[Congressional Record Volume 164, Number 96 (Monday, June 11, 2018)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3403-S3596]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION ACT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2019
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the bill.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
A bill (H.R. 5515) to authorize appropriations for fiscal
year 2019 for military activities of the Department of
Defense, for military construction, and for defense
activities of the Department of Energy, to prescribe military
personnel strengths for such fiscal year, and for other
purposes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oklahoma.
Amendment No. 2282
(Purpose: In the nature of a substitute)
Mr. INHOFE. Mr. President, I call up amendment No. 2282.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
The senior assistant legislative clerk read as follows:
The Senator from Oklahoma [Mr. Inhofe] proposes an
amendment numbered 2282.
Mr. INHOFE. I ask unanimous consent that the reading of the amendment
be dispensed with.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
(The amendment is printed in the Record of June 6, 2018, under ``Text
of Amendments.'')
Amendment No. 2282, as Modified
Mr. INHOFE. I send a modification to amendment No. 2282 to the desk.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator has that right. The amendment is
modified.
The amendment, as modified, is as follows:
Strike all after the enacting clause and insert the
following:
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
(a) In General.--This Act may be cited as the ``John S.
McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2019''.
(b) References.--Any reference in this or any other Act to
the ``National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2019'' shall be deemed to be a reference to the ``John S.
McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2019''.
SEC. 2. ORGANIZATION OF ACT INTO DIVISIONS; TABLE OF
CONTENTS.
(a) Divisions.--This Act is organized into four divisions
as follows:
(1) Division A--Department of Defense Authorizations.
(2) Division B--Military Construction Authorizations.
(3) Division C--Department of Energy National Security
Authorizations and Other Authorizations.
(4) Division D--Funding Tables.
(b) Table of Contents.--The table of contents for this Act
is as follows:
Sec. 1. Short title.
Sec. 2. Organization of Act into divisions; table of contents.
Sec. 3. Congressional defense committees.
Sec. 4. Budgetary effects of this Act.
DIVISION A--DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE AUTHORIZATIONS
TITLE I--PROCUREMENT
Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations
Sec. 101. Authorization of appropriations.
Subtitle B--Army Programs
Sec. 111. Deployment by the Army of an interim cruise missile defense
capability.
Subtitle C--Navy Programs
Sec. 121. Multiyear procurement authority for F/A-18E/F Super Hornet
and EA-18G aircraft program.
Sec. 122. Multiyear procurement authority for E-2D Advanced Hawkeye
(AHE) aircraft program.
Sec. 123. Extension of limitation on use of sole-source shipbuilding
contracts for certain vessels.
Sec. 124. Prohibition on availability of funds for Navy port waterborne
security barriers.
Sec. 125. Multiyear procurement authority for Standard Missile-6.
Sec. 126. Limitation on availability of funds for the Littoral Combat
Ship.
Sec. 127. Nuclear refueling of aircraft carriers.
Sec. 128. Limitation on funding for Amphibious Assault Vehicle Product
Improvement Program.
Subtitle D--Air Force Programs
Sec. 141. Prohibition on availability of funds for retirement of E-8
JSTARS aircraft.
Sec. 142. B-52H aircraft system modernization report.
Sec. 143. Repeal of funding restriction for EC-130H Compass Call
Recapitalization Program and review of program
acceleration opportunities.
Subtitle E--Defense-wide, Joint, and Multiservice Matters
Sec. 151. Multiyear procurement authority for C-130J aircraft program.
Sec. 152. Quarterly updates on the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program.
Sec. 153. Authority to procure additional polar-class icebreakers.
TITLE II--RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION
Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations
Sec. 201. Authorization of appropriations.
Subtitle B--Program Requirements, Restrictions, and Limitations
Sec. 211. Codification and reauthorization of Defense Research and
Development Rapid Innovation Program.
Sec. 212. Procedures for rapid reaction to emerging technology.
Sec. 213. Activities on identification and development of enhanced
personal protective equipment against blast injury.
Sec. 214. Human factors modeling and simulation activities.
Sec. 215. Expansion of mission areas supported by mechanisms for
expedited access to technical talent and expertise at
academic institutions.
Sec. 216. Advanced manufacturing activities.
Sec. 217. National security innovation activities.
Sec. 218. Partnership intermediaries for promotion of defense research
and education.
Sec. 219. Limitation on use of funds for Surface Navy Laser Weapon
System.
Sec. 220. Expansion of coordination requirement for support for
national security innovation and entrepreneurial
education.
Sec. 221. Limitation on funding for Amphibious Combat Vehicle 1.2.
Sec. 222. Defense quantum information science and technology research
and development program.
Sec. 223. Joint directed energy test activities.
Sec. 224. Requirement for establishment of arrangements for expedited
access to technical talent and expertise at academic
institutions to support Department of Defense missions.
Sec. 225. Authority for Joint Directed Energy Transition Office to
conduct research relating to high powered microwave
capabilities.
Sec. 226. Joint artificial intelligence research, development, and
transition activities.
Subtitle C--Reports and Other Matters
Sec. 231. Report on comparative capabilities of adversaries in key
technology areas.
Sec. 232. Report on active protection systems for armored combat and
tactical vehicles.
Sec. 233. Next Generation Combat Vehicle.
Sec. 234. Report on the future of the defense research and engineering
enterprise.
Sec. 235. Modification of reports on mechanisms to provide funds to
defense laboratories for research and development of
technologies for military missions.
Sec. 236. Report on Mobile Protected Firepower and Future Vertical
Lift.
Sec. 237. Improvement of the Air Force supply chain.
Sec. 238. Review of guidance on blast exposure during training.
Sec. 239. List of technologies and manufacturing capabilities critical
to Armed Forces.
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Sec. 240. Report on requiring access to digital technical data in
future acquisitions of combat, combat service, and combat
support systems.
Sec. 241. Competitive acquisition strategy for Bradley Fighting Vehicle
transmission replacement.
Sec. 242. Independent assessment of electronic warfare plans and
programs.
TITLE III--OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations
Sec. 301. Authorization of appropriations.
Subtitle B--Energy and Environment
Sec. 311. Further improvements to energy security and resilience.
Sec. 312. Funding of study and assessment of health implications of
per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances contamination in
drinking water by Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease
Registry.
Sec. 313. Military Mission Sustainment Siting Clearinghouse.
Sec. 314. Operational energy policy.
Sec. 315. Funding treatment of perfluorooctane sulfonic acid and
perfluorooctanoic acid at State-owned and operated
National Guard installations.
Subtitle C--Reports
Sec. 321. Reports on readiness.
Sec. 322. Report on cold weather capabilities and readiness of United
States Armed Forces.
Subtitle D--Other Matters
Sec. 331. Pilot programs on integration of military information support
and civil affairs activities.
Sec. 332. Reporting on future years budgeting by subactivity group.
Sec. 333. Restriction on upgrades to aviation demonstration team
aircraft.
Sec. 334. U.S. Special Operations Command civilian personnel.
Sec. 335. Limitation on availability of funds for service-specific
Defense Readiness Reporting Systems.
Sec. 336. Repurposing and reuse of surplus Army firearms.
Sec. 337. Limitation on availability of funds for establishment of
additional specialized undergraduate pilot training
facility.
Sec. 338. Scope of authority for restoration of land due to mishap.
Sec. 339. Redesignation of the Utah Test and Training Range (UTTR).
Subtitle E--Logistics and Sustainment
Sec. 351. Limitation on modifications to Navy Facilities Sustainment,
Restoration, and Modernization (FSRM) structure and
mechanism.
TITLE IV--MILITARY PERSONNEL AUTHORIZATIONS
Subtitle A--Active Forces
Sec. 401. End strengths for active forces.
Sec. 402. End strengths for commissioned officers on active duty in
certain grades.
Subtitle B--Reserve Forces
Sec. 411. End strengths for Selected Reserve.
Sec. 412. End strengths for Reserves on active duty in support of the
reserves.
Sec. 413. End strengths for military technicians (dual status).
Sec. 414. Maximum number of reserve personnel authorized to be on
active duty for operational support.
Subtitle C--Authorization of Appropriations
Sec. 421. Military personnel.
Sec. 422. Limitation on use of funds for personnel in fiscal year 2019
in excess of statutorily specified end strengths for
fiscal year 2018.
TITLE V--MILITARY PERSONNEL POLICY
Subtitle A--Officer Personnel Policy
PART I--Officer Personnel Management Reform
Sec. 501. Repeal of codified specification of authorized strengths of
certain commissioned officers on active duty.
Sec. 502. Annual defense manpower requirements report matters.
Sec. 503. Repeal of requirement for ability to complete 20 years of
service by age 62 as qualification for original
appointment as a regular commissioned officer.
Sec. 504. Enhancement of availability of constructive service credit
for private sector training or experience upon original
appointment as a commissioned officer.
Sec. 505. Standardized temporary promotion authority across the
military departments for officers in certain grades with
critical skills.
Sec. 506. Authority for promotion boards to recommend officers of
particular merit be placed higher on a promotion list.
Sec. 507. Authority for officers to opt out of promotion board
consideration.
Sec. 508. Competitive category matters.
Sec. 509. Promotion zone matters.
Sec. 510. Alternative promotion authority for officers in designated
competitive categories of officers.
Sec. 511. Applicability to additional officer grades of authority for
continuation on active duty of officers in certain
military specialties and career tracks.
PART II--Other Matters
Sec. 516. Matters relating to satisfactory service in grade for
purposes of retirement grade of officers in highest grade
of satisfactory service.
Sec. 517. Reduction in number of years of active naval service required
for permanent appointment as a limited duty officer.
Sec. 518. Repeal of original appointment qualification requirement for
warrant officers in the regular Army.
Sec. 519. Uniform grade of service of the Chiefs of Chaplains of the
Armed Forces.
Sec. 520. Written justification for appointment of Chiefs of Chaplains
in grade below grade of major general or rear admiral.
Subtitle B--Reserve Component Management
Sec. 521. Authority to adjust effective date of promotion in the event
of undue delay in extending Federal recognition of
promotion.
Sec. 522. Authority to designate certain reserve officers as not to be
considered for selection for promotion.
Sec. 523. Expansion of personnel subject to authority of the Chief of
the National Guard Bureau in the execution of functions
and missions of the National Guard Bureau.
Sec. 524. Repeal of prohibition on service on Army Reserve Forces
Policy Committee by members on active duty.
Subtitle C--General Service Authorities
Sec. 531. Assessment of Navy standard workweek and related adjustments.
Sec. 532. Manning of Forward Deployed Naval Forces.
Sec. 533. Navy watchstander records.
Sec. 534. Qualification experience requirements for certain Navy
watchstations.
Sec. 535. Repeal of 15-year statute of limitations on motions or
requests for review of discharge or dismissal from the
Armed Forces.
Sec. 536. Treatment of claims relating to military sexual trauma in
correction of military records and review of discharge or
dismissal proceedings.
Subtitle D--Military Justice Matters
Sec. 541. Punitive article on domestic violence under the Uniform Code
of Military Justice.
Sec. 542. Inclusion of strangulation and suffocation in conduct
constituting aggravated assault for purposes of the
Uniform Code of Military Justice.
Sec. 543. Authorities of Defense Advisory Committee on Investigation,
Prosecution, and Defense of Sexual Assault in the Armed
Forces.
Sec. 544. Protective orders against individuals subject to the Uniform
Code of Military Justice.
Sec. 545. Expansion of eligibility for Special Victims' Counsel
services.
Sec. 546. Clarification of expiration of term of appellate military
judges of the United States Court of Military Commission
Review.
Sec. 547. Expansion of policies on expedited transfer of members of the
Armed Forces who are victims of sexual assault.
Sec. 548. Uniform command action form on disposition of unrestricted
sexual assault cases involving members of the Armed
Forces.
Sec. 549. Inclusion of information on certain collateral conduct of
victims of sexual assault in annual reports on sexual
assault involving members of the Armed Forces.
Subtitle E--Member Education, Training, Transition, and Resilience
Sec. 551. Consecutive service of service obligation in connection with
payment of tuition for off-duty training or education for
commissioned officers of the Armed Forces with any other
service obligations.
Sec. 552. Consecutive service of active service obligations for medical
training with other service obligations for education or
training.
Sec. 553. Clarification of application and honorable service
requirements under the Troops-to-Teachers Program to
members of the Retired Reserve.
Sec. 554. Prohibition on use of funds for attendance of enlisted
personnel at senior level and intermediate level officer
professional military education courses.
Sec. 555. Repeal of program on encouragement of postseparation public
and community service.
Sec. 556. Expansion of authority to assist members in obtaining
professional credentials.
Sec. 557. Enhancement of authorities in connection with Junior Reserve
Officers' Training Corps programs.
[[Page S3405]]
Subtitle F--Defense Dependents' Education and Military Family Readiness
Matters
PART I--Defense Dependents' Education Matters
Sec. 561. Continuation of authority to assist local educational
agencies that benefit dependents of members of the Armed
Forces and Department of Defense civilian employees.
Sec. 562. Impact aid for children with severe disabilities.
Sec. 563. Department of Defense Education Activity policies and
procedures on sexual harassment of students of Activity
schools.
PART II--Military Family Readiness Matters
Sec. 566. Improvement of authority to conduct family support programs
for immediate family members of the Armed Forces assigned
to special operations forces.
Sec. 567. Expansion of period of availability of Military OneSource
program for retired and discharged members of the Armed
Forces and their immediate families.
Sec. 568. Expansion of authority for noncompetitive appointments of
military spouses by Federal agencies.
Sec. 569. Improvement of My Career Advancement Account program for
military spouses.
Sec. 570. Access to military installations for certain surviving
spouses and other next of kin of members of the Armed
Forces who die while on active duty or certain reserve
duty.
Sec. 571. Department of Defense Military Family Readiness Council
matters.
Sec. 572. Multidisciplinary teams for military installations on child
abuse and other domestic violence.
Sec. 573. Provisional or interim clearances to provide childcare
services at military childcare centers.
Sec. 574. Pilot program on prevention of child abuse and training on
safe childcare practices among military families.
Sec. 575. Pilot program on participation of military spouses in
Transition Assistance Program activities.
Sec. 576. Small business activities of military spouses on military
installations in the United States.
Subtitle G--Decorations and Awards
Sec. 581. Authorization for award of the Distinguished Service Cross
for Justin T. Gallegos for acts of valor during Operation
Enduring Freedom.
Sec. 582. Award of medals or other commendations to handlers of
military working dogs.
Subtitle H--Other Matters
Sec. 591. Authority to award damaged personal protective equipment to
members separating from the Armed Forces and veterans as
mementos of military service.
Sec. 592. Standardization of frequency of academy visits of the Air
Force Academy Board of Visitors with academy visits of
boards of other military service academies.
Sec. 593. Redesignation of the Commandant of the United States Air
Force Institute of Technology as the President of the
United States Air Force Institute of Technology.
Sec. 594. Limitation on justifications entered by military recruiters
for enlistment or accession of individuals into the Armed
Forces.
Sec. 595. National Commission on Military, National, and Public Service
matters.
Sec. 596. Burial of unclaimed remains of inmates at the United States
Disciplinary Barracks Cemetery, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
Sec. 597. Space-available travel on Department of Defense aircraft for
veterans with service-connected disabilities rated as
total.
TITLE VI--COMPENSATION AND OTHER PERSONNEL BENEFITS
Subtitle A--Pay and Allowances
Sec. 601. Fiscal year 2019 increase in military basic pay.
Sec. 602. Repeal of authority for payment of personal money allowances
to Navy officers serving in certain positions.
Sec. 603. Department of Defense proposal for a pay table for members of
the Armed Forces using steps in grade based on time in
grade rather than time in service.
Sec. 604. Financial support for lessors under the Military Housing
Privatization Initiative during 2019.
Sec. 605. Modification of authority of President to determine
alternative pay adjustment in annual basic pay of members
of the uniformed services.
Sec. 606. Eligibility of reserve component members for high-deployment
allowance for lengthy or numerous deployments and
frequent mobilizations.
Sec. 607. Eligibility of reserve component members for nonreduction in
pay while serving in the uniformed services or National
Guard.
Sec. 608. Temporary adjustment in rate of basic allowance for housing
following identification of significant
underdetermination of civilian housing costs for housing
areas.
Subtitle B--Bonuses and Special and Incentive Pays
Sec. 611. One-year extension of certain expiring bonus and special pay
authorities.
Subtitle C--Disability Pay, Retired Pay, and Survivor Benefits
Sec. 621. Technical corrections in calculation and publication of
special survivor indemnity allowance cost of living
adjustments.
Subtitle D--Other Matters
Sec. 631. Rates of per diem for long-term temporary duty assignments.
Sec. 632. Prohibition on per diem allowance reductions based on the
duration of temporary duty assignment or civilian travel.
TITLE VII--HEALTH CARE PROVISIONS
Subtitle A--TRICARE and Other Health Care Benefits
Sec. 701. Consolidation of cost-sharing requirements under TRICARE
Select and TRICARE Prime.
Sec. 702. Administration of TRICARE dental plans through the Federal
Employees Dental Insurance Program.
Sec. 703. Contraception coverage parity under the TRICARE program.
Sec. 704. Pilot program on opioid management in the military health
system.
Sec. 705. Pilot program on treatment of members of the Armed Forces for
post-traumatic stress disorder related to military sexual
trauma.
Subtitle B--Health Care Administration
Sec. 711. Improvement of administration of Defense Health Agency and
military medical treatment facilities.
Sec. 712. Organizational framework of the military healthcare system to
support medical requirements of the combatant commands.
Sec. 713. Streamlining of TRICARE Prime beneficiary referral process.
Sec. 714. Sharing of information with State prescription drug
monitoring programs.
Sec. 715. Improvement of reimbursement by Department of Defense of
entities carrying out State vaccination programs in
connection with vaccines provided to covered
beneficiaries under the TRICARE Program.
Subtitle C--Reports and Other Matters
Sec. 721. Extension of authority for Joint Department of Defense-
Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Facility
Demonstration Fund.
Sec. 722. Increase in number of appointed members of the Henry M.
Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military
Medicine.
Sec. 723. Cessation of requirement for mental health assessment of
members after redeployment from a contingency operation
upon discharge or release from the Armed Forces.
Sec. 724. Pilot program on earning by special operations forces medics
of credits towards a physician assistant degree.
Sec. 725. Pilot program on partnerships with civilian organizations for
specialized medical training.
Sec. 726. Registry of individuals exposed to per- and polyfluoroalkyl
substances on military installations.
Sec. 727. Inclusion of gambling disorder in health assessments for
members of the Armed Forces and related research efforts.
Sec. 728. Comptroller General review of Defense Health Agency oversight
of TRICARE managed care support contractors.
TITLE VIII--ACQUISITION POLICY, ACQUISITION MANAGEMENT, AND RELATED
MATTERS
Subtitle A--Acquisition Policy and Management
Sec. 801. Permanent Supply Chain Risk Management Authority.
Sec. 802. Commercially available market research.
Sec. 803. Comptroller General assessment of acquisition programs and
related initiatives.
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Subtitle B--Amendments to General Contracting Authorities, Procedures,
and Limitations
Sec. 811. Department of Defense contracting dispute matters.
Sec. 812. Continuation of technical data rights during challenges.
Sec. 813. Increased micro-purchase threshold.
Sec. 814. Modification of limitations on single source task or delivery
order contracts.
Sec. 815. Preliminary cost analysis requirement for exercise of
multiyear contract authority.
Sec. 816. Inclusion of best available information regarding past
performance of subcontractors and joint venture partners.
Sec. 817. Modification of criteria for waivers of requirement for
certified cost and price data.
Sec. 818. Subcontracting price and approved purchasing systems.
Sec. 819. Comptroller General of the United States report on progress
payment financing of Department of Defense contracts.
Sec. 820. Authorization to limit foreign access to technology through
contracts.
Sec. 821. Briefing requirement on services contracts.
Sec. 822. Sense of Congress on awarding of contracts to responsible
companies that primarily employ American workers and do
not actively transfer American jobs to potential
adversaries.
Subtitle C--Provisions Relating to Major Defense Acquisition Programs
Sec. 831. Program cost, fielding, and performance goals in planning
major acquisition programs.
Sec. 832. Implementation of recommendations of the Independent Study on
Consideration of Sustainment in Weapons Systems Life
Cycle.
Sec. 833. Pilot program to accelerate major weapons system programs.
Subtitle D--Provisions Relating to Acquisition Workforce
Sec. 841. Permanent authority for demonstration projects relating to
acquisition personnel management policies and procedures.
Sec. 842. Establishment of integrated review team on defense
acquisition industry-government exchange.
Sec. 843. Exchange program for acquisition workforce employees.
Subtitle E--Provisions Relating to Commercial Items
Sec. 851. Report on commercial item procurement reform.
Subtitle F--Industrial Base Matters
Sec. 861. National technology and industrial base application process.
Sec. 862. Report on defense electronics industrial base.
Sec. 863. Support for defense manufacturing communities to support the
defense industrial base.
Subtitle G--Other Transactions
Sec. 871. Change to notification requirement for other transactions.
Sec. 872. Data and policy on the use of other transactions.
Subtitle H--Development and Acquisition of Software Intensive and
Digital Products and Services
Sec. 881. Clarifications regarding proprietary and technical data.
Sec. 882. Implementation of recommendations of the final report of the
Defense Science Board Task Force on the Design and
Acquisition of Software for Defense Systems.
Sec. 883. Implementation of pilot program to use agile or iterative
development methods required under section 873 of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018.
Sec. 884. Enabling and other activities of the Cloud Executive Steering
Group.
Subtitle I--Other Matters
Sec. 891. Prohibition on certain telecommunications services or
equipment.
Sec. 892. Limitation on use of funds pending submittal of report on
Army Marketing and Advertising Program.
Sec. 893. Permanent SBIR and STTR authority for the Department of
Defense.
Sec. 894. Procurement of telecommunications supplies for experimental
purposes.
Sec. 895. Access by developmental and operational testing activities to
data regarding modeling and simulation activity.
TITLE IX--DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT
Subtitle A--Office of the Secretary of Defense and Related Matters
Sec. 901. Powers and duties of the Under Secretary of Defense for
Research and Engineering in connection with priority
emerging technologies.
Sec. 902. Redesignation and modification of responsibilities of Under
Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness.
Sec. 903. Modification of responsibilities of the Under Secretary of
Defense for Policy.
Sec. 904. Report on allocation of former responsibilities of the Under
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and
Logistics.
Sec. 905. Assistant Secretary of Defense for Strategy, Plans,
Assessments, Readiness, and Capabilities.
Sec. 906. Clarification of responsibilities and duties of the Chief
Information Officer of the Department of Defense.
Sec. 907. Specification of certain duties of the Defense Technical
Information Center.
Sec. 908. Limitation on termination of, and transfer of functions,
responsibilities, and activities of, the Strategic
Capabilities Office.
Sec. 909. Technical corrections to Department of Defense Test Resource
Management Center authority.
Subtitle B--Organization and Management of Other Department of Defense
Offices and Elements
Sec. 921. Modification of certain responsibilities of the Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff relating to joint force concept
development.
Sec. 922. Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations and
Low-Intensity Conflict review of United States Special
Operations Command.
Sec. 923. Qualifications for appointment as Deputy Chief Management
Officer of a military department.
Sec. 924. Expansion of principal duties of Assistant Secretary of the
Navy for Research, Development, and Acquisition.
Sec. 925. Cross-functional teams in the Department of Defense.
Sec. 926. Deadline for completion of full implementation of
requirements in connection with organization of the
Department of Defense for management of special
operations forces and special operations.
Subtitle C--Organization and Management of the Department of Defense
Generally
Sec. 931. Limitation on availability of funds for major headquarters
activities of the Department of Defense.
Sec. 932. Responsibility for policy on civilian casualty matters.
Sec. 933. Additional matters in connection with background and security
investigations for Department of Defense personnel.
Sec. 934. Program of expedited security clearances for mission-critical
positions.
Sec. 935. Information sharing program for positions of trust.
Sec. 936. Report on clearance in person concept.
Sec. 937. Strategic Defense Fellows Program.
Subtitle D--Other Matters
Sec. 941. Analysis of Department of Defense business management and
operations datasets to promote savings and efficiencies.
Sec. 942. Research and development to advance capabilities of the
Department of Defense in data integration and advanced
analytics in connection with personnel security.
TITLE X--GENERAL PROVISIONS
Subtitle A--Financial Matters
Sec. 1001. General transfer authority.
Sec. 1002. Inclusion of funds for Air Force pass-through items in
Defense-wide budget for the Department of Defense.
Sec. 1003. Report on shift in requests for funds for Department of
Defense activities from funds for overseas contingency
operations to funds through the base budget.
Sec. 1004. Ranking of auditability of financial statements of the
organizations and elements of the Department of Defense.
Sec. 1005. Transparency of accounting firms used to support Department
of Defense audit.
Subtitle B--Naval Vessels and Shipyards
Sec. 1011. Date of listing of vessels as battle force ships in the
Naval Vessel Register and other fleet inventory measures.
Sec. 1012. Annual reports on examination of Navy vessels.
Sec. 1013. Limitation on duration of homeporting of certain vessels in
foreign locations.
Sec. 1014. Specific authorization requirement for nuclear refueling of
aircraft carriers.
Sec. 1015. Dismantlement and disposal of nuclear-powered aircraft
carriers.
Sec. 1016. National Defense Sealift Fund.
Sec. 1017. Limitation on use of funds for retirement of hospital ships.
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Subtitle C--Counterterrorism
Sec. 1021. Extension of prohibition on use of funds for transfer or
release of individuals detained at United States Naval
Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to the United States.
Sec. 1022. Extension of prohibition on use of funds to construct or
modify facilities in the United States to house detainees
transferred from United States Naval Station, Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba.
Sec. 1023. Extension of prohibition on use of funds for transfer or
release of individuals detained at United States Naval
Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to certain countries.
Sec. 1024. Extension of prohibition on use of funds to close or
relinquish control of United States Naval Station,
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Sec. 1025. Authority to transfer individuals detained at United States
Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to the United States
temporarily for emergency or critical medical treatment.
Subtitle D--Miscellaneous Authorities and Limitations
Sec. 1031. Strategic guidance documents within the Department of
Defense.
Sec. 1032. Guidance on the electronic warfare mission area and joint
electromagnetic spectrum operations.
Sec. 1033. Limitation on use of funds for United States Special
Operations Command Global Messaging and Counter-Messaging
platform.
Sec. 1034. Sense of Congress on the basing of KC-46A aircraft outside
the continental United States.
Sec. 1035. Relinquishment of legislative jurisdiction of criminal
offenses committed by juveniles on military
installations.
Sec. 1036. Policy on response to juvenile-on-juvenile abuse committed
on military installations.
Subtitle E--Studies and Reports
Sec. 1041. Report on highest-priority roles and missions of the
Department of Defense and the Armed Forces.
Sec. 1042. Annual reports by the Armed Forces on Out-Year Unconstrained
Total Munitions Requirements and Out-Year inventory
numbers.
Sec. 1043. Comprehensive review of operational and administrative
chains-of-command and functions of the Department of the
Navy.
Sec. 1044. Military aviation readiness review in support of the
National Defense Strategy.
Sec. 1045. Report on capabilities and capacities of Armored Brigade
Combat Teams.
Sec. 1046. Improvement of annual report on civilian casualties in
connection with United States military operations.
Sec. 1047. Report on Department of Defense participation in Export
Administration Regulations license application review
process.
Sec. 1048. Automatic sunset for future statutory reporting
requirements.
Sec. 1049. Repeal of certain Department of Defense reporting
requirements that otherwise terminate as of December 31,
2021.
Sec. 1050. Report on potential improvements to certain military
educational institutions of the Department of Defense.
Sec. 1051. Recruiting costs of the Armed Forces.
Subtitle F--Other Matters
Sec. 1061. Authority to transfer funds for Bien Hoa dioxin cleanup.
Sec. 1062. Improvement of database on emergency response capabilities.
Sec. 1063. Acceptance and distribution by Department of Defense of
assistance from certain nonprofit entities in support of
missions of deployed United States personnel around the
world.
Sec. 1064. United States policy with respect to freedom of navigation
and overflight.
Sec. 1065. Prohibition of funds for Chinese language instruction
provided by a Confucius Institute.
TITLE XI--CIVILIAN PERSONNEL MATTERS
Subtitle A--Department of Defense Matters
Sec. 1101. Inapplicability of certification of executive qualifications
by qualification review boards of Office of Personnel
Management for initial appointments to Senior Executive
Service positions in Department of Defense.
Sec. 1102. Direct hire authority for science and technology reinvention
laboratories and Major Range and Test Facilities Base
facilities for recent science, technology, engineering,
and mathematics graduates of minority-serving
institutions.
Sec. 1103. Inclusion of Strategic Capabilities Office and Defense
Innovation Unit Experimental of the Department of Defense
in personnel management authority to attract experts in
science and engineering.
Sec. 1104. Enhancement of flexible management authorities for Science
and Technology Reinvention Laboratories of the Department
of Defense.
Sec. 1105. Inclusion of Office of Secretary of Defense among components
of the Department of Defense covered by direct hire
authority for financial management experts.
Sec. 1106. Authority to employ civilian faculty members at the Joint
Special Operations University.
Subtitle B--Government-Wide Matters
Sec. 1121. Alcohol testing of civil service mariners of the Military
Sealift Command assigned to vessels.
Sec. 1122. Expedited hiring authority for college graduates and post
secondary students.
Sec. 1123. Increase in maximum amount of voluntary separation incentive
pay authorized for civilian employees.
Sec. 1124. One-year extension of temporary authority to grant
allowances, benefits, and gratuities to civilian
personnel on official duty in a combat zone.
Sec. 1125. One-year extension of authority to waive annual limitation
on premium pay and aggregate limitation on pay for
Federal civilian employees working overseas.
TITLE XII--MATTERS RELATING TO FOREIGN NATIONS
Subtitle A--Assistance and Training
Sec. 1201. Clarification of authority for use of advisors and trainers
for training of personnel of foreign ministries with
security missions under defense institution capacity
building authorities.
Sec. 1202. Modification to Department of Defense State Partnership
Program.
Sec. 1203. Expansion of Regional Defense Combating Terrorism Fellowship
Program to include irregular warfare.
Sec. 1204. Extension and modification of authority to support border
security operations of certain foreign countries.
Sec. 1205. Legal and policy review of advise, assist, and accompany
missions.
Sec. 1206. Technical corrections relating to defense security
cooperation statutory reorganization.
Sec. 1207. Naval Small Craft Instruction and Technical Training School.
Subtitle B--Matters Relating to Afghanistan and Pakistan
Sec. 1211. Afghanistan Security Forces Fund.
Sec. 1212. Extension and modification of authority for reimbursement of
certain coalition nations for support provided to United
States military operations.
Sec. 1213. Extension of authority to transfer defense articles and
provide defense services to the military and security
forces of Afghanistan.
Sec. 1214. Modification of reporting requirements for special immigrant
visas for Afghan allies program.
Subtitle C--Matters Relating to Syria, Iraq, and Iran
Sec. 1221. Extension of authority to provide assistance to counter the
Islamic State of Iraq and Syria.
Sec. 1222. Extension and modification of authority to provide
assistance to the vetted Syrian opposition.
Sec. 1223. Extension and modification of authority to support
operations and activities of the Office of Security
Cooperation in Iraq.
Sec. 1224. Syria Study Group.
Sec. 1225. Modification of annual report on military power of Iran.
Subtitle D--Matters Relating to Europe and the Russian Federation
Sec. 1231. Extension of limitation on military cooperation between the
United States and the Russian Federation.
Sec. 1232. Limitation on availability of funds relating to sovereignty
of the Russian Federation over Crimea.
Sec. 1233. Extension of Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative.
Sec. 1234. Sense of Senate on relocation of Joint Intelligence Analysis
Complex.
Sec. 1235. Sense of Senate on enhancing deterrence against Russian
aggression in Europe.
Sec. 1236. Technical amendments related to NATO Support and Procurement
Organization and related NATO agreements.
Sec. 1237. Report on security cooperation between the Russian
Federation and Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela.
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Sec. 1238. Sense of Senate on countering Russian malign influence.
Subtitle E--Matters Relating to the Indo-Pacific Region
Sec. 1241. Redesignation, expansion, and extension of Southeast Asia
Maritime Security Initiative.
Sec. 1242. Modification of annual report on military and security
developments involving the People's Republic of China.
Sec. 1243. Sense of Senate on Taiwan.
Sec. 1244. Redesignation and modification of sense of Congress and
initiative for the Indo-Asia-Pacific region.
Sec. 1245. Prohibition on participation of the People's Republic of
China in Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) naval exercises.
Sec. 1246. Assessment of and report on geopolitical conditions in the
Indo-Pacific region.
Sec. 1247. Sense of Senate on United States-India defense relationship.
Sec. 1248. Sense of Senate on strategic importance of maintaining
commitments under Compacts of Free Association.
Sec. 1249. Sense of Senate on United States military forces on the
Korean Peninsula.
Subtitle F--Reports
Sec. 1251. Report on military and coercive activities of the People's
Republic of China in South China Sea.
Sec. 1252. Report on terrorist use of human shields.
Sec. 1253. Report on Arctic strategies.
Sec. 1254. Report on permanent stationing of a United States Army
brigade combat team in the Republic of Poland.
Sec. 1255. Reports on nuclear capabilities of the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea.
Sec. 1256. Report on United States military training opportunities with
allies and partners in the Indo-Pacific region.
Subtitle G--Other Matters
Sec. 1261. Modification of authorities relating to acquisition and
cross-servicing agreements.
Sec. 1262. Extension of authority for transfer of amounts for Global
Engagement Center.
Sec. 1263. Sense of Senate on purchase by Turkey of S-400 air defense
system.
Sec. 1264. Department of Defense support for stabilization activities
in national security interest of the United States.
Sec. 1265. Enhancement of U.S.-Israel defense cooperation.
Sec. 1266. Certifications regarding actions by Saudi Arabia in Yemen.
Sec. 1267. Sense of Senate on support for G5 Sahel Joint Force
countries.
Sec. 1268. Sense of Congress on broadening and expanding strategic
partnerships and allies.
Sec. 1269. Removal of Turkey from the F-35 program.
Sec. 1270. Increase in minimum amount of obligations from the Special
Defense Acquisition Fund for precision guided munitions.
TITLE XIII--COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION
Sec. 1301. Specification of Cooperative Threat Reduction funds.
Sec. 1302. Funding allocations.
TITLE XIV--OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS
Subtitle A--Military Programs
Sec. 1401. Working capital funds.
Sec. 1402. Chemical Agents and Munitions Destruction, Defense.
Sec. 1403. Drug Interdiction and Counter-Drug Activities, Defense-wide.
Sec. 1404. Defense Inspector General.
Sec. 1405. Defense Health Program.
Subtitle B--National Defense Stockpile
Sec. 1411. Consolidation of reporting requirements under the Strategic
and Critical Materials Stock Piling Act.
Subtitle C--Armed Forces Retirement Home
Sec. 1421. Authorization of appropriations for Armed Forces Retirement
Home.
Sec. 1422. Expansion of eligibility for residence at the Armed Forces
Retirement Home.
Sec. 1423. Oversight of health care provided to residents of the Armed
Forces Retirement Home.
Sec. 1424. Modification of authority on acceptance of gifts for the
Armed Forces Retirement Home.
Sec. 1425. Relief for residents of the Armed Forces Retirement Home
impacted by increase in fees.
Sec. 1426. Limitation on applicability of fee increase for residents of
the Armed Forces Retirement Home.
Subtitle D--Other Matters
Sec. 1431. Authority for transfer of funds to joint Department of
Defense-Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Facility
Demonstration Fund for Captain James A. Lovell Health
Care Center, Illinois.
Sec. 1432. Economical and efficient operation of working capital fund
activities.
TITLE XV--AUTHORIZATION OF ADDITIONAL APPROPRIATIONS FOR OVERSEAS
CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS
Subtitle A--Authorizations of Appropriations
Sec. 1501. Purpose.
Sec. 1502. Overseas contingency operations.
Sec. 1503. Procurement.
Sec. 1504. Research, development, test, and evaluation.
Sec. 1505. Operation and maintenance.
Sec. 1506. Military personnel.
Sec. 1507. Working capital funds.
Sec. 1508. Drug Interdiction and Counter-Drug Activities, Defense-wide.
Sec. 1509. Defense Inspector General.
Sec. 1510. Defense Health Program.
Subtitle B--Financial Matters
Sec. 1521. Treatment as additional authorizations.
Sec. 1522. Special transfer authority.
Subtitle C--Other Matters
Sec. 1531. Joint Improvised-Threat Defeat Organization.
TITLE XVI--STRATEGIC PROGRAMS, CYBER, AND INTELLIGENCE MATTERS
Subtitle A--Space Activities
Sec. 1601. Modifications to Space Rapid Capabilities Office.
Sec. 1602. Space warfighting policy and review of space capabilities.
Sec. 1603. Report on enhancements to the Global Positioning System
Operational Control Segment.
Sec. 1604. Streamline of commercial space launch operations.
Sec. 1605. Reusable launch vehicles.
Sec. 1606. Review of and report on activities of International Space
Station.
Subtitle B--Defense Intelligence and Intelligence-related Activities
Sec. 1611. Framework on governance, mission management, resourcing, and
effective oversight of Department of Defense combat
support agencies that are also elements of the
intelligence community.
Subtitle C--Cyberspace-related Matters
PART I--Cyberspace Generally
Sec. 1621. Policy of the United States on cyberspace, cybersecurity,
cyber warfare, and cyber deterrence.
Sec. 1622. Affirming the authority of the Secretary of Defense to
conduct military activities and operations in cyberspace.
Sec. 1623. Active defense and surveillance against Russian Federation
attacks in cyberspace.
Sec. 1624. Reorganization and consolidation of certain cyber
provisions.
Sec. 1625. Designation of official for matters relating to integrating
cybersecurity and industrial control systems within the
Department of Defense.
Sec. 1626. Assistance for small manufacturers in the defense industrial
supply chain on matters relating to cybersecurity.
Sec. 1627. Modification of acquisition authority of the Commander of
the United States Cyber Command.
Sec. 1628. Email and Internet website security and authentication.
Sec. 1629. Matters pertaining to the Sharkseer cybersecurity program.
Sec. 1630. Pilot program on modeling and simulation in support of
military homeland defense operations in connection with
cyber attacks on critical infrastructure.
