[Congressional Record Volume 140, Number 107 (Friday, August 5, 1994)]
[Senate]
[Page S]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]


[Congressional Record: August 5, 1994]
From the Congressional Record Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]

 
                DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE APPROPRIATIONS ACT

  Mr. INOUYE. Mr. President I ask unanimous consent that the Senate 
proceed to the immediate consideration of H.R. 4650, the Department of 
Defense appropriations bill for fiscal year 1995.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The clerk will state the bill by title.
  The bill clerk read as follows:

       A bill (H.R. 4650) making appropriations for the Department 
     of Defense for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1995, and 
     for other purposes.

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection to the immediate 
consideration of the bill?
  There being no objection, the Senate proceeded to consider the 
bill which had been reported from the Committee on Appropriations, with 
amendments; as follows:

  (The parts of the bill intended to be stricken are shown in boldface 
brackets, and the parts of the bill intended to be inserted are shown 
in italic.)

                               H.R. 4650

       Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of 
     the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the 
     following sums are appropriated, out of any money in the 
     Treasury not otherwise appropriated, for the fiscal year 
     ending September 30, 1995, for military functions 
     administered by the Department of Defense, and for other 
     purposes, namely:

                                TITLE I

                           MILITARY PERSONNEL

                        Military Personnel, Army

       For pay, allowances, individual clothing, interest on 
     deposits, gratuities, permanent change of station travel 
     (including all expenses thereof for organizational 
     movements), and expenses of temporary duty travel between 
     permanent duty stations, for members of the Army on active 
     duty (except members of reserve components provided for 
     elsewhere), cadets, and aviation cadets; and for payments 
     pursuant to section 156 of Public Law 97-377, as amended (42 
     U.S.C. 402 note), to section 229(b) of the Social Security 
     Act (42 U.S.C. 429(b)), and to the Department of Defense 
     Military Retirement Fund; [$20,737,470,000] $20,629,770,000.

                        Military Personnel, Navy

       For pay, allowances, individual clothing, interest on 
     deposits, gratuities, permanent change of station travel 
     (including all expenses thereof for organizational 
     movements), and expenses of temporary duty travel between 
     permanent duty stations, for members of the Navy on active 
     duty (except members of the Reserve provided for elsewhere), 
     midshipmen, and aviation cadets; and for payments pursuant to 
     section 156 of Public Law 97-377, as amended (42 U.S.C. 402 
     note), to section 229(b) of the Social Security Act (42 
     U.S.C. 429(b)), and to the Department of Defense Military 
     Retirement Fund; [$17,692,537,000] $17,638,483,000.

                    Military Personnel, Marine Corps

       For pay, allowances, individual clothing, interest on 
     deposits, gratuities, permanent change of station travel 
     (including all expenses thereof for organizational 
     movements), and expenses of temporary duty travel between 
     permanent duty stations, for members of the Marine Corps on 
     active duty (except members of the Reserve provided for 
     elsewhere); and for payments pursuant to section 156 of 
     Public Law 97-377, as amended (42 U.S.C. 402 note), to 
     section 229(b) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 429(b)), 
     and to the Department of Defense Military Retirement Fund; 
     [$5,816,671,000] $5,806,471,000.

                     Military Personnel, Air Force

       For pay, allowances, individual clothing, interest on 
     deposits, gratuities, permanent change of station travel 
     (including all expenses thereof for organizational 
     movements), and expenses of temporary duty travel between 
     permanent duty stations, for members of the Air Force on 
     active duty (except members of reserve components provided 
     for elsewhere), cadets, and aviation cadets; and for payments 
     pursuant to section 156 of Public Law 97-377, as amended (42 
     U.S.C. 402 note), to section 229(b) of the Social Security 
     Act (42 U.S.C. 429(b)), and to the Department of Defense 
     Military Retirement Fund; [$17,311,379,000] $17,031,179,000.

                        Reserve Personnel, Army

       For pay, allowances, clothing, subsistence, gratuities, 
     travel, and related expenses for personnel of the Army 
     Reserve on active duty under sections 265, 3021, and 3038 of 
     title 10, United States Code, or while serving on active duty 
     under section 672(d) of title 10, United States Code, in 
     connection with performing duty specified in section 678(a) 
     of title 10, United States Code, or while undergoing reserve 
     training, or while performing drills or equivalent duty or 
     other duty, and for members of the Reserve Officers' Training 
     Corps, and expenses authorized by section 2131 of title 10, 
     United States Code; and for payments to the Department of 
     Defense Military Retirement Fund; [$2,183,620,000] 
     $2,178,620,000.

                        Reserve Personnel, Navy

       For pay, allowances, clothing, subsistence, gratuities, 
     travel, and related expenses for personnel of the Navy 
     Reserve on active duty under section 265 of title 10, United 
     States Code, or while serving on active duty under section 
     672(d) of title 10, United States Code, in connection with 
     performing duty specified in section 678(a) of title 10, 
     United States Code, or while undergoing reserve training, or 
     while performing drills or equivalent duty, and for members 
     of the Reserve Officers' Training Corps, and expenses 
     authorized by section 2131 of title 10, United States Code; 
     and for payments to the Department of Defense Military 
     Retirement Fund; [$1,398,609,000] $1,418,723,000.

                    Reserve Personnel, Marine Corps

       For pay, allowances, clothing, subsistence, gratuities, 
     travel, and related expenses for personnel of the Marine 
     Corps Reserve on active duty under section 265 of title 10, 
     United States Code, or while serving on active duty under 
     section 672(d) of title 10, United States Code, in connection 
     with performing duty specified in section 678(a) of title 10, 
     United States Code, or while undergoing reserve training, or 
     while performing drills or equivalent duty, and for members 
     of the Marine Corps platoon leaders class, and expenses 
     authorized by section 2131 of title 10, United States Code; 
     and for payments to the Department of Defense Military 
     Retirement Fund; [$354,048,000] $351,098,000.

                      Reserve Personnel, Air Force

       For pay, allowances, clothing, subsistence, gratuities, 
     travel, and related expenses for personnel of the Air Force 
     Reserve on active duty under sections 265, 8021, and 8038 of 
     title 10, United States Code, or while serving on active duty 
     under section 672(d) of title 10, United States Code, in 
     connection with performing duty specified in section 678(a) 
     of title 10, United States Code, or while undergoing reserve 
     training, or while performing drills or equivalent duty or 
     other duty, and for members of the Air Reserve Officers' 
     Training Corps, and expenses authorized by section 2131 of 
     title 10, United States Code; and for payments to the 
     Department of Defense Military Retirement Fund; 
     [$782,434,000] $774,834,000.

                     National Guard Personnel, Army

       For pay, allowances, clothing, subsistence, gratuities, 
     travel, and related expenses for personnel of the Army 
     National Guard while on duty under section 265, 3021, or 3496 
     of title 10 or section 708 of title 32, United States Code, 
     or while serving on duty under section 672(d) of title 10 or 
     section 502(f) of title 32, United States Code, in connection 
     with performing duty specified in section 678(a) of title 10, 
     United States Code, or while undergoing training, or while 
     performing drills or equivalent duty or other duty, and 
     expenses authorized by section 2131 of title 10, United 
     States Code; and for payments to the Department of Defense 
     Military Retirement Fund; [$3,378,705,000] $3,371,605,000.

                  National Guard Personnel, Air Force

       For pay, allowances, clothing, subsistence, gratuities, 
     travel, and related expenses for personnel of the Air 
     National Guard on duty under section 265, 8021, or 8496 of 
     title 10 or section 708 of title 32, United States Code, or 
     while serving on duty under section 672(d) of title 10 or 
     section 502(f) of title 32, United States Code, in connection 
     with performing duty specified in section 678(a) of title 10, 
     United States Code, or while undergoing training, or while 
     performing drills or equivalent duty or other duty, and 
     expenses authorized by section 2131 of title 10, United 
     States Code; and for payments to the Department of Defense 
     Military Retirement Fund; [$1,238,029,000] $1,244,729,000.

                                TITLE II

                       OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE

                    Operation and Maintenance, Army


                     (including transfer of funds)

       For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the 
     operation and maintenance of the Army, as authorized by law; 
     and not to exceed $14,437,000 can be used for emergencies and 
     extraordinary expenses, to be expended on the approval or 
     authority of the Secretary of the Army, and payments may be 
     made on his certificate of necessity for confidential 
     military purposes; [$17,836,504,000] $17,475,806,000 [, of 
     which $150,000,000 for real property maintenance shall be 
     made available for obligation until September 30, 1996] and, 
     in addition, $50,000,000 shall be derived by transfer from 
     the National Defense Stockpile Transaction Fund[: Provided, 
     That of the funds appropriated in this paragraph, not less 
     than $388,599,000 shall be made available only for 
     conventional ammunition care and maintenance: Provided 
     further, That of the funds appropriated in this paragraph, 
     $5,800,000 shall be available only for removal of Department 
     of Defense equipment from Pine Bluff Arsenal: Provided 
     further, That of the funds appropriated in this paragraph, 
     $473,763,000 shall not be obligated or expended until 
     authorized by law]: Provided, That of the funds appropriated 
     under this heading, not less than $5,000,000 shall be made 
     available only for payment to the DOD 50th Anniversary of 
     World War II Commemoration Appropriation.

                    Operation and Maintenance, Navy


                     (including transfer of funds)

       For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the 
     operation and maintenance of the Navy and the Marine Corps, 
     as authorized by law; and not to exceed $4,301,000 can be 
     used for emergencies and extraordinary expenses, to be 
     expended on the approval or authority of the Secretary of the 
     Navy, and payments may be made on his certificate of 
     necessity for confidential military purposes; 
     [$21,316,555,000] $21,275,770,000 [, of which $200,000,000 
     for real property maintenance shall be made available for 
     obligation until September 30, 1996] and, in addition, 
     $50,000,000 shall be derived by transfer from the National 
     Defense Stockpile Transaction Fund[: Provided, That of the 
     funds appropriated in this paragraph, $1,206,359,000 shall 
     not be obligated or expended until authorized by law]: 
     Provided, That of the funds appropriated under this heading, 
     not less than $2,436,700,000 shall be made available for 
     depot maintenance, repair and overhaul of United States Navy 
     ships prior to September 30, 1995.

                Operation and Maintenance, Marine Corps

       For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the 
     operation and maintenance of the Marine Corps, as authorized 
     by law; [$2,097,395,000] $1,968,965,000,[of which $66,000,000 
     for real property maintenance shall be made available for 
     obligation until September 30, 1996: Provided, That of the 
     funds appropriated in this paragraph, $100,300,000 shall not 
     be obligated or expended until authorized by law].

                  Operation and Maintenance, Air Force


                     (including transfer of funds)

       For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the 
     operation and maintenance of the Air Force, as authorized by 
     law; and not to exceed $8,762,000 can be used for emergencies 
     and extraordinary expenses, to be expended on the approval or 
     authority of the Secretary of the Air Force, and payments may 
     be made on his certificate of necessity for confidential 
     military purposes; [$18,913,050,000] $18,786,243,000[, of 
     which $84,000,000 for real property maintenance shall be made 
     available for obligation until September 30, 1996] and, in 
     addition, $50,000,000 shall be derived by transfer from the 
     National Defense Stockpile Transaction Fund[: Provided, That 
     of the funds appropriated in this paragraph, $179,592,000 
     shall not be obligated or expended until authorized by law].

                Operation and Maintenance, Defense-Wide


                     (including transfer of funds)

       For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the 
     operation and maintenance of activities and agencies of the 
     Department of Defense (other than the military departments), 
     as authorized by law; [$8,945,266,000] $9,986,654,000 and, in 
     addition, $100,000,000 shall be derived by transfer from the 
     National Defense Stockpile Transaction Fund, of which not to 
     exceed $25,000,000 may be available for the CINC initiative 
     fund account; and of which not to exceed $23,768,000 can be 
     used for emergencies and extraordinary expenses, to be 
     expended on the approval or authority of the Secretary of 
     Defense, and payments may be made on his certificate of 
     necessity for confidential military purposes: Provided, That 
     of the funds appropriated under this heading, $20,000,000 
     shall be made available only for the repair and maintenance 
     of federally owned education facilities located on military 
     installations.

                Operation and Maintenance, Army Reserve

       For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the 
     operation and maintenance, including training, organization, 
     and administration, of the Army Reserve; repair of facilities 
     and equipment; hire of passenger motor vehicles; travel and 
     transportation; care of the dead; recruiting; procurement of 
     services, supplies, and equipment; and communications; 
     [$1,240,109,000] $1,253,709,000.

                Operation and Maintenance, Navy Reserve

       For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the 
     operation and maintenance, including training, organization, 
     and administration, of the Navy Reserve; repair of facilities 
     and equipment; hire of passenger motor vehicles; travel and 
     transportation; care of the dead; recruiting; procurement of 
     services, supplies, and equipment; and communications; 
     [$834,119,000] $827,819,000[: Provided, That of the funds 
     appropriated in this paragraph, $6,300,000 shall not be 
     obligated or expended until authorized by law].

            Operation and Maintenance, Marine Corps Reserve

       For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the 
     operation and maintenance, including training, organization, 
     and administration, of the Marine Corps Reserve; repair of 
     facilities and equipment; hire of passenger motor vehicles; 
     travel and transportation; care of the dead; recruiting; 
     procurement of services, supplies, and equipment; and 
     communications; [$83,542,000] $80,562,000[: Provided, That of 
     the funds appropriated in this paragraph, $2,080,000 shall 
     not be obligated or expended until authorized by law].

              Operation and Maintenance, Air Force Reserve

       For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the 
     operation and maintenance, including training, organization, 
     and administration, of the Air Force Reserve; repair of 
     facilities and equipment; hire of passenger motor vehicles; 
     travel and transportation; care of the dead; recruiting; 
     procurement of services, supplies, and equipment; and 
     communications; [$1,486,805,000] $1,455,872,000[: Provided, 
     That of the funds appropriated in this paragraph $5,473,000 
     shall not be obligated or expended until authorized by law].

             Operation and Maintenance, Army National Guard

       For expenses of training, organizing, and administering the 
     Army National Guard, including medical and hospital treatment 
     and related expenses in non-Federal hospitals; maintenance, 
     operation, and repairs to structures and facilities; hire of 
     passenger motor vehicles; personnel services in the National 
     Guard Bureau; travel expenses (other than mileage), as 
     authorized by law for Army personnel on active duty, for Army 
     National Guard division, regimental, and battalion commanders 
     while inspecting units in compliance with National Guard 
     Bureau regulations when specifically authorized by the Chief, 
     National Guard Bureau; supplying and equipping the Army 
     National Guard as authorized by law; and expenses of repair, 
     modification, maintenance, and issue of supplies and 
     equipment (including aircraft); [$2,498,868,000] 
     $2,442,135,000[: Provided, That of the funds appropriated in 
     this paragraph, $10,000,000 shall be made available only for 
     a National Guard Outreach Program in the Los Angeles School 
     District: Provided further, That of the funds appropriated in 
     this paragraph, $50,253,000 shall not be obligated or 
     expended until authorized by law].

             Operation and Maintenance, Air National Guard

       For operation and maintenance of the Air National Guard, 
     including medical and hospital treatment and related expenses 
     in non-Federal hospitals; maintenance, operation, repair, and 
     other necessary expenses of facilities for the training and 
     administration of the Air National Guard, including repair of 
     facilities, maintenance, operation, and modification of 
     aircraft; transportation of things; hire of passenger motor 
     vehicles; supplies, materials, and equipment, as authorized 
     by law for the Air National Guard; and expenses incident to 
     the maintenance and use of supplies, materials, and 
     equipment, including such as may be furnished from stocks 
     under the control of agencies of the Department of Defense; 
     travel expenses (other than mileage) on the same basis as 
     authorized by law for Air National Guard personnel on active 
     Federal duty, for Air National Guard commanders while 
     inspecting units in compliance with National Guard Bureau 
     regulations when specifically authorized by the Chief, 
     National Guard Bureau; [$2,797,978,000] $2,780,178,000: 
     Provided, That of the funds appropriated under this heading, 
     [$1,500,000] $9,200,000 shall be made available only for the 
     operation of Air National Guard C-130 operational support 
     aircraft of the 159th Air National Guard Fighter Group, the 
     146th Airlift Wing, and the South Carolina Air National Guard 
     169th Fighter Group unit[: Provided further, That of the 
     funds appropriated in this paragraph, $17,800,000 shall not 
     be obligated or expended until authorized by law].

        National Board for the Promotion of Rifle Practice, Army

       For the necessary expenses and personnel services (other 
     than pay and non-travel-related allowances of members of the 
     Armed Forces of the United States, except for members of the 
     reserve components thereof called or ordered to active duty 
     to provide support for the national matches) in accordance 
     with law, for operation and maintenance of rifle ranges; the 
     instruction of citizens in marksmanship; the promotion of 
     rifle practice; the conduct of the national matches; the sale 
     of ammunition under the authority of title 10, United States 
     Code, sections 4308 and 4311; the travel of rifle teams, 
     military personnel, and individuals attending regional, 
     national, and international competitions; and the payment to 
     competitors at national matches under section 4312 of title 
     10, United States Code, of subsistence and travel allowances 
     under section 4313 of title 10, United States Code; not to 
     exceed $2,544,000.

                   Court of Military Appeals, Defense

       For salaries and expenses necessary for the United States 
     Court of Military Appeals; $6,126,000, of which not to exceed 
     $2,500 can be used for official representation purposes.

                   Environmental Restoration, Defense


                     (including transfer of funds)

       For the Department of Defense; [$1,880,200,000] 
     $2,034,075,000, to remain available until transferred: 
     Provided, That the Secretary of Defense shall, upon 
     determining that such funds are required for environmental 
     restoration, reduction and recycling of hazardous waste, 
     removal of unsafe buildings and debris of the Department of 
     Defense, or for similar purposes (including programs and 
     operations at sites formerly used by the Department of 
     Defense), transfer the funds made available by this 
     appropriation to other appropriations made available to the 
     Department of Defense as the Secretary may designate, to be 
     merged with and to be available for the same purposes and for 
     the same time period as the appropriations of funds to which 
     transferred: Provided further, That upon a determination that 
     all or part of the funds transferred from this appropriation 
     are not necessary for the purposes provided herein, such 
     amounts may be transferred back to this appropriation.

       [Support for International Sporting Competitions, Defense

       [For the account ``Support for International Sporting 
     Competitions, Defense''; $7,900,000, to be merged with and to 
     be available for the same purposes and the same time period 
     as that appropriation: Provided, That of the funds in that 
     appropriation not more than $1,500,000 may be used for the 
     1995 Special Olympics: Provided further, That of the funds in 
     that appropriation not more than $4,400,000 may be used for 
     the 1996 Paralympics: Provided further, That funds 
     appropriated in this paragraph shall not be obligated or 
     expended until authorized by law.]

                            Summer Olympics

       For logistical support and personnel services (other than 
     pay and non-travel-related allowances of members of the Armed 
     Forces of the United States, except for members of the 
     reserve components thereof called or ordered to active duty 
     to provide support for the 1996 Games of the XXVI Olympiad to 
     be held in Atlanta, Georgia) provided by any component of the 
     Department of Defense to the 1996 Games of the XXVI Olympiad; 
     $10,000,000.

                   1995 Special Olympics World Games

       For logistical support and personnel services (other than 
     pay and non-travel-related allowances of members of the Armed 
     Forces of the United States, except for members of the 
     reserve components thereof called or ordered to active duty 
     to provide support for the 1995 Special Olympics World Games 
     to be held in New Haven, Connecticut) provided by any 
     component of the Department of Defense to the 1995 Special 
     Olympics World Games; $3,000,000.

                        Humanitarian Assistance

       For transportation for humanitarian relief for the people 
     of Afghanistan, the Kurdish population and other minorities 
     of northern Iraq, and the people of sub-Saharan Africa, 
     acquisition and shipment of transportation assets to assist 
     in the distribution of such relief, and for transportation 
     and distribution of humanitarian relief supplies, and excess 
     non-lethal property; [$60,000,000] $71,900,000 of which 
     [$12,000,000] $10,000,000 shall be made available only for 
     activities to support the clearing of landmines for 
     humanitarian purposes.

                  Former Soviet Union Threat Reduction

       For assistance to the republics of the former Soviet Union, 
     including assistance provided by contract or by grants, for 
     facilitating the elimination and the safe and secure 
     transportation and storage of nuclear, chemical and other 
     weapons; for providing incentives for demilitarization; for 
     establishing programs to prevent the proliferation of 
     weapons, weapons components, and weapons-related technology 
     and expertise; for expansion of military-to-military 
     contacts; for supporting the conversion of military 
     technologies and capabilities into civilian activities; and 
     for retraining military personnel of the former Soviet Union; 
     $400,000,000 to remain available until expended: Provided, 
     That of the funds appropriated under this heading, 
     $10,000,000 shall be made available only for the continuing 
     study, assessment, and identification of nuclear waste 
     disposal by the former Soviet Union in the Arctic and North 
     Pacific regions.

                   Real Property Maintenance, Defense


                     (including transfer of funds)

       For the maintenance of real property of the Department of 
     Defense, in addition to amounts provided for this purpose 
     under other headings of this title of this Act, $500,000,000 
     to remain available for obligation until July 1, 1995: 
     Provided, That such funds shall be available only for 
     repairing property which has been defined by the Department 
     of Defense as part of a backlog of maintenance and repair 
     projects in the justification material accompanying the 
     President's budget request for fiscal year 1995: Provided 
     further, That such funds shall be allocated by the 
     Comptroller, Department of Defense for the projects 
     determined by the military components as the highest priority 
     for repair.

                               TITLE III

                              PROCUREMENT

                       Aircraft Procurement, Army

       For construction, procurement, production, modification, 
     and modernization of aircraft, equipment, including ordnance, 
     ground handling equipment, spare parts, and accessories 
     therefor; specialized equipment and training devices; 
     expansion of public and private plants, including the land 
     necessary therefor, for the foregoing purposes, and such 
     lands and interest therein, may be acquired, and construction 
     prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title; and 
     procurement and installation of equipment, appliances, and 
     machine tools in public and private plants; reserve plant and 
     Government and contractor-owned equipment layaway; and other 
     expenses necessary for the foregoing purposes; 
     [$1,264,198,000] $1,062,581,000, to remain available for 
     obligation until September 30, 1997: Provided, That the 
     Secretary of the Army will report to the House and Senate 
     Committees on Appropriations the doctrine, organization and 
     mission statement for the High Capacity Air Ambulance concept 
     not later than May 15, 1995.

