. Approximately 60 to 65 percent of the cocaine destined for the 
United States flows through the Eastern Pacific corridor while 35 to 40 
percent is shipped through the Caribbean Sea.
National Drug Control Strategy & the Coast Guard's Role
    The National Drug Control Strategy (NDCS) emphasizes the global 
reach of U.S. enforcement and interdiction efforts and addresses both 
illicit drug supply and demand. The Coast Guard's work falls squarely 
into supply reduction, which we support with our cutters, boarding 
teams, and aircraft, as well as with information and intelligence 
sharing to our task forces that target TCOs. However, our role is much 
bigger than our presence on and over the water.
    The Commandant of the Coast Guard serves as the Chair of The 
Interdiction Committee (TIC), which is the Office of National Drug 
Control Policy's (ONDCP) senior interagency forum attended by drug 
interdiction officials from 26 departments and agencies. Just three 
months ago, our Commandant, Admiral Fagan, convened the TIC principals 
in San Juan, Puerto Rico, to work on issues related to the 
coordination, oversight, and integration of international, border, and 
domestic drug interdiction efforts in support of the President's NDCS. 
It highlighted the unique counter-drug challenges in the U.S. 
territories of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, which are part 
of our southeast U.S. border, as well as broader drug interdiction 
concerns for the Nation as a whole.
    In addition to our role with the TIC, Coast Guard flag Officers 
direct both U.S. Southern Command's Joint Interagency Task Force South 
(JIATF-S) and Indo-Pacific Command's Joint Interagency Task Force West 
(JIATF-W), leading the primary organizations charged with executing the 
Department of Defense's (DoD) Title 10 responsibility for the detection 
and monitoring of illicit aerial and maritime drug trafficking, while 
efficiently coordinating with the Coast Guard, interagency, allies, and 
partner nations for interdiction and related activities.
Partnerships
    As the Nation's lead maritime law enforcement agency, the Coast 
Guard has a broad range of authorities and a network of interagency and 
international partnerships that enable us to conduct law enforcement 
operations on the high seas, pushing threats far from U.S. borders. The 
Coast Guard conducts drug interdiction operations over a six-million 
square mile transit zone which includes the Caribbean Sea and the 
Eastern Pacific Ocean. However, we cannot cover that massive threat 
area alone. The Coast Guard relies on robust partnerships to conduct 
the drug interdiction mission and drive our whole-of-government effort 
to target TCOs that threaten our Nation.
    The Coast Guard relies on over 40 bilateral and multilateral 
international agreements with allies and partner nations that enable 
seamless, coordinated law enforcement efforts against TCOs. These 
international agreements are critical to Coast Guard drug interdiction 
successes, allowing the Coast Guard to conduct ship boardings of 
foreign-flagged vessels and time-critical operational coordination with 
partner nations during high-seas drug interdiction operations. The 
Department of State (DOS) plays a crucial role in negotiating, 
securing, and managing those agreements, and works closely with the 
Coast Guard on capacity-building efforts to improve the effectiveness 
of partner nations' counter-drug efforts.
    In addition to exercising international agreements, the Coast Guard 
relies on allies and international partners to provide assets, 
collaborate on operations, share intelligence, and work to eradicate 
maritime trafficking. We coordinate operations with, and regularly 
deploy Coast Guard law enforcement teams aboard allied vessels (e.g., 
United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Canada, and France), and work closely 
with partner nations throughout South and Central America and the 
Caribbean to dismantle maritime trafficking networks in the region.
    The Department of Defense (DoD)-Coast Guard partnership is critical 
to the Nation's drug interdiction mission and our collective ability to 
succeed. While DoD is the lead Federal agency for the detection and 
monitoring of aerial and maritime transits of illegal drugs into the 
United States (under Title 10, U.S. Code), the Coast Guard leverages 
unique authorities (under Title 14, U.S. Code) to serve as the lead 
agency for the interdiction and apprehension of vessels suspected of 
engaging in maritime drug trafficking. The Coast Guard's unique role as 
both a law enforcement agency and an armed force allows us to bridge 
these communities and leverage the full suite of authorities across the 
government.
    Similarly, the Coast Guard maintains close connections with the DOJ 
to prosecute cases and investigate TCO networks. Those relationships 
are key to ensuring a prosecution endgame for Coast Guard-initiated 
cases offshore. In addition to engagement on various DOJ-led 
interagency task forces, the Coast Guard assigns judge advocates who 
serve as Special Assistant United States Attorneys to work side-by-side 
with DOJ attorneys in the U.S. Attorney's Offices that prosecute the 
majority of the maritime drug cases. This model is highly successful 
and allows the Coast Guard to bring its maritime counter-drug expertise 
into the courtroom.
    Within DHS, the Coast Guard leads the DHS Joint Task Force East 
(JTF-EAST) which is responsible for coordinating activities and 
operations across DHS components with others to protect the U.S. 
Southeast Border and maritime approaches. For the past two years, JTF-
EAST has focused on addressing the threat of drug smuggling in the 
eastern Caribbean that is undermining security and stability in a 
region vital to U.S. border security. Working with JIATF-S, allies, and 
international partners, we have improved unified efforts to disrupt 
TCOs in the eastern Caribbean.
Drug Interdiction Operations
    The Coast Guard works closely with JIATF-S and JIATF-W to target 
Western Hemisphere and Indo-Pacific illicit narcotics (and precursors) 
flow, respectively. When interdiction assets are available, we 
prioritize U.S. interdictions to support investigations by our DOJ and 
DHS partners. When a U.S. interdiction is not possible, coordinating 
partner nation response is the preferred option. In Fiscal Year 2023, 
partner nations contributed approximately 80 percent of documented 
cocaine disruptions. This was the largest percentage of partner nation 
contributions on record, a promising trend that highlights the 
increasing capability and willingness of our partners to help shoulder 
the load of this important mission. In Fiscal Year 2023, the Coast 
Guard also provided intelligence support to European law enforcement 
partners on trans-Atlantic cocaine movement, accounting for an 
additional 45 metric tons disrupted.
Fentanyl
    While fentanyl is a top U.S. counterdrug priority and has been the 
leading cause of U.S. drug-related deaths since 2016, accounting for 
approximately 70 percent of U.S. drug overdose deaths in 2023, it has 
not yet been encountered in significant quantities in the maritime 
domain. Mexican TCOs are the primary source of synthetic opioids flow 
into the U.S., predominantly across our Southwest Border. Presently 
there is no significant Coast Guard nexus to U.S.-bound fentanyl 
shipments, nor to precursor chemicals destined for Mexico. In the 
previous five Fiscal Years (2019-2023), the Coast Guard conducted over 
1,030 drug interdiction events but only three of those events involved 
fentanyl, totaling 26.8 kilograms removed. However, interdiction of 
cocaine shipments directly targets and impacts the same Mexican TCOs 
that produce and smuggle fentanyl. Moreover, cocaine remains a threat 
to the United States public: cocaine-involved overdose deaths increased 
in 2023 by over 5.6 percent, to over 30,000 deaths. Overdose deaths 
involving synthetic opioids other than methadone (e.g., fentanyl), 
meanwhile, decreased by about 1.7 percent. The Coast Guard is postured 
with appropriate authority, capability, and policy to interdict 
fentanyl smuggling in the maritime environment. Our intelligence 
personnel are connected and working with their Intelligence Community 
partners in this important mission.
Coast Guard Workforce
    Sufficient numbers of modern cutters and aircraft are essential to 
Coast Guard maritime drug interdiction operations; however, it is Coast 
Guard men and women who are the most critical to our success. Our 
people performing drug interdiction operate in a dangerous and 
unforgiving maritime environment, encountering smugglers who would do 
them harm. That is why the Commandant has prioritized investments in 
recruiting, readiness, and retention of our talented workforce to 
ensure our Service remains Semper Paratus--Always Ready, both today and 
into the future.
Conclusion
    The Coast Guard continues to provide tremendous value to the United 
States in the maritime drug interdiction mission. Despite surface fleet 
reductions and competing mission demands, the Coast Guard remains well 
positioned to contribute to illicit drug supply reduction efforts as 
well as our Nation's overall drug control strategy. Future success of 
Coast Guard counterdrug operations hinge on continued investment in 
recruiting efforts, and the recapitalization of our aging fleet--
Congress' continued generous support will help the Nation's greatest 
Coast Guard meet these global demands.
    Thank you for the opportunity to testify today and for your 
continued support of the Coast Guard. I would be pleased to answer your 
questions.

    Senator Baldwin. Thank you, Admiral.
    Admiral Burdian.

   STATEMENT OF REAR ADMIRAL JO-ANN BURDIAN, DIRECTOR, JOINT 
         INTERAGENCY TASK FORCE SOUTH, U.S. COAST GUARD

    Admiral Burdian. Good morning, Chair Baldwin. Thank you for 
the opportunity to appear before the Subcommittee today. I am 
truly honored to represent the women and men of Joint 
Interagency Task Force South.
    We are a component of U.S. Southern Command and support the 
combatant commander's efforts to strengthen partnerships, 
counter threats, and build the team. According to the Perry 
Center, 40 of the 50 most violent cities in the world are in 
Latin America and the Caribbean.
    Much of that violence is fueled by narcotics smuggling. 
Transnational criminals disrupt governments and destroy 
communities and families throughout the SOUTHCOM AOR.
    Good morning, Ranking Member Sullivan.
    In its 35 years of existence JIATF South has leveraged the 
authority, jurisdiction, and capability of five of the six 
armed services, 13 U.S. law enforcement and intelligence 
agencies, and 20 foreign partners to detect and monitor drug 
flows in the air and maritime domains throughout our 42-
million-nautical-mile joint operating area.
    Would you like me to pause for Senator Sullivan? OK.
    Senator Baldwin. He will follow--he will follow your 
testimony.
    Admiral Burdian. Thank you, ma'am.
    Our work together enables the disruption of narcotics 
consignments bound for the United States and keeps profit out 
of the pockets of transnational criminals.
    Last year alone, we enabled the disruption of 361 narcotics 
shipments including the interdiction of over 300 metric tons of 
cocaine and 78 metric tons of marijuana valued at more than $7 
billion. This work represents over 25 percent of all known 
interdictions globally.
    In 2023, the CDC reported a decline in drug overdoses in 
the United States for the first time since 2018 but that trend 
did not apply to cocaine.
    Last year more than 29,000 Americans died from cocaine 
overdose, a number that is comparable to losing a small 
American town, one that is just smaller than Manitowoc or just 
about the same size as Juneau every single year.
    Cocaine-related deaths were five times higher than they 
were in 2014 when already--when over 5,000 Americans, which was 
already far too many, lost their lives to cocaine overdose. 
More than 70 percent of cocaine overdose deaths involved 
combining cocaine with an opioid, most often fentanyl.
    Just as American victims mix their drug of choice, TCOs--
transnational criminal organizations--or poly drug enterprises 
they traffic plant-based drugs like cocaine and marijuana, 
synthetic drugs like fentanyl alongside bulk cash, weapons, and 
people and they are driven by a single goal--profit.
    Although we have not encountered fentanyl in the maritime 
our efforts advance investigations into criminal organizations 
who traffic fentanyl in the U.S. According to the organized 
crime drug enforcement task forces, last year 23 percent of 
their designated investigations that involved maritime 
interdictions in the JIATF South JOA were connected to 
organizations also linked to fentanyl or its precursors.
    Nine percent of the investigations were linked to command 
and control elements of the most prolific international drug 
trafficking organizations.
    I just want to emphasize the work JIATF South does advances 
investigations into organizations who traffic fentanyl into the 
United States.
    Partnerships are at the core of our success. We integrate 
and investigate intelligence data from around the U.S. 
interagency with information provided by our foreign partners 
to develop real time targets that we monitor to turn over to 
our interdiction partners like the Coast Guard.
    The Coast Guard is the largest single provider of U.S. ship 
days and those days are augmented using their law enforcement 
detachments on allied vessels.
    We began to use the ship's special mission, which is a 
repurposed commercial vessel under contract by SOUTHCOM, in 
2017 as a force multiplier to enable partner nation 
interdictions.
    In its time and service the SSM has supported the 
interdiction of over 40 metric tons of cocaine and marijuana 
and, moreover, has provided our partners with the expertise and 
experience to operate far offshore on their own.
    Today, partner nations contributes over 80 percent of JIATF 
South supported interdictions. While we are grateful for the 
commitment of our foreign partners, U.S. law enforcement 
agencies benefit most from U.S. interdictions.
    Simply put, more U.S. interdictions lead to more U.S. 
prosecutions, initiating a virtuous cycle of success. 
Information gathered during these interdictions drive further 
arrests and each arrest can provide witnesses, cooperators, and 
new sources of intelligence.
    This intelligence feeds back into our targeting cycle, 
leading to more interdictions. In short, we can do more with 
more.
    Multiple media outlets have reported a surplus in global 
cocaine supply that has driven prices down, increased 
consumption, and expanded markets into Asia and Europe.
    This shift highlights the global nature of the threat and 
the complexity, maturity, and agility of transnational criminal 
organizations, underscoring the need for an integrated U.S. and 
international approach to narcotics--counter narcotics 
operations.
    No U.S. Government entity is better poised to combat the 
threat than Joint Interagency Task Force South. Together, we 
set the global standard for interagency and international 
cooperation.
    Thank you for the opportunity to testify before the 
Subcommittee. I look forward to our discussion.
    Senator Baldwin. Thank you.
    Next, I will turn to my Ranking Member Senator Sullivan for 
his opening remarks.

                STATEMENT OF HON. DAN SULLIVAN, 
                    U.S. SENATOR FROM ALASKA

    Senator Sullivan. Thank you, Madam Chair, and thank you for 
holding this hearing today. I think it is a really, really 
important one as it focuses on the maritime drug interdiction 
issues, which is one element of our strategy that we all need 
to deal with.
    An issue that is impacting every state in America and that 
is the unprecedented drug crisis especially with regard to 
fentanyl that is impacting every state. It is interesting and 
sad, from my perspective but my state in many ways is the 
furthest from the southern border and, yet, we are facing an 
unprecedented fentanyl crisis in Alaska.
    In 2023, opioids killed more Alaskans than ever before. 
Drug overdose deaths in Alaska, the vast majority of which were 
fentanyl related, increased by more than 40 percent in Alaska, 
the largest percentage increase of any state in the country.
    And to combat this I recently launched an initiative in my 
state with our Governor called the ``One Pill Can Kill'' 
campaign.
    The point of this campaign is to go out to all Alaskans, 
especially our youth, to warn them of the threat of taking 
unprescribed pills. Counterfeit pills are incredibly difficult 
to spot and can contain deadly amounts of fentanyl. We are 
seeing this across every state in the country.
    I do have to say although we are focused on maritime issues 
here, the failed open border policies of the Biden-Harris 
administration have accelerated this disaster. Homeland 
Security investigations estimates that Mexican cartels, some of 
which are actually operating in Alaska--in Alaska villages--
this notorious Sinaloa cartel is in my state right now.
    They are now making $13 billion a year smuggling illegal 
immigrants into the U.S., 26 times what they made in 2018. Mass 
migration that the Biden-Harris administration has encouraged 
and allowed has caused a humanitarian crisis, a national 
security crisis, a health crisis and drug overdose crisis.
    This crisis is also driven by illegal drug trafficking by 
transnational criminal organizations, or TCOs, as was already 
mentioned, some of which is being done by maritime means.
    Last week Vice Admiral Holsey, the military deputy 
commander of Southern Command, testified in front of the Armed 
Services Committee that, quote, ``Transnational criminal 
organizations remain the primary threat to stability in the 
entire region.''
    He also said these TCOs, these cartels, get at least one-
third of their revenue from drug trafficking. Beyond drug 
smuggling the TCOs are engaged in arms trafficking, money 
laundering, human trafficking, and many other horrific crimes.
    Interdicting drugs on the high seas is a key to combating 
the flow of illegal drugs into the United States and I want to 
thank the Coast Guard again for all their great work, and other 
various law enforcement agencies and partner nations around the 
hemisphere who do this crucial work. It is imperative.
    However, our challenges are evolving and we must adapt 
accordingly. In the 2024 national drug threat assessment the 
DEA Administrator highlighted the Mexican cartels' reliance on 
companies in China to supply the pill presses and precursor 
chemicals needed to manufacture fentanyl that they are using to 
poison Americans.
    I recently co-sponsored in the Senate with Senator Tim 
Scott the ``Fend Off Fentanyl Act,'' which was signed into law. 
This legislation will help stop the flow of deadly fentanyl by 
directing the Department of Treasury to use economic national 
security tools to choke off the profits of the Chinese 
precursor manufacturers and Mexican cartels that push fentanyl 
across the border. It will help, but until we secure the border 
it will not be enough.
    Finally, Madam Chair, I want to mention one other thing. 
The Trump administration, the Biden-Harris administration, have 
all announced agreements that they achieved with the communist 
dictator Xi Jinping that he would reduce the flow of precursor 
chemicals from China into the United States.
    As usual, the Chinese Communist Party does not keep its 
commitments to the United States, whether to the Trump 
administration or the Biden administration.
    This is what some of us call ``promise fatigue'' where the 
Chinese consistently commit at the highest levels of 
government--think about Xi Jinping and President Obama in the 
Rose Garden where Xi Jinping said, ``we are not going to 
militarize the South China Sea.''
    They lie. Great powers do not lie but China does lie all 
the time and particularly when it comes to fentanyl.
    The Congress of the United States in a bipartisan way is 
tired of hearing the Chinese making agreements with Republican 
administrations, Democratic administrations on fentanyl and 
never keeping their word.
    The Chinese--the Chinese Communist Party is engaging in 
chemical warfare against United States. We are tired of it. 
Hear that, Xi Jinping and the rest of you Communist Party 
hacks. We need to hold their feet to the fire.
    Finally, I just want to mention the Coast Guard. Again, you 
have the biggest fans in the world in my state, the great state 
of Alaska, with regard for the Coast Guard. We are committed to 
a recapitalization--a continued recapitalization of the fleet 
to provide you the resources and the ability to undertake this 
and the other numerous missions you undertake every single day 
to save lives in Alaska and Wisconsin and everywhere else 
across the United States.
    So, I want to thank the Coast Guard and I am looking 
forward to hearing what you need from the Congress to be able 
to do this mission--this critical mission--in a more effective 
way than you can be doing it now.
    Thank you, Madam Chair.
    Senator Baldwin. Thank you, Senator Sullivan.
    Next we are going to hear from Admiral Little.