Sec. 1631. Security product integration framework.
Sec. 1632. Report on enhancement of software security for critical
systems.
Sec. 1633. Comply to connect and cybersecurity scorecard.
Sec. 1634. Cyberspace Solarium Commission.
Sec. 1635. Program to establish cyber institutes at institutions of
higher learning.
Sec. 1636. Establishment of Cybersecurity for Defense Industrial Base
Manufacturing Activity.
PART II--Mitigation of Risks Posed by Providers of Information
Technology With Obligations to Foreign Governments
Sec. 1637. Definitions.
Sec. 1638. Identification of countries of concern regarding
cybersecurity.
Sec. 1639. Mitigation of risks to national security posed by providers
of information technology products and services who have
obligations to foreign governments.
Sec. 1640. Establishment of registry of disclosures.
Subtitle D--Nuclear Forces
Sec. 1641. Oversight and management of the command, control, and
communications system for the national leadership of the
United States.
Sec. 1642. Modification to requirement for conventional long-range
standoff weapon.
Sec. 1643. Exchange program for nuclear weapons program employees.
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Sec. 1644. Procurement authority for certain parts of intercontinental
ballistic missile fuzes.
Sec. 1645. Plan to train officers in nuclear command, control, and
communications.
Sec. 1646. Plan for alignment of acquisition of warhead life extension
programs and delivery vehicles for such warheads.
Sec. 1647. Extension of annual report on plan for the nuclear weapons
stockpile, nuclear weapons complex, nuclear weapons
delivery systems, and nuclear weapons command and control
system.
Sec. 1648. Prohibition on use of funds for activities to modify United
States aircraft to implement Open Skies Treaty.
Sec. 1649. Sense of Senate on Nuclear Posture Review.
Subtitle E--Missile Defense Programs
Sec. 1651. Extension of prohibition relating to missile defense
information and systems.
Sec. 1652. Multiyear procurement authority for Standard Missile-3 IB
guided missiles.
Sec. 1653. Extension of requirement for reports on unfunded priorities
of Missile Defense Agency.
Sec. 1654. Iron Dome short-range rocket defense system and Israeli
cooperative missile defense program co-development and
co-production.
Sec. 1655. Metrics for evaluating effectiveness of integrated Ballistic
Missile Defense System against operationally realistic
ballistic missile attacks.
Sec. 1656. Modification of requirement relating to transition of
ballistic missile defense programs to military
departments.
Sec. 1657. Sense of the Senate on acceleration of missile defense
capabilities.
Sec. 1658. Integrated air and missile defense for evolving theater
missile threats.
Sec. 1659. Acceleration of hypersonic missile defense program.
Sec. 1660. Sense of the Senate on allied partnerships for missile
defense.
Sec. 1660A. Sense of the Senate on results of tests carried out by
Missile Defense Agency.
Sec. 1660B. Sense of the Senate on discrimination for missile defense.
Sec. 1660C. Development and deployment of persistent space-based sensor
architecture.
Sec. 1660D. Modification of requirement to develop a space-based
ballistic missile intercept layer.
Subtitle F--Other Matters
Sec. 1661. Assessment of electronic warfare capabilities of Russia and
China.
Sec. 1662. Budget exhibit on support provided to entities outside
Department of Defense.
Sec. 1663. Development of Electromagnetic Battle Management capability
for joint electromagnetic operations.
TITLE XVII--COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN INVESTMENT IN THE UNITED STATES
Sec. 1701. Short title.
Sec. 1702. Sense of Congress.
Sec. 1703. Definitions.
Sec. 1704. Acceptance of written notices.
Sec. 1705. Inclusion of partnership and side agreements in notice.
Sec. 1706. Declarations for certain covered transactions.
Sec. 1707. Stipulations regarding transactions.
Sec. 1708. Authority for unilateral initiation of reviews.
Sec. 1709. Timing for reviews and investigations.
Sec. 1710. Monitoring of non-notified and non-declared transactions.
Sec. 1711. Submission of certifications to Congress.
Sec. 1712. Analysis by Director of National Intelligence.
Sec. 1713. Information sharing.
Sec. 1714. Action by the President.
Sec. 1715. Judicial review.
Sec. 1716. Membership and staff of Committee.
Sec. 1717. Actions by the Committee to address national security risks.
Sec. 1718. Modification of annual report and other reporting
requirements.
Sec. 1719. Certification of notices and information.
Sec. 1720. Implementation plans.
Sec. 1721. Assessment of need for additional resources for Committee.
Sec. 1722. Funding.
Sec. 1723. Centralization of certain Committee functions.
Sec. 1724. Conforming amendments.
Sec. 1725. Requirements to identify and control the export of emerging
and foundational technologies.
Sec. 1726. Export control enforcement authority.
Sec. 1727. Prohibition on modification of civil penalties under export
control and sanctions laws.
Sec. 1728. Under Secretary of Commerce for Industry and Security.
Sec. 1729. Limitation on cancellation of designation of Secretary of
the Air Force as Department of Defense Executive Agent
for a certain Defense Production Act program.
Sec. 1730. Review of and report on certain defense technologies
critical to the United States maintaining superior
military capabilities.
Sec. 1731. Briefing on information from transactions reviewed by
Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States
relating to foreign efforts to influence democratic
institutions and processes.
Sec. 1732. Effective date.
Sec. 1733. Severability.
DIVISION B--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION AUTHORIZATIONS
Sec. 2001. Short title.
Sec. 2002. Expiration of authorizations and amounts required to be
specified by law.
Sec. 2003. Effective date.
TITLE XXI--ARMY MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
Sec. 2101. Authorized Army construction and land acquisition projects.
Sec. 2102. Family housing.
Sec. 2103. Authorization of appropriations, Army.
Sec. 2104. Extension of authorizations of certain fiscal year 2015
projects.
Sec. 2105. Extension of authorizations of certain fiscal year 2016
project.
TITLE XXII--NAVY MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
Sec. 2201. Authorized Navy construction and land acquisition projects.
Sec. 2202. Family housing.
Sec. 2203. Improvements to military family housing units.
Sec. 2204. Authorization of appropriations, Navy.
TITLE XXIII--AIR FORCE MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
Sec. 2301. Authorized Air Force construction and land acquisition
projects.
Sec. 2302. Family housing.
Sec. 2303. Improvements to military family housing units.
Sec. 2304. Authorization of appropriations, Air Force.
Sec. 2305. Modification of authority to carry out certain phased
project authorized in fiscal years 2015, 2016, and 2017.
Sec. 2306. Modification of authority to carry out certain fiscal year
2017 project.
Sec. 2307. Modification of authority to carry out certain fiscal year
2018 project.
Sec. 2308. Additional authority to carry out certain fiscal year 2019
projects.
TITLE XXIV--DEFENSE AGENCIES MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
Sec. 2401. Authorized defense agencies construction and land
acquisition projects.
Sec. 2402. Energy Resilience and Conservation Investment Program.
Sec. 2403. Authorization of appropriations, defense agencies.
Sec. 2404. Extension of authorizations of certain fiscal year 2015
projects.
Sec. 2405. Authorization of certain fiscal year 2018 project.
TITLE XXV--INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS
Subtitle A--North Atlantic Treaty Organization Security Investment
Program
Sec. 2501. Authorized NATO construction and land acquisition projects.
Sec. 2502. Authorization of appropriations, NATO.
Subtitle B--Host Country In-kind Contributions
Sec. 2511. Republic of Korea funded construction projects.
TITLE XXVI--GUARD AND RESERVE FORCES FACILITIES
Subtitle A--Project Authorizations and Authorization of Appropriations
Sec. 2601. Authorized Army National Guard construction and land
acquisition projects.
Sec. 2602. Authorized Army Reserve construction and land acquisition
projects.
Sec. 2603. Authorized Navy Reserve and Marine Corps Reserve
construction and land acquisition projects.
Sec. 2604. Authorized Air National Guard construction and land
acquisition projects.
Sec. 2605. Authorized Air Force Reserve construction and land
acquisition projects.
Sec. 2606. Authorization of appropriations, National Guard and Reserve.
Subtitle B--Other Matters
Sec. 2611. Modification of authority to carry out certain fiscal year
2016 project.
Sec. 2612. Modification of authority to carry out certain fiscal year
2018 project.
Sec. 2613. Additional authority to carry out certain fiscal year 2019
project.
TITLE XXVII--BASE REALIGNMENT AND CLOSURE ACTIVITIES
Sec. 2701. Authorization of appropriations for base realignment and
closure activities funded through Department of Defense
Base Closure Account.
[[Page S3410]]
Sec. 2702. Prohibition on conducting additional base realignment and
closure (BRAC) round.
TITLE XXVIII--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION AND GENERAL PROVISIONS
Subtitle A--Military Construction Program and Military Family Housing
Changes
Sec. 2801. Additional authority to obtain architectural and engineering
services and construction design for defense laboratory
modernization pilot program.
Sec. 2802. Modification of contract authority for acquisition,
construction, or furnishing of test facilities and
equipment.
Sec. 2803. Extension of temporary, limited authority to use operation
and maintenance funds for construction projects in
certain areas outside the United States.
Sec. 2804. Unspecified minor military construction projects related to
revitalization and recapitalization of Defense Industrial
Base Facilities.
Sec. 2805. Congressional oversight of projects carried out pursuant to
laws other than Military Construction Authorization Acts.
Subtitle B--Project Management and Oversight Reforms
Sec. 2811. Updates and modifications to Department of Defense Form
1391, Unified Facilities Criteria, and military
installation master plans.
Sec. 2812. Work in Process Curve charts and outlay tables for military
construction projects.
Subtitle C--Land Conveyances
Sec. 2821. Land exchange, Air Force Plant 44, Tucson, Arizona.
Sec. 2822. Land conveyance, Eglin Air Force Base, Florida.
Subtitle D--Other Matters
Sec. 2831. Commemoration of Freedman's Village.
Sec. 2832. Strategic plan to improve capabilities of Department of
Defense training ranges and installations.
Sec. 2833. Native American Indian lands environmental mitigation
program.
Sec. 2834. Defense community infrastructure pilot program.
Sec. 2835. Representation of installation interests in negotiations and
proceedings with carriers and other public utilities.
Sec. 2836. White Sands Missile Range land enhancements.
Sec. 2837. Authority to transfer funds for construction of Indian River
Bridge.
TITLE XXIX--OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
Sec. 2901. Authorized Army construction and land acquisition projects.
Sec. 2902. Authorized Navy construction and land acquisition projects.
Sec. 2903. Authorized Air Force construction and land acquisition
projects.
Sec. 2904. Authorized Defense Agencies construction and land
acquisition projects.
Sec. 2905. Authorization of appropriations.
DIVISION C--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY AUTHORIZATIONS AND
OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS
TITLE XXXI--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY PROGRAMS
Subtitle A--National Security Programs and Authorizations
Sec. 3101. National Nuclear Security Administration.
Sec. 3102. Defense environmental cleanup.
Sec. 3103. Other defense activities.
Sec. 3104. Nuclear energy.
Subtitle B--Program Authorizations, Restrictions, and Limitations
Sec. 3111. Clarification of roles and authorities of National Nuclear
Security Administration.
Sec. 3112. National Nuclear Security Administration Personnel System.
Sec. 3113. Amendments to the Atomic Energy Act of 1954.
Sec. 3114. Extension of enhanced procurement authority to manage supply
chain risk.
Sec. 3115. Pilot program on conduct by Department of Energy of
background reviews for access by certain individuals to
national security laboratories.
Sec. 3116. Extension of authority for acceptance of contributions for
acceleration of removal or security of fissile materials,
radiological materials, and related equipment at
vulnerable sites worldwide.
Sec. 3117. Modification of limitation on development of low-yield
nuclear weapons.
Sec. 3118. Prohibition on use of funds for terminating activities at
MOX facility.
Subtitle C--Plans and Reports
Sec. 3121. Modifications to cost-benefit analyses for competition of
management and operating contracts.
Sec. 3122. Review of defense environmental cleanup activities.
Sec. 3123. Survey of workforce of national security laboratories and
nuclear weapons production facilities.
Sec. 3124. Elimination of certain reports.
Sec. 3125. Implementation of Nuclear Posture Review by National Nuclear
Security Administration.
TITLE XXXII--DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD
Sec. 3201. Authorization.
TITLE XXXV--MARITIME ADMINISTRATION
Sec. 3501. Maritime Administration.
Sec. 3502. Permanent authority of Secretary of Transportation to issue
vessel war risk insurance.
DIVISION D--FUNDING TABLES
Sec. 4001. Authorization of amounts in funding tables.
TITLE XLI--PROCUREMENT
Sec. 4101. Procurement.
Sec. 4102. Procurement for overseas contingency operations.
TITLE XLII--RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION
Sec. 4201. Research, development, test, and evaluation.
Sec. 4202. Research, development, test, and evaluation for overseas
contingency operations.
TITLE XLIII--OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
Sec. 4301. Operation and maintenance.
Sec. 4302. Operation and maintenance for overseas contingency
operations.
TITLE XLIV--MILITARY PERSONNEL
Sec. 4401. Military personnel.
Sec. 4402. Military personnel for overseas contingency operations.
TITLE XLV--OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS
Sec. 4501. Other authorizations.
Sec. 4502. Other authorizations for overseas contingency operations.
TITLE XLVI--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
Sec. 4601. Military construction.
Sec. 4602. Military construction for overseas contingency operations.
TITLE XLVII--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY PROGRAMS
Sec. 4701. Department of Energy national security programs.
SEC. 3. CONGRESSIONAL DEFENSE COMMITTEES.
In this Act, the term ``congressional defense committees''
has the meaning given that term in section 101(a)(16) of
title 10, United States Code.
SEC. 4. BUDGETARY EFFECTS OF THIS ACT.
The budgetary effects of this Act, for the purposes of
complying with the Statutory Pay-As-You-Go Act of 2010, shall
be determined by reference to the latest statement titled
``Budgetary Effects of PAYGO Legislation'' for this Act,
jointly submitted for printing in the Congressional Record by
the Chairmen of the House and Senate Budget Committees,
provided that such statement has been submitted prior to the
vote on passage in the House acting first on the conference
report or amendment between the Houses.
DIVISION A--DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE AUTHORIZATIONS
TITLE I--PROCUREMENT
Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations
SEC. 101. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal
year 2019 for procurement for the Army, the Navy and the
Marine Corps, the Air Force, and Defense-wide activities, as
specified in the funding table in section 4101.
Subtitle B--Army Programs
SEC. 111. DEPLOYMENT BY THE ARMY OF AN INTERIM CRUISE MISSILE
DEFENSE CAPABILITY.
(a) Certification of Need.--Not later than 30 days after
the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of
Defense shall certify to the congressional defense committees
whether deployment of an interim, fixed site cruise missile
defense capability is necessary.
(b) Deployment Required.--The Army shall deploy an interim,
fixed site cruise missile defense capability, in anticipation
of delivery to the Army of the Indirect Fire Protection
Capability (IFPC), by the deadlines as follows:
(1) Two batteries by not later than September 30, 2020.
(2) Two additional batteries by not later than September
30, 2023.
(c) Locations of Deployment.--In deploying the interim
capability pursuant to subsection (b), the Secretary of
Defense shall afford a priority in locations for deployment
to air bases and significant fixed site locations in Europe
and Asia for the purpose of the protection of such bases and
locations against potential cruise missile threats.
(d) Achievement of Deployment Deadlines.--In order to meet
the deadlines for deployment specified in subsection (b), the
Army--
(1) shall deploy systems that require the least amount of
development; and
(2) may use a combination of--
(A) procurement of non-developmental air and missile
defense systems currently in production to ensure rapid
delivery of capability;
[[Page S3411]]
(B) use of existing systems, components, and capabilities
already in the Joint Force inventory, including rockets and
missiles as available;
(C) operational information technology for communication,
detection, and fire control that is certified to work with
existing joint information technology systems to ensure
interoperability;
(D) engagement and collaboration with science and
technology, engineering, testing, and acquisition
organization and activities in the Department of Defense,
including the Defense Innovation United Experimental, the
Director of Operational Test and Evaluation, the Defense
Digital Service, the Strategic Capabilities Office, and the
Rapid Capabilities offices, to accelerate the development,
testing, and deployment of existing systems; and
(E) institutional and operational basing to facilitate
rapid training and fielding.
(e) Funding.--Of the amount authorized to be appropriated
for fiscal year 2019 by section 101 and available for the
Army for procurement as specified in the funding table in
section 4101, up to $500,000,000 may be available for the
deployment of the interim capability required by subsection
(b).
Subtitle C--Navy Programs
SEC. 121. MULTIYEAR PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR F/A-18E/F SUPER
HORNET AND EA-18G AIRCRAFT PROGRAM.
(a) Authority for Multiyear Procurement.--Subject to
section 2306b of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary
of the Navy may enter into one or more multiyear contracts,
beginning with the fiscal year 2019 program year, for the
procurement of F/A-18E/F Super Hornet and potential EA-18G
aircraft. Notwithstanding subsection (k) of such section
2306b, the Secretary of Defense may enter into a multiyear
contract under this section for up to three years.
(b) Authority for Advance Procurement.--The Secretary of
the Navy may enter into one or more contracts for advance
procurement associated with the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet and
potential EA-18G aircraft, including economic order quantity,
for which authorization to enter into a multiyear procurement
contract is provided under subsection (a).
(c) Cost Analysis Requirement.--The Secretary may not
exercise the authority provided under subsection (a) or (b)
until the Secretary of Defense submits to the congressional
defense committees the report and confirmation required under
subparagraphs (A) and (B), respectively, of section
2306b(i)(2) of title 10, United States Code.
(d) Condition for Out-Year Contract Payments.--A contract
entered into under subsection (a) shall provide that any
obligation of the United States to make a payment under the
contract for a fiscal year after fiscal year 2019 is subject
to the availability of appropriations or funds for that
purpose for such later fiscal year.
SEC. 122. MULTIYEAR PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR E-2D ADVANCED
HAWKEYE (AHE) AIRCRAFT PROGRAM.
(a) Authority for Multiyear Procurement.--Subject to
section 2306b of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary
of the Navy may enter into one or more multiyear contracts,
beginning with the fiscal year 2019 program year, for the
procurement of E-2D Advanced Hawkeye (AHE) aircraft.
Notwithstanding subsection (k) of such section 2306b, the
Secretary of Defense may enter into a multiyear contract
under this section for up to five years.
(b) Authority for Advance Procurement and Economic Order
Quantity.--The Secretary may enter into one or more contracts
for advance procurement associated with the E-2D AHE
(including economic order quantity) for which authorization
to enter into a multiyear procurement contract is provided
under subsection (a).
(c) Cost Analysis Requirement.--The Secretary may not
exercise the authority provided under subsection (a) or (b)
until the Secretary of Defense submits to the congressional
defense committees the report and confirmation required under
subparagraphs (A) and (B), respectively, of section
2306b(i)(2) of title 10, United States Code.
(d) Condition for Out-year Contract Payments.--A contract
entered into under subsection (a) shall provide that any
obligation of the United States to make a payment under the
contract for a fiscal year after fiscal year 2019 is subject
to the availability of appropriations for that purpose for
such later fiscal year.
SEC. 123. EXTENSION OF LIMITATION ON USE OF SOLE-SOURCE
SHIPBUILDING CONTRACTS FOR CERTAIN VESSELS.
Section 124 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328), as amended by section
127 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2018 (Public Law 115-91), is further amended by striking ``or
fiscal year 2018'' and inserting ``, fiscal year 2018, or
fiscal year 2019''.
SEC. 124. PROHIBITION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR NAVY PORT
WATERBORNE SECURITY BARRIERS.
(a) Prohibition.--Except as provided under subsection (b),
none of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act
or otherwise made available for the Department of Defense for
fiscal year 2019 may be used for the procurement of new Navy
port waterborne security barriers.
(b) Waiver.--The Secretary of the Navy may waive the
prohibition under subsection (a) not less than 30 days after
submitting to the congressional defense committees--
(1) a Navy requirements document that specifies Key
Performance Parameters and Key System Attributes for new Navy
port waterborne security barriers;
(2) a certification that the level of capability specified
under paragraph (1) will meet or exceed that of legacy Navy
port waterborne security barriers;
(3) the acquisition strategy for the recapitalization of
legacy Navy port waterborne security barriers, which will
meet or exceed the requirements specified under paragraph
(1); and
(4) a certification that any contract award or awards for
new Navy port waterborne security barriers will result from
full and open competition to the maximum extent practicable.
SEC. 125. MULTIYEAR PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR STANDARD
MISSILE-6.
(a) Authority for Multiyear Procurement.--Subject to
section 2306b of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary
of the Navy may enter into one or more multiyear contracts,
beginning with the fiscal year 2019 program year, for the
procurement of up to 625 Standard Missile-6 guided missiles.
(b) Authority for Advance Procurement and Economic Order
Quantity.--The Secretary may enter into one or more contracts
for advance procurement associated with the missiles
(including economic order quantity) for which authorization
to enter into a multiyear procurement contract is provided
under subsection (a).
(c) Cost Analysis Requirement.--The Secretary may not
exercise the authority provided under subsection (a) or (b)
until the Secretary of Defense submits to the congressional
defense committees the report and confirmation required under
subparagraphs (A) and (B), respectively, of section
2306b(i)(2) of title 10, United States Code.
(d) Condition for Out-year Contract Payments.--A contract
entered into under subsection (a) shall provide that any
obligation of the United States to make a payment under the
contract for a fiscal year after fiscal year 2019 is subject
to the availability of appropriations for that purpose for
such later fiscal year.
SEC. 126. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR THE
LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP.
(a) Limitation.--None of the amounts authorized to be
appropriated by this Act or otherwise made available for the
Department of Defense for fiscal year 2019 may be used to
exceed the total procurement quantity listed in revision five
of the Littoral Combat Ship acquisition strategy unless the
Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment
submits to the congressional defense committees the
certification described in subsection (b).
(b) Certification.--The certification described in this
subsection is a certification by the Under Secretary that
awarding a contract for the procurement of a Littoral Combat
Ship that exceeds the total procurement quantity listed in
revision five of the Littoral Combat Ship acquisition
strategy--
(1) is in the national security interests of the United
States;
(2) will not result in exceeding the low-rate initial
production quantity approved in the Littoral Combat Ship
acquisition strategy in effect as of the date of the
certification; and
(3) is necessary to maintain a full and open competition
for the Guided Missile Frigate (FFG(X)) with a single source
award in fiscal year 2020.
(c) Definition.--The term ``revision five of the Littoral
Combat Ship acquisition strategy'' means the fifth revision
of the Littoral Combat Ship acquisition strategy approved by
the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and
Sustainment on March 26, 2018.
SEC. 127. NUCLEAR REFUELING OF AIRCRAFT CARRIERS.
(a) Authorization To Procure Nuclear Refueling Materials.--
Pursuant to section 7314a of title 10, United States Code, as
added by section 1014 of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy
may procure naval nuclear reactor power units and associated
reactor components for the following aircraft carriers:
(1) U.S.S. John C. Stennis (CVN-74).
(2) U.S.S. Harry S. Truman (CVN-75).
(3) U.S.S. Ronald Reagan (CVN-76).
(4) U.S.S. George H.W. Bush (CVN-77).
(b) Condition for Out-year Payments.--Any contract entered
into under subsection (a) shall provide that any obligation
of the United States to make a payment under the contract for
a fiscal year after fiscal year 2019 is subject to
availability of appropriations for that purpose for that
later fiscal year.
SEC. 128. LIMITATION ON FUNDING FOR AMPHIBIOUS ASSAULT
VEHICLE PRODUCT IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.
Not more than 75 percent of the funds authorized by this
Act or otherwise made available for the Marine Corps for
fiscal year 2019 for the Amphibious Assault Vehicle Product
Improvement Program (AAV PIP) may be obligated or expended
until the Secretary of Defense has submitted to the
congressional defense committees--
(1) the report required under subsection (b) of section
1041; or
(2) the information required under paragraph (5) of such
subsection.
Subtitle D--Air Force Programs
SEC. 141. PROHIBITION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR RETIREMENT
OF E-8 JSTARS AIRCRAFT.
(a) Prohibition on Availability of Funds for Retirement.--
Except as provided by
[[Page S3412]]
subsection (d), none of the funds authorized to be
appropriated by this Act or otherwise made available for
fiscal year 2019 for the Air Force may be obligated or
expended to retire, or prepare to retire, any E-8 Joint
Surveillance Target Attack Radar System aircraft.
(b) Additional Limitation on Retirement.--
(1) In general.--In addition to the prohibition in
subsection (a), the Secretary of the Air Force may not
retire, or prepare to retire, any E-8C aircraft until the
Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment
submits to the congressional defense committees the
certification described under paragraph (2).
(2) Required certification.--The certification referred to
in paragraph (1) is a certification submitted by the Under
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment to the
congressional defense committees that the Department of
Defense's plan for 21st Century Battle Management Command and
Control, as briefed to the congressional defense committees
in March 2018, is progressing according to the schedule
presented in March 2018.
(c) Exception.--The prohibitions in subsections (a) and (b)
shall not apply to individual E-8 Joint Surveillance Target
Attack Radar System aircraft that the Secretary of the Air
Force determines, on a case-by-case basis, to be
nonoperational because of mishaps, other damage, or being
uneconomical to repair.
SEC. 142. B-52H AIRCRAFT SYSTEM MODERNIZATION REPORT.
Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of
this Act, the Secretary of the Air Force shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report on the long term
modernization of the B-52H aircraft, including an estimated
timeline and requirements as an integrated aircraft system
of--
(1) electronic warfare and defensive systems;
(2) communications including secure jam resistant
capability;
(3) radar replacement;
(4) engine replacement;
(5) future weapons and targeting capability; and
(6) mission planning systems.
SEC. 143. REPEAL OF FUNDING RESTRICTION FOR EC-130H COMPASS
CALL RECAPITALIZATION PROGRAM AND REVIEW OF
PROGRAM ACCELERATION OPPORTUNITIES.
(a) Repeal.--Section 131 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328;
130 Stat. 2037) is repealed.
(b) Periodic Reports Required.--
(1) In general.--Not later than December 30, 2018, June 30,
2019, and December 30, 2019, the Secretary of the Air Force
shall submit to the congressional defense committees a series
of updated program status reports for the EC-130H Compass
Call Recapitalization Program.
(2) Elements.--The reports required under paragraph (1)
shall include--
(A) a program status update describing progress in meeting
current and future acquisition milestones;
(B) a description of opportunities to accelerate the
program in fiscal years 2020 and 2021;
(C) a description of long-lead items or other block buy
components that could reduce cost and lead to acceleration of
the program;
(D) funding requirements to carry out program acceleration
in order to replace the legacy EC-130H fleet as rapidly as
possible; and
(E) a description of how the EC-130H Compass Call
Recapitalization Program--
(i) meets the requirements of combatant commanders; and
(ii) is more operationally effective and survivable than
the existing EC-130H Compass Call aircraft platform.
Subtitle E--Defense-wide, Joint, and Multiservice Matters
SEC. 151. MULTIYEAR PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR C-130J AIRCRAFT
PROGRAM.
(a) Authority for Multiyear Procurement.--Subject to
section 2306b of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary
of the Air Force may enter into one or more multiyear
contracts, beginning with the fiscal year 2019 program year,
for the procurement of C-130J aircraft and, acting as the
executive agent for the Department of the Navy, for the
procurement of C-130J aircraft.
(b) Authority for Advance Procurement and Economic Order
Quantity.--The Secretary of the Air Force may enter into one
or more contracts for advance procurement associated with the
C-130J aircraft, including economic order quantity, for which
authorization to enter into a multiyear procurement contract
is provided under subsection (a).
(c) Condition for Out-Year Contract Payments.--A contract
entered into under subsection (a) shall provide that any
obligation of the United States to make a payment under the
contract for a fiscal year after fiscal year 2019 is subject
to the availability of appropriations for that purpose for
such later fiscal year.
(d) Treatment of Fiscal Year 2018 Aircraft.--The multiyear
contract authority under subsection (a) includes C-130J
aircraft for which funds were appropriated for fiscal year
2018.
SEC. 152. QUARTERLY UPDATES ON THE F-35 JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER
PROGRAM.
(a) In General.--Beginning not later than October 1, 2018,
and on a quarterly basis thereafter through October 1, 2024,
the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and
Sustainment shall provide to the congressional defense
committees a briefing on the progress of the F-35 Joint
Strike Fighter program.
(b) Elements.--Each briefing under subsection (a) shall
include, with respect to the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter
program, the following elements:
(1) An overview of the program schedule.
(2) A description of each contract awarded under the
program, including a description of the type of contract and
the status of the contract.
(3) An assessment of the status of the program with respect
to--
(A) modernization;
(B) modification;
(C) testing;
(D) delivery;
(E) sustainment; and
(F) program management.
SEC. 153. AUTHORITY TO PROCURE ADDITIONAL POLAR-CLASS
ICEBREAKERS.
Section 122 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91) is amended--
(1) in the section heading, by striking ``icebreaker
vessel'' and inserting ``authorization to procure up to six
polar-class icebreakers'';
(2) by striking subsections (a) and (b);
(3) by inserting before subsection (c) the following new
subsection:
``(a) Authority To Procure Icebreakers.--The Secretary of
the department in which the Coast Guard is operating may, in
consultation with the Secretary of the Navy, enter into a
contract or contracts for the procurement of up to six polar-
class icebreakers, including--
``(1) polar-class heavy icebreakers; and
``(2) polar-class medium icebreakers.'';
(4) by redesignating subsections (c) and (d) as subsections
(b) and (c), respectively; and
(5) in paragraph (1) of subsection (b), as redesignated by
paragraph (4) of this section, by striking ``subsection
(a)(1)'' and inserting ``subsection (a)''.
TITLE II--RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION
Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations
SEC. 201. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal
year 2019 for the use of the Department of Defense for
research, development, test, and evaluation, as specified in
the funding table in section 4201.
Subtitle B--Program Requirements, Restrictions, and Limitations
SEC. 211. CODIFICATION AND REAUTHORIZATION OF DEFENSE
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT RAPID INNOVATION
PROGRAM.
(a) Codification.--
(1) In general.--Chapter 139 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by inserting after section 2359 the
following new section:
``Sec. 2359a. Defense Research and Development Rapid
Innovation Program
``(a) Program Established.--(1) The Secretary of Defense
shall establish a competitive, merit-based program to
accelerate the fielding of technologies developed pursuant to
phase II Small Business Innovation Research Program projects,
technologies developed by the defense laboratories, and other
innovative technologies (including dual use technologies).
``(2) The purpose of this program is to stimulate
innovative technologies and reduce acquisition or lifecycle
costs, address technical risks, improve the timeliness and
thoroughness of test and evaluation outcomes, and rapidly
insert such products directly in support of primarily major
defense acquisition programs, but also other defense
acquisition programs that meet critical national security
needs.
``(b) Guidelines.--The Secretary shall issue guidelines for
the operation of the program. At a minimum such guidance
shall provide for the following:
``(1) The issuance of one or more broad agency
announcements or the use of any other competitive or merit-
based processes by the Department of Defense for candidate
proposals in support of defense acquisition programs as
described in subsection (a).
``(2) The review of candidate proposals by the Department
of Defense and by each military department and the merit-
based selection of the most promising cost-effective
proposals for funding through contracts, cooperative
agreements, and other transactions for the purposes of
carrying out the program.
``(3) The total amount of funding provided to any project
under the program from funding provided under subsection (d)
shall not exceed $3,000,000, unless the Secretary, or the
Secretary's designee, approves a larger amount of funding for
the project.
``(4) No project shall receive more than a total of two
years of funding under the program from funding provided
under subsection (d), unless the Secretary, or the
Secretary's designee, approves funding for any additional
year.
``(5) Mechanisms to facilitate transition of follow-on or
current projects carried out under the program into defense
acquisition programs, through the use of the authorities of
section 2302e of this title or such other authorities as may
be appropriate to conduct
[[Page S3413]]
further testing, low rate production, or full rate production
of technologies developed under the program.
``(6) Projects are selected using merit-based selection
procedures and the selection of projects is not subject to
undue influence by Congress or other Federal agencies.
``(c) Treatment Pursuant to Certain Congressional Rules.--
Nothing in this section shall be interpreted to require or
enable any official of the Department of Defense to provide
funding under this section to any earmark as defined pursuant
to House Rule XXI, clause 9, or any congressionally directed
spending item as defined pursuant to Senate Rule XLIV,
paragraph 5.
``(d) Funding.--Subject to the availability of
appropriations for such purpose, the amounts authorized to be
appropriated for research, development, test, and evaluation
for a fiscal year may be used for such fiscal year for the
program established under subsection (a).
``(e) Transfer Authority.--(1) The Secretary may transfer
funds available for the program to the research, development,
test, and evaluation accounts of a military department,
defense agency, or the unified combatant command for special
operations forces pursuant to a proposal, or any part of a
proposal, that the Secretary determines would directly
support the purposes of the program.
``(2) The transfer authority provided in this subsection is
in addition to any other transfer authority available to the
Department of Defense.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 139 of such title is amended by
inserting after the item relating to section 2359 the
following new item:
``2359a. Defense Research and Development Rapid Innovation Program.''.
(b) Conforming Amendments.--
(1) Repeal of old provision.--Section 1073 of the Ike
Skelton National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2011 (Public Law 111-383; 10 U.S.C. 2359 note) is hereby
repealed.
(2) Repeal of old table of contents item.--The table of
contents in section 2(b) of such Act is amended by striking
the item relating to section 1073.
SEC. 212. PROCEDURES FOR RAPID REACTION TO EMERGING
TECHNOLOGY.
(a) Requirement to Establish Procedures.--Not later than
180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the
Under Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering shall
prescribe procedures for the designation and development of
technologies that are--
(1) urgently needed--
(A) to react to a technological development of an adversary
of the United States; or
(B) to respond to a significant and urgent emerging
technology; and
(2) not receiving appropriate research funding or attention
from the Department of Defense.
(b) Elements.--The procedures prescribed under subsection
(a) shall include the following:
(1) A process for streamlined communications between the
the Under Secretary, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the
commanders of the combatant commands, the science and
technology executives within each military department, and
the science and technology community, including--
(A) a process for the commanders of the combatant commands
and the Joint Chiefs of Staff to communicate their needs to
the science and technology community; and
(B) a process for the science and technology community to
propose technologies that meet the needs communicated by the
combatant commands and the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
(2) Procedures for the development of technologies proposed
pursuant to paragraph (1)(B), including--
(A) a process for demonstrating performance of the proposed
technologies on a short timeline;
(B) a process for developing a development strategy for a
technology, including integration into future budget years;
and
(C) a process for making investment determinations based on
information obtained pursuant to subparagraphs (A) and (B).
SEC. 213. ACTIVITIES ON IDENTIFICATION AND DEVELOPMENT OF
ENHANCED PERSONAL PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT AGAINST
BLAST INJURY.
(a) Activities Required.--
(1) In general.--During fiscal years 2019 and 2020, the
Secretary of the Army shall carry out a set of activities to
identify and develop personal equipment to provide enhanced
protection against injuries caused by blasts in combat and
training.
(2) Action with dote.--The Secretary shall undertake all
actions required of the Secretary under this section jointly
with the Director of Operational Test and Evaluation.
(b) Activities.--
(1) Continuous evaluation process.--For purposes of the
activities required by subsection (a), the Secretary shall
establish a process to continuously solicit from government,
industry, academia, and other appropriate entities personal
protective equipment that is ready for testing and evaluation
in order to identify and evaluate equipment or clothing that
is more effective in protecting members of the Armed Forces
from the harmful effects of blast injuries, including
traumatic brain injuries, and would be suitable for expedited
procurement and fielding.
(2) Goals.--The goals of the activities shall include:
(A) Development of streamlined requirements for procurement
of personal protective equipment.
(B) Appropriate testing of personal protective equipment
prior to procurement and fielding.
(C) Development of expedited mechanisms for deployment of
effective personal protective equipment.
(D) Identification of areas of research in which increased
investment has the potential to improve the quality of
personal protective equipment and the capability of the
industrial base to produce such equipment.
(E) Such other goals as the Secretary considers
appropriate.
(3) Partnerships for certain assessments.--As part of the
activities, the Secretary shall establish research
partnerships with appropriate academic institutions for
purposes of assessing the following:
(A) The ability of various forms of personal protective
equipment to protect against common blast injuries, including
traumatic brain injuries.
(B) The value of real-time data analytics to track the
effectiveness of various forms of personal protective
equipment to protect against common blast injuries, including
traumatic brain injuries.
(C) The availability of commercial-off the-shelf personal
protective technology to protect against traumatic brain
injury resulting from blasts.
(D) The extent to which the equipment determined through
the assessment to be most effective to protect against common
blast injuries is readily modifiable for different body types
and to provide lightweight material options to enhance
maneuverability.
(c) Authorities.--In carrying out activities under
subsection (a), the Secretary may use any authority as
follows:
(1) Experimental procurement authority under section 2373
of title 10, United States Code.
(2) Other transactions authority under section 2371 and
2371b of title 10, United States Code.
(3) Authority to award technology prizes under section
2374a of title 10, United States Code.
(4) Authority under the Defense Acquisition Challenge
Program under section 2359b of title 10, United States Code.
(5) Any other authority on acquisition, technology
transfer, and personnel management that the Secretary
considers appropriate.
(d) Certain Treatment of Activities.--Any activities under
this section shall be deemed to have been through the use of
competitive procedures for the purposes of section 2304 of
title 10, United States Code.
(e) On-going Assessment Following Activities.--After the
completion of activities under subsection (a), the Secretary
shall, on an on-going basis, do the following:
(1) Evaluate the extent to which personal protective
equipment identified through the activities would--
(A) enhance survivability of personnel from blasts in
combat and training; and
(B) enhance prevention of brain damage, and reduction of
any resultant chronic brain dysfunction, from blasts in
combat and training.
(2) In the case of personal protective equipment so
identified that would provide enhancements as described in
paragraph (1), estimate the costs that would be incurred to
procure such enhanced personal protective equipment, and
develop a schedule for the procurement of such equipment.
(3) Estimate the potential health care cost savings that
would occur from expanded use of personal protective
equipment described in paragraph (2).
(f) Reports.--
(1) Initial report.--Not later than December 1, 2019, the
Secretary shall submit to the Committee on Armed Services of
the Senate and the House of Representatives a report on the
activities under subsection (a) as of the date of the report.