                       Missile Procurement, Army

       For construction, procurement, production, modification, 
     and modernization of missiles, equipment, including ordnance, 
     ground handling equipment, spare parts, and accessories 
     therefor; specialized equipment and training devices; 
     expansion of public and private plants, including the land 
     necessary therefor, for the foregoing purposes, and such 
     lands and interests therein, may be acquired, and 
     construction prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title; 
     and procurement and installation of equipment, appliances, 
     and machine tools in public and private plants; reserve plant 
     and Government and contractor-owned equipment layaway; and 
     other expenses necessary for the foregoing purposes; 
     [$728,095,000] $707,895,000, to remain available for 
     obligation until September 30, 1997[: Provided, That of the 
     funds appropriated in this paragraph, $42,959,000 shall not 
     be obligated or expended until authorized by law].

        Procurement of Weapons and Tracked Combat Vehicles, Army

       For construction, procurement, production, and modification 
     of weapons and tracked combat vehicles, equipment, including 
     ordnance, spare parts, and accessories therefor; specialized 
     equipment and training devices; expansion of public and 
     private plants, including the land necessary therefor, for 
     the foregoing purposes, and such lands and interests therein, 
     may be acquired, and construction prosecuted thereon prior to 
     approval of title; and procurement and installation of 
     equipment, appliances, and machine tools in public and 
     private plants; reserve plant and Government and contractor-
     owned equipment layaway; and other expenses necessary for the 
     foregoing purposes; [$1,001,873,000] $1,129,514,000, to 
     remain available for obligation until September 30, 1997[: 
     Provided, That of the funds appropriated in this paragraph, 
     $58,987,000 shall not be obligated or expended until 
     authorized by law].

                    Procurement of Ammunition, Army

       For construction, procurement, production, and modification 
     of ammunition, and accessories therefor; specialized 
     equipment and training devices; expansion of public and 
     private plants, including ammunition facilities authorized by 
     section 2854, title 10, United States Code, and the land 
     necessary therefor, for the foregoing purposes, and such 
     lands and interests therein, may be acquired, and 
     construction prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title; 
     and procurement and installation of equipment, appliances, 
     and machine tools in public and private plants; reserve plant 
     and Government and contractor-owned equipment layaway; and 
     other expenses necessary for the foregoing purposes; 
     [$1,274,644,000] $877,761,000, to remain available for 
     obligation until September 30, 1997: Provided, That of the 
     amounts appropriated for the ARMS program in ``Procurement of 
     Ammunition, Army, 1993/1995'', $43,000,000 may be available 
     to fund subsidy costs of loan guarantees authorized to be 
     made under that program[: Provided further, That of the funds 
     appropriated in this paragraph, $419,761,000 shall not be 
     obligated or expended until authorized by law]: Provided 
     further, That notwithstanding any other provision of law, of 
     the amounts appropriated for the ARMS program in 
     ``Procurement of Ammunition, Army, 1993/1995'', up to 
     $2,500,000 shall be made available to the William Langer 
     Plant for capital investment, operations, and such other 
     expenditures as may be necessary to maintain the Plant as a 
     going concern while it is being excessed under the provisions 
     of the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act.

                        Other Procurement, Army

       For construction, procurement, production, and modification 
     of vehicles, including tactical, support, and nontracked 
     combat vehicles; communications and electronic equipment; 
     other support equipment; spare parts, ordnance, and 
     accessories therefor; specialized equipment and training 
     devices; expansion of public and private plants, including 
     the land necessary therefor, for the foregoing purposes, and 
     such lands and interests therein, may be acquired, and 
     construction prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title; 
     and procurement and installation of equipment, appliances, 
     and machine tools in public and private plants; reserve plant 
     and Government and contractor-owned equipment layaway; and 
     other expenses necessary for the foregoing purposes; 
     [$2,348,806,000] $2,646,048,000, to remain available for 
     obligation until September 30, 1997.

                       Aircraft Procurement, Navy

       For construction, procurement, production, modification, 
     and modernization of aircraft, equipment, including ordnance, 
     spare parts, and accessories therefor; specialized equipment; 
     expansion of public and private plants, including the land 
     necessary therefor, and such lands and interests therein, may 
     be acquired, and construction prosecuted thereon prior to 
     approval of title; and procurement and installation of 
     equipment, appliances, and machine tools in public and 
     private plants; reserve plant and Government and contractor-
     owned equipment layaway; [$4,820,442,000] $4,531,789,000, to 
     remain available for obligation until September 30, 1997[: 
     Provided, That of the funds appropriated in this paragraph, 
     $232,435,000 shall not be obligated or expended until 
     authorized by law].

                       Weapons Procurement, Navy

       For construction, procurement, production, modification, 
     and modernization of missiles, torpedoes, other weapons, and 
     related support equipment including spare parts, and 
     accessories therefor; expansion of public and private plants, 
     including the land necessary therefor, and such lands and 
     interests therein, may be acquired, and construction 
     prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title; and 
     procurement and installation of equipment, appliances, and 
     machine tools in public and private plants; reserve plant and 
     Government and contractor-owned equipment layaway; 
     [$1,969,336,000] $1,858,200,000, to remain available for 
     obligation until September 30, 1997[: Provided, That of the 
     funds appropriated in this paragraph, $70,458,000 shall not 
     be obligated or expended until authorized by law]: Provided, 
     That, in addition to the foregoing purposes, funds 
     appropriated under this heading shall be available to 
     liquidate deficiencies in appropriations provided under this 
     heading in prior Department of Defense appropriations Acts 
     without regard to any provision of law limiting or 
     restricting amounts which may be charged to currently 
     available appropriations with respect to funds provided in 
     prior appropriations Acts.

            Procurement of Ammunition, Navy and Marine Corps

       For construction, procurement, production, and modification 
     of ammunition, and accessories therefor; specialized 
     equipment and training devices; expansion of public and 
     private plants, including ammunition facilities authorized by 
     section 2854, title 10, United States Code, and the land 
     necessary therefor, for the foregoing purposes, and such 
     lands and interests therein, may be acquired, and 
     construction prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title; 
     and procurement and installation of equipment, appliances, 
     and machine tools in public and private plants; reserve plant 
     and Government and contractor-owned equipment layaway; and 
     other expenses necessary for the foregoing purposes; [as 
     follows:
       [For the Navy, $335,368,000;
       [For the Marine Corps, $158,442,000;
     [In all: $493,810,000] $432,815,000, to remain available for 
     obligation until September 30, 1997[: Provided, That of the 
     funds appropriated in this paragraph, $34,500,000 shall not 
     be obligated or expended until authorized by law].

                   Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy


                     (including transfer of funds)

       For expenses necessary for the construction, acquisition, 
     or conversion of vessels as authorized by law, including 
     armor and armament thereof, plant equipment, appliances, and 
     machine tools and installation thereof in public and private 
     plants; reserve plant and Government and contractor-owned 
     equipment layaway; procurement of critical, long leadtime 
     components and designs for vessels to be constructed or 
     converted in the future; and expansion of public and private 
     plants, including land necessary therefor, and such lands and 
     interests therein, may be acquired, and construction 
     prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title, as follows:
       Carrier replacement program, [$2,446,958,000] 
     $2,284,925,000;
       CVN Refuelings, $38,328,000;
       DDG-51 destroyer program, [$2,607,690,000] $2,660,690,000;
       LHD-1 amphibious assault ship program, $50,000,000: 
     Provided, That such funds shall not be obligated or expended 
     until such time that there are sufficient funds made 
     available for the LHD ship program to execute an existing 
     contract option or any extension thereto for LHD-7: Provided 
     further, That such funds shall not be transferred, 
     reprogrammed, or used for any purpose other than the LHD ship 
     program: Provided further, That such funds shall remain 
     available for obligation until expended: Provided further, 
     That the Secretary of the Navy shall extend this existing 
     contract option for the LHD-7 ship for not less than one year 
     and shall negotiate any change in option price made necessary 
     by such extension;
       [Nuclear submarine main steam condenser industrial base, 
     $1,000,000;
       [Cost growth on prior years' programs, $8,200,000;]
       For craft, outfitting, post delivery, [conversions,] and 
     first destination transportation, [$357,521,000] 
     $349,031,000;
       For escalation, $146,000,000;
     In all: [$5,471,369,000] $5,528,974,000, and, in addition, 
     $1,200,000,000 shall be derived by transfer from the National 
     Defense Sealift Fund for additional funding for the Carrier 
     replacement program, all to remain available for obligation 
     until September 30, 1999: Provided, That additional 
     obligations may be incurred after September 30, 1999, for 
     engineering services, tests, evaluations, and other such 
     budgeted work that must be performed in the final stage of 
     ship construction: Provided further, That none of the funds 
     herein provided for the construction or conversion of any 
     naval vessel to be constructed in shipyards in the United 
     States shall be expended in foreign facilities for the 
     construction of major components of such vessel: Provided 
     further, That none of the funds herein provided shall be used 
     for the construction of any naval vessel in foreign 
     shipyards.

                        Other Procurement, Navy

       For procurement, production, and modernization of support 
     equipment and materials not otherwise provided for, Navy 
     ordnance (except ordnance for new aircraft, new ships, and 
     ships authorized for conversion); the purchase of not to 
     exceed 262 passenger motor vehicles, of which 162 shall be 
     for replacement only; expansion of public and private plants, 
     including the land necessary therefor, and such lands and 
     interests therein, may be acquired, and construction 
     prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title; and 
     procurement and installation of equipment, appliances, and 
     machine tools in public and private plants; reserve plant and 
     Government and contractor-owned equipment layaway; 
     [$3,271,088,000] $3,309,698,000, to remain available for 
     obligation until September 30, 1997[: Provided, That of the 
     funds appropriated in this paragraph, $29,477,000 shall not 
     be obligated or expended until authorized by law].

                       Procurement, Marine Corps

       For expenses necessary for the procurement, manufacture, 
     and modification of missiles, armament, military equipment, 
     spare parts, and accessories therefor; plant equipment, 
     appliances, and machine tools, and installation thereof in 
     public and private plants; reserve plant and Government and 
     contractor-owned equipment layaway; vehicles for the Marine 
     Corps, including the purchase of not to exceed 103 passenger 
     motor vehicles for replacement only; and expansion of public 
     and private plants, including land necessary therefor, and 
     such lands and interests therein, may be acquired and 
     construction prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title; 
     [$452,178,000] $403,410,000, to remain available for 
     obligation until September 30, 1997[: Provided, That of the 
     funds appropriated in this paragraph, $58,768,000 shall not 
     be obligated or expended until authorized by law].

                    Aircraft Procurement, Air Force

       For construction, procurement, and modification of aircraft 
     and equipment, including armor and armament, specialized 
     ground handling equipment, and training devices, spare parts, 
     and accessories therefor; specialized equipment; expansion of 
     public and private plants, Government-owned equipment and 
     installation thereof in such plants, erection of structures, 
     and acquisition of land, for the foregoing purposes, and such 
     lands and interests therein, may be acquired, and 
     construction prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title; 
     reserve plant and Government and contractor-owned equipment 
     layaway; and other expenses necessary for the foregoing 
     purposes including rents and transportation of things; 
     [$6,182,199,000] $6,571,524,000, to remain available for 
     obligation until September 30, 1997[: Provided, That not less 
     than $103,700,000 of the funds appropriated in this paragraph 
     shall be used only to initiate procurement of non-
     developmental airlift aircraft no later than September 30, 
     1995: Provided further, That the Department of the Air Force 
     shall qualify a second source producer for the C-17 transport 
     aircraft engine and competitively contract for the 
     procurement of the C-17 engine no later than September 30, 
     1997: Provided further, That of the funds appropriated in 
     this paragraph, $80,432,000 shall not be obligated or 
     expended until authorized by law].

                     Missile Procurement, Air Force

       For construction, procurement, and modification of 
     missiles, spacecraft, rockets, and related equipment, 
     including spare parts and accessories therefor, ground 
     handling equipment, and training devices; expansion of public 
     and private plants, Government-owned equipment and 
     installation thereof in such plants, erection of structures, 
     and acquisition of land, for the foregoing purposes, and such 
     lands and interests therein, may be acquired, and 
     construction prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title; 
     reserve plant and Government and contractor-owned equipment 
     layaway; and other expenses necessary for the foregoing 
     purposes including rents and transportation of things; 
     [$2,758,285,000] $3,620,055,000, to remain available for 
     obligation until September 30, 1997.

                  Procurement of Ammunition, Air Force

       For construction, procurement, production, and modification 
     of ammunition, and accessories therefor; specialized 
     equipment and training devices; expansion of public and 
     private plants, including ammunition facilities authorized by 
     section 2854, title 10, United States Code, and the land 
     necessary therefor, for the foregoing purposes, and such 
     lands and interests therein, may be acquired, and 
     construction prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title; 
     and procurement and installation of equipment, appliances, 
     and machine tools in public and private plants; reserve plant 
     and Government and contractor-owned equipment layaway; and 
     other expenses necessary for the foregoing purposes; 
     [$278,681,000] $283,173,000, to remain available for 
     obligation until September 30, 1997[: Provided, That of the 
     funds appropriated in this paragraph, $18,963,000 shall not 
     be obligated or expended until authorized by law].

                      Other Procurement, Air Force

       For procurement and modification of equipment (including 
     ground guidance and electronic control equipment, and ground 
     electronic and communication equipment), and supplies, 
     materials, and spare parts therefor, not otherwise provided 
     for; the purchase of not to exceed 678 passenger motor 
     vehicles for replacement only; and expansion of public and 
     private plants, Government-owned equipment and installation 
     thereof in such plants, erection of structures, and 
     acquisition of land, for the foregoing purposes, and such 
     lands and interests therein, may be acquired, and 
     construction prosecuted thereon, prior to approval of title; 
     reserve plant and Government and contractor-owned equipment 
     layaway; [$6,886,613,000] $6,897,696,000, to remain available 
     for obligation until September 30, 1997[: Provided, That of 
     the funds appropriated in this paragraph, $31,190,000 shall 
     not be obligated or expended until authorized by law].

                       Procurement, Defense-Wide

       For expenses of activities and agencies of the Department 
     of Defense (other than the military departments) necessary 
     for procurement, production, and modification of equipment, 
     supplies, materials, and spare parts therefor, not otherwise 
     provided for; the purchase of not to exceed 437 passenger 
     motor vehicles, of which 431 shall be for replacement only; 
     expansion of public and private plants, equipment, and 
     installation thereof in such plants, erection of structures, 
     and acquisition of land for the foregoing purposes, and such 
     lands and interests therein, may be acquired, and 
     construction prosecuted thereon prior to approval of title; 
     reserve plant and Government and contractor-owned equipment 
     layaway; [$3,020,616,000] $1,894,916,000, to remain available 
     for obligation until September 30, 1997[: Provided, That of 
     the funds appropriated in this paragraph, $953,922,000 shall 
     not be obligated or expended until authorized by law].

                  National Guard and Reserve Equipment

       For procurement of aircraft, missiles, tracked combat 
     vehicles, ammunition, other weapons, and other procurement 
     for the reserve components of the Armed Forces; 
     [$796,200,000] $952,000,000, to remain available for 
     obligation until September 30, 1997[: Provided, That of the 
     funds appropriated in this paragraph, $9,000,000 shall not be 
     obligated or expended until authorized by law].

                                TITLE IV

               RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST AND EVALUATION

            Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Army

       For expenses necessary for basic and applied scientific 
     research, development, test and evaluation, including 
     maintenance, rehabilitation, lease, and operation of 
     facilities and equipment, as authorized by law; 
     [$5,456,498,000] $5,304,329,000, to remain available for 
     obligation until September 30, 1996[: Provided, That of the 
     funds appropriated in this paragraph, $35,695,000 shall not 
     be obligated or expended until authorized by law].

            Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Navy

       For expenses necessary for basic and applied scientific 
     research, development, test and evaluation, including 
     maintenance, rehabilitation, lease, and operation of 
     facilities and equipment, as authorized by law; 
     [$8,598,958,000] $8,790,331,000, to remain available for 
     obligation until September 30, 1996[: Provided, That for 
     continued research and development programs at the National 
     Center for Physical Acoustics, centering on ocean acoustics 
     as it applies to advanced antisubmarine warfare acoustics 
     issues with focus on ocean bottom acoustics, seismic 
     coupling, sea-surface and bottom scattering, oceanic ambient 
     noise, underwater sound propagation, bubble related ambient 
     noise, acoustically active surfaces, machinery noise, 
     propagation physics, solid state acoustics, 
     electrorheological fluids, transducer development, ultrasonic 
     sensors, and other such projects as may be agreed upon, 
     $1,000,000 shall be made available, as a grant, to the 
     Mississippi Resource Development Corporation, of which not to 
     exceed $250,000 of such sum may be used to provide such 
     special equipment as may be required for particular projects: 
     Provided further, That none of the funds appropriated in this 
     paragraph may be obligated or expended to develop or purchase 
     equipment for an Aegis destroyer variant (commonly known as 
     ``Flight IIA'') whose initial operating capability is 
     budgeted to be achieved prior to the initial operating 
     capability of the Ship Self-Defense program, nor to develop 
     sensor, processor, or display capabilities which duplicate in 
     any way those being developed in the Ship Self-Defense 
     program: Provided further, That funds appropriated in this 
     paragraph for development of E-2C aircraft upgrades may not 
     be obligated until the Under Secretary of Defense for 
     Acquisition submits a plan to the Committees on 
     Appropriations and Armed Services of each House of Congress 
     for development and deployment of a fully participating 
     cooperative engagement capability on E-2 aircraft to be 
     fielded concurrent with and no later than major computer 
     upgrades for the aircraft: Provided further, That funds 
     appropriated in this paragraph for development of the LPD-17 
     ship may not be obligated unless the baseline design of the 
     ship includes cooperative engagement capability and 
     sufficient own-ship self-defense capability against advanced 
     sea-skimming antiship cruise missiles in the baseline design 
     to achieve an estimated probability of survival from attack 
     by such missiles at a level no less than any other Navy 
     ship].

         Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Air Force

       For expenses necessary for basic and applied scientific 
     research, development, test and evaluation, including 
     maintenance, rehabilitation, lease, and operation of 
     facilities and equipment, as authorized by law; 
     [$10,728,533,000] $12,151,011,000, to remain available for 
     obligation until September 30, 1996[: Provided, That not less 
     than $12,000,000 of the funds appropriated in this paragraph 
     shall be made only for the Joint Seismic Program and Global 
     Seismic Network administered by the Incorporated Research 
     Institutions for Seismology: Provided further, That not less 
     than $20,000,000 of the funds appropriated in this paragraph 
     shall be made available only for the National Center for 
     Manufacturing Sciences (NCMS)]: Provided, That of the funds 
     appropriated in this paragraph, not less than $13,000,000 of 
     the funds in the Advanced Weapons program element shall be 
     made available only to continue the establishment and 
     operation of an image information processing center 
     supporting the Air Force Maui Space Surveillance Site (MSSS).

        Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Defense-Wide


                     (including transfer of funds)

       For expenses of activities and agencies of the Department 
     of Defense (other than the military departments), necessary 
     for basic and applied scientific research, development, test 
     and evaluation; advanced research projects as may be 
     designated and determined by the Secretary of Defense, 
     pursuant to law; maintenance, rehabilitation, lease, and 
     operation of facilities and equipment, as authorized by law; 
     [$9,419,955,000] $8,922,649,000, to remain available for 
     obligation until September 30, 1996[: Provided, That not less 
     than $120,000,000 of the funds appropriated in this paragraph 
     are available only for the Sea-Based Wide Area Defense 
     program: Provided further, That of the funds appropriated in 
     this paragraph, $361,743,000 shall not be obligated or 
     expended until authorized by law: Provided further, That 
     funds appropriated in this paragraph for development of the 
     TIER II Plus vehicle shall not be obligated until not less 
     than $50,000,000 has been obligated for the TIER III Minus 
     vehicle]: Provided, That $27,400,000 shall be available for 
     transfer to the Small Business Administration to cover the 
     costs (as defined in section 502(5) of the Federal Credit 
     Reform Act of 1990 (2 U.S.C. 661a(5))) of loan guarantees 
     issued pursuant to subsection (b)(3) of such section.

               Developmental Test and Evaluation, Defense

       For expenses, not otherwise provided for, of independent 
     activities of the Director, Test and Evaluation in the 
     direction and supervision of developmental test and 
     evaluation, including performance and joint developmental 
     testing and evaluation; and administrative expenses in 
     connection therewith; [$251,495,000] $224,353,000, to remain 
     available for obligation until September 30, 1996.

                Operational Test and Evaluation, Defense

       For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the 
     independent activities of the Director, Operational Test and 
     Evaluation in the direction and supervision of operational 
     test and evaluation, including initial operational test and 
     evaluation which is conducted prior to, and in support of, 
     production decisions; joint operational testing and 
     evaluation; and administrative expenses in connection 
     therewith; $12,501,000, to remain available for obligation 
     until September 30, 1996.

                                TITLE V

                     REVOLVING AND MANAGEMENT FUNDS

                    Defense Business Operations Fund

       For the Defense Business Operations Fund; [$1,090,438,000] 
     $789,400,000.

                     National Defense Sealift Fund


                    [(including transfer of funds)]

       For National Defense Sealift Fund programs, projects, and 
     activities, [$858,600,000] $828,600,000, to remain available 
     until expended[: Provided, That $25,000,000 shall be 
     transferred to the Secretary of Transportation for title XI 
     loan guarantees: Provided further, That none of the funds 
     provided in this paragraph shall be used to award a new 
     contract that provides for the acquisition of any of the 
     following major components unless such components are 
     manufactured in the United States: auxiliary equipment, 
     including pumps, for all shipboard services; propulsion 
     system components (that is; engines, reduction gears, and 
     propellers); shipboard cranes; and spreaders for shipboard 
     cranes: Provided further, That the exercise of an option in a 
     contract awarded through the obligation of previously 
     appropriated funds shall not be considered to be the award of 
     a new contract: Provided further, That the Secretary of the 
     military department responsible for such procurement may 
     waive this restriction on a case-by-case basis by certifying 
     in writing to the Committees on Appropriations of the House 
     of Representatives and the Senate, that adequate domestic 
     supplies are not available to meet Department of Defense 
     requirements on a timely basis and that such an acquisition 
     must be made in order to acquire capability for national 
     security purposes: Provided further, That funds appropriated 
     in this paragraph shall not be obligated or expended until 
     authorized by law]: Provided, That not to exceed $43,000,000 
     may be used for the purchase or construction of vessels for 
     the Ready Reserve Force component of the National Defense 
     Reserve Fleet, as established by section 11 of the Merchant 
     Ship Sales Act of 1946 (50 U.S.C. App. 1744).