     STATEMENT OF REAR ADMIRAL BOB LITTLE, DIRECTOR, JOINT 
         INTERAGENCY TASK FORCE WEST, U.S. COAST GUARD

    Admiral Little. Good morning, Chair Baldwin, Ranking Member 
Sullivan. Thank you for the opportunity to appear today to 
discuss the important work of Joint Interagency Task Force 
West, or JIATF West.
    JIATF West is INDOPACOM's standing counter narcotics task 
force. We utilize Title 10 authorities to provide Department of 
Defense capabilities in support of law enforcement counterdrug 
operations.
    Comprised of members of the joint force, elements of the 
intelligence community and U.S. law enforcement, we identify 
threat networks and share that information with partners to 
reduce the flow of narcotics in the Indo-Pacific.
    We specifically target networks associated with drug 
trafficking including precursor chemicals used to produce 
illicit drugs such as methamphetamine and fentanyl.
    Our priorities are protecting the homeland, strengthening 
our network of partners, disrupting and degrading threat 
networks, and countering malign influences in the region.
    My highest operational priority is identifying and stemming 
the flow of precursor chemicals and we have been successful in 
providing intelligence to support these efforts.
    Our work has led to the indictment and seizure of illicit 
drugs in large quantities of precursor chemicals. Additional 
efforts have supported sanctions against multiple Chinese 
entities materially contributing to the production of synthetic 
opioids.
    To succeed in our mission we rely on a network of key 
partners. Chief among those are the U.S. Coast Guard and JIATF 
South. We routinely share intelligence and information related 
to transnational threats that transcend geographic boundaries.
    As we speak, JIATF West is sharing regionally derived 
intelligence that is informing active cases in the JIATF South 
area of responsibility and these will likely result in Coast 
Guard interdictions.
    We also partner with Coast Guard training teams to 
facilitate instructional courses for international partners who 
may not have the expertise or resources to effectively fight 
transnational organized crime.
    Thank you for the opportunity to share the important work 
my team at JIATF West does every day and I look forward to your 
questions.
    Senator Baldwin. Thank you, Admiral.
    And next Ms. MacLeod.

            STATEMENT OF HEATHER MacLEOD, DIRECTOR,

                 HOMELAND SECURITY AND JUSTICE,

             U.S. GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE

    Ms. MacLeod. Chair Baldwin, Ranking Member Sullivan, thank 
you for the opportunity to be here to discuss GAO's recent work 
on Federal efforts to counter illicit drugs.
    Illicit drugs like cocaine and fentanyl and the criminal 
organizations that traffic them pose significant threats to 
national security. As you know, Coast Guard is the lead Federal 
agency for maritime drug interdiction. However, it faces 
significant challenges in carrying out its mission effectively.
    My testimony today will focus on two main areas: first, key 
Federal maritime coordination efforts to counter illicit drugs 
and, second, challenges to the service's ability to carry out 
its missions including drug interdiction.
    Regarding Federal coordination efforts, the Coast Guard 
coordinates with the Department of Defense, other DHS 
components, and participates in joint task forces to enhance 
drug interdiction efforts.
    One key example is JIATF South which coordinates 
interagency counterdrug operations in the Caribbean, Gulf of 
Mexico, and eastern Pacific. Just last week the Coast Guard, in 
coordination with JIATF South, offloaded thousands of pounds of 
cocaine that it seized in the Caribbean.
    Such seizures demonstrate the value of task force efforts, 
but our work in 2019 and 2024 has shown that task forces have 
not consistently assessed their efforts. This is essential for 
making decisions about priority and resource allocations.
    We have nine recommendations to the Coast Guard and others 
pertaining to task forces that remain unaddressed.
    Second, the Coast Guard faces asset and workforce 
challenges that can impact its drug interdiction efforts. The 
Coast Guard's aging fleet of vessels and aircraft face 
maintenance and reliability issues.
    Declining availability of these assets and delays in 
acquisitions of their replacements can affect the Coast Guard's 
ability to conduct its drug interdiction mission.
    Our work has noted that acquisition program delays continue 
to affect the availability of Coast Guard assets. For example, 
the Coast Guard's newest cutters--the offshore patrol cutter 
and the polar security cutter--are intended to support law 
enforcement missions like drug interdiction and prevention of 
illegal fishing.
    But we found that combined these two programs are billions 
of dollars over their initial cost estimates and more than two 
years behind schedule. We have made dozens of recommendations 
in those reports on how Coast Guard can better manage 
acquisition programs for new vessels and aircraft.
    Another challenge I would like to highlight is uncertainty 
around the Coast Guard's workforce needs. In recent years, the 
Coast Guard has raised concerns that its mission workload has 
outpaced its workforce levels. Staffing gaps, particularly in 
specialized units like tactical law enforcement teams, can 
hinder drug interdiction efforts.
    Despite these concerns, Coast Guard has conducted limited 
assessments of its workforce needs. Specifically, the service 
reported that it has assessed needs for just 15 percent of its 
workforce, a process that it began 20 years ago.
    The Coast Guard estimates that it is short thousands of 
service members. Without workforce assessments it does not know 
the true magnitude of the shortfall and which units or missions 
are most effective.
    One of our recommendations from our review is that Coast 
Guard update its workforce planning document with timeframes 
and milestones for completing these assessments.
    Finally, our work has identified challenges related to 
quality of life factors in healthcare and housing, among 
others, that may affect the Coast Guard's ability to retain 
personnel.
    For example, many Coast Guard stations are located near 
vacation destinations or in remote areas which can make it 
difficult for service members to find available and affordable 
housing.
    Earlier this year, we found that the Coast Guard has not 
conducted a survey about members' housing challenges since 
2012. We recommended that the Coast Guard do so which would 
allow the service to better respond to members' housing needs.
    In conclusion, while the Coast Guard plays a vital role in 
maritime interdiction it faces significant challenges carrying 
out this mission effectively. Continued coordination with 
partner agencies will be key as the Coast Guard faces declining 
asset availability and workforce shortages.
    Addressing our open recommendations in these areas will 
help ensure that the Coast Guard is effectively and efficiently 
using its limited resources to carry out these critical 
missions.
    Chair Baldwin, Ranking Member Sullivan, this completes my 
prepared statement. I would be pleased to respond to any 
questions you may have.
    Thank you.
    [The prepared statement of Ms. MacLeod follows:]

Prepared Statement of Heather MacLeod, Director, Homeland Security and 
        Justice, United States Government Accountability Office
        
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    Chair Baldwin, Ranking Member Sullivan, and Members of the 
Subcommittee:

    I am pleased to be here to today to discuss Federal coordination 
efforts to counter illicit drugs and challenges the U.S. Coast Guard 
faces in carrying out its drug interdiction mission. The U.S. 
government has identified transnational and domestic criminal 
organizations trafficking and smuggling illicit drugs as a significant 
threat to the public, law enforcement, and national security. 
Provisional data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 
show nearly 100,000 drug overdose deaths during the 12-month period 
ending in March 2024.\1\
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    \1\ According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 
reported provisional counts for 12-month ending periods are the number 
of deaths received and processed for the 12-month period ending in the 
month indicated. Drug overdose deaths are often initially reported with 
no cause of death (pending investigation) because they require lengthy 
investigation, including toxicology testing. As a result, reported 
provisional counts may not include all deaths that occurred during a 
given time and are subject to change.
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    As shown in figure 1, many Federal departments and agencies 
coordinate on efforts to counter the flow of illicit drugs into the 
U.S. Among them are the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which is 
responsible for securing U.S. borders to prevent illegal activity while 
facilitating legitimate trade and travel, and the Department of Defense 
(DOD), which is the single lead agency responsible for detecting and 
monitoring the aerial and maritime transport of illegal drugs like 
cocaine and fentanyl into the U.S.

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]

    Source: GAO Summary of information provided by the entities listed. 
| GAO-24-107785.

    a The Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) is 
a component of the Executive Office of the President. In addition to 
the entities shown, ONDCP coordinates with the Departments of Health 
and Human Services, State, and the Treasury on counternarcotics 
activities.

    The Coast Guard--a multi-mission, maritime military service within 
DHS--is the lead Federal agency for maritime drug interdiction. It 
coordinates with DOD in joint task forces to carry out its drug 
interdiction mission.\2\ In particular, the Coast Guard is a major 
contributor of vessels and aircraft deployed to disrupt the flow of 
illicit drugs.\3\ The Coast Guard shares maritime drug interdiction 
responsibility with U.S. Customs and Border Protection's (CBP) Air and 
Marine Operations and Border Patrol. According to the Coast Guard 
Commandant, in Fiscal Year 2023, the agency intercepted more than 
212,000 pounds of cocaine and 54,000 pounds of marijuana.\4\
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    \2\ 10 U.S.C. Sec. 124 designates DOD as the single lead agency of 
the Federal government for the detection and monitoring of aerial and 
maritime transit of illegal drugs into the U.S. The Coast Guard, within 
DHS, is the lead Federal agency for interdiction of maritime drug 
smugglers in international waters. This is because the Coast Guard may 
make inquiries, examinations, inspections, searches, seizures, and 
arrests upon the high seas and waters over which the United States has 
jurisdiction to prevent, detect, and suppress violations of U.S. laws. 
See 14 U.S.C. Sec. 522.
    \3\ Coast Guard aviation and vessel assets include a fleet of about 
200 fixed-and rotary-wing aircraft, about 250 cutters, and more than 
1,600 boats. As of July 2023, the Coast Guard had a workforce of about 
57,000 personnel. GAO, Coast Guard: Aircraft Fleet and Aviation 
Workforce Assessments Needed, GAO-24-106374 (Washington, D.C.: April 9, 
2024).
    \4\ Admiral Linda L. Fagan, Commandant, U.S. Coast Guard, The Coast 
Guard's Fiscal Year 2025 Budget Request, testimony before the House of 
Representatives Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, 
Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation, 118th Cong., 
2nd sess., May 23, 2024.
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    According to the Drug Enforcement Administration, the majority of 
the cocaine shipped to the U.S. travels on maritime routes from South 
America and through the eastern Pacific Ocean and Caribbean Sea.\5\ 
Precursor chemicals may be shipped from Asia to Mexico, sometimes as 
legitimate commerce, where they may be combined into fentanyl or other 
controlled substances.\6\ Figure 2 shows maritime and land routes for 
precursor chemical and illicit drug smuggling.
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    \5\ Drug Enforcement Administration, 2020 National Drug Threat 
Assessment, DEA-DCT-DIR-008-21 (March 2021). The majority of known 
maritime drug flow is conveyed via noncommercial vessels through the 
Western Hemisphere Transit Zone--a 6 million square mile area of routes 
drug smugglers use to transport illicit drugs that includes the eastern 
Pacific Ocean, the Gulf of Mexico, and the Caribbean Sea. GAO, Coast 
Guard: Resources Provided for Drug Interdiction Operations in the 
Transit Zone, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands, GAO-14-527 
(Washington, D.C.: June 14, 2014).
    \6\ Precursor chemicals are chemicals or substances that may be 
intended for illicit drug production.

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    Source: U.S. Coast Guard based on the Consolidated Counterdrug 
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Database; Map Resources (Map) | GAO-24-107785.

    Note: Precursor chemicals are chemicals or substances that may be 
intended for illicit drug production.

    Given challenges the Federal government faces in responding to the 
drug misuse crisis, in March 2021, we added national efforts to 
prevent, respond to, and recover from drug misuse to our High-Risk 
List. We identified several challenges in the Federal government's 
response to drug misuse, such as the need for more effective 
implementation and monitoring, and related ongoing efforts to address 
the issue, including drug interdiction.\7\
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    \7\ See GAO, High-Risk Series: Dedicated Leadership Needed to 
Address Limited Progress in Most High-Risk Areas, GAO-21-119SP 
(Washington, D.C.: Mar. 2, 2021). We issue an update to the High-Risk 
List every two years at the start of each new session of Congress. The 
most recent update was issued in April 2023. See GAO, High-Risk Series: 
Efforts Made to Achieve Progress Need to Be Maintained and Expanded to 
Fully Address All Areas, GAO-23-106203 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 20, 
2023).
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    My statement today discusses (1) key Federal maritime coordination 
efforts to counter the flow of illicit drugs to the U.S. and (2) 
challenges we have identified related to the Coast Guard carrying out 
its drug interdiction mission. This statement is based primarily on 36 
reports published from April 2010 to June 2024. For the reports we cite 
in this statement, among other methodologies, we analyzed DOD, DHS, and 
Coast Guard policy, documentation, and data, and interviewed officials 
from agency headquarters and selected field units. More detailed 
information on our scope and methodology can be found in the reports we 
cite in this statement.
    For this statement, we reviewed documentation and met with 
officials to obtain updated information on the status of agency 
implementation of selected recommendations through September 2024. In 
addition, we reviewed Coast Guard budget and performance documents 
since 2018 to determine the extent the service reported meeting its 
drug interdiction performance goals from Fiscal Year 2014 through 2023.
    We conducted the work on which this statement is based in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. Those 
standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe that 
the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and 
conclusions based on our audit objectives.
Federal Agencies Coordinate to Counter Illicit Drug Flow in the 
        Maritime Domain, but Could Better Assess Their Efforts
    Federal agencies coordinate with international partners and each 
other to stem the flow of illegal drugs into the U.S through the 
maritime domain. For example, in 2018 we reported that Federal agencies 
coordinated with foreign governments, such as China, Mexico, and 
Canada, as well as with international organizations, to limit the 
production of illicit synthetic opioids.\8\ They did this by sharing 
information on emerging trends, helping to expand the regulation of 
illicit substances, and building capacity to thwart the distribution of 
illicit drugs. We reported that coordination could also include the 
sharing of international data to analyze vessel movements that may 
indicate illegal activity.\9\
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    \8\ GAO, Illicit Opioids: While Greater Attention Given to 
Combating Synthetic Opioids, Agencies Need to Better Assess their 
Efforts, GAO-18-205 (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 29, 2018).
    \9\ GAO, Combating Illegal Fishing: Clear Authority Could Enhance 
U.S. Efforts to Partner with Other Nations at Sea, GAO-22-104234 
(Washington, D.C.: Nov. 5, 2021).

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]

    In addition, military and Federal law enforcement agencies 
coordinated through several task forces to detect and interdict illicit 
drugs, such as cocaine and fentanyl, and their precursors on maritime 
routes. DOD and DHS lead and operate certain task forces--Joint 
Interagency Task Force (JIATF)-South, JIATF-West, and DHS Joint Task 
Force-East.\10\ Each task force is directed by a member of the Coast 
Guard.\11\
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    \10\ An additional task force--Joint Task Force-North--consists 
solely of DOD personnel and does not generally operate in the maritime 
domain.
    \11\ In 2019, task force officials told us that Coast Guard 
leadership encourages participation from both DOD and DHS because the 
Coast Guard is both a military and a law enforcement agency. GAO, Drug 
Control: Certain DOD and DHS Joint Task Forces Should Enhance Their 
Performance Measures to Better Assess Counterdrug Activities, GAO-19-
441 (Washington, D.C.: July 9, 2019).
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    In 2019, we reported that the task forces generally coordinated 
effectively using mechanisms that aligned with leading practices.\12\ 
These mechanisms, such as working groups and liaison officers, helped 
to minimize duplication of missions and activities. Figure 3 shows a 
seizure of more than 12,000 pounds of cocaine in the Caribbean Sea in 
September 2023, which was the result of JIATF-South coordination 
between Coast Guard, CBP Air and Marine Operations, and international 
partners.
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    \12\ GAO-19-441.
    
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    Source: U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Santiago 
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Gomez. | GAO-24-107785

    While such seizures anecdotally demonstrate the value of task force 
efforts, our recent work has shown that these task forces have not 
consistently assessed their efforts.\13\ In 2024, we made four 
recommendations to improve agencies' assessment efforts. Fully 
implementing these recommendations is essential for making decisions 
about priorities, resource allocations, and strategies for 
improvements.
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    \13\ GAO, Counternarcotics: DOD Should Improve Coordination and 
Assessment of Its Activities, GAO-24-106281 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 16, 
2024) and Department of Homeland Security: Additional Actions Needed to 
Improve Oversight of Joint Task Forces, GAO-24-106855 (Washington, 
D.C.: Feb. 7, 2024).
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Longstanding Challenges Hinder the Coast Guard's Drug Interdiction 
        Mission Efforts
    Challenges have hindered the Coast Guard's ability to meet drug 
interdiction mission demands. These challenges include (1) declining 
readiness of its vessels and aircraft, (2) acquisition associated 
delays in replacing them, and (3) workforce shortages and retention 
challenges. Notably, the Coast Guard has not met its annual primary 
drug interdiction mission performance target in any of the past 10 
Fiscal Years.\14\ The Coast Guard's challenge of balancing its varied 
mission priorities has grown as it is called on to do more with its 
limited resources.
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    \14\ The Coast Guard's primary drug interdiction performance 
measure is its removal rate for cocaine from noncommercial maritime 
vessels in the maritime transit zone.
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    Noncommercial maritime smuggling involves the use of various 
vessels, including speedboats, fishing vessels, and submersible 
vessels. This performance measure assesses the percentage of cocaine 
directly seized or observed being jettisoned, scuttled, or destroyed as 
a result of Coast Guard actions relative to the total known flow of 
cocaine through the transit zone.
Coast Guard Faces Declining Asset Readiness and Challenges Acquiring 
        Replacements
Declining Availability and Readiness of Assets and Infrastructure
    Our work has shown that the Coast Guard's aircraft and vessels have 
faced readiness and availability challenges, while its supporting shore 
infrastructure requires considerable repair. Coast Guard assets have 
been in a state of decline for decades. For example, the Coast Guard 
relies on its Medium Endurance Cutters for its drug interdiction 
mission.\15\ However, we reported in July 2012 that Medium Endurance 
Cutters did not meet operational hours targets from Fiscal Years 2005 
through 2011 and that declining operational capacity hindered mission 
performance.\16\ In June 2023, we reported that Medium Endurance 
Cutters were not consistently meeting operational availability targets, 
and the Coast Guard noted that the declining physical condition of the 
cutters puts them at significant risk of decreased capability for 
meeting mission requirements.
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    \15\ The Coast Guard operates a fleet of 28 Medium Endurance 
Cutters, consisting of 14 210-foot and 13 270-foot Medium Endurance 
Cutters, along with the 282-foot Alex Haley Medium Endurance Cutter. 
These cutters are deployed for a wide range of mission operations, 
including search and rescue; interdicting illegal drugs and migrants; 
enforcing fishing laws; and securing ports, waterways, and coastal 
areas.
    \16\ GAO, Coast Guard: Legacy Vessels' Declining Conditions 
Reinforce Need for More Realistic Operational Targets, GAO-12-741 
(Washington, D.C.: July 31, 2012).
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    We made five recommendations to improve the Offshore Patrol Cutter 
acquisition program to the Coast Guard in June 2023.\17\
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    \17\ GAO, Coast Guard Acquisitions: Offshore Patrol Cutter Program 
Needs to Mature Technology and Design, GAO-23-105805 (Washington, D.C.: 
Jun. 20, 2023) and Coast Guard: Opportunities Exist to Reduce Risk for 
the Offshore Patrol Cutter Program, GAO-21-9 (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 
28, 2020). In our June 2023 report, we also reiterated that eight 
recommendations we made in October 2020 to improve the program 
continued to have merit. As of August 2024, eight of these 13 
recommendations were not implemented.
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    The Coast Guard's asset readiness challenges are not contained to 
its cutters. In April 2024, we reported that the Coast Guard's aircraft 
generally did not meet the Coast Guard's 71 percent availability target 
during Fiscal Years 2018 through 2022, as shown in figure 4.\18\
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    \18\ GAO-24-106374. Coast Guard officials attributed the aircraft 
fleet generally not meeting availability targets to maintenance and 
repair challenges for its aircraft.