(2) Final report.--Not later than December 1, 2020, the
Secretary shall submit to the committees of Congress referred
to in paragraph (1) a report on the activities under this
section, including the following:
(A) The results of the evaluation under subsection (e)(1).
(B) The estimate of costs and schedules under subsection
(e)(2).
(g) Funding.--Of the amount authorized to be appropriated
for fiscal year 2019 for the Department of Defense by section
201, up to $10,000,000 may be available to carry out this
section.
SEC. 214. HUMAN FACTORS MODELING AND SIMULATION ACTIVITIES.
(a) Activities Required.--The Secretary of the Army shall
develop and provide for the carrying out of human factors
modeling and simulation activities designed to do the
following:
(1) Provide warfighters and civilians with personalized
assessment, education, and training tools.
(2) Identify and implement effective ways to interface and
team warfighters with machines.
(3) Result in the use of intelligent, adaptive augmentation
to enhance decision making.
(4) Result in the development of techniques, technologies,
and practices to mitigate critical stressors that impede
[[Page S3414]]
warfighter and civilian protection, sustainment, and
performance.
(b) Purpose.--The overall purpose of the activities shall
be to accelerate research and development that enhances
capabilities for human performance, human-systems
integration, and training for the warfighter.
(c) Participants in Activities.--Participants in the
activities may include the following:
(1) Elements of the Department of Defense engaged in
science and technology activities.
(2) Program Executive Offices of the Department.
(3) Academia.
(4) The private sector.
(5) Such other participants as the Secretary considers
appropriate.
(d) Execution.--The Secretary shall carry out this section
through the Army Futures Command, the Army Research
Institute, or such other component of the Department of the
Army as the Secretary considers appropriate.
SEC. 215. EXPANSION OF MISSION AREAS SUPPORTED BY MECHANISMS
FOR EXPEDITED ACCESS TO TECHNICAL TALENT AND
EXPERTISE AT ACADEMIC INSTITUTIONS.
Section 217(e) of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 10 U.S.C. 2358 note)
is amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraph (23) as paragraph (27); and
(2) by inserting after paragraph (22) the following new
paragraphs:
``(23) Space.
``(24) Infrastructure resilience.
``(25) Photonics.
``(26) Autonomy.''.
SEC. 216. ADVANCED MANUFACTURING ACTIVITIES.
(a) Designation.--The Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition and Sustainment and the Under Secretary of
Defense for Research and Engineering shall jointly, in
coordination with Secretaries of the military departments,
establish not less than three activities to demonstrate
advanced manufacturing techniques and capabilities at depot-
level activities or military arsenal facilities of the
military departments.
(b) Purposes.--The activities established pursuant to
subsection (a) shall--
(1) support efforts to implement advanced manufacturing
techniques and capabilities;
(2) identify improvements to sustainment methods for
component parts and other logistics needs;
(3) identify and implement appropriate information security
protections to ensure security of advanced manufacturing;
(4) aid in the procurement of advanced manufacturing
equipment and support services; and
(5) enhance partnerships between the defense industrial
base and Department of Defense laboratories, academic
institutions, and industry.
(c) Cooperative Agreements and Partnerships.--
(1) In general.--The Under Secretaries may enter into a
cooperative agreement and use public-private and public-
public partnerships to facilitate development of advanced
manufacturing techniques in support of the defense industrial
base.
(2) Requirements.--A cooperative agreement entered into
under paragraph (1) and a partnership used under such
paragraph shall facilitate--
(A) development and implementation of advanced
manufacturing techniques and capabilities;
(B) appropriate sharing of information in the adaptation of
advanced manufacturing, including technical data rights; and
(C) implementation of appropriate information security
protections into advanced manufacturing tools and techniques.
(d) Authorities.--In carrying out this section, the Under
Secretaries may use the following authorities:
(1) Section 2196 of title 10, United States Code, relating
to the Manufacturing Engineering Education Program.
(2) Section 2368 of such title, relating to centers for
science, technology, and engineering partnership.
(3) Section 2374a of such title, relating to prizes for
advanced technology achievements.
(4) Section 2474 of such title, relating to centers of
industrial and technical excellence.
(5) Section 2521 of such title, relating to the
Manufacturing Technology Program.
(6) Section 12 of the Stevenson-Wydler Technology
Innovation Act of 1980 (15 U.S.C. 3710a) and section 6305 of
title 31, United States Code, relating to cooperative
research and development agreements.
(7) Such other authorities as the Under Secretaries
considers appropriate.
SEC. 217. NATIONAL SECURITY INNOVATION ACTIVITIES.
(a) Establishment.--The Under Secretary of Defense for
Research and Engineering shall establish activities to
develop interaction between the Department of Defense and the
commercial technology industry and academia with regard to
emerging hardware products and technologies with national
security applications.
(b) Elements.--The activities required by subsection (a)
shall include the following:
(1) Informing and encouraging private investment in
specific hardware technologies of interest to future defense
technology needs with unique national security applications.
(2) Funding research and technology development in critical
hardware-based defense sectors, specifically
microelectromechanical systems, processing components,
micromachinery, and materials science that private industry
has not supported sufficiently to meet rapidly emerging
national security needs.
(3) Developing and executing policies and actions to deter
strategic acquisition of industrial and technical
capabilities in the private sector by foreign entities that
could potentially exclude companies from participating in the
Department of Defense technology and industrial base.
(4) Identifying promising emerging technology in industry
and academia for the Department of Defense for potential
support or research and development cooperation.
(c) Transfer of Personnel and Resources.--
(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), the Under
Secretary may transfer such personnel, resources, and
authorities as the Under Secretary considers appropriate to
carry out the activities established under subsection (a)
from other elements of the Department.
(2) Certification.--The Under Secretary may only make a
transfer of personnel, resources, or authorities under
paragraph (1) upon certification by the Under Secretary that
the activities established under paragraph (a) can attract
sufficient private sector investment, has personnel with
sufficient technical and management expertise, and has
identified relevant technologies and systems for potential
investment in order to carry out the activities established
under subsection (a), independent of further government
funding beyond this authorization.
(d) Establishment of Nonprofit Entity.--The Under Secretary
may establish or fund a nonprofit entity to carry out the
program activities under subsection (a).
(e) Plan.--
(1) In general.--Not later than one year after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Under Secretary shall submit
to the congressional defense committees a detailed plan to
carry out this section.
(2) Elements.--The plan required by paragraph (1) shall
include the following:
(A) A description of the additional authorities needed to
carry out the activities set forth in subsection (b).
(B) Plans for transfers under subsection (c), including
plans for private fund-matching and investment mechanisms,
oversight, treatment of rights relating to technical data
developed, and relevant dates and goals of such transfers.
(C) Plans for attracting the participation of the
commercial technology industry and academia and how those
plans fit into the current Department of Defense research and
engineering enterprise.
(f) Authorities.--In carrying out this section, the Under
Secretary may use the following authorities:
(1) Section 1711 of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91), relating to a pilot
program on strengthening manufacturing in the defense
industrial base.
(2) Section 1599g of title 10 of the United States Code,
relating to public-private talent exchanges.
(3) Section 2368 of such title, relating to Centers for
Science, Technology, and Engineering Partnerships.
(4) Section 2374a of such title, relating to prizes for
advanced technology achievements.
(5) Section 2474 of such title, relating to Centers of
Industrial and Technical Excellence.
(6) Section 2521 of such title, relating to the
Manufacturing Technology Program.
(7) Subchapter VI of chapter 33 of title 5, United States
Code, relating to assignments to and from States.
(8) Chapter 47 of such title, relating to personnel
research programs and demonstration projects.
(9) Section 12 of the Stevenson-Wydler Technology
Innovation Act of 1980 (15 U.S.C. 3710a) and section 6305 of
title 31, United States Code, relating to cooperative
research and development agreements.
(10) Such other authorities as the Under Secretary
considers appropriate.
(g) Funding.--Of the amount authorized to be appropriated
for fiscal year 2019 for the Department of Defense by section
201 and subject to the availability of appropriations, up to
$150,000,000 may be available to carry out this section.
SEC. 218. PARTNERSHIP INTERMEDIARIES FOR PROMOTION OF DEFENSE
RESEARCH AND EDUCATION.
Section 2368 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (f) and (g) as subsections
(g) and (h), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after subsection (e) the following new
subsection (f):
``(f) Use of Partnership Intermediaries to Promote Defense
Research and Education.--(1) Subject to the approval of the
Secretary or the head of the another department or agency of
the Federal Government concerned, the Director of a Center
may enter into a contract, memorandum of understanding or
other transition with a partnership intermediary that
provides for the partnership intermediary to perform services
for the Department of Defense that increase the likelihood of
success in the conduct of cooperative or joint activities of
the Center with industry or academic institutions.
[[Page S3415]]
``(2) In this subsection, the term `partnership
intermediary' means an agency of a State or local government,
or a nonprofit entity owned in whole or in part by, chartered
by, funded in whole or in part by, or operated in whole or in
part by or on behalf of a State or local government, that
assists, counsels, advises, evaluates, or otherwise
cooperates with industry or academic institutions that need
or can make demonstrably productive use of technology-related
assistance from a Center.''.
SEC. 219. LIMITATION ON USE OF FUNDS FOR SURFACE NAVY LASER
WEAPON SYSTEM.
(a) Limitation.--None of the funds authorized to be
appropriated or otherwise made available by this Act may be
used to exceed a procurement quantity of one Surface Navy
Laser Weapon System, also known as the High Energy Laser and
Integrated Optical-dazzler with Surveillance (HELIOS), per
fiscal year, unless the Secretary of the Navy submits to the
congressional defense committees a report on such system with
the elements set forth in subsection (b).
(b) Elements.--The elements set forth in this subsection
are, with respect to the system described in subsection (a),
the following:
(1) A document setting forth the requirements for the
system, including desired performance characteristics.
(2) An acquisition plan that includes the following:
(A) A program schedule to accomplish design completion,
technology maturation, risk reduction, and other activities,
including dates of key design reviews (such as Preliminary
Design Review and Critical Design Review) and program
initiation decision (such as Milestone B) if applicable.
(B) A contracting strategy, including requests for
proposals, the extent to which contracts will be
competitively awarded, option years, option quantities,
option prices, and ceiling prices.
(C) The fiscal years of procurement and delivery for each
engineering development model, prototype, or similar unit
planned to be acquired.
(D) A justification for the fiscal years of procurement and
delivery for each engineering development model, prototype,
or similar unit planned to be acquired.
(3) A test plan and schedule sufficient to achieve
operational effectiveness and operational suitability
determinations (such as Early Operational Capability and
Initial Operational Capability) related to the requirements
set forth in paragraph (1).
(4) Associated funding and item quantities, disaggregated
by fiscal year and appropriation, requested in the Fiscal
Year 2019 Future Years Defense Program.
(5) An estimate of the acquisition costs, including the
total costs for procurement, research, development, test, and
evaluation.
SEC. 220. EXPANSION OF COORDINATION REQUIREMENT FOR SUPPORT
FOR NATIONAL SECURITY INNOVATION AND
ENTREPRENEURIAL EDUCATION.
Section 225(e) of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91) is amended by adding
at the end the following new paragraph:
``(16) The National Security Technology Accelerator.''.
SEC. 221. LIMITATION ON FUNDING FOR AMPHIBIOUS COMBAT VEHICLE
1.2.
None of the funds authorized by this Act or otherwise made
available for the Marine Corps for fiscal year 2019 for the
development of Amphibious Combat Vehicle 1.2 may be obligated
or expended until the Secretary of Defense has submitted to
the congressional defense committees--
(1) the report required under subsection (b) of section
1041; or
(2) the information required under paragraph (5) of such
subsection.
SEC. 222. DEFENSE QUANTUM INFORMATION SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM.
(a) Establishment.--The Secretary of Defense shall carry
out a quantum information science and technology research and
development program.
(b) Purposes.--The purposes of the program required by
subsection (a) are as follows:
(1) To ensure global superiority of the United States in
quantum information science necessary for meeting national
security requirements.
(2) To coordinate all quantum information science and
technology research and development within the Department of
Defense and to provide for interagency cooperation and
collaboration on quantum information science and technology
research and development between the Department of Defense
and other departments and agencies of the United States and
appropriate private sector entities that are involved in
quantum information science and technology research and
development.
(3) To develop and manage a portfolio of fundamental and
applied quantum information science and technology and
engineering research initiatives that is stable, consistent,
and balanced across scientific disciplines.
(4) To accelerate the transition and deployment of
technologies and concepts derived from quantum information
science and technology research and development into the
Armed Forces, and to establish policies, procedures, and
standards for measuring the success of such efforts.
(5) To collect, synthesize, and disseminate critical
information on quantum information science and technology
research and development.
(6) To establish and support appropriate research,
innovation, and industrial base, including facilities and
infrastructure, to support the needs of Department of Defense
missions and systems related to quantum information science
and technology.
(c) Administration.--In carrying out the program required
by subsection (a), the Secretary shall act through the Under
Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering, who shall
supervise the planning, management, and coordination of the
program. The Under Secretary, in consultation with the
Secretaries of the military departments and the heads of
participating Defense Agencies and other departments and
agencies of the United States, shall--
(1) prescribe a set of long-term challenges and a set of
specific technical goals for the program, including--
(A) optimization of analysis of national security data
sets;
(B) design of new materials and molecular functions;
(C) secure communications and cryptography;
(D) quantum sensing and metrology;
(E) development of mathematics to support defense missions
related to quantum-based encryption techniques; and
(F) processing and manufacturing of low-cost, robust, and
reliable quantum information science and technology-enabled
devices and systems;
(2) develop a coordinated and integrated research and
investment plan for meeting the near-, mid-, and long-term
challenges with definitive milestones while achieving the
specific technical goals that builds upon the Department's
increased investment in quantum information science and
technology research and development, commercial sector and
global investments, and other United States Government
investments in the quantum sciences;
(3) not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment
of this Act, develop and continuously update guidance,
including classification and data management plans for
defense-related quantum information science and technology
activities, and policies for control of personnel
participating on such activities to minimize the effects of
loss of intellectual property in basic and applied quantum
science and information considered sensitive to the
leadership of the United States in the field of quantum
computing; and
(4) develop memoranda of agreement, joint funding
agreements, and other cooperative arrangements necessary for
meeting the long-term challenges and achieving the specific
technical goals.
(d) Report.--Not later than December 31, 2020, the Under
Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering shall
submit to the congressional defense committees a report on
the program, in both classified and unclassified format.
SEC. 223. JOINT DIRECTED ENERGY TEST ACTIVITIES.
(a) Test Activities.--The Under Secretary of Defense for
Research and Engineering shall develop, establish, and
coordinate directed energy testing activities adequate to
ensure the achievement by the Department of Defense of goals
of the Department for developing and deploying directed
energy systems to match national security needs.
(b) Elements.--The activity established under subsection
(a) shall include the following:
(1) The High Energy Laser System Test Facility of the Army
Test and Evaluation Command.
(2) Such other test resources and activities as the Under
Secretary may designate for purposes of this section.
(c) Designation.--The test activities established under
subsection (a) shall be considered part of the Major Range
and Test Facility Base (as defined in 196(i) of title 10,
United States Code).
(d) Direction and Control.--The conduct of testing
activities under subsection (a) shall be subject to
authority, direction, and control of the Under Secretary in
the Under Secretary's capacity as the official with principal
responsibility for the development and demonstration of
directed energy weapons for the Department pursuant to
section 219(a)(1) of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2017 (10 U.S.C. 2431 note).
(e) Prioritization of Effort.--In developing and
coordinating testing activities pursuant to subsection (a),
the Under Secretary shall prioritize efforts consistent with
the following:
(1) Paragraphs (2) through (5) of section 219(a) of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (10
U.S.C. 2431 note).
(2) Enabling the standardized collection and evaluation of
testing data to establish testing references and benchmarks.
(3) Concentrating sufficient personnel expertise of
directed energy weapon systems in order to validate the
effectiveness of new weapon systems against a variety of
targets.
(4) Consolidating modern state-of-the-art testing
infrastructure including telemetry, sensors, and optics to
support advanced technology testing and evaluation.
(5) Formulating a joint lethality or vulnerability
information repository that can be accessed by any of the
military departments of Defense Agencies, similar to a Joint
Munitions Effectiveness Manuals (JMEMs).
(6) Reducing duplication of directed energy weapon testing.
[[Page S3416]]
(7) Ensuring that an adequate workforce and adequate
testing facilities are maintained to support missions of the
Department of Defense.
SEC. 224. REQUIREMENT FOR ESTABLISHMENT OF ARRANGEMENTS FOR
EXPEDITED ACCESS TO TECHNICAL TALENT AND
EXPERTISE AT ACADEMIC INSTITUTIONS TO SUPPORT
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE MISSIONS.
(a) In General.--Subsection (a)(1) of section 217 of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018
(Public Law 115-91) is amended by striking ``may'' and
inserting ``shall''.
(b) Extension.--Subsection (f) of such section is amended
by striking ``September 30, 2020'' and inserting ``September
30, 2022''.
SEC. 225. AUTHORITY FOR JOINT DIRECTED ENERGY TRANSITION
OFFICE TO CONDUCT RESEARCH RELATING TO HIGH
POWERED MICROWAVE CAPABILITIES.
Section 219(b)(3) of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 10 U.S.C. 2431
note) is amended by inserting ``, including high-powered
microwaves,'' after ``energy systems and technologies''.
SEC. 226. JOINT ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT, AND TRANSITION ACTIVITIES.
(a) Establishment.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish a
set of activities within the Department of Defense to
coordinate the efforts of the Department to develop, mature,
and transition artificial intelligence technologies into
operational use.
(2) Emphasis.--The set of activities established under
paragraph (1) shall apply artificial intelligence and machine
learning solutions to operational problems and coordinate
activities involving artificial intelligence and artificial
intelligence enabled capabilities within the Department.
(b) Designation.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
designate a senior official of the Department of Defense with
principal responsibility for the coordination of activities
relating to the development and demonstration of artificial
intelligence and machine learning for the Department.
(c) Duties.--The duties of the official designated under
subsection (b) shall include the following:
(1) Strategic plan.--Developing a detailed strategic plan
to develop, mature, adopt, and transition artificial
intelligence technologies into operational use. Such plan
shall include the following:
(A) A strategic roadmap for the identification and
coordination of the development and fielding of artificial
intelligence technologies and key enabling capabilities.
(B) The continuous evaluation and adaptation of relevant
artificial intelligence capabilities developed both inside
the Department and in other organizations for military
missions.
(2) Acceleration of development and fielding of artificial
intelligence.--To the degree practicable, the designated
official shall--
(A) use the flexibility of regulations, personnel, or other
relevant policies of the Department to accelerate the
development and fielding of artificial intelligence
capabilities;
(B) ensure engagement with defense and private industries,
research universities, and unaffiliated, nonprofit research
institutions;
(C) provide technical advice and support to entities in the
Department of Defense and the military departments to
optimize the use of artificial intelligence and machine
learning technologies to meet Department missions;
(D) support the development of requirements for artificial
intelligence capabilities that address the highest priority
capability gaps of the Department and technical feasibility;
(E) develop and support capabilities for technical analysis
and assessment of threat capabilities based on artificial
intelligence;
(F) ensure that the Department has appropriate workforce
and capabilities at laboratories, test ranges, and within the
organic defense industrial base to support the artificial
intelligence capabilities and requirements of the Department;
(G) develop classification guidance for all artificial
intelligence related activities of the Department;
(H) work with appropriate officials to develop appropriate
ethical, legal, and other policies for the Department
governing the development and use of artificial intelligence
enabled systems and technologies in operational situations;
and
(I) ensure--
(i) that artificial intelligence programs of each military
department and of the Defense Agencies are consistent with
the priorities identified under this section; and
(ii) appropriate coordination of artificial intelligence
activities of the Department with interagency, industry, and
international efforts relating to artificial intelligence,
including relevant participation in standards setting bodies.
(d) Access to Information.--The Secretary of Defense shall
ensure that the official designated under subsection (b) has
access to such information on programs and activities of the
military departments and other Defense Agencies as the
Secretary considers appropriate to carry out the coordination
described in subsection (b) and the duties set forth in
subsection (c).
(e) Study on Artificial Intelligence Topics.--
(1) In general.--Not later than one year after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the official designated under
subsection (b) shall--
(A) complete a study on the future of artificial
intelligence in the context of the missions of the
Department; and
(B) submit to the congressional defense committees a report
on the findings of the designated official with respect to
the study completed under subparagraph (A).
(2) Consultation with experts.--In conducting the study
required by paragraph (1)(A), the designated official shall
consult with experts within the Department, other Federal
agencies, academia, and the commercial sector, as the
Secretary considers appropriate.
(3) Elements.--The study required by paragraph (1)(A) shall
include the following:
(A) A comprehensive and national-level review of advances
in artificial intelligence and machine learning, and
associated technologies relevant to the needs of the
Department and the Armed Forces.
(B) Near-term actionable recommendations to the Secretary,
including ways to more effectively organize the Department
for artificial intelligence and most effectively leverage
academic and commercial progress in these technologies.
(C) Recommendations for engagement by the Department with
relevant agencies that will be involved with artificial
intelligence in the future.
Subtitle C--Reports and Other Matters
SEC. 231. REPORT ON COMPARATIVE CAPABILITIES OF ADVERSARIES
IN KEY TECHNOLOGY AREAS.
(a) In General.--Not later than 90 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Director of the Defense
Intelligence Agency shall submit to the Committees on Armed
Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a
report that sets forth a direct comparison between the
capabilities of the United States in emerging technology
areas (such as hypersonics, artificial intelligence, quantum
information science, and directed energy weapons) and the
capabilities of adversaries of the United States in such
areas.
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall
include, for each technology covered by such report, the
following:
(1) An evaluation of spending by the United States and
adversaries on such technology.
(2) An evaluation of the quantity and quality of research
on such technology.
(3) An evaluation of the test infrastructure and workforce
supporting such technology.
(4) An assessment of the technological progress of the
United States and adversaries on such technology.
(5) Descriptions of timelines for operational deployment of
such technology.
(6) An assessment of the intent or willingness of
adversaries to use such technology.
(c) Coordination.--The Director shall prepare the report in
coordination with other appropriate officials of the
intelligence community and with such other partners in the
technology areas covered by the report as the Director
considers appropriate.
SEC. 232. REPORT ON ACTIVE PROTECTION SYSTEMS FOR ARMORED
COMBAT AND TACTICAL VEHICLES.
(a) Report Required.--Not later than 60 days after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army shall
submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and
the House of Representatives a report on technologies related
to active protection systems (APS) for armored combat and
tactical vehicles.
(b) Contents.--The report required by subsection (a) shall
include the following:
(1) With respect to the active protection systems that the
Army has recently tested on the M1A2 Abrams, the M2A3
Bradley, and the STRYKER, the following:
(A) An assessment of the effectiveness of such systems.
(B) Plans of the Secretary to further test such systems.
(C) Proposals for future development of such systems.
(D) A timeline for fielding such systems.
(2) Plans for how the Army will incorporate active
protection systems into new armored combat and tactical
vehicle designs, such as Mobile Protection Firepower (MPF),
Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicle (AMPV), and Next Generation
Combat Vehicle (NGCV).
SEC. 233. NEXT GENERATION COMBAT VEHICLE.
(a) Prototype.--The Secretary of the Army shall take
appropriate actions to ensure that the Tank Automotive,
Research, Development, and Engineering Center (TARDEC) of the
Army is provided the resources, including funds and
acquisition authorities, necessary to build a prototype for
the Next Generation Combat Vehicle (NGCV).
(b) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 60 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the
Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of
Representatives a report on the development of the Next
Generation Combat Vehicle.
(2) Analysis.--
(A) In general.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall
include a thorough analysis of the requirements of the Next
Generation Combat Vehicle.
(B) Relevance to national defense strategy.--In carrying
out subparagraph
[[Page S3417]]
(A), the Secretary shall ensure that the requirements are
relevant to the most recently published National Defense
Strategy.
(C) Threats and terrain.--The Secretary shall ensure that
the analysis includes consideration of threats and terrain.
(D) Component technologies.--The Secretary shall ensure
that the analysis includes consideration of the latest
enabling component technologies that have the potential to
dramatically change basic combat vehicle design and improve
lethality, protection, mobility, range, and sustainment.
(c) Limitation.--Of the funds authorized to be appropriated
for fiscal year 2019 by section 201 and available for
research, development, testing, and evaluation, Army, for the
Next Generation Combat Vehicle, not more than 50 percent may
be obligated or expended until the Secretary submits the
report required by subsection (b).
SEC. 234. REPORT ON THE FUTURE OF THE DEFENSE RESEARCH AND
ENGINEERING ENTERPRISE.
(a) Report Required.--Not later than one year after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Under Secretary of
Defense for Research and Engineering shall submit to the
Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of
Representatives a report setting forth recommendations on the
future of the defense research and engineering enterprise,
including such recommendations for legislative or
administrative action as the Under Secretary considers
appropriate in light of the anticipated future of the defense
research and engineering enterprise.
(b) Focus.--The recommendations under subsection (a) shall
focus on enabling the success of the defense research and
engineering enterprise in the current environment of
strategic competition.
(c) Defense Research and Engineering Enterprise.--For
purposes of subsection (a), the defense research and
engineering enterprise shall consist of the following:
(1) The science and technology elements of the military
departments.
(2) The Department of Defense laboratories
(3) The test ranges and facilities of the Department.
(4) The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).
(5) The Defense Innovation Unit Experimental (DIU(x)).
(6) The Strategic Capabilities Office of the Department.
(7) The Small Business Innovation Research Program of the
Department.
(8) Such other elements, offices, programs, and activities
of the Department as the Under Secretary considers
appropriate for purposes of the this section.
(d) Particular Recommendations.--The recommendations under
subsection (a) shall include recommendations on the
following:
(1) Portfolio management and coordination of research and
development activities across the military departments and
the defense research and engineering enterprise, including
management and activities across the enterprise.
(2) Workforce management, recruitment, retention, and
shaping.
(3) Facilities and research and test infrastructure.
(4) Relationships with academia, the acquisition community,
the operational community, and the commercial sector.
(5) Governance.
(e) Comparisons.--For purposes of making recommendations
under subsection (a), the Under Secretary shall conduct a
comparison of the defense research and engineering enterprise
of the United States, namely processes, test infrastructure,
and workforce, with the defense research and engineering
enterprises of other countries and the private sector.
(f) Consultation and Comments.--In making recommendations
under subsection (a), the Under Secretary shall consult with
and seek comments from groups and entities relevant to the
recommendations, such as the military departments, the
combatant commands, the Defense Innovation Board, the Defense
Science Board, the Defense Business Board, the federally
funded research and development centers (FFRDCs), and
commercial partners of the Department of Defense (including
small business concerns).
SEC. 235. MODIFICATION OF REPORTS ON MECHANISMS TO PROVIDE
FUNDS TO DEFENSE LABORATORIES FOR RESEARCH AND
DEVELOPMENT OF TECHNOLOGIES FOR MILITARY
MISSIONS.
Subsection (c) of section 2363 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended to read as follows:
``(c) Release and Dissemination of Information on
Contributions From Use of Authority to Military Missions.--
``(1) Collection of information.--The Secretary shall
establish and maintain mechanisms for the continuous
collection of information on achievements, best practices
identified, lessons learned, and challenges arising in the
exercise of the authority in this section.
``(2) Release of information.--The Secretary shall
establish and maintain mechanisms as follows:
``(A) Mechanisms for the release to the public of
information on achievements and best practices described in
paragraph (1) in unclassified form.
``(B) Mechanisms for dissemination to appropriate civilian
and military officials of information on achievements and
best practices described in paragraph (1) in classified
form.''.
SEC. 236. REPORT ON MOBILE PROTECTED FIREPOWER AND FUTURE
VERTICAL LIFT.
(a) In General.--Not later than 60 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army shall
submit to the Committee on Armed Services of the Senate and
the Committee on Armed Services of the House of
Representatives a report on the requirements of the Army for
Mobile Protected Firepower (MPF) and Future Vertical Lift
(FVL).
(b) Contents.--The report submitted pursuant to subsection
(a) shall include the following:
(1) An explanation of how Mobile Protected Firepower and
Future Vertical Lift could survive against the effects of
anti-armor and anti-aircraft networks established within
anti-access, area-denial defenses.
(2) An explanation of how Mobile Protected Firepower and
Future Vertical Lift would improve offensive overmatch
against a peer adversary.
(3) Details regarding the total number of Mobile Protected
Firepower and Future Vertical Lift systems needed by the
Army.
(4) An explanation of how these systems will be
logistically supported within light formations.
(5) Plans to integrate active protection systems into the
designs of such systems.
SEC. 237. IMPROVEMENT OF THE AIR FORCE SUPPLY CHAIN.
(a) In General.--The Assistant Secretary of the Air Force
for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics may use funds
described in subsection (b) as follows:
(1) For nontraditional technologies and sustainment
practices (such as additive manufacturing, artificial
intelligence, predictive maintenance, nad other software-
intensive and software-defined capabilities) to--
(A) increase the availability of aircraft to the Air Force;
and
(B) decrease backlogs and lead times for the production of
parts for such aircraft.
(2) To advance the qualification, certification, and
integration of additive manufacturing into the Air Force
supply chain.
(3) To otherwise identify and reduce supply chain risk for
the Air Force.
(4) To define workforce development requirements and
training for personnel who implement and support additive
manufacturing for the Air Force at the warfighter, end-item
designer and equipment operator, and acquisition officer
levels.
(b) Funding.--Of the amounts authorized to be appropriated
for fiscal year 2019 by section 201 for research,
development, test, and evaluation for the Air Force and
available for Tech Transition Program (Program Element
(0604858F)), up to $42,800,000 may be available as described
in subsection (a).
SEC. 238. REVIEW OF GUIDANCE ON BLAST EXPOSURE DURING
TRAINING.
(a) Initial Review.--Not later than 180 days after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
review the firing limits for heavy weapons during training
exercises.
(b) Elements.--The review required by subsection (a) shall
take into account current data and evidence on the cognitive
effects of blast exposure and shall include consideration of
the following:
(1) The impact of exposure over multiple successive days of
training.
(2) The impact of multiple types of heavy weapons being
fired in close succession.
(3) The feasibility of cumulative annual or lifetime
exposure limits.
(4) The minimum safe distance for observers and
instructors.
(c) Updated Training Guidance.--Not later than 180 days
after the date of the completion of the review under
subsection (a), each Secretary of a military department shall
update any relevant training guidance to account for the
conclusions of the review.
(d) Updated Review.--
(1) In general.--Not less frequently than once every two
years after the initial review conducted under subsection
(a), the Secretary of Defense shall conduct an updated review
under such subsection, including consideration of the matters
set forth under subsection (b), and update training guidance
under subsection (c).
(2) Consideration of new research and evidence.--Each
updated review conducted under paragraph (1) shall take into
account new research and evidence that has emerged since the
previous review.
(e) Briefing Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall
brief the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the
House of Representatives on a summary of the results of the
initial review under subsection (a), each updated review
conducted under subsection (d), and any updates to training
guidance and procedures resulting from any such review or
updated review.
SEC. 239. LIST OF TECHNOLOGIES AND MANUFACTURING CAPABILITIES
CRITICAL TO ARMED FORCES.
(a) List Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall develop
a list of technologies and manufacturing capabilities
critical to the Armed Forces.
(b) Primary Emphasis.--In developing such list, primary
emphasis shall be given to--
(1) research, development, design, and manufacturing
expertise;
(2) research, development, design, and manufacturing
equipment and unique facilities;
(3) goods and services associated with or enabled by
research, development, operation, application, manufacturing,
or maintenance expertise, which are not possessed by
countries to which exports are controlled and
[[Page S3418]]
which, if exported or otherwise transferred, would permit a
significant advance in the military capabilities of any such
country; and
(4) emerging technology areas supportive of military
requirements and strategies.
(c) Specificity.--The shall ensure that the list required
by subsection (a) is sufficiently specific to guide the
recommendations of the Secretary in any interagency
determinations on exercising export licensing, technology
transfer, or foreign investment.
(d) Publication.--
(1) In general.--Not later than December 31, 2019, the
Secretary shall publish the list required by subsection (a)
and continuously update such list thereafter as the Secretary
considers appropriate.
(2) Form.--The list published under paragraph (1) shall be
published in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
SEC. 240. REPORT ON REQUIRING ACCESS TO DIGITAL TECHNICAL
DATA IN FUTURE ACQUISITIONS OF COMBAT, COMBAT
SERVICE, AND COMBAT SUPPORT SYSTEMS.
Not later than 120 days after the date of the enactment of
this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report on the feasibility
and advisability of requiring access to digital technical
data in all future acquisitions by the Department of Defense
of combat, combat service, and combat support systems,
including front-end negotiations for such access. Such report
shall include a digital data standard for technical data for
use by equipment manufacturers and the Department with regard
to three-dimensional printed parts.
SEC. 241. COMPETITIVE ACQUISITION STRATEGY FOR BRADLEY
FIGHTING VEHICLE TRANSMISSION REPLACEMENT.
(a) Plan Required.--The Secretary of the Army shall develop
a strategy to competitively procure a new transmission for
the Bradley Fighting Vehicle family of vehicles.
(b) Additional Strategy Requirements.--The plan required by
subsection (a) shall include the following:
(1) An analysis of the potential cost savings and
performance improvements associated with developing or
procuring a new transmission common to the Bradley Fighting
Vehicle family of vehicles, including the Armored
Multipurpose Vehicle and the Paladin Integrated Management
artillery system.
(2) A plan to use full and open competition to the maximum
extent practicable.
(c) Timeline.--Not later than February 15, 2019, the
Secretary of the Army shall submit to the congressional
defense committees the strategy developed under subsection
(a).
(d) Limitation.--None of the funds authorized to be
appropriated for fiscal year 2019 by this Act for Weapons and
Tracked Combat Vehicles, Army, may be obligated or expended
to procure a Bradley Fighting Vehicle replacement
transmission until the date that is 30 days after the date on
which the Secretary of the Army submits to the congressional
defense committees the plan required by subsection (a).
SEC. 242. INDEPENDENT ASSESSMENT OF ELECTRONIC WARFARE PLANS
AND PROGRAMS.
(a) Agreement.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall seek to
enter into an agreement with the private scientific advisory
group known as ``JASON'' to perform the services covered by
this section.
(2) Timing.--The Secretary shall seek to enter into the
agreement described in paragraph (1) not later than 120 days
after the date of the enactment of this Act.
(b) Independent Assessment.--Under an agreement between the
Secretary and JASON under this section, JASON shall--
(1) assess the strategies, programs, order of battle, and
doctrine of the United States related to the electronic
warfare mission area and electromagnetic spectrum operations;
(2) assess the strategies, programs, order of battle, and
doctrine of potential adversaries, such as China, Iran, and
the Russian Federation, related to the same;
(3) develop recommendations for improvements to the
strategies, programs, and doctrine of the United States in
order to enable the United States to achieve and maintain
superiority in the electromagnetic spectrum in future
conflicts; and
(4) develop recommendations for the Secretary, Congress,
and such other Federal entities as JASON considers
appropriate, including recommendations for--
(A) closing technical, policy, or resource gaps;
(B) improving cooperation and appropriate integration among
Federal entities;
(C) improving cooperation between the United States and
other countries and international organizations; and
(D) such other important matters identified by JASON that
are directly relevant to the strategies of the United States
described in paragraph (3).
(c) Liaisons.--The Secretary shall appoint appropriate
liaisons to JASON to support the timely conduct of the
services covered by this section.
(d) Materials.--The Secretary shall provide access to JASON
to materials relevant to the services covered by this
section, consistent with the protection of sources and
methods and other critically sensitive information.
(e) Clearances.--The Secretary shall ensure that
appropriate members and staff of JASON have the necessary
clearances, obtained in an expedited manner, to conduct the
services covered by this section.
(f) Report.--Not later than October 1, 2019, the Secretary
shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report
on--
(1) the findings of JASON with respect to the assessments
carried out under subsection (b); and
(2) the recommendations developed by JASON pursuant to such
subsection.
(g) Alternate Contract Scientific Organization.--
(1) In general.--If the Secretary is unable within the
period prescribed in paragraph (2) of subsection (a) to enter
into an agreement described in paragraph (1) of such
subsection with JASON on terms acceptable to the Secretary,
the Secretary shall seek to enter into such agreement with
another appropriate scientific organization that--
(A) is not part of the Government; and
(B) has expertise and objectivity comparable to that of
JASON.
(2) Treatment.--If the Secretary enters into an agreement
with another organization as described in paragraph (1), any
reference in this section to JASON shall be treated as a
reference to the other organization.
TITLE III--OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations
SEC. 301. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal
year 2019 for the use of the Armed Forces and other
activities and agencies of the Department of Defense for
expenses, not otherwise provided for, for operation and
maintenance, as specified in the funding table in section
4301.
Subtitle B--Energy and Environment
SEC. 311. FURTHER IMPROVEMENTS TO ENERGY SECURITY AND
RESILIENCE.
(a) Energy Policy Authority.--Section 2911(b) of title 10,
United States Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) as
paragraphs (3), (4), and (5), respectively; and
(2) by inserting before paragraph (3), as so redesignated,
the following new paragraphs:
``(1) establish metrics and standards for the assessment of
energy resilience;
``(2) require the Secretary of a military department to
perform mission assurance and readiness assessments of energy
power systems for mission critical assets and supporting
infrastructure, applying uniform mission standards
established by the Secretary of Defense;''.
(b) Reporting on Energy Security and Resilience Goals.--
Section 2911(c) of title 10, United States Code, is amended
by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(3) The Secretary of Defense shall include the energy
security and resilience goals of the Department of Defense in
the installation energy report submitted under section
2925(a) of this title for fiscal year 2018 and every fiscal
year thereafter. In the development of energy security and
resilience goals, the Department of Defense shall conform
with the definitions of energy security and resilience under
this title. The report shall include the amount of critical
energy load, together with the level of availability and
reliability by fiscal year the Department of Defense deems
necessary to achieve energy security and resilience.''.