                                TITLE VI

                  OTHER DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE PROGRAMS

                         Defense Health Program

       For expenses, not otherwise provided for, for medical and 
     health care programs of the Department of Defense, as 
     authorized by law; [$9,895,159,000] $9,808,239,000, of which 
     [$9,577,770,000] $9,499,350,000 shall be for Operation and 
     maintenance, of which [$317,389,000] $308,889,000, to remain 
     available for obligation until September 30, 1997, shall be 
     for Procurement: Provided, That the Department shall continue 
     to competitively contract during fiscal year 1995 for mail 
     service pharmacy for at least two multi-state regions in 
     addition to the ongoing solicitations for Florida, South 
     Carolina, Georgia, Delaware, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and 
     Hawaii, as well as each base closure area not supported by an 
     at-risk managed care plan; that such services shall be 
     procured independent of any other Department managed care 
     contracts; that one multi-state region shall include the 
     State of Kentucky and that one multi-state region shall 
     include the State of New Mexico[: Provided further, That of 
     the funds appropriated in this paragraph, $8,500,000 shall 
     not be obligated or expended until authorized by law]: 
     Provided further, That of the funds appropriated under this 
     heading, $5,000,000 shall be made available only for nursing 
     research: Provided further, That of the funds appropriated 
     under this heading, $14,500,000 shall be made available for 
     obtaining emergency communications services for members of 
     the Armed Forces and their families from the American 
     National Red Cross as authorized by law: Provided further, 
     That until the end of September 30, 1995, the Secretary of 
     the Air Force shall, through contract or otherwise, continue 
     to provide primary health care in the base hospital at 
     Plattsburgh Air Force Base, New York, to persons entitled to 
     health care in facilities of the uniformed services.

           Chemical Agents and Munitions Destruction, Defense

       For expenses, not otherwise provided for, necessary for the 
     destruction of the United States stockpile of lethal chemical 
     agents and munitions in accordance with the provisions of 
     section 1412 of the Department of Defense Authorization Act, 
     1986 (50 U.S.C. 1521), and for the destruction of other 
     chemical warfare materials that are not in the chemical 
     weapon stockpile, [$562,949,000] $590,149,000, of which 
     [$345,784,000] $363,584,000 shall be for Operation and 
     maintenance, [$196,465,000] $215,265,000 shall be for 
     Procurement to remain available until September 30, 1997, and 
     [$20,700,000] $11,300,000 shall be for Research, development, 
     test and evaluation to remain available until September 30, 
     1996.

         Drug Interdiction and Counter-Drug Activities, Defense


                     (including transfer of funds)

       For drug interdiction and counter-drug activities of the 
     Department of Defense, for transfer to appropriations 
     available to the Department of Defense for military personnel 
     of the reserve components serving under the provisions of 
     title 10 and title 32, United States Code; for Operation and 
     maintenance; for Procurement; and for Research, development, 
     test and evaluation; [$713,053,000] $700,100,000, of which 
     $10,000,000 is hereby transferred to the ``Military 
     Construction, Navy'' appropriation for construction of a 
     Relocatable Over-the-Horizon Radar in Puerto Rico: Provided, 
     That the funds appropriated by this paragraph shall be 
     available for obligation for the same time period and for the 
     same purpose as the appropriation to which transferred: 
     Provided further, That the transfer authority provided in 
     this paragraph is in addition to any transfer authority 
     contained elsewhere in this Act.

                    Office of the Inspector General

       For expenses and activities of the Office of the Inspector 
     General in carrying out the provisions of the Inspector 
     General Act of 1978, as amended; [$142,098,000] $140,872,000, 
     of which [$141,098,000] $139,872,000 shall be for Operation 
     and maintenance, of which not to exceed $400,000 is available 
     for emergencies and extraordinary expenses to be expended on 
     the approval or authority of the Inspector General, and 
     payments may be made on his certificate of necessity for 
     confidential military purposes; and of which $1,000,000, to 
     remain available until September 30, 1997, shall be for 
     Procurement.

                  [Defense Conversion and Reinvestment


                     [(including transfer of funds)

     [For necessary expenses for transition benefits for military 
     and civilian employees of the Department of Defense, and for 
     assistance to communities and industries affected by the 
     military drawdown; for transfer to appropriations available 
     to the Department of Defense for Operation and maintenance, 
     and for Research, development, test and evaluation; 
     $1,401,944,000: Provided, That the funds appropriated by this 
     paragraph shall be available for the same time period and for 
     the same purpose as the appropriation to which transferred: 
     Provided further, That the transfer authority provided in 
     this paragraph is in addition to any transfer authority 
     contained elsewhere in this Act: Provided further, That 
     $50,000,000 shall be available to cover the costs (as defined 
     in section 502(5) of the Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990 (2 
     U.S.C. 661a(5))) of loan guarantees issued pursuant to 
     subsection (b)(3) of such section: Provided further, That of 
     the funds appropriated in this paragraph, $30,744,000 shall 
     not be obligated or expended until authorized by law.]

                   [Korean Enhanced Readiness Account


                     [(including transfer of funds)

       [For necessary expenses to enhance the readiness of United 
     States Forces to perform the mission assigned to United 
     States Forces, Korea, $250,000,000: Provided, That such funds 
     may be transferred by the Secretary to appropriations made 
     available to the Department of Defense for Operation and 
     maintenance, Procurement, and Research, development, test and 
     evaluation: Provided further, That the funds appropriated by 
     this paragraph shall be available for the same time period 
     and for the same purpose as the appropriation to which 
     transferred: Provided further, That the transfer authority 
     provided in this paragraph is in addition to any transfer 
     authority contained elsewhere in this Act: Provided further, 
     That of the funds appropriated by this paragraph, not less 
     than $55,000,000 shall be transferred to ``Other procurement, 
     Army'', and not less than $15,000,000 shall be transferred to 
     ``Research, development, test and evaluation, Defense-Wide'': 
     Provided further, That no funds made available under this 
     paragraph shall be obligated until 15 days after submission 
     of a report by the Secretary to the House and Senate 
     Committees on Appropriations explaining and justifying the 
     proposed uses of such funds: Provided further, That funds 
     appropriated in this paragraph shall not be obligated or 
     expended until authorized by law.]

                               TITLE VII

                [NATIONAL FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE PROGRAM]

                            RELATED AGENCIES

   Central Intelligence Agency Retirement and Disability System Fund

       For payment to the Central Intelligence Agency Retirement 
     and Disability System Fund, to maintain proper funding level 
     for continuing the operation of the Central Intelligence 
     Agency Retirement and Disability System; $198,000,000.

                 National Security Education Trust Fund

       For the purposes of title VIII of Public Law 102-183, 
     $8,500,000 to be derived from the National Security Education 
     Trust Fund, to remain available until expended.

                      Community Management Account

       For necessary expenses of the Community Management Account; 
     [$83,084,000] $105,084,000: Provided, That of the funds 
     appropriated in this paragraph, no more than $2,000,000 may 
     be available for the purchase of information system upgrades 
     at the Department of State Bureau of Intelligence and 
     Research.

     Kaho'olawe Island Conveyance, Remediation, and Environmental 
                         Restoration Trust Fund

       For payment to the Kaho'olawe Island Conveyance, 
     Remediation, and Environmental Restoration Trust Fund, as 
     authorized by law, $50,000,000 to remain available until 
     expended.

                               TITLE VIII

                           GENERAL PROVISIONS

       Sec. 8001. No part of any appropriation contained in this 
     Act shall be used for publicity or propaganda purposes not 
     authorized by the Congress.
       Sec. 8002. During the current fiscal year, provisions of 
     law prohibiting the payment of compensation to, or employment 
     of, any person not a citizen of the United States shall not 
     apply to personnel of the Department of Defense: Provided, 
     That salary increases granted to direct and indirect hire 
     foreign national employees of the Department of Defense 
     funded by this Act shall not be at a rate in excess of the 
     percentage increase authorized by law for civilian employees 
     of the Department of Defense whose pay is computed under the 
     provisions of section 5332 of title 5, United States Code, or 
     at a rate in excess of the percentage increase provided by 
     the appropriate host nation to its own employees, whichever 
     is higher: Provided further, That this section shall not 
     apply to Department of Defense foreign service national 
     employees serving at United States diplomatic missions whose 
     pay is set by the Department of State under the Foreign 
     Service Act of 1980: Provided further, That the limitations 
     of this provision shall not apply to foreign national 
     employees of the Department of Defense in the Republic of 
     Turkey.
       Sec. 8003. No part of any appropriation contained in this 
     Act shall remain available for obligation beyond the current 
     fiscal year, unless expressly so provided herein.
       Sec. 8004. No more than 20 per centum of the appropriations 
     in this Act which are limited for obligation during the 
     current fiscal year shall be obligated during the last two 
     months of the fiscal year: Provided, That this section shall 
     not apply to obligations for support of active duty training 
     of reserve components or summer camp training of the Reserve 
     Officers' Training Corps, or the National Board for the 
     Promotion of Rifle Practice, Army.


                          (transfer of funds)

       Sec. 8005. Upon determination by the Secretary of Defense 
     that such action is necessary in the national interest, he 
     may, with the approval of the Office of Management and 
     Budget, transfer not to exceed $2,000,000,000 of working 
     capital funds of the Department of Defense or funds made 
     available in this Act to the Department of Defense for 
     military functions (except military construction) between 
     such appropriations or funds or any subdivision thereof, to 
     be merged with and to be available for the same purposes, and 
     for the same time period, as the appropriation or fund to 
     which transferred: Provided, That such authority to transfer 
     may not be used unless for higher priority items, based on 
     unforeseen military requirements, than those for which 
     originally appropriated and in no case where the item for 
     which funds are requested has been denied by Congress: 
     Provided further, That the Secretary of Defense shall notify 
     the Congress promptly of all transfers made pursuant to this 
     authority or any other authority in this Act.


                          (transfer of funds)

       Sec. 8006. During the current fiscal year, cash balances in 
     working capital funds of the Department of Defense 
     established pursuant to section 2208 of title 10, United 
     States Code, may be maintained in only such amounts as are 
     necessary at any time for cash disbursements to be made from 
     such funds: Provided, That transfers may be made between such 
     funds and the ``Foreign Currency Fluctuations, Defense'' and 
     ``Operation and Maintenance'' appropriation accounts in such 
     amounts as may be determined by the Secretary of Defense, 
     with the approval of the Office of Management and Budget, 
     except that such transfers may not be made unless the 
     Secretary of Defense has notified the Congress of the 
     proposed transfer. Except in amounts equal to the amounts 
     appropriated to working capital funds in this Act, no 
     obligations may be made against a working capital fund to 
     procure or increase the value of war reserve material 
     inventory, unless the Secretary of Defense has notified the 
     Congress prior to any such obligation.
       Sec. 8007. Using funds available by this Act or any other 
     Act, the Secretary of the Air Force, pursuant to a 
     determination under section 2690 of title 10, United States 
     Code, may implement cost-effective agreements for required 
     heating facility modernization in the Kaiserslautern Military 
     Community in the Federal Republic of Germany: Provided, That 
     in the City of Kaiserslautern such agreements will include 
     the use of United States anthracite as the base load energy 
     for municipal district heat to the United States Defense 
     installations: Provided further, That at Landstuhl Army 
     Regional Medical Center and Ramstein Air Base, furnished heat 
     may be obtained from private, regional or municipal services, 
     if provisions are included for the consideration of United 
     States coal as an energy source.
       Sec. 8008. Funds appropriated by this Act may not be used 
     to initiate a special access program without prior 
     notification 30 calendar days in session in advance to the 
     Committees on Appropriations and Armed Services of the Senate 
     and House of Representatives.
       Sec. 8009. None of the funds contained in this Act 
     available for the Civilian Health and Medical Program of the 
     Uniformed Services shall be available for payments to 
     physicians and other authorized individual health care 
     providers in excess of the amounts allowed in fiscal year 
     1994 for similar services, except that: (a) for services for 
     which the Secretary of Defense determines an increase is 
     justified by economic circumstances, the allowable amounts 
     may be increased in accordance with appropriate economic 
     index data similar to that used pursuant to title XVIII of 
     the Social Security Act; and (b) for services the Secretary 
     determines are overpriced based on allowable payments under 
     title XVIII of the Social Security Act, the allowable amounts 
     shall be reduced by not more than 15 percent (except that the 
     reduction may be waived if the Secretary determines that it 
     would impair adequate access to health care services for 
     beneficiaries). The Secretary shall solicit public comment 
     prior to promulgating regulations to implement this section. 
     Such regulations shall include a limitation, similar to that 
     used under title XVIII of the Social Security Act, on the 
     extent to which a provider may bill a beneficiary an actual 
     charge in excess of the allowable amount.
       Sec. 8010. None of the funds provided in this Act shall be 
     available to initiate (1) a multiyear contract that employs 
     economic order quantity procurement in excess of $20,000,000 
     in any one year of the contract or that includes an unfunded 
     contingent liability in excess of $20,000,000, or (2) a 
     contract for advance procurement leading to a multiyear 
     contract that employs economic order quantity procurement in 
     excess of $20,000,000 in any one year, unless the Committees 
     on Appropriations and Armed Services of the Senate and House 
     of Representatives have been notified at least thirty days in 
     advance of the proposed contract award: Provided, That no 
     part of any appropriation contained in this Act shall be 
     available to initiate a multiyear contract for which the 
     economic order quantity advance procurement is not funded at 
     least to the limits of the Government's liability: Provided 
     further, That no part of any appropriation contained in this 
     Act shall be available to initiate multiyear procurement 
     contracts for any systems or component thereof if the value 
     of the multiyear contract would exceed $500,000,000 unless 
     specifically provided in this Act: Provided further, That no 
     multiyear procurement contract can be terminated without 10-
     day prior notification to the Committees on Appropriations 
     and Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the 
     Senate: Provided further, That the execution of multiyear 
     authority shall require the use of a present value analysis 
     to determine lowest cost compared to an annual procurement.
       Sec. 8011. Within the funds appropriated for the operation 
     and maintenance of the Armed Forces, funds are hereby 
     appropriated pursuant to section 401 of title 10, United 
     States Code, for humanitarian and civic assistance costs 
     under chapter 20 of title 10, United States Code. Such funds 
     may also be obligated for humanitarian and civic assistance 
     costs incidental to authorized operations and pursuant to 
     authority granted in section 401 of chapter 20 of title 10, 
     United States Code, and these obligations shall be reported 
     to Congress on September 30 of each year: Provided, That 
     funds available for operation and maintenance shall be 
     available for providing humanitarian and similar assistance 
     by using Civic Action Teams in the Trust Territories of the 
     Pacific Islands and freely associated states of Micronesia, 
     pursuant to the Compact of Free Association as authorized by 
     Public Law 99-239: Provided further, That upon a 
     determination by the Secretary of the Army that such action 
     is beneficial for graduate medical education programs 
     conducted at Army medical facilities located in Hawaii, the 
     Secretary of the Army may authorize the provision of medical 
     services at such facilities and transportation to such 
     facilities, on a nonreimbursable basis, for civilian patients 
     from American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana 
     Islands, the Marshall Islands, the Federated States of 
     Micronesia, Palau, and Guam.
       [Sec. 8012. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, 
     governments of Indian tribes shall be treated as State and 
     local governments for the purposes of disposition of real 
     property recommended for closure in the report of the Defense 
     Secretary's Commission on Base Realignments and Closures, 
     December 1988, the report to the President from the Defense 
     Base Closure and Realignment Commission, July 1991, and 
     Public Law 100-526.]
       Sec. 8012. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a 
     qualified Indian Tribal corporation or Alaska Native 
     Corporation furnishing the product of a responsible small 
     business concern shall not be denied the opportunity to 
     compete for and be awarded a procurement contract pursuant to 
     section 2323 of title 10, United States Code, solely because 
     the Indian Tribal corporation or Alaska Native Corporation is 
     not the actual manufacturer or processor of the product to be 
     supplied under the contract.
       [Sec. 8013. (a) The provisions of section 115(a)(4) of 
     title 10, United States Code, shall not apply with respect to 
     fiscal year 1995 or with respect to the appropriation of 
     funds for that year.
       [(b) During fiscal year 1995, the civilian personnel of the 
     Department of Defense may not be managed on the basis of any 
     end-strength, and the management of such personnel during 
     that fiscal year shall not be subject to any constraint or 
     limitation (known as an end-strength) on the number of such 
     personnel who may be employed on the last day of such fiscal 
     year.
       [(c) The fiscal year 1996 budget request for the Department 
     of Defense as well as all justification material and other 
     documentation supporting the fiscal year 1996 Department of 
     Defense budget request shall be prepared and submitted to the 
     Congress as if subsections (a) and (b) of this provision were 
     effective with regard to fiscal year 1996.]
       Sec. 8013. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, none 
     of the funds made available by this Act shall be used by the 
     Department of Defense to exceed, outside the fifty United 
     States, its territories, and the District of Columbia, 
     125,000 civilian workyears: Provided, That workyears shall be 
     applied as defined in the Federal Personnel Manual: Provided 
     further, That workyears expended in dependent student hiring 
     programs for disadvantaged youths shall not be included in 
     this workyear limitation.
       Sec. 8014. None of the funds made available by this Act 
     shall be used in any way, directly or indirectly, to 
     influence congressional action on any legislation or 
     appropriation matters pending before the Congress.
       Sec. 8015. None of the funds appropriated by this Act shall 
     be obligated for the pay of any individual who is initially 
     employed after the date of enactment of this Act as a 
     technician in the administration and training of the Army 
     Reserve and the maintenance and repair of supplies issued to 
     the Army Reserve unless such individual is also a military 
     member of the Army Reserve troop program unit that he or she 
     is employed to support. Those technicians employed by the 
     Army Reserve in areas other than Army Reserve troop program 
     units need only be members of the Selected Reserve.
       Sec. 8016. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the 
     Secretaries of the Army and Air Force may authorize the 
     retention in an active status until age sixty of any person 
     who would otherwise be removed from an active status and who 
     is employed as a National Guard or Reserve technician in a 
     position in which active status in a reserve component of the 
     Army or Air Force is required as a condition of that 
     employment.
       Sec. 8017. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, 
     during the current fiscal year [and hereafter], proceeds from 
     the investment of the Fisher House Investment Trust Fund will 
     be used to support the operation and maintenance of Fisher 
     Houses associated with Army medical treatment facilities.
       Sec. 8018. (a) None of the funds appropriated by this Act 
     shall be used to make contributions to the Department of 
     Defense Education Benefits Fund pursuant to section 2006(g) 
     of title 10, United States Code, representing the normal cost 
     for future benefits under section 1415(c) of title 38, United 
     States Code, for any member of the armed services who, on or 
     after the date of enactment of this Act--
       (1) enlists in the armed services for a period of active 
     duty of less than three years; or
       (2) receives an enlistment bonus under section 308a or 308f 
     of title 37, United States Code,