[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]

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    Source: GAO analysis of U.S. Coast Guard data. | GAO-24-107785

    In April 2024, we reported the Coast Guard also faces key decisions 
in managing its aging aircraft fleet and implementing an extensive 
modernization program across all of its aircraft types.\19\ In 
particular, the Coast Guard is embarking on a significant operational 
change from a largely short-range helicopter fleet to a medium-range 
fleet. However, we reported that its related planning efforts raised 
serious questions, including how the medium-range helicopters will 
interact with cutters for its drug interdiction operations.
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    \19\ GAO-24-106374.
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    The Coast Guard has not fully assessed whether this transition will 
result in the type and quantity of helicopters needed to meet its 
mission demands--including for drug interdiction--in the coming 
decades. We recommended the Coast Guard assess different helicopters 
and conduct a fleet mix analysis to help ensure it identifies the 
necessary type and number of helicopters it requires to meet its 
mission demands. DHS concurred with this recommendation and we will 
continue to monitor Coast Guard's efforts to address it.
    Notwithstanding the readiness of Coast Guard assets, our work has 
also found that the service faces tradeoffs when making decisions 
regarding its vast, aging portfolio of shore infrastructure. In 
February 2019, we found that the Coast Guard was confronted with a 
costly backlog of shore infrastructure projects related to docks, air 
stations, and other infrastructure from which missions such as drug 
interdiction begin.\20\ This backlog totaled at least $2.6 billion at 
that time. We made six recommendations to address these issues, two of 
which the Coast Guard has implemented.
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    \20\ GAO, Coast Guard Shore Infrastructure: Applying Leading 
Practices Could Help Better Manage Project Backlogs of At Least $2.6 
Billion, GAO-19-82 (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 21, 2019).
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Acquisition Program Challenges
    Our work has also found that the Coast Guard's declining asset 
readiness is exacerbated by persistent challenges it faces managing its 
planned $40 billion acquisition programs to modernize its vessels and 
aircraft. These challenges include:

    Capability gaps from schedule delays. Delays experienced by the 
Coast Guard's highest priority program--the Offshore Patrol Cutters--
will exacerbate capability gaps.\21\ The Coast Guard plans to replace 
the aging Medium Endurance Cutters with Offshore Patrol Cutters. The 
Commandant testified in July 2024 that Offshore Patrol Cutters are to 
be essential assets for JIATF-South and its drug interdiction 
mission.\22\ However, in May 2024, we reported that the Coast Guard has 
delayed delivery of the first Offshore Patrol Cutter by 4 years, from 
Fiscal Year 2021 to 2025.\23\ In June 2023, we reported that given the 
delays in delivery of the Offshore Patrol Cutters, the Coast Guard 
projects to have a reduction in asset availability--or a reduction in 
the number of cutters available for operations--starting in 2024 and 
through 2039.\24\
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    \21\ Offshore Patrol Cutters generally conduct the same range of 
missions as Medium Endurance Cutters, including search and rescue and 
interdicting drugs and migrants. Designed for long-distance transit, 
extended on-scene presence, and operations with deployable aircraft and 
small boats, these cutters are intended to provide offshore presence 
for the Coast Guard's cutter fleet.
    \22\ Admiral Linda L. Fagan, Commandant, U.S. Coast Guard, 
testimony before the House of Representatives Committee on Homeland 
Security, 118th Cong., 2nd sess., July 24, 2024.
    \23\ GAO, Coast Guard Acquisitions: Opportunities Exist to Improve 
Shipbuilding Outcomes, GAO-24-107488 (Washington, D.C.: May 7, 2024).
    \24\ GAO-23-105805. We found that ship design instability 
contributed to Offshore Patrol Cutter schedule delays and made five 
recommendations to address this challenge. Coast Guard agreed with 
three recommendations and as of September 2024, addressed one of them. 
Coast Guard disagreed with the other two recommendations, including a 
priority recommendation. We stand by this recommendation as it aligns 
with our leading practices in shipbuilding. We have ongoing reviews of 
the program and will continue to monitor its progress toward design 
completion.
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    Affordability concerns and difficult tradeoff decisions. As we 
reported in June 2024, the Coast Guard will have to make difficult 
decisions to address the affordability concerns surrounding its 
acquisition portfolio.\25\ These concerns affect how Coast Guard 
prioritizes spending on aging assets, including those currently 
performing the drug interdiction mission.\26\ Specifically, for over a 
decade and most recently in 2024, we have reported that the Coast 
Guard's short-term budget decisions have resulted in a buildup of near-
term unaffordable acquisitions that have continued to put pressure on 
available resources.\27\ In particular, we reported that the Coast 
Guard made short-term budget decisions that obscure the tradeoffs 
needed to balance the long-term affordability of the portfolio. In 
2014, we recommended that the Coast Guard develop a long-term plan to 
manage its highest priority efforts. The Coast Guard agreed, and 
subsequent statute directed it to develop such a plan.\28\ However, as 
of June 2024, it had yet to produce one.
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    \25\ GAO, Coast Guard Acquisition: Actions Needed to Address 
Affordability Challenges, GAO-24-107584 (Washington, D.C.: June 12, 
2024).
    \26\ The Coast Guard's planned investments for its portfolio of 
major acquisitions increased by $8.2 billion since Fiscal Year 2018. 
The increase is primarily related to cost increases on the Offshore 
Patrol Cutter program and additional investments in medium-range MH-60T 
helicopters--both key assets for the drug interdiction mission.
    \27\ GAO-24-107584; Coast Guard Acquisitions: Actions Needed to 
Address Longstanding Portfolio Management Challenges, GAO-18-454 
(Washington, D.C.: July 24, 2018); Coast Guard Acquisitions: Limited 
Strategic Planning Efforts Pose Risk for Future Acquisitions, GAO-17-
747T (Washington, D.C.: July 25, 2017); Coast Guard Recapitalization: 
Matching Needs and Resources Continue to Strain Acquisition Efforts, 
GAO-17-654T (Washington D.C.: June 7, 2017); and Coast Guard 
Acquisitions: Better Information on Performance and Funding Needed to 
Address Shortfalls, GAO-14-450 (Washington, D.C.: June 5, 2014).
    \28\ Pursuant to 14 U.S.C. Sec. 5103(a), a status report on the 
Coast Guard's major acquisition programs is to be submitted to the 
Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate 
and the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure every 2 
years. Each report is to include certain information for each major 
acquisition program, as well as a long-term plan for the upcoming 
Fiscal Year, and for each of the 20 Fiscal Years thereafter. 14 U.S.C. 
Sec. 5103(b), (e). In addition, the Commandant of the Coast Guard is to 
submit each long-term major acquisitions plan to the House Committee on 
Homeland Security. 14 U.S.C. Sec. 5110 note.
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Coast Guard Faces Workforce Shortages and Retention Challenges
    Our work has shown that staffing shortfalls and poor workforce 
planning have affected the Coast Guard's ability to meet its mission 
needs, including for drug interdiction. Since October 2023, the Coast 
Guard has reported a nearly 10 percent shortfall in its enlisted 
personnel, due in part to having missed its recruiting targets in 
recent years, prompting it to reduce operational activities. In 
response, the Coast Guard has implemented plans to take several cutters 
out of active service, including three Medium Endurance Cutters--a 
mainstay of its drug interdiction efforts. Moreover, it has closed boat 
stations around the country due to a lack of personnel needed to staff 
them.
    In May 2023, we reported that the Coast Guard's workforce 
challenges have persisted, and that the service may miss key 
opportunities to tackle these issues unless it implements plans to 
address future workforce needs and sets goals for retaining 
personnel.\29\ In 2010, 2020, 2022, and 2024 we found that the Coast 
Guard had not adequately determined its workforce needs.\30\ 
Specifically, in 2020 we found that the Coast Guard had assessed a 
small portion of its workforce needs through the workforce requirements 
determination process it began using in 2003. We recommended that the 
Coast Guard develop a plan for how it will meet its workforce 
assessment goals and this recommendation remained open as of September 
2024.\31\ Further, as of November 2023, the Coast Guard reported that 
it had completed workforce requirements determinations for 15 percent 
of its workforce. Without this information, it does not have a sound 
basis for prioritizing resources effectively.
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    \29\ GAO, Coast Guard: Recruitment and Retention Challenges 
Persist, GAO-23-106750 (Washington, D.C.: May 11, 2023).
    \30\ GAO-24-106374; GAO, Coast Guard: Workforce Planning Actions 
Needed to Address Growing Cyberspace Mission Demands, GAO-22-105208 
(Washington, D.C.: Sept. 27, 2022); Coast Guard: Actions Needed to 
Enhance IT Program Implementation, GAO-22-105092 (Washington, D.C.: 
July 28, 2022); Coast Guard: Increasing Mission Demands Highlight 
Importance of Assessing Its Workforce Needs, GAO-22-106135 (Washington, 
D.C.: July 27, 2022); Coast Guard: Actions Needed to Evaluate the 
Effectiveness of Organizational Changes and Determine Workforce Needs, 
GAO-20-223 (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 26, 2020); and Coast Guard: 
Deployable Operations Group Achieving Organizational Benefits, but 
Challenges Remain; GAO-10-433R (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 7, 2010).
    \31\ GAO-20-223.
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    More specifically, we have previously reported on Coast Guard 
resource shortfalls and incomplete workforce planning for various units 
the service relies on to support its drug interdiction mission, such as 
its aviation workforce and specialized forces. Specifically, in April 
2024, we reported that the Coast Guard had 387 of 4,134 (9 percent) of 
its authorized military aviation workforce positions vacant, as of July 
2023.\32\ However the Coast Guard had not assessed and determined 
necessary staffing levels and skills for a large portion of its 
aviation workforce, including all 25 of its air stations and its major 
aircraft repair facility.
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    \32\ GAO-24-106374.
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    In November 2019, we found that the Coast Guard had not used data 
and evidence to fully assess its Deployable Specialized Forces. These 
are teams that deploy aboard Coast Guard cutters or U.S. Navy or Allied 
vessels to provide specialized capabilities for offshore drug 
interdiction and vessel interception operations, primarily in the 
Caribbean Sea and Eastern Pacific Ocean.\33\ We recommended that Coast 
Guard assess its Deployable Specialized Forces' workforce needs. We 
continue to monitor Coast Guard's efforts to address this 
recommendation.
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    \33\ GAO, Coast Guard: Assessing Deployable Specialized Forces' 
Workforce Needs Could Improve Efficiency and Reduce Potential Overlap 
or Gaps in Capabilities, GAO-20-33 (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 21, 2019).
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    Challenges related to quality of life factors in health care and 
housing, among others, may affect the Coast Guard's ability to retain 
personnel. In April 2023, we found that Coast Guard personnel stationed 
in remote areas may experience challenges accessing medical care.\34\ 
Specifically, we found that 17 of 43 Coast Guard clinics were located 
in medically underserved areas and 11 of 43 were located in at least 
one type of health provider shortage area. We recommended the Coast 
Guard obtain and monitor heath care access data. Doing so would better 
position the Coast Guard to identify and address potential access 
concerns, which could affect retention.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \34\ GAO, Coast Guard Health Care: Additional Actions Could Help 
Ensure Beneficiaries' Access, GAO-23-105574 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 4, 
2023).
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    We made 34 recommendations in our workforce reports, 28 of which 
remain unaddressed. We continue to monitor the Coast Guard's progress 
in implementing them.
    In conclusion, Federal interagency collaboration, and Coast Guard's 
drug interdiction efforts in particular, are critical efforts to reduce 
the maritime flow of illicit drugs into the U.S. Defining and measuring 
what success looks like is essential to ensure that Federal efforts 
achieve the desired outcomes and resources are allocated efficiently. 
Further, the Coast Guard's challenge of balancing its varied mission 
priorities has grown as it is called on to do more with its limited 
resources. In this way, it is critical for the Coast Guard to address 
the longstanding challenges facing its drug interdiction mission--
including better managing its acquisition efforts to replace aging 
assets and infrastructure and assessing its workforce needs.
    Overall, we made 105 recommendations in the reports covered by this 
statement. Agencies generally agreed with the recommendations. As of 
September 2024, agencies had implemented 46 of them. Fully addressing 
our recommendations will help ensure that the service efficiently uses 
its available resources to carry out its drug interdiction and other 
missions. We will continue to monitor the agencies' progress in 
implementing them.
    Chair Baldwin, Ranking Member Sullivan, and Members of the 
Subcommittee, this completes my prepared statement. I would be pleased 
to respond to any questions that you may have at this time.

    Senator Baldwin. Thank you all for your testimony and 
opening statements. Your full statements will be made a part of 
the record.
    I am going to--before we start a round of questioning I am 
going to recognize Chair Cantwell for an opening statement.
    The Chair. Madam Chair, I will put a statement in the 
record and if we can go to questions that would be great.
    Senator Baldwin. Absolutely. Your statement--your opening 
statement will be made a part of the record.
    I want to begin a round of questions. Each member will be 
given 5 minutes in this opening round and I want to begin by 
acknowledging that our Nation's effort to counter global drug 
trafficking requires a whole of government approach.
    While the Office of National Drug Control Policy provides 
overall direction to these efforts each participating agency 
must also have clear goals, partnerships, and resource 
requirements.
    Ms. MacLeod, can you please describe the Coast Guard's role 
in disrupting the flow of drugs and precursor chemicals within 
the national drug control policy and also what it would mean 
for the Coast Guard to have its own policy to prevent the 
smuggling of illicit synthetic drugs such as fentanyl?
    Ms. MacLeod. The Coast Guard plays an important role in 
this area. There is no doubt about that, and our work has shown 
that the collaboration is very strong in these areas including 
JIATF South and JIATF West and other task forces.
    However, our work has shown that the Coast Guard has 
struggled with foresight and managing toward a future that is 
different from the past, and I think that would be something 
important to look at in such a strategy.
    Senator Baldwin. Thank you.
    And, Admiral Lunday, if this committee were to direct the 
Coast Guard to work with its partners and develop such a 
strategy what activities would be prioritized and how would you 
go about putting together that strategy?
    Admiral Lunday. Chair Baldwin, thank you for the question.
    The Coast Guard's existing strategy exists in the Western 
Hemisphere strategy which is about a decade old and is 
principally focused on targeting the transnational criminal 
organization--excuse me, criminal organizations that are 
smuggling into the U.S.
    We currently operate our counter narcotics efforts under 
the three national strategies for the Northern border, the 
Southwest border and the Southeast border, and our efforts are 
targeted in those areas under the national strategy.
    But we are--it is time for us to look at updating that 
strategy for the Western Hemisphere so it fully aligns with the 
evolving threat that now includes fentanyl and other synthetic 
drugs.
    Senator Baldwin. Thank you.
    Admiral Little, I am interested in discussing with you the 
challenges of the Indo-Pacific and the work that the Coast 
Guard assets conduct to disrupt the global fentanyl supply 
chain.
    Part of determining how best to allocate resources and 
identifying where gaps remain involves adequately measuring 
performance. I noticed that in 2019 the Government 
Accountability Office recommended your organization establish 
performance measures to track over time.
    This recommendation was implemented and now, Admiral 
Little, can you please discuss what these measures show about 
the efforts to track the global movement of precursor chemicals 
to synthetic drugs and how to improve our approach?
    Admiral Little. Yes. Thank you, Chair Baldwin, for that 
question.
    We did go--we have looked at that 2019 GAO report and 
verified, you know, what we did in 2019 and what I will say is 
I believe our metrics have evolved significantly and improved 
significantly from--even from that time to where we are now.
    What has transpired in the last four or five years is a 
defense wide review. We have had a significant reduction in 
capacity at JIATF West and we have evolved as an organization 
as we have had to reassess where our priorities are--as I 
mentioned in my opening statement, our number-one priority 
being that of chasing the flow of precursor chemicals into the 
Western Hemisphere.
    So we have evolved our evaluation metrics to align with 
four lines of effort to include our number-one priority which 
is getting after the flow of both fentanyl precursors and the 
equipment that supports the supply of those things.
    Underneath that we have measures of effectiveness and 
measures of performance in the neighborhood of about 60 
specific measures that seek to ensure that we are applying our 
efforts on our highest priority work and that we are getting 
the results out of that work to support success and, you know, 
just one example of that--of those results include increasing 
the number of interagency partners that we are working with, 
increasing the amount of cooperation, and significant increases 
in successful interdictions of precursors.
    Senator Baldwin. And on that topic can you describe how you 
are increasing cooperation with Mexican partners, specifically 
to stem the flow of precursor chemicals into Mexico, and how is 
that taking shape?
    Admiral Little. Yes. Thanks, Chair Baldwin.
    Mexico is a critical partner in stemming the flow of 
precursor chemicals, particularly in the maritime environment, 
and as Ranking Member Sullivan mentioned in his opening remarks 
the type of flow and the way those chemicals move in bulk into 
the ports and then into inland Mexico for further production 
into fentanyl, methamphetamines, or other synthetic opioids.
    Our role in that is to provide visibility and transparency 
to U.S. and international law enforcement to understand where 
are the chemicals, where are they coming from, and where are 
they headed.
    When we identify those at risk for diversion we work very 
closely with U.S. law enforcement in Mexico City to get that 
information to SEMAR, the Mexican Navy who controls the ports, 
so that they can detain those chemicals and conduct further 
investigations prior to diversion for illicit use.
    Senator Baldwin. Thank you.
    Senator Sullivan.
    Senator Sullivan. Thank you, Madam Chair.
    Let me follow on that, Admiral Little.
    Do you have concerns about corrupt Mexican officials in 
terms of who we are dealing with? Is that part of our problem 
that we cannot trust our partners?
    Admiral Little. Our role is directly with U.S. law 
enforcement so most of the information that we share will be 
specific to a load and then those relationships take place 
between those partners and the embassy.
    From our observations, we have had good success with vetted 
crews and members of SEMAR and other Mexican organizations that 
we have high trust in.
    Senator Sullivan. OK. And maybe, Ms. MacLeod or Admiral 
Lunday, you can address this, but my opening statement made the 
point that I think is very clear is that the Chinese make these 
commitments on precursor chemicals at the highest levels, 
whether in the Trump administration or with the Biden 
administration, and it just does not seem to go anywhere.
    Do you--has GAO looked at this at all? Do we--would you 
agree with me that the commitments they are making--look, it is 
a dictatorship?
    If Xi Jinping wanted to go to the precursor chemical people 
and say, hey, shut it down or you are going to be thrown in 
jail like he throws his foreign minister and defense minister 
and everybody else in jail he could stop it.
    So what is your sense of what the Chinese are doing? And, 
clearly, they did not abide by the agreement they had with the 
Trump administration and it does not look like they are abiding 
by the agreement they have with the Biden administration. What 
is your assessment on that?
    Ms. MacLeod. GAO recently added drug--the drug crisis to 
our high risk area, which is an area that we continue to look 
at all aspects of how to manage the issues that the Nation 
faces. So through this work we continue to look at the various 
threats that--as they come through. So that that is something 
we have work underway on.
    Senator Sullivan. But have you done an assessment on 
whether or not you think they are abiding by the agreement they 
did with the Biden administration?
    Ms. MacLeod. I do not recall that we have done work on that 
yet.
    Senator Sullivan. Maybe you can take a look at that.
    Ms. MacLeod. I can look into it.
    Senator Sullivan. Admiral, have you assessed that at all at 
your level?
    Admiral Lunday. Ranking Member Sullivan, that is not a 
specific issue that we have looked at in the Coast Guard with 
respect to high level agreements between the U.S. and China. 
But we are, as you know, for the Arctic close to Alaska. We are 
very concerned about China's activities in and around the U.S. 
exclusive economic zone and so we are focused on that 
operational activity.
    Senator Sullivan. Let me ask the panel as it relates to 
that question or what you just raised.
    Just in my state--you have seen it last summer and 
particularly just in the last two months in Alaska--we have had 
a joint Russian-Chinese naval task force of seven ships last 
summer, or two summers ago, in Alaska waters.
    Last summer, a joint Chinese naval task force, 12 ships in 
our waters--a joint Chinese-Russian strategic bomber task force 
that we--in our ADIZ a few months ago--actually, 6 weeks ago.
    Chinese surface vessels in our Alaska waters four weeks ago 
and this past weekend with this big Russian-Chinese military 
exercise, four ADIZ--three ADIZ incursions that we had to go 
intercept those guys in one week, And naval assets off the 
coast of Alaska, including two nuclear subs from Russia 50 
miles off the coast.
    My question is the Coast Guard has limited assets. You have 
gone and shadowed these big operations. But how do you divide 
that up with the Navy, with INDOPACOM?
    Two summers ago when we sent one 150-foot Coast Guard 
cutter to go shadow that seven-ship Russian naval joint task 
force off the coast of my state.
    I love the Coast Guard, but I let senior military officials 
know that was not sufficient, right. If there was a joint 
Russian naval task force that large off the East Coast we would 
have sent a carrier strike group to go greet it.
    So last summer when they came back--and they are going to 
keep coming, right. This is just--they sent a 12-ship joint 
naval task force. We did send four destroyers, P-8s, and this 
summer we have a destroyer and a national security cutter up in 
Alaska shadowing these aggressive operations.
    But how do you--how do you divvy up the Coast Guard DOD 
assets up in the--up in Alaska where there is so much activity 
going on with great power competition? The one thing we do know 
is if we do not show up with our own force and our own weapon 
capability they are going to keep doing this.
    Would you agree with me on that, Admiral?
    Admiral Lunday. Yes, Ranking Member Sullivan. Thank you.
    Senator Sullivan. And then how do we--and then how do we 
do--how do we divvy up those assets between the Coast Guard and 
DOD in what is becoming a really, really competitive sphere of 
competition in the waters and air and subsea off the coast of 
Alaska?
    Admiral Lunday. Ranking Member Sullivan, you mentioned the 
Coast Guard cutter Stratton meeting presence with presence this 
last weekend for the three Russian ships. One was a submarine.
    Now, the Coast Guard is unafraid out there but we are not 
alone. All of our activities are fully coordinated with U.S. 
Northern Command, Indo-Pacific Command and Alaska Command.
    And so how we decide to meet presence with presence is 
fully coordinated even when the Coast Guard is operating under 
our own organic Coast Guard authorities.
    And so we remain in full coordination with them. We also 
coordinate with our Canadian allies on over flights of Chinese 
research vessels that may be operating in that area as well.
    And so this is a sustained operation that we have in place 
to make sure we meet presence with presence and demonstrate the 
importance of U.S. sovereignty not only in our waters but 
ensuring that these Russian Navy vessels and the PLA Navy 
vessels--the Chinese warships--that they are operating 
consistent with customary international law and that they know 
the U.S. is watching.
    Senator Sullivan. Do we need more assets up there, Coast 
Guard or Navy?
    Admiral Lunday. Thank you for the question, Ranking Member 
Sullivan. We do.
    As you know, we are working hard to sustain the existing 
assets we have while we also look to modernize the Coast Guard 
fleet by recapitalizing them, not only our national security 
cutters but the new offshore patrol cutter and ensuring its 
presence.
    We have two of the new offshore patrol cutters once they 
are built, which will be home ported--together to be home 
ported in Kodiak, and then also along the West Coast and other 
areas where they will be able to provide that increased 
presence.
    Senator Sullivan. Thank you.
    Senator Baldwin. Thank you.
    And next I recognize Chair Cantwell.