(c) Reporting on Installations Energy Management, Energy
Resilience, and Mission Assurance.--Section 2925(a) of title
10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by inserting ``, including progress on energy
resilience at military installations according to metrics
developed by the Secretary'' after ``under section 2911 of
this title'';
(2) in paragraph (3), by striking ``the mission
requirements associated with disruption tolerances based on
risk to mission'' and inserting ``the downtimes (in minutes
or hours) these missions can afford based on their mission
requirements and risk tolerances'';
(3) in paragraph (4), by inserting ``(including critical
energy loads in megawatts and the associated downtime
tolerances for critical energy loads)'' after ``energy
requirements and critical energy requirements'';
(4) by redesignating paragraph (5) as paragraph (7); and
(5) by inserting after paragraph (4) the following new
paragraphs:
``(5) A list of energy resilience projects awarded by the
Department of Defense by military department and military
installation, whether appropriated or alternative financed
for the reporting fiscal year, including project description,
award date, the critical energy requirements serviced
(including critical energy loads in megawatts), expected
reliability of the project (as indicated in the awarded
contract), life cycle costs, savings to investment, fuel
type, and the type of appropriation or alternative financing
used.
``(6) A list of energy resilience projects planned by the
Department of Defense by military department and military
installation, whether appropriated or alternative financed
for the next two fiscal years, including project description,
fuel type, expected award date, and the type of appropriation
or alternative financing expected for use.''.
(d) Inclusion of Energy Security and Resilience as
Priorities in Contracts for Energy or Fuel for Military
Installations.--Section 2922a(d) of title 10, United States
Code, is amended to read as follows:
``(d) The Secretary concerned shall ensure energy security
and resilience are prioritized and included in the provision
and operation of energy production facilities under this
section.''.
[[Page S3419]]
(e) Conveyance Authority for Utility Systems.--Section 2688
of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (a), by striking ``Secretary of a
military department'' and inserting ``Secretary of Defense,
or the Secretary of a military department designated by the
Secretary,'';
(2) in subsection (d)(2), by adding at the end the
following: ``The business case analysis must also demonstrate
how a privatized system will operate in a manner consistent
with subsection (g)(3).''; and
(3) in subsection (g)(3)--
(A) by striking ``Secretary concerned may require'' and
inserting ``Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the
Secretaries of the military departments, shall require''; and
(B) by striking ``consistent with energy resilience
requirements and metrics'' and inserting ``consistent with
energy resilience and cybersecurity requirements and
associated metrics''.
(f) Modification of Energy Resilience Definition.--Section
101(e)(6) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``task critical assets and other''.
(g) Authority To Accept Energy Performance Financial
Incentives From State and Local Governments.--Section 2913(c)
of title 10, United States Code, is amended by inserting ``a
State or local government'' after ``generally available
from''.
(h) Treatment of Energy Demand Response Financial
Incentives.--Paragraph (2) of section 2919(b) of title 10,
United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
``(2) credited to an appropriation designated by the
Secretary of Defense, submitted in the annual President's
budget request, merged with the appropriation to which
credited, and available for energy security or energy
resilience projects.''.
(i) Use of Energy Cost Savings To Implement Energy
Resilience and Energy Conservation Construction Projects.--
Section 2912(b)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by inserting ``, including energy resilience and
energy conservation construction projects,'' after ``energy
security measures''.
(j) Additional Basis for Preservation of Property in the
Vicinity of Military Installations in Agreements With Non-
Federal Entities on Use of Such Property.--Section
2684a(a)(2)(B) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking ``(B)'' and inserting ``(B)(i)''; and
(2) by adding at the end of the following new clause:
``(ii) maintains or improves military installation
resilience; or''.
SEC. 312. FUNDING OF STUDY AND ASSESSMENT OF HEALTH
IMPLICATIONS OF PER- AND POLYFLUOROALKYL
SUBSTANCES CONTAMINATION IN DRINKING WATER BY
AGENCY FOR TOXIC SUBSTANCES AND DISEASE
REGISTRY.
Paragraph (2) of section 316(a) of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91) is
amended to read as follows:
``(2) Funding.--
``(A) Source of funds.--The study and assessment performed
pursuant to this section may be paid for using funds
authorized to be appropriated to the Department of Defense
under the heading `Operation and Maintenance, Defense-Wide'.
``(B) Transfer authority.--(i) Of the amounts authorized to
be appropriated for the Department of Defense for fiscal year
2018, not more than $10,000,000 shall be transferred by the
Secretary of Defense, without regard to section 2215 of title
10, United States Code, to the Secretary of Health and Human
Services to pay for the study and assessment required by this
section.
``(ii) Without regard to section 2215 of title 10, United
States Code, the Secretary of Defense may transfer not more
than $10,000,000 a year during fiscal years 2019 and 2020 to
the Secretary of Health and Human Services to pay for the
study and assessment required by this section.
``(C) Expenditure authority.--Amounts transferred to the
Secretary of Health and Human Services shall be used to carry
out the study and assessment under this section through
contracts, cooperative agreements, or grants. In addition,
such funds may be transferred by the Secretary of Health and
Human Services to other accounts of the Department for the
purposes of carrying out this section.
``(D) Relationship to other transfer authorities.--The
transfer authority provided under this paragraph is in
addition to any other transfer authority available to the
Department of Defense.''.
SEC. 313. MILITARY MISSION SUSTAINMENT SITING CLEARINGHOUSE.
(a) Change in Name of Clearinghouse.--Section 183a of title
10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in the section heading, by striking ``Military Aviation
and Installation Assurance Clearinghouse for review of
mission obstructions'' and inserting ``Military Mission
Sustainment Siting Clearinghouse for review of energy
projects''; and
(2) in paragraph (1) of subsection (a), by striking
``Military Aviation and Installation Assurance Siting
Clearinghouse'' and inserting ``Military Mission Sustainment
Siting Clearinghouse''.
(b) Responsible Official.--Subsection (a) of such section
is further amended, in paragraph (2)(A), by striking
``control of an Assistant Secretary of Defense designated by
the Secretary'' and inserting ``control of the Under
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment''.
(c) Functions.--Subsection (b) of such section is amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraphs (2) and (3) as paragraphs
(3) and (4); and
(2) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following new
paragraph:
``(2) The Clearinghouse shall coordinate Department of
Defense consideration of and response to requests for reviews
received from other Federal agencies, State governments,
Indian tribal governments, local governments, landowners, and
developers of energy projects.''.
(d) Review of Proposed Actions.--Subsection (c) of such
section is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1)--
(A) in subparagraph (A), by inserting ``, including any
potential negative impacts on pilot safety and training''
after ``military operations and readiness''; and
(B) in subparagraph (B), by inserting ``, including any
potential negative impacts on pilot safety and training,''
after ``risks to national security''; and
(2) in paragraph (3), by inserting ``and the relevant local
military installation'' after ``notice to the governor of the
State''.
(e) Identification of Actions To Mitigate All Adverse
Impacts.--Subsection (d)(2)(F) is amended by inserting
``all'' before ``adverse impacts of projects filed''.
(f) Department of Defense Finding of Unacceptable Risk.--
Subsection (e)(1) of such section is amended by inserting ``,
including unacceptable risk to pilot safety and unacceptable
loss of training days'' after ``risk to the national security
of the United States''.
(g) Definition of Adverse Impact on Military Operations and
Readiness.--Subsection (h)(1) of such section is amended by
inserting ``pilot safety,'' after ``including flight
operations,''.
(h) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 7 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by striking the item relating to section 183a and
inserting the following:
``183a. Military Mission Sustainment Siting Clearinghouse for review of
energy projects.''.
SEC. 314. OPERATIONAL ENERGY POLICY.
(a) In General.--Section 2926 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (a), (b), (c), and (d) as
subsections (c), (d), (e), (f), respectively;
(2) by inserting before subsection (c), as redesignated by
paragraph (1), the following new subsections:
``(a) Operational Energy Policy.--In carrying out section
2911(a) of this title, the Secretary of Defense shall ensure
the types, availability, and use of operational energy
promote the readiness of the armed forces for their military
missions.
``(b) Authorities.--The Secretary of Defense may--
``(1) require the Secretary of a military department or the
commander of a combatant command to assess the energy
supportability of systems, capabilities, and plans;
``(2) authorize the use of energy security, cost of backup
power, and energy resilience as factors in the cost-benefit
analysis for procurement of operational equipment; and
``(3) in selecting equipment that will use operational
energy, give favorable consideration to the acquisition of
equipment that enhances energy security, energy resilience,
energy conservation, and reduces logistical
vulnerabilities.''; and
(3) in subsection (c), as redesignated by subparagraph
(A)--
(A) in the subsection heading, by striking ``Alternative
Fuel Activities'' and inserting ``Functions of the Assistant
Secretary of Defense for Energy, Installations, and
Environment'';
(B) by striking ``heads of the military departments and the
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering''
and inserting ``heads of the appropriate Department of
Defense components'';
(C) in paragraph (1), by striking ``lead the alternative
fuels activities'' and inserting ``oversee the operational
energy activities'';
(D) in paragraph (2), by striking ``regarding the
development of alternative fuels by the military departments
and the Office of the Secretary of Defense'' and inserting
``regarding the policies and investments that affect the use
of operational energy across the Department of Defense'';
(E) in paragraph (3), by striking ``prescribe policy to
streamline the investments in alternative fuel activities
across the Department of Defense'' and inserting ``recommend
to the Secretary policy to improve warfighting capability
through energy security and energy resilience''; and
(F) in paragraph (5), by striking ``subsection (c)(4)'' and
inserting ``subsection (e)(4)''.
(b) Conforming Amendments.--(1) Section 2925(b)(1) of title
10, United States Code, is amended by striking ``section
2926(b)'' and inserting ``section 2926(d)''.
(2) Section 1061(c)(55) of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328;
10 U.S.C. 111 note) is amended by striking ``section
2926(c)(4)'' and inserting ``section 2926(e)(4)''.
[[Page S3420]]
SEC. 315. FUNDING TREATMENT OF PERFLUOROOCTANE SULFONIC ACID
AND PERFLUOROOCTANOIC ACID AT STATE-OWNED AND
OPERATED NATIONAL GUARD INSTALLATIONS.
(a) Assistance Authorized.--The Secretary concerned may
provide for the treatment of perfluorooctane sulfonic acid
and perfluorooctanoic acid in drinking water from wells owned
and operated by a local water authority undertaken to attain
the lifetime health advisory level for such acids in drinking
water.
(b) Requirements for Assistance.--The Secretary concerned
may only provide for the treatment of drinking water pursuant
to subsection (a) if--
(1) the local water authority has requested such treatment
from the Secretary during the fiscal year when the treatment
is provided;
(2) the elevated levels of perfluorooctane sulfonic acid
and perfluorooctanoic acid in the drinking water are the
result of activities conducted by or paid for by the
Department of the Army or the Department of the Air Force at
a State-owned National Guard installation;
(3) such treatment takes place only during the fiscal year
in which the request was made;
(4) the local water authority waives all claims against the
United States and the National Guard for treatment expenses
incurred before the fiscal year during which the treatment is
taking place; and
(5) the cost of any treatment provided pursuant to
subsection (a) does not exceed the actual cost of the
treatment attributable to the activities conducted by or paid
for by the Department of the Army or the Department of the
Air Force, as the case may be.
(c) Existing Agreements.--Treatment of drinking water
pursuant to subsection (a) may be provided without regard to
existing contractual provisions in agreements between the
Department of the Army, the Department of the Air Force, or
the National Guard Bureau, as the case may be, and the State
in which the base is located relating to environmental
response actions or indemnification.
(d) Authority To Enter Into Agreements.--The Secretary
concerned may enter into such grants, cooperative agreements,
or contracts with a local water authority as may be necessary
to implement this section.
(e) Use of DSMOA.--Using up to $45,000,000 of the funds
authorized to be appropriated by section 301 for operation
and maintenance, the Secretary concerned may pay, utilizing
an existing Defense-State Memorandum of Agreement, costs that
would otherwise be eligible for payment under that agreement.
(f) Termination of Authority.--The authority under this
section shall terminate on September 30, 2021.
(g) Retroactive Effect.--Notwithstanding paragraphs (1),
(3), (4) of subsection (b), the Secretary concerned may
reimburse a local water authority or a State for the
treatment of drinking water pursuant to this section if--
(1) the local water authority or state requested such a
payment from the National Guard Bureau prior to March 1,
2018, or the National Guard Bureau was aware of a treatment
plan by the local water authority or state prior to that
date; and
(2) the local water authority or the State, as the case may
be, waives all claims against the United States and the
National Guard for treatment expenses incurred before January
1, 2018.
(h) Conforming Amendments.--
(1) Responsibility for response actions.--Section
2701(c)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
inserting ``or pollutants or contaminants'' after ``releases
of hazardous substances''.
(2) Definition of facility.--Section 2700(2) of title 10,
United States Code, is amended--
(A) by striking ``The terms `environment', `facility',''
and inserting ``(A) The terms `environment',''; and
(B) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(B) The term `facility'--
``(i) has the meaning given the term in section 101 of
CERCLA (42 U.S.C. 9601); and
``(ii) includes real property which is owned by, leased,
to, or otherwise possessed by the United States at locations
conducting military activities under the authority of either
this title or title 32.''.
(i) Definitions.--In this section--
(1) Lifetime health advisory.--The term ``lifetime health
advisory'' means the United States Environmental Protection
Agency Lifetime Health Advisory for the presence of
perfluorooctane sulfonic acid and perfluorooctanoic acid in
drinking water.
(2) Secretary concerned.--The term ``Secretary concerned''
means the Secretary of the Army or the Secretary of the Air
Force.
(3) State.--The term ``State'' means any of the several
States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, Guam, and the Virgin Islands.
(4) State-owned national guard installation.--The term
``State-owned National Guard installation'' means a facility
or site owned or operated by a State when such facility or
site is used for training the National Guard pursuant to
chapter 5 of title 32, United States Code, with funds
provided by the Secretary of Defense or the Secretary of a
military department, even though the Department of Defense is
not the owner or operator of such facility or site.
Subtitle C--Reports
SEC. 321. REPORTS ON READINESS.
(a) Uniform Applicability of Readiness Reporting System.--
Subsection (b) of section 117 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended--
(1) by inserting ``and maintaining'' after
``establishing'';
(2) in paragraph (1), by striking ``reporting system is
applied uniformly throughout the Department of Defense'' and
inserting ``reporting system and associated policies are
applied uniformly throughout the Department of Defense,
including between and among the joint staff and each of the
armed forces'';
(3) by redesignating paragraphs (2) and (3) as paragraphs
(5) and (6), respectively;
(4) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following new
paragraphs:
``(2) that is the single authoritative readiness reporting
system for the Department, and that there shall be no
military service specific systems;
``(3) that readiness assessments are accomplished at an
organizational level at, or below, the level at which forces
are employed;
``(4) that the reporting system include resources
information, force posture, and mission centric capability
assessments, as well as predicted changes to these
attributes;''; and
(5) in paragraph (5), as redesignated by paragraph (3) of
this subsection, by inserting ``, or element of a unit,''
after ``readiness status of a unit''.
(b) Capabilities of Readiness Reporting System.--Such
section is further amended in subsection (c)--
(1) in paragraph (1)--
(A) by striking ``Measure, on a monthly basis, the
capability of units'' and inserting ``Measure the readiness
of units''; and
(B) by striking ``conduct their assigned wartime missions''
and inserting ``conduct their designed and assigned
missions'';
(2) in paragraph (2)--
(A) by striking ``Measure, on an annual basis,'' and
inserting ``Measure''; and
(B) by striking ``wartime missions'' and inserting
``designed and assigned missions'';
(3) in paragraph (3)--
(A) by striking ``Measure, on an annual basis,'' and
inserting ``Measure''; and
(B) by striking ``wartime missions'' and inserting
``designed and assigned missions'';
(4) in paragraph (4), by striking ``Measure, on a monthly
basis,'' and inserting ``Measure'';
(5) in paragraph (5), by striking ``Measure, on an annual
basis,'' and inserting ``Measure'';
(6) by striking paragraphs (6) and (8) and redesignating
paragraph (7) as paragraph (6); and
(7) in paragraph (6), as so redesignated, by striking
``Measure, on a quarterly basis,'' and inserting ``Measure''.
(c) Semi-annual and Monthly Joint Readiness Reviews.--Such
section is further amended in subsection (d)(1)(A) by
inserting ``, which includes a validation of readiness data
currency and accuracy'' after ``joint readiness review''.
(d) Quarterly Report on Change in Current State of Unit
Readiness.--Such section is further amended--
(1) in subsection (e), by striking ``Submission to
Congressional Committees'' and inserting ``Quarterly Report
on Joint Readiness'';
(2) by redesignating subsection (f) as subsection (h); and
(3) by inserting after subsection (e) the following new
subsection:
``(f) Quarterly Report on Monthly Changes in Current State
of Readiness of Units.--The Secretary shall each quarter
submit to the congressional defense committees a report on
each monthly upgrade or downgrade of the current state of
readiness of a unit that was issued by the commander of a
unit during the previous quarter, together with the rationale
of the commander for the issuance of such upgrade or
downgrade.''.
(e) Annual Report to Congress on Operational Contract
Support.--Such section is further amended by inserting after
subsection (f), as added by subsection (d) of this section,
the following new subsection:
``(g) Annual Report on Operational Contract Support.--The
Secretary shall each year submit to the congressional defense
committees a report in writing containing the results of the
most recent annual measurement of the capability of
operational contract support to support current and
anticipated wartime missions of the armed forces. Each such
report shall be submitted in unclassified form, but may
include a classified annex.''.
(f) Regulations.--Such section is further amended in
subsection (h), as redesignated by subsection (d) of this
section, by striking ``prescribe the units that are subject
to reporting in the readiness reporting system, what type of
equipment is subject to such reporting'' and inserting
``prescribe the established information technology system for
Department of Defense reporting, specifically authorize
exceptions to a single-system architecture, and identify the
organizations, units, and entities that are subject to
reporting in the readiness reporting system, what
organization resources are subject to such reporting''.
(g) Conforming Amendments.--
(1) Section heading.--Such section is further amended in
the section heading by striking ``: establishment; reporting
to congressional committees''.
[[Page S3421]]
(2) Table of sections.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 2 is amended by striking the item
relating to section 117 and inserting the following new item:
``117. Readiness reporting system.''.
SEC. 322. REPORT ON COLD WEATHER CAPABILITIES AND READINESS
OF UNITED STATES ARMED FORCES.
(a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
submit to the congressional defense committees a report on
the current cold weather capabilities and readiness of the
United States Armed Forces.
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall
include the following:
(1) A description of current cold weather capabilities and
training to support United States military operations in cold
climates across the joint force.
(2) A description of anticipated requirements for United
States military operations in cold and extreme cold weather
in the Arctic, Northeast Asia, and Northern and Eastern
Europe.
(3) A description of the current cold weather readiness of
the joint force, the ability to increase cold weather
training across the joint force, and any equipment,
infrastructure, personnel, or resource limitations or gaps
that may exist.
(4) An analysis of potential opportunities to expand cold
weather training for the Army, the Navy, the Air Force, and
the Marine Corps and the resources or infrastructure required
for such expansion.
(5) An analysis of potential cold weather amphibious
landing locations, including the potential for a combined
arms live fire exercise.
Subtitle D--Other Matters
SEC. 331. PILOT PROGRAMS ON INTEGRATION OF MILITARY
INFORMATION SUPPORT AND CIVIL AFFAIRS
ACTIVITIES.
(a) Pilot Programs Authorized.--
(1) In general.--The commander of any geographic combatant
command designated by the Secretary of Defense for purposes
of this section, and the Commander of the United States
Special Operations Command if so designated, may carry out
one or more pilot programs designed to assess the feasability
and advisability of integrating military information support
and civil affairs in support of the theater campaign plans of
such combatant command.
(2) Concurrence of chiefs of mission.--Activities under a
pilot program under this section may be carried out in a
country only with the concurrence of the Chief of Mission for
that country.
(b) Requirement for Both Military Information Support and
Civil Affairs Capabilities.--
(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraphs (2) and
(3), each pilot program under this section shall include both
a military information support capability and a civil affairs
capability.
(2) No military information support capability.--A pilot
program may be carried out in a region or country in which no
military information support capability is deployed if the
program is complemented by a Department of State public
diplomacy effort that contributes to the fulfillment of the
objectives of the commander of the combatant command
concerned to convey information to foreign audiences in the
region or county to influence their emotions, motives,
objective reasoning, and behavior in support of the
applicable theater campaign plan.
(3) No civil affairs capability.--A pilot program may be
carried out in a region or country in which no civil affairs
capability is deployed if the program is complemented by an
effort of the Department of State or the United States Agency
for International Development to contribute to the
fulfillment of the objectives of the commander of the
combatant command concerned to reestablish or maintain
stability within the region or country in support of the
applicable theater campaign plan.
(4) Plan.--In the event a pilot program will be carried out
pursuant to paragraph (2) or (3), planning for the pilot
program shall include an explanation of concept, budget,
timeline, and metrics for measuring the effectiveness of
activities of the Department of State or United States Agency
for International Development, as applicable, under the pilot
program.
(c) Duration.--The authority to carry out pilot programs
under this section shall cease on September 30, 2023.
(d) Annual Reports.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 90 days after the last day
of each of fiscal year 2019 through 2023, the Secretary shall
submit to the congressional defense committees a report on
the pilot programs carried out under this section during the
preceding fiscal year.
(2) Elements.--Each report under this subsection shall
include, for the fiscal year covered by such report, the
following:
(A) A list of all pilot programs carried out, set forth by
combatant command.
(B) A list of all pilot programs commenced, set forth by
combatant command.
(C) The amount of funds provided for each pilot program
carried out.
(D) The objectives of each pilot program carried out, and
the metrics used or to be used to measure the effectiveness
of such pilot program.
(E) A description of the manner in which each pilot program
carried out supports the applicable theater campaign plan of
the commanders of the combatant command concerned.
(F) If a pilot program was concluded, an assessment of the
value of the program, a description and assessment of lessons
learned through the program, and any recommendations the
Secretary considers appropriate for follow-on efforts in
connection with the program.
(e) Funding.--
(1) In general.--Of the amounts authorized to be
appropriated for each of fiscal years 2019 through 2023 for
the Department of Defense for operation and maintenance and
available for the combatant commands, an aggregate of
$20,000,000 may be used in each such fiscal year by each such
combatant command for pilot programs under this section.
(2) Limitation on amount for particular programs.--The
amount expended on any particular pilot program may not
exceed $2,000,000.
(f) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Civil affairs.--The term ``civil affairs'' means
activities intended to establish, maintain, influence, or
exploit relations between military forces, indigenous
populations, and institutions by directly supporting the
attainment of objectives relating to the reestablishment or
maintenance of stability within a region or country.
(2) Military information support.--The term ``military
information support'' means operations to convey selected
information and indicators to foreign audiences to influence
their emotions, motives, objective reasoning, and ultimately
the behavior of foreign governments, organizations, groups,
and individuals in a manner favorable to the objectives of
those planning such operations.
(3) Theater campaign plan.--The term ``theater campaign
plan'' means a plan developed by a combatant command for the
steady-state activities of the command, including operations,
security cooperation, and other activities designed to
achieve strategic end states in the theater.
SEC. 332. REPORTING ON FUTURE YEARS BUDGETING BY SUBACTIVITY
GROUP.
Along with the budget for each fiscal year submitted by the
President pursuant to section 1105(a) of title 31, United
States Code, the Secretary of Defense and the Secretaries of
the military departments shall include in the OP-5
Justification Books as detailed by Department of Defense
Financial Management Regulation 7000.14-R the amount for each
individual subactivity group (SAG) as detailed in the
Department's future years defense program pursuant to section
221 of title 10, United States Code.
SEC. 333. RESTRICTION ON UPGRADES TO AVIATION DEMONSTRATION
TEAM AIRCRAFT.
(a) In General.--Except as provided under subsection (b),
the Secretary of Defense may not upgrade the type, model, or
series of aircraft used by a military service for its fixed
wing aviation demonstration teams, including Blue Angel and
Thunderbird aircraft, until the service's active and reserve
duty squadrons and weapon training schools have replaced 100
percent of the existing type, model, and series of aircraft.
(b) Waiver Authority.--The Secretary of Defense may, upon
written notice to the congressional defense committees, waive
the prohibition under subsection (a) for the purpose of
carrying out upgrades to the type, model, or series of the
aircraft described under such subsection that are necessary
to ensure the safety of pilots.
SEC. 334. U.S. SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND CIVILIAN PERSONNEL.
Of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act for
Operation and Maintenance, Defense-wide for U.S. Special
Operations Command civilian personnel, not less than
$6,200,000 shall be used to fund the detail of civilian
personnel to the office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense
for Special Operations and Low-Intensity Conflict to support
the Secretariat for Special Operations.
SEC. 335. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR SERVICE-
SPECIFIC DEFENSE READINESS REPORTING SYSTEMS.
(a) Limitation.--None of the funds authorized to be
appropriated by this Act or otherwise made available for the
Department of Defense for fiscal year 2019 for operation and
maintenance, research, development, test, and evaluation, or
procurement, and available to operate service specific
Defense Readiness Reporting Systems (DRRS) may be made
available for such purpose except for required maintenance
and in order to facilitate the transition to DRRS-Strategic
(DRRS-S).
(b) Plan.--Not later than February 1, 2019, the Under
Secretary for Personnel and Readiness shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a resource and funding plan
to include a schedule with relevant milestones on the
elimination of service-specific DRRS and the migration of the
military services and other organizations to DRRS-S.
(c) Transition.--The military services shall complete the
transition to DRRS-S not later than October 1, 2019. The
Secretary of Defense shall notify the congressional defense
committees upon the complete transition of the services.
(d) Reporting Requirement.--
(1) In general.--The Under Secretary for Personnel and
Readiness, the Under Secretary for Acquisition and
Sustainment, and the Under Secretary for Research and
Engineering, in coordination with the Secretaries of the
military departments and other organizations with relevant
technical expertise, shall establish a working group
including individuals with expertise in application or
[[Page S3422]]
software development, data science, testing, and development
and assessment of performance metrics to assess the current
process for collecting, analyzing, and communicating
readiness data, and develop a strategy for implementing any
recommended changes to improve and establish readiness
metrics using the current DRRS-Strategic platform.
(2) Elements.--The assessment conducted pursuant to
paragraph (1) shall include--
(A) identification of modern tools, methods, and approaches
to readiness to more effectively and efficiently collect,
analyze, and make decision based on readiness data; and
(B) consideration of cost and schedule.
(3) Submission to congress.--Not later than February 1,
2020, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the
congressional defense committees the assessment conducted
pursuant to paragraph (1).
(e) Defense Readiness Reporting Requirements.--To the
maximum extent practicable, the Secretary of Defense shall
meet defense readiness reporting requirements consistent with
the recommendations of the working group established under
subsection (d)(1).
SEC. 336. REPURPOSING AND REUSE OF SURPLUS ARMY FIREARMS.
Section 348(b) of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 131 Stat. 1365) is
amended by inserting ``shredded or'' before ``melted and
repurposed''.
SEC. 337. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR
ESTABLISHMENT OF ADDITIONAL SPECIALIZED
UNDERGRADUATE PILOT TRAINING FACILITY.
(a) Limitation.--Of the funds authorized to be appropriated
by this Act or otherwise made available for the Department of
Defense for fiscal year 2019 for Specialized Undergraduate
Pilot Training for the Air Force (referred to in this section
as ``SUPT'') no funds may be used to enter into a contract
for the procurement of equipment, facilities, real property,
or services to establish a new SUPT location in the United
States until the date on which the Secretary of the Air Force
submits to the congressional defense committees the
certification described under subsection (b).
(b) Certification.--The certification referred to in
subsection (a) is a certification that--
(1) existing SUPT installations are operating at maximum
capacity in terms of pilot production; and
(2) the Air Force plans to operate existing SUPT
installations at maximum capacity over the future years
defense program.
(c) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than March 1, 2019, the
Secretary of the Air Force shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a report on existing SUPT production,
resourcing, and locations.
(2) Elements.--The report required under paragraph (1)
shall include the following elements:
(A) A description of the strategy of the Air Force for
utilizing existing SUPT locations to produce the number of
pilots the Air Force requires.
(B) The number of pilots that each SUPT location has
graduated, by year, over the previous 5 fiscal years.
(C) The forecast number of pilots that each SUPT location
will produce for fiscal year 2019.
(D) The maximum production capacity of each SUPT location.
(E) A cost estimate of the resources required for each SUPT
location to reach maximum production capacity.
(F) A determination as to whether increasing production
capacity at existing SUPT locations will satisfy the Air
Force's SUPT requirement.
(G) A timeline and cost estimation of establishing a new
SUPT location.
(H) A business case analysis comparing the establishment of
a new SUPT location to increasing production capacity at
existing SUPT locations.
SEC. 338. SCOPE OF AUTHORITY FOR RESTORATION OF LAND DUE TO
MISHAP.
Subsection (e) of section 2691 of title 10, United States
Code, as added by section 2814 of the Military Construction
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (division B of Public
Law 115-91; 131 Stat. 1849), is amended by adding at the end
the following new paragraph:
``(3) The authority under paragraphs (1) and (2) includes
activities and expenditures necessary to complete restoration
to meet the regulations of the Federal department or agency
with administrative jurisdiction over the affected land,
which may be different than the regulations of the Department
of Defense.''.
SEC. 339. REDESIGNATION OF THE UTAH TEST AND TRAINING RANGE
(UTTR).
The Utah Test and Training Range (UTTR) located in
northwestern Utah and eastern Nevada may be redesignated.
Subtitle E--Logistics and Sustainment
SEC. 351. LIMITATION ON MODIFICATIONS TO NAVY FACILITIES
SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION, AND MODERNIZATION
(FSRM) STRUCTURE AND MECHANISM.
The Secretary of the Navy may not make any modification to
the existing Navy Facilities Sustainment, Restoration, and
Modernization (FSRM) structure or mechanism that would modify
duty relationships or significantly alter the existing
structure until 90 days after providing notice of the
proposed modification to the congressional defense
committees.
TITLE IV--MILITARY PERSONNEL AUTHORIZATIONS
Subtitle A--Active Forces
SEC. 401. END STRENGTHS FOR ACTIVE FORCES.
The Armed Forces are authorized strengths for active duty
personnel as of September 30, 2019, as follows:
(1) The Army, 485,741.
(2) The Navy, 331,900.
(3) The Marine Corps, 186,100.
(4) The Air Force, 325,720.
SEC. 402. END STRENGTHS FOR COMMISSIONED OFFICERS ON ACTIVE
DUTY IN CERTAIN GRADES.
The Armed Forces are authorized strengths for commissioned
officers on active duty as of September 30, 2019, in the
grades as follows in the number specified:
(1) The Army:
(A) Colonel, 3,970.
(B) Lieutenant colonel, 8,700.
(C) Major, 15,470.
(2) The Navy:
(A) Captain, 3,060.
(B) Commander, 6,670.
(C) Lieutenant commander, 11,010.
(3) The Marine Corps:
(A) Colonel, 650.
(B) Lieutenant colonel, 1,910.
(C) Major, 3,920.
(4) The Air Force:
(A) Colonel, 3,450.
(B) Lieutenant colonel, 10,270.
(C) Major, 13,920.
Subtitle B--Reserve Forces
SEC. 411. END STRENGTHS FOR SELECTED RESERVE.
(a) In General.--The Armed Forces are authorized strengths
for Selected Reserve personnel of the reserve components as
of September 30, 2019, as follows:
(1) The Army National Guard of the United States, 343,500.
(2) The Army Reserve, 199,500.
(3) The Navy Reserve, 59,000.
(4) The Marine Corps Reserve, 38,500.
(5) The Air National Guard of the United States, 106,600.
(6) The Air Force Reserve, 69,800.
(7) The Coast Guard Reserve, 7,000.
(b) End Strength Reductions.--The end strengths prescribed
by subsection (a) for the Selected Reserve of any reserve
component shall be proportionately reduced by--
(1) the total authorized strength of units organized to
serve as units of the Selected Reserve of such component
which are on active duty (other than for training) at the end
of the fiscal year; and
(2) the total number of individual members not in units
organized to serve as units of the Selected Reserve of such
component who are on active duty (other than for training or
for unsatisfactory participation in training) without their
consent at the end of the fiscal year.
(c) End Strength Increases.--Whenever units or individual
members of the Selected Reserve of any reserve component are
released from active duty during any fiscal year, the end
strength prescribed for such fiscal year for the Selected
Reserve of such reserve component shall be increased
proportionately by the total authorized strengths of such
units and by the total number of such individual members.
SEC. 412. END STRENGTHS FOR RESERVES ON ACTIVE DUTY IN
SUPPORT OF THE RESERVES.
Within the end strengths prescribed in section 411(a), the
reserve components of the Armed Forces are authorized, as of
September 30, 2019, the following number of Reserves to be
serving on full-time active duty or full-time duty, in the
case of members of the National Guard, for the purpose of
organizing, administering, recruiting, instructing, or
training the reserve components:
(1) The Army National Guard of the United States, 30,155.
(2) The Army Reserve, 16,261.
(3) The Navy Reserve, 10,101.
(4) The Marine Corps Reserve, 2,261.
(5) The Air National Guard of the United States, 19,450.
(6) The Air Force Reserve, 3,588.
SEC. 413. END STRENGTHS FOR MILITARY TECHNICIANS (DUAL
STATUS).
The minimum number of military technicians (dual status) as
of the last day of fiscal year 2019 for the reserve
components of the Army and the Air Force (notwithstanding
section 129 of title 10, United States Code) shall be the
following:
(1) For the Army National Guard of the United States,
22,294.
(2) For the Army Reserve, 6,492.
(3) For the Air National Guard of the United States,
18,969.
(4) For the Air Force Reserve, 8,880.
SEC. 414. MAXIMUM NUMBER OF RESERVE PERSONNEL AUTHORIZED TO
BE ON ACTIVE DUTY FOR OPERATIONAL SUPPORT.
During fiscal year 2019, the maximum number of members of
the reserve components of the Armed Forces who may be serving
at any time on full-time operational support duty under
section 115(b) of title 10, United States Code, is the
following:
(1) The Army National Guard of the United States, 17,000.
(2) The Army Reserve, 13,000.
(3) The Navy Reserve, 6,200.
(4) The Marine Corps Reserve, 3,000.
(5) The Air National Guard of the United States, 16,000.
(6) The Air Force Reserve, 14,000.
[[Page S3423]]
Subtitle C--Authorization of Appropriations
SEC. 421. MILITARY PERSONNEL.
(a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby
authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2019 for the
use of the Armed Forces and other activities and agencies of
the Department of Defense for expenses, not otherwise
provided for, for military personnel, as specified in the
funding table in section 4401.
(b) Construction of Authorization.--The authorization of
appropriations in subsection (a) supersedes any other
authorization of appropriations (definite or indefinite) for
such purpose for fiscal year 2019.
SEC. 422. LIMITATION ON USE OF FUNDS FOR PERSONNEL IN FISCAL
YEAR 2019 IN EXCESS OF STATUTORILY SPECIFIED
END STRENGTHS FOR FISCAL YEAR 2018.
Notwithstanding any other provision of this title, funds
authorized to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise made
available for the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2019
for military personnel may be not obligated or expended for a
number of military personnel covered by an end strength in
title IV of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91) in excess of such end strength
until the Secretary of Defense has submitted to the
congressional defense committees the report required under
subsection (b) of section 1041.
TITLE V--MILITARY PERSONNEL POLICY
Subtitle A--Officer Personnel Policy
PART I--OFFICER PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT REFORM
SEC. 501. REPEAL OF CODIFIED SPECIFICATION OF AUTHORIZED
STRENGTHS OF CERTAIN COMMISSIONED OFFICERS ON
ACTIVE DUTY.
Effective as of October 1, 2018, the text of section 523 of
title 10, United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
``The total number of commissioned officers serving on
active duty in the Army, Air Force, or Marine Corps in each
of the grades of major, lieutenant colonel, or colonel, or in
the Navy in each of the grades of lieutenant commander,
commander, or captain, at the end of any fiscal year shall be
as specifically authorized by Act of Congress for such fiscal
year.''.
SEC. 502. ANNUAL DEFENSE MANPOWER REQUIREMENTS REPORT
MATTERS.
(a) Date of Submittal.--Subsection (a) of section 115a of
title 10, United States Code, is amended in the matter
preceding paragraph (1) by striking ``not later than 45 days
after the date on which'' and inserting ``on the date on
which''.
(b) Specification of Anticipated Opportunities for
Promotion of Commissioned Officers.--Subsection (d) of such
section is amended by adding the following new paragraph:
``(4) The opportunities for promotion of commissioned
officers anticipated to be estimated pursuant to section
623(b)(4) of this title for the fiscal year in which such
report is submitted for purposes of promotion selection
boards convened pursuant to section 611 of this title during
such fiscal year.''.
(c) Enumeration of Required Numbers of Certain Commissioned
Officers.--Such section is further amended by adding at the
end the following new subsection:
``(i) In each such report, the Secretary shall also include
a separate statement of the number of officers required for
the next fiscal year in each grade as follows:
``(1) Major, lieutenant colonel, and colonel of each of the
Army, the Air Force, and the Marine Corps.
``(2) Lieutenant commander, commander, and captain of the
Navy.''.
SEC. 503. REPEAL OF REQUIREMENT FOR ABILITY TO COMPLETE 20
YEARS OF SERVICE BY AGE 62 AS QUALIFICATION FOR
ORIGINAL APPOINTMENT AS A REGULAR COMMISSIONED
OFFICER.
(a) Repeal.--Subsection (a) of section 532 of title 10,
United States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking paragraph (2); and
(2) by redesignating paragraphs (3), (4), and (5) as
paragraphs (2), (3), and (4), respectively.
(b) Conforming Amendment.--Such section is further amended
by striking subsection (d).
(c) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section
shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act,
and shall apply with respect to original appointments of
regular commissioned officers of the Armed Forces made on or
after that date.
SEC. 504. ENHANCEMENT OF AVAILABILITY OF CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE
CREDIT FOR PRIVATE SECTOR TRAINING OR
EXPERIENCE UPON ORIGINAL APPOINTMENT AS A
COMMISSIONED OFFICER.
(a) Regular Officers.--
(1) In general.--Subsection (b) of section 533 of title 10,
United States Code, is amended--
(A) in paragraph (1), by striking subparagraph (D) and
inserting the following new subparagraph (D):
``(D) Additional credit for special training or experience
in a particular officer career field as designated by the
Secretary concerned, if such training or experience is
directly related to the operational needs of the armed force
concerned.''; and
(B) in paragraph (2)--
(i) by striking ``Except as authorized by the Secretary
concerned in individual cases and under regulations
prescribed by the Secretary of Defense in the case of a
medical or dental officer, the amount'' and inserting ``The
amount''; and
(ii) by striking ``in the grade of major in the Army, Air
Force, or Marine Corps or lieutenant commander in the Navy''
and inserting ``in the grade of colonel in the Army, Air
Force, or Marine Corps or captain in the Navy''.