     nor shall any amounts representing the normal cost of such 
     future benefits be transferred from the Fund by the Secretary 
     of the Treasury to the Secretary of Veterans Affairs pursuant 
     to section 2006(d) of title 10, United States Code; nor shall 
     the Secretary of Veterans Affairs pay such benefits to any 
     such member: Provided, That, in the case of a member covered 
     by clause (1), these limitations shall not apply to members 
     in combat arms skills or to members who enlist in the armed 
     services on or after July 1, 1989, under a program continued 
     or established by the Secretary of Defense in fiscal year 
     1991 to test the cost-effective use of special recruiting 
     incentives involving not more than nineteen noncombat arms 
     skills approved in advance by the Secretary of Defense: 
     Provided further, That this subsection applies only to active 
     components of the Army.
       (b) None of the funds appropriated by this Act shall be 
     available for the basic pay and allowances of any member of 
     the Army participating as a full-time student and receiving 
     benefits paid by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs from the 
     Department of Defense Education Benefits Fund when time spent 
     as a full-time student is credited toward completion of a 
     service commitment: Provided, That this subsection shall not 
     apply to those members who have reenlisted with this option 
     prior to October 1, 1987: Provided further, That this 
     subsection applies only to active components of the Army.
       Sec. 8019. Funds appropriated in this Act shall be 
     available for the payment of not more than 75 percent of the 
     charges of a postsecondary educational institution for the 
     tuition or expenses of an officer in the Ready Reserve of the 
     Army National Guard or Army Reserve for education or training 
     during his off-duty periods, except that no part of the 
     charges may be paid unless the officer agrees to remain a 
     member of the Ready Reserve for at least four years after 
     completion of such training or education.
       Sec. 8020. None of the funds appropriated by this Act shall 
     be available to convert to contractor performance an activity 
     or function of the Department of Defense that, on or after 
     the date of enactment of this Act, is performed by more than 
     ten Department of Defense civilian employees until a most 
     efficient and cost-effective organization analysis is 
     completed on such activity or function and certification of 
     the analysis is made to the Committees on Appropriations of 
     the House of Representatives and the Senate: Provided, That 
     this section shall not apply to a commercial or industrial 
     type function of the Department of Defense that: (1) is 
     included on the procurement list established pursuant to 
     section 2 of the Act of June 25, 1938 (41 U.S.C. 47), 
     popularly referred to as the Javits-Wagner-O'Day Act; (2) is 
     planned to be converted to performance by a qualified 
     nonprofit agency for the blind or by a qualified nonprofit 
     agency for other severely handicapped individuals in 
     accordance with that Act; or (3) is planned to be converted 
     to performance by a qualified firm under 51 percent Native 
     American ownership.
       [Sec. 8021. None of the funds made available by this Act 
     may be obligated for the acquisition of major automated 
     information systems which have not successfully completed 
     oversight reviews required by Department of Defense 
     regulations: Provided, That the automated information systems 
     oversight review board will be independent of any other 
     Department review function and chaired by the Assistant 
     Secretary of Defense for Command, Control, Communications and 
     Intelligence: Provided further, That except for those 
     programs to modernize and develop migration and standard 
     automated information systems that have been certified by the 
     Department's senior information resource management (IRM) 
     official as being fully compliant with the Department's 
     information management initiative as defined in Defense 
     Department Directive 8000.1, no funds may be expended for 
     modernization or development of any automated information 
     system (AIS) by the military departments, services, defense 
     agencies, Joint Staff or Military Commands in excess of 
     $2,000,000 unless the senior official of the Office of the 
     Secretary of Defense with primary responsibility for the 
     functions being supported or to be supported certifies to the 
     Assistant Secretary of Defense for Command, Control, 
     Communications and Intelligence that the functional 
     requirement(s) is valid and that the system modernization or 
     development has no unnecessary duplication of other available 
     or planned AISs: Provided further, That all new Department of 
     Defense procurements shall separately identify software costs 
     in the work breakdown structure defined by MIL-STD-881 in 
     those instances where software is considered to be a major 
     category of cost.]
       Sec. 8021. Funds appropriated in title III of this Act for 
     the Department of Defense Pilot Mentor-Protege Program may be 
     transferred to any other appropriation contained in this Act 
     solely for the purpose of implementing a Mentor-Protege 
     Program developmental assistance agreement pursuant to 
     section 831 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
     Fiscal Year 1991 (Public Law 101-510; 10 U.S.C. 2301 note), 
     as amended, under the authority of this provision or any 
     other transfer authority contained in this Act.
       Sec. 8022. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the 
     Secretary of the Navy may use funds appropriated to charter 
     ships to be used as auxiliary minesweepers providing that the 
     owner agrees that these ships may be activated as Navy 
     Reserve ships with Navy Reserve crews used in training 
     exercises conducted in accordance with law and policies 
     governing Naval Reserve forces: Provided, That none of the 
     funds appropriated or made available in this Act may be used 
     to inactivate, disestablish, or discontinue the Navy's Craft 
     of Opportunity Program.
       Sec. 8023. [Funds appropriated or made available in this 
     Act shall be obligated and expended to continue to fully 
     utilize the facilities at the United States Army Engineer's 
     Waterways Experiment Station, including the continued 
     availability of the supercomputer capability: Provided, That 
     none] None of the funds in this Act may be used to purchase 
     any supercomputer which is not manufactured in the United 
     States, unless the Secretary of Defense certifies to the 
     Armed Services and Appropriations Committees of Congress that 
     such an acquisition must be made in order to acquire 
     capability for national security purposes that is not 
     available from United States manufacturers.
       Sec. 8024. For the purposes of the Balanced Budget and 
     Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 (Public Law 99-177) as 
     amended by the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control 
     Reaffirmation Act of 1987 (Public Law 100-119) and by the 
     Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (Public Law 101-508), the term 
     program, project, and activity for appropriations contained 
     in this Act shall be defined as the most specific level of 
     budget items identified in the Department of Defense 
     Appropriations Act, 1995, the accompanying House and Senate 
     Committee reports, the conference report and accompanying 
     joint explanatory statement of the managers of the Committee 
     of Conference, the related classified annexes and reports, 
     and the P-1 and R-1 budget justification documents as 
     subsequently modified by Congressional action: Provided, That 
     the following exception to the above definition shall apply:
       For the Military Personnel and the Operation and 
     Maintenance accounts, the term ``program, project, and 
     activity'' is defined as the appropriations accounts 
     contained in the Department of Defense Appropriations Act: 
     Provided further, That at the time the President submits his 
     budget for fiscal year 1996, the Department of Defense shall 
     transmit to the Committees on Appropriations and the 
     Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of 
     Representatives a budget justification document to be known 
     as the ``O-1'' which shall identify, at the budget activity, 
     activity group, and subactivity group level, the amounts 
     requested by the President to be appropriated to the 
     Department of Defense for operation and maintenance in any 
     budget request, or amended budget request, for fiscal year 
     1996.
       [Sec. 8025. Of the funds appropriated to the Army, 
     $223,736,000 shall be available only for the Reserve 
     Component Automation System (RCAS): Provided, That none of 
     these funds can be expended--
       [(1) except as approved by the Chief of the National Guard 
     Bureau;
       [(2) unless RCAS resource management functions are 
     performed by the National Guard Bureau;
       [(3) to pay the salary of an RCAS program manager who has 
     not been selected and approved by the Chief of the National 
     Guard Bureau and chartered by the Chief of the National Guard 
     Bureau and the Secretary of the Army;
       [(4) unless the Program Manager (PM) charter makes the PM 
     accountable to the Chief of the National Guard Bureau and 
     fully defines his authority, responsibility, reporting 
     channels and organizational structure;
       [(5) to pay the salaries of individuals assigned to the 
     RCAS program management office unless such organization is 
     comprised of personnel chosen jointly by the Chiefs of the 
     National Guard Bureau and the Army Reserve;
       [(6) to pay contracted costs for the acquisition of RCAS 
     unless RCAS is an integrated system consisting of software, 
     hardware, and communications equipment and unless such 
     contract continues to preclude the use of Government 
     furnished equipment, operating systems, and executive 
     applications software; and
       [(7) unless RCAS performs its own classified information 
     processing:

     [Provided further, That notwithstanding any other provision 
     of law, none of the funds appropriated shall be available for 
     procurement of computers for the Army Reserve Component which 
     are used to network or expand the capabilities of existing or 
     future information systems or duplicate functions to be 
     provided under the RCAS contract unless the procurement meets 
     the following criteria: (A) at sites scheduled to receive 
     RCAS equipment prior to September 30, 1995, RCAS ADP 
     equipment may be procured and only in the numbers and types 
     allocated by the RCAS program to each site; and at sites 
     scheduled to receive RCAS equipment after September 30, 1995, 
     RCAS ADP equipment or ADP equipment from a list of RCAS 
     compatible equipment approved by the Chief of the National 
     Guard Bureau or his designee, may be procured and only in the 
     numbers and types allocated by the RCAS program to each site; 
     (B) the requesting organizational element has insufficient 
     ADP equipment to perform administrative functions but not to 
     exceed the number of work stations determined by the RCAS 
     program for that site; (C) replacement equipment will not 
     exceed the minimum required to maintain the reliability of 
     existing capabilities; (D) replacement will be justified on 
     the basis of cost and feasibility of repairs and maintenance 
     of present ADP equipment as compared to the cost of 
     replacement; and (E) the procurement under this policy must 
     be approved by the Chief of the National Guard Bureau or his 
     designee, provided that the procurement is a one for one 
     replacement action of existing equipment.]
       Sec. 8025. Of the funds made available by this Act in title 
     III, Procurement, $8,000,000, drawn pro rata from each 
     appropriations account in title III, shall be available for 
     incentive payments authorized by section 504 of the Indian 
     Financing Act of 1974, 25 U.S.C. 1544. These payments shall 
     be available only to contractors which have submitted 
     subcontracting plans pursuant to 15 U.S.C. 637(d), and 
     according to regulations which shall be promulgated by the 
     Secretary of Defense within 90 days of the passage of this 
     Act.
       [Sec. 8026. None of the funds in this Act may be available 
     for the purchase by the Department of Defense (and its 
     departments and agencies) of welded shipboard anchor and 
     mooring chain 4 inches in diameter and under unless the 
     anchor and mooring chain are manufactured in the United 
     States from components which are substantially manufactured 
     in the United States: Provided, That for the purpose of this 
     section manufactured will include cutting, heat treating, 
     quality control, testing of chain and welding (including the 
     forging and shot blasting process): Provided further, That 
     for the purpose of this section substantially all of the 
     components of anchor and mooring chain shall be considered to 
     be produced or manufactured in the United States if the 
     aggregate cost of the components produced or manufactured in 
     the United States exceeds the aggregate cost of the 
     components produced or manufactured outside the United 
     States: Provided further, That when adequate domestic 
     supplies are not available to meet Department of Defense 
     requirements on a timely basis, the Secretary of the service 
     responsible for the procurement may waive this restriction on 
     a case-by-case basis by certifying in writing to the 
     Committees on Appropriations that such an acquisition must be 
     made in order to acquire capability for national security 
     purposes.]
       Sec. 8026. During the current fiscal year, none of the 
     funds available to the Department of Defense may be used to 
     procure or acquire (1) defensive handguns or defensive 
     handgun ammunition unless such handguns or handgun ammunition 
     are the M9 9mm Department of Defense standard handgun or 
     ammunition for such handguns, or (2) offensive handguns and 
     ammunition except for the Special Operations Forces: 
     Provided, That the foregoing shall not apply to handguns for 
     marksmanship competitions.


                          (transfer of funds)

       Sec. 8027. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the 
     Department of Defense may transfer prior year, unobligated 
     balances and funds appropriated in this Act to the operation 
     and maintenance appropriations for the purpose of providing 
     military technician and Department of Defense medical 
     personnel pay and medical programs (including CHAMPUS) the 
     same exemption from sequestration set forth in the Balanced 
     Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 (Public Law 
     99-177) as amended by the Balanced Budget and Emergency 
     Deficit Control Reaffirmation Act of 1987 (Public Law 100-
     119) and by the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (Public Law 
     101-508) as that granted the other military personnel 
     accounts: Provided, That any transfer made pursuant to any 
     use of the authority provided by this provision shall be 
     limited so that the amounts reprogrammed to the operation and 
     maintenance appropriations do not exceed the amounts 
     sequestered under the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit 
     Control Act of 1985 (Public Law 99-177) as amended by the 
     Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Reaffirmation 
     Act of 1987 (Public Law 100-119) and by the Budget 
     Enforcement Act of 1990 (Public Law 101-508): Provided 
     further, That the authority to make transfers pursuant to 
     this section is in addition to the authority to make 
     transfers under other provisions of this Act: Provided 
     further, That the Secretary of Defense may proceed with such 
     transfer after notifying the Appropriations Committees of the 
     House of Representatives and the Senate twenty calendar days 
     in session before any such transfer of funds under this 
     provision.
       Sec. 8028. None of the funds available to the Department of 
     the Navy may be used to enter into any contract for the 
     overhaul, repair, or maintenance of any naval vessel 
     homeported on the West Coast of the United States which 
     includes charges for interport differential as an evaluation 
     factor for award.
       Sec. 8029. None of the funds appropriated by this Act 
     available for the Civilian Health and Medical Program of the 
     Uniformed Services (CHAMPUS) shall be available for the 
     reimbursement of any health care provider for inpatient 
     mental health service for care received when a patient is 
     referred to a provider of inpatient mental health care or 
     residential treatment care by a medical or health care 
     professional having an economic interest in the facility to 
     which the patient is referred: Provided, That this limitation 
     does not apply in the case of inpatient mental health 
     services provided under the program for the handicapped under 
     subsection (d) of section 1079 of title 10, United States 
     Code, provided as partial hospital care, or provided pursuant 
     to a waiver authorized by the Secretary of Defense because of 
     medical or psychological circumstances of the patient that 
     are confirmed by a health professional who is not a Federal 
     employee after a review, pursuant to rules prescribed by the 
     Secretary, which takes into account the appropriate level of 
     care for the patient, the intensity of services required by 
     the patient, and the availability of that care.
       [Sec. 8030. Operational control of the Naval Reserve 
     Personnel Center, including its functions and 
     responsibilities, shall be under the command and control of 
     the Commander, Naval Reserve Command: Provided, That 
     notwithstanding any other provision of law, the one-time 
     costs, including the procurement or lease of new or 
     reutilized automatic data processing investment equipment, 
     peripheral equipment and related software, of the 1993 Report 
     to the President of the Defense Base Closure and Realignment 
     Commission or current DOD Data Center Consolidation shall not 
     exceed $309,000,000.]
       Sec. 8030. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, none 
     of the funds appropriated in this Act may be used to 
     purchase, install, replace, or otherwise repair any lock on a 
     safe or security container which protects information 
     critical to national security or any other classified 
     materials and which has not been certified as passing the 
     security lock specifications contained in regulation FF-L-
     2740 dated October 12, 1989, and has not passed all testing 
     criteria and procedures established through February 28, 
     1992: Provided, That the Director of Central Intelligence may 
     waive this provision, on a case-by-case basis only, upon 
     certification that the above cited locks are not adequate for 
     the protection of sensitive intelligence information.
       Sec. 8031. Funds available in this Act may be used to 
     provide transportation for the next-of-kin of individuals who 
     have been prisoners of war or missing in action from the 
     Vietnam era to an annual meeting in the United States, under 
     such regulations as the Secretary of Defense may prescribe.
       [Sec. 8032. None of the funds available to the Department 
     of Defense shall be obligated or expended for (or to 
     implement) automatic data processing, data processing center, 
     central design activity, DMRD 918, defense information 
     infrastructure, and military or civilian personnel function 
     consolidation plans, consolidations, and disestablishment or 
     realignment plans that impact, in terms of reductions in 
     force or transfers in military and civilian personnel, end 
     strength, billets, functions, or missions, the Enlisted 
     Personnel Management Center, and the collocated Naval 
     Computer and Telecommunications Station, the Naval Reserve 
     Force Information Systems Office, and the Naval Reserve 
     Personnel Center until sixty legislative days after the 
     Secretary of Defense submits to the House and Senate 
     Committees on Appropriations a report, including complete 
     review comments and a validation by the Department of Defense 
     Comptroller, justifying and validating that such plans and 
     actions: (1) do not consolidate, plan to consolidate, 
     disestablish or realign Department of Defense or Service data 
     processing functions or centers, central design activities, 
     or military and civilian personnel functions and activities, 
     or claim savings from such function and activity 
     consolidations and disestablishment, realignment, or 
     consolidation plans, that are in more than one defense 
     management report plan or decision or any other Department of 
     Defense or Service consolidation, disestablishment or 
     realignment plan; (2) utilize criteria primarily weighted to 
     evaluate, measure and compare how data processing centers and 
     activities, central design activities, and military and 
     civilian personnel functions and activities are ranked in 
     terms of operational readiness, customer satisfaction, and 
     the most cost effective and least expensive from a business 
     performance, and regional operations cost standpoint; (3) 
     will provide equal or better service for DOD customers; (4) 
     provide details as to the impacts on the quality of life and 
     benefits of the individual service person, dependents, and 
     civilian personnel; and (5) will not adversely impact the 
     mission and readiness of the Navy and Naval Reserves: 
     Provided, That funds made available to the Department of 
     Defense shall be available to implement the 1993 Defense Base 
     Closure and Realignment Commission approved recommendations 
     concerning the Enlisted Personnel Management Center and the 
     collocated Naval Computer and Telecommunications Station.]
       Sec. 8032. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, 
     funds available to the Department of Defense shall be made 
     available to provide transportation of medical supplies and 
     equipment, on a nonreimbursable basis, to American Samoa: 
     Provided, That notwithstanding any other provision of law, 
     funds available to the Department of Defense shall be made 
     available to provide transportation of medical supplies and 
     equipment, on a nonreimbursable basis, to the Indian Health 
     Service when it is in conjunction with a civil-military 
     project.
       Sec. 8033. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, 
     during the current fiscal year, the Secretary of Defense may, 
     by Executive Agreement, establish with host nation 
     governments in NATO member states a separate account into 
     which such residual value amounts negotiated in the return of 
     United States military installations in NATO member states 
     may be deposited, in the currency of the host nation, in lieu 
     of direct monetary transfers to the United States Treasury: 
     Provided, That such credits may be utilized only for the 
     construction of facilities to support United States military 
     forces in that host nation, or such real property maintenance 
     and base operating costs that are currently executed through 
     monetary transfers to such host nations: Provided further, 
     That the Department of Defense's budget submission for fiscal 
     year 1996 shall identify such sums anticipated in residual 
     value settlements, and identify such construction, real 
     property maintenance or base operating costs that shall be 
     funded by the host nation through such credits: Provided 
     further, That all military construction projects to be 
     executed from such accounts must be previously approved in a 
     prior Act of Congress: Provided further, That each such 
     Executive Agreement with a NATO member host nation shall be 
     reported to the Committees on Appropriations and Armed 
     Services of the House of Representatives and the Senate 
     thirty days prior to the conclusion and endorsement of any 
     such agreement established under this provision.
       Sec. 8034. None of the funds available to the Department of 
     Defense in this Act shall be used to demilitarize or dispose 
     of more than 310,784 unserviceable M1 Garand rifles and M1 
     Carbines.
       Sec. 8035. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, none 
     of the funds appropriated by this Act shall be available to 
     pay more than 50 percent of an amount paid to any person 
     under section 308 of title 37, United States Code, in a lump 
     sum.
       Sec. 8036. None of the funds appropriated by this Act may 
     be used by the Department of Defense to assign a supervisor's 
     title or grade when the number of people he or she supervises 
     is considered as a basis for this determination: Provided, 
     That savings that result from this provision are represented 
     as such in future budget proposals.
       Sec. 8037. Of the funds appropriated by this Act, no more 
     than $18,500,000 shall be available for the mental health 
     care demonstration project at Fort Bragg, North Carolina: 
     Provided, That adjustments may be made for normal and 
     reasonable price and program growth.
       Sec. 8038. None of the funds appropriated by this Act shall 
     be available for payments under the Department of Defense 
     contract with the Louisiana State University Medical Center 
     involving the use of cats for Brain Missile Wound Research, 
     and the Department of Defense shall not make payments under 
     such contract from funds obligated prior to the date of the 
     enactment of this Act, except as necessary for costs incurred 
     by the contractor prior to the enactment of this Act: 
     Provided, That funds necessary for the care of animals 
     covered by this contract are allowed.
       Sec. 8039. None of the funds provided in this Act or any 
     other Act shall be available to conduct bone trauma research 
     at any Army Research Laboratory until the Secretary of the 
     Army certifies that the synthetic compound to be used in the 
     experiments is of such a type that its use will result in a 
     significant medical finding, the research has military 
     application, the research will be conducted in accordance 
     with the standards set by an animal care and use committee, 
     and the research does not duplicate research already 
     conducted by a manufacturer or any other research 
     organization.
       Sec. 8040. The Secretary of Defense shall include in any 
     base closure and realignment plan submitted to Congress after 
     the date of enactment of this Act, a complete review for the 
     five-year period beginning on October 1, 1994, which shall 
     include expected force structure and levels for such period, 
     expected installation requirements for such period, a budget 
     plan for such period, the cost savings expected to be 
     realized through realignments and closures of military 
     installations during such period, an economics model to 
     identify the critical local economic sectors affected by 
     proposed closures and realignments of military installations 
     and an assessment of the economic impact in each area in 
     which a military installation is to be realigned or closed.
       [Sec. 8041. No more than $50,000 of the funds appropriated 
     or made available in this Act shall be used for any single 
     relocation of an organization, unit, activity or function of 
     the Department of Defense into or within the National Capital 
     Region: Provided, That the Secretary of Defense may waive 
     this restriction on a case-by-case basis by certifying in 
     writing to the Committees on Appropriations of the House of 
     Representatives and Senate that such a relocation is required 
     in the best interest of the Government: Provided further, 
     That no funds appropriated or made available in this Act 
     shall be used for the relocation into the National Capital 
     Region of the Air Force Office of Medical Support located at 
     Brooks Air Force Base.]
       Sec. 8041. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, each 
     contract awarded by the Department of Defense in fiscal year 
     1995 for construction or service performed in whole or in 
     part in a State which is not contiguous with another State 
     and has an unemployment rate in excess of the national 
     average rate of unemployment as determined by the Secretary 
     of Labor shall include a provision requiring the contractor 
     to employ, for the purpose of performing that portion of the 
     contract in such State that is not contiguous with another 
     State, individuals who are residents of such State and who, 
     in the case of any craft or trade, possess or would be able 
     to acquire promptly the necessary skills: Provided, That the 
     Secretary of Defense may waive the requirements of this 
     section in the interest of national security.
       Sec. 8042. During the current fiscal year, funds 
     appropriated or otherwise available for any Federal agency, 
     the Congress, the judicial branch, or the District of 
     Columbia may be used for the pay, allowances, and benefits of 
     an employee as defined by section 2105 of title 5 or an 
     individual employed by the government of the District of 
     Columbia, permanent or temporary indefinite, who--
       (1) is a member of a Reserve component of the armed forces, 
     as described in section 261 of title 10, or the National 
     Guard, as described in section 101 of title 32;
       (2) performs, for the purpose of providing military aid to 
     enforce the law or providing assistance to civil authorities 
     in the protection or saving of life or property or prevention 
     of injury--
       (A) Federal service under section 331, 332, 333, 3500, or 
     8500 of title 10, or other provision of law, as applicable, 
     or
       (B) full-time military service for his State, the District 
     of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or a territory 
     of the United States; and
       (3) requests and is granted--
       (A) leave under the authority of this section; or
       (B) annual leave, which may be granted without regard to 
     the provisions of sections 5519 and 6323(b) of title 5, if 
     such employee is otherwise entitled to such annual leave:

     Provided, That any employee who requests leave under 
     subsection (3)(A) for service described in subsection (2) of 
     this section is entitled to such leave, subject to the 
     provisions of this section and of the last sentence of 
     section 6323(b) of title 5, and such leave shall be 
     considered leave under section 6323(b) of title 5.
       Sec. 8043. None of the funds appropriated by this Act shall 
     be available to perform any cost study pursuant to the 
     provisions of OMB Circular A-76 if the study being performed 
     exceeds a period of twenty-four months after initiation of 
     such study with respect to a single function activity or 
     forty-eight months after initiation of such study for a 
     multi-function activity.
       Sec. 8044. Funds appropriated by this Act for the American 
     Forces Information Service shall not be used for any national 
     or international political or psychological activities.
       Sec. 8045. Notwithstanding any other provision of law or 
     regulation, the Secretary of Defense may adjust wage rates 
     for civilian employees hired for certain health care 
     occupations as authorized for the Secretary of Veterans 
     Affairs by section 7455 of title 38, United States Code.
       Sec. 8046. Of the funds made available in this Act, not 
     less than [$24,565,000] $19,917,000 shall be available for 
     the Civil Air Patrol, of which [$13,105,000] $10,410,000 
     shall be available for Operation and Maintenance.
       Sec. 8047. None of the funds appropriated or made available 
     in this Act shall be used to reduce or disestablish the 
     operation of the 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron of the 
     Air Force Reserve, if such action would reduce the WC-130 
     Weather Reconnaissance mission below the levels funded in 
     this Act.
       Sec. 8048. (a) Of the funds for the procurement of supplies 
     or services appropriated by this Act, qualified nonprofit 
     agencies for the blind or other severely handicapped shall be 
     afforded the maximum practicable opportunity to participate 
     as subcontractors and suppliers in the performance of 
     contracts let by the Department of Defense.
       (b) During the current fiscal year, a business concern 
     which has negotiated with a military service or defense 
     agency a subcontracting plan for the participation by small 
     business concerns pursuant to section 8(d) of the Small 
     Business Act (15 U.S.C. 637(d)) shall be given credit toward 
     meeting that subcontracting goal for any purchases made from 
     qualified nonprofit agencies for the blind or other severely 
     handicapped.
       (c) For the purpose of this section, the phrase ``qualified 
     nonprofit agency for the blind or other severely 
     handicapped'' means a nonprofit agency for the blind or other 
     severely handicapped that has been approved by the Committee 
     for the Purchase from the Blind and Other Severely 
     Handicapped under the Javits-Wagner-O'Day Act (41 U.S.C. 46-
     48).
       Sec. 8049. During the current fiscal year, net receipts 
     pursuant to collections from third party payers pursuant to 
     section 1095 of title 10, United States Code, shall be made 
     available to the local facility of the uniformed services 
     responsible for the collections and shall be over and above 
     the facility's direct budget amount.
       [Sec. 8050. Notwithstanding any other provision of law or 
     regulation, ships designated T-AGS 63, T-AGS 64 and T-AGS 65 
     must utilize remanufactured milspec SASS multibeam sonars. 
     Provided; That the Secretary of the Navy may waive this 
     restriction by certifying in writing to the Committee on 
     Appropriations that an alternative acquisition must be made 
     in order to acquire capability for national security 
     purposes.]
       Sec. 8050. None of the funds available to the Department of 
     Defense during fiscal year 1995 may be obligated for low rate 
     initial production of the ALR-67(V)3 Advanced Special 
     Receiver (ASR) until 30 days after the congressional defense 
     committees have received the following:
       (1) A certification by the Director, Operational Test and 
     Evaluation, Defense, that, based on the results of the joint 
     Developmental Test/Operational Test flight tests and of the 
     Operational Assessment intended to address the readiness of 
     the ASR for low rate initial production, ASR is potentially 
     operationally effective and potentially operationally 
     suitable and ready to enter low rate initial production;
       (2) A comprehensive report by the Commander, Navy 
     Operational Test and Evaluation Force as to the test 
     objectives and results of the joint Developmental Test/
     Operational Test flight tests and of the Operational 
     Assessment intended to address the readiness of the ASR for 
     low rate initial production;
       (3) A comprehensive report by the Assistant Secretary of 
     the Navy (Research, Development and Acquisition) as to the 
     test objectives and results of the Developmental Flight Tests 
     and Technical Evaluation, along with her certification that, 
     based on these results, the ASR is ready to enter low rate 
     initial production.
       Sec. 8051. Section 8060 of the Department of Defense 
     Appropriations Act, 1994 (Public Law 103-139) is hereby 
     repealed, which contained authority for acquisition of 
     LANDSAT 7.
       Sec. 8052. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, of 
     the funds appropriated for the Defense Health Program during 
     this fiscal year [and hereafter], the amount payable for 
     services provided under this section shall not be less than 
     the amount calculated under the coordination of benefits 
     reimbursement formula utilized when CHAMPUS is a secondary 
     payor to medical insurance programs other than Medicare, and 
     such appropriations as necessary shall be available 
     (notwithstanding the last sentence of section 1086(c) of 
     title 10, United States Code) to continue Civilian Health and 
     Medical Program of the Uniformed Services (CHAMPUS) benefits, 
     until age 65, under such section for a former member of a 
     uniformed service who is entitled to retired or retainer pay 
     or equivalent pay, or a dependent of such a member, or any 
     other beneficiary described by section 1086(c) of title 10, 
     United States Code, who becomes eligible for hospital 
     insurance benefits under part A of title XVIII of the Social 
     Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1395 et seq.) solely on the grounds 
     of physical disability, or end stage renal disease: Provided, 
     That expenses under this section shall only be covered to the 
     extent that such expenses are not covered under parts A and B 
     of title XVIII of the Social Security Act and are otherwise 
     covered under CHAMPUS: Provided further, That no 
     reimbursement shall be made for services provided prior to 
     October 1, 1991.
       Sec. 8053. During the current fiscal year, the Department 
     of Defense is authorized to incur obligations of not to 
     exceed $250,000,000 for purposes specified in section 
     2350j(c) of title 10, United States Code in anticipation of 
     receipt of contributions, only from the Government of Kuwait, 
     under that section: Provided, That, upon receipt, such 
     contributions from the Government of Kuwait shall be credited 
     to the appropriation or fund which incurred such obligations.
       [Sec. 8054. (a) Funds appropriated in this Act to finance 
     activities of Department (DOD) Federally Funded Research and 
     Development Centers (FFRDCs) may not be obligated or expended 
     for a FFRDC if a member of its Board of Directors or Trustees 
     simultaneously serves on the Board of Directors or Trustees 
     of a profit-making company under contract to the Department 
     of Defense unless the FFRDC has a DOD approved conflict of 
     interest policy for its members.
       [(b) None of the funds appropriated in this Act are 
     available to establish a new FFRDC, either as a new entity, 
     or as a separate entity administered by an organization 
     managing another FFRDC, or as a nonprofit membership 
     corporation consisting of a consortium of other FFRDCs and 
     other nonprofit entities.
       [(c) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, of the 
     amounts available to the Department of Defense during fiscal 
     year 1995, not more than $1,252,650,000 may be obligated for 
     financing activities of FFRDCs.
       [(d) The Secretary of Defense may not obligate more than 
     one-half of the funds available to FFRDCs until the 
     Congressional defense committees receive the report on 
     establishing pay caps for FFRDC employees that was directed 
     in the Committee's report accompanying the fiscal year 1994 
     Department of Defense Appropriations Act.]
       Sec. 8054. (a) Funds appropriated in this Act to finance 
     activities of Department of Defense (DOD) Federally Funded 
     Research and Development Centers (FFRDCs) may not be 
     obligated or expended for a FFRDC if a member of its Board of 
     Directors or Trustees simultaneously serves on the Board of 
     Directors or Trustees of a profit-making company under 
     contract to the Department of Defense unless the FFRDC has a 
     DOD approved conflict of interest policy for its members.
       (b) None of the funds appropriated in this Act are 
     available to establish a new FFRDC, either as a new entity, 
     or as a separate entity administered by an organization 
     managing another FFRDC, or as a nonprofit membership 
     corporation consisting of a consortium of other FFRDCs and 
     other nonprofit entities.
       (c) The Secretary of Defense may not obligate more than 
     one-half of the funds available for each defense FFRDC, and 
     more than one-half of the total amount available for defense 
     FFRDCs, until the Congressional defense committees receive a 
     copy of the revised and updated DOD master plan for FFRDCs: 
     Provided, That the master plan submitted in compliance with 
     this subsection shall contain annual funding and manpower 
     ceilings for each defense FFRDC and each subcomponent of a 
     defense FFRDC identified as separate sub-entity due to the 
     significantly unique nature of its functions.
       (d) Limitation on Compensation.--No employee or executive 
     officer of a defense FFRDC may be compensated at a rate 
     exceeding Executive Schedule Level I by that FFRDC: Provided, 
     That the restriction contained in this subsection shall not 
     take effect until July 1, 1995.
       (e) Limitation on Compensation.--No member of a Board of 
     Directors, Trustees, Overseers, Advisory Group, Special 
     Issues Panel, Visiting Committee, or any similar entity of a 
     defense FFRDC may be compensated for his or her services as a 
     member of such entity except under the same conditions, and 
     to the same extent, as members of the Defense Science Board: 
     Provided, That a member of any such entity shall be allowed 
     travel expenses and per diem as authorized under the Federal 
     Joint Travel Regulations, when engaged in the performance of 
     membership duties: Provided further, That the restriction 
     contained in this subsection shall not take effect until July 
     1, 1995.
       (f) Elimination of Fee.--None of the funds available to the 
     Department of Defense from any source during fiscal year 1995 
     may be obligated to pay any fee to a defense FFRDC.
       (g) None of the funds available to the Department of 
     Defense from any source during fiscal year 1995 may be used 
     by a defense FFRDC for any purpose which otherwise is not 
     reimbursable under federal or Department of Defense 
     acquisition regulations: Provided, That the restriction 
     contained in this subsection shall also apply to cost sharing 
     for projects funded by government grants, absorption of 
     contract overruns, and costs necessary to pay the costs of 
     doing business in advance of reimbursement.
       (h) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, of the 
     amounts available to the Department of Defense during fiscal 
     year 1995, not more than $1,300,000,000 may be obligated for 
     financing activities of FFRDCs: Provided, That the total 
     amount appropriated in title IV of this Act is hereby reduced 
     by $52,650,000 to reflect the funding ceiling contained in 
     this subsection.
       (i) The total amount appropriated to or for the use of the 
     Department of Defense in title IV of this Act is reduced by 
     an additional $62,634,000 to reflect savings from the 
     decreased use of non-FFRDC consulting services by the 
     Department of Defense.
       (j) The total amount appropriated to or for the use of the 
     Department of Defense in title IV of this Act is reduced by 
     an additional $19,055,000 to reflect savings from the 
     decreased use of major non-profit federally-funded research 
     institutions and university-affiliated research centers by 
     the Department of Defense.
       [Sec. 8055. None of the funds appropriated or made 
     available in this Act shall be used to procure carbon, alley 
     or armor steel plate for use in any Government-owned facility 
     or property under the control of the Department of Defense 
     which were not melted and rolled in the United States or 
     Canada: Provided, That these procurement restrictions shall 
     apply to any and all Federal Supply Class 9515, American 
     Society of Testing and Materials (ASTM) or American Iron and 
     Steel Institute (AISI) specifications of carbon, alloy or 
     armor steel plate: Provided further, That the Secretary of 
     the military department responsible for the procurement may 
     waive this restriction on a case-by-case basis by certifying 
     in writing to the Committees on Appropriations of the House 
     of Representatives and the Senate that adequate domestic 
     supplies are not available to meet Department of Defense 
     requirements on a timely basis and that such an acquisition 
     must be made in order to acquire capability for national 
     security purposes: Provided further, That these restrictions 
     shall not apply to contracts which are in being as of the 
     date of enactment of this Act.]
       Sec. 8055. None of the unobligated balances available in 
     the National Defense Stockpile Transaction Fund during the 
     current fiscal year may be obligated or expended to finance 
     any grant or contract to conduct research, development, test 
     and evaluation activities for the development or production 
     of advanced materials, unless amounts for such purposes are 
     specifically appropriated in a subsequent appropriations Act.
       Sec. 8056. For the purposes of this Act, the term 
     ``congressional defense committees'' means the Committees on 
     Armed Services, the Committees on Appropriations, and the 
     subcommittees on Defense of the Committee on Appropriations, 
     of the Senate and the House of Representatives.
       Sec. 8057. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, 
     during the current fiscal year, the Department of Defense may 
     acquire the modification, depot maintenance and repair of 
     aircraft, vehicles and vessels as well as the production of 
     components and other Defense-related articles, through 
     competition between Department of Defense depot maintenance 
     activities and private firms: Provided, That the Senior 
     Acquisition Executive of the military department or defense 
     agency concerned, with power of delegation, shall certify 
     that successful bids include comparable estimates of all 
     direct and indirect costs for both public and private bids: 
     Provided further, That Office of Management and Budget 
     Circular A-76 shall not apply to competitions conducted under 
     this section.
       [Sec. 8058. (a)(1) If the Secretary of Defense, after 
     consultation with the United States Trade Representative, 
     determines that a foreign country which is party to an 
     agreement described in paragraph (2) has violated the terms 
     of the agreement by discriminating against certain types of 
     products produced in the United States that are covered by 
     the agreement, the Secretary of Defense shall rescind the 
     Secretary's blanket waiver of the Buy American Act with 
     respect to such types of products produced in that foreign 
     country.
       [(2) An agreement referred to in paragraph (1) is any 
     reciprocal defense procurement memorandum of understanding, 
     between the United States and a foreign country pursuant to 
     which the Secretary of Defense has prospectively waived the 
     Buy American Act for certain products in that country.
       [(b) The Secretary of Defense shall submit to Congress a 
     report on the amount of Department of Defense purchases from 
     foreign entities in fiscal year 1995. Such report shall 
     separately indicate the dollar value of items for which the 
     Buy American Act was waived pursuant to any agreement 
     described in subsection (a)(2), the Trade Agreement Act of 
     1979 (19 U.S.C. 2501 et seq.), or any international agreement 
     to which the United States is a party.
       [(c) For purposes of this section, the term ``Buy American 
     Act'' means title III of the Act entitled ``An Act making 
     appropriations for the Treasury and Post Office Departments 
     for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1934, and for other 
     purposes'', approved March 3, 1933 (41 U.S.C. 10a et seq.).]
       Sec. 8058. None of the funds appropriated by this Act shall 
     be used for the support of any nonappropriated funds activity 
     of the Department of Defense that procures malt beverages and 
     wine with nonappropriated funds for resale (including such 
     alcoholic beverages sold by the drink) on a military 
     installation located in the United States unless such malt 
     beverages and wine are procured within that State, or in the 
     case of the District of Columbia, within the District of 
     Columbia, in which the military installation is located: 
     Provided, That in a case in which the military installation 
     is located in more than one State, purchases may be made in 
     any State in which the installation is located: Provided 
     further, That such local procurement requirements for malt 
     beverages and wine shall apply to all alcoholic beverages 
     only for military installations in States which are not 
     contiguous with another State: Provided further, That 
     alcoholic beverages other than wine and malt beverages, in 
     contiguous States and the District of Columbia shall be 
     procured from the most competitive source, price and other 
     factors considered.
       Sec. 8059. (a) Of the funds made available in this Act in 
     title II, Operation and Maintenance, Army, $2,000,000 shall 
     be available only to execute the cleanup of uncontrolled 
     hazardous waste contamination affecting the Sale Parcel at 
     Hamilton Air Force Base, in Novato, in the State of 
     California.
       (b) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, in the 
     event that the purchaser of the Sale Parcel exercises its 
     option to withdraw from all or a portion of the sale, as 
     provided in the Agreement and Modification, dated September 
     25, 1990, between the Department of Defense, the General 
     Services Administration, and the purchaser, as amended, the 
     purchaser's deposit of $4,500,000 shall be returned by the 
     General Services Administration and funds eligible for 
     reimbursement under the Agreement and Modification, as 
     amended, shall come from the funds made available to the 
     Department of Defense by this Act.
       (c) In the event that the purchaser purchases only a 
     portion of the Sale Parcel and exercises its option to 
     withdraw from the sale as to the rest of the Sale Parcel, the 
     portion of the Sale Parcel that is not purchased (other than 
     Landfill 26 and an appropriate buffer area around it and the 
     groundwater treatment facility site), together with any of 
     the land referred to in section 9099(e) of Public Law 102-396 
     that is not purchased by the purchaser, shall be sold to the 
     City of Novato, in the State of California, for the sum of 
     One Dollar as a public benefit transfer for school, classroom 
     or other educational use, for use as a public park or 
     recreation area or for further conveyance as provided herein, 
     subject to the following restrictions: (1) if the City sells 
     any portion of such land to any third party within ten years 
     after the transfer to the City, which sale may be made 
     without the foregoing use restrictions, any proceeds received 
     by the City in connection with such sale, minus the 
     demonstrated reasonable costs of conducting the sale and of 
     any improvements made by the City to the land following its 
     acquisition of the land (but only to the extent such 
     improvements increase the value of the portion sold), shall 
     be immediately turned over to the Army in reimbursement of 
     the withdrawal payment made by the Army to the contract 
     purchaser and the costs of cleaning up the Landfill and (2) 
     until one year following completion of the cleanup of 
     contaminated soil in the Landfill and completion of the 
     groundwater treatment facilities, the sale must be at a per-
     acre price for the portion sold that is at least equal to the 
     per-acre contract price paid by the purchaser for the portion 
     of the Sale Parcel purchased under the Agreement and 
     Modification, as amended, and thereafter must be at a price 
     at least equal to the fair market value of the portion sold. 
     The foregoing restrictions shall not apply to a transfer to 
     another public or quasi-public agency for public uses of the 
     kind described above. The deed to the City shall contain a 
     clause providing that, if any of the proceeds referred to in 
     clause (1) are not delivered to the Army within 30 days after 
     sale, or any portion of the land not sold as provided herein 
     is used for other than educational, park or recreational 
     uses, title to the applicable portion of such land shall 
     revert to the United States Government at the election of the 
     General Services Administration. The Army shall agree to 
     deliver into the applicable closing escrow an acknowledgement 
     of receipt of any proceeds described in clause (1) above and 
     a release of the reverter right as to the affected land, 
     effective upon such receipt.
       (d) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Air 
     Force shall be reimbursed for expenditures in excess of 
     $15,000,000 in connection with the total clean-up of 
     uncontrolled hazardous waste contamination on the 
     aforementioned Sale Parcel from the proceeds collected upon 
     the closing of any portion of the Sale Parcel purchased by 
     the contract purchaser under the Agreement and Modification, 
     as amended.
       (e) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the 
     purchaser's reimbursement claims shall be audited by the 
     Defense Contract Audit Agency for reasonableness and accuracy 
     before the Department of Defense provides any funds under the 
     purchaser's withdrawal and reimbursement rights.
       Sec. 8060. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the 
     Secretary of Defense may, when he considers it in the best 
     interest of the United States, cancel any part of an 
     indebtedness, up to $2,500, that is or was owed to the United 
     States by a member or former member of a uniformed service if 
     such indebtedness, as determined by the Secretary, was 
     incurred in connection with Operation Desert Shield/Storm: 
     Provided, That the amount of an indebtedness previously paid 
     by a member or former member and cancelled under this section 
     shall be refunded to the member.
       Sec. 8061. Appropriations contained in this Act that remain 
     available at the end of the current fiscal year as a result 
     of energy cost savings realized by the Department of Defense 
     shall remain available for obligation for the next fiscal 
     year to the extent, and for the purposes, provided in section 
     2865 of title 10, United States Code.
       Sec. 8062. During the current fiscal year [and thereafter], 
     voluntary separation incentives payable under 10 U.S.C. 1175 
     may be paid in such amounts as are necessary from the assets 
     of the Voluntary Separation Incentive Fund established by 
     section 1175(h)(1).


                     (including transfer of funds)