               STATEMENT OF HON. MARIA CANTWELL, 
                  U.S. SENATOR FROM WASHINGTON

    The Chair. Thank you, Madam Chair, and I want to follow 
along Senator Sullivan. I would have gotten to this same 
subject but since you have gone here let us go here first.
    And I am not sure there is much daylight between Senator 
Sullivan and I on this issue. When I think about all the 
attention we give to the South China Sea how about a little bit 
of attention in the Arctic?
    So we are having incursions, correct, by the Russians. Let 
us just get that just----
    Admiral Lunday. We have seen the Russians cross into our 
exclusive economic zone, yes, Chair Cantwell.
    The Chair. OK. So we know it is happening, and I am 
extremely concerned about the fact that President Putin has 
announced that Russia will allow fishermen to fish in these 
international waters which is a direct threat to our seafood 
sector, and the fact that the Coast Guard is the front line, 
and so I think we need to know from the Coast Guard what 
resources you think that we need to have?
    Now, just to throw in the original focus of drug 
interdiction, when I look at it over the past decade the flow 
of cocaine through the maritime environment has doubled while 
the Coast Guard removals have remained flat.
    And so now that cocaine is being cut with the deadly 
fentanyl if the Coast Guard had more ships at its disposal what 
could you do to boost those interdiction rates--now I am 
talking all over--and what else do we need to do to increase 
those interdiction rates?
    And, look, I believe the Coast Guard does many--you have 
five missions and we put a lot on you, but I think we are 
asking let us go and argue for a more focused approach in the 
Arctic and a more focused interdiction approach.
    But you have to tell us what resources you need and what 
you think that we could do in stopping chemical shipments or 
stopping traffickers before they get a chance to turn this into 
deadly narcotics?
    So I was actually going to ask you, Rear Admiral, but 
anybody who wants to answer that question.
    Admiral Lunday. Thank you, Chair Cantwell, and I will 
start. Thank you for the question.
    So we have received great support from the Congress of the 
administration to make key investments in sustaining our 
current readiness and modernizing our assets. But as the 
Commandant has been clear publicly and in testimony, we will 
need more going into the future.
    Today, the Coast Guard's discretionary budget is $12.3 
billion with a capital improvement budget of $1.6 billion. 
Going forward, the Coast Guard is a $20 billion organization.
    We need today a $3 billion capital procurement and 
improvement budget in order to do the modernization necessary, 
and the remainder of that--the $16 billion--is needed to 
sustain our aging assets that we have in place.
    That will enable us to deliver new assets--cutters, boats, 
aircraft, and other systems, along with the people, which are 
our most precious resource, to be able to provide the presence 
needed to do those missions.
    The Chair. Well, I definitely could ask lots of questions 
about Cape D and assets and their future and missions. But in 
this regard what do we--does the Coast Guard have a draft out 
of that $3 billion that would be necessary for a larger Arctic 
presence for both the incursions that are happening by the 
Russians, the threats of the Chinese pretending to be an Arctic 
nation when they are not an Arctic nation, and to help in the 
interdiction? Do you have a proposal within that $3 billion?
    Admiral Lunday. Chair Cantwell, we do have--in addition to 
the Fiscal Year 2025 President's budget request we also have an 
unfunded priority list that identifies items for increased 
purchase of spare parts for our aging cutter fleet, also parts 
for our aviation fleet both fixed wing and helicopters, as well 
as increased funding for the recapitalization of assets to be 
able to accelerate the work that we need to do.
    The Chair. Could we get a plan from the Coast Guard on what 
would increase your interdiction capacity to try to address the 
fact that we have seen this huge increase in supply and not as 
much interdiction?
    So we want to help you get the assets, and then separately 
I would like to see a number--that is, what would a larger--I 
do not know what Senator Sullivan would call it. You know, the 
Russians are going to continue to provoke.
    But what we want to do is to have, as you described it, a 
presence there and to be serious about--I mean, we have 
fishermen up there that the fleet--Russian fleet--are coming up 
next to fishing vessels.
    So we want to know what that plan would look like out of 
the $3 billion, too. So more interdiction writ large and more 
capacity in the Arctic meeting, as you described, presence with 
presence.
    If we could get--what of your $3 billion proposal would be 
addressing either of those and if that is not crisp if you 
could get us something that is crisp because I think Senator 
Sullivan and I plan to continue to communicate about this 
issue.
    So, and Chair Baldwin, thank you for having the hearing to 
begin with and getting all of us here to talk about this. So 
could I get a commitment, Admiral, for that plan?
    Admiral Lunday. Thank you. Thank you, Chair Cantwell. Yes, 
we will follow up with briefings and information for the record 
in response to your questions.
    The Chair. Thank you.
    Senator Baldwin. Next we have Senator Blackburn.

              STATEMENT OF HON. MARSHA BLACKBURN, 
                  U.S. SENATOR FROM TENNESSEE

    Senator Blackburn. Madam Chairman, thank you so much and I 
want to thank you for the hearing today. I think that looking 
at what is happening on the world stage with the cartels and 
the drug trafficking, the human trafficking, is something that 
we are continuing to see more of and the fact that these 
precursor chemicals seem to be coming in by the container load, 
as one of our Tennessee sheriffs said, when they apprehend 
drugs now. They used to apprehend things in grams and now it is 
all in pounds.
    So we appreciate what the Coast Guard does. Admiral, I do 
have a question about the budget justification that states that 
failing to achieve counterdrug performance measures was due to 
a decrease in the number of surface assets due to reallocation 
to migrant interdiction operations, and we know that a decade 
ago that the Coast Guard would interdict 15 percent of 
estimated cocaine maritime drug flows and in 2023 the numbers 
were 3.6 percent.
    So do you continue to see a reduction? Do you expect to 
continue to see a reduction in drug interdiction because of the 
illegal migrant flows?
    Admiral Lunday. Senator Blackburn, thank you for your 
question. So I was the Atlantic area commander for the Coast 
Guard in 2023.
    As I took command in 2022 we were beginning to see an 
uptick in regular maritime migration from Haiti and from Cuba 
moving in the south Florida straits and off the windward pass 
toward south Florida.
    So I made the decision after notifying the Commandant that 
we were going to begin to shift major Coast Guard cutters, 
aircraft, and personnel from the counterdrug mission, which is 
about saving lives and protecting our border, but over to the 
effort to stop the irregular maritime migration toward the 
U.S., which is also about saving lives and protecting our 
border.
    Our mission there, which is conducted in a task force--a 
Department of Homeland Security Task Force--is to prevent a 
maritime mass migration that would it occur, would present a 
national security threat to the U.S.
    The last time that happened was in 1994 from both Haiti and 
Cuba. And so we surged assets starting in August 2022 to 
prevent that from happening, maintaining a higher than 80 
percent at sea interdiction rate and, again, our mission is to 
interdict those ventures--those migrant ventures--as far from 
U.S. shores as possible and then rapidly repatriate them to 
their country of origin.
    So it is a lifesaving and a border control mission, and 
over the last two years we have been successful in preventing a 
maritime mass migration.
    We will always have a presence to prevent that pressure 
against the U.S. southeast border and now we have begun in the 
last several months to shift those major cutters back to the 
drug interdiction mission working for Admiral Burdian at Joint 
Task Force.
    Senator Blackburn. OK. Not to interrupt, but I do want to 
ask you this. Going back to February 2023 when you started to 
see an uptick and a skyrocketing in the numbers of the illegal 
migrants you had two senior members of the Coast Guard that 
wrote an article and they talked about the migrant interdiction 
operations were in a state of emergency.
    So what--tell me where you put the number to say we are now 
in a state of emergency and how many a day, a week, a month, a 
year? What are you facing?
    You have referenced twice when you got to that state of 
emergency. So are we still in what you would classify as state 
of emergency?
    Admiral Lunday. Thank you for the question, Senator 
Blackburn.
    So under our plan, which is a homeland security plan that 
we lead, we entered a surge phase for prevention of a mass 
migration.
    So it is not--emergency was not a term we were using at the 
time but we were seeing a historic surge in a regular maritime 
migration and so we took an urgent approach to address that. 
And so----
    Senator Blackburn. OK. Let me ask you this, because with 
some of the migrants, these illegal aliens that come to the 
southern border or you are interdicting them at sea, we know 
that there are gang members, Tren de Aragua--TDA--the 
Venezuelan gang. You also have MS-13.
    These are dangerous people. So what are you doing to 
protect our men and women in uniform so that they are going to 
be safe as they are handling these instances?
    Admiral Lunday. Thank you, Senator. So, first, we make sure 
that our people, our Coast Guard men and women that are 
conducting this mission and encountering migrants at sea, are 
well trained and that they have the equipment they need to be 
able to process and then repatriate those migrants safely, and 
then continue to treat each person we encounter with dignity 
and respect.
    Until we know their background, and we do collect 
biometrics--that is an expansion of the capability that we 
have. We started that in 2023. So we better understand who we 
are encountering at sea.
    Senator Blackburn. OK. Thank you. Thank you, Madam 
Chairman.
    Senator Baldwin. Thank you.
    Next, we have Senator Budd.