(2) Repeal of temporary authority for service credit for
critically necessary cyberspace-related experience.--Such
section is further amended--
(A) in subsections (a)(2) and (c), by striking ``or (g)'';
and
(B) by striking subsection (g).
(b) Reserve Officers.--
(1) In general.--Subsection (b) of section 12207 of title
10, United States Code, is amended--
(A) in paragraph (1), by striking subparagraph (D) and
inserting the following new subparagraph (D):
``(D) Additional credit for special training or experience
in a particular officer career field as designated by the
Secretary concerned, if such training or experience is
directly related to the operational needs of the armed force
concerned.''; and
(B) by striking paragraph (3) and inserting the following
new paragraph (3):
``(3) The amount of constructive service credit credited to
an officer under this subsection may not exceed the amount
required in order for the officer to be eligible for an
original appointment as a reserve officer of the Army, Air
Force, or Marine Corps in the grade of colonel or as a
reserve officer of the Navy in the grade of captain.''.
(2) Repeal of temporary authority for service credit for
critically necessary cyberspace-related experience.--Such
section is further amended--
(A) by striking subsection (e);
(B) by redesignating subsections (f) and (g) as subsections
(e) and (f), respectively; and
(C) in subsection (e), as redesignated by subparagraph (B),
by striking ``, (d), or (e)'' and inserting ``or (d)''.
SEC. 505. STANDARDIZED TEMPORARY PROMOTION AUTHORITY ACROSS
THE MILITARY DEPARTMENTS FOR OFFICERS IN
CERTAIN GRADES WITH CRITICAL SKILLS.
(a) Standardized Temporary Promotion Authority.--
(1) In general.--Chapter 35 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
section:
``Sec. 605. Promotion to certain grades for officers with
critical skills: colonel, lieutenant colonel, major,
captain; captain, commander, lieutenant commander,
lieutenant
``(a) In General.--An officer in the grade of first
lieutenant, captain, major, or lieutenant colonel in the
Army, Air Force, or Marine Corps, or lieutenant (junior
grade), lieutenant, lieutenant commander, or commander in the
Navy, who is described in subsection (b) may be temporarily
promoted to the grade of captain, major, lieutenant colonel,
or colonel in the Army, Air Force, or Marine Corps, or
lieutenant, lieutenant commander, commander, or captain in
the Navy, as applicable, under regulations prescribed by the
Secretary of the military department concerned. Appointments
under this section shall be made by the President, by and
with the advice and consent of the Senate.
``(b) Covered Officers.--An officer described in this
subsection is any officer in a grade specified in subsection
(a) who--
``(1) has a skill in which the armed force concerned has a
critical shortage of personnel (as determined by the
Secretary of the military department concerned); and
``(2) is serving in a position (as determined by the
Secretary of the military department concerned) that--
``(A) is designated to be held by a captain, major,
lieutenant colonel, or colonel in the Army, Air Force, or
Marine Corps, or lieutenant, lieutenant commander, commander,
or captain in the Navy, as applicable; and
``(B) requires that an officer serving in such position
have the skill possessed by such officer.
``(c) Status of Officers Appointed.--
``(1) Preservation of position and status.--An appointment
under this section does not change the position on the
active-duty list or the permanent, probationary, or acting
status of the officer so appointed, prejudice the officer in
regard to other promotions or appointments, or abridge the
rights or benefits of the officer.
``(2) Grade for purposes of annual defense manpower
reports.--For purposes of section 115a of this title, an
officer holding an appointment under this section is
considered as serving in the grade of the temporary promotion
this section.
``(d) Board Recommendation Required.--A temporary promotion
under this section may be made only upon the recommendation
of a board of officers convened by the Secretary of the
military department concerned for the purpose of recommending
officers for such promotions.
``(e) Acceptance and Effective Date of Appointment.--Each
appointment under this section, unless expressly declined,
is, without formal acceptance, regarded as accepted on the
date such appointment is made, and a member so appointed is
entitled to the pay and allowances of the grade of the
temporary promotion under this section from the date the
appointment is made.
``(f) Termination of Appointment.--Unless sooner
terminated, an appointment under this section terminates--
``(1) on the date the officer who received the appointment
is promoted to the permanent grade of captain, major,
lieutenant
[[Page S3424]]
colonel, or colonel in the Army, Air Force, or Marine Corps,
or lieutenant, lieutenant commander, commander, or captain in
the Navy; or
``(2) on the date the officer is detached from a position
described in subsection (b)(2), unless the officer is on a
promotion list to the permanent grade of captain, major,
lieutenant colonel, or colonel in the Army, Air Force, or
Marine Corps, or lieutenant, lieutenant commander, commander,
or captain in the Navy, in which case the appointment
terminates on the date the officer is promoted to that grade.
``(g) Limitation on Number of Eligible Positions.--An
appointment under this section may only be made for service
in a position designated by the Secretary of the military
department concerned for the purposes of this section. The
number of positions so designated may not exceed the
following:
``(1) In the case of the Army--
``(A) as captain, 120;
``(B) as major, 350;
``(C) as lieutenant colonel, 200; and
``(D) as colonel, 100.
``(2) In the case of the Air Force--
``(A) as captain, 100;
``(B) as major, 325;
``(C) as lieutenant colonel, 175; and
``(D) as colonel, 80.
``(3) In the case of the Marine Corps--
``(A) as captain, 50;
``(B) as major, 175;
``(C) as lieutenant colonel, 100; and
``(D) as colonel, 50.
``(4) In the case of the Navy--
``(A) as lieutenant, 100;
``(B) as lieutenant commander, 325;
``(C) as commander, 175; and
``(D) as captain, 80.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 35 of such title is amended by adding at
the end the following new item:
``605. Promotion to certain grades for officers with critical skills:
colonel, lieutenant colonel, major, captain; captain,
commander, lieutenant commander, lieutenant.''.
(b) Repeal of Superseded Authority Applicable to Navy
Lieutenants.--
(1) Repeal.--Chapter 544 of title 10, United States Code,
is repealed.
(2) Clerical amendments.--The tables of chapters at the
beginning of title 10, United States Code, and at the
beginning of subtitle C of such title, are each amended by
striking the item relating to chapter 544.
SEC. 506. AUTHORITY FOR PROMOTION BOARDS TO RECOMMEND
OFFICERS OF PARTICULAR MERIT BE PLACED HIGHER
ON A PROMOTION LIST.
(a) DOPMA Boards.--
(1) In general.--Section 616 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
subsection:
``(g)(1) In selecting the officers to be recommended for
promotion, a selection board may, when authorized by the
Secretary of the military department concerned, recommend
officers of particular merit, from among those officers
selected for promotion, to be placed higher on the promotion
list established by the Secretary under section 624(a)(1) of
this title.
``(2) An officer may be recommended to be placed higher on
a promotion list under paragraph (1) only if the officer
receives the recommendation of at least a majority of the
members of the board, unless the Secretary concerned
establishes an alternative requirement. Any such alternative
requirement shall be furnished to the board as part of the
guidelines furnished to the board under section 615 of this
title.
``(3) For the officers recommended to be placed higher on a
promotion list under paragraph (1), the board shall recommend
the order in which those officers should be placed on the
list.''.
(2) Promotion selection board reports recommending officers
of particular merit be placed higher on promotion list.--
Section 617 of such title is amended by adding at the end the
following new subsection:
``(d) A selection board convened under section 611(a) of
this title shall, when authorized under section 616(g) of
this title, include in its report to the Secretary concerned
the names of those officers recommended by the board to be
placed higher on the promotion list and the order in which
the board recommends that those officers should be placed on
the list.''.
(3) Officers of particular merit appearing higher on
promotion list.--Section 624(a)(1) of such title is amended
in the first sentence by adding at the end ``or based on
particular merit, as determined by the promotion board''.
(b) ROPMA Boards.--
(1) In general.--Section 14108 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
subsection:
``(f) Officers of Partcular Merit.--(1) In selecting the
officers to be recommended for promotion, a promotion board
may, when authorized by the Secretary of the military
department concerned, recommend officers of particular merit,
from among those officers selected for promotion, to be
placed higher on the promotion list established by the
Secretary under section 14308(a) of this title.
``(2) An officer may be recommended to be placed higher on
a promotion list under paragraph (1) only if the officer
receives the recommendation of at least a majority of the
members of the board, unless the Secretary concerned
establishes an alternative requirement. Any such alternative
requirement shall be furnished to the board as part of the
guidelines furnished to the board under section 14107 of this
title.
``(3) For the officers recommended to be placed higher on a
promotion list under paragraph (1), the board shall recommend
the order in which those officers should be placed on the
list.''.
(2) Promotion board reports recommending officers of
particular merit be placed higher on promotion list.--Section
14109 of such title is amended by adding at the end the
following new subsection:
``(d) Officers of Particular Merit.--A promotion board
convened under section 14101(a) of this title shall, when
authorized under section 14108(f) of this title, include in
its report to the Secretary concerned the names of those
officers recommended by the board to be placed higher on the
promotion list and the order in which the board recommends
that those officers should be placed on the list.''.
(3) Officers of particular merit appearing higher on
promotion list.--Section 14308(a) of such title is amended in
the first sentence by adding at the end ``or based on
particular merit, as determined by the promotion board''.
SEC. 507. AUTHORITY FOR OFFICERS TO OPT OUT OF PROMOTION
BOARD CONSIDERATION.
(a) Active-Duty List Officers.--Section 619 of title 10,
United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (d), by adding at the end the following
new paragraph:
``(6) An officer excluded under subsection (e).''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(e) Authority To Allow Officers To Opt Out of Selection
Board Consideration.--(1) The Secretary of a military
department may provide that an officer under the jurisdiction
of the Secretary may, upon the officer's request and with the
approval of the Secretary, be excluded from consideration by
a selection board convened under section 611(a) of this title
to consider officers for promotion to the next higher grade.
``(2) The Secretary concerned may only approve a request
under paragraph (1) if--
``(A) the basis for the request is to allow an officer to
complete a broadening assignment, advanced education, another
assignment of significant value to the Department, or a
career progression requirement delayed by the assignment or
education;
``(B) the Secretary determines the exclusion from
consideration is in the best interest of the military
department concerned; and
``(C) the officer has not previously failed of selection
for promotion to the grade for which the officer requests the
exclusion from consideration.''.
(b) Reserve Active-Status List Officers.--Section 14301 of
such title is amended--
(1) in subsection (c)--
(A) in the subsection heading, by striking ``Previously
Selected Officers Not Eligible'' and inserting ``Certain
Officers Not''; and
(B) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(6) An officer excluded under subsection (j).''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(j) Authority To Allow Officers To Opt Out of Selection
Board Consideration.--(1) The Secretary a military department
may provide that an officer under the jurisdiction of the
Secretary may, upon the officer's request and with the
approval of the Secretary, be excluded from consideration by
a selection board convened under section 14101(a) of this
title to consider officers for promotion to the next higher
grade.
``(2) The Secretary concerned may only approve a request
under paragraph (1) if--
``(A) the basis for the request is to allow an officer to
complete a broadening assignment, advanced education, another
assignment of significant value to the Department, or a
career progression requirement delayed by the assignment or
education;
``(B) the Secretary determines the exclusion from
consideration is in the best interest of the military
department concerned; and
``(C) the officer has not previously failed of selection
for promotion to the grade for which the officer requests the
exclusion from consideration.''.
SEC. 508. COMPETITIVE CATEGORY MATTERS.
Section 621 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by inserting ``(a) Competitive Categories.--'' before
``Under regulations''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new subsections:
``(b) Bases for Competitive Categories.--Competitive
categories shall be established on the bases as follows:
``(1) Officers occupying similar officer qualifications,
specialties, occupations, or ratings shall be grouped
together.
``(2) Promotion timing, promotion opportunity, and officer
career length shall each be tailored to particular officer
qualifications, specialties, occupations, or ratings.
``(c) Consistency Not Required in Promotion Timing or
Opportunity.--In establishing competitive categories, the
Secretary of a military department shall not be required to
provide consistency in promotion timing or promotion
opportunity among competitive categories of the armed force
concerned.''.
[[Page S3425]]
SEC. 509. PROMOTION ZONE MATTERS.
(a) Alignment With Annual Defense Manpower Requirements
Reports.--Subsection (b) of section 623 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended--
(1) in paragraph (3), by striking ``and'' at the end;
(2) in paragraph (4), by striking the period at the end and
inserting ``; and''; and
(3) by adding after paragraph (4) the following new
paragraph (5):
``(5) the alignment of opportunities for promotion for
officers considered by any particular selection board with
opportunities for promotion in the next year as estimated
pursuant to paragraph (4) and reported in the annual defense
manpower requirements report covering such year under section
115a of this title.''.
(b) Prohibition on Determination of Officers in Promotion
Zone Based on Year of Original Appointment to Current
Grade.--
(1) In general.--Such section is further amended by adding
at the end the following new subsection:
``(c) The Secretary concerned may not determine the number
of officers in a promotion zone on the basis of the year in
which officers receive their original appointment in their
current grade.''.
(2) Effective date.--The amendment made by paragraph (1)
shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act,
and shall apply with respect to promotion zones established
for promotion selection boards convened on or after that
date.
SEC. 510. ALTERNATIVE PROMOTION AUTHORITY FOR OFFICERS IN
DESIGNATED COMPETITIVE CATEGORIES OF OFFICERS.
(a) Alternative Promotion Authority.--
(1) In general.--Chapter 36 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
subchapter:
``SUBCHAPTER VI--ALTERNATIVE PROMOTION AUTHORITY FOR OFFICERS IN
DESIGNATED COMPETITIVE CATEGORIES
``Sec.
``649a. Officers in designated competitive categories.
``649b. Selection for promotion.
``649c. Eligibility for consideration for promotion.
``649d. Opportunities for consideration for promotion.
``649e. Promotions.
``649f. Failure of selection for promotion.
``649g. Retirement: retirement for years of service; selective early
retirement.
``649h. Continuation on active duty.
``649h-1. Continuation on active duty: officers in certain military
specialties and career tracks.
``649i. Other administrative authorities.
``649j. Regulations.
``Sec. 649a. Officers in designated competitive categories
``(a) Authority To Designate Competitive Categories of
Officers.--Each Secretary of a military department may
designate one or more competitive categories for promotion of
officers under section 621 of this title that are under the
jurisdiction of such Secretary as a competitive category of
officers whose promotion, retirement, and continuation on
active duty shall be subject to the provisions of this
subchapter.
``(b) Limitation on Exercise of Authority.--The Secretary
of a military department may not designate a competitive
category of officers for purposes of this subchapter until 60
days after the date on which the Secretary submits to the
Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of
Representatives a report on the designation of the
competitive category. The report on the designation of a
competitive category shall set forth the following:
``(1) A detailed description of officer requirements for
officers within the competitive category.
``(2) An explanation of the number of opportunities for
consideration for promotion to each particular grade, and an
estimate of promotion timing, within the competitive
category.
``(3) An estimate of the size of the promotion zone for
each grade within the competitive category.
``(4) A description of any other matters the Secretary
considered in determining to designate the competitive
category for purposes of this subchapter.
``Sec. 649b. Selection for promotion
``(a) In General.--Except as provided in this section, the
selection for promotion of officers in any competitive
category of officers designated for purposes of this
subchapter shall be governed by the provisions of subchapter
I of this chapter.
``(b) No Recommendation for Promotion of Officers Below
Promotion Zone.--Section 616(b) of this title shall not apply
to the selection for promotion of officers described in
subsection (a).
``(c) Recommendation for Officers To Be Excluded From
Future Consideration for Promotion.--In making
recommendations pursuant to section 616 of this title for
purposes of the administration of this subchapter, a
selection board convened under section 611(a) of this title
may recommend that an officer considered by the board be
excluded from future consideration for promotion under this
chapter.
``Sec. 649c. Eligibility for consideration for promotion
``(a) In General.--Except as provided by this section,
eligibility for promotion of officers in any competitive
category of officers designated for purposes of this
subchapter shall be governed by the provisions of section 619
of this title.
``(b) Inapplicability of Certain Time-in-grade
Requirements.--Paragraphs (2) through (4) of section 619(a)
of this title shall not apply to the promotion of officers
described in subsection (a).
``(c) Inapplicability to Officers Above and Below Promotion
Zone.--The following provisions of section 619(c) of this
title shall not apply to the promotion of officers described
in subsection (a):
``(1) The reference in paragraph (1) of that section to an
officer above the promotion zone.
``(2) Paragraph (2)(A) of that section.
``(d) Ineligibility of Certain Officers.--The following
officers are not eligible for promotion under this
subchapter:
``(1) An officer described in section 619(d) of this title.
``(2) An officer not included within the promotion zone.
``(3) An officer who has failed of promotion to a higher
grade the maximum number of times specified for opportunities
for promotion for such grade within the competitive category
concerned pursuant to section 649d of this title.
``(4) An officer recommended by a selection board to be
removed from consideration for promotion in accordance with
section 649b(c) of this title.
``Sec. 649d. Opportunities for consideration for promotion
``(a) Specification of Number of Opportunities for
Consideration for Promotion.--In designating a competitive
category of officers pursuant to section 649a of this title,
the Secretary of a military department shall specify the
number of opportunities for consideration for promotion to be
afforded officers of the armed force concerned within the
category for promotion to each grade above the grade of first
lieutenant or lieutenant (junior grade), as applicable.
``(b) Limited Authority of Secretary of Military Department
to Modify Number of Opportunities.--The Secretary of a
military department may modify the number of opportunities
for consideration for promotion to be afforded officers of an
armed force within a competitive category for promotion to a
particular grade, as previously specified by the Secretary
pursuant subsection (a) or this subsection, not more
frequently than once every five years.
``(c) Discretionary Authority of Secretary of Defense to
Modify Number of Opportunities.--The Secretary of Defense may
modify the number of opportunities for consideration for
promotion to be afforded officers of an armed force within a
competitive category for promotion to a particular grade, as
previously specified or modified pursuant to any provision of
this section, at the discretion of the Secretary.
``(d) Limitation on Number of Opportunities Specified.--The
number of opportunities for consideration for promotion to be
afforded officers of an armed force within a competitive
category for promotion to a particular grade, as specified or
modified pursuant to any provision of this section, may not
exceed five opportunities.
``(e) Effect of Certain Reduction in Number of
Opportunities Specified.--If, by reason of a reduction in the
number of opportunities for consideration for promotion under
this section, an officer would no longer have one or more
opportunities for consideration for promotion that were
available to the officer before the reduction, the officer
shall be afforded one additional opportunity for
consideration for promotion after the reduction.
``Sec. 649e. Promotions
``Sections 620 through 626 of this title shall apply in
promotions of officers in competitive categories of officers
designated for purposes of this subchapter.
``Sec. 649f. Failure of selection for promotion
``(a) In General.--Except as provided in this section,
sections 627 through 632 of this title shall apply to
promotions of officers in competitive categories of officers
designated for purposes of this subchapter.
``(b) Inapplicability of Failure of Selection for Promotion
to Officers Above Promotion Zone.--The reference in section
627 of this title to an officer above the promotion zone
shall not apply in the promotion of officers described in
subsection (a).
``(c) Special Selection Board Matters.--The reference in
section 628(a)(1) of this title to a person above the
promotion zone shall not apply in the promotion of officers
described in subsection (a).
``(d) Effect of Failure of Selection.--In the
administration of this subchapter pursuant to subsection
(a)--
``(1) an officer described in subsection (a) shall not be
deemed to have failed twice of selection for promotion for
purposes of section 629(e)(2) of this title until the officer
has failed selection of promotion to the next higher grade
the maximum number of times specified for opportunities for
promotion to such grade within the competitive category
concerned pursuant to section 649d of this title; and
``(2) any reference in section 631(a) or 632(a) of this
title to an officer who has failed of selection for promotion
to the next higher grade for the second time shall be deemed
to refer instead to an officer described in subsection (a)
who has failed of selection for promotion to the next higher
grade for the
[[Page S3426]]
maximum number of times specified for opportunities for
promotion to such grade within the competitive category
concerned pursuant to such section 649d.
``Sec. 649g. Retirement: retirement for years of service;
selective early retirement
``(a) Retirement for Years of Services.--Sections 633
through 636 of this title shall apply to the retirement of
officers in competitive categories of officers designated for
purposes of this subchapter.
``(b) Selective Early Retirement.--Sections 638 and 638a of
this title shall apply to the retirement of officers
described in subsection (a).
``Sec. 649h. Continuation on active duty
``(a) In General.--An officer subject to discharge or
retirement pursuant to this subchapter may, subject to the
needs of the service, be continued on active duty if the
officer is selected for continuation on active duty in
accordance with this section by a selection board convened
under section 611(b) of this title.
``(b) Identification of Positions for Officers Continued on
Active Duty.--
``(1) In general.--Officers may be selected for
continuation on active duty pursuant to this section only for
assignment to positions identified by the Secretary of the
military department concerned for which vacancies exist or
are anticipated to exist.
``(2) Identification.--Before convening a selection board
pursuant to section 611(b) of this title for purposes of
selection of officers for continuation on active duty
pursuant to this section, the Secretary of the military
department concerned shall specify for purposes of the board
the positions identified by the Secretary to which officers
selected for continuation on active duty may be assigned.
``(c) Recommendation for Continuation.--A selection board
may recommend an officer for continuation on active duty
pursuant to this section only if the board determines that
the officer is qualified for assignment to one or more
positions identified pursuant to subsection (b) on the basis
of skills, knowledge, and behavior required of an officer to
perform successfully in such position or positions.
``(d) Approval of Secretary of Military Department.--
Continuation of an officer on active duty under this section
pursuant to the action of a selection board is subject to the
approval of the Secretary of the military department
concerned.
``(e) Nonacceptance of Continuation.--An officer who is
selected for continuation on active duty pursuant to this
section, but who declines to continue on active duty, shall
be discharged or retired, as appropriate, in accordance with
section 632 of this title.
``(f) Period of Continuation.--
``(1) In general.--An officer continued on active duty
pursuant to this section shall remain on active duty, and
serve in the position to which assigned (or in another
position to which assigned with the approval of the Secretary
of the military department concerned), for a total of not
more than three years afer the date of assignment to the
position to which first so assigned.
``(2) Additional continuation.--An officer whose continued
service pursuant to this section would otherwise expire
pursuant to paragraph (1) may be continued on active duty if
selected for continuation on active duty in accordance with
this section before the date of expiration pursuant to that
paragraph.
``(g) Effect of Expiration of Continuation.--Each officer
continued on active duty pursuant to this subsection who is
not selected for continuation on active duty pursuant to
subsection (f)(2) at the completion of the officer's term of
continued service shall, unless sooner discharged or retired
under another provision of law--
``(1) be discharged upon the expiration of the term of
continued service; or
``(2) if eligible for retirement under another other
provision of law, be retired under that law on the first day
of the first month following the month in which the officer
completes the term of continued service.
``(h) Treatment of Discharge or Retirement.--The discharge
or retirement of an officer pursuant to this section shall be
considered to be an involuntary discharge or retirement for
purposes of any other provision of law.
``Sec. 649h-1. Continuation on active duty: officers in
certain military specialties and career tracks
``In addition to continuation on active duty provided for
in section 649h of this title, an officer to whom section
637a of this title applies may be continued on active duty in
accordance with the provisions of such section 637a.
``Sec. 649i. Other administrative authorities
``(a) In General.--The following provisions of this title
shall apply to officers in competitive categories of officers
designated for purposes of this subchapter:
``(1) Section 638b, relating to voluntary retirement
incentives.
``(2) Section 639, relating to continuation on active duty
to complete disciplinary action.
``(3) Section 640, relating to deferment of retirement or
separation for medical reasons.
``Sec. 649j. Regulations
``The Secretary of Defense shall prescribe regulations
regarding the administration of this subchapter. The elements
of such regulations shall include mechanisms to clarify the
manner in which provisions of other subchapters of this
chapter shall be used in the administration of this
subchapter in accordance with the provisions of this
subchapter.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of subchapters at the
beginning of chapter 36 of such title is amended by adding at
the end the following new item:
``VI. Alternative Promotion Authority for Officers in Designated
Competitive Categories..................................649a''.....
(b) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall, in
consultation with the Secretaries of the military
departments, submit to the Committees on Armed Services of
the Senate and the House of Representatives a report on the
authorities in subchapter VI of chapter 36 of title 10,
United States Code (as added by subsection (a)).
(2) Elements.--The report shall include the following:
(A) A detailed analysis and assessment of the manner in
which the exercise of the authorities in subchapter VI of
chapter 36 of title 10, United States Code (as so added),
will effect the career progression of commissioned officers
in the Armed Forces.
(B) A description of the competitive categories of officers
that are anticipated to be designated as competitive
categories of officers for purposes of such authorities.
(C) A plan for implementation of such authorities.
(D) Such recommendations for legislative or administrative
action as the Secretary of Defense considers appropriate to
improve or enhance such authorities.
SEC. 511. APPLICABILITY TO ADDITIONAL OFFICER GRADES OF
AUTHORITY FOR CONTINUATION ON ACTIVE DUTY OF
OFFICERS IN CERTAIN MILITARY SPECIALTIES AND
CAREER TRACKS.
Section 637a(a) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) by striking ``grade O-4'' and inserting ``grade O-2'';
and
(2) by inserting ``632,'' before ``633,''.
PART II--OTHER MATTERS
SEC. 516. MATTERS RELATING TO SATISFACTORY SERVICE IN GRADE
FOR PURPOSES OF RETIREMENT GRADE OF OFFICERS IN
HIGHEST GRADE OF SATISFACTORY SERVICE.
(a) Conditional Determinations of Grade of Satisfactory
Service.--
(1) In general.--Subsection (a)(1) of section 1370 of title
10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the
following new sentences: ``When an officer is under
investigation for alleged misconduct at the time of
retirement, the Secretary concerned may conditionally
determine the highest grade of satisfactory service of the
officer pending completion of the investigation. Such grade
is subject to reopening in accordance with subsection (f).''.
(2) Officers in o-9 and o-10 grades.--Subsection (c) of
such section is amended by adding at the end the following
new paragraph:
``(4) The Secretary of Defense may make a conditional
certification regarding satisfactory service in grade under
paragraph (1) with respect to an officer under that paragraph
notwithstanding the fact that there is pending the
disposition of an adverse personnel action against the
officer for alleged misconduct. The retired grade of an
officer following such a conditional certification is subject
to reopening in accordance with subsection (f).''.
(3) Reserve officers.--Subsection (d)(1) of such section is
amended by adding at the end the following new sentences:
``When an officer is under investigation for alleged
misconduct at the time of retirement, the Secretary concerned
may conditionally determine the highest grade of satisfactory
service of the officer pending completion of the
investigation. Such grade is subject to reopening in
accordance with subsection (f).''.
(b) Determinations of Satisfactory Service.--Such section
is further amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (e) as subsection (g); and
(2) by inserting after subsection (d) the following new
subsection (e):
``(e) Determinations of Satisfactory Service in Grade.--The
determination whether an officer's service in grade is
satisfactory for purposes of any provision of this section
shall--
``(1) be based on quantative and qualitative
considerations;
``(2) take into account both acts and omissions; and
``(3) take into account service in current grade and in any
prior grade in which served (whether a lower or higher
grade).''.
(c) Finality of Retired Grade Determinations.--Such section
is further amended by inserting after subsection (e), as
amended by subsection (b) of this section, the following new
subsection:
``(f) Finality of Retired Grade Determinations.--(1) Except
as otherwise provided by law, a determination or
certification of the retired grade of an officer pursuant to
this section is administratively final on the day the officer
is retired, and may not be reopened.
``(2) A determination or certification of the retired grade
of an officer may be reopened as follows:
``(A) If the retirement or retired grade of the officer was
procured by fraud.
[[Page S3427]]
``(B) If substantial evidence comes to light after the
retirement that could have led to a lower retired grade under
this section if known by competent authority at the time of
retirement.
``(C) If a mistake of law or calculation was made in the
determination of the retired grade.
``(D) In the case of a retired grade following a
conditional determination under subsection (a)(1) or (d)(1)
or conditional certification under subsection (c)(4), if the
investigation of or personnel action against the officer, as
applicable, results in adverse findings.
``(E) If the Secretary concerned determines, pursuant to
regulations prescribed by the Secretary of Defense, that good
cause exists to reopen the determination or certification.
``(3) If a determination or certification of the retired
grade of an officer is reopened, the Secretary concerned--
``(A) shall notify the officer of the reopening; and
``(B) may not make an adverse determination on the retired
grade of the officer until the officer has had a reasonable
opportunity to respond regarding the basis of the reopening.
``(4) If a certification of the retired grade of an officer
covered by subsection (c) is reopened, the Secretary
concerned shall also notify the President and Congress of the
reopening.
``(5) If the retired grade of an officer is reduced through
the reopening of the officer's retired grade, the retired pay
of the officer under chapter 71 of this title shall be
recalculated, and any modification of the retired pay of the
officer shall go into effect on the effective date of the
reduction of the officer's retired grade.''.
(d) Effective Date.--The amendments made by subsection (a)
shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act,
and shall apply with respect to officers who retire from the
Armed Forces on or after that date.
SEC. 517. REDUCTION IN NUMBER OF YEARS OF ACTIVE NAVAL
SERVICE REQUIRED FOR PERMANENT APPOINTMENT AS A
LIMITED DUTY OFFICER.
Section 5589(d) of title 10, United States Code, is amended
by striking ``10 years'' and inserting ``8 years''.
SEC. 518. REPEAL OF ORIGINAL APPOINTMENT QUALIFICATION
REQUIREMENT FOR WARRANT OFFICERS IN THE REGULAR
ARMY.
(a) In General.--Section 3310 of title 10, United States
Code, is repealed.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 335 of such title is amended by striking
the item relating to section 3310.
SEC. 519. UNIFORM GRADE OF SERVICE OF THE CHIEFS OF CHAPLAINS
OF THE ARMED FORCES.
The grade of service as Chief of Chaplains of the Army,
Chief of Chaplains of the Navy, and Chief of Chaplains of the
Air Force of an officer serving in such position shall be
such grade as the Secretary of Defense shall specify. The
grade of service shall be the same for service in each such
position.
SEC. 520. WRITTEN JUSTIFICATION FOR APPOINTMENT OF CHIEFS OF
CHAPLAINS IN GRADE BELOW GRADE OF MAJOR GENERAL
OR REAR ADMIRAL.
(a) Chief of Chaplains of the Army.--Section 3036 of title
10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the
following new subsection:
``(h) If an individual is appointed Chief of Chaplains in a
regular grade below the grade of major general, the Secretary
of the Army shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services
of the Senate and the House of Representatives a report
setting forth in writing the justification for the
appointment of the individual as Chief of Chaplains in such
lower grade.''.
(b) Chief of Chaplains of the Navy.--Section 5142(b) of
such title is amended--
(1) by inserting ``(1)'' after ``(b)''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(2) If an individual is appointed Chief of Chaplains in a
regular grade below the grade of rear admiral, the Secretary
of the Navy shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services
of the Senate and the House of Representatives a report
setting forth in writing the justification for the
appointment of the individual as Chief of Chaplains in such
lower grade.''.
(c) Chief of Chaplains of the Air Force.--Section 8039(a)
of such title is amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraphs (2) and (3) as paragraphs
(3) and (4), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following new
paragraph (2):
``(2) If an individual is appointed Chief of Chaplains in a
regular grade below the grade of major general, the Secretary
of the Air Force shall submit to the Committees on Armed
Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a
report setting forth in writing the justification for the
appointment of the individual as Chief of Chaplains in such
lower grade.''.
Subtitle B--Reserve Component Management
SEC. 521. AUTHORITY TO ADJUST EFFECTIVE DATE OF PROMOTION IN
THE EVENT OF UNDUE DELAY IN EXTENDING FEDERAL
RECOGNITION OF PROMOTION.
(a) In General.--Section 14308(f) of title 10, United
States Code, is amended--
(1) by inserting ``(1)'' before ``The effective date of
promotion''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(2) If the Secretary concerned determines that there was
an undue delay in extending Federal recognition in the next
higher grade in the Army National Guard or the Air National
Guard to a reserve commissioned officer of the Army or the
Air Force, and the delay was not attributable to the action
(or inaction) of such officer, the effective date of the
promotion concerned under paragraph (1) may be adjusted to a
date determined by the Secretary concerned, but not earlier
than the effective date of the State promotion.''.
(b) Effective Date.--The amendments made by subsection (a)
shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act,
and shall apply with respect to promotions of officers whose
State effective date is on or after that date.
SEC. 522. AUTHORITY TO DESIGNATE CERTAIN RESERVE OFFICERS AS
NOT TO BE CONSIDERED FOR SELECTION FOR
PROMOTION.
Section 14301 of title 10, United States Code, is amended
by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(j) Certain Officers Not to Be Considered for Selection
for Promotion.--The Secretary of the military department
concerned may provide that an officer who is in an active
status, but is in a duty status in which the only points the
officer accrues under section 12732(a)(2) of this title are
pursuant to subparagraph (C)(i) of that section (relating to
membership in a reserve component), shall not be considered
for selection for promotion until completion of two years of
service in such duty status. Any such officer may remain on
the reserve active-status list.''.
SEC. 523. EXPANSION OF PERSONNEL SUBJECT TO AUTHORITY OF THE
CHIEF OF THE NATIONAL GUARD BUREAU IN THE
EXECUTION OF FUNCTIONS AND MISSIONS OF THE
NATIONAL GUARD BUREAU.
Section 10508(b)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by striking ``sections 2103,'' and all that follows
through ``of title 32,'' and inserting ``sections 2102, 2103,
2105, and 3101, and subchapter IV of chapter 53, of title 5,
or sections 328 and 709 of title 32,''.
SEC. 524. REPEAL OF PROHIBITION ON SERVICE ON ARMY RESERVE
FORCES POLICY COMMITTEE BY MEMBERS ON ACTIVE
DUTY.
Section 10302 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (b), by striking ``not on active duty''
each place it appears; and
(2) in subsection (c)--
(A) by inserting ``of the reserve components'' after
``among the members''; and
(B) by striking ``not on active duty''.
Subtitle C--General Service Authorities
SEC. 531. ASSESSMENT OF NAVY STANDARD WORKWEEK AND RELATED
ADJUSTMENTS.
(a) Assessment.--The Secretary of the Navy shall conduct a
comprehensive assessment of the Navy standard workweek.
(b) Other Requirements.--The Secretary shall--
(1) update Office of the Chief of Naval Operations
Instruction 1000.16L in order to--
(A) obtain an examination of current in-port workloads; and
(B) identify the manpower necessary to execute in-port
workload for all surface ship classes;
(2) update the criteria used in the Instruction referred to
in paragraph (1) that are used to reassess the factors used
to calculate manpower requirements periodically or when
conditions change; and
(3) using the updates required by paragraphs (1) and (2),
identify personnel needs and costs associated with the
planned larger size of the Navy fleet.
(c) Added Demands.--The Secretary shall identify and
quantify added demands on Navy ship crews, including Ready
Relevant Learning training periods and additional work that
affects readiness and technical qualifications for Navy ship
crews.
(d) Deadline.--The Secretary shall complete carrying out
the requirements in this section by not later than 180 days
after the date of the enactment of this Act.
SEC. 532. MANNING OF FORWARD DEPLOYED NAVAL FORCES.
Commencing not later than October 1, 2019, the Secretary of
the Navy shall implement a policy to man ships homeported
overseas (commonly referred to as ``Forward Deployed Naval
Forces'') at manning levels not less than the levels
established for each ship class or type of unit, including
any adjustments resulting from as a result of changes from
actions in connection with section 531, relating to an
assessment of the Navy standard workweek and related
adjustments.
SEC. 533. NAVY WATCHSTANDER RECORDS.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of the Navy shall require
that, commencing not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, key watchstanders on Navy surface
ships shall maintain a career record of watchstanding hours
and specific operational evolutions.
(b) Key Watchstander Defined.--In this section, the term
``key watchstander'' means each of the following:
(1) Officer of the Deck.
(2) Any other officer specified by the Secretary for
purposes of this section.
[[Page S3428]]
SEC. 534. QUALIFICATION EXPERIENCE REQUIREMENTS FOR CERTAIN
NAVY WATCHSTATIONS.
(a) In General.--Not later than 90 days after the date the
of enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall
submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and
the House of Representatives a report on the adequacy of
individual training for certain watchstations, including any
planned or recommended changes in qualification standards for
such watchstations.
(b) Watchstations.--The watchstations covered by the report
required by subsection (a) are the following:
(1) Officer of the Deck.
(2) Combat Information Center Watch Officer.
(3) Tactical Action Officer.
SEC. 535. REPEAL OF 15-YEAR STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS ON MOTIONS
OR REQUESTS FOR REVIEW OF DISCHARGE OR
DISMISSAL FROM THE ARMED FORCES.
(a) Repeal.--Section 1553(a) of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by striking the second sentence.
(b) Effective Date.--The amendment made by this section
shall take effect on October 1, 2019.
SEC. 536. TREATMENT OF CLAIMS RELATING TO MILITARY SEXUAL
TRAUMA IN CORRECTION OF MILITARY RECORDS AND
REVIEW OF DISCHARGE OR DISMISSAL PROCEEDINGS.
(a) Correction of Military Records.--
(1) In general.--Subsection (h) of section 1552 of title
10, United States Code, is amended in paragraphs (1) and
(2)(B), by striking ``post-traumatic stress disorder or
traumatic brain injury'' and inserting ``post-traumatic
stress disorder, traumatic brain injury, or military sexual
trauma''.
(2) Quarterly reports.--Subsection (i)(1) of such section
is amended by inserting ``, or an experience of military
sexual trauma,'' after ``traumatic brain injury''.
(b) Review of Discharge or Dismissal.--Section 1553(d) of
such title is amended--
(1) by striking ``or traumatic brain injury'' each place it
appears (other than the second place it appears in paragraph
(3)(B)) and inserting ``, traumatic brain injury, or military
sexual trauma''; and
(2) in paragraph (3)(B), by inserting ``and'' before
``whose'' the second place it appears.