       Sec. 8063. Amounts deposited during fiscal years 1994 and 
     1995 to the special account established under 40 U.S.C. 
     485(h)(2) and to the special account established under 10 
     U.S.C. 2667(d)(1) are appropriated and shall be available 
     until transferred by the Secretary of Defense to current 
     applicable appropriations or funds of the Department of 
     Defense under the terms and conditions specified by 40 U.S.C. 
     485(h)(2) (A) and (B) and 10 U.S.C. 2667(d)(1)(B), to be 
     merged with and to be available for the same time period and 
     the same purposes as the appropriation to which transferred.
       [Sec. 8064. In order to maintain an electric furnace 
     capacity in the United States, preference for the purchase of 
     chromite ore and manganese ore authorized for disposal from 
     the National Defense Stockpile shall be given to domestic 
     producers of high carbon ferrochromium and high carbon 
     ferromanganese--
       [(A) whose primary output during the three preceding years 
     has been ferrochromium or ferromanganese; and
       [(B) who guarantee to use the chromite and manganese ore 
     for domestic purposes.]
       Sec. 8064. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any 
     statutorily-required analysis of the impact on the defense 
     technology and industrial base of terminations and 
     significant reductions of major research and development 
     programs and procurement programs of the Department of 
     Defense shall address only those actions recommended by the 
     Defense Department in its annual budget request and 
     amendments thereto, supplemental requests, or proposed 
     rescissions.
       Sec. 8065. None of the funds in this or any other Act shall 
     be available for the preparation of studies on--
       (a) the feasibility of removal and transportation of 
     unitary chemical weapons from the eight chemical storage 
     sites within the continental United States: Provided, That 
     this prohibition shall not apply to non-stockpile material in 
     the United States or to studies needed for environmental 
     analysis required by the National Environmental Policy Act, 
     or for General Accounting Office studies requested by a 
     Member of Congress or a Congressional Committee; and
       (b) the potential future uses of the nine chemical disposal 
     facilities other than for the destruction of stockpile 
     chemical munitions and as limited by section 1412(c)(2), 
     Public Law 99-145: Provided, That this prohibition does not 
     apply to future use studies for the CAMDS facility at Tooele, 
     Utah.
       Sec. 8066. During the current fiscal year, appropriations 
     available to the Department of Defense may be used to 
     reimburse a member of a reserve component of the Armed Forces 
     who is not otherwise entitled to travel and transportation 
     allowances and who occupies transient government housing 
     while performing active duty for training or inactive duty 
     training: Provided, That such members may be provided lodging 
     in kind if transient government quarters are unavailable as 
     if the member was entitled to such allowances under 
     subsection (a) of section 404 of title 37, United States 
     Code: Provided further, That if lodging in kind is provided, 
     any authorized service charge or cost of such lodging may be 
     paid directly from funds appropriated for operation and 
     maintenance of the reserve component of the member concerned.
       Sec. 8067. For fiscal year 1995, the total amount 
     appropriated to fund the Uniformed Services Treatment 
     Facilities program, operated pursuant to section 911 of 
     Public Law 97-99 (42 U.S.C. 248c), is limited to 
     [$329,000,000] $296,000,000, of which not more than 
     [$300,000,000] $270,000,000 may be provided by the funds 
     appropriated by this Act.
       Sec. 8068. None of the funds available in this Act may be 
     used to support in any manner, including travel or other 
     related expenses, the ``Tailhook Association'': Provided, 
     That investigations by the Secretary of the Navy or 
     consultation with the Tailhook Association are not prohibited 
     by this provision.
       Sec. 8069. The President shall include with each budget for 
     a fiscal year submitted to the Congress under section 1105 of 
     title 31, United States Code, materials that shall identify 
     clearly and separately the amounts requested in the budget 
     for appropriation for that fiscal year for salaries and 
     expenses related to administrative activities of the 
     Department of Defense, the military departments, and the 
     Defense Agencies.
       Sec. 8070. None of the funds available to the Department of 
     Defense may be obligated or expended for construction of 
     Ground Wave Emergency Network (GWEN) sites in Fiscal Year 
     1995.
       Sec. 8071. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the 
     Naval shipyards of the United States shall be eligible to 
     participate in any manufacturing extension program financed 
     by funds appropriated in this or any other Act.
       Sec. 8072. During the current fiscal year, amounts 
     contained in the Department of Defense Overseas Military 
     Facility Investment Recovery Account established by section 
     2921(c)(1) of the National Defense Authorization Act of 1991 
     (Public Law 101-510; 10 U.S.C. 2687 note) shall be available 
     until expended for the payments specified by section 
     2921(c)(2) of that Act.
       Sec. 8073. During the current fiscal year [and thereafter], 
     annual payments granted under the provisions of section 4416 
     of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
     1993 (Public Law 102-428; 106 Stat. 2714) shall be made from 
     appropriations in this Act which are available for the pay of 
     reserve component personnel.
       [Sec. 8074. None of the funds appropriated by this Act may 
     be used to relocate the 116th Fighter Wing of the Air 
     National Guard from Dobbins Air Reserve Base to Robins Air 
     Force Base, or to convert that wing from F-15A aircraft to B-
     1B aircraft.]
       Sec. 8074. Of the funds appropriated or otherwise made 
     available by this Act, not more than $119,200,000 shall be 
     available for payment of the operating costs of NATO 
     Headquarters.
       [Sec. 8075. None of the funds appropriated by this Act 
     shall be used to procure aircraft fuel cells unless the fuel 
     cells are produced or manufactured in the United States by a 
     domestic-operated entity: Provided, That the Secretary of the 
     military department responsible for the procurement may waive 
     this restriction on a case-by-case basis by certifying in 
     writing to the Committees on Appropriations of the House of 
     Representatives and the Senate that adequate domestic 
     supplies are not available to meet Department of Defense 
     requirements on a timely basis and that such an acquisition 
     must be made in order to acquire capability for national 
     security purposes.]
       Sec. 8075. None of the funds available to the Department of 
     the Air Force shall be available to establish or support any 
     organic depot maintenance support activity for the B-2 bomber 
     until the Under Secretary of Defense, Acquisition and 
     Technology reviews the existing infrastructure for the 
     private sector and Air Force Depot support and maintenance of 
     the B-2 and reports to the Congressional Defense Committees 
     the most efficient and cost effective utilization of public 
     and private facilities to support the B-2.
       Sec. 8076. During the current fiscal year, appropriations 
     which are available to the Department of Defense for 
     operation and maintenance may be used to purchase items 
     having an investment item unit cost of not more than $50,000.
       Sec. 8077. During the current fiscal year [and thereafter], 
     appropriations available for the pay and allowances of active 
     duty members of the Armed Forces shall be available to pay 
     the retired pay which is payable pursuant to section 4403 of 
     Public Law 102-484 (10 U.S.C. 1293 note) under the terms and 
     conditions provided in section 4403.
       Sec. 8078. (a) During the current fiscal year, none of the 
     appropriations or funds available to the Defense Business 
     Operations Fund shall be used for the purchase of an 
     investment item for the purpose of acquiring a new inventory 
     item for sale or anticipated sale during the current fiscal 
     year or a subsequent fiscal year to customers of the Defense 
     Business Operations Fund if such an item would not have been 
     chargeable to the Defense Business Operations Fund during 
     fiscal year 1994 and if the purchase of such an investment 
     item would be chargeable during the current fiscal year to 
     appropriations made to the Department of Defense for 
     procurement.
       (b) The fiscal year 1996 budget request for the Department 
     of Defense as well as all justification material and other 
     documentation supporting the fiscal year 1996 Department of 
     Defense budget shall be prepared and submitted to the 
     Congress on the basis that any equipment which was classified 
     as an end item and funded in a procurement appropriation 
     contained in this Act shall be budgeted for in a proposed 
     fiscal year 1996 procurement appropriation and not in the 
     supply management business area or any other area or category 
     of the Defense Business Operations Fund.
       Sec. 8079. None of the funds provided in this Act shall be 
     available for use by a Military Department to modify an 
     aircraft, weapon, ship or other item of equipment, that the 
     Military Department concerned plans to retire or otherwise 
     dispose of within five years after completion of the 
     modification: Provided, That this prohibition shall not apply 
     to safety modifications: Provided further, That this 
     prohibition may be waived by the Secretary of a Military 
     Department if the Secretary determines it is in the best 
     national security interest of the [country] United States to 
     provide such waiver and so notifies the congressional defense 
     committees in writing.
       Sec. 8080. No part of the funds in this Act shall be 
     available to prepare or present a request to the Committees 
     on Appropriations for reprogramming of funds, unless for 
     higher priority items, based on unforeseen military 
     requirements, than those for which originally appropriated 
     and in no case where the item for which reprogramming is 
     requested has been denied by the Congress.
       [Sec. 8081. None of the funds appropriated by this Act 
     shall be available for payment of the compensation of 
     personnel assigned to or serving in the National Foreign 
     Intelligence Program in excess of 94 percent of such 
     personnel actually assigned to or serving in the National 
     Foreign Intelligence Program on September 30, 1992: Provided, 
     That in making any reduction in the number of such personnel 
     that may be required pursuant to this section, the percentage 
     of reductions to Senior Intelligence Service positions shall 
     be equal to or exceed the percentage of reductions to non-
     Senior Intelligence Service positions: Provided further, That 
     in making any reduction in the number of such personnel that 
     may be required pursuant to this section, the percentage of 
     reductions to positions in the National Capital Region shall 
     be equal to or exceed the percentage of reductions to 
     positions outside of the National Capital Region.]
       Sec. 8081. In addition to amounts appropriated or otherwise 
     made available by this Act, $97,000,000 is hereby 
     appropriated and shall be available for liquidating 
     deficiencies in the amounts specified in the appropriations 
     ``National Guard Personnel, Army, 1992'', $10,000,000; 
     ``National Guard Personnel, Army, 1993'', $75,000,000; and 
     ``Reserve Personnel, Army, 1993'', $12,000,000.
       Sec. 8082. None of the funds provided by this Act may be 
     used to pay the salaries of any person or persons who 
     authorize the transfer of obligated and deobligated 
     appropriations into the Reserve for Contingencies of the 
     Central Intelligence Agency.
       Sec. 8083. None of the funds appropriated by this Act for 
     programs of the Central Intelligence Agency shall remain 
     available for obligation beyond the current fiscal year, 
     except for funds appropriated for the Reserve for 
     Contingencies, which shall remain available until September 
     30, 1996.
       Sec. 8084. The classified Annex prepared by the Committee 
     on Appropriations to accompany the report on the Department 
     of Defense Appropriations Act, 1995 is hereby incorporated 
     into this Act: Provided, That the amounts specified in the 
     classified Annex are not in addition to amounts appropriated 
     by other provisions of this Act: Provided further, That the 
     President shall provide for appropriate distribution of the 
     classified Annex, or of appropriate portions of the 
     classified Annex, within the executive branch of the 
     Government.
       Sec. 8085. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, 
     funds made available in this Act for the Defense Intelligence 
     Agency may be used for the design, development, and 
     deployment of General Defense Intelligence Program 
     intelligence communications and intelligence information 
     systems for the Services, the Unified and Specified Commands, 
     and the component commands.
       [Sec. 8086. None of the funds appropriated by this Act 
     shall be available for the planning, programming or actual 
     movement of any component or function of the Defense Mapping 
     Agency Aerospace Center annex from the St. Louis, Missouri 
     area.]
       Sec. 8086. None of the funds appropriated by this Act may 
     be used to pay health care providers under the Civilian 
     Health and Medical Program of the Uniformed Services 
     (CHAMPUS) for services determined under the CHAMPUS Peer 
     Review Organization (PRO) Program to be not medically or 
     psychologically necessary. The Secretary of Defense may by 
     regulation adopt any quality and utilization review 
     requirements and procedures in effect for the Peer Review 
     Organization Program under title XVIII of the Social Security 
     Act (Medicare) that the Secretary determines necessary, and 
     may adapt the Medicare requirements and procedures to the 
     circumstances of the CHAMPUS PRO Program as the Secretary 
     determines appropriate.
       Sec. 8087. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, 
     reimbursements received from the North Atlantic Treaty 
     Organization for the E-3 Airborne Warning and Control System 
     (AWACS) Radar System Improvement Program (RSIP) attributable 
     to development work for fiscal years 1987 through 1992 shall 
     be available to the Air Force until September 30, 1995, for 
     meeting that service's financial commitments for the AWACS 
     RSIP.
       Sec. 8088. (a) None of the funds appropriated or otherwise 
     made available in this Act may be used to transport or 
     provide for the transportation of chemical munitions to the 
     Johnston Atoll for the purpose of storing or demilitarizing 
     such munitions.
       (b) The prohibition in subsection (a) shall not apply to 
     any obsolete World War II chemical munition of the United 
     States found in the World War II Pacific Theater of 
     Operations.
       (c) The President may suspend the application of subsection 
     (a) during a period of war in which the United States is a 
     party.
       Sec. 8089. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, 
     funds made available in this Act and in the fiscal year 1994 
     Department of Defense Appropriations Act (Public Law 103-139) 
     under the heading ``Procurement, Defense-Wide'' shall be 
     available to pay equitable adjustments to which the 
     contractor is legally entitled for Coastal Patrol Craft that 
     were procured in prior fiscal years.
       [Sec. 8090. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, 
     funds appropriated in this Act for the High Performance 
     Computing Modernization Plan shall be made available only for 
     the upgrade, purchase, or modernization of supercomputing 
     capability and capacity at all DOD high performance computing 
     sites: Provided, That contracts, contract modifications, or 
     contract options are awarded as the result of full and open 
     competition based upon the requirements of the users.]
       Sec. 8090. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, 
     funds appropriated in this Act for the upgrade, purchase, or 
     modernization of supercomputing capability and capacity under 
     the High Performance Computing Modernization program shall 
     only be available for contracts, contract modifications, or 
     contract options which are awarded as the result of open 
     competition based upon the requirements of the users without 
     regard to the architecture or design of the supercomputer 
     system.
       Sec. 8091. Amounts collected for the use of the facilities 
     of the National Science Center for Communications and 
     Electronics during the current fiscal year pursuant to 
     section 1459(g) of the Department of Defense Authorization 
     Act, 1986 and deposited to the special account established 
     under subsection 1459(g)(2) of that Act are appropriated and 
     shall be available until expended for the operation and 
     maintenance of the Center as provided for in subsection 
     1459(g)(2).
       Sec. 8092. The Secretary of Defense and the Director of 
     Central Intelligence shall deliver, no later than January 1, 
     1995, a report providing the following information about all 
     research and development projects involving the 
     implementation, monitoring, or verification of current and 
     projected international arms control agreements: (a) annual 
     and total budgets, goals, schedules, and priorities; (b) 
     relationships among related projects being funded by the 
     Department of Defense, the National Foreign Intelligence 
     Program, and other departments and agencies of the Federal 
     Government; and (c) comments by the Arms Control and 
     Disarmament Agency about the relevance of each project to the 
     arms control priorities of the United States.
       [Sec. 8093. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, 
     none of the funds appropriated in this or any other Act shall 
     be used for the purchase of a totally enclosed lifeboat 
     survival system, which consists of the lifeboat and 
     associated davits and winches, if less than 75 percent of the 
     entire system's components are manufactured in the United 
     States, and if less than 75 percent of the labor in the 
     manufacture and assembly of the entire system is performed in 
     the United States.]
       Sec. 8093. None of the funds appropriated in this Act may 
     be used to fill the commander's position at any military 
     medical facility with a health care professional unless the 
     prospective candidate can demonstrate professional 
     administrative skills.
       [Sec. 8094. (a) None of the funds appropriated in this Act 
     may be expended by an entity of the Department of Defense 
     unless the entity, in expending the funds, complies with the 
     Buy American Act. For purposes of this subsection, the term 
     ``Buy American Act'' means title III of the Act entitled ``An 
     Act making appropriations for the Treasury and Post Office 
     Departments for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1934, and for 
     other purposes'', approved March 3, 1933 (41 U.S.C. 10a et 
     seq.).
       [(b) If the Secretary of Defense determines that a person 
     has been convicted of intentionally affixing a label bearing 
     a ``Made in America'' inscription to any product sold in or 
     shipped to the United States that is not made in America, the 
     Secretary shall determine, in accordance with section 2410f 
     of title 10, United States Code, whether the person should be 
     debarred from contracting with the Department of Defense.]
       Sec. 8094. Of the funds appropriated to the Department of 
     Defense (DOD) for Operation and Maintenance, Defense-Wide, 
     not less than $8,000,000 shall be made available until 
     expended to the Administration for Native Americans within 90 
     days of enactment of this Act: Provided, That such funds 
     shall be made available only for the mitigation of 
     environmental impacts, including training and technical 
     assistance to tribes, related administrative support, the 
     gathering of information, documenting of environmental 
     damage, and developing a system for prioritization of 
     mitigation, on Indian lands resulting from Department of 
     Defense activities: Provided further, That the Department of 
     Defense shall provide to the Committees on Appropriations of 
     the Senate and House of Representatives by September 30, 
     1995, a summary report of all environmental damage that has 
     occurred on Indian land as a result of DOD activities, to 
     include, to the extent feasible, a list of all documents and 
     records known to the Department that describe the activity or 
     action causing or relating to such environmental damage.
       Sec. 8095. None of the funds available to the Department of 
     Defense in this Act shall be used by the Secretary of a 
     military department to purchase coal or coke from foreign 
     nations for use at United States defense facilities in Europe 
     when coal from the United States is available.
       Sec. 8096. None of the funds appropriated or otherwise made 
     available by this Act may be used for a defense technology 
     reinvestment project that is not selected pursuant to the 
     applicable competitive selection and other procedures set 
     forth in chapter 148 of title 10, United States Code: 
     Provided, That notwithstanding any other provision of law, 
     funds appropriated for defense reinvestment programs under 
     the heading ``Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, 
     Defense-Wide'' shall not be obligated for any individual 
     project until an Assistant Secretary for Research, 
     Development, and Acquisition of the Military Department which 
     has a direct interest in the project certifies to the Under 
     Secretary of Defense, Acquisition and Technology that the 
     project proposed to receive funds addresses a bona fide need 
     of that Military Department: Provided further, That 
     notwithstanding any other provision of law, of the funds 
     appropriated for defense reinvestment programs under the 
     heading ``Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, 
     Defense-Wide'', $150,000,000 may only be obligated for 
     projects selected as a result of a focused competition held 
     in subject areas selected exclusively by the Assistant 
     Secretaries for Research, Development, and Acquisition of the 
     separate Military Departments: Provided further, That in 
     addition to the restriction contained in the preceding 
     provisos, the focused competitions shall be conducted in 
     accordance with other unaffected statutory provisions of the 
     Defense Conversion, Reinvestment, and Transition Assistance 
     Amendments of 1993.
       [Sec. 8097. None of the funds appropriated in this Act are 
     available for development of bi-static active capability in 
     SURTASS unless the acoustic signal processing for this 
     capability is hosted exclusively on the AN/UYS-2 in the 
     operational system.]
       Sec. 8097. (a) Not later than April 1, 1995, the Secretary 
     of Defense shall submit to the Congressional defense 
     committees a management plan for the major university-
     affiliated research centers which support the Department of 
     Defense.
       (b) The master plan required by the preceding subsection 
     shall--
       (1) establish annual funding and manpower ceilings for each 
     institution, and a total annual funding and manpower ceiling;
       (2) describe in detail what specific actions are being 
     taken to increase management of these institutions by the 
     Office of the Secretary of Defense, and to reduce future 
     annual funding; and
       (3) explain the contracting arrangement with each 
     institution, including an evaluation of whether contracts for 
     future efforts should be competitively awarded.
       (c) For the purposes of this section, the term ``major'' 
     shall apply to institutions which receive more than 
     $2,000,000 annually from the Department of Defense.
       Sec. 8098. None of the funds appropriated by this Act shall 
     be available for a contract for studies, analyses, or 
     consulting services entered into without competition on the 
     basis of an unsolicited proposal unless the head of the 
     activity responsible for the procurement determines--
       (1) as a result of thorough technical evaluation, only one 
     source is found fully qualified to perform the proposed work, 
     or
       (2) the purpose of the contract is to explore an 
     unsolicited proposal which offers significant scientific or 
     technological promise, represents the product of original 
     thinking, and was submitted in confidence by one source, or
       (3) the purpose of the contract is to take advantage of 
     unique and significant industrial accomplishment by a 
     specific concern, or to insure that a new product or idea of 
     a specific concern is given financial support:

     Provided, That this limitation shall not apply to contracts 
     in an amount of less than $25,000, contracts related to 
     improvements of equipment that is in development or 
     production, or contracts as to which a civilian official of 
     the Department of Defense, who has been confirmed by the 
     Senate, determines that the award of such contract is in the 
     interest of the national defense.
       [Sec. 8099. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the 
     Secretary of the Navy shall obligate funds made available in 
     the fiscal year 1993 Department of Defense Appropriations Act 
     (Public Law 102-396) and the fiscal year 1994 Department of 
     Defense Appropriations Act (Public Law 103-139) under the 
     heading ``Aircraft Procurement, Navy'' for the USH-42 mission 
     recorder for S-3 aircraft.]


                          (transfer of funds)

       Sec. 8099. Upon enactment of this Act, the Secretary of 
     Defense shall make the following transfers of funds: 
     Provided, That the amounts transferred shall be available for 
     the same purposes as the appropriations to which transferred, 
     and for the same time period as the appropriation from which 
     transferred: Provided further, That the amounts shall be 
     transferred between the following appropriations in the 
     amounts specified:
       From:
       Under the heading, ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy, 
     1986/1990'':
       CG-47 cruiser program, $6,000,000;
       LSD-41 landing ship dock program, $1,700,000;
       T-AGOS ocean surveillance ship program, $5,000,000;
       For craft, outfitting, post delivery, and cost growth, 
     $2,438,000;
       To:
       Under the heading, ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy, 
     1986/90'':
       SSN-688 attack submarine program, $11,719,000;
       MSH coastal mine hunter program, $3,419,000;
       From:
       Under the heading, ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy, 
     1987/1991'':
       TRIDENT ballistic missile submarine program, $650,000;
       DDG-51 destroyer program, $633,000;
       CG-47 cruiser program, $283,000;
       T-AO fleet oiler program, $2,800,000;
       AO conversion program, $400,000;
       For craft, outfitting, and post delivery, $5,900,000;
       Under the heading, ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy, 
     1988/1992'':
       CG-47 cruiser program, $5,145,000;
       Weapons Procurement, Navy, 1993/1995, $18,069,000;
       To:
       Under the heading, ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy, 
     1987/1991'':
       SSN-688 attack submarine program, $18,496,000;
       AOE fast combat support ship program, $15,384,000;
       From:
       Under the heading, ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy, 
     1988/1992'':
       CG-47 cruiser program, $11,993,000;
       LSD-41 cargo variant ship program, $4,773,000;
       LHD-1 amphibious assault ship program, $7,028,000;
       AO conversion program, $1,900,000;
       To:
       Under the heading, ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy, 
     1988/1992'':
       TRIDENT ballistic missile submarine program, $6,035,000;
       SSN-688 attack submarine program, $19,659,000;
       From:
       Under the heading, ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy, 
     1989/1993'':
       LHD-1 amphibious assault ship program, $3,400,000;
       T-AO fleet oiler program, $3,488,000;
       T-AGOS surveillance ship program, $3,197,000;
       AO conversion program, $1,300,000;
       Weapons Procurement, Navy, 1993/1995, $178,000;
       Other Procurement, Navy, 1993/1995, $22,400,000;
       Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Navy, 1994/
     1995, $41,700,000;
       To:
       Under the heading, ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy, 
     1989/1993'':
       SSN-688 attack submarine program, $18,939,000;
       SSN-21 attack submarine program, $37,123,000;
       MHC coastal mine hunter program, $1,700,000;
       AOE combat support ship program, $17,901,000;
       From:
       Under the heading, ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy, 
     1990/1994'':
       TRIDENT ballistic submarine program, $2,400,000;
       Aircraft carrier service life extension program, $346,000;
       MCM mine countermeasures program, $657,000;
       Oceanographic ship program, $3,964,000;
       LCAC landing craft air cushion program, $1,188,000;
       Aircraft Procurement, Navy, 1993/1995, $6,000,000;
       Weapons Procurement, Navy, 1993/1995, $6,753,000;
       Other Procurement, Navy, 1994/1996, $1,297,000;
       To:
       Under the heading, ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy, 
     1990/1994'':
       SSN-688 attack submarine program, $9,046,000;
       MHC coastal mine hunter program, $3,575,000;
       AOE combat support ship program, $9,984,000;
       From:
       Under the heading, ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy, 
     1991/1995'':
       TRIDENT ballistic missile submarine program, $39,500,000;
       DDG-51 destroyer program, $8,200,000;
       LSD-41 dock landing ship cargo variant ship program, 
     $22,427,000;
       Aircraft Procurement, Navy, 1994/1996, $17,000,000;
       Other Procurement, Navy, 1994/1996, $666,000;
       Procurement, Marine Corps, 1993/1995, $6,600,000;
       To:
       Under the heading, ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy, 
     1991/1995'':
       SSN-21 attack submarine program, $48,240,000;
       LHD-1 amphibious assault ship program, $43,600,000;
       MHC coastal mine hunter program, $2,553,000;
       From:
       Under the heading, ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy, 
     1992/1996'':
       For craft, outfitting, post delivery, and DBOF transfer, 
     $5,183,000;
       Other Procurement, Navy, 1994/1996, $29,261,000;
       To:
       Under the heading, ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy, 
     1992/1996'':
       DDG-51 destroyer program, $22,958,000;
       MHC coastal mine hunter program, $11,486,000;
       From:
       Weapons Procurement Navy, 1993/1995, $30,000,000;
       Other Procurement, Navy, 1994/1996, $38,438,000;
       To:
       Under the heading, ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy, 
     1993/1997'':
       DDG-51 destroyer program, $26,894,000;
       LSD-41 cargo variant ship program, $5,663,000;
       MHC coastal mine hunter program, $7,615,000;
       AOE combat support ship program, $28,266,000;
       From:
       Under the heading, ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy, 
     1994/1998'':
       For craft, outfitting, post delivery, and first destination 
     transportation, $5,000,000;
       Weapons Procurement, Navy, 1994/1996, $14,000,000;
       Other Procurement, Navy, 1994/1996, $435,000;
       To:
       Under the heading, ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy, 
     1994/1998'':
       LHD-1 amphibious assault ship program, $15,131,000;
       Oceanographic ship program, $4,304,000.
       Sec. 8100. It is the sense of Congress that none of the 
     funds appropriated or otherwise made available by this Act 
     should be available for the purposes of deploying United 
     States Armed Forces to participate in the implementation of a 
     peace settlement in Bosnia-Herzegovina, unless previously 
     authorized by the Congress.