                  STATEMENT OF HON. TED BUDD, 
                U.S. SENATOR FROM NORTH CAROLINA

    Senator Budd. I thank the Chair and I thank the panel for 
being here.
    Admiral Lunday, I would like to ask you for a status 
update. As you know, there is an ongoing environmental 
emergency in Buxton Beach, North Carolina, which is part of the 
Cape Hatteras National Seashore.
    Before 2013 the Navy and Coast Guard they stored fuel at 
the beach and it used to be buried but now oil is washing onto 
the beach and leaking into the ocean. Folks in the area are 
rightly concerned and frustrated because this has gone on for 
more than a year.
    There are three primary Federal agencies with 
responsibility here. It is the National Park Service, the Army 
Corps of Engineers, and the Coast Guard. Now, I know that the 
Coast Guard is working with the other relevant agencies but--
and then the Army Corps of Engineers recently announced they 
are deploying a team to monitor and take potential actions if 
petroleum releases are observed.
    But is the Coast Guard involved with these efforts?
    Admiral Lunday. Senator Budd, thank you for the question. I 
first became aware of this issue when I was commanding Atlantic 
area last year and I began to receive e-mails directly from 
local residents and community members in the area and in 
Buxton, and so I became familiar with the issue and what we 
were doing working with the National Parks Service, the Army 
Corps of Engineers and the Navy and we continue to be involved 
in those efforts.
    As you noted, Senator, I noted that the Corps of Engineers 
last Friday deployed a team to begin removing potentially 
contaminated soil and they announced that they awarded a 
contract to bring in additional equipment to begin to remediate 
some of the potentially contaminated soil in the area.
    But the Coast Guard remains fully involved in that and in 
coordination with the Corps, with the National Parks Service 
and the Navy.
    Senator Budd. So you do agree that there is an active 
spill? And, first of all, thank you for your efforts through 
the Coast Guard on this, but you do agree there is an active 
spill?
    Admiral Lunday. Senator, we sent Coast Guard pollution 
responders earlier in the year and last year to determine 
whether or not we could take action as if it was an oil spill 
into the water.
    As we arrived on scene we did not detect a level of--or 
detect any spill that we could respond to under our 
authorities. That did not mean there was nothing that could be 
done because there are other authorities that the Army Corps 
and others are using and that we are leaning on to be able to 
address the problem.
    But at the time in our response we have not seen an active 
spill that enabled us to use our organic Coast Guard oil spill 
response authorities.
    Senator Budd. Has the Coast Guard determined whether there 
is an authorized program it can use to remediate the site?
    Admiral Lunday. Well, we are working with the Corps of 
Engineers and the Parks Service to look at that, Senator, and 
so that is part of a Federal team effort to address the 
challenges there.
    Senator Budd. One more question on the authorities. Would 
it be possible for the Coast Guard's oil cleanup authorities to 
be used here since petroleum is washing into the ocean? I just 
want to be clear on this.
    Admiral Lunday. Senator, although we have not seen oil 
washing into the ocean specifically but if we do detect that 
our oil spill authority response authorities could be used.
    So we are continually in communication with, not only the 
Federal partners, but with the local community and if there is 
oil going into the water we will respond under that oil spill 
response authority, yes, sir.
    Senator Budd. Again, I know there is multiple agencies 
involved here. How long, in your best estimation, would it be 
before those that are concerned--all of us in North Carolina 
are concerned about this--how long do you think it can be 
before we expect these are all cleaned up?
    Admiral Lunday. Senator, I would like to get back to you 
with a briefing along with the Corps of Engineers so we can 
fully answer that question and provide that for the record, 
sir.
    Senator Budd. Thank you. I would ask the Coast Guard to 
keep working as you are with every other involved party to end 
this environmental emergency now. This needs to be cleaned up 
without further delay and, again, I want to thank you for your 
efforts through the Coast Guard.
    I want to ask you a question related to what Senator 
Blackburn was talking about with drug trafficking and this is 
regarding trafficking in the Middle East including drugs 
trafficked on the fishing dhows. It has been--they have been 
used to finance Iran's malign activities.
    If the Coast Guard is--if your assets are operating in the 
CENTCOM AOR and you discover illegal narcotics aboard a vessel 
what happens to those narcotics and to the crew that is 
attempting to traffic those illegal narcotics?
    Admiral Lunday. Thank you for the question, Senator Budd.
    Our forces over there--and we have almost 400 Coast Guard 
men and women and six Coast Guard cutters permanently stationed 
there--they operate under the command and control of U.S. 
Central Command and then Fifth Fleet naval central forces under 
the command of Admiral Wikoff. So they are performing a 
Department of Defense mission.
    I do not represent the Department of Defense today, 
Senator, but in my experience as a force provider to them our 
crews typically, when they encounter a dhow--one of these 
vessels that is smuggling drugs--we will destroy the drugs at 
sea, gather information about the master and the crew of the 
vessel, and then we will disembark the vessel.
    Senator Budd. Thank you, Admiral.
    Is it--this is a ``yes or no'' question--is it fair to say 
that these would-be drug traffickers face no other punishment 
other than having their drugs seized?
    Admiral Lunday. In my experience in that scenario, that is 
correct, Senator.
    Senator Budd. Thank you.
    Senator Baldwin. Thank you. I am going to start a second 
round of questioning and go a little bit out of order to allow 
Senator Sullivan to go first because he has another 
appointment.
    Senator Sullivan. Thank you, Madam Chair, and I just have 
one final question. It is an important one.
    So, as Senator Cantwell mentioned, the Russians have 
announced that they are going to stop even abiding by EEZ rules 
when they are fishing and they are going to go into other 
people's EEZs.
    This is in line with other dictatorships like the Chinese 
with their IUU fishing. Senator Whitehouse and I have been 
working on a bipartisan bill dealing with IUU fishing that 
would target China primarily with more naval and Coast Guard 
assets.
    My question, Admiral, maybe you can take it or anyone else 
from JIATF West or South because it is--IUU is a giant issue 
all over the world particularly with these Chinese gray 
fleets--is that in addressing the IUU fishing problem in our 
fish bill--that is the name of our bill to address IUU fishing 
which the Coast Guard helped us write--provides assets.
    But tying that problem back to the topic of today's 
hearing, is there overlap in terms of assets and efforts and 
resources that can be used in the counterdrug mission that can 
also be used in combating IUU fishing particularly as it 
relates Chinese use of precursors on the drug issue and the 
Chinese fleets being the biggest violators of IUU fishing in 
the world?
    Admiral, maybe take a crack at that and then anyone else.
    Admiral Lunday. Thank you, Ranking Member Sullivan.
    It is an important question and I thank you for your 
support to strengthen the Coast Guard's tools and the Federal 
Government's tools to address the problem of IUU fishing, a 
global problem but one that actually impacts our seafood 
industry as well, and so I thank you for the additional tools.
    In terms of the--a cross connect between what we may be 
seeing in IUU fishing and drug interdiction or the drug 
problem, we are looking closely at that.
    We see these distant water fishing fleets travel around the 
world, stay persistently at sea, and engage in IUU fishing, and 
that destabilizes maritime nations that are trying but may not 
have the capability to protect their own waters, and that could 
be a connection to challenges to movement of drugs and other 
malign activities.
    So it is an area we are focused on.
    Senator Sullivan. Great. Well, we want to work--continue to 
work with you on that because they are both really important 
topics.
    And, again, Madam Chair, thank you for holding this hearing 
and I appreciate you letting me cut in line.
    Senator Baldwin. No problem.
    I want to go back to drill down a little deeper on some of 
the asset and resourcing issues. So as we have heard discussed 
already more cocaine is entering the country now compared to 
five to 10 years ago and, in fact, the flow of known cocaine 
into America has doubled over the last decade while the amount 
interdicted by the Coast Guard has remained flat over the same 
period of time.
    The Coast Guard has not met its mission performance target 
for cocaine interdiction once in the past 10 years. So I want 
to start with you, Admiral Burdian. Cocaine is primarily 
trafficked in your areas of operation and it is now, as we 
know, frequently being cut with fentanyl, leading to tragic 
losses across America.
    I am concerned that we are not resourcing the Coast Guard 
sufficiently to address that threat and so just how much 
additional cocaine could be stopped from reaching this country 
if your organization received additional Coast Guard sea and 
air assets as well as personnel, and is there a specific Coast 
Guard asset whose shortage most affects your mission?
    Admiral Burdian. Thank you for the question, Chair Baldwin.
    I am proud to say that today we do have six Coast Guard 
cutters operating under the tactical control of JIATF operating 
between the eastern Pacific and in the Caribbean, as well as a 
law enforcement detachment on board an allied vessel.
    So we have seen a restoration of those forces in support of 
JIATF South's detection and monitoring mission. While I could 
not speak to how much more is enough, there really is no 
replacement for U.S. Coast Guard law enforcement capabilities 
and authorities in the JIATF South JOA.
    When the Coast Guard conducts an interdiction we not only 
remove those narcotics from the water but the pocket litter, 
the electronics, that intelligence is exploited by those crews 
and the individuals who are involved in the smuggling effort 
are brought back to the United States to the Department of 
Justice for prosecution, and that work really contributes to 
the broader U.S. efforts to dismantle the transnational 
criminal organizations who are conducting the trafficking.
    I would like to mention also we have six partner nations 
contributing their forces in the eastern Pacific and another 
six partner nations and an allied partner operating in the 
Caribbean and they are doing extraordinary work.
    I mentioned they contribute to 80 percent of the 307 metric 
tons that were interdicted, supported by JIATF South last year, 
and they are providing some information. They give us 
biometrics. They exploit the pocket litter, and that goes into 
U.S. databases for our use.
    But more Coast Guard cutters are vital to the effort and 
the best Coast Guard cutters, the national security cutters--we 
have got two of them in the JOA right now--are exceptional 
assets.
    Their ability to deploy law enforcement teams, utilize 
airborne use of force, the stability, the sea keeping of those 
assets, is simply irreplaceable.
    The medium endurance cutters who do come down to the joint 
operating area they do tremendous work. Those crews are working 
so, so hard and I value all of them. But it is difficult. They 
are operating aging assets that break frequently and their 
embarked airborne capability is then not usable.
    We simply--we lose ship days to the need to conduct 
emergency maintenance and repair on those assets. The fast 
response cutters, when we do get them down in the joint 
operating area--those are the newer 154-foot patrol boats--are 
also extraordinary. I think the data would tell you they are 
about 40 percent more effective than medium endurance cutters.
    However, part of the package that is necessary to interdict 
these fast-moving assets is that airborne use of force 
capability from the Coast Guard helicopter interdiction 
squadron.
    So best for us is a functioning, trained crew who comes in 
with an airborne use of force helicopter, a surface use of 
force capability that can deliver that law enforcement with 
those highly trained boarding teams.
    Senator Baldwin. Thank you.
    And, Admiral Lunday, can you describe for the Committee how 
the Coast Guard balances risks and competing priorities when 
allocating assets between the counterdrug mission and other 
missions?
    And you were just describing a little bit about the need to 
do some of that pivoting with regard to Haiti and Cuba and, you 
know, when you described the surge in maritime migration and 
the mission to prevent that?
    Admiral Lunday. Thank you, Chair Baldwin.
    The top mission for the Coast Guard is--that is our North 
Star is search and rescue and then ensuring the operation and 
defense of a marine transportation. That is so vital to our 
economic prosperity and national security.
    And so we have not taken any reduction in the level of 
commitment to forces and operations to ensure we perform those 
missions.
    As you know, we have a 10 percent shortage in our enlisted 
workforce--the backbone of our force--and so because of that we 
have had to take actions to lay up three of our 210-foot 
cutters and seven patrol boats because we did not have enough 
Coast Guard men and women to crew them.
    Now, we are making progress on recruiting and I can talk 
about that, but the cutters we have laid up would have 
otherwise been operating and conducting drug interdiction 
operations or other high-priority operations that we have been 
discussing.
    Senator Baldwin. And, Ms. MacLeod, from your vantage point 
as a subject matter expert can you provide an assessment of 
what new technology or updates to existing platforms would 
yield significant improvements in the Coast Guard's drug 
interdiction mission?
    Ms. MacLeod. Yes, thank you.
    Technology is critical for Coast Guard operations. However, 
the Coast Guard has a long history of problems managing these 
resources. Our work has highlighted many areas.
    We currently have more than 50 open recommendations to the 
Coast Guard to help them manage resources. These include: 
workforce planning, delayed acquisitions, and shore 
infrastructure resources, all of which are key to carrying out 
their missions including drug interdiction.
    Senator Baldwin. Thank you. I look forward to receiving 
progress reports on the Coast Guard's workforce assessments and 
the Government Accountability Office's recommendations, and I 
look forward to working with all of you to train and equip the 
people who defend our shores.
    With that, the hearing record will remain open for two 
weeks. During that time Senators may submit questions for the 
record.
    Upon receipt, witnesses are requested to submit their 
written answers to the Committee as soon as possible, but by no 
later than Thursday October 3.
    I thank the witnesses for appearing today and this hearing 
is now adjourned.
    [Whereupon, at 11:13 a.m., the hearing was adjourned.]

                            A P P E N D I X

      Prepared Statement of Hon. Ted Cruz, U.S. Senator from Texas
    Chairwoman Baldwin and Ranking Member Sullivan, thank you for 
holding today's hearing. And thank you to Admiral Lunday, Rear Admiral 
Burdian, Rear Admiral Little, and Ms. MacLeod for appearing today.
    You cannot stop illegal drugs when you have an open border. The 
Biden-Harris administration and DHS Secretary Mayorkas have ignored the 
painful connection between their open border policies and the 
devastation wrought by illegally trafficked drugs on our families, 
communities, and country. This administration's radical policies have 
led to an influx of illegal aliens, drug smuggling, sex trafficking, 
and American lives lost.
    Our Nation relies upon the Coast Guard to keep our country safe, 
project national power, and champion the rule of law. The men and women 
of the Coast Guard do this job tremendously well, and we owe them a 
debt of gratitude.
    Yet because of the Biden-Harris administration's actions, and their 
allies in Congress, the Coast Guard finds itself in an increasingly 
impossible position. On the migrant and narcotics fronts alone, the 
Coast Guard has readily acknowledged it has been unable to interdict 
drugs they otherwise could have because the Coast Guard was busy 
catching and releasing illegal aliens instead.
    Last Congress, I inserted a provision into the Coast Guard bill 
during committee markup to study the impacts of the Biden-Harris open 
border policies on the workload of the Coast Guard. But Senate 
Democrats, preferring ignorance to politically inconvenient facts, 
unilaterally stripped it from the final product.
    Though this is bad enough, this Administration has also taken to 
expanding the Coast Guard's responsibilities without increasing 
resources. Most recently, in a clear sop to the environmentalist left, 
Biden-Harris officials at NOAA proposed senseless new whale-related 
rules impacting the waters from South Texas to Northern Maine that, in 
addition to curtailing most oil and gas development, would see the 
Coast Guard play traffic cop for boats going faster than 11.5 miles per 
hour.
    The reality is this: while the Coast Guard does an incredibly 
admirable job, it works with limited resources stemming from an 
administration that is more concerned with advancing woke and 
ineffectual policies than equipping the Coast Guard with the tools and 
support to do dangerous and demanding jobs.
    As just one example this Administration's disastrous vaccine 
mandate kicked coasties out of the service while the Coast Guard was 
struggling to meet recruitment goals. How many more tons of dangerous 
drugs could have been stopped from reaching our shores had the Coast 
Guard been adequately resourced or not had to clean up the Biden-Harris 
border crisis?
    Unfortunately, this Administration's bad policies don't stop at our 
exclusive economic zone. In the Middle East, where maritime drug 
trafficking bankrolls Iran's malign activities, Coast Guard cutters 
recently interdicted advanced weapons originating from Iran bound for 
the Houthis in Yemen, and hundreds of kilograms of methamphetamines, 
heroin, and other narcotics from a dhow in the Arabian Sea.
    Oftentimes, the Coast Guard and other Federal agencies are playing 
catch-and-release with these Iranian drug-runners. That's a horrible 
idea since these vessels face no consequence other than losing their 
cargo. I have put forward language for the upcoming Coast Guard 
reauthorization that empowers the Coast Guard and the Navy to respond 
appropriately to dhows running drugs and weapons to finance Iranian 
terror. There needs to be consequences since catch-and-release is a 
failure.
    Still, there have been incremental gains and improvements in border 
security through the Coast Guard. In the last authorization, I secured 
language to provide a tethered aerostat radar system at Coast Guard 
Station South Padre Island at the Texas-Mexico border to combat 
poachers, human traffickers, and drug runners. I am proud to say that 
system is up and flying in South Texas today and helping to keep 
Americans safe and prosperous.
    Similarly, my provision requiring operational data sharing between 
CBP and the Coast Guard is helping to streamline interdiction efforts 
along the southern maritime border, so that more people illegally 
entering the U.S. are caught.
    But we still have more to accomplish. We need to end the ``catch 
and release'' approach to Middle East drug enforcement, and enact the 
Pay Our Coast Guard Act, which I sponsored along with Senators 
Cantwell, Sullivan, Baldwin, and Wicker to ensure the Coast Guard is no 
longer the only armed service that goes unpaid during a government 
shutdown.
    I look forward to hearing from our witnesses about their important 
work and what they could accomplish if properly resourced.
                                 ______
                                 
  Response to Written Questions Submitted by Hon. Tammy Duckworth to 
                        Admiral Kevin E. Lunday
QFR #8
COAST GUARD--ILLEGAL UNREPORTED & UNREGULATED FISHING (IUUF) OPERATIONS
    BACKGROUND: I would like to express my gratitude to the U.S. Coast 
Guard for your work in combatting Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated 
(IUU) fishing. As you know, the global and domestic impacts of IUU 
fishing pose a significant security threat to the U.S. economy.

    QUESTION PART-1: How is the Coast Guard planning to meet 
operational demands of combatting IUU fishing in the Indo-Pacific while 
facing current limitations with the number of available ships and an 
aging fleet?
    Answer. Operations in the Indo-Pacific are inherently challenging 
as we work to reach and support remote partners and sustain our own 
personnel and assets across the vast region. The Coast Guard plans to 
continue engagement across the Indo-Pacific; resource needs to do so 
are reflected in the President's Budget and our Unfunded Priorities 
List. The Coast Guard continues to leverage interagency and 
international partnerships to combat illegal, unreported and 
unregulated fishing throughout the Indo-Pacific.

    QUESTION PART-2: During the Coast Guard's interruption of IUU 
fishing operations, to what extent do you observe those malign actors 
engaging in other unlawful activity concurrently?
    Answer. Based on historical data and observation, the Coast Guard 
rarely sees other unlawful activities concurrently taking place during 
counter-IUU fishing operations. Additionally, Coast Guard presence 
often changes the behavior of both domestic and foreign fishing fleets.

    QUESTION PART-3: How would you characterize the Coast Guard's 
effective interoperability with allies and partners as you conduct IUU 
fishing operations, and what resources or authorities would provide the 
greatest positive impact to improve this interoperability?
    Answer. The Coast Guard leverages 12 bilateral agreements 
throughout the INDOPACOM Area of Responsibility. In 2024, the Coast 
Guard executed all 12 of these agreements to assist our Pacific Island 
partners in combatting IUU fishing. The Coast Guard leverages DoD's 
Oceania Maritime Security Initiative to conduct bilateral boardings 
with U.S. Coast Guard Law Enforcement Detachments (LEDETs) embarked 
onboard U.S. naval vessels. Joint Coast Guard operations throughout the 
Indo-Pacific ensure continued interoperability with our allies to 
maintain rules-based order throughout the region. Continuing to enhance 
Coast Guard capacity and capability, through the acquisition of new 
cutters and aircraft, is critical to improving mission effectiveness 
for counter IUU fishing operations.
QFR #9
          COAST GUARD LAW ENFORCEMENT/DRUG INTERDICTION DEMAND
    BACKGROUND: Data shows a significant decline in U.S. Coast Guard 
cocaine seizures over the last three years, despite a steady flow of 
cocaine across the Eastern Pacific and Caribbean AORs.

    QUESTION PART-1: Is there a way in which the Coast Guard could 
increase its Law Enforcement presence in known drug trafficking areas, 
such as the use of Law Enforcement Detachments with Title 14 authority 
onboard allied vessels, without diverting Coast Guard ships away from 
the maritime migration flow?
    Answer. In FY 2024, LEDETs conducted three deployments aboard U.S. 
Navy and eight deployments aboard Allied surface assets. Planned LEDET 
deployments in FY 2025 are expected to maintain this level of 
commitment.

    QUESTION PART-2: What additional resources could the Coast Guard 
utilize to meet the Service's Law Enforcement/Drug Interdiction 
operational demand?
    Answer. The best way to bolster the Coast Guard's counter-drug 
capacity is to support ongoing fleet recapitalization efforts, which 
will enable force packages consisting of major cutters, with a 
deployable Airborne Use of Force capable rotary-wing aircraft and 
onboard tactical intelligence capabilities.
                                 ______
                                 
    Response to Written Questions Submitted by Hon. Roger Wicker to 
                        Admiral Kevin E. Lunday
QFR #14
         (U) COAST GUARD DRUG INTERDICTION IN EASTERN PACIFIC 
                          & WESTERN CARIBBEAN
    BACKGROUND: (U) Because of the vast increase of illegal maritime 
migration, the Coast Guard has been forced to focus resources on 
migrant interdiction at the expense of other missions.

    QUESTION PART-1: (U) How has this increase of migration impacted 
your readiness and deterrence efforts in other places, such as working 
to stop the drug flow in the Eastern Pacific and Western Caribbean?
    Answer.(U) In August 2022, in response to a significant increase in 
the levels of irregular maritime migration in the Caribbean region, DHS 
elevated Operation Vigilant Sentry from Phase 1a to Phase 1b. At this 
time, the Coast Guard surged assets and personnel to deter and prevent 
a maritime mass migration amid the ongoing civil unrest in Haiti and 
deteriorating conditions in Cuba. While the Coast Guard strategically 
reallocates personnel and resources to these efforts, missions such as 
drug interdiction will continue to be impacted.

    QUESTION PART-2: (U) In the last year, what percentage of illegal 
narcotics bound for the U.S. actually made it ashore?
    Answer. (U//FOUO) The Coast Guard estimates roughly 82 percent of 
the documented 2,655 metric tons of cocaine moving towards the United 
States across all vectors was not intercepted and thus potentially 
available to cross the U.S. border in Fiscal Year 2023. The Service 
cannot verify the amount that actually made it ashore. (U//FOUO)

    QUESTION PART-3: (U) Is that more or less than it was five years 
ago?
    Answer. (U//FOUO) The Coast Guard is unable to verify the amount of 
illegal narcotics that actually made it to shore in 2019. the estimates 
for the amount of cocaine available to cross into the United States 
remained consistent at 82 percent. (U//FOUO)

    QUESTION PART-4: (U) What resources does the Coast Guard need to 
stop more of the illicit flow of drugs and migrants?
    Answer. (U) The best way to bolster the Coast Guard's counter-drug 
capacity is to support ongoing fleet recapitalization efforts.