Subtitle D--Military Justice Matters
SEC. 541. PUNITIVE ARTICLE ON DOMESTIC VIOLENCE UNDER THE
UNIFORM CODE OF MILITARY JUSTICE.
(a) Punitive Article.--
(1) In general.--Subchapter X of chapter 47 of title 10,
United States Code (the Uniform Code of Military Justice), is
amended by inserting after section 928a (article 128a) the
following new section (article):
``Sec. 928b. Art. 128b. Domestic violence
``(a) In General.--Any person who--
``(1) commits a violent offense against a spouse, an
intimate partner, or an immediate family member of that
person;
``(2) with intent to threaten or intimidate a spouse, an
intimate partner, or an immediate family member of that
person--
``(A) commits an offense under this chapter against any
person; or
``(B) commits an offense under this chapter against any
property, including an animal;
``(3) with intent to threaten or intimidate a spouse, an
intimate partner, or an immediate family member of that
person, violates a protection order;
``(4) with intent to commit a violent offense against a
spouse, an intimate partner, or an immediate family member of
that person, violates a protection order; or
``(5) assaults a spouse, an intimate partner, or an
immediate family member of that person by strangling or
suffocating;
shall be punished as a court-martial may direct.
``(b) Definitions.--In this section (article):
``(1) Immediate family.--The term `immediate family', with
respect to an accused, means a spouse, parent, brother or
sister, child of the accused, a person to whom the accused
stands in loco parentis, and any other person who lives in
the household involved and is related by blood or marriage to
the accused.
``(2) Intimate partner.--The term `intimate partner', with
respect to an accused, means--
``(A) a former spouse of the accused;
``(B) a person who has a child in common with the accused;
``(C) a person who cohabits or has cohabited as a spouse
with the accused; or
``(D) a person who is or has been in a social relationship
of a romantic or intimate nature with the accused, as
determined by the length of the relationship, the type of
relationship, and the frequency of interaction between the
person and the accused.
``(3) Protection order.--The term `protection order'
means--
``(A) a military protective order enforceable under section
890 of this title (article 90); or
``(B) a protection order, as defined in section 2266 of
title 18 and, if issued by a State, Indian tribal, or
territorial court, is in accordance with the standards
specified in section 2265 of such title.
``(4) Strangling.--The term `strangling' means
intentionally or knowingly impeding the normal breathing or
circulation of the blood of a person by applying pressure to
the throat or neck, regardless of whether the impeding
results in any visible injury or whether there is any intent
to kill or protractedly injure the victim.
``(5) Suffocating.--The term `suffocating' means
intentionally or knowingly impeding the normal breathing of a
person by covering the mouth or the nose, regardless of
whether the impeding results in any visible injury or whether
there is any intent to kill or protractedly injure the
victim.
``(6) Violent offense.--The term `violent offense' means a
violation of any of the provisions of this chapter as
follows:
``(A) Section 918 of this title (article 118).
``(B) Section 919(a) of this title (article 119(a)).
``(C) Section 919a of this title (article 119a).
``(D) Section 920 of this title (article 120).
``(E) Section 920b of this title (article 120b).
``(F) Section 922 of this title (article 122).
``(G) Section 925 of this title (article 125).
``(H) Section 926 of this title (article 126).
``(I) Section 928 of this title (article 128).
``(J) Section 928a of this title (article 128a).
``(K) Section 930 of this title (article 130).''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of subchapter X of chapter 47 of such title (the
Uniform Code of Military Justice) is amended by inserting
after the item relating to section 928a (article 128a) the
following new item:
``928b. 128b. Domestic violence.''.
(b) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section
shall take effect on January 1, 2019, immediately after the
coming into effect of the amendments made by the Military
Justice Act of 2016 (division E of Public Law 114-328) as
provided in section 5542 of that Act (130 Stat. 2967; 10
U.S.C. 801 note).
SEC. 542. INCLUSION OF STRANGULATION AND SUFFOCATION IN
CONDUCT CONSTITUTING AGGRAVATED ASSAULT FOR
PURPOSES OF THE UNIFORM CODE OF MILITARY
JUSTICE.
(a) In General.--Subsection (b) of section 928 of title 10,
United States Code (article 128 of the Uniform Code of
Military Justice), is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``or'' at the end;
(2) in paragraph (2), by adding ``or'' after the semicolon;
and
(3) by inserting after paragraph (2) the following new
paragraph:
``(3) who commits an assault by strangulation or
suffocation;''.
(b) Effective Date.--The amendments made by subsection (a)
shall take effect on January 1, 2019, immediately after the
coming into effect of the amendment made by section 5441 of
the Military Justice Act of 2016 (division E of Public Law
114-328; 130 Stat. 2954) as provided in section 5542 of that
Act (130 Stat. 2967; 10 U.S.C. 801 note).
SEC. 543. AUTHORITIES OF DEFENSE ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON
INVESTIGATION, PROSECUTION, AND DEFENSE OF
SEXUAL ASSAULT IN THE ARMED FORCES.
Section 546 of the Carl Levin and Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (10
U.S.C. 1561 note) is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (d) and (e) as subsections
(e) and (f), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after subsection (c) the following new
subsection (d):
``(d) Authorities.--
``(1) Hearings.--The Advisory Committee may hold such
hearings, sit and act at such times and places, take such
testimony, and receive such evidence as the committee
considers appropriate to carry out its duties under this
section.
``(2) Information from federal agencies.--Upon request by
the chair of the Advisory Committee, a department or agency
of the Federal Government shall provide information that the
Advisory Committee considers necessary to carry out its
duties under this section.''.
SEC. 544. PROTECTIVE ORDERS AGAINST INDIVIDUALS SUBJECT TO
THE UNIFORM CODE OF MILITARY JUSTICE.
(a) Protective Orders.--
(1) In general.--Subchapter II of chapter 47 of title 10,
United States Code (the Uniform Code of Military Justice), is
amended by inserting after section 809 (article 9) the
following new section (article):
``Sec. 809a. Art. 9a. Protective orders
``(a) Issuance Authorized.--
``(1) In general.--In accordance with such regulations as
the President may prescribe and subject to the provisions of
this section, upon proper application therefor pursuant to
subsection (b), a military judge or military magistrate may
issue the following:
``(A) A protective order described in subsection (c) on an
emergency basis against a person subject to this chapter.
``(B) A protective order described in subsection (c), other
than a protective order on an emergency basis, against a
person subject to this chapter.
``(2) Other protective orders.--Nothing in this section may
be construed as limiting or altering any authority of a
military judge or military magistrate to issue a protective
order, other than a protective order described in subsection
(c), against a person subject to this chapter under any other
provision of law or regulation.
``(b) Application.--
``(1) In general.--Application for a protective order under
this section shall be made in accordance with such
requirements and procedures as the President shall prescribe.
Such requirements and procedures shall, to the extent
practicable, conform to the requirements and procedures
generally applicable to applications for protective orders in
civilian jurisdictions of the United States.
[[Page S3429]]
``(2) Eligibility.--Application for a protective order may
be made by any individual. The regulations prescribed for
purposes of this section may not limit eligibility for
application to judge advocates or other attorneys or to
military commanders or other members of the armed forces.
``(c) Protective Orders.--
``(1) In general.--A protective order described in this
subsection is an order that--
``(A) restrains a person from harassing, stalking,
threatening, or otherwise contacting or communicating with
another person who stands in relation to the person as
described in subsection (d)(8) or (g)(8) of section 922 of
title 18, or engaging in other conduct that would place such
other person in reasonable fear of bodily injury to any such
other person; and
``(B) by its terms, explicitly prohibits--
``(i) the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical
force by the person against another person who stands in
relation to the person as described in subsection (d)(8) or
(g)(8) of section 922 of title 18 that would reasonably be
expected to cause bodily injury;
``(ii) the initiation by the person restrained of any
contact or communication with such other person; or
``(iii) actions described by both clauses (i) and (ii).
``(2) Definitions.--In this subsection:
``(A) The term `contact' includes contact in person or
through a third party, or through gifts,
``(B) The term `communication' includes communication in
person or through a third party, and by telephone or in
writing by letter, data fax, or other electronic means.
``(d) Due Process.--
``(1) Protection of due process.--Except as provided in
paragraph (2), a protective order described in subsection (c)
may only be issued after the person to be subject to the
order has received such notice and opportunity to be heard on
the order as the President shall prescribe.
``(2) Emergency orders.--A protective order on an emergency
basis may be issued on an ex parte basis under such rules and
limitations as the President shall prescribe.
``(e) Nature and Scope of Protective Orders.--The President
shall prescribe any requirements or limitations applicable to
nature and scope of protective orders described in subsection
(c), including requirements and limitations relating to the
following:
``(1) The duration of protective orders on an emergency
basis, and of other protective orders.
``(2) The scope of protective orders on an emergency basis,
and of other protective orders.
``(f) Command Matters.--
``(1) Delivery to commander.--A copy of a protective order
described in subsection (c) against a member of the armed
forces shall be provided to such commanding officer in the
chain of command of the member as the President shall
prescribe for purposes of this section.
``(2) Inclusion in personnel file.--Any protective order
described in subsection (c) against a member shall be placed
and retained in the military personnel file of the member.
``(3) Notice to civilian law enforcement of issuance.--Any
protective order described in subsection (c) against a member
shall be treated as a military protective order for purposes
of section 1567a of this title, including for purposes of
mandatory notification of issuance to civilian law
enforcement as required by that section.
``(4) Authority of commanding officers.--Nothing in this
section may be construed as prohibiting a commanding officer
from issuing or enforcing any otherwise lawful order in the
nature of a protective order described in subsection (c) to
or against members of the officer's command.
``(g) Delivery to Certain Persons.--A physical copy of any
protective order described in subsection (c) shall be
provided, as soon as practicable after issuance, to the
following:
``(1) The person or persons protected by the protective
order or to the guardian of such a person if such person is
under the age of 18 years.
``(2) The person subject to the protective order.
``(h) Enforcement.--A protective order described in
subsection (c) shall be enforceable by a military judge or
military magistrate under such rules, and subject to such
requirements and limitations, as the President shall
prescribe.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of subchapter II of chapter 47 of such title is
amended by inserting after the item relating to section 809
(article 9) the following new item:
``809a. 9a. Protective orders.''.
(b) Authority of Military Magistrates.--
(1) In general.--Section 826a(b) of title 10, United States
Code (article 26a(b) of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice), is amended by striking ``819 or 830a of this title
(article 19 or 30a)'' and inserting ``809a, 819, or 830 of
this title (article 9a, 19, or 30a)''.
(2) Effective date.--The amendment made by paragraph (1)
shall take effect on January 1, 2019, immediately after the
coming into effect pursuant to section 5542 of the Military
Justice Act of 2016 (division E of Public Law 114-328; 130
Stat. 2967; 10 U.S.C. 801 note) of the amendment made by
section 5185 of the Military Justice Act of 2016 (130 Stat.
2902), to which the amendment made by paragraph (1) relates.
SEC. 545. EXPANSION OF ELIGIBILITY FOR SPECIAL VICTIMS'
COUNSEL SERVICES.
(a) In General.--Subsection (a) of section 1044e of title
10, United States Code, is amended by striking ``alleged sex-
related offense'' each place it appears and inserting
``alleged covered violence offense''.
(b) Types of Legal Assistance Authorized.--Subsection (b)
of such section is amended--
(1) by striking ``the alleged sex-related offense'' each
place it appears and inserting ``the alleged covered violence
offense''; and
(2) in paragraph (3), by inserting ``if and as
applicable,'' after ``or domestic abuse advocate,''.
(c) Availability of SVCs.--Such section is further
amended--
(1) in subsection (b)(10), by striking ``subsection (h)''
and inserting ``subsection (j)'';
(2) by redesignating subsections (g) and (h) as subsections
(i) and (j), respectively;
(3) in subsection (f)--
(A) by striking the subsection heading and inserting
``Availability of SVCs in Connection With Sex-related
Offenses.--''; and
(B) in paragraph (1), by inserting ``an alleged covered
violence offense that is'' before ``an alleged sex-related
offense'' the first place it appears; and
(4) by inserting after subsection (f) the following new
subsections:
``(g) Availability of SVCs in Connection With Domestic
Violence Offenses.--(1) An individual described in subsection
(a)(2) who is the victim of an alleged covered violence
offense that is an alleged domestic violence offense shall be
offered the option of receiving assistance from a Special
Victims' Counsel upon report of an alleged domestic violence
offense or at the time the victim seeks assistance from a
Family Advocate, a domestic violence victim advocate, a
military criminal investigator, a victim/witness liaison, a
trial counsel, a healthcare provider, or any other personnel
designated by the Secretary concerned for purposes of this
subsection.
``(2) Paragraphs (2) and (3) of subsection (f) shall apply
to the availability of Special Victims' Counsel under this
subsection to victims of an alleged domestic violence
offense.
``(h) Availability of SVCs in Connection With Other Covered
Violence Offenses.--An individual described in subsection
(a)(2) who is the victim of an alleged covered violence
offense (other than an alleged offense covered by subsection
(f) or (g)) shall be offered the option of receiving
assistance from a Special Victims' Counsel upon report of
such alleged covered violence offense or at the time the
victim seeks assistance from a military criminal
investigator, a victim/witness liaison, a trial counsel, a
healthcare provider, or any other personnel designated by the
Secretary concerned for purposes of this subsection.''.
(d) Definitions.--Subsection (i) of such section, as
redesignated by subsection (c)(2) of this section, is further
amended to read as follows:
``(i) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) Alleged covered violence offense.--The term `alleged
covered violence offense' means any allegation of the
following:
``(A) A violation of section 918, 919, 919a, 920, 920b,
925, 928a, or 930 of this title (article 118, 119, 119a, 120,
120b, 125, 128a, or 130 of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice).
``(B) A violation of subsection (b) of section 928 of this
title (article 128 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice),
if the offense was aggravated.
``(C) A violation of any other provision of chapter 47 of
this title (the Uniform Code of Military Justice) that the
Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of Homeland Security
jointly specify as an alleged covered violence offense for
purposes of this section.
``(D) An attempt to commit an offense specified in
subparagraph (A), (B), or (C) as punishable under section 880
of this title (article 80 of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice).
``(E) A conspiracy to commit an offense specified in
subparagraph (A), (B), or (C) as punishable under section 881
of this title (article 81 of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice).
``(F) A solicitation to commit an offense specified in
subparagraph (A), (B), or (C) as punishable under section 882
of this title (article 82 of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice).
``(2) Alleged domestic violence offense.--The term `alleged
domestic violence offense' means any allegation of the
following:
``(A) A violation of section 919b of this title (article
119b of the Uniform Code of Military Justice).
``(B) A violation of section 920, 928 (if the offense was
aggravated), or 930 of this title (article 120, 128, or 130
of the Uniform Code of Military Justice) in which the victim
of the violation is a spouse or other intimate partner of the
accused or a child of the spouse or other intimate partner of
the accused and the accused.
``(C) A violation of any other provision of chapter 47 of
this title (the Uniform Code of Military Justice) that the
Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of Homeland Security
jointly specify as an alleged domestic violence offense for
purposes of this section.
``(D) An attempt to commit an offense specified in
subparagraph (A), (B), or (C) as punishable under section 880
of this title (article 80 of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice).
``(E) A conspiracy to commit an offense specified in
subparagraph (A), (B), or (C) as
[[Page S3430]]
punishable under section 881 of this title (article 81 of the
Uniform Code of Military Justice).
``(F) A solicitation to commit an offense specified in
subparagraph (A), (B), or (C) as punishable under section 882
of this title (article 82 of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice).
``(3) Alleged sex-related offense.--The term `alleged sex-
related offense' means any allegation of the following:
``(A) A violation of section 920, 920b, 920c, or 930 of
this title (article 120, 120b, 120c, or 130 of the Uniform
Code of Military Justice).
``(B) A violation of any other provision of chapter 47 of
this title (the Uniform Code of Military Justice) that the
Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of Homeland Security
jointly specify as an alleged sex-related offense for
purposes of this section.
``(C) An attempt to commit an offense specified in
subparagraph (A) or (B) as punishable under section 880 of
this title (article 80 of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice).
``(D) A conspiracy to commit an offense specified in
subparagraph (A) or (B) as punishable under section 881 of
this title (article 81 of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice).
``(E) A solicitation to commit an offense specified in
subparagraph (A) or (B) as punishable under section 882 of
this title (article 82 of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice).''.
(e) Conforming and Clerical Amendments.--
(1) Heading amendment.--The heading of such section is
amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 1044e. Special Victims' Counsel: victims of sex-
related offenses, domestic violence offenses, and other
violence offenses''.
(2) Table of sections.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 53 of such title is amended by striking
the item relating to section 1044e and inserting the
following new item:
``1044e. Special Victims' Counsel: victims of sex-related offenses,
domestic violence offenses, and other violence
offenses.''.
(f) Effective Date.--
(1) In general.--The amendments made by this section shall
take effect on such date after January 1, 2019, as the
President shall specify for purposes of this section.
(2) Date specified.--In specifying a date for purposes of
paragraph (1), the President shall specify a date that
permits the Secretaries concerned and the Armed Forces the
opportunity to assess and properly allocate the personnel and
other resources required to fully implement and carry out the
amendments made by this section.
(3) Implementation activities.--During the period beginning
on the date of the enactment of this Act and ending on the
date specified for purposes of paragraph (1), the Secretaries
concerned and the Armed Forces shall--
(A) establish mechanisms to ensure that a priority is
afforded in the discharge of duties of Special Victims'
Counsel under the amendments made by this section to serious
cases of child abuse and other domestic violence (including
cases involving aggravated assault and serious neglect that
could result in serious injury or death); and
(B) strongly consider the advisability of employing
civilians to perform duties of Special Victims' Counsel in
the matters covered by the amendments in the event the number
of military Special Victims' Counsel is insufficient for the
full and effective discharge of such duties.
(4) Secretaries concerned defined.--In this subsection, the
term ``Secretaries concerned'' has the meaning given that
term in section 101(a)(9) of title 10, United States Code.
SEC. 546. CLARIFICATION OF EXPIRATION OF TERM OF APPELLATE
MILITARY JUDGES OF THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
MILITARY COMMISSION REVIEW.
(a) In General.--Section 950f(b) of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
paragraph:
``(6) The term of an appellate military judge assigned to
the Court under paragraph (2) or appointed to the Court under
paragraph (3) shall expire on the earlier of the date on
which--
``(A) the judge leaves active duty; or
``(B) the judge is reassigned to other duties in accordance
with section 949b(b)(4) of this title.''.
(b) Applicability.--The amendment made by subsection (a)
shall apply to each judge of the United States Court of
Military Commission Review serving on that court on the date
of the enactment of this Act and each judge assigned or
appointed to that court on or after such date.
SEC. 547. EXPANSION OF POLICIES ON EXPEDITED TRANSFER OF
MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES WHO ARE VICTIMS OF
SEXUAL ASSAULT.
(a) Eligibility of Additional Members for Transfer.--The
Secretary of Defense shall modify section 105.9 of title 32,
Code of Federal Regulations, and any other regulations and
policy of the Department of Defense applicable to the
expedited transfer of members of the Armed Forces who allege
they are a victim of sexual assault, in order to provide that
a member of the Armed Forces described in subsection (b) is
eligible for expedited transfer under such regulations and
policy in connection with an allegation as described in that
paragraph.
(b) Covered Members.--A member of the Armed Forces
described in this subsection is any member as follows:
(1) A member who is an alleged victim of sexual assault
committed by the spouse or intimate partner of the member,
which spouse or intimate partner is not a member of the Armed
Forces.
(2) A member who is an alleged victim of physical domestic
violence (other than sexual assault) committed by the spouse
or intimate partner of the member, regardless of whether the
spouse or intimate partner is a member of the Armed Forces.
(c) Physical Domestic Violence.--In carrying out subsection
(a), the Secretary shall prescribe the offenses or other
actions constituting physical domestic violence for purposes
of subsection (b)(2).
SEC. 548. UNIFORM COMMAND ACTION FORM ON DISPOSITION OF
UNRESTRICTED SEXUAL ASSAULT CASES INVOLVING
MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES.
(a) Uniform Form Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall
establish a uniform command action form, applicable across
the Armed Forces, for reporting the final disposition of
cases of sexual assault in which--
(1) the alleged offender is a member of the Armed Forces;
and
(2) the victim files an unrestricted report on the alleged
assault.
(b) Elements.--The form required by subsection (a) shall
provide for the inclusion of information on the following:
(1) The final disposition of the case.
(2) Appropriate demographic information on the victim and
the alleged offender.
(3) The status of the alleged offender as of final
disposition of the case.
(4) Whether the victim received assistance from a Special
Victims' Counsel in connection with the case.
(5) Whether the victim was disciplined for any collateral
misconduct in connection with the case.
(6) The number of years working in a criminal justice
litigation billet of any trial counsel who prosecuted or
otherwise consulted on the case.
SEC. 549. INCLUSION OF INFORMATION ON CERTAIN COLLATERAL
CONDUCT OF VICTIMS OF SEXUAL ASSAULT IN ANNUAL
REPORTS ON SEXUAL ASSAULT INVOLVING MEMBERS OF
THE ARMED FORCES.
Section 1631(b) of the Ike Skelton National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011 (10 U.S.C. 1561 note)
is amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(13) Information on the frequency with which individuals
who were identified as victims of sexual assault in case
files of military criminal investigative organizations were
also accused of or punished for misconduct or crimes
considered collateral to the sexual assault under
investigation by such organizations, including the type of
misconduct or crime and the punishment, if any, received.''.
Subtitle E--Member Education, Training, Transition, and Resilience
SEC. 551. CONSECUTIVE SERVICE OF SERVICE OBLIGATION IN
CONNECTION WITH PAYMENT OF TUITION FOR OFF-DUTY
TRAINING OR EDUCATION FOR COMMISSIONED OFFICERS
OF THE ARMED FORCES WITH ANY OTHER SERVICE
OBLIGATIONS.
(a) In General.--Section 2007(b) of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
paragraph:
``(3) Any active duty service obligation of a commissioned
officer under this subsection shall be served consecutively
with any other service obligation of the officer (whether
active duty or otherwise) under any other provision of
law.''.
(b) Effective Date.--The amendment made by this section
shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act,
and shall apply with respect to agreements for the payment of
tuition for off-duty training or education that are entered
into on or after that date.
SEC. 552. CONSECUTIVE SERVICE OF ACTIVE SERVICE OBLIGATIONS
FOR MEDICAL TRAINING WITH OTHER SERVICE
OBLIGATIONS FOR EDUCATION OR TRAINING.
(a) Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences.--
Section 2114(d) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by inserting ``(1)'' after ``(d)''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(2) A commissioned service obligation incurred as a
result of participation in a military intern, residency, or
fellowship training program shall be served consecutively
with the commissioned service obligation imposed by this
section and by any other provision of this title for
education or training.''.
(b) Health Professions Scholarship and Financial Assistance
Program.--Section 2123(b) of such title is amended--
(1) by inserting ``(1)'' after ``(b)''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(2) A commissioned service obligation incurred as a
result of participation in a military intern, residency, or
fellowship training program shall be served consecutively
with the active duty obligation imposed by this section and
by any other provision of this title for education or
training.''.
(c) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section
shall apply to individuals beginning participation in a
military intern, residency, or fellowship training program on
or after January 1, 2020.
[[Page S3431]]
SEC. 553. CLARIFICATION OF APPLICATION AND HONORABLE SERVICE
REQUIREMENTS UNDER THE TROOPS-TO-TEACHERS
PROGRAM TO MEMBERS OF THE RETIRED RESERVE.
(a) In General.--Paragraph (2)(B) of section 1154(d) of
title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by inserting ``(A)(iii),'' after ``A(i),'';
(2) by inserting ``transferred to the Retired Reserve, or''
after ``member is retired,''; and
(3) by striking ``separated,'' and inserting ``separated''.
(b) Conforming Amendments.--The second sentence of
paragraph (3)(D) of such section is amended--
(1) by inserting ``, the transfer of the member to the
Retired Reserve,'' after ``retirement of the member''; and
(2) by inserting ``transfer,'' after ``after the
retirement,''.
SEC. 554. PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS FOR ATTENDANCE OF
ENLISTED PERSONNEL AT SENIOR LEVEL AND
INTERMEDIATE LEVEL OFFICER PROFESSIONAL
MILITARY EDUCATION COURSES.
(a) Prohibition.--None of the funds authorized to be
appropriated or otherwise made available for the Department
of Defense may be obligated or expended for the purpose of
the attendance of enlisted personnel at senior level and
intermediate level officer professional military education
courses.
(b) Senior Level and Intermediate Level Officer
Professional Military Education Courses Defined.--In this
section, the term ``senior level and intermediate level
officer professional military education courses'' means any
course offered by a school specified in section 2151(b) of
title 10, United States Code.
(c) Repeal of Superseded Limitation.--
(1) In general.--Section 547 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91) is
repealed.
(2) Preservation of certain reporting requirement.--The
repeal in paragraph (1) shall not be interpreted to terminate
the requirement of the Comptroller General of the United
States to submit the report required by subsection (c) of
section 547 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2018.
SEC. 555. REPEAL OF PROGRAM ON ENCOURAGEMENT OF
POSTSEPARATION PUBLIC AND COMMUNITY SERVICE.
(a) Repeal.--
(1) In general.--Section 1143a of title 10, United States
Code, is repealed.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 58 of such title is amended by striking
the item relating to section 1143a.
(b) Conforming Amendments.--Section 1144(b) of such title
is amended--
(1) by striking paragraph (8); and
(2) by redesignating paragraphs (9), (10), and (11) as
paragraphs (8), (9), and (10), respectively.
SEC. 556. EXPANSION OF AUTHORITY TO ASSIST MEMBERS IN
OBTAINING PROFESSIONAL CREDENTIALS.
Section 2015 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (b) through (e) as
subsections (c) through (f), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after subsection (a) the following new
subsection (b):
``(b) Professional Credentials Not Related to Military
Training and Skills.--Under the program required by this
section, the Secretary of Defense, and the Secretary of
Homeland Security, with respect to the Coast Guard when it is
not operating as a service in the Navy, may enable members of
the armed forces to obtain, while serving in the armed
forces, professional credentials for which such members are
other otherwise qualified that do not relate to military
training and skills if such Secretary determines that such
action is in the best interests of the United States.''.
SEC. 557. ENHANCEMENT OF AUTHORITIES IN CONNECTION WITH
JUNIOR RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS
PROGRAMS.
(a) Flexibility in Authorities for Management of Programs
and Units.--
(1) In general.--Chapter 102 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
section:
``Sec. 2034. Flexibility in authorities for management of
programs and units
``(a) Authority To Convert Otherwise Closing Units to
National Defense Cadet Corps Program Units.--If the Secretary
of a military department is notified by a local educational
agency of the intent of the agency to close its Junior
Reserve Officers' Training Corps, the Secretary shall offer
the agency the option of converting the unit to a National
Defense Cadet Corps (NDCC) program unit in lieu of closing
the unit.
``(b) Flexibility in Administration of Instructors.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretaries of the military
departments may, without regard to any other provision of
this chapter, undertake initiatives designed to promote
flexibility in the hiring and compensation of instructors for
the Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps program under the
jurisdiction of such Secretaries.
``(2) Elements.--The initiatives undertaken pursuant to
this subsection may provide for one or more of the following:
``(A) Termination of the requirement for a waiver as a
condition of the hiring of well-qualified non-commissioned
officers with a bachelor's degree for senior instructor
positions within the Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps.
``(B) Specification of a single instructor as the minimum
number of instructors required to found and operate a Junior
Reserve Officers' Training Corps unit.
``(C) Authority for Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps
instructors to undertake school duties, in addition to Junior
Reserve Officers' Training Corps duties, at small schools.
``(D) Authority for the payment of instructor compensation
for a limited number of Junior Reserve Officers' Training
Corps instructors on a 10-month per year basis rather than a
12-month per year basis.
``(E) Such other actions as the Secretaries of the military
departments consider appropriate.
``(c) Flexibility in Allocation and Use of Travel
Funding.--The Secretaries of the military departments shall
take appropriate actions to provide so-called regional
directors of the Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps
programs located at remote rural schools enhanced discretion
in the allocation and use of funds for travel in connection
with Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps activities.
``(d) Standardization of Program Data.--The Secretary of
Defense shall take appropriate actions to standardize the
data collected and maintained on the Junior Reserve Officers'
Training Corps programs in order to facilitate and enhance
the collection and analysis of such data. Such actions shall
include a requirement for the use of the National Center for
Education Statistics (NCES) identification code for each
school with a unit under a Junior Reserve Officers' Training
Corps program in order to facilitate identification of such
schools and their units under the Junior Reserve Officers'
Training Corps programs.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 102 of such title is amended by adding
at the end the following new item:
``2034. Flexibility in authorities for management of programs and
units.''.
(b) Authority for Additional Units.--The Secretaries of the
military departments may, using amounts authorized to be
appropriated by this Act and available in the funding tables
in sections 4301 and 4401 for purposes of the Junior Reserve
Officers' Training Corps programs, establish an aggregate of
not more than 100 units under the Junior Reserve Officers'
Training Corps programs in low-income and rural areas of the
United States and areas of the United States currently
underserved by the Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps
programs.
Subtitle F--Defense Dependents' Education and Military Family Readiness
Matters
PART I--DEFENSE DEPENDENTS' EDUCATION MATTERS
SEC. 561. CONTINUATION OF AUTHORITY TO ASSIST LOCAL
EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES THAT BENEFIT DEPENDENTS OF
MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES AND DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE CIVILIAN EMPLOYEES.
(a) Assistance to Schools With Significant Numbers of
Military Dependent Students.--Of the amount authorized to be
appropriated for fiscal year 2019 by section 301 and
available for operation and maintenance for Defense-wide
activities as specified in the funding table in section 4301,
$40,000,000 shall be available only for the purpose of
providing assistance to local educational agencies under
subsection (a) of section 572 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2006 (Public Law 109-163;
20 U.S.C. 7703b).
(b) Local Educational Agency Defined.--In this section, the
term ``local educational agency'' has the meaning given that
term in section 7013(9) of the Elementary and Secondary
Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 7713(9)).
SEC. 562. IMPACT AID FOR CHILDREN WITH SEVERE DISABILITIES.
(a) In General.--Of the amount authorized to be
appropriated for fiscal year 2019 pursuant to section 301 and
available for operation and maintenance for Defense-wide
activities as specified in the funding table in section 4301,
$10,000,000 shall be available for payments under section 363
of the Floyd D. Spence National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2001 (as enacted into law by Public Law 106-398;
114 Stat. 1654A-77; 20 U.S.C. 7703a).
(b) Use of Certain Amount.--Of the amount available under
subsection (a) for payments as described in that subsection,
$5,000,000 shall be available for such payments to local
educational agencies determined by the Secretary of Defense,
in the discretion of the Secretary, to have higher
concentrations of military children with severe disabilities.
SEC. 563. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE EDUCATION ACTIVITY POLICIES
AND PROCEDURES ON SEXUAL HARASSMENT OF STUDENTS
OF ACTIVITY SCHOOLS.
(a) Applicability of Title IX Protections.--The provisions
of title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 (20 U.S.C.
1681 et seq.) (in this section referred to as ``title IX'')
with respect to education programs or activities receiving
Federal financial assistance shall apply equally to education
programs and activities administered by the Department of
Defense Education Activity (DODEA).
(b) Policies and Procedures.--Not later than March 31,
2019, the Department of Defense Education Activity shall
establish policies and procedures to protect students at
[[Page S3432]]
schools of the Activity who are victims of sexual harassment.
Such policies and procedures shall afford protections at
least comparable to the protections afforded under title IX.
(c) Elements.--The policies and procedures required by
subsection (b) shall include, at a minimum, the following:
(1) A policy addressing sexual harassment of students at
the schools of the Department of Defense Education Activity
that uses and incorporates terms, procedures, protections,
investigation standards, and standards of evidence consistent
with title IX.
(2) A procedure by which--
(A) a student of a school of the Activity, or a parent of
such a student, may file a complaint with the school alleging
an incident of sexual harassment at the school; and
(B) such a student or parent may appeal the decision of the
school regarding such complaint.
(3) A procedure and mechanisms for the appointment and
training of, and allocation of responsibility to, a
coordinator at each school of the Activity for sexual
harassment matters involving students from the military
community served by such school.
(4) Training of employees of the Activity, and volunteers
at schools of the Activity, on the policies and procedures.
(5) Mechanisms for the broad distribution and display of
the policy described in paragraph (1), including on the
Internet website of the Activity and on Internet websites of
schools of the Activity, in printed and online versions of
student handbooks, and in brochures and flyers displayed on
school bulletin boards and in guidance counselor offices.
(6) Reporting and recordkeeping requirements designed to
ensure that--
(A) complaints of sexual harassment at schools of the
Activity are handled--
(i) with professionalism and consistency; and
(ii) in a manner that permits coordinators referred to in
paragraph (3) to track trends in incidents of sexual
harassment and to identify repeat offenders of sexual
harassment; and
(B) appropriate members of the local leadership of military
communities are held accountable for acting upon complaints
of sexual harassment at schools of the Activity.
PART II--MILITARY FAMILY READINESS MATTERS
SEC. 566. IMPROVEMENT OF AUTHORITY TO CONDUCT FAMILY SUPPORT
PROGRAMS FOR IMMEDIATE FAMILY MEMBERS OF THE
ARMED FORCES ASSIGNED TO SPECIAL OPERATIONS
FORCES.
(a) Costs of Participation of Family Members in Programs.--
Section 1788a of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (c), (d), and (e) as
subsections (d), (e), and (f), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new
subsection (c):
``(c) Costs of Family Member Participation.--In carrying
out family support programs under this section, the Commander
may also pay, or reimburse immediate family members, for
transportation, food, lodging, child care, supplies, fees,
and training materials in connection with the participation
of family members in such programs.''.
(b) Funding.--Subsection (d) of such section, as
redesignated by subsection (a)(1) of this section, is
amended--
(1) by striking ``up to $5,000,000'' and inserting ``up to
$10,000,000''; and
(2) by inserting before the period the following: ``,
including payment of costs of participation in such programs
as authorized by subsection (c)''.
(c) Technical Amendment.--Paragraph (3) of subsection (f)
of such section, as so redesignated, is amended by striking
``section 167(i)'' and inserting ``section 167(j)''.
SEC. 567. EXPANSION OF PERIOD OF AVAILABILITY OF MILITARY
ONESOURCE PROGRAM FOR RETIRED AND DISCHARGED
MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES AND THEIR IMMEDIATE
FAMILIES.
(a) In General.--Under regulations prescribed by the
Secretary of Defense, the period of eligibility for the
Military OneSource program of the Department of Defense of an
eligible individual retired, discharged, or otherwise
released from the Armed Forces, and for the eligible
immediate family members of such an individual, shall be the
one-year period beginning on the date of the retirement,
discharge, or release, as applicable, of such individual.
(b) Information to Families.--The Secretary shall, in such
manner as the Secretary considers appropriate, inform
military families and families of veterans of the Armed
Forces of the wide range of benefits available through the
Military OneSource program.
SEC. 568. EXPANSION OF AUTHORITY FOR NONCOMPETITIVE
APPOINTMENTS OF MILITARY SPOUSES BY FEDERAL
AGENCIES.
(a) Expansion To Include All Spouses of Members of the
Armed Forces on Active Duty.--Section 3330d of title 5,
United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (a)--
(A) by striking paragraphs (3), (4), and (5); and
(B) by redesignating paragraph (6) as paragraph (3);
(2) by striking subsections (b) and (c) and inserting the
following new subsection (b):
``(b) Appointment Authority.--The head of an agency may
appoint noncompetitively--
``(1) a spouse of a member of the Armed Forces on active
duty; or
``(2) a spouse of a disabled or deceased member of the
Armed Forces.'';
(3) by redesignating subsection (d) as subsection (c); and
(4) in subsection (c), as so redesignated, by striking
``subsection (a)(6)'' in paragraph (1) and inserting
``subsection (a)(3)''.
(b) Heading Amendment.--The heading of such section is
amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 3330d. Appointment of military spouses''.
(c) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 33 of such title is amended by striking
the item relating to section 3330d and inserting the
following new item:
``3330d. Appointment of military spouses.''.
SEC. 569. IMPROVEMENT OF MY CAREER ADVANCEMENT ACCOUNT
PROGRAM FOR MILITARY SPOUSES.
(a) Outreach on Availability of Program.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall take
appropriate actions to ensure that military spouses who are
eligible for participation in the My Career Advancement
Account (MyCAA) program of the Department of Defense are, to
the extent practicable, made aware of the program.
(2) Comptroller general report.--Not later than 180 days
after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Comptroller
General of the United States shall submit to the Committees
on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of
Representatives a report setting forth such recommendations
as the Comptroller General considers appropriate regarding
the following:
(A) Mechanisms to increase awareness of the My Career
Advancement Account program among military spouses who are
eligible to participate in the program.
(B) Mechanisms to increase participation in the My Career
Advancement Account program among military spouses who are
eligible to participate in the program.
(b) Training for Installation Career Counselors on
Program.--The Secretaries of the military departments shall
take appropriate actions to ensure that career counselors at
military installations receive appropriate training and
current information on eligibility for and use of benefits
under the My Career Advancement Account program, including
financial assistance to cover costs associated with
professional recertification, portability of occupational
licenses, professional credential exams, and other mechanisms
in connection with the portability of professional licenses.
SEC. 570. ACCESS TO MILITARY INSTALLATIONS FOR CERTAIN
SURVIVING SPOUSES AND OTHER NEXT OF KIN OF
MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES WHO DIE WHILE ON
ACTIVE DUTY OR CERTAIN RESERVE DUTY.
(a) Procedures for Access of Surviving Spouses Required.--
The Secretary of Defense, acting jointly with the Secretary
of Homeland Security, shall establish procedures by which an
eligible surviving spouse may obtain unescorted access, as
appropriate, to military installations in order to receive
benefits to which the eligible surviving spouse may be
entitled by law or policy.
(b) Eligible Surviving Spouse.--
(1) In general.--In this section, the term ``eligible
surviving spouse'' means an individual who--
(A) is a surviving spouse of a member of the Armed Forces
who dies while serving--
(i) on active duty; or
(ii) on such reserve duty as the Secretary of Defense and
the Secretary of Homeland Security may jointly specify for
purposes of this section; and
(B) has guardianship of one or more dependent children of
such member.