                          [(transfer of funds)

       [Sec. 8101. In addition to any other transfer authority 
     contained in this Act, funding appropriated under the heading 
     ``Operation and Maintenance, Defense-Wide'' for increasing 
     energy and water efficiency in Federal buildings may be 
     transferred to other appropriations or funds of the 
     Department of Defense, to be merged with and to be available 
     for the same purposes, and for the same time period, as the 
     appropriation or fund to which transferred.]
       Sec. 8101. None of the funds provided in this Act may be 
     obligated to initiate a program, or project, or award a new 
     contract to modify or upgrade the B-1, B-2, or B-52 aircraft 
     until the Secretary of Defense has submitted a cost and 
     operational effectiveness analysis for Air Force bomber 
     programs to the Committees on Appropriations and Armed 
     Services of the Senate and House of Representatives: 
     Provided, That this section shall not apply to safety of 
     flight modifications.
       Sec. 8102. Funds appropriated by this Act for intelligence 
     activities are deemed to be specifically authorized by the 
     Congress for purposes of section 504 of the National Security 
     Act of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 414) during fiscal year 1995 until the 
     enactment of the Intelligence Authorization Act for fiscal 
     year 1995.
       [Sec. 8103. (1) Except as provided in subsection (c) below, 
     it is the sense of the Congress that none of the funds 
     appropriated by this Act should be obligated or expended for 
     costs incurred by the United States Armed Forces units 
     serving in any international peacekeeping or peace-
     enforcement operations under the authority of Chapter VI or 
     Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter and under the 
     authority of a United Nations Security Council Resolution, or 
     for costs incurred by United States Armed Forces serving in 
     any significant international humanitarian, peacekeeping or 
     peace-enforcement operations, unless--
       [(a) the President initiates consultations with the bi-
     partisan leadership of Congress, including the leadership of 
     the relevant committees, regarding such operations; these 
     consultations should be initiated at least fifteen days prior 
     to the initial deployment of United States Armed Forces units 
     to participate in such an operation, whenever possible, but 
     in no case later than forty-eight hours after such a 
     deployment; and these consultations should continue on a 
     periodic basis throughout the period of the deployment;
       [(b) such consultation should include discussion of--
       [(1) the goals of the operation and the mission of any 
     United States Armed Forces units involved in the operation;
       [(2) the United States interests that will be served by the 
     operation;
       [(3) the estimated cost of the operation;
       [(4) the strategy by which the President proposes to fund 
     the operation, including possible supplemental appropriations 
     or payments from international organizations, foreign 
     countries or other donors;
       [(5) the extent of involvement of armed forces and other 
     contributions of personnel from other nations; and
       [(6) the operation's anticipated duration and scope;
       [(c) subsection (a) does not apply with respect to an 
     international humanitarian assistance operation carried out 
     in response to natural disasters; or to any other 
     international humanitarian assistance operation if the 
     President reports to Congress that the estimated cost of such 
     operation is less than $50,000,000.
       [(2) Further, it is the sense of the Congress that the 
     President should seek supplemental appropriations for any 
     significant deployment of United States Armed Forces when 
     such forces are to perform or have been performing 
     international humanitarian, peacekeeping or peace-enforcement 
     operations.]
       Sec. 8103. None of the funds available to the Department of 
     Defense during fiscal year 1995 may be obligated or expended 
     to reimburse States which are parties to the Treaty on the 
     Elimination of Intermediate-Range and Shorter-Range Missiles 
     concluded on December 8, 1987, and the Treaty on the 
     Reduction and Limitation of Strategic Offensive Arms, 
     concluded July 31, 1991, for costs allocated to such States 
     by either of those treaties where such costs are incurred in 
     support of inspections conducted by the United States: 
     Provided, That the limitation in this section shall not apply 
     if the Senate of the United States gives its advice and 
     consent to the ratification of an amendment to those treaties 
     which changes the financial obligations of the parties to 
     those treaties with respect to inspection costs.


                     [(including transfer of funds)

       [Sec. 8104. Balances of the funds appropriated in Public 
     Laws 102-172, 102-396, and 103-139, under the headings 
     ``World University Games'', ``Summer Olympics'', and ``World 
     Cup USA 1994'' in title II of those Acts shall be merged into 
     a single account entitled ``Support for International 
     Sporting Competitions, Defense'', to remain available until 
     expended: Provided further, That such account shall be 
     available for the purpose of liquidating obligations incurred 
     under the appropriations from which funds are transferred 
     pursuant to the provisions of this section and for providing 
     support to the 1996 Games of the XXVI Olympiad to be held in 
     Atlanta, Georgia, under the terms and conditions specified in 
     those Acts under the headings ``Summer Olympics'' and for 
     providing support to any other international sporting 
     competitions, as provided for in Authorization or 
     Appropriations Acts, during the current fiscal year and 
     thereafter.]
       Sec. 8104. The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that all 
     applicable DOD regulations and component command, 
     installation, or agency policies and procedures governing 
     temporary duty travel on official military business to the 
     States of Hawaii and Alaska require no higher levels of 
     approval or stricter controls than travel within the 
     continental United States.
       [Sec. 8105. Of the funds appropriated in this Act, not to 
     exceed $68,000,000 may be used for the purchase or 
     construction of vessels for the Ready Reserve Force component 
     of the National Defense Reserve Fleet, as established by 
     section 11 of the Merchant Ship Sales Act of 1946 (50 U.S.C. 
     App. 1744).]
       Sec. 8105. None of the funds available to the Department of 
     Defense may be used to support the relocation of P-3 aircraft 
     squadrons or other aircraft or units from the Naval Air 
     Station at Barbers Point, Hawaii unless such relocation was 
     specifically stated in the 1993 Report to the President of 
     the Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission.
       [Sec. 8106. After September 1, 1995, none of the funds in 
     this Act are available for research, development, 
     acquisition, or launch of Titan IV expendable launch 
     vehicles: Provided, That the above provision shall not apply 
     if the Secretary of Defense certifies to the Congress a plan 
     for the development of and initiation of a competition for a 
     family of launch vehicles that is--
       [(1) capable of launching both medium and heavy payloads,
       [(2) fully funded in the outyears, and
       [(3) scheduled to be available prior to the launch of the 
     41st Titan IV expendable launch vehicle:

     [Provided further, That MILSTAR satellites 1 through 6 shall 
     be launched on vehicles being procured as a part of the 
     current contract for 41 Titan IV launch vehicles: Provided 
     further, That none of the funds in this Act may be used to 
     procure more than 41 Titan IV expendable launch vehicles.]
       Sec. 8106. In the case of members who separate from active 
     duty or full-time National Guard duty in a military 
     department pursuant to a Special Separation Benefits program 
     (10 U.S.C. Sec. 1174a) or a Voluntary Separation Incentive 
     program (10 U.S.C. Sec. 1175) at any time after the enactment 
     of this Act, the separation payments paid such members who 
     are also paid any bonus provided for in chapter 5, title 37, 
     United States Code, during the same years in which they 
     separate shall be reduced (but in no event to an amount less 
     than zero) by an amount equal to any such bonus: Provided, 
     That any future bonus payments to which such members would 
     otherwise be entitled are rescinded: Provided further, That 
     this measure will not apply to members who separate during 
     the last year of a bonus paid pursuant to chapter 5, title 
     37, United States Code: Provided further, That civilian 
     employees of the Department of Defense are prohibited from 
     receiving voluntary separation payments if such employees are 
     rehired by any agency of the Federal Government within one 
     hundred and eighty days of separating from the Department of 
     Defense: Provided further, That members who separate from 
     active duty or full-time National Guard duty in a military 
     department at any time after the enactment of this Act, are 
     prohibited from receiving Special Separation Benefits program 
     (10 U.S.C. Sec. 1174a) or Voluntary Separation Incentive 
     program (10 U.S.C. Sec. 1175) payments if rehired by the 
     Department of Defense within one hundred and eighty days of 
     separating from active duty or full-time National Guard Duty.
       [Sec. 8107. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, of 
     the funds appropriated to the Department of the Navy for 
     Operation and Maintenance, not less than $3,000,000 shall be 
     obligated and expended only for operation and maintenance, 
     purchase of automatic data processing equipment, or in-house 
     central design development for the Naval Reserve Force 
     Information Systems Office, the Navy Reserve Personnel 
     Center, the Enlisted Personnel Management Center, and the 
     collocated Naval Computer and Telecommunications Station: 
     Provided, That notwithstanding any other provision of law, of 
     the funds appropriated to the Department of Defense for 
     Procurement, Defense-Wide not less than $10,000,000 shall be 
     obligated and expended only for automatic data processing 
     equipment or software, or in-house central design development 
     for the Naval Reserve Force Information Systems Office, the 
     Naval Reserve Personnel Center, the Enlisted Personnel 
     Management Center and the collocated Naval Computer and 
     Telecommunications Station: Provided further, That the 
     Secretary of the Navy shall establish the Naval Reserve Force 
     Information Systems Office, the Enlisted Personnel Management 
     Center, and the collocated Naval Computer and 
     Telecommunications Station, as the designers, developers, 
     managers, integrators and central design activity for the 
     software development and maintenance of the Naval active and 
     reserve Single Source Data Collection System.]


                          (transfer of funds)

       Sec. 8107. Within amounts appropriated in this Act, 
     $5,000,000 shall be made available for pay and allowances for 
     the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Reserve 
     Affairs to be available only for support of Civil-Military 
     Cooperation program operations, for transfer to 
     appropriations available to the Department of Defense for 
     military personnel of the reserve components serving under 
     the provisions of title 10 and title 32, United States Code: 
     Provided, That the funds made available by this paragraph 
     shall be available for obligation for the same time period 
     and for the same purpose as the appropriation to which 
     transferred: Provided further, That the transfer authority 
     provided in this paragraph is in addition to any transfer 
     authority contained elsewhere in this Act.
       [Sec. 8108. No funds available to the Department of Defense 
     may be used to establish additional field operating agencies 
     or field offices of any element of the Department during 
     fiscal year 1995: Provided, That after August 30, 1995, none 
     of the funds available to the Department of Defense shall be 
     used to support more than fifty percent of the field 
     operating agencies or field offices of any element of the 
     Department of Defense which were in existence on September 
     30, 1994.]
       Sec. 8108. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, for 
     resident classes entering the war colleges after September 
     30, 1996, the Department of Defense shall require that not 
     less than 20 percent of the total of United States military 
     students at each war college shall be from military 
     departments other than the hosting military department: 
     Provided, That each military department will recognize the 
     attendance at a sister military department war college as the 
     equivalent of attendance at its own war college for promotion 
     and advancement of personnel.
       [Sec. 8109. None of the funds made available in this Act 
     under the heading ``Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy'' may 
     be obligated for the DDG-51 destroyer program or the LHD-1 
     amphibious assault ship program until the fiscal year 1995 
     options for acquisition of sealift ships have been 
     exercised.]
       Sec. 8109. None of the funds provided in this Act may be 
     expended for the refurbishment of M61/20 mm Gatling Gun 
     assets for domestic or foreign military sales unless the 
     Department of the Air Force competes this work among 
     qualified depots and commercial contractors.
       [Sec. 8110. None of the funds provided in this Act may be 
     used to procure crystal oscillator carriers, ceramic package 
     incorporating ceramic components joined with glass (frit) or 
     epoxy seals, or multi-layer co-fired single chip ceramic 
     packages unless such products are produced or manufactured in 
     the United States: Provided, That when adequate domestic 
     supplies are not available to meet Department of Defense 
     requirements on a timely basis, the Secretary of the service 
     responsible for the procurement may waive this restriction on 
     a case-by-case basis by certifying in writing to the 
     Committees on Appropriations that such an acquisition must be 
     made in order to acquire capability for national security 
     purposes.]
       Sec. 8110. None of the funds provided in this Act may be 
     obligated or expended for the sale of zinc in the National 
     Defense Stockpile if zinc commodity prices decline more than 
     five percent below the London Metals Exchange market price 
     reported on the date of enactment of this Act.
       [Sec. 8111. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, 
     funds made available in the fiscal year 1993 and 1994 
     Department of Defense Appropriations Acts for the EA-6B 
     program are to be used exclusively to begin engineering 
     changes that will increase the capability of the Navy's EA-6B 
     aircraft by insertion of the critical elements of the EA-6B 
     ADVCAP receiver processor group system into the on-board 
     system and the addition of the ALQ-149 Command, Control, and 
     Communications countermeasure system: Provided, That these 
     funds shall be obligated no later than 120 days after 
     enactment of this Act: Provided further, That the Secretary 
     of the Navy shall obligate $6,000,000 made available in the 
     fiscal year 1994 Department of Defense Appropriations Act 
     (Public Law 103-139) exclusively for the miniaturization of 
     the EA-6B RPG technology for use on the Navy's electronic 
     warfare aircraft.]
       Sec. 8111. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the 
     Secretary of the Navy shall reimburse the Muckleshoot Indian 
     Tribe of Auburn, Washington, for costs that have been 
     validated as having been expended in the development and 
     submission of a base reuse plan for Puget Sound Naval Air 
     Station: Provided, That the Muckleshoot Indian Tribe cost 
     reimbursement claims shall be submitted to and validated by 
     the General Counsel of the Department of Defense prior to 
     reimbursement by the Secretary of the Navy: Provided further, 
     That in no case shall total reimbursements for these costs 
     exceed $600,000.


                          (transfer of funds)

       Sec. 8112. For the rehabilitation of damage caused to 
     Rongelap Atoll by the nuclear testing program and for the 
     resettlement of Rongelap Atoll, $5,000,000 is appropriated to 
     the Department of Defense, which shall be transferred to the 
     Department of the Interior for deposit into the Rongelap 
     Resettlement Trust Fund.
       [Sec. 8113. None of the funds provided in this Act may be 
     used to develop the Sustaining Base Information System until 
     the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Command, Control, 
     Communications and Intelligence has certified to the Armed 
     Services and Appropriations Committees of Congress that the 
     Department of Defense has published a complete and 
     comprehensive system functional description governing the 
     acquisition and has received from the contractor an estimate 
     of the number of lines of software code to implement such 
     functional description and an estimate of the attendant cost: 
     Provided, That none of the work content of the Sustaining 
     Base Information System contract may be performed instead by 
     government in-house activities without being competed if such 
     efforts are passed through government organizations to other 
     than Sustaining Base Information System contractors.]
       Sec. 8113. Prohibition on Use of Funds for Certain 
     Activities at Cameron Station, Virginia. (a) Prohibition.--
     None of the funds appropriated in this Act or otherwise made 
     available to the Department of Defense may be obligated or 
     expended by the Secretary of Defense for the execution 
     pursuant to subsection (f) of section 501 of the Stewart B. 
     McKinney Homeless Assistance Act of (42 U.S.C. 11411) of a 
     lease, permit, or deed of conveyance for use to assist the 
     homeless of any property described in subsection (b) until 
     the Secretary of Health and Human Services, appropriate 
     representatives of the City of Alexandria, Virginia, and 
     representatives of the homeless whose applications for use of 
     such property to assist the homeless have been approved by 
     the Secretary of Health and Human Services under subsection 
     (e)(3) of such section jointly determine that such use is 
     reasonable under the redevelopment plan for Cameron Station, 
     Virginia.
       (b) Covered Property.--Subsection (a) applies to the public 
     buildings and real property located at Cameron Station, 
     Virginia, which installation was approved for closure 
     pursuant to the provisions of title II of the Defense 
     Authorization Amendments and Base Closure and Realignment Act 
     (Public Law 100-526; 10 U.S.C. 2687 note).
       [Sec. 8114. The Assistant Secretary of Defense for Command, 
     Control, Communications and Intelligence shall establish and 
     implement a master plan for all acquisitions of automated 
     document conversion systems, equipment, and technologies: 
     Provided, That none of the funds in this Act may be used to 
     develop technologies or to acquire new automated document 
     conversion equipment, services, or systems which cost more 
     than $5,000,000 after January 1, 1995 unless such 
     acquisitions are approved in advance by the Assistant 
     Secretary or his designee: Provided further, That of the 
     funds appropriated to the Department of Defense for 
     Procurement, Defense-Wide, not less than $30,000,000 shall be 
     used only to integrate the Automated Document Conversion 
     System into the Joint Engineering Data Management and 
     Information Control System.]
       Sec. 8114. (a) In General.--The fiscal year 1995 increase 
     in military retired pay shall (notwithstanding subparagraph 
     (B) of section 1401a(b)(2) of title 10, United States Code) 
     first be payable as part of such retired pay for the month of 
     March 1995.
       (b) Definitions.--For the purposes of subsection (a):
       (1) The term ``fiscal year 1995 increase in military 
     retired pay'' means the increase in retired pay that, 
     pursuant to paragraph (1) of section 1401a(b) of title 10, 
     United States Code, becomes effective on December 1, 1994.
       (2) The term ``retired pay'' includes retainer pay.
       [Sec. 8115. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, 
     none of the funds provided in this Act may be used to procure 
     vessel propellers six feet in diameter and greater unless 
     such propellers are manufactured in the United States 
     incorporating only casting which are poured and finished in 
     the United States. Nor may any of the funds provided in this 
     Act be used to procure ship propulsion shafting unless such 
     ship propulsion shafting is manufactured in the United 
     States: Provided, That when adequate domestic supplies are 
     not available to meet Department of Defense requirements on a 
     timely basis, the Secretary of the service responsible for 
     the procurement may waive this restriction on a case-by-case 
     basis by certifying in writing to the Committees on 
     Appropriations that such an acquisition must be made in order 
     to acquire capability for national security purposes.]


                          (transfer of funds)

       Sec. 8115. In addition to amounts appropriated or otherwise 
     made available by this Act, $11,200,000 is hereby 
     appropriated to the Department of Defense and shall be 
     available only for transfer to the United States Coast Guard 
     for a 2.6 percent pay increase for uniformed members.


                          [transfer of funds)

       [Sec. 8116. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, 
     $16,300,000 made available in the fiscal year 1993 Department 
     of Defense Appropriations Act (Public Law 102-396) for 
     ``Other Procurement, Navy'' and $5,900,000 made available in 
     the fiscal year 1994 Department of Defense Appropriations Act 
     (Public Law 103-139) for ``Other Procurement, Navy'' shall be 
     transferred to ``Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, 
     Navy'' for the SPS-48E program.]
       Sec. 8116. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, for 
     education and training expenses not otherwise provided for, 
     $119,000,000 is appropriated for aiding school districts in 
     accordance with authority granted under Public Law 81-874.
       [Sec. 8117. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the 
     Department of Defense shall award contracts for the CHAMPUS 
     Reform Initiative in California-Hawaii and the Managed Care 
     Support initiative in Washington-Oregon regions in sufficient 
     time for the contractors to begin to provide health care 
     under those contracts no later than April 1, 1995 in 
     California and Hawaii, and not later than March 1, 1995 for 
     Washington and Oregon, or as soon thereafter as practicable.]
       Sec. 8117. After April 15, 1995, none of the funds provided 
     in this Act may be obligated for payment on contracts on 
     which allowable costs charged to the government include 
     payments for individual compensation in excess of the rate of 
     compensation of Level I of the Executive Schedule employees 
     of the United States Government.
       [Sec. 8118. None of the funds appropriated in this Act 
     shall be used for the recruitment or enrollment of a new 
     student or class of students at the Uniformed Services 
     University of the Health Sciences.
       [Sec. 8119. None of the funds appropriated or made 
     available by this Act shall be obligated to procure active 
     matrix liquid crystal displays unless the displays, including 
     the active and passive plates, are produced or manufactured 
     in the United States by a domestic-owned and domestic-
     operated entity: Provided, That the Secretary of the military 
     department or head of a Defense Agency responsible for the 
     procurement may waive this restriction on a case-by-case 
     basis by certifying in writing to the Committees on 
     Appropriations of the House of Representatives and the Senate 
     that adequate domestic supplies are not available to meet 
     Department of Defense requirements on a timely basis and that 
     such an acquisition must be made in order to acquire 
     capability for national security purposes: Provided further, 
     That these restrictions shall not apply to contracts which 
     are in being as of the date of enactment of this Act.]
       Sec. 8120. None of the funds appropriated in this Act to 
     the Department of the Army may be obligated for procurement 
     of 120mm mortars or 120mm mortar ammunition manufactured 
     outside of the United States.
       [Sec. 8121. The total amount appropriated to or for the use 
     of the Department of Defense by this Act for research, 
     development, test and evaluation for management support is 
     hereby reduced by $30,000,000: Provided, That the Secretary 
     of Defense shall allocate the amount reduced in the preceding 
     sentence and not later than December 31, 1994, report to the 
     Senate and the House Committees on Appropriations and Armed 
     Services how this reduction was allocated among the services 
     and Defense Agencies.
       [This Act may be cited as the ``Department of Defense 
     Appropriations Act, 1995''.]
       Titles I through VIII of this Act may be cited as the 
     ``Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 1995''.

         TITLE IX--FISCAL YEAR 1994 SUPPLEMENTAL APPROPRIATION

       The following sum is appropriated, out of any money in the 
     Treasury not otherwise appropriated, for the fiscal year 
     ending September 30, 1994, namely:

                         DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE

                            Management Funds


                        Emergency Response Fund

       For the ``Emergency Response Fund'', $170,000,000: 
     Provided, That these funds may be used to reimburse 
     appropriations of the Department of Defense for costs 
     incurred for emergency relief for Rwanda: Provided further, 
     That the Secretary of State shall provide a report to the 
     Congress no later than September 1, 1994, as to the burden-
     sharing arrangements in the Rwanda relief operation that have 
     been negotiated and implemented with other nations, and 
     international public and private organizations, as to both 
     cost and personnel participation, including armed forces 
     participation: Provided further, That the Secretary of 
     Defense shall provide assessments to the Congress no later 
     than September 1, 1994, of (1) any threats to the security of 
     United States personnel, including armed forces personnel, in 
     the Rwanda relief operation, and (2) the extent to which the 
     UNAMIR peacekeeping operation has established a security 
     system within the country of Rwanda: Provided further, That 
     any change in the mission from one of strict refugee relief 
     to security, peace-enforcing, nation-building or any other 
     substantive role, shall not be implemented without the 
     further approval of the Congress: Provided further, That 
     United States armed forces shall not participate in relief 
     operations inside Rwanda until and unless the President has 
     certified to the Congress that the security situation in the 
     countryside has stabilized to the extent that United States 
     forces will not play a peacekeeping or peace-enforcing role 
     between the warring factions inside Rwanda: Provided further, 
     That no funds are available for United States participation 
     in operations in or around Rwanda after October 7, 1994: 
     Provided further, That the President shall provide a plan to 
     the Congress by September 15, 1994, as to how he will 
     terminate United States involvement in the Rwanda operation 
     by October 7, 1994, unless an extension of time is approved 
     by the Congress, and what arrangements have been made for 
     other nations and international public and private 
     organizations to replace United States resources and 
     personnel.