    QUESTION PART-5: (U) How can Congress support the Coast Guard to 
carry out these statutory missions?
    Answer. (U) The Coast Guard remains responsive to all maritime 
threats. However, the Service needs investment and funding to sustain 
vital operations, modernize aging assets, and overcome shore 
maintenance deficiencies and personnel shortfalls. The Coast Guard's 
annual budget is $12.3 billion--that equates to about 1.4 percent of 
the DoD budget or 6 percent of the Navy budget. With all of the value 
that the Coast Guard provides to the Nation, that is a tremendous 
return on investment for the taxpayer.
QFR #15
  U.S. COAST GUARD & PARTNER NATION COOPERATION IN EASTERN PACIFIC & 
                WESTERN CARIBBEAN FOR DRUG INTERDICTION
    BACKGROUND: These questions are regarding the U.S. Coast Guard's 
Partnerships with countries bordering the Eastern Pacific/Western 
Caribbean and how these partnerships impact drug interdiction in the 
region.

    QUESTION PART-1: How important are the relationships and agreements 
the U.S. Coast Guard has with partner nations in the region?
    Answer. The relationships and agreements that the U.S. Coast Guard 
has with partner nations to counter the flow of illicit drugs are 
critical to our ability to address mission demands in the Eastern 
Pacific and Western Caribbean region. The Coast Guard maintains over 40 
country-specific counter-drug agreements, covering a range of subjects 
from shiprider procedures to overflight of national airspace. The Coast 
Guard's network of multilateral and bilateral agreements are unlike 
those of any other armed service or government agency.
    These agreements increase the operational reach of U.S. assets and 
support integration with our international partners, enabling them to 
enforce their laws on vessels subject to their jurisdiction. These 
agreements are critical to supporting our national security objectives.

    QUESTION PART-2: Do these relationships and agreements help the 
Coast Guard better understand where the drugs are coming from and where 
they are headed?
    Answer. Yes, the relationships between the U.S. Coast Guard and 
partner nations in the region help the information flow to better 
understand illicit drug activities. The depth and continuity of 
relationships with countries where the Coast Guard has permanently 
assigned members (liaison, attache, etc.), help foster more 
collaboration and joint efforts to counter illicit drug activities. 
Information sharing agreements with partner nations also help identify 
specific drug movements in the region allowing for better targeting and 
interdiction by Coast Guard or partner assets.

    QUESTION PART-3: Would the Coast Guard's partners in the region 
benefit from more Coast Guard and SOUTHCOM resources in theater?
    Answer. The Coast Guard footprint strengthens and develops partner 
nation capabilities. Bilateral agreements greatly increase the 
operational reach of U.S. assets and also support integration with our 
international partners by providing support to enable their assets to 
better patrol and respond to maritime threats in their sovereign 
waters. During key leader engagements throughout the region, our 
partners have expressed a desire for more U.S. Coast Guard, SOUTHCOM, 
and other U.S. resources and partnership. If the United States does not 
foster relationships, these countries will have limited choices and may 
turn to our rivals and adversaries for support.

    QUESTION PART-4: How has the U.S. Coast Guard's relationships with 
those countries helped stem the flow of drugs?
    Answer. The Coast Guard contributes aircraft, cutters, and 
personnel for the detection and monitoring of illicit drugs. The strong 
relationships fostered by the Coast Guard enable information sharing 
and facilitate operations and data analysis critical for targeting the 
primary flow of illicit traffic, directly degrading TCO networks. The 
expertise obtained by partner nations facilitates independent 
operations and coordination with JIATF-S for counter-drug operations at 
sea without the need for Coast Guard personnel or assets. In FY 2023, 
partner nations carried out approximately 80 percent of JIATF-S 
interdictions. Coast Guard presence and support in the region has 
enabled essential training, modeling, and process improvements that 
empower partner nations to battle TCOs.
                                 ______
                                 
  Response to Written Questions Submitted by Hon. Marsha Blackburn to 
                        Admiral Kevin E. Lunday
QFR #17
            COAST GUARD ICEBREAKER ACQUISITION/CONSTRUCTION
    BACKGROUND: The Coast Guard's law enforcement mission on the Great 
Lakes can only be carried out with icebreakers during the winter 
months, protecting our northern border. The Coast Guard requested $55 
million in FY24 to start the construction process on a new heavy 
icebreaker for the Great Lakes yet received only $20 million.
    The Coast Guard's icebreaking mission, whether in the Arctic, 
Antarctic or on the Great Lakes is suffering. The HEALY was sent back 
to Seattle after a casualty leaving the Arctic uncovered. The 40-year-
old 140-foot icebreaking tugs are suffering astounding failure rates 
causing significant impacts to our winter supply chain on the Great 
Lakes.

    QUESTION PART-1: How is the lack of funding impacting the 
acquisition timeline for this critical new multi-mission asset, the 
heavy Great Lakes Icebreaker?
    Answer. The reduction from the $55 million requested in the FY 2024 
President's Budget to the $20 million provided for the Great Lakes 
Icebreaker in the FY 2024 Further Consolidated Appropriations Act 
partially funds the Analyze/Select phase of the acquisition. The 
appropriated funds are sufficient to initiate that phase, but the 
Service will need the balance of the requested $55 million in order to 
complete the Analyze/Select phase.

    QUESTION PART-2: Why did the Coast Guard not ask for funding for 
the new heavy Great Lakes Icebreaker in the FY25 Presidents Budget?
    Answer. The timing of the three-year process to build the FY 2025 
President's Budget request and the delayed enactment of the FY 2024 
Further Consolidated Appropriations Act did not afford the Coast Guard 
any flexibility to adjust for the reduction below the amount included 
in the FY 2024 President's Budget. After nearly two-and-a-half years of 
development, the FY 2025 President's Budget was transmitted to Congress 
on March 11, 2024; the FY 2024 Further Consolidated Appropriations Act 
was signed into law on March 23, 2024.

    QUESTION PART-3: What can this committee do to help expedite 
icebreaker construction now?
    Answer. Two actions could help expedite icebreaker contruction. 
First, Congress could provide the remaining $35 million dollars that is 
needed to complete the Analyze/Select phase--without additional 
funding, the Coast Guard expects to exhaust available funding in the 
early part of FY 2026. Additionally, Congress could fund the $25 
million request on the Coast Guard's FY 2025 Unfunded Priorities List 
for Long-Lead Time Material. This would expedite icebreaker 
construction; however, the Service cannot begin construction until 
after the Analyze/Select phase is complete.
                                 ______
                                 
   Response to Written Questions Submitted by Hon. Maria Cantwell to 
                     Jo-Ann F. Burdian, RADM, USCG
    Question 1. Over the past decade, the known flow of cocaine through 
the maritime environment has more than doubled, while Coast Guard 
removals have remained flat. At the same time that we have more cocaine 
entering America, this cocaine is now often being cut with fentanyl and 
turned into a far deadlier narcotic.

    a. How can the Coast Guard and JIATFS better deter, interdict, and 
stop this surging flow of cocaine coming into the United States?
    Answer. The greatest operational challenge JIATFS faces in 
deterring and interdicting the surging flow of cocaine is the 
availability of U.S. assets. To better deter and stop these shipments, 
we need to increase the number of maritime and air platforms assigned 
to our Detection and Monitoring (D&M) missions. Enhancing intelligence-
sharing and fostering deeper partnerships with our Latin American and 
Caribbean allies is also essential, as over 80 percent of JIATFS 
interdictions are conducted by partner nations. Additionally, 
modernizing our infrastructure--particularly the consolidation into a 
single Command and Control Facility (C2F)--will significantly improve 
our coordination and operational effectiveness.

    b. If Joint Interagency Task Force-South (JIATFS) was assigned 
additional Coast Guard ships, planes, and other assets, could your team 
boost interdiction rates? Please describe.
    Answer. Yes, additional ships, planes, and assets would 
significantly increase JIATFS's interdiction rates. For each additional 
force package, which includes a long-range surface asset, an over-the-
horizon interceptor, and a maritime patrol aircraft, we can disrupt 
approximately 50 metric tons of cocaine per year. These assets would 
allow us to cover more of the 42 million square mile Joint Operating 
Area (JOA), detect more targets, and support U.S. law enforcement 
agencies and partner nations in conducting more interdictions.

    c. Please provide a detailed breakdown of how many additional 
assets, such as ships, planes, and other assets, or asset hours, that 
JIATFS could effectively employ to prosecute the large volume of 
tactical intelligence coming into the taskforce?
    Answer. JIATFS could immediately employ additional Coast Guard 
cutters and Navy ships with embarked Law Enforcement Detachments 
(LEDETs) and Maritime Patrol Aircraft (MPA). Based on FY24 Global Force 
Management (GFM) requirements and allocations, JIATFS requires 5,475 
ship days annually to effectively meet operational demand, yet only 
1,825 ship days were allocated. Similarly, we requested 12,700 hours 
for Customs and Border Protection (CBP) maritime patrol aircraft, but 
only 5,500 hours were allocated. These shortages limit our ability to 
fully act on the large volume of tactical intelligence we receive. 
Additional surface assets and MPA would allow us to significantly 
increase interdiction rates and reduce the flow of cocaine toward U.S. 
shores.

    d. What other actions does the Federal government need take to 
increase narcotic interdiction rates?
    Answer. The most impactful action the Federal government can take 
is to increase the number of U.S. surface and air assets available for 
interdiction operations in the JIATFS region. Enhancing intelligence-
sharing agreements with partner nations and improving real-time data 
exchange will allow for more effective interdictions. Additionally, a 
second Ship Special Mission (SSM) would also expand our capacity to 
support partner nations in conducting interdictions on the high seas, 
further reducing the volume of cocaine reaching U.S. shores.
                                 ______
                                 
  Response to Written Questions Submitted by Hon. Tammy Duckworth to 
                     Jo-Ann F. Burdian, RADM, USCG
Increasing Law Enforcement Presence Despite Competing CG Migrant 
        Demands
    Data shows a significant decline in U.S. Coast Guard cocaine 
seizures over the last three years, despite a steady flow of cocaine 
across the Eastern Pacific and Caribbean AORs.

    Question 1. Is there a way in which the U.S. Coast Guard could 
increase its Law Enforcement presence in known drug trafficking areas, 
such as the use of Law Enforcement Detachments with Title 14 authority 
onboard allied vessels, without diverting U.S. Coast Guard ships away 
from the maritime migration flow?
    Answer. Yes, one way to increase U.S. Coast Guard law enforcement 
presence in known drug trafficking areas without diverting Coast Guard 
ships from the maritime migration mission is through the use of LEDETs. 
These teams can embark on allied and Partner Nation vessels with 
appropriate shiprider agreements, leveraging their authority under 
Title 14 to conduct interdictions. This approach has proven effective 
and allows us to multiply our law enforcement presence by utilizing 
partner nation platforms in areas where trafficking is heaviest.

    Question 2. What additional resources or authorities could be 
utilized by JIATFS to meet this operational demand?
    Answer. To meet the growing operational demand, additional 
resources are essential. First, increasing the availability of LEDETs, 
surface assets, and maritime patrol aircraft would significantly 
enhance JIATFS's capacity to detect and monitor illicit drug shipments. 
These resources are critical for maintaining a strong presence across 
the vast area of operations.
    Additionally, continued funding for the construction of a new 
Command and Control Facility (C2F) is crucial to improving real-time 
intelligence sharing and operational coordination with our interagency 
and international partners. Furthermore, funding for military family 
housing in Key West would directly support the JIATFS team, ensuring 
that we can retain top talent and maintain our operational tempo.
    In terms of authorities, we appreciate Congress' efforts to expand 
JIATFS authority to conduct D&M of the transit of illegal drugs 
regardless of their destination within the JOA, as provided in the 
SASC's FY25 NDAA section 351. This authority would enable JIATFS to 
intercept drugs that are not only bound for the United States but also 
for other regions, giving us a broader reach to disrupt the global drug 
trade.
                                 ______
                                 
      Response to Written Questions Submitted by Hon. Ted Cruz to 
                     Jo-Ann F. Burdian, RADM, USCG
Drug Trafficking
    Question 1. What does the Coast Guard need to increase the amount 
of intelligence on drug trafficking that it is able to act on?
    Answer. JIATFS respectfully defers to the U.S. Coast Guard to 
provide information on their specific intelligence needs.

    Question 2. Have Joint Interagency Task Force South assets 
interdicted fentanyl or fentanyl precursor chemicals in the maritime 
environment in the past few years? If so, how much fentanyl was 
interdicted in comparison with other drugs?
    Answer. To date, JIATFS has not intercepted finished fentanyl in 
the maritime domain. Fentanyl or precursor chemicals from China or 
India are typically trafficked into major ports in the region, not via 
the typical conveyances used by cocaine trafficking (go-fasts, etc.).
    Nevertheless, our efforts advance investigations into criminal 
organizations who traffic fentanyl into the United States. According to 
the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces, last year, 23 percent 
of their designated investigations that involved U.S. maritime 
interdictions in the JIATFS JOA were connected to organizations also 
linked to fentanyl or its precursors.

    Question 3. When Joint Interagency Task Force South assets 
interdict criminals attempting to bring deadly narcotics into the 
United States, are they prosecuted in the United States? Are any simply 
sent back to their own country?
    Answer. When JIATFS supports an interdiction of narcotics, and the 
interdiction is conducted by a U.S. platform (USCG or DoD with LEDET), 
the traffickers involved are typically prosecuted in the United States 
under U.S. Federal law. If a partner nation conducts the interdiction 
using its own assets, those individuals are often prosecuted in the 
partner nation's judicial system. While we welcome the growing 
involvement of partner nations in conducting interdictions, there is an 
advantage when the United States conducts an interdiction, as the 
criminals are brought to justice in the United States and we gain 
valuable intelligence that furthers U.S. investigations into larger 
transnational criminal organizations (TCO) networks.
                                 ______
                                 
    Response to Written Questions Submitted by Hon. Roger Wicker to 
                     Jo-Ann F. Burdian, RADM, USCG
    Question 1. How important are the relationships and agreements that 
we have with partner nations in the region? Do these relationships and 
agreements help you to better understand where the drugs are coming 
from and where they are headed?
    Answer. The relationships and agreements with our partner nations 
are critical to the success of JIATFS operations. The U.S. benefits 
most from U.S.-led interdictions, as they result in prosecutions within 
the U.S. legal system, leading to the dismantling of TCOs. Increased 
U.S. assets in the region would bolster these efforts, enabling us to 
act on intelligence more quickly and intercept more shipments before 
they reach U.S. shores.
    However, the close partnerships we have with Latin American and 
Caribbean nations significantly enhance our ability to track the flow 
of drugs. These relationships provide invaluable insights into drug 
trafficking routes and allow us to monitor, track, and interdict 
narcotics before they reach U.S. shores. Additionally, bilateral 
agreements with countries like Colombia, Peru, and Panama enable 
seamless cooperation and law enforcement actions, further enhancing our 
understanding of the source and transit zones of these narcotics.

    Question 2. Would your partners in the region benefit from more 
Coast Guard and SOUTHCOM resources in theater?
    Answer. Yes. Our partner nations rely heavily on the resources and 
support provided by the U.S. Coast Guard and SOUTHCOM to conduct 
effective interdictions. Increased availability of U.S. assets--
particularly interdiction assets and LEDETs--would allow our partners 
to engage in more operations and interdict greater quantities of 
cocaine. Additionally, expanded training programs and investments in 
their interdiction platforms would enhance their operational 
capabilities and further support the shared mission of disrupting TCOs. 
JIATFS can do more . . . with more.

    How has our relationships with those countries helped stem the flow 
of drugs?
    Answer. Our relationships with partner nations have been 
instrumental in stemming the flow of drugs. Joint exercises and 
operations have led to increased interoperability and experience, 
positively impacting day-to-day operations. Over 80 percent of JIATFS 
interdictions are now conducted by partner nations, demonstrating the 
critical role they play in countering drug trafficking. These 
partnerships allow us to disrupt shipments at multiple points along the 
supply chain, significantly reducing the volume of drugs entering the 
United States.
                                 ______
                                 
    Response to Written Questions Submitted by Hon. Dan Sullivan to 
                     Jo-Ann F. Burdian, RADM, USCG
Unmanned Systems
    Question 1. How do JIATF South & JIATF-West employ unmanned 
systems? Does JIATFS have something like a Task Force 59?
    Answer. JIATFS employs unmanned systems through partnerships with 
various force providers and interagency collaborations. We leverage 
unmanned aerial systems like the CBP MQ-9 Predator, as well as smaller 
drones, to conduct intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) 
in support of our detection and monitoring missions. While we do not 
have a dedicated entity like Task Force 59, we are working closely with 
U.S. Navy 4th Fleet to incorporate unmanned technologies as part of 
their Hybrid Fleet concept, which will further strengthen our maritime 
and air domain awareness across our vast area of operations. Finally, 
JIATFS continues to prioritize efforts to optimize software, sensors, 
and unmanned systems to rapidly improve operational effectiveness. By 
integrating these technologies, we are increasing our ability to detect 
and monitor drug trafficking activities across the vast region we 
cover.
IUU Fishing
    Question 1. Is there an overlap of efforts, assets, and resources 
used in the counterdrug mission that could also be used to help combat 
IUU fishing?
    Answer. There is some overlap in terms of the intelligence-sharing 
mechanisms and assets used for both the counterdrug mission and 
illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing. JIATFS authorities 
are specifically for the D&M of narcotics transiting via air and 
maritime domains. However, during the course of our counter-narcotics 
D&M missions, our maritime patrol aircraft and surface assets may 
detect vessels engaged in IUU fishing. In such cases, we follow 
established IUU fishing business rules with the U.S. Coast Guard, which 
allow us to pass any incidental intelligence gathered during our 
operations to the appropriate organizations with IUU fishing authority.
    While there is overlap in these capabilities, the primary focus of 
JIATFS remains on the counterdrug mission. Diverting assets to address 
IUU fishing would require additional resources to avoid compromising 
our effectiveness in interdicting narcotics. Expanding our authority or 
creating a dedicated JIATF-like organization focused on IUU fishing may 
provide a more structured and efficient approach to combating these 
activities.

    Would additional authorities without additional resources be 
helpful?
    Answer. The U.S. Coast Guard is the lead Federal agency for 
conducting counter-IUU fishing operations, and many of the same 
approaches--such as intelligence fusion, detection, and monitoring--
apply to both counterdrug and IUU fishing missions. However, additional 
authorities without corresponding resources would offer only limited 
benefits. The key to addressing both counterdrug and IUU fishing 
threats lies in increasing the availability of resources--such as 
surface assets and patrol aircraft--to support the expanded mission 
scope. Without sufficient resources, additional authorities alone would 
not enable JIATFS to maintain the necessary operational tempo to meet 
the growing challenges posed by transnational criminal organizations 
(TCOs) and illegal fishing operations.