(2) Status not effected by remarriage.--An individual is an
eligible surviving spouse for purposes of this section
without regard to whether the individual remarries after the
death of the member concerned.
(c) Procedures for Access of Next of Kin Authorized.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense, acting jointly
with the Secretary of Homeland Security, may establish
procedures by which the next of kin of a deceased member of
the Armed Forces, in addition to an eligible surviving
spouse, may obtain access to military installations for such
purposes and under such conditions as the Secretaries jointly
consider appropriate.
(2) Next of kin.--If the Secretaries establish procedures
pursuant to paragraph (1), the Secretaries shall jointly
specify the individuals who shall constitute next of kin for
purposes of such procedures.
(d) Considerations.--Any procedures established under this
section shall--
(1) be applied consistently across the Department of
Defense and the Department of Homeland Security, including
all components of the Departments;
(2) minimize any administrative burden on a surviving
spouse or dependent child, including through the elimination
of any requirement for a surviving spouse to apply as a
personal agent for continued access to military installations
in accompaniment of a dependent child;
(3) take into account measures required to ensure the
security of military installations, including purpose and
eligibility for access and renewal periodicity; and
(4) take into account such other factors as the Secretary
of Defense or the Secretary of Homeland Security considers
appropriate.
[[Page S3433]]
(e) Deadline.--The procedures required by subsection (a)
shall be established by the date that is not later than one
year after the date of the enactment of this Act.
SEC. 571. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE MILITARY FAMILY READINESS
COUNCIL MATTERS.
(a) Member Matters.--
(1) Membership.--Paragraph (1)(B) of subsection (b) of
section 1781a of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(A) in clause (i), by striking ``a member of the armed
force to be represented'' and inserting ``a member or
civilian employee of the armed force to be represented''; and
(B) by striking clause (ii) and inserting the following new
clause (ii):
``(ii) One representative, who shall be a member or
civilian employee of the National Guard Bureau, to represent
both the Army National Guard and the Air National Guard.''.
(2) Terms.--Paragraph (2) of such subsection is amended--
(A) in subparagraph (A)--
(i) in the first sentence, by striking ``clauses (i) and
(iii) of''; and
(ii) by striking the second sentence; and
(B) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``three years'' and
inserting ``two years''.
(b) Duties.--Subsection (d) of such section is amended--
(1) in paragraph (2), by striking ``military family
readiness by the Department of Defense'' and inserting
``military family readiness programs and activities of the
Department of Defense''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(4) To make recommendations to the Secretary of Defense
to improve collaboration, awareness, and promotion of
accurate and timely military family readiness information and
support services by policy makers, service providers, and
targeted beneficiaries.''.
(c) Annual Reports.--Subsection (e) of such section is
amended by striking ``February 1'' and inserting ``July 1''.
(d) Effective Date.--
(1) In general.--The amendments made by this section shall
take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act.
(2) Applicability of membership and term amendments.--The
amendments made by subsection (a) shall apply to members of
the Department of Defense Military Family Readiness Council
appointed after the date of the enactment of this Act.
SEC. 572. MULTIDISCIPLINARY TEAMS FOR MILITARY INSTALLATIONS
ON CHILD ABUSE AND OTHER DOMESTIC VIOLENCE.
(a) Multidisciplinary Teams Required.--
(1) In general.--Under regulations prescribed by each
Secretary concerned, there shall be established and
maintained for each military installation, except as provided
in paragraph (2), one or more multidisciplinary teams on
child abuse and other domestic violence for the purposes
specified in subsection (b).
(2) Single team for proximate installations.--A single
multidiscipinary team described in paragraph (1) may be
established and maintained under this subsection for two or
more military installations in proximity with one another if
the Secretary concerned determines, in consultation with the
Secretary of Defense, that a single team for such
installations suffices to carry out the purposes of such
teams under subsection (b) for such installations.
(b) Purposes.--The purposes of each multidisciplinary team
maintained pursuant to subsection (a) shall be as follows:
(1) To provide for the sharing of information among such
team and other appropriate personnel on the installation or
installations concerned regarding the progress of
investigations into and resolutions of incidents of child
abuse and other domestic violence involving members of the
Armed Forces stationed at or otherwise assigned to the
installation or installations.
(2) To provide for and enhance collaborative efforts among
such team and other appropriate personnel of the installation
or installations regarding investigations into and
resolutions of such incidents.
(3) To enhance the social services available to military
families at the installation or installations in connection
with such incidents, including through the enhancement of
cooperation among specialists and other personnel providing
such services to such military families in connection with
such incidents
(4) To carry out such other duties regarding the response
to child abuse and other domestic violence at the
installation or installations as the Secretary concerned
considers appropriate for such purposes.
(c) Personnel.--
(1) In general.--Each multidisciplinary team maintained
pursuant to subsection (a) shall be composed of the
following:
(A) One or more judge advocates.
(B) Appropriate personnel of one or more military criminal
investigation services.
(C) Appropriate mental health professionals.
(D) Appropriate medical personnel.
(E) Family advocacy case workers.
(F) Such other personnel as the Secretary or Secretaries
concerned consider appropriate.
(2) Expertise and training.--Any individual assigned to a
multidisciplinary team shall possess such expertise, and
shall undertake such training as is required to maintain such
expertise, as the Secretary concerned shall specify for
purposes of this section in order to ensure that members of
the team remain appropriately qualified to carry out the
purposes of the team under this section. The training and
expertise so specified shall include training and expertise
on special victims' crimes, including child abuse and other
domestic violence.
(d) Coordination and Collaboration With Non-military
Resources.--
(1) Use of community resources serving installations.--In
providing under this section for a multidisciplinary team for
a military installation or installations that benefit from
services or resources on child abuse or other domestic
violence that are provided by civilian entities in the
vicinity of the installation or installations, the Secretary
concerned may take the availability of such services or
resources to the installation or installations into account
in providing for the composition and duties of the team.
(2) Best practices.--The Secretaries concerned shall take
appropriate actions to ensure that multidisciplinary teams
maintained pursuant to subsection (a) remain fully and
currently apprised of best practices in the civilian sector
on investigations into and resolutions of incidents of child
abuse and other domestic violence and on the social services
provided in connection with such incidents.
(3) Collaboration.--In providing for the enhancement of
social services available to military families in accordance
with subsection (b)(3), the Secretaries concerned shall
permit, facilitate, and encourage multidisciplinary teams to
collaborate with appropriate civilian agencies in the
vicinity of the military installations concerned with regard
to availability, provision, and use of such services to and
by such families.
(e) Annual Reports.--Not later than March 1 of each of 2020
through 2022, each Secretary concerned shall submit to the
Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of
Representatives a report on the activities of
multidisciplinary teams maintained pursuant to subsection (a)
under the jurisdiction of such Secretary during the preceding
year. Each report shall set forth, for the period covered by
such report, the following:
(1) A summary description of the activities of the
multidisciplinary teams concerned, including the number and
composition of such teams, the recurring activities of such
teams, and any notable achievements of such teams.
(2) A description of any impediments to the effectiveness
of such teams.
(3) Such recommendations for legislative or administrative
action as such Secretary considers appropriate in order to
improve the effectiveness of such teams.
(4) Such other matters with respect to such teams as such
Secretary considers appropriate.
(f) Secretary Concerned.--
(1) Definition.--In this section, the term ``Secretary
concerned'' has the meaning given that term in section
101(a)(9) of title 10, United States Code.
(2) Usage with respect to multiple installations.--For
purposes of this section, any reference to ``Secretary
concerned'' with respect to a single multidisciplinary team
established and maintained pursuant to subsection (a) for two
or more military installations that are under the
jurisdiction of different Secretaries concerned, shall be
deemed to refer to each Secretary concerned who has
jurisdiction of such an installation, acting jointly.
SEC. 573. PROVISIONAL OR INTERIM CLEARANCES TO PROVIDE
CHILDCARE SERVICES AT MILITARY CHILDCARE
CENTERS.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall implement a
policy to permit the issuance on a provisional or interim
basis of clearances for the provision of childcare services
at military childcare centers.
(b) Elements.--The policy required by subsection (a) shall
provide for the following:
(1) Any clearance issued under the policy shall be
temporary and contingent upon the satisfaction of such
requirements for the issuance of a clearance on a permanent
basis as the Secretary considers appropriate.
(2) Any individual issued a clearance on a provisional or
interim basis under the policy shall be subject to such
supervision in the provision of childcare services using such
clearance as the Secretary considers appropriate.
(c) Clearance Defined.--In this section, the term
``clearance'', with respect to an individual and the
provision of childcare services, means the formal approval of
the individual, after appropriate background checks and other
review, to provide childcare services to children at a
military childcare center of the Department of Defense.
SEC. 574. PILOT PROGRAM ON PREVENTION OF CHILD ABUSE AND
TRAINING ON SAFE CHILDCARE PRACTICES AMONG
MILITARY FAMILIES.
(a) Pilot Program.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall, acting
through the Defense Health Agency, carry out a pilot program
on universal home visits for purposes of providing eligible
covered beneficiaries and their families training on safe
childcare practices aimed at reducing child abuse and
fatalities due to abuse and neglect, assessments of risk
factors for child abuse, and connections with community
resources to meet identified needs.
(2) Scope.--The pilot program shall be designed to
facilitate connections between covered beneficiaries and
their families and
[[Page S3434]]
community resources (including existing resources provided by
the Armed Forces). The pilot program, including the practices
covered by training pursuant to the pilot program, shall
conform to evidence-based scientific criteria, including
criteria available through publications in peer-reviewed
scientific journals.
(3) Elements.--The pilot program shall include the
following:
(A) Between one and three home visits, and not more than
seven other contacts, except in unusual cases (such as
deployments), with such home visits by a team led by a nurse,
whenever practicable, to provide screening, community
resource referral, and training to eligible covered
beneficiaries and their families on the following:
(i) General maternal and infant health.
(ii) Safe sleeping environments.
(iii) Feeding and bathing.
(iv) Adequate supervision.
(v) Common hazards.
(vi) Self-care.
(vii) Recognition of post-partum depression, substance
abuse, and domestic violence in a mother or her partner and
community violence.
(viii) Skills for management of infant crying.
(ix) Other positive parenting skills and practices.
(x) The importance of participating in ongoing healthcare
for an infant and in ongoing healthcare for post-partum
depression.
(xi) Finding, qualifying for, and participating in
available community resources with respect to infant care,
childcare, and parenting support.
(xii) Planning for parenting or guardianship of children
during deployment.
(xiii) Such other matters as the Secretary considers
appropriate.
(B) If a parent is deployed at the time of birth--
(i) the first home visit pursuant to subparagraph (A)
shall, to the extent practicable, incorporate both parents,
in person with the local parent and by electronic means (such
as Skype or FaceTime) with the deployed parent; and
(ii) another such home visit shall be conducted upon the
return of the parent from deployment, and shall include both
parents.
(C) An electronic directory of community resources
available to eligible covered beneficiaries and their
families in order to assist teams described in subparagraph
(A) in connecting beneficiaries and families with such
resources.
(D) An electronic integrated data system to--
(i) support teams in referring beneficiaries to the
services and resources to be offered under subsection (c)(3)
and track beneficiary usage;
(ii) track interactions between teams described in
subparagraph (A) and eligible beneficiaries and their
families; and
(iii) otherwise evaluate the implementation and
effectiveness of the pilot program.
(b) Mandatory Participation.--
(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), the
Secretary shall require all eligible covered beneficiaries at
each installation at which the pilot program is being
conducted to be contacted by the pilot program under this
section.
(2) Exception.--The Secretary shall encourage participation
by both parents of a child in the pilot program, but
participation by one parent shall be sufficient to meet the
requirement under paragraph (1).
(c) Available Services and Resources.--
(1) In general.--In carrying out the pilot program under
this section, the Secretary shall offer services and
resources to an eligible covered beneficiary based on the
particular needs of the beneficiary and the beneficiary's
family.
(2) Voluntary participation.--Participation by an eligible
covered beneficiary and family in any service or resource
offered under paragraph (1) shall be at the election of the
beneficiary.
(3) Assessment of eligible covered beneficiaries.--
(A) In general.--In carrying out the pilot program, the
Secretary shall conduct, or attempt to conduct, an assessment
of every eligible covered beneficiary and beneficiary family
participating in the pilot program, regardless of risk
factors, to determine which services and resources to offer
such beneficiary and family under paragraph (1).
(B) Particular needs.--In conducting an assessment of an
eligible covered beneficiary and family under subparagraph
(A), the Secretary shall assess their needs and eligibility
for particular services and resources and connect the
beneficiary and family to services and resources for which
they have a need and are eligible, either within the
Department of Defense or elsewhere.
(d) Involvement of Medical Staff.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary shall ensure that the pilot
program under this section is conducted by licensed medical
staff of the Department of Defense and not family advocacy
staff.
(2) Home visits.--
(A) In general.--The Secretary shall ensure that the pilot
program includes the following:
(i) An initial contact made prenatally (except when not
possible, in which case the contact shall occur as soon after
birth as possible) by a team described in subsection
(a)(3)(A), which shall include screening for the matters
specified in that subsection.
(ii) Home visits by a nurse or other licensed medical
professional trained in the practices covered by the program
at the birth of a child, which visits shall follow a
research-based structured clinical protocol and include use
of the electronic integrated data described in subsection
(a)(3)(D).
(B) Timing of visits.--The first visits under subparagraph
(A)(ii) shall occur between two and five weeks after hospital
discharge with appropriate follow-up generally accomplished
within two home visits.
(C) Duration of visits.--Visits under this paragraph shall
have a duration between 90 minutes and 2 hours.
(D) Final visit.--Not later than 45 days after the last
visit conducted by a nurse under subparagraph (A)(ii) with
respect to an eligible covered beneficiary, appropriate staff
shall follow-up with the beneficiary and the beneficiary's
family to assess if they are using the services recommended
under subsection (c).
(e) Implementation Assessments.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary shall carry out not fewer
than five implementation assessments in accordance with this
subsection in order to assess the effectiveness of the
elements and requirements of the pilot program.
(2) Schedule.--The implementation assessment required by
this subsection shall be completed by not later than two
years after the date of the enactment of this Act.
(3) Locations.--The implementation assessments shall be
carried out at not less than five military installations
selected by the Secretary for purposes of this subsection. In
selecting such installations, the Secretary shall select
installations representing a range of circumstances,
including installations in an urban location and a rural
location, installations with a large population and with a
small population, installations currently experiencing high
incidence of child abuse, neglect, or both and low incidence
of child abuse, neglect, or both, installations with a
hospital or clinic and without a hospital or clinic, joint
installations, and installations serving only one Armed
Force.
(4) Assessment.--In carrying out the implementation
assessments, the Secretary shall seek to obtain an assessment
of each of the following:
(A) The ability of nurses or other licensed medical
professionals to contact families eligible for participation
in the pilot program.
(B) The extent to which families eligible for participation
in the program actually participate in the pilot program.
(C) The ability of medical personnel to adhere to the
clinical protocols of the pilot program.
(D) The extent to which families participating in the pilot
program are being connected to services and resources under
the pilot program.
(E) The extent to which families participating in the pilot
program are using services and resources under the pilot
program.
(f) Reports.--
(1) Initial report.--Not later than 180 days after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to
the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House
of Representatives a report on the pilot program to be
carried out pursuant to this section. The report shall
include a comprehensive description of each implementation
assessment to be carried out pursuant to subsection (e),
including--
(A) the installation at which such implementation
assessment is being carried out;
(B) a justification for the selection of such installation
for purposes of subsection (e); and
(C) the elements and requirements of the pilot program
being carried out through such implementation assessment,
including strategy and metrics for evaluating effectiveness.
(2) Final report.--Not later than 180 days after the
completion of the pilot program, the Secretary shall submit
to the committees specified in paragraph (1) a report on the
pilot program. The report shall include the following:
(A) A comprehensive description and assessment of each of
the implementation assessments under subsection (e).
(B) A comprehensive description and assessment of the pilot
program.
(C) Such recommendations for legislative or administrative
action as the Secretary considers appropriate in light of
pilot program, including recommendations for modifications of
the pilot program or extension of the pilot program on an
permanent basis at additional locations.
(g) Implementation Defense-wide.--If the Secretary
determines as a result of the pilot program that any element
of the pilot program is effective, the Secretary shall take
appropriate actions to implement the pilot program as a
program throughout and across the military installations of
the Department.
(h) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) The term ``community'', with respect to a military
installation, means the catchment area for community services
of the installation, including services provided on the
installation and services provided by State, county, and
local jurisdictions in which the installation is located or
in the vicinity of the installation.
(2) The term ``eligible covered beneficiary'' means a
covered beneficiary (as that term is defined in section 1072
of title 10, United States Code) who obtains pre-natal and
obstetrical care in a military medical treatment facility in
connection with a birth covered by the pilot program.
[[Page S3435]]
SEC. 575. PILOT PROGRAM ON PARTICIPATION OF MILITARY SPOUSES
IN TRANSITION ASSISTANCE PROGRAM ACTIVITIES.
(a) Pilot Program Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall
carry out a pilot program to assess the feasability and
advisability of permitting military spouses to participate in
activities under the Transition Assistance Program (TAP)
under section 1144 of title 10, United States Code, on
military installations.
(b) Locations.--The Secretary shall carry out the pilot
program at not fewer than five military installations
selected by the Secretary for purposes of the pilot program.
(c) Duration.--The Secretary shall carry out the pilot
program during the five-year period beginning on the date of
the enactment of this Act.
(d) Participation.--
(1) In general.--Under the pilot program, the spouse of a
member of the Armed Forces assigned to a military
installation at which the pilot program is carried out who is
participating in activities under the Transition Assistance
Program may participate in such activities under the Program
as the spouse considers appropriate, regardless of whether
the member is also participating in such activities at the
time of the spouse's participation.
(2) Adequate facilities.--The Secretary shall ensure that
the facilities for the carrying out of activities under the
Transition Assistance Program at each installation at which
the pilot program is carried out are adequate to permit the
participation in such activities of any spouse of a member of
the Armed Forces at the installation who seeks to participate
in such activities.
(e) Reports.--
(1) Initial report.--Not later than six months after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit
to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the
House of Representatives a report on the pilot program,
including a comprehensive description of the pilot program.
(2) Final report.--Not later than six months after the
completion of the pilot program, the Secretary shall submit
to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the
House of Representatives a report on the pilot program. The
report shall include the following:
(A) A comprehensive description of the pilot program,
including the installations at which the pilot program was
carried out and the rates of participation of military
spouses in activities under the Transition Assistance Program
pursuant to the pilot program.
(B) Such recommendations for extension or expansion of the
pilot program, including making the pilot program permanent,
as the Secretary considers appropriate in light of the pilot
program.
SEC. 576. SMALL BUSINESS ACTIVITIES OF MILITARY SPOUSES ON
MILITARY INSTALLATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES.
(a) Assessment of Small Business Activities.--The Secretary
of Defense shall submit to Congress a report setting forth an
assessment of the feasibility and advisability of permitting
military spouses to engage in small business activities on
military installations in the United States and in
partnership with commissaries, exchange stores, and other
morale, welfare, and recreation facilities of the Armed
Forces in the United States.
(b) Elements.--The assessment shall--
(1) take into account the usage by military spouses of
installation facilities, utilities, and other resources in
the conduct of small business activities on military
installations in the United States and such other matters in
connection with the conduct of such business activities by
military spouses as the Secretary considers appropriate; and
(2) seek to identify mechanisms to ensure that costs and
fees associated with the usage by military spouses of such
facilities, utilities, and other resources in connection with
such business activities does not meaningfully curtail or
eliminate the opportunity for military spouses to profit
reasonably from such business activities.
Subtitle G--Decorations and Awards
SEC. 581. AUTHORIZATION FOR AWARD OF THE DISTINGUISHED
SERVICE CROSS FOR JUSTIN T. GALLEGOS FOR ACTS
OF VALOR DURING OPERATION ENDURING FREEDOM.
(a) Authorization.--Notwithstanding the time limitations
specified in section 3744 of title 10, United States Code, or
any other time limitation with respect to the awarding of
certain medals to persons who served in the Armed Forces, the
Secretary of the Army may award the Distinguished Service
Cross under section 3742 of such title to Justin T. Gallegos
for the acts of valor during Operation Enduring Freedom
described in subsection (b).
(b) Action Described.--The acts of valor referred to in
subsection (a) are the actions of Justin T. Gallegos on
October 3, 2009, while serving in the grade of Staff Sergeant
in Afghanistan while serving with B Troop, 3d Squadron, 61st
Cavalry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry
Division.
SEC. 582. AWARD OF MEDALS OR OTHER COMMENDATIONS TO HANDLERS
OF MILITARY WORKING DOGS.
(a) Program of Award Required.--Each Secretary of a
military department shall carry out a program to provide for
the award of one or more medals or other commendations to
handlers of military working dogs under the jurisdiction of
such Secretary to recognize valor or meritorious achievement
by such handlers and dogs.
(b) Medals and Commendations.--Any medal or commendation
awarded pursuant to a program under subsection (a) shall be
of such design, and include such elements, as the Secretary
of the military department concerned shall specify.
(c) Presentation and Acceptance.--Any medal or commendation
awarded pursuant to a program under subsection (a) may be
presented to and accepted by the handler concerned on behalf
of the handler and the military working dog concerned.
(d) Regulations.--Medals and commendations shall be awarded
under programs under subsection (a) in accordance with
regulations prescribed by the Secretary of Defense for
purposes of this section.
Subtitle H--Other Matters
SEC. 591. AUTHORITY TO AWARD DAMAGED PERSONAL PROTECTIVE
EQUIPMENT TO MEMBERS SEPARATING FROM THE ARMED
FORCES AND VETERANS AS MEMENTOS OF MILITARY
SERVICE.
(a) In General.--Chapter 152 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
section:
``Sec. 2568a. Damaged personal protective equipment: award to
members separating from the armed forces and veterans
``The Secretary of a military department may award to a
member of the armed forces under the jurisdiction of the
Secretary who is separating from the armed forces, and to any
veteran formerly under the jurisdiction of the Secretary,
demilitarizied personal protective equipment (PPE) of the
member or veteran that was damaged in combat or otherwise
during the deployment of the member or veteran. The award of
equipment under this section shall be without cost to the
member or veteran concerned.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 152 of such title is amended by adding
at the end the following new item:
``2568a. Damaged personal protective equipment: award to members
separating from the armed forces and veterans.''.
SEC. 592. STANDARDIZATION OF FREQUENCY OF ACADEMY VISITS OF
THE AIR FORCE ACADEMY BOARD OF VISITORS WITH
ACADEMY VISITS OF BOARDS OF OTHER MILITARY
SERVICE ACADEMIES.
Section 9355 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
striking subsection (d) and inserting the following new
subsection:
``(d) The Board shall visit the Academy annually. With the
approval of the Secretary of the Air Force, the Board or its
members may make other visits to the Academy in connection
with the duties of the Board or to consult with the
Superintendent of the Academy. Board members shall have
access to the Academy grounds and the cadets, faculty, staff,
and other personnel of the Academy for the purposes of the
duties of the Board.''.
SEC. 593. REDESIGNATION OF THE COMMANDANT OF THE UNITED
STATES AIR FORCE INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY AS THE
PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES AIR FORCE
INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY.
(a) Redesignation.--Section 9314b(a) of title 10, United
States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection heading, by striking ``Commandant'' and
inserting ``President'';
(2) by striking ``Commandant'' each place it appears and
inserting ``President''; and
(3) in the heading of paragraph (3), by striking
``commandant'' and inserting ``president''.
(b) References.--Any reference in any law, regulation, map,
document, paper, or other record of the United States to the
Commandant of the United States Air Force Institute of
Technology shall be deemed to be a reference to the President
of the United States Air Force Institute of Technology.
SEC. 594. LIMITATION ON JUSTIFICATIONS ENTERED BY MILITARY
RECRUITERS FOR ENLISTMENT OR ACCESSION OF
INDIVIDUALS INTO THE ARMED FORCES.
(a) In General.--In any case in which a database or system
maintained by an Armed Force regarding the reasons why
individuals elect to enlist or access into the Armed Force
provides for military recruiters to select among pre-
specified options for reasons for such election, military
recruiters entering data into such database or system may
select only among such pre-specified options as reasons for
the enlistment or accession of any particular individual.
(b) Military Recruiter Defined.--In this section, the term
``military recruiter'' means a person who as the duty to
recruit persons into the Armed Forces for military service.
SEC. 595. NATIONAL COMMISSION ON MILITARY, NATIONAL, AND
PUBLIC SERVICE MATTERS.
(a) Definitions.--Section 551(c) of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328;
130 Stat. 2130) is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by inserting after ``United States
Code)'' the following: ``or active status (as that term is
defined in subsection (d)(4) of such section)'';
(2) in paragraph (2)--
(A) by striking `` `national service' '' and inserting ``
`public service' ''; and
(B) by striking ``or State Government'' and inserting ``,
State, Tribal, or local government'';
(3) in paragraph (3)--
(A) by striking `` `public service' '' and inserting ``
`national service' ''; and
[[Page S3436]]
(B) by striking ``employment'' and inserting
``participation''; and
(4) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(4) The term `establishment date' means September 19,
2017.''.
(b) Exception to Paperwork Reduction Act.--Section 555(e)
of that Act (130 Stat. 2134) is amended by adding at the end
the following new paragraph:
``(4) Paperwork reduction act.--For purposes of developing
its recommendations, the information collection of the
Commission may be treated as a pilot project under section
3505(a) of title 44, United States Code. In addition, the
Commission shall not be subject to the requirements of
section 3506(c)(2)(A) of such title.''.
SEC. 596. BURIAL OF UNCLAIMED REMAINS OF INMATES AT THE
UNITED STATES DISCIPLINARY BARRACKS CEMETERY,
FORT LEAVENWORTH, KANSAS.
Section 985 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (b), by striking ``A person who is
ineligible'' in the matter preceding paragraph (1) and
inserting ``Except as provided in subsection (c), a person
who is ineligible'';
(2) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (d); and
(3) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new
subsection (c):
``(c) Unclaimed Remains of Military Prisoners.--Subsection
(b) shall not preclude the burial at the United States
Disciplinary Barracks Cemetery at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas,
of a military prisoner, including a military prisoner who is
a person described in section 2411(b) of title 38, who dies
while in custody of a military department and whose remains
are not claimed by the person authorized to direct
disposition of the remains or by other persons legally
authorized to dispose of the remains.''.
SEC. 597. SPACE-AVAILABLE TRAVEL ON DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
AIRCRAFT FOR VETERANS WITH SERVICE-CONNECTED
DISABILITIES RATED AS TOTAL.
(a) In General.--Subsection (c) of section 2641b of title
10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraphs (4) and (5) as paragraphs
(5) and (6), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after paragraph (3) the following new
paragraph (4):
``(4) Subject to subsection (f), veterans with a permanent
service-connected disability rated as total.''.
(b) Conditions and Limitations.--Such section is further
amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (f) as subsection (g); and
(2) by inserting after subsection (e) the following new
subsection (f):
``(f) Veterans With Service-connected Disabilities Rated as
Total.--(1) Travel may not be provided under this section to
a veteran eligible for travel pursuant to subsection (c)(4)
in priority over any member eligible for travel under
subsection (c)(1) or any dependent of such a member eligible
for travel under this section.
``(2) The authority in subsection (c)(4) may not be
construed as affecting or in any way imposing on the
Department of Defense, any armed force, or any commercial
company with which they contract an obligation or expectation
that they will retrofit or alter, in any way, military
aircraft or commercial aircraft, or related equipment or
facilities, used or leased by the Department or such armed
force to accommodate passengers provided travel under such
authority on account of disability.
``(3) The authority in subsection (c)(4) may not be
construed as preempting the authority of a flight commander
to determine who boards the aircraft and any other matters in
connection with safe operation of the aircraft.''.
TITLE VI--COMPENSATION AND OTHER PERSONNEL BENEFITS
Subtitle A--Pay and Allowances
SEC. 601. FISCAL YEAR 2019 INCREASE IN MILITARY BASIC PAY.
(a) Waiver of Section 1009 Adjustment.--The adjustment to
become effective during fiscal year 2019 required by section
1009 of title 37, United States Code, in the rates of monthly
basic pay authorized members of the uniformed services shall
not be made.
(b) Increase in Basic Pay.--Effective on January 1, 2019,
the rates of monthly basic pay for members of the uniformed
services are increased by 2.6 percent.
SEC. 602. REPEAL OF AUTHORITY FOR PAYMENT OF PERSONAL MONEY
ALLOWANCES TO NAVY OFFICERS SERVING IN CERTAIN
POSITIONS.
(a) Repeal.--Section 414 of title 37, United States Code,
is amended--
(1) by striking subsection (b); and
(2) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (b).
(b) Effective Date.--The amendments made by subsection (a)
shall take effect on December 31, 2018, and shall apply with
respect to personal money allowances payable under section
414 of title 37, United States Code, for years beginning
after that date.
SEC. 603. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE PROPOSAL FOR A PAY TABLE FOR
MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES USING STEPS IN
GRADE BASED ON TIME IN GRADE RATHER THAN TIME
IN SERVICE.
(a) Proposal Required.--Not later than 120 days after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense
shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report
setting forth a proposal for a pay table for members of the
Armed Forces that uses steps in grade for each pay grade
based on time of service within such pay grade rather than on
time of service in the Armed Forces as a whole.
(b) Comptroller General Assessment.--Not later than April
1, 2019, the Comptroller General of the United States shall
submit to the congressional defense committees a report
setting forth an assessment by the Comptroller General of the
proposed pay table required pursuant to subsection (a),
including an assessment of the effects of using the proposed
pay table, rather than the current pay table for members of
the Armed Forces, on recruitment and retention of members of
the Armed Forces as a whole and on recruitment and retention
of members of the Armed Forces with particular sets of skills
(including cyber and other technical skills).
SEC. 604. FINANCIAL SUPPORT FOR LESSORS UNDER THE MILITARY
HOUSING PRIVATIZATION INITIATIVE DURING 2019.
(a) Support Authorized.--Subject to subsection (c), for
each month during 2019, the Secretary of Defense may pay to a
lessor of covered housing up to 2 percent of the amount
calculated under section 403(b)(3)(A)(i) of title 37, United
States Code, for the area in which the covered housing exists
for each member to whom such lessor leases covered housing
for such month.
(b) Covered Housing.--In this section, the term ``covered
housing'' means a unit of housing--
(1) acquired or constructed under the alternative authority
of subchapter IV of chapter 169 of title 10, United States
Code (known as the Military Housing Privatization
Initiative);
(2) that is leased to a member of a uniformed service who
resides in such unit; and
(3) for which the lessor charges such member rent that
equals or exceeds the amount calculated under section
403(b)(3)(A) of title 37, United States Code.
(c) Support Contingent on Notice to Congress.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary may not make payments to a
lessor for particular covered housing in 2019 authorized by
subsection (a) until the Secretary submits to the Committees
on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of
Representatives a notice on such payments.
(2) Elements.--The notice on payments to a lessor for
particular covered housing in 2019 for purposes of paragraph
(1) shall include the following:
(A) A documented request from the lessor for additional
funding in connection with such housing and endorsed by the
commander of the military installation concerned.
(B) A description of the formula to be used by the
Secretary to calculate the amount of such payments.
(C) A description of the current financial condition of the
lessor in connection with such housing, including the
following:
(i) The current debt coverage ratio of the lessor for such
housing.
(ii) An assessment of the lessor's ability to fund future
sustainment costs for such housing in the absence of payments
as described in subsection (a).
(iii) An assessment of whether any earnings for the lessor
from other covered housing, if any, can offset predicted
shortfalls in funding for such housing.
(D) An assessment of the effects, if any, of recent
reductions in basic allowance for housing on the financial
viability of such housing for the lessor.
(E) A plan to ensure the long-term financial stability of
such housing.
(F) A recommendation whether the contract between the
lessor and government for such housing area should be
retained without modification, or modified, to ensure long-
term financial viability of such housing.
SEC. 605. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY OF PRESIDENT TO DETERMINE
ALTERNATIVE PAY ADJUSTMENT IN ANNUAL BASIC PAY
OF MEMBERS OF THE UNIFORMED SERVICES.
(a) Modification.--Section 1009(e) of title 37, United
States Code, is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``or serious economic
conditions affecting the general welfare'';
(2) by striking paragraph (2); and
(3) by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph (2).
(b) Effective Date.--The amendments made by subsection (a)
shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act,
and--
(1) if the date of the enactment of this Act occurs before
September 1 of a year, shall apply with respect to plans for
alternative pay adjustments for any year beginning after such
year; and
(2) if the date of the enactment of this Act occurs after
August 31 of a year, shall apply with respect to plans for
alternative pay adjustments for any year beginning after the
year following such year.
SEC. 606. ELIGIBILITY OF RESERVE COMPONENT MEMBERS FOR HIGH-
DEPLOYMENT ALLOWANCE FOR LENGTHY OR NUMEROUS
DEPLOYMENTS AND FREQUENT MOBILIZATIONS.
Section 436(a)(2)(C)(ii) of title 37, United States Code,
is amended by inserting after ``under'' the first place it
appears the following: ``section 12304b of title 10 or''.
[[Page S3437]]
SEC. 607. ELIGIBILITY OF RESERVE COMPONENT MEMBERS FOR
NONREDUCTION IN PAY WHILE SERVING IN THE
UNIFORMED SERVICES OR NATIONAL GUARD.
Section 5538(a) of title 5, United States Code, is amended
in the matter preceding paragraph (1) by inserting after
``under'' the following: ``section 12304b of title 10 or''.
SEC. 608. TEMPORARY ADJUSTMENT IN RATE OF BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR
HOUSING FOLLOWING IDENTIFICATION OF SIGNIFICANT
UNDERDETERMINATION OF CIVILIAN HOUSING COSTS
FOR HOUSING AREAS.
Section 403(b) of title 37, United States Code, is amended
by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(8)(A) Under the authority of this paragraph, the
Secretary of Defense may prescribe a temporary adjustment in
the current rates of basic allowance for housing for a
military housing area or portion of a military housing area
if the Secretary determines that the actual costs of adequate
housing for civilians in that military housing area or
portion thereof differ from such current rates of basic
allowance for housing by an amount in excess of 20 percent of
such current rates of basic allowance for housing.
``(B) Any temporary increase in rates of basic allowance
for housing under this paragraph shall remain in effect only
until the next annual adjustment in rates of basic allowance
for housing under this subsection by law.
``(C) This paragraph shall cease to be effective on
December 31, 2019.''.
Subtitle B--Bonuses and Special and Incentive Pays
SEC. 611. ONE-YEAR EXTENSION OF CERTAIN EXPIRING BONUS AND
SPECIAL PAY AUTHORITIES.
(a) Authorities Relating to Title 37 Consolidated Special
Pay, Incentive Pay, and Bonus Authorities.--The following
sections of title 37, United States Code, are amended by
striking ``December 31, 2018'' and inserting ``December 31,
2019'':
(1) Section 331(h), relating to general bonus authority for
enlisted members.
(2) Section 332(g), relating to general bonus authority for
officers.
(3) Section 334(i), relating to special aviation incentive
pay and bonus authorities for officers.
(4) Section 335(k), relating to special bonus and incentive
pay authorities for officers in health professions.
(5) Section 336(g), relating to contracting bonus for
cadets and midshipmen enrolled in the Senior Reserve
Officers' Training Corps.
(6) Section 351(h), relating to hazardous duty pay.
(7) Section 352(g), relating to assignment pay or special
duty pay.
(8) Section 353(i), relating to skill incentive pay or
proficiency bonus.
(9) Section 355(h), relating to retention incentives for
members qualified in critical military skills or assigned to
high priority units.
(b) Authorities Relating To Reserve Forces.--Section 910(g)
of title 37, United States Code, relating to income
replacement payments for reserve component members
experiencing extended and frequent mobilization for active
duty service, is amended by striking ``December 31, 2018''
and inserting ``December 31, 2019''.
(c) Title 10 Authorities Relating to Health Care
Professionals.--The following sections of title 10, United
States Code, are amended by striking ``December 31, 2018''
and inserting ``December 31, 2019'':
(1) Section 2130a(a)(1), relating to nurse officer
candidate accession program.
(2) Section 16302(d), relating to repayment of education
loans for certain health professionals who serve in the
Selected Reserve.
(d) Authorities Relating to Nuclear Officers.--Section
333(i) of title 37, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``December 31, 2018'' and inserting ``December 31,
2019''.
(e) Authority to Provide Temporary Increase in Rates of
Basic Allowance for Housing.--Section 403(b)(7)(E) of title
37, United States Code, is amended by striking ``December 31,
2018'' and inserting ``December 31, 2019''.
Subtitle C--Disability Pay, Retired Pay, and Survivor Benefits
SEC. 621. TECHNICAL CORRECTIONS IN CALCULATION AND
PUBLICATION OF SPECIAL SURVIVOR INDEMNITY
ALLOWANCE COST OF LIVING ADJUSTMENTS.
(a) Months for Which Adjustment Applicable.--Paragraph (2)
of section 1450(m) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) in subparagraph (I), by striking ``December'' and
inserting ``November''; and
(2) in subparagraph (J), by striking ``for months during
any calendar year after 2018'' and inserting ``for months
after November 2018''.
(b) Cost of Living Adjustment.--Paragraph (6) of such
section is amended--
(1) in the paragraph heading, by striking ``after 2018''
and inserting ``after november 2018''; and
(2) by striking subparagraphs (A) and (B) and inserting the
following new subparagraphs:
``(A) In general.--Whenever retired pay is increased for a
month under section 1401a of this title (or any other
provision of law), the amount of the allowance payable under
paragraph (1) for that month shall also be increased.
``(B) Amount of increase.--With respect to an eligible
survivor of a member of the uniformed services, the increase
for a month shall be--
``(i) the amount payable pursuant to paragraph (2) for
months during the preceding 12-month period; plus
``(ii) an amount equal to a percentage of the amount
determined pursuant to clause (i), which percentage is the
percentage by which the retired pay of the member would have
increased for the month, as described in subparagraph (A), if
the member was alive (and otherwise entitled to such pay).
``(C) Rounding down.--The monthly amount of an allowance
payable under this subsection, if not a multiple of $1, shall
be rounded to the next lower multiple of $1.