  Mr. INOUYE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the committee 
amendments be agreed to, en bloc, and that the bill, as thus amended, 
be regarded for the purpose of amendment as original text provided that 
no point of order shall be considered to have been waived by agreeing 
to this request.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  So the committee amendments were agreed to, en bloc.
  Mr. INOUYE. Mr. President, the statement I am about to present is a 
joint statement, one that the vice chairman of the subcommittee, the 
distinguished Senator from Alaska [Mr. Stevens] and I will be 
presenting.
  Mr. President, on behalf of the Committee on Appropriations I am 
pleased to present our recommendations for fiscal year 1995 funding of 
the programs and activities of our Government in support of our 
Nation's defense and security.
  The bill before the Senate provides $243.6 billion in budget 
authority--we have nearly exhausted the budget authority provided to 
the subcommittee under our committee allocation, only $2 million 
remains. We are well within our outlay allocations, but I expect we 
will find it necessary to make use of more outlays when we are in 
conference with the House.
  The bill also contains fiscal year 1994 supplemental funding to help 
offset the costs of United States military participation in emergency 
relief efforts in Rwanda. Title IX of the bill provides $170 million 
for the Defense Emergency Response Fund for use in reimbursing 
appropriations of the Department of Defense for costs incurred in the 
emergency relief operations. Fiscal year 1995 outlays of $124 million 
are charged against this appropriation.
  As you know, Mr. President, we also try to stay within the 
authorization ceilings for each of the multiple accounts in each title 
of the bill. Here, again, we are very close to the ceilings in the 
Senate passed authorization bill. In numerous instances we filled the 
authorized amounts by responding to requests that Members have made for 
added funding. In most accounts we are now at the ceiling; in others we 
have very little headroom remaining. In point of fact, the leadership 
of the Defense Subcommittee, Senator Stevens and I have tried to 
respond to Senators who brought their requirements for Defense spending 
to our attention. I believe we have done so in a very balanced, 
nonpartisan, responsible way and, wherever possible, we have met their 
requests.

  This is not to say that we have been able to respond to each and 
every wish of each and every Senator. We have not. Many valuable and 
useful undertakings have not been funded. I regret that. But, we have 
produced a bill which is sound and which meets the essential 
requirements of our national security--both economic and military. The 
funding we recommend will equip the force and keep it ready--but, it is 
a smaller force, stretched thinly along the line of defense. We should 
be under no illusions about that.
  Mr. President, this year, unlike the past several years, the 
Subcommittee on Defense Appropriations was more constrained by 
limitations on budget authority than it was by an outlay ceiling.
  There is good news and bad news in that statement. First, after 5 
successive years of very dramatic reductions in Defense spending, we 
now have a bare bones defense budget.
  Prior year outlays from the large scale procurement programs funded 
in previous years have now subsided.
  But, all is not well. The dark side of this picture is that the 
services--the Army, in particular--are eating their seed corn. The 
investment budget--procurement and research and development--as a 
percentage of the whole DOD budget, is now lower than at any time since 
1980. For example, it may surprise my colleagues to learn that this 
year, we will buy only 17 combat fighter aircraft; this year, the Army 
will buy no--that is, zero--tanks.
  In all the years I have served on this committee, we have always 
purchased tanks, but this year there are no funds for tanks. This year, 
the Navy will purchase four ships. We are not investing in the future.
  We are staving off the collapse of the defense industrial base.
  In recent times, we have created and we have provided for a totally 
voluntary military, one which leads our society in equal opportunities 
for women and for minorities. We have a military which, until quite 
recently, attracted highly qualified and well-motivated individuals to 
a life of service and adventure.
  Mr. President, we now find that, for an array of reasons, the young 
men and women in America no longer want to join the military. The Youth 
Attitude Tracking Survey, which measures the propensity to enlist among 
our Nation's youth, has found that fewer men and women wish to join the 
voluntary military now than at any time in the past 10 years. Some say 
this is because high school guidance counselors and parents no longer 
think the military offers opportunity for advancement; some say the 
youngsters themselves think that the Defense Department is going out of 
business. Who can blame them, when all that the press reports is 
downsizing, base closure, abuse, and frustration, and increasingly 
lengthy and more frequent deployments. It is clear that the message 
must get out that defense is still an ongoing concern, that we have a 
strong military, that we care for those who wear our Nation's military 
uniforms, and that military service is a worthwhile career objective.
  Mr. President, I fervently hope that this bill faces up to that 
challenge. And in this bill, the committee addresses the challenge of 
recruiting by providing a $100 million increase to support the 
recruitment efforts of the sergeants and chiefs who must enlist the 
soldiers and sailors of tomorrow. We add funds to enhance the quality 
of life of our military through programs such as improved health care, 
school impact aid, family advocacy programs, and child care centers.
  We also address the question of readiness by funding the flying 
hours, tank training miles, and ship steaming days requested by the 
military. We add funds for real property maintenance and for base 
operations at war fighting commands. We counter the inefficiencies and 
costs of the drawdown by providing increased funds to bring equipment 
and supplies home from Europe, and to hasten the repair of barracks 
where our troops returning from Europe will reside.
  But in all candor, Mr. President, I must tell you that we fall short 
of what is needed to preserve our military superiority. It is in the 
military procurement accounts that we find the shortfalls. The Defense 
Department has, with deliberation and purpose, cut back on procurement 
spending. Their focus has been on meeting the costs of downsizing, and 
on maintaining the readiness of remaining forces. At the risk of 
oversimplification, we can say that the leadership in the Department of 
Defense has calculated that procurement can be deferred until savings 
can be derived from force structure reductions and reduced overhead 
costs as bases are closed.
  I shall tell you with equal candor that I am not sold on this idea. 
Mr. President, I am concerned that the military will find that the 
savings assumed to finance future procurement will prove to be as 
illusory as the peace dividend was to those who looked for a pot of 
gold beneath the ruins of the Berlin Wall.
  So, Mr. President, while the committee recommends selected increases 
in operation and maintenance accounts to preserve readiness, we also 
recommend a number of modest increases and realignments of spending in 
procurement accounts to preserve the plants, people, and processes 
which make up the defense industrial base.
  We believe that the bill we have put before the Senate is a good 
bill. We believe it is sound. There are no budgetary gimmicks here, no 
false assumptions, no smoke and mirrors--just difficult choices, well 
thought out.
  In difficult times, we believe we have met the challenge. Our 
recommendations protect readiness and the force structure of the 
Bottom-Up Review. Our recommendations provide for the welfare and 
quality of life of military families. Our recommendations preserve the 
defense industrial base.
  So, Mr. President, I am confident that the Senate will support this 
bill. I cannot think of why any Senator, looking at the total effort, 
would want to amend this bill. But if any Senator has any suggestions 
or recommendations for improving the bill, we will, of course, review 
those suggestions.
  Mr. President, I have prepared a summary of the bill, which provides 
details of the recommendations, which I will read into the Record.


                      TITLE I: MILITARY PERSONNEL

  The bill before the Senate realigns the President's request for 
military personnel. This results in a marginal reduction in funding. 
The recommendation fully funds active duty personnel end strength at 
the authorized level. The recommendation also provides funding for a 
2.6-percent increase in military pay. The total of the funding 
recommended in the military personnel accounts is $70,445,512,000.
  For the Guard and Reserve--we continue to support the Guard and 
Reserve as an integral part of the total force. Accordingly, we provide 
funding for a 2.6-percent increase in pay for the Reserve component as 
well as in the active.
  I also wish to call attention to the fact that, as authorized for all 
members of the uniformed services, we have also provided a 2.6-percent 
pay increase for the Coast Guard.


                  title ii: operation and maintenance

  For the Operation and Maintenance title, the committee provides 
$81,361,358,000, about $1.5 billion above the House. Our concern with 
readiness is reflected in the $5 billion increase we recommend over 
fiscal year 1994 funding.
  We have supported the force structure and strategy of the Bottom Up 
review. Programs which are key to readiness, such as unit training, are 
fully supported. We increase funds for recruiting by $100 million in an 
effort to ensure that personnel standards are kept at high levels.
  In fact, we have enhanced readiness by providing an increase of $201 
million for the repair and maintenance of equipment--known as Depot 
Maintenance; we have provided $83 million to improve and upgrade 
shipyard repair facilities, $50 million for strategic mobility, $86 
million for Air Force aircraft parts, and $40 million for the Army 
Retro-EUR Program, which brings equipment and material back from 
Europe. By adding funds to these programs, we have taken care to fill 
the major budgetary shortfalls identified by the uniformed services. 
There is no reasons for readiness to be affected this year by 
shortfalls in O&M funding. At present, 6 of every 10 U.S. service 
members are married. There are about 80,000 single parents in the 
military and almost 100,000 dual military parents. Supporting military 
families is a readiness issue of the first order.
  Under the O&M title, we have also provided funds to begin in earnest 
the environmental cleanup of our Nation's defense installations--we 
provide $2 billion, more than half of which is for efforts which are 
actually cleanup efforts--not studies and research, but the actual 
turning of the Earth to cleanup the mess left behind by a century of 
neglect.
  In addition, we provide $2.2 billion for compliance efforts to bring 
our bases into accord with the law and to make operations safe and 
environmentally sound. The Defense Department can become the model for 
responsible Government in the field of environmental concerns.


                         title iii: procurement

  The bill which the subcommittee recommends makes a prudent investment 
in the military hardware and related equipment necessary to preserve a 
strong defense establishment. We recommend the appropriation of 
$42,708,049, the lowest amount we have provided for procurement in at 
least 15 years.


                                  navy

  For the Navy, we provide $2,284,925,000, which is sufficient to 
complete payment for the CVN-76 nuclear aircraft carrier, and $2.6 
billion for three DDG-51 Aegis destroyers, as requested and as 
authorized; also $50 million to add to funds available for advance 
procurement for the LHD-7 amphibious assault ship for the Marines; and 
$828.6 million for the National Defense Sealift Fund--which includes 
financing for the construction or lease of two additional ships for 
Marine Corps logistics.
  In commenting on this action, we would note that had we funded the 
CVN-76 in fiscal year 1994, as recommended by this subcommittee, we 
could have saved in excess of $200 million on the overall procurement.
  We address the problems of Navy air by funding procurement of 17 F/A-
18 C/D aircraft as authorized, as well as 12 T-45 Navy trainers, and we 
fund the remanufacture of 4 AV-8B Harrier aircraft. We also provide 
substantial amounts in R&D funding for an advanced version of the F/A-
18, the E/F version. I will say more about that in a moment.


                                  army

  For the Army, we are recommending the procurement of 6 Apache 
helicopters at a cost of $77.6 million; and we recommend $248.3 million 
for the procurement of 60 additional UH-60 Blackhawk utility 
helicopters. We also fund the Kiowa Warrior upgrade to the Army's AHIP 
helicopters, at $98.8 million.


                               air force

  For the Air Force, the recommendation includes $2,472,914,000 to 
purchase six C-17 aircraft in fiscal year 1995 and $189,900,000 to 
finance advance procurement for eight more in fiscal year 1996. Our 
recommendation fully funds the agreement between DOD and McDonnell 
Douglas Aircraft Corp. to settle all outstanding claims.
  We also recommend the appropriation of $440.5 million for 2 JSTARS 
aircraft and we add $218.8 million for advance procurement of 
additional JSTARS aircraft. Finally, the mark also includes $78.2 
million for 3 joint primary aircraft trainers, and $155 million for 32 
of the Air Force's new tanker/transport trainer known as the T-1.
  The recommendations would provide $384 million to support the 
procurement of support equipment for the B-2 bomber and $150 million to 
preserve the bomber industrial base. A general provision in the bill 
requires the Institute for Defense Analysis to conduct a cost and 
operational effectiveness analysis [COEA] on the several elements of 
the bomber force structure to assist the Congress in determining what 
force structure to support in the future.


                   title iv: research and development

  In the research and development accounts, we provide funding for 
investment in the future of America's Armed Forces. We are not unaware 
that defense budgets may decline in the future. Accordingly, we have 
been careful to avoid initiation of R&D programs which are unaffordable 
in the future. Nonetheless, we do provide ample resources to those R&D 
programs which have been identified as required investments. Our 
recommendation is to appropriate $35,405,174,000.


                                  army

  Under Army R&D, we continue funding for research on breast cancer and 
AIDS. The amount provided for breast cancer is $60 million, which, 
together with $25 million in unobligated funds from fiscal year 1994, 
will finance a significant effort to conquer breast cancer. A lesser, 
but not insignificant amount--$2 million--is provided for research on 
prostate cancer. And, we provide $30.2 million for AIDS research.
  Our largest recommendation is for the $525 million sought for 
development of the Army's No. 1 priority R&D effort--the Comanche light 
armed scout helicopter.
  We also recommend full funding of the $191 million sought for the 
Apache Longbow heavy attack helicopter upgrade.
  Finally, we have provided $42 million to continue development of the 
sense and destroy antiarmor munition, known as SADARM.


                                  navy

  We approve the budget request for F-18 E/F development--$1.42 
billion. This airplane will solve the Navy's midterm problems in the 
area of strike aircraft.
  We provide full funding of $508 million for development of the new 
attack submarine. However, we do acknowledge that there is an open 
question whether the most cost-effective plan for Navy submarines is to 
keep producing the SSN-21 Seawolf-class submarine instead of continuing 
with the new attack boat.
  The subcommittee allocates $403 million, an increase of $29 million 
to the budget request, to support Navy efforts to develop advanced 
capabilities for ship self-defense.
  We have approved $497 million to continue development of the V-22 
tilt-rotor aircraft for the Marines.
  We have added $25 million to the budget request to develop a 
successor to the now-terminated EA-6B advanced capability jammer 
aircraft upgrade. These funds are available to begin the new program 
after the Navy submits a complete plan outlining a preferred approach 
in this important area.


                               air force

  The R&D programs in the Air Force are numerous--and costly. 
Nonetheless, we support them because we believe air superiority and the 
importance of strategic and tactical bombing were unquestionably 
demonstrated in the gulf war. Communications, intelligence, and control 
of air over the battlefield are vital to the success of our Armed 
Forces.
  For the F-22 advanced tactical fighter, we recommend the 
appropriation of $2.4 billion, which fully funds firm program 
requirements in fiscal year 1995.
  We recommend the appropriation of the budget request of $409 million 
for B-2 development and flight testing, and the $74 million sought for 
the conventional war-fighting upgrades for the B-1 bomber.
  In the arena of early warning systems, we have reshaped the proposals 
for satellite development, due to serious concerns about the currently 
planned program. We have created a new alarm--alert, locate, and 
report, missile--prototyping program to replace the demonstration-
validation program proposed by DOD.
  Our program recommends $150 million for the Brilliant Eyes warning 
satellites and $62 million for quick reaction technology satellite 
demonstrations. We think there should be a ``fly-off'' in about 2 years 
among the widest possible competition. This should ensure the best 
candidate technology enters engineering and manufacturing development.
  The recommendation includes $210 million for the C-17 advanced 
transport aircraft. This amount will fully fund firm program 
requirements and the R&D share of the settlement between the contractor 
and the Government.
  The C-17 is important for global mobility, and the settlement permits 
all parties to focus on final development and flight tests, and on 
continued production--instead of time-consuming, costly legal battles.


                            defense-wide R&D

  It is under defense agencies that we find the largest of the R&D 
programs, the efforts which are consolidated under the ballistic 
missile defense organization. The recently passed defense authorization 
bill restructures this program into 10 new program elements, building 
on this committee's initiative of last year, and continues emphasis on 
theater missile defenses. Consequently, we recommend the appropriation 
of $2.83 billion for the Ballistic Missile Defense--former SDI--
Initiative, an amount which is $421 million below the request, but the 
same amount as recently passed by the Senate.
  It will be of interest that we recommend the appropriation of $625 
million, the budget request amount, for ARPA defense conversion R&D. 
The committee has deferred initiating new conversion-related programs 
outside the core ARPA technology reinvestment program.
  Finally, under the defense-wide accounts, our recommendations would 
provide $342 million to develop massively parallel supercomputers and 
software under the ARPA high performance computing program, and $183 
million, the requested and Senate-authorized amount, to buy high 
performance supercomputers.
  There are some recommendations which affect funding across all of the 
R&D accounts. For example, we provide $145 million for manufacturing 
technology programs under the purview of the military services and the 
Office of the Secretary of Defense.
  In another instance, following the authorized levels, we cut $52 
million from the accounts for the federally funded research and 
development centers, leaving $1.3 billion for these institutions. This 
is exactly the amount authorized by the Senate.
  We also provide $1.7 billion for university research in fiscal year 
1995. That amount is a minor decrease of about $100 million to the 
request. It is far less than the $900 million reduction recommended by 
the House. We reject that House cut, because it could interrupt 
important, defense-related research and unduly harm our national 
university community.


                               conclusion

  Mr. President, the summary I have presented represents the principal 
recommendations for funding.
  As you know, the defense appropriations bill carries a large number 
of general provisions--over 100--which cover a variety of subjects. I 
will not review all of them; most have been carried in our bill for a 
number of years.
  The committee has shaped a bill which both meets our essential 
national security requirements and the objective of fiscal restraint. 
We are confident that the Senate will support this bill. No one will 
find everything that they wanted in this bill, but all will find that 
we have made a determined effort to maintain readiness, preserve the 
defense industrial base, and invest in the future. Above all, we have 
protected the welfare and the war-fighting ability of the men and women 
who serve our country in the uniformed services.
  As in the past, we have a classified annex to the bill and a 
classified report detailing the recommendations for the intelligence 
and special access programs. I invite my colleagues to review these 
papers and to discuss any concerns that they might have with me and 
Senator Stevens.
  Mr. President, when we continue next week I will yield to my trusted 
adviser and friend, to whom I often turn for leadership and support as 
we struggle with these difficult choices, the senior Senator from 
Alaska, Senator Stevens.
  Mr. President, before closing my remarks, I would just like to point 
out a matter that has concerned Senator Stevens and has concerned me. 
We oftentimes speak of the hollow force, and most Americans have no 
idea what we are speaking about. We usually point to that period in the 
seventies when we had a hollow force. What was that hollow force? Let 
me point out that in the seventies, our Navy had many magnificent 
ships, as we do at this time. But yet, even with ships that were brand 
new, 30 percent of these ships were not ready for combat. Thirty 
percent of our Navy was not ready for combat. When one analyzes why 
this was so, you will find that these ships were not ready for combat 
because we did not have personnel qualified to man these ships.
  Slowly, we are approaching that point. Most Americans do not realize 
this. A year and a half ago, in our recruiting, we were able to get an 
abundance of college graduates and an abundance of high school 
graduates. We recruited less than 1 percent category IV. What do I 
speak of when I mention category IV?
  In our recruiting program, we have five categories. Category I would 
be the genius. There are very few category I's who volunteer. Category 
II are the college grads. We have many college grads volunteering. But 
ask yourselves how many college grads do we know that are volunteering? 
Category III is the equivalent of a high school graduate. And category 
IV have an intelligence quotient of less than 90 percent.
  Two years ago, less than 1 percent of our recruits were in category 
IV. I am sorry to report to you, Mr. President, that this year, we are 
approaching 7 percent. In addition to that, those men and women in whom 
we have invested much time and resources, the captains and majors, or 
the senior lieutenants and lieutenant commanders, are leaving the 
services. Why? Some feel that there is no future for them. Others, 
because of complaints from their spouses.
  Mr. President, as you know, we had a large number of Marines on ships 
on the coast of Bosnia. They were prepared for any contingency. 
Suddenly, we were faced with a contingency in Haiti. They came back. 
They spent 8 days with their families, and they were shipped out again. 
Yes, these men are patriotic, brave, and loyal. But I think, like all 
of us, they want to be with their families, and their families want to 
be with them. The drawdown of our military is causing all of this, and 
we wonder why our sergeants are not reenlisting? They have many 
temptations outside. They are paid better.
  And so, Mr. President, all seems well. Today we have the finest 
military in the world. But when we begin recruiting category IV's and 
when our sergeants leave us and when our captains and majors leave us, 
we are approaching this hollow force that I have been speaking of.
  So, Mr. President, in conclusion, I would like to say that the 
summary that we have just presented and made part of the record 
represents the principal recommendations for funding. But, as you know, 
the bill carries a large number of general provisions. There are over 
100 of them which cover a variety of subjects. I will not review all of 
them. Most have been carried in our bills for a number of years.
  The committee has shaped a bill which both meets our essential 
national security requirements and the objective of fiscal restraint. 
And, as I have indicated, we are confident that the U.S. Senate will 
support this measure.
  No one will find everything they wanted in this bill, but all will 
find that we have made a determined effort to maintain readiness, 
preserve the defense industrial base, and invest in the future. Above 
all, we believe we have protected the welfare and the war-fighting 
ability of the men and women who serve our country in the uniformed 
services.
  Mr. President, as in the past, we have a classified annex to the bill 
and a classified report detailing the recommendations for the 
intelligence and special-access programs. I wish to invite my 
colleagues to review these papers and to discuss any concerns that they 
might have with me or with Senator Stevens.
  Mr. President, Senator Stevens will be presenting his remarks when we 
return to the bill on Monday next. At that time, it would be my 
pleasure to yield to my trusted adviser and friend, to whom I often 
turn for leadership and support as we struggle with these difficult 
choices.
  Mr. President, at this juncture, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. INOUYE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. INOUYE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate 
vitiate the action on the adoption of committee amendments.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. INOUYE. I have been advised that Senators may have a list of 
excepted amendments on Monday next.


                        Privileges of the Floor

  Mr. INOUYE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the following 
individuals be given floor privileges during the consideration of this 
bill: Mr. David Hennessey, Ms. Nora Kelly, Ms. Nancy Lescavage, and Mr. 
Herb Nakamura.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. INOUYE. Mr. President, am I correct that Monday next the Senate 
will take into consideration the Labor-HHS appropriations measure?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator is correct.
  Mr. INOUYE. And upon the disposition of that measure, is the Senate 
scheduled to resume consideration of the Defense appropriations bill?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. That would be the regular order once that bill 
has been submitted.
  Mr. INOUYE. Is that the order?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. That will be the order.
  Mr. INOUYE. I yield the floor.
  Mr. COHEN addressed the Chair.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maine is recognized.

                          ____________________