    Question 2. IF NOT, do you think a JIATF-like organization that is 
focused on IUU fishing instead of drug trafficking is needed?
    Answer. JIATFS is recognized as the ``gold standard'' in 
interagency cooperation, a model that could enhance many different 
missions. Given the USCG's status as the lead Federal agency to 
counter-IUU fishing, JIATFS respectfully defers to the USCG on the 
utility of a JIATF-like organization focused on this activity.
                                 ______
                                 
   Response to Written Questions Submitted by Hon. Maria Cantwell to 
                            RADM Bob Little
    Question 1. You stated that Joint Interagency Task Force-West 
(JIATF-W) has ``had a significant reduction in capacity'' and has had 
to evolve ``as an organization as we have had to reassess where our 
priorities.'' Please specifically identify what capacity has been 
reduced, how JIATF-W's priorities have changed as a result, and what 
effect this has had on JIATF-W's ability to identify and interdict the 
flow of fentanyl and fentanyl precursor chemicals?
    Answer. The FY19 Defense-Wide Review (DWR) directed the Department 
to ``deactivate JIATF-W operations center/systems'' and transfer 
residual functions to USINDOPACOM and USNORTHCOM no later than FY 2023. 
In April 2022, the Secretary of Defense approved the decision to retain 
JIATF-W, but as a smaller, more focused organization that would 
concentrate on programs and activities directly supporting counterdrug 
and counter transnational organized crime operations. In accordance 
with the Secretary's decision, the Task Force's budget and manpower was 
reduced.
    In response to the reduced funding, JIATF-W formed a Mission 
Refinement Working Group to determine how best to structure the 
organization while maximizing efficiencies and more effectively manage 
our available resources. Based on the Working Group findings, JIATF-W 
reorganized into a Cross Functional Team (CFT) structure integrating 
intelligence and operations functions across four geographical regions 
(Southeast Asia, Northeast Asia, South Asia, and Oceania) to optimize 
mission effectiveness. JIATF-W's four separate CFTs leverage our 
diverse expertise and perspectives to regionally integrate 
intelligence, planning, and operational functions. Each CFT is 
supported by the Operations Support Directorate who provides 
centralized planning, evaluation, and coordination. JIATF-W's 
Intelligence Directorate established a Fusion Cell and a Targeting 
Cell. The Fusion Cell weaves the CFT's regional threat pictures into 
the overarching strategic intelligence picture while the Targeting Cell 
contributes to the intelligence fusion process by diving into specific 
targets to build actionable intelligence products for use by U.S. law 
enforcement and/or other U.S. partners.
    In 2023, we updated our Lines of Effort (LOE) to better align with 
new USINDOPACOM and the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for 
Counternarcotics and Stabilization Policy priorities. JIATF-W's four 
specific Lines of Effort are:

    LOE 1: Provide Intelligence Analysis to U.S. LEAs and partners in 
support of Investigations and Operations

    LOE 2: Identify, Monitor, and Target Threat Networks associated 
with Precursor Chemicals and Pharmaceutical Equipment from the Indo-
Pacific to the Western Hemisphere

    LOE 3: Identify, Monitor, and Target Threat Networks associated 
with Mexican drug trafficking organizations operating in the Indo-
Pacific

    LOE 4: Strengthen Allies and Partners

    JIATF-W's highest priority remains countering the fentanyl threat 
to the homeland which spans across all four LOEs. The Department of 
Defense Appropriations Act, 2024, provided JIATF-W with a one-time $10 
million increase in counterdrug funding to counter the smuggling of 
chemical precursors from Asia into the Western Hemisphere.
    With the funding, JIATF-W increased its intelligence capabilities 
by procuring improved technology and hiring additional contracted 
intelligence analysts to improve the capacity to conduct deeper supply 
chain analysis. This enabled the production of more intelligence on 
illicit companies and their fentanyl precursor shipments. The current 
draft of the Fiscal Year 2025 House defense appropriation has a similar 
addition of four million dollars for the same purpose.
                                 ______
                                 
  Response to Written Questions Submitted by Hon. Tammy Duckworth to 
                            RADM Bob Little
International Coordination
    Members from my staff had the pleasure of visiting JIATF-W earlier 
this year and I'm grateful for you hosting them to answer questions 
regarding how JIATF-W is working with our international and interagency 
partners to combat the flow of illicit narcotics and IUU fishing in the 
Indo-Pacific.

    Question 1. If provided with the necessary resources, can you 
identify new or existing partners in the Indo-Pacific that JIATF-W 
could engage to strengthen regional cooperation and advance these 
missions, especially where opportunity may be untapped?
    Answer. The U.S. Coast Guard is the lead Federal agency for 
conducting counter-IUU fishing operations. JIATF-W is funded from 
counterdrug operations and operates under counterdrug authorities.
    USINDOPACOM's FY25 unfunded priority list has requested 4.2 million 
dollars in non-counter narcotics funds for JIATF-West to provide the 
capacity to support our regional partners' priority needs by taking a 
more comprehensive approach to counter illicit and malign activity. As 
this money would not be limited to only counterdrug operations, we 
would be able to work with additional partners to illuminate criminal 
activity such as financial crimes and illegal, unreported, and 
unregulated fishing (IUUF).
    Additional engagement would be particularly helpful in Oceania and 
support cooperation with the Pacific Islands countries. Moreover, 
JIATF-W could expand its limited work with the Pacific Islands Forum's 
Fisheries Agency supporting the 17 member states as they sustainably 
manage and enforce their fishing resources. The group also works with 
the Oceania Customs Organization, the Pacific Islands Chiefs of Police, 
and the Pacific Immigration Development Community to jointly combat 
transnational organized crime.

    Question 2. How would you characterize the U.S. Coast Guard's 
effective interoperability with allies and partners as you conduct IUU 
fishing and counter-narcotics operations, and what resources or 
authorities would provide the greatest positive impact to improve this 
interoperability?
    Answer. The U.S. Coast Guard is best postured to respond to this 
question.
                                 ______
                                 
      Response to Written Questions Submitted by Hon. Ted Cruz to 
                            RADM Bob Little
Drug Trafficking
    Question 1. It has been well documented that fentanyl precursors 
originating in China are shipped to Mexico, where illicit fentanyl is 
being produced. As illicit fentanyl trafficking increases along the 
land border, what is Joint Interagency Task Force West doing to improve 
capabilities to locate, detect, and interdict fentanyl and fentanyl 
precursors at sea?
    Answer. Joint Interagency Task Force West (JIATF-W) does not have 
strong indications that finished fentanyl is trafficked via the 
maritime as a primary means of conveyance; however, precursor chemicals 
used to produce other synthetic opioids, such as methamphetamine, are 
often shipped via maritime cargo and then diverted for illicit use 
after arrival in ports. To address this threat, JIATF-W provides 
intelligence analysis to U.S. law enforcement agencies to help 
identify, monitor, and target threat networks associated with these 
shipments.
    JIATF-W's highest priority remains countering the fentanyl threat 
to the homeland. The Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2024, 
provided JIATF-W with a one-time $10 million increase in counterdrug 
funding to counter the smuggling of chemical precursors from Asia into 
the Western Hemisphere. With the funding JIATF-W increased its 
intelligence capabilities by procuring improved technology and hiring 
additional contracted intelligence analysts to improve the capacity to 
conduct deeper supply chain analysis. This enabled the production of 
more intelligence on illicit companies and fentanyl precursors.
    The current draft of the Fiscal Year 2025 House defense 
appropriation has a similar addition of $4 million dollars for the same 
purpose which would allow us to continue many of these efforts.
                                 ______
                                 
    Response to Written Questions Submitted by Hon. Dan Sullivan to 
                            RADM Bob Little
Unmanned Systems
    Question 1. How do JIATF-South & JIATF-West employ unmanned 
systems? Does JIATF-S have something like a Task Force 59?
    Answer, JIATF-W does not have assigned ships and aircraft to 
include unmanned systems. However, JIATF-W submits collection 
requirements to USINDOPACOM, which may use a variety of DoD assets to 
fulfill valid requirements. Additionally, through support to U.S. law 
enforcement, JIATF-W helps coordinate end-game operations that may 
include USCG and DoD assets.
IUU Fishing
    Question 1.Is there an overlap of efforts, assets, and resources 
used in the counterdrug mission that could also be used to help combat 
IUU fishing? Would additional authorities without additional resources 
be helpful?
    Answer. Through USINDOPACOM, JIATF-W has the authorities it 
requires to help combat IUU fishing as evidenced by its leadership of 
the USINDOPACOM-funded Blue Pacific Cooperative initiative which aims 
to expand maritime domain awareness and information sharing 
capabilities in support of counter IUUF operations for the Pacific 
Islands Forum Fisheries Agency (FFA).
    The FFA is primarily focused on countering IUUF, but in November 
2023 it partnered with the Oceania Customs Organization, Pacific 
Islands Chiefs of Police (PICP) and the Pacific Immigration Development 
Community to jointly combat transnational organized crime. According to 
the PICP, this new partnership formed in response to the rising threats 
of drug trafficking, human trafficking, and other transnational crimes 
that exploit the vulnerabilities of the region.
    In September 2024, JIATF-W supported a U.S. Coast Guard-led 
operation in Palau. This operation focused on enhancing maritime domain 
awareness and Palau's ability to identify and act on illicit maritime 
activity in their sovereign waters. JIATF-W also supported a similar 
operation in Fiji that resulted in a maritime drug seizure. The Pacific 
Island's new focus on transnational organized crime uniquely positions 
JIATF-W to expand its support to the PICP and other regional partners.
    To this end, USINDOPACOM's FY25 unfunded priority list has 
requested 4.2 million dollars in non-CN funds for JIATF-West which 
would provide the capacity to support our regional partners' priority 
needs by taking a more comprehensive approach to counter illicit and 
malign activity. As this money would not be limited to only counter 
narcotics operations, we would be able to work with additional partners 
to illuminate criminal activity such as financial crimes, human 
trafficking, and illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing.

    Question 2. IF NOT, do you think a JIATF-like organization that is 
focused on IUU fishing instead of drug trafficking is needed?
    Answer. A JIATF-like organization that supports U.S. and regional 
law enforcement in addressing a wider range of transnational crimes and 
malign influences could more effectively illuminate interconnected 
criminal enterprises and bolster regional security. This would also be 
a more efficient application of resources, providing better integration 
of whole of government efforts to strengthen regional security. We 
defer to the Department of Defense and Congress regarding the need to 
establish such an organization.
                                 ______
                                 
   Response to Written Questions Submitted by Hon. Maria Cantwell to 
                            Heather MacLeod
    Question 1. GAO has done extensive work documenting the delays in 
Coast Guard acquisition programs, including the Coast Guard's top two 
acquisition priorities--the Offshore Patrol Cutter and the Polar 
Security Cutter. Both new cutter classes are vitally needed to help 
provide for the security and safety of our Nation.

    a. What does the Coast Guard need to do to ensure the timeline for 
these critical acquisition programs does not slip further?
    Answer. The Coast Guard needs to focus on achieving a stable design 
in accordance with GAO's shipbuilding leading practices (GAO-24-
105503). As we have previously reported, the shipbuilders for the 
Offshore Patrol Cutter (OPC) and the Polar Security Cutter (PSC) have 
yet to stabilize their design, which has contributed to schedule delays 
and cost growth for both programs (GAO-23-105805, GAO-23-105949). For 
example, the OPC program began ship construction without a matured 
critical technology, which led to redesign of portions of the ship and 
contributed to delays of the lead ship by almost four years. The PSC 
program is more than four years late delivering a capability because 
designing the polar icebreaker has taken much longer than planned. A 
stable design will help ensure the shipbuilders and the Coast Guard 
have the knowledge needed to support timely, predictable outcomes for 
both programs.

    b. How can the Coast Guard expedite the delivery of these and other 
new assets to ensure they are operational and executing missions as 
soon as possible?
    Answer. In addition to ensuring a design is sufficiently stable as 
outlined above, the Coast Guard needs to work with the shipbuilders to 
set realistic schedules. We previously reported that the Coast Guard 
adopted unrealistic schedules from the outset of both the OPC and PSC 
programs. The programs' schedule challenges have been exacerbated by a 
lack of reliable schedule data from the shipbuilders that could be used 
to anchor projections of remaining work to complete the ships. For 
example, the PSC program can use the knowledge gained from building up 
to eight sections (of 85 on the total ship) and apply it to the planned 
production time to create more realistic schedules for each PSC. 
Additionally, as we found in May 2024, commercial ship buyers and 
builders use leading design practices that enable shorter, predictable 
cycles for designing and delivering new ships (GAO-24-105503). These 
practices include leveraging existing ship designs, prioritizing timely 
vendor decisions, and using ship design tools to shorten cycle time. By 
leveraging such practices, the Coast Guard could achieve more 
consistent, predictable outcomes and help expedite delivery for its 
shipbuilding programs.

    c. How are these delays specifically impacting Coast Guard mission 
performance?
    Answer. In the absence of new cutters, the Coast Guard is relying 
on its aged fleet of existing ships. While these ships have generally 
maintained operations, continued use increases the risk they will fail 
before they are replaced. For example, the Coast Guard is annually 
accomplishing its Antarctic mission with its existing heavy polar 
icebreaker, the Polar Star, which is over 47 years old and well beyond 
its 30-year service life. However, there is no backup if the Polar Star 
becomes inoperable before PSCs are delivered.

    Question 2. The Coast Guard is currently short 10 percent of its 
enlisted workforce. As a result, 10 cutters were removed from service 
this year, and there is now reduced staffing at numerous boat stations 
nationwide. In 2025, the Service plans to lay up another 5 ships.

    a. With all the Coast Guard's workforce and retention challenges, 
what does the Coast Guard need to do to increase recruitment, 
retention, and become a more competitive employer?
    Answer. We have made more than 29 recommendations since 2022 which 
relate to these issues, including workforce issues involving critical 
areas of expertise such as cybersecurity and marine inspections, and 
housing challenges that can affect the Coast Guard's workforce.\2\ The 
Coast Guard needs to fully implement these recommendations in a timely 
manner, which will help position the it to address workforce 
challenges. Competition with higher paying jobs in the private sector, 
limited opportunities for promotion, and long work hours have made it 
challenging for the Coast Guard to recruit personnel. While some 
challenges, such as higher paying jobs in the private sector, are 
largely outside its control,\3\ the Coast Guard needs to address 
quality-of-life factors within its authority that affect its ability to 
retain personnel. This includes access to childcare,\4\ health care,\5\ 
housing,\6\ and education.\7\ For example:
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    \2\ GAO, Coast Guard: Recruitment and Retention Challenges Persist, 
GAO-23-106750 (Washington, D.C.: May 11, 2023).
    \3\ Like other military departments, the Coast Guard is authorized 
to pay special bonus or incentive pay for certain professional 
expertise, such as for aviation officers and officers in health 
professions. 37 U.S.C. Sec. Sec. 334, 335.
    \4\ GAO, Military Child Care: Coast Guard is Taking Steps to 
Increase Access for Families, GAO-22-105262 (Washington, D.C.: June 30, 
2022).
    \5\ GAO, Coast Guard Health Care: Additional Actions Could Help 
Ensure Beneficiaries' Access, GAO-23-105574 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 4, 
2023).
    \6\ GAO, Coast Guard: Better Feedback Collection and Information 
Could Enhance Housing Program, GAO-24-106388 (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 5, 
2024.
    \7\ GAO, K-12 Education: U.S. Military Families Generally Have the 
Same Schooling Options as Other Families and Consider Multiple Factors 
When Selecting Schools, GAO-21-80 (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 4, 2021).

   In September 2022, we made six recommendations aimed at 
        improving the Coast Guard's workforce planning process for 
        cybersecurity personnel, including assessing needs, collecting 
        data, and developing a strategy and metrics that could better 
        inform efforts to recruit these personnel.\8\
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    \8\ GAO, Coast Guard: Workforce Planning Actions Needed to Address 
Growing Cyberspace Mission Demands, GAO-22-105208 (Washington, D.C.: 
Sept. 27, 2022).

   In April 2023, we made six recommendations that the Coast 
        Guard, among other things, obtain, share, and monitor several 
        types of data, including information on health care access and 
        the reasons for medical provider recruitment and retention 
        challenges.\9\
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    \9\ GAO, Coast Guard Health Care: Additional Actions Could Help 
Ensure Beneficiaries' Access, GAO-23-105574 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 4, 
2023).

   In February 2024, we made three recommendations that the 
        Coast Guard collect and use service-wide housing feedback and 
        assess 10 DOD housing authorities for potential benefits. If 
        implemented, these actions could help with the Coast Guard's 
        retention of service members and competitiveness as an employer 
        and improve awareness of the extent of challenges experienced 
        by service members that utilize either government-owned or 
        private sector housing, which could affect morale and 
        retention.\10\
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    \10\ GAO, Coast Guard: Better Feedback Collection and Information 
Could Enhance Housing Program, GAO-24-106388 (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 5, 
2024). In addition, in March 2023 we reported on recruitment and 
retention challenges for active-duty personnel facing the Department of 
Defense (DOD). See GAO, National Security Snapshot: DOD Active-Duty 
Recruitment and Retention Challenges, GAO-23-106551 (Washington, D.C.: 
Mar. 28, 2023).

    b. What resources does the Coast Guard need to boost recruitment 
and retention?
    Answer. The Coast Guard needs to fully assess its workforce needs 
in a timely, comprehensive manner, including requesting and deploying 
adequate resources to do so. Such assessments could help inform its 
recruiting goals. As of March 2023, the service reported completing 
workforce requirement determinations for 15 percent of its units. In 
May 2023 we testified regarding 29 related recommendations, including 
to improve workforce planning processes and data monitoring and 
collection, of which 24 remain open that could affect specific 
resources.\11\ For example, while the Coast Guard says that determining 
actual workforce needs is a priority, as of September 2024 the service 
had not adequately staffed the offices responsible for assessing actual 
workforce needs.\12\
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    \11\ GAO, Coast Guard: Recruitment and Retention Challenges 
Persist, GAO-23-106750 (Washington, D.C.: May 11, 2023).
    \12\ We have two additional ongoing audits addressing Coast Guard 
recruitment and retention efforts that are planned for issuance in 
Spring 2025.
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    Nevertheless, in October 2024, Coast Guard officials reported the 
service exceeded its FY 2024 recruitment goals for enlisted and reserve 
personnel. The number of enlisted recruits was 4,422 (with a goal of 
4,200); reserve recruits totaled 737 (with a goal of 725). However, our 
work has found that the Coast Guard has a culture of ``making do'' with 
the resources it has, which makes it difficult to determine the 
resources needed to boost recruitment and retention. For example, in 
2019 we found that Coast Guard budget requests did not provide accurate 
information about its needs.\13\ Without such information about the 
Coast Guard's realistic budgetary needs, Congress will lack critical 
information that could help prioritize funding. We have previously 
reported on Coast Guard resource shortfalls and incomplete workforce 
planning for its drug interdiction mission, such as its aviation 
workforce and specialized forces. We continue to believe that budget 
transparency will aid decision-makers and the Coast Guard in making 
better trade-off decisions.
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    \13\ GAO, Coast Guard Shore Infrastructure: Applying Leading 
Practices Could Help Better Manage Project Backlogs of at least $2.6 
Billion, GAO-19-82 (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 21, 2019).
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                                 ______
                                 
      Response to Written Questions Submitted by Hon. Ted Cruz to 
                            Heather MacLeod
Drug Trafficking
    Your statement notes that the Coast Guard has not met its cocaine 
interdiction target in a decade.
    Question 1. What major resources or acquisitions are necessary for 
the Coast Guard to improve in this area?
    Answer. For its drug interdiction mission, the Coast Guard relies 
on its vessels and aircraft in a layered approach to address the 
transport of illicit drugs from the source zone, through maritime 
corridors off Central America, Mexico, and the Caribbean, and into the 
United States. According to the Coast Guard, this approach confronts 
the threat beyond U.S. land borders where traffickers are most exposed 
and drugs are most vulnerable to interdiction by law enforcement 
assets.
    However, our work has shown that asset readiness and availability 
challenges have affected the Coast Guard's ability to meet these drug 
interdiction mission demands. These challenges include (1) declining 
readiness of its vessels and aircraft and (2) acquisition associated 
delays in replacing them. We have made several recommendations for the 
Coast Guard to better support these efforts. For example, certain Coast 
Guard assets have been in a state of decline for decades.\14\
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    \14\ GAO, Coast Guard Acquisitions: Offshore Patrol Cutter Program 
Needs to Mature Technology and Design, GAO-23-105805 (Washington, D.C.: 
June 20, 2023) and Coast Guard: Opportunities Exist to Reduce Risk for 
the Offshore Patrol Cutter Program, GAO-21-9 (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 
28, 2020). In our June 2023 report, we also reiterated that eight of 
the recommendations we made in the October 2020 report to improve the 
program continued to have merit. As of August 2024, eight of the 13 
recommendations in these two reports were not implemented.
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    Our work has also found that the Coast Guard's declining asset 
readiness is exacerbated by persistent challenges it faces managing its 
planned $40 billion acquisition programs to modernize its vessels and 
aircraft. These challenges include:

   Capability gaps from schedule delays. Delays experienced by 
        the Coast Guard's highest priority program--the Offshore Patrol 
        Cutters--will exacerbate capability gaps.\15\ The Coast Guard 
        plans to replace the aging Medium Endurance Cutters with 
        Offshore Patrol Cutters. The Commandant testified in July 2024 
        that Offshore Patrol Cutters are to be essential assets for 
        Coast Guard's drug interdiction mission.\16\ However, in May 
        2024, we reported that the Coast Guard has delayed delivery of 
        the first Offshore Patrol Cutter by 4 years, from Fiscal Year 
        2021 to 2025.\17\ In June 2023, we reported that given the 
        delays in delivery of the Offshore Patrol Cutters, the Coast 
        Guard projects to have a reduction in asset availability--or a 
        reduction in the number of cutters available for operations--
        starting in 2024 and through 2039.
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    \15\ Offshore Patrol Cutters generally conduct the same range of 
missions as Medium Endurance Cutters, such as conducting search and 
rescue and interdicting drugs and migrants. Designed for long-distance 
transit, extended on-scene presence, and operations with deployable 
aircraft and small boats, these cutters are intended to provide 
offshore presence for the Coast Guard's cutter fleet.
    \16\ Admiral Linda L. Fagan, Commandant, U.S. Coast Guard, From 
Drug Interdictions in the Caribbean to National Security Patrols in the 
Arctic: Examining U.S. Coast Guard's Role in Securing the Homeland, 
testimony before the House of Representatives Committee on Homeland 
Security, 118th Cong., 2nd sess., July 24, 2024.
    \17\ GAO, Coast Guard Acquisitions: Opportunities Exist to Improve 
Shipbuilding Outcomes, GAO-24-107488 (Washington, D.C.: May 7, 2024).

   Affordability concerns and difficult tradeoff decisions. As 
        we reported in June 2024, the Coast Guard will have to make 
        difficult decisions to address the affordability concerns 
        surrounding its acquisition portfolio.\18\ These concerns 
        affect how the Coast Guard prioritizes spending on aging 
        assets, including those currently performing the drug 
        interdiction mission. Specifically, for over a decade and most 
        recently in 2024, we have reported that the Coast Guard's 
        short-term budget decisions have resulted in a buildup of near-
        term unaffordable acquisitions that have continued to put 
        pressure on available resources.\19\ In particular, we reported 
        that the Coast Guard made short-term budget decisions that 
        obscure the tradeoffs needed to balance the long-term 
        affordability of the portfolio. To that end, the Coast Guard 
        has yet to produce a long-term acquisitions plan, which 
        Congress directed them to do nearly 10 years ago.\20\
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    \18\ GAO, Coast Guard Acquisition: Actions Needed to Address 
Affordability Challenges, GAO-24-107584 (Washington, D.C.: June 12, 
2024).
    \19\ GAO-24-107584; Coast Guard Acquisitions: Actions Needed to 
Address Longstanding Portfolio Management Challenges, GAO-18-454 
(Washington, D.C.: July 24, 2018); Coast Guard Acquisitions: Limited 
Strategic Planning Efforts Pose Risk for Future Acquisitions, GAO-17-
747T (Washington, D.C.: July 25, 2017); Coast Guard Recapitalization: 
Matching Needs and Resources Continue to Strain Acquisition Efforts, 
GAO-17-654T (Washington D.C.: June 7, 2017); and Coast Guard 
Acquisitions: Better Information on Performance and Funding Needed to 
Address Shortfalls, GAO-14-450 (Washington, D.C.: June 5, 2014).
    \20\ Since 2016, the Coast Guard has been required to develop a 20-
year long-term major acquisitions plan, to be submitted to 
congressional committees as part of a biennial report on the status of 
the Coast Guard's major acquisition programs. Coast Guard Authorization 
Act of 2015, Pub. L. No. 114-120, Sec. 204(e), 130 Stat. 27, 35-36 
(2016) (codified at 14 U.S.C. Sec. 5103(e), formerly numbered 
Sec. 2903, adding the long-term major acquisitions plan).

    Question 2. In what ways do the Coast Guard's workforce and 
retention challenges impact its counter-drug mission? Is the Coast 
Guard making progress towards meeting its recruiting and retention 
goals?
    Answer. In October 2024, Coast Guard officials reported the service 
exceeded its Fiscal Year 2024 recruitment goals for enlisted and 
reserve personnel. The number of enlisted recruits was 4,422 (with a 
goal of 4,200); reserve recruits totaled 737 (with a goal of 725). We 
have two additional ongoing audits addressing Coast Guard recruitment 
and retention efforts that are planned for issuance in Spring 2025.
    Our work has shown that staffing shortfalls have affected the Coast 
Guard's ability to meet its mission needs, including for drug 
interdiction. Since October 2023, the Coast Guard has reported a nearly 
10 percent shortfall in its enlisted personnel, due in part to having 
missed its recruiting targets in recent years with the exception of 
2024, prompting it to reduce operational activities. In response, the 
Coast Guard has implemented plans to take several cutters out of active 
service, including three Medium Endurance Cutters--a mainstay of its 
drug interdiction efforts. Moreover, it has closed boat stations around 
the country due to a lack of personnel needed to staff them.
    The service may miss key opportunities to tackle these issues 
unless it implements plans to address future workforce needs and sets 
goals for retaining personnel. Notably, we found the service does not 
have a complete picture of the workforce necessary to meet its mission 
demands or whether its existing mix of personnel is efficiently and 
effectively allocated across units. Specifically:

   In February 2020, we found that the Coast Guard had assessed 
        a small portion of its workforce needs through the requirements 
        determination process it began using in 2003.\21\ We 
        recommended that the Coast Guard develop a plan for how it will 
        meet its workforce assessment goals. As of September 2024, this 
        recommendation remained open, and Coast Guard's last update, 
        which was in November 2023, reported that it had assessed only 
        15 percent of its workforce.\22\
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    \21\ As of November 2023, the Coast Guard reported that it had 
completed workforce requirements determinations for 15 percent of its 
workforce. Without this information, it does not have a sound basis for 
prioritizing resources effectively.
    \22\ GAO, Coast Guard: Actions Needed to Evaluate the Effectiveness 
of Organizational Changes and Determine Workforce Needs, GAO-20-223 
(Washington, D.C.: Feb. 26, 2020).

   In April 2024, we reported on Coast Guard resource 
        shortfalls and incomplete workforce planning for various units 
        the service relies on to support its drug interdiction mission, 
        such as its aviation workforce and specialized forces. 
        Specifically, we reported that the Coast Guard had 9 percent of 
        its authorized military aviation workforce positions vacant, as 
        of July 2023. However, the Coast Guard had not assessed and 
        determined necessary staffing levels and skills for a large 
        portion of its aviation workforce, including for the workforce 
        at its 25 air stations and its major aircraft repair facility. 
        We recommended the Coast Guard assess and determine the 
        aviation workforce levels required to meet its mission 
        needs.\23\
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    \23\ GAO, Coast Guard: Aircraft Fleet and Aviation Workforce 
Assessments Needed, GAO-24-106374 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 9, 2024).

    Growth in the Coast Guard's mission demands, and resource 
challenges underscore the importance of ensuring the right number of 
people with the right set of skills conduct its missions. In doing so, 
the Coast Guard will be better positioned to manage risks and inform 
Congress of its workforce and associated resource needs.
Gas Carrier Vessels
    In January 2022, GAO released its report, entitled Assessment of a 
Risk-based Approach for Conducting Gas Carrier Exams Is Needed. That 
report noted that the Coast Guard has an overall shortage of 
approximately 400 marine inspectors.

    Question 1. What role would the Coast Guard's adoption of a risk-
based approach to conducting gas carrier and tank vessel compliance 
exams have in optimizing the Coast Guard's marine inspection workforce 
and addressing its marine inspection workforce challenges?
    Answer. The Coast Guard's adoption of a risk-based approach to 
conducting gas carrier and tank vessel exams could help the Coast Guard 
more efficiently and effectively use its marine inspection workforce. 
In January 2022, we reported that from 2016 through 2020 the Coast 
Guard staffed the key operational field units that conduct gas carrier 
exams at below 70 percent of their estimated need.\24\ The Coast Guard 
is required by statute to conduct gas carrier compliance exams 
annually,\25\ and officials told us during our review that they 
complete all required exams. However, representatives from six of nine 
industry stakeholders told us they sometimes experienced costly delays 
because marine inspectors were not available.
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    \24\ See GAO, Coast Guard: Enhancements Needed to Strengthen Marine 
Inspection Workforce Planning Efforts, GAO-22-104465 (Washington, D.C.: 
Jan. 12, 2022).
    \25\ See 46 U.S.C. Sec. 3714(a)(1).
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    The Coast Guard inspects other vessels based on risk but has not 
assessed the effects of adopting this approach for gas carriers' 
compliance exams. Doing so could free up resources to focus inspections 
on riskier vessels. We recommended the Coast Guard conduct an 
assessment of adopting a risk-based approach to conducting gas carrier 
compliance exams and take actions, as appropriate and feasible. In July 
2022, the Coast Guard contracted with the National Academy of Sciences 
to conduct such an assessment.
    In April 2024 the National Academy of Sciences published its study 
related to the Coast Guard's certificate of compliance program for 
liquefied gas carriers.\26\ The study reported that gas carrier 
arrivals are expected to grow by more than 50 percent during the next 
decade based on current and forecasted growth in liquefied natural gas 
and liquefied petroleum gas exports. It also reported that unless 
changes are made to the compliance program requirements or size, to its 
management, and to the deployment of the gas-qualified marine 
inspection workforce, the Coast Guard will have a difficult time 
meeting the demand for more exams efficiently.
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    \26\ See, National Academy of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 
2024. Reforming the Coast Guard's Certificate of Compliance Program for 
Liquefied Gas Carriers: Promoting Efficient Implementation and Safety 
Effectiveness. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. https://
doi.org/10.17226/27803.
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    The National Academy of Sciences study noted that certain statutory 
changes would be required in order for the Coast Guard to adopt a risk-
informed approach to its certificate of compliance program for 
liquefied natural gas carriers. It also identified several advantages 
and challenges related to the Coast Guard's adoption of such an 
approach, if authorized by statute. The study evaluated the advantages 
and challenges of several modifications to the compliance program and 
staffing allocation.
    Regarding adoption of a risk-based approach to conducting gas 
carrier and tank vessel compliance exams, if allowed by changes to 
statute, the study recognized that other high-hazard industries use 
risk-informed approaches for their regulatory and safety oversight 
programs, such as the nuclear industry. Advantages included giving the 
Coast Guard flexibility to focus its limited resources on the highest-
risk vessels, components, operations, and companies. Challenges for the 
Coast Guard included the collection, maintenance, and analysis of data 
needed to identify and assess risk factors. Additionally, the study 
noted that due to the marine industry's competitive nature, operator 
cooperation could be limited and prevent the Coast Guard from 
collecting the data needed to develop risk-based performance 
indicators.
    The staffing shortage for conducting gas carrier exams that we 
reported on is part of a larger workforce planning challenge for the 
Coast Guard. In January 2022, we reported on steps taken by the Coast 
Guard intended to address its marine inspection workforce needs, which 
could help reduce gas carrier compliance exam delays.\27\ For example, 
the Coast Guard added 65 new marine inspector positions between Fiscal 
Years 2020 and 2021 to help address a shortfall of over 400 marine 
inspectors. However, we also found that some of the Coast Guard 
initiatives were ongoing and faced implementation challenges. In that 
report, we made five recommendations to help improve the Coast Guard's 
workforce planning efforts, and the Coast Guard has implemented one of 
those recommendations.\28\
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    \27\ See GAO, Coast Guard: Enhancements Needed to Strengthen Marine 
Inspection Workforce Planning Efforts, GAO-22-104465 (Washington, D.C.: 
Jan. 12, 2022).
    \28\ In April 2023, the Coast Guard updated performance and 
training guidance that outlined responsibilities for individuals to 
submit recently acquired training or education into the individual's 
record prior to the first of July of each year. By taking this step, 
the Coast Guard will better ensure that it has the information needed 
to make annual staffing decisions for its marine inspection workforce 
and identify and address possible competency gaps.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    In your January 2022 report entitled Assessment of a Risk-based 
Approach for Conducting Gas Carrier Exams Is Needed, you stated that 
``GAO analysis of Coast Guard data shows that marine inspectors 
identified low instances of more serious deficiencies that pose a risk 
to the cargo, vessel, or crew during gas carrier compliance exams.'' 
You also noted that ``Coast Guard officials stated that gas carriers 
are generally well run.''

    Question 2. In light of GAO's analysis of this Coast Guard data, 
are gas carrier vessels a better candidate for a risk-based approach to 
examinations and inspections, as compared to non-gas carrier vessels of 
a similar size?
    Answer. We have not conducted analysis of Coast Guard data to allow 
for comparison of deficiencies by size of vessels. However, we did 
report in January 2022 that Coast Guard data from Fiscal Years 2016 
through 2020 showed that 29 percent (238 of 831) of examined gas 
carrier vessels participated in the Coast Guard's quality ship 
(Qualship 21) program as of November 2020. This program requires 
participating ships to be lower risk cargo ships.
    Our 2022 report on gas carrier exams noted that, according to Coast 
Guard officials, gas carriers were generally well run.\29\ The report 
also noted that Congress has taken legislative action to strengthen 
vessel safety since the early 1970s and that gas carriers are 
statutorily required to receive an annual compliance exam.\30\ We 
recommended that the Coast Guard conduct an assessment of adopting a 
risk-based approach for gas carrier compliance exams. The intent of 
this recommendation was to explore the appropriateness and feasibility 
of changing the frequency of exams.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    \29\ GAO, Coast Guard: Assessment of a Risk-Based Approach for 
Conducting Gas Carrier Exams Is Needed, GAO-22-105432 (Washington, 
D.C.: Jan. 12, 2022).
    \30\ Id. at 18, 18 n.39 (citing Ports and Waterways Safety Act of 
1972, Port and Tanker Safety Act of 1978, and 46 U.S.C. Sec. 3714).
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    In your January 2022 report entitled Assessment of a Risk-based 
Approach for Conducting Gas Carrier Exams Is Needed, you noted in 
figure 3 that approximately 77 percent of Gas Carrier Compliance Exams 
are completed by Coast Guard Sector Houston-Galveston and Coast Guard 
Sector Corpus Christi, Texas.

    Question 3. In what ways would the Coast Guard's adoption of a 
risk-based approach to gas carrier examinations relieve the 
disproportionately large marine inspection burden that is placed on 
Coast Guard units in Texas?
    Answer. The Coast Guard's adoption of a risk-based approach to gas 
carrier compliance exams could help it better manage marine inspections 
in Texas. For example, during our review, marine inspectors in Sector 
Houston-Galveston told us that, like the overall marine inspection 
workforce, there was an insufficient number of marine inspectors 
qualified to conduct gas carrier examinations. These officials also 
told us many gas carrier vessels are well run, and conducting gas 
carrier examinations based on risk could free up limited resources to 
inspect riskier oil, chemical, or other vessels. This change could make 
the marine inspections in the sector more efficient and effective.
    However, according to the 2024 National Academy of Sciences report 
discussed above, gas carrier exams represent a relatively small portion 
of the Coast Guard's total workload and responsibility. The report 
noted that in 2022, gas carrier exams accounted for less than 8 percent 
of all Port State Control exams completed by the Coast Guard.
    Additionally, in 2022, we reported that the staffing shortage that 
affects gas carrier exams is part of a larger workforce planning 
challenge for the Coast Guard. For example, we found that although the 
Coast Guard developed a tool to estimate the number and type of field 
personnel needed at specific sectors and subordinate field units, it 
collected limited data to forecast future workforce and industry trends 
that could affect the supply and demand for marine inspectors.
    We also found that there was no requirement for marine inspectors 
to input newly earned competency information in the Coast Guard's human 
resources database, which it uses to assess whether certain marine 
safety positions are staffed with personnel who have the needed skills. 
The Coast Guard requires that inspectors that perform gas carrier exams 
take extensive training and gain requisite experience before they can 
conduct exams.
    We recommended that the Coast Guard require military and civilian 
marine inspectors to update their competency information in the Coast 
Guard's human resources database. In 2023, the Coast Guard implemented 
this recommendation by updating its guidance to require individuals to 
submit recently acquired training or education into the individual's 
record prior to the first of July of each year. Our recommendation for 
the Coast Guard to collect additional data on the marine inspection 
workforce and maritime industry to forecast future workforce needs has 
not yet been implemented, but the Coast Guard is taking steps to 
address it.

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