``(D) Public notice on amount of allowance payable.--
Whenever an increase in the amount of the allowance payable
under paragraph (1) is made pursuant to this paragraph, the
Secretary of Defense shall publish the amount of the
allowance so payable by reason of such increase, including
the months for which payable.''.
(c) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section
shall take effect on December 1, 2018.
Subtitle D--Other Matters
SEC. 631. RATES OF PER DIEM FOR LONG-TERM TEMPORARY DUTY
ASSIGNMENTS.
(a) Report on Cost-benefit Analysis of November 2014 Change
of Policy.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 90 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and
the House of Representatives a report setting forth an
analysis, conducted by the Secretary for purposes of the
report, of the costs and benefits of the change in policy of
the Department of Defense on rates of per diem for long-term
temporary duty assignments that took effect on November 1,
2014. The study shall be consistent with the principles and
requirements of Office of Management and Budget Circular A-
94.
(2) Element assessing cost-benefit.--The report under
paragraph (1) shall specify, in particular, whether or not
the benefits of the change in policy described in that
paragraph have outweighed and will continue to outweigh the
costs of the change of policy.
(b) Contingent Reversion to Prior Policy.--
(1) Lack of report.--If the report required by subsection
(a)(1) is not submitted to the committees of Congress
referred to in that subsection by the contingency date,
effective as of the contingency date, the policy of the
Department on rates of per diem for long-term temporary duty
assignments shall be the policy as in effect as of October
31, 2014.
(2) Finding of costs outweighing benefits.--If the
specification in the report as required by subsection (a)(2)
is that the benefits of the change in policy described in
subsection (a)(1) have not outweighed or will not continue to
outweigh the costs of the change of policy, effective as of
the date of the report, the policy of the Department on rates
of per diem for long-term temporary duty assignments shall be
the policy as in effect as of October 31, 2014.
(3) Contingency date defined.--In this subsection, the term
``contingency date'' means the date that is 120 days after
the date of the enactment of this Act.
SEC. 632. PROHIBITION ON PER DIEM ALLOWANCE REDUCTIONS BASED
ON THE DURATION OF TEMPORARY DUTY ASSIGNMENT OR
CIVILIAN TRAVEL.
(a) Members.--Section 474(d)(3) of title 37, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
sentence: ``The Secretary of a military department shall not
alter the amount of the per diem allowance, or the maximum
amount of reimbursement, for a locality based on the duration
of the temporary duty assignment in the locality of a member
of the armed forces under the jurisdiction of the
Secretary.''.
(b) Civilian Employees.--Section 5702(a)(2) of title 5,
United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the
following new sentence: ``The Secretary of Defense shall not
alter the amount of the per diem allowance, or the maximum
amount of reimbursement, for a locality based on the duration
of the travel in the locality of an employee of the
Department.''.
(c) Repeals.--
(1) Existing policy and regulations.--The policy, and any
regulations issued pursuant to such policy, implemented by
the Secretary of Defense on November 1, 2014, with respect to
reductions in per diem allowances based on duration of
temporary duty assignment or civilian travel shall have no
force or effect.
(2) Attempted statutory fix.--Section 672 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law
114-328; 37 U.S.C. 474 note; 130 Stat. 2178) is repealed.
TITLE VII--HEALTH CARE PROVISIONS
Subtitle A--TRICARE and Other Health Care Benefits
SEC. 701. CONSOLIDATION OF COST-SHARING REQUIREMENTS UNDER
TRICARE SELECT AND TRICARE PRIME.
(a) TRICARE Select.--
(1) In general.--Section 1075 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended--
(A) in subsection (c), by striking paragraphs (1) and (2)
and inserting the following new paragraphs:
``(1) With respect to beneficiaries in the active-duty
family member category or the retired category other than
beneficiaries described in paragraph (2)(B), the cost-sharing
requirements shall be calculated pursuant to subsection
(d)(1).
[[Page S3438]]
``(2)(A) With respect to beneficiaries described in
subparagraph (B) in the active-duty family member category or
the retired category, the cost-sharing requirements shall be
calculated as if the beneficiary were enrolled in TRICARE
Extra or TRICARE Standard as if TRICARE Extra or TRICARE
Standard, as the case may be, were still being carried out by
the Secretary.
``(B) Beneficiaries described in this subparagraph are the
following beneficiaries:
``(i) Retired members and the family members of such
retired members covered by section 1086(c)(1) of this title
by reason of being retired under chapter 61 of this title or
being a dependent of such a retired member.
``(ii) Survivors covered by section 1086(c)(2) of this
title.'';
(B) by striking subsection (e); and
(C) by redesignating subsections (f), (g), and (h) as
subsections (e), (f), and (g), respectively.
(2) Conforming amendment.--Subsection (d)(2) of such
section is amended by striking ``, and the amounts specified
under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subsection (e),''.
(b) TRICARE Prime.--Section 1075a(a) of title 10, United
States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking paragraph (2) and inserting the following
new paragraph:
``(2) With respect to beneficiaries in the active-duty
family member category or the retired category (as described
in section 1075(b)(1) of this title) other than beneficiaries
described in paragraph (3)(B), the cost-sharing requirements
shall be calculated pursuant to subsection (b)(1).''; and
(2) in paragraph (3), by striking subparagraph (B) and
inserting the following new subparagraph:
``(B) Beneficiaries described in this subparagraph are the
following beneficiaries:
``(i) Retired members and the family members of such
retired members covered by section 1086(c)(1) of this title
by reason of being retired under chapter 61 of this title or
being a dependent of such a retired member.
``(ii) Survivors covered by section 1086(c)(2) of this
title.''.
(c) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section
shall take effect on January 1, 2019.
SEC. 702. ADMINISTRATION OF TRICARE DENTAL PLANS THROUGH THE
FEDERAL EMPLOYEES DENTAL INSURANCE PROGRAM.
(a) Eligibility of Additional Beneficiaries Under the
Federal Employees Dental Insurance Program.--Section 8951(8)
of title 5, United States Code, is amended by striking
``1076c'' and inserting ``1076a or 1076c''.
(b) Administration of TRICARE Dental Plans.--Subsection (b)
of section 1076a of title 10, United States Code, is amended
to read as follows:
``(b) Administration of Plans.--The plans established under
this section shall be administered by the Secretary of
Defense through an agreement with the Director of the Office
of Personnel Management to allow persons described in
subsection (a) to enroll in an insurance plan under chapter
89A of title 5, in accordance with terms prescribed by the
Secretary, including terms, to the extent practical, as
defined by the Director through regulation, consistent with
subsection (d) and, to the extent practicable in relation to
such chapter 89A, other provisions of this section.''.
(c) Applicability.--The amendments made by this section
shall apply with respect to the first contract year for
chapter 89A of title 5, United States Code, that begins on or
after January 1, 2022.
(d) Transition.--To ensure the successful transition of
programs, in carrying out the TRICARE dental program under
section 1076a of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary
of Defense shall ensure that the contractor for such program
provides claims information under such program to carriers
providing dental coverage under chapter 89A of title 5,
United States Code.
SEC. 703. CONTRACEPTION COVERAGE PARITY UNDER THE TRICARE
PROGRAM.
(a) In General.--Section 1074d(b)(3) of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by inserting before the period at the
end the following: ``(including all methods of contraception
approved by the Food and Drug Administration, contraceptive
care (including with respect to insertion, removal, and
follow up), sterilization procedures, and patient education
and counseling in connection therewith)''.
(b) Prohibition on Cost-sharing for Certain Services.--
(1) TRICARE select.--Section 1075(c) of such title is
amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(4) For all beneficiaries under this section, there is no
cost-sharing for any method of contraception provided by a
network provider.''.
(2) TRICARE prime.--Section 1075a(b) of such title is
amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(5) For all beneficiaries under this section, there is no
cost-sharing for any method of contraception provided by a
network provider.''.
(3) Pharmacy benefits program.--Section 1074g(a)(6) of such
title is amended by adding at the end the following new
subparagraph:
``(D) Notwithstanding subparagraphs (A) and (B), there is
no cost-sharing for any prescription contraceptive on the
uniform formulary provided by a network retail pharmacy
provider or the mail order pharmacy program.''.
(c) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section
shall take effect on January 1, 2020.
SEC. 704. PILOT PROGRAM ON OPIOID MANAGEMENT IN THE MILITARY
HEALTH SYSTEM.
(a) Pilot Program.--
(1) In general.--Beginning not later than 180 days after
the date of the enactment of this Act, the Director of the
Defense Health Agency shall implement a comprehensive pilot
program to minimize early opioid exposure in beneficiaries
under the TRICARE program and to prevent progression to
misuse or abuse of opioid medications.
(2) Opioid safety across continuum of care.--The pilot
program shall include elements to maximize opioid safety
across the entire continuum of care consisting of patient,
physician or dentist, and pharmacist.
(b) Elements of Pilot Program.--The pilot program shall
include the following:
(1) Identification of potential opioid misuse or abuse in
pharmacies of military treatment facilities, retail network
pharmacies, and the home delivery pharmacy and transmission
of alerts regarding such potential mistreatment to opioid
prescribing physicians or dentists.
(2) Direct engagement with, education for, and management
of beneficiaries under the TRICARE program to help such
beneficiaries avoid opioid misuse or abuse.
(3) Provision of in-home disposal kits to deactivate excess
opioids and prevent unauthorized use.
(4) Proactive outreach by specialist pharmacists to such
beneficiaries when identifying potential opioid misuse or
abuse.
(5) Monitoring of such beneficiaries through the use of
predictive analytics to identify the potential for abuse and
addiction before such beneficiaries begin an opioid
prescription.
(6) Detection of fraud, waste, and abuse.
(c) Report on Pilot Program.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days before completion
of the pilot program, the Secretary of Defense shall submit
to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the
House of Representatives a report that describes the conduct
of the pilot program.
(2) Elements.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall
include the following:
(A) A description of the pilot program, including outcome
measures developed to determine the overall effectiveness of
the pilot program.
(B) A description of the ability of the pilot program to
identify opioid misuse and abuse among beneficiaries under
the TRICARE program in each pharmacy venue of the pharmacy
program of the military health system.
(C) A description of the impact of the use of predictive
analytics to monitor such beneficiaries to identify the
potential for opioid abuse and addiction before such
beneficiaries begin an opioid prescription.
(D) A description of any reduction in the misuse or abuse
of opioid medications among such beneficiaries as a result of
the pilot program.
(d) Duration.--
(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), the
Director shall carry out the pilot program for a period of
not more than three years.
(2) Expansion.--The Director may implement the pilot
program on a permanent basis if the Director determines that
the pilot program successfully reduces early opioid exposure
in beneficiaries under the TRICARE program and prevents
progression to misuse or abuse of opioid medications.
(e) TRICARE Program Defined.--In this section, the term
``TRICARE program'' has the meaning given that term in
section 1072 of title 10, United States Code.
SEC. 705. PILOT PROGRAM ON TREATMENT OF MEMBERS OF THE ARMED
FORCES FOR POST-TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER
RELATED TO MILITARY SEXUAL TRAUMA.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense may carry out a
pilot program to assess the feasibility and advisability of
using intensive outpatient programs to treat members of the
Armed Forces suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder
resulting from military sexual trauma, including treatment
for substance abuse, depression, and other issues related to
such conditions.
(b) Discharge Through Partnerships.--The pilot program
authorized by subsection (a) shall be carried out through
partnerships with public, private, and non-profit health care
organizations and institutions that--
(1) provide health care to members of the Armed Forces;
(2) provide evidence-based treatment for psychological and
neurological conditions that are common among members of the
Armed Forces, including post-traumatic stress disorder,
traumatic brain injury, substance abuse, and depression;
(3) provide health care, support, and other benefits to
family members of members of the Armed Forces; and
(4) provide health care under the TRICARE program (as that
term is defined in section 1072 of title 10, United States
Code).
(c) Program Activities.--Each organization or institution
that participates in a partnership under the pilot program
authorized by subsection (a) shall--
(1) carry out intensive outpatient programs of short
duration to treat members of the Armed Forces suffering from
post-traumatic stress disorder resulting from military sexual
trauma, including treatment for substance abuse, depression,
and other issues related to such conditions;
[[Page S3439]]
(2) use evidence-based and evidence-informed treatment
strategies in carrying out such programs;
(3) share clinical and outreach best practices with other
organizations and institutions participating in the pilot
program; and
(4) annually assess outcomes for members of the Armed
Forces individually and among the organizations and
institutions participating in the pilot program with respect
to the treatment of conditions described in paragraph (1).
(d) Evaluation Metrics.--Before commencement of the pilot
program, the Secretary shall establish metrics to be used to
evaluate the effectiveness of the pilot program and the
activities under the pilot program.
(e) Reports.--
(1) Initial report.--Not later than 180 days after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to
the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House
of Representatives a report on the pilot program authorized
by subsection (a). The report shall include a description of
the pilot program and such other matters on the pilot program
as the Secretary considers appropriate.
(2) Final report.--Not later than 180 days after the
cessation of the pilot program under subsection (f), the
Secretary shall submit to the committees of Congress referred
to in paragraph (1) a report on the pilot program. The report
shall include the following:
(A) A description of the pilot program, including the
partnership under the pilot program as described in
subsection (b).
(B) An assessment of the effectiveness of the pilot program
and the activities under the pilot program.
(C) Such recommendations for legislative or administrative
action as the Secretary considers appropriate in light of the
pilot program, including recommendations for extension or
making permanent the authority for the pilot program.
(f) Termination.--The Secretary may not carry out the pilot
program authorized by subsection (a) after the date that is
three years after the date of the enactment of this Act.
Subtitle B--Health Care Administration
SEC. 711. IMPROVEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION OF DEFENSE HEALTH
AGENCY AND MILITARY MEDICAL TREATMENT
FACILITIES.
(a) In General.--Subsection (a) of section 1073c of title
10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraphs (2) and (3) as paragraphs
(3) and (4), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following new
paragraph (2):
``(2) In addition to the responsibilities set forth in
paragraph (1), the Director of the Defense Health Agency
shall have the authority--
``(A) to direct, control, and serve as the primary rater of
the performance of commanders or directors of military
medical treatment facilities;
``(B) to direct and control any intermediary organizations
between the Defense Health Agency and military medical
treatment facilities;
``(C) to determine the scope of medical care provided at
each military medical treatment facility to meet the military
personnel readiness requirements of the senior military
operational commander of the military installation;
``(D) to determine total workforce requirements at each
military medical treatment facility;
``(E) to direct joint manning at military medical treatment
facilities and intermediary organizations;
``(F) to establish training and skills sustainment venues
for military medical personnel;
``(G) to address personnel staffing shortages at military
medical treatment facilities; and
``(H) to approve service nominations for commanders or
directors of military medical treatment facilities.''.
(b) Combat Support Responsibilities.--Subsection (d)(2) of
such section is amended by adding at the end the following
new subparagraph:
``(C) Ensuring that the Defense Health Agency meets the
military personnel readiness requirements of the senior
military operational commanders of the military
installations.''.
SEC. 712. ORGANIZATIONAL FRAMEWORK OF THE MILITARY HEALTHCARE
SYSTEM TO SUPPORT MEDICAL REQUIREMENTS OF THE
COMBATANT COMMANDS.
(a) Organizational Framework Required.--The Secretary of
Defense shall, acting through the Director of the Defense
Health Agency, implement an organizational framework for the
military healthcare system that most effectively implements
chapter 55 of title 10, United States Code, in a manner that
maximizes interoperability and fully integrates medical
capabilities of the Armed Forces in order to enhance joint
military medical operations in support of requirements of the
combatant commands.
(b) Implementation.--
(1) Commencement.--Implementation of the organizational
framework required by subsection (a) shall commence not later
than October 1, 2018.
(2) Phased implementation.--Implementation of the
organizational framework may occur in phases, as considered
appropriate by the Director.
(3) Completion.--The organizational framework shall be
fully implemented by not later than October 1, 2020.
(4) Compliance with certain requirements.--The
organizational framework, as implemented, shall comply with
all requirements of section 1073c of title 10, United States
Code, except for the October 1, 2018, implementation date
specified in such section.
(c) Health-readiness Regions in CONUS Required.--The
organizational framework required by subsection (a) shall
meet the requirements as follows:
(1) Health-readiness regions.--There shall be not more than
three health-readiness regions established in the continental
United States.
(2) Leader.--Each region under paragraph (1) shall be led
by a commander or director who is a member of the Armed
Forces serving in a grade not higher than major general or
rear admiral and who shall be--
(A) selected by the Director from among members of the
Armed Forces recommended by the military departments for
service in such position; and
(B) under the authority, direction, and control of the
Director while serving in such position.
(3) Regional hubs.--
(A) In general.--Each region under paragraph (1) shall
include a major military medical center designated by the
Director to serve as the regional hub for the provision of
specialized medical services in such region.
(B) Capabilities.--A major medical center may not be
designated as a regional hub unless the center--
(i) includes one or more large graduate medical education
training platforms; and
(ii) provides, at a minimum, role 4 medical care.
(C) Location.--Any major medical center designated as a
regional hub of a region shall be geographically located so
as to maximize the support provided by uniformed medical
resources in the region to the combatant commands. In
designating major medical centers as a regional hub, the
Director shall give consideration to the collocation of such
centers with major aerial debarkation points of patients in
the medical evacuation system of the United States
Transportation Command.
(D) Major health care delivery platform.--A major medical
center designated as a regional hub of a region shall serve
as the major health care delivery platform for the provision
of complex specialized medical care in the region, whether
through patient referrals from other military medical
treatment facilities in the region or through referrals from
other regions in the case of certain specialized medical
services (such as treatment for severe burns) which may only
be available at a military medical treatment facility within
the region.
(4) Additional military medical centers.--Consistent with
section 1073d of title 10, United States Code, each region
under paragraph (1) may include one or more additional
military medical centers, whether established or maintained
by the Director for purposes of this section, in order to
serve locations in the region, if any, as follows:
(A) Locations with large beneficiary populations.
(B) Locations that serve as the primary readiness platforms
of the Armed Forces.
(5) Patient referrals and coordination.--The Director shall
ensure effective and efficient medical care referrals and
coordination among military medical treatment facilities in
each region under paragraph (1), and among local or regional
high-performing health systems in the region, through local
or regional partnerships with institutional or individual
civilian providers.
(d) Health-readiness Regions OCONUS Required.--The
organizational framework required by subsection (a) shall
meet the requirements as follows:
(1) Health-readiness regions.--There shall be established
not more than two health-readiness regions outside the
continental United States--
(A) to enhance joint military medical operations in support
of the requirements of the combatant commands in such region
or regions, with a specific focus on existing and future
contingency and operational plans;
(B) to ensure the provision of high-quality healthcare
services to beneficiaries; and
(C) to improve the interoperability of healthcare delivery
systems in regions (whether under this subsection, subsection
(c), or both).
(2) Patient referrals and coordination.--The Director shall
ensure effective and efficient medical care referrals and
coordination among military medical treatment facilities in
any region under paragraph (1), and among local or regional
high-performing health systems in such region.
(e) Planning and Coordination.--
(1) Sustainment of clinical competencies and staffing.--The
Director shall--
(A) provide in each health-readiness region under this
section healthcare delivery venues for uniformed medical and
dental personnel to obtain operational clinical competencies;
and
(B) coordinate with the military departments to ensure that
staffing at military medical treatment facilities in each
region supports readiness requirements for members of the
Armed Forces and military medical personnel.
(2) Oversight and allocation of resources.--
(A) In general.--The Director shall, consistent with
section 193 of title 10, United
[[Page S3440]]
States Code, coordinate with the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, through the Joint Staff Surgeon, to conduct
oversight and direct resources to support requirements
related to readiness or operational medicine support that are
validated by the Joint Staff.
(B) Supply and demand for medical services.--Based on
operational medical force readiness requirements of the
combatant commands validated by the Joint Staff, the Director
shall--
(i) validate supply and demand requirements for medical and
dental services at each military medical treatment facility;
(ii) in coordination with the operational medical force
readiness organizations required by subsection (f)(1),
provide currency workload for uniformed medical and dental
personnel at each facility to maintain skills proficiency;
and
(iii) if workload is insufficient to meet requirements,
identify alternative training and clinical practice sites for
uniformed medical and dental personnel, and establish
military-civilian training partnerships, to provide such
workload.
(f) Operational Medical Force Readiness Organizations of
the Armed Forces.--
(1) Establishment.--Not later than October 1, 2019, the
Secretary of Defense shall, acting through the Secretary of
the military department concerned, establish in each military
department an operational medical force readiness
organization in accordance with this subsection.
(2) Leader.--
(A) In general.--Each operational medical force readiness
organization established under paragraph (1) shall be led by
the Surgeon General of an Armed Force.
(B) Construction of duties.--The duties of a Surgeon
General under this paragraph as leader of an operational
medical force readiness organization are in addition to the
duties of such Surgeon General under section 3036, 5137, or
8036 of title 10, United States Code, as applicable.
(3) Responsibilities.--The responsibilities of an
operational medical force readiness organization are limited
to the responsibilities as follows:
(A) To recruit, organize, train, and equip uniformed
medical and dental personnel of the military department
concerned.
(B) To assign uniformed medical and dental personnel of the
military department concerned to military medical treatment
facilities for training activities specific to such military
department and for operational and training missions, during
which assignment such personnel shall be under the
operational control of the commander or director of the
military medical treatment facility concerned, subject to the
authority, direction, and control of the Director.
(C) To ensure the readiness for operational deployment of
medical and dental personnel and deployable medical or dental
teams or units of the Armed Force or Armed Forces concerned.
(D) To provide logistical support for operational
deployment of medical and dental personnel and deployable
medical or dental teams or units of the Armed Force or Armed
Forces concerned.
(E) To oversee the mobilization and demobilization in
connection with operational deployment of medical and dental
personnel of the Armed Force or Armed Forces concerned.
(F) To carry out operational medical and dental force
development for the military department concerned.
(G) In coordination with the Secretary concerned, to ensure
that the operational medical force readiness organizations of
the Armed Forces support the medical and dental readiness
responsibilities of the Director and the Secretary concerned.
(4) Medical force requirements of combatant commands.--
(A) In general.--Each operational medical force readiness
organization shall ensure that the uniformed medical and
dental personnel serving in the military department concerned
receive training and clinical practice opportunities
necessary to ensure that such personnel are capable of
meeting the operational medical force requirements of the
combatant commands applicable to such personnel. Such
training and practice opportunities shall be provided through
programs and activities of the Defense Health Agency and by
such other mechanisms as the Secretary shall designate for
purposes of this paragraph.
(B) Requirements.--The commanders of the combatant commands
shall apprise operational medical force readiness
organizations of the operational medical force requirements
of the combatant commands through the Joint Staff.
(5) No command authority.--An operational medical force
readiness organization established under paragraph (1) shall
have no command authority.
(g) Disestablishment of Superseded Medical Organizations.--
(1) In general.--Not later than the date on which the
Secretary of Defense establishes an operational medical force
readiness organization within a military department pursuant
to subsection (f), the Secretary of Defense shall, acting
through the Secretary of such military department concerned,
disestablish the following:
(A) In the case of the Army, the Army Medical Command, and
any associated subordinate command or organization.
(B) In the case of the Navy, the Bureau of Medicine and
Surgery of the Navy, and any associated subordinate command
or organization.
(C) In the case of the Air Force, the Air Force Medical
Service, and any associated subordinate command or
organization.
(2) Transfer of personnel authorizations.--Any personnel
authorization of a command or organization disestablished
pursuant to paragraph (1) as of the date of disestablishment
may be transferred by the Secretary to the Defense Health
Agency or any other organization of the Department of Defense
considered appropriate by the Secretary, including an
operational medical force readiness organization under
subsection (f).
SEC. 713. STREAMLINING OF TRICARE PRIME BENEFICIARY REFERRAL
PROCESS.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall streamline
the process under section 1095f of title 10, United States
Code, by which beneficiaries enrolled in TRICARE Prime are
referred to the civilian provider network for inpatient or
outpatient care under the TRICARE program.
(b) Objectives.--In carrying out the requirement in
subsection (a), the Secretary shall meet the following
objectives:
(1) The referral process shall model best industry
practices for referrals from primary care managers to
specialty care providers.
(2) The process shall strictly limit administrative
requirements for enrolled beneficiaries, relying instead on
communications among providers and care coordinators to
arrange appointments within applicable access to care
scheduling time standards.
(3) Beneficiary preferences for communications relating to
appointment referrals using state-of-the-art information
technology shall be used to expedite the process.
(4) There shall be effective and efficient processes to
determine the availability of appointments at military
medical treatment facilities and, when unavailable, to make
prompt referrals to network providers under the TRICARE
program.
(5) There shall be no right-of-first refusal requirement
under the process.
(c) Deadline for Implementation.--The requirement in
subsection (a) shall be implemented for referrals under
TRICARE Prime in calendar year 2019.
(d) Evaluation and Improvement.--After 2019, the Secretary
shall--
(1) evaluate the process described in subsection (a) not
less often annually; and
(2) make appropriate improvements to the process in light
of such evaluation.
(e) Definitions.--In this section, the terms ``TRICARE
program'' and ``TRICARE Prime'' have the meaning given such
terms in section 1072 of title 10, United States Code.
SEC. 714. SHARING OF INFORMATION WITH STATE PRESCRIPTION DRUG
MONITORING PROGRAMS.
(a) In General.--Section 1074g of title 10, United States
Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (g) and (h) as subsections
(h) and (i), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after subsection (f) the following new
subsection (g):
``(g) Sharing of Information With State Prescription Drug
Monitoring Programs.--(1) The Secretary of Defense shall
establish and maintain a program (to be known as the
`Military Health System Prescription Drug Monitoring
Program') in accordance with this subsection. The program
shall include a special emphasis on drugs provided through
facilities of the uniformed services.
``(2) The program shall be--
``(A) comparable to prescription drug monitoring programs
operated by States, including such programs approved by the
Secretary of Health and Human Services under section 399O of
the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 280g-3); and
``(B) applicable to designated controlled substance
prescriptions under the pharmacy benefits program.
``(3)(A) The Secretary shall establish appropriate
procedures for the bi-directional sharing of patient-specific
information regarding prescriptions for designated controlled
substances between the program and State prescription drug
monitoring programs.
``(B) The purpose of sharing of information under this
paragraph shall be to prevent misuse and diversion of opioid
medications and other designated controlled substances.
``(C) Any disclosure of patient-specific information by the
Secretary under this paragraph is an authorized disclosure
for purposes of the health information privacy regulations
promulgated under the Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-191).
``(4)(A) Any procedures developed pursuant to paragraph
(3)(A) shall include appropriate safeguards, as determined by
the Secretary, concerning cyber security of Department of
Defense systems and operational security of Department
personnel.
``(B) To the extent the Secretary considers appropriate,
the program may be treated as comparable to a State program
for purposes of bi-directional sharing of controlled
substance prescription information.
``(5) For purposes of this subsection, any reference to a
program operated by a State includes any program operated by
a county, municipality, or other subdivision within that
State.''.
(b) Conforming Amendment.--Section 1079(q) of such title is
amended by striking ``section 1074g(g)'' and inserting
``section 1074g(h)''.
[[Page S3441]]
SEC. 715. IMPROVEMENT OF REIMBURSEMENT BY DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE OF ENTITIES CARRYING OUT STATE
VACCINATION PROGRAMS IN CONNECTION WITH
VACCINES PROVIDED TO COVERED BENEFICIARIES
UNDER THE TRICARE PROGRAM.
Section 719(a) of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 10 U.S.C. 1074g
note) is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``for the cost of
vaccines provided to covered beneficiaries through such
program''; and
(2) in paragraph (2)--
(A) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``to purchase vaccines
provided'' and inserting ``in making vaccines available'';
(B) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``to provide
vaccines'' and all that follows through the period at the end
and inserting ``with respect to a State vaccination program
may not exceed the amount the Department would reimburse an
entity for making vaccines available to the number of covered
beneficiaries who reside in the State concerned.''; and
(C) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(C) Inapplicability of limitation.--Subparagraph (B)
shall not apply to amounts assessed by entities that provide
independent verification that the assessments of such
entities are below the costs of the private sector in making
vaccines available.''.
Subtitle C--Reports and Other Matters
SEC. 721. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY FOR JOINT DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE-DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS MEDICAL
FACILITY DEMONSTRATION FUND.
Section 1704(e) of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2010 (Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 2573), as
amended by section 722 of the Carl Levin and Howard P.
``Buck'' McKeon National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291), section 723 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law
114-92), section 741(a) of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328), and section
719 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2018 (Public Law 115-91), is further amended by striking
``September 30, 2019'' and inserting ``September 30, 2020''.
SEC. 722. INCREASE IN NUMBER OF APPOINTED MEMBERS OF THE
HENRY M. JACKSON FOUNDATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT
OF MILITARY MEDICINE.
Section 178(c)(1)(C) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by striking ``four members'' and inserting ``six
members''.
SEC. 723. CESSATION OF REQUIREMENT FOR MENTAL HEALTH
ASSESSMENT OF MEMBERS AFTER REDEPLOYMENT FROM A
CONTINGENCY OPERATION UPON DISCHARGE OR RELEASE
FROM THE ARMED FORCES.
Section 1074m of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (a)(1)(C), by striking ``Once'' and
inserting ``Subject to subsection (d), once''; and
(2) in subsection (d), by striking ``subsection (a)(1)(D)''
and inserting ``subparagraph (C) or (D) of subsection
(a)(1)''.
SEC. 724. PILOT PROGRAM ON EARNING BY SPECIAL OPERATIONS
FORCES MEDICS OF CREDITS TOWARDS A PHYSICIAN
ASSISTANT DEGREE.
(a) In General.--The Assistant Secretary of Defense for
Health Affairs shall conduct a pilot program to assess the
feasibility and advisability of partnerships between special
operations forces and institutions of higher education, and
health care systems if determined appropriate by the
Assistant Secretary for purposes of the pilot program,
through which special operations forces medics earn credit
toward the master's degree of physician assistant for
military operational work and training performed by the
medics.
(b) Duration.--The Assistant Secretary shall conduct the
pilot program for a period not to exceed five years.
(c) Clinical Training.--Partnerships under subsection (a)
shall permit medics participating in the pilot program to
conduct clinical training at medical facilities of the
Department of Defense and the civilian sector.
(d) Evaluation.--The evaluation of work and training
performed by medics for which credits are earned under the
pilot program shall comply with civilian clinical evaluation
standards applicable to the awarding of master's degrees of
physician assistant.
(e) Reports.--
(1) Initial report.--Not later than 180 days after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and
the House of Representative a report that shall include the
following:
(A) A comprehensive framework for the military education to
be provided to special operations forces medics under the
pilot program, including courses of instruction at
institutions of higher education and any health care systems
participating in the pilot program.
(B) Metrics to be used to assess the effectiveness of the
pilot program.
(C) A description of the mechanisms to be used by the
Department, medics, or both to cover the costs of education
received by medics under the pilot program through
institutions of higher education or health care systems,
including payment by the Department in return for a military
service commitment, tuition or other educational assistance
by the Department, use by medics of post-9/11 educational
assistance available through the Department of Veterans
Affairs, and any other mechanisms the Secretary considers
appropriate for purposes of the pilot program.
(2) Final report.--Not later than 180 days after completion
of the pilot program, the Secretary shall submit to the
Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of
Representatives a final report on the pilot program. The
report shall include the following:
(A) An evaluation of the pilot program using the metrics of
assessment set forth pursuant to paragraph (1)(B).
(B) An assessment of the utility of the funding mechanisms
set forth pursuant to paragraph (1)(C).
(C) An assessment of the effects of the pilot program on
recruitment and retention of medics for special operations
forces.
(D) An assessment of the feasibility and advisability of
extending one or more authorities for joint professional
military education under chapter 107 of title 10, United
States Code, to warrant officers or enlisted personnel, and
if the Secretary considers the extension of any such
authorities feasible and advisable, recommendations for
legislative or administrative action to so extend such
authorities.
(f) Construction of Authorities.--Nothing in this section
may be construed to--
(1) authorize an officer or employee of the Federal
Government to create, endorse, or otherwise incentivize a
particular curriculum or degree track; or
(2) require, direct, review, or control a State or
educational institution, or the instructional content,
curriculum, and related activities of a State or educational
institution.
SEC. 725. PILOT PROGRAM ON PARTNERSHIPS WITH CIVILIAN
ORGANIZATIONS FOR SPECIALIZED MEDICAL TRAINING.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall carry out a
pilot program to assess the feasibility and advisability of
establishing partnerships with public, private, and non-
profit organizations and institutions to provide short-term
specialized medical training to advance the medical skills
and capabilities of military medical providers.
(b) Duration.--The Secretary may carry out the pilot
program under subsection (a) for a period of not more than
three years.
(c) Evaluation Metrics.--Before commencing the pilot
program under subsection (a), the Secretary shall establish
metrics to be used to evaluate the effectiveness of the pilot
program.
(d) Reports.--
(1) Initial report.--
(A) In general.--Not later than 180 days before the
commencement of the pilot program under subsection (a), the
Secretary shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services of
the Senate and the House of Representatives a report on the
pilot program.
(B) Elements.--The report required by subparagraph (A)
shall include a description of the pilot program, the
evaluation metrics established under subsection (c), and such
other matters relating to the pilot program as the Secretary
considers appropriate.
(2) Final report.--
(A) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the
completion of the pilot program under subsection (a), the
Secretary shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services of
the Senate and the House of Representatives a report on the
pilot program.
(B) Elements.--The report required by subparagraph (A)
shall include the following:
(i) A description of the pilot program, including the
partnerships established under the pilot program as described
in subsection (a).
(ii) An assessment of the effectiveness of the pilot
program.
(iii) Such recommendations for legislative or
administrative action as the Secretary considers appropriate
in light of the pilot program, including recommendations for
extending or making permanent the authority for the pilot
program.
(e) Funding.--
(1) In general.--The amount authorized to be appropriated
for fiscal year 2019 for the Department of Defense for the
Defense Health Program for education and training shall be
increased by $2,500,000.
(2) Availability.--The amount of the increase of the
authorization under paragraph (1) shall be available to carry
out this section and shall remain available for obligation
until the completion of the pilot program under this section.
SEC. 726. REGISTRY OF INDIVIDUALS EXPOSED TO PER- AND
POLYFLUOROALKYL SUBSTANCES ON MILITARY
INSTALLATIONS.
(a) Establishment of Registry.--
(1) In general.--Not later than one year after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Veterans Affairs
shall--
(A) establish and maintain a registry for eligible
individuals who may have been exposed to per- and
polyfluoroalkyl substances (in this section referred to as
``PFAS'') due to the environmental release of aqueous film-
forming foam (in this section referred to as ``AFFF'') on
military installations to meet the requirements of military
specification MIL-F-24385F;
(B) include any information in such registry that the
Secretary of Veterans Affairs determines necessary to
ascertain and monitor the health effects of the exposure of
members of the Armed Forces to PFAS associated with AFFF;
[[Page S3442]]
(C) develop a public information campaign to inform
eligible individuals about the registry, including how to
register and the benefits of registering; and
(D) periodically notify eligible individuals of significant
developments in the study and treatment of conditions
associated with exposure to PFAS.
(2) Coordination.--The Secretary of Veterans Affairs shall
coordinate with the Secretary of Defense in carrying out
paragraph (1).
(b) Reports.--
(1) Initial report.--Not later than two years after the
date on which the registry under subsection (a) is
established, the Secretary of Veterans Affairs shall submit
to Congress an initial report containing the following:
(A) An assessment of the effectiveness of actions taken by
the Secretary of Veterans Affairs and the Secretary of
Defense to collect and maintain information on the health
effects of exposure to PFAS.
(B) Recommendations to improve the collection and
maintenance of such information.
(C) Using established and previously published
epidemiological studies, recommendations regarding the most
effective and prudent means of addressing the medical needs
of eligible individuals with respect to exposure to PFAS.
(2) Follow-up report.--Not later than five years after
submitting the initial report under paragraph (1), the
Secretary of Veterans Affairs shall submit to Congress a
follow-up report containing the following:
(A) An update to the initial report submitted under
paragraph (1).
(B) An assessment of whether and to what degree the content
of the registry established under subsection (a) is current
and scientifically up-to-date.
(3) Independent scientific organization.--The Secretary of
Veterans Affairs shall enter into an agreement with an
independent scientific organization to prepare the reports
under paragraphs (1) and (2).
(c) Recommendations for Additional Exposures to Be
Included.--Not later than five years after the date of the
enactment of this Act, and every five years thereafter, the
Secretary of Veterans Affairs, in consultation with the
Secretary of Defense and the Administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency, shall submit to Congress
recommendations for additional chemicals with respect to
which individuals exposed to such chemicals should be
included in the registry established under subsection (a).
(d) Eligible Individual Defined.--In this section, the term
``eligible individual'' means any individual who, on or after
a date specified by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs through
regulations, served or is serving in the Armed Forces at a
military installation where AFFF was used or at another
location of the Department of Defense where AFFF was used.
SEC. 727. INCLUSION OF GAMBLING DISORDER IN HEALTH
ASSESSMENTS FOR MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES AND
RELATED RESEARCH EFFORTS.
(a) Annual Periodic Health Assessment.--The Secretary of
Defense shall incorporate medical screening questions
specific to gambling disorder into the Annual Periodic Health
Assessment conducted by the Department of Defense for members
of the Armed Forces.
(b) Research Efforts.--The Secretary shall incorporate into
ongoing research efforts of the Department questions on
gambling disorder, as appropriate, including by restoring
such questions into the Health Related Behaviors Survey of
Active Duty Military Personnel and the Health Related
Behaviors Survey of Reserve Component Personnel.
(c) Report.--Not later than two years after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report on efforts
undertaken pursuant to subsections (a) and (b) and the
findings of the assessments and surveys described in those
subsections with respect to the prevalence of gambling
disorder among members of the Armed Forces.
SEC. 728. COMPTROLLER GENERAL REVIEW OF DEFENSE HEALTH AGENCY
OVERSIGHT OF TRICARE MANAGED CARE SUPPORT
CONTRACTORS.
(a) Review.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Comptroller General of the United
States shall submit to the congressional defense committees a
review of the oversight conducted by the Defense Health
Agency with respect to the transition of managed care support
contractors for the TRICARE program.
(b) Matters Included.--The review conducted under
subsection (a) shall include the following:
(1) The extent to which the Defense Health Agency provided
guidance and oversight to the outgoing and incoming managed
care support contractors during the transition period prior
to the start of health care delivery.
(2) The extent to which there were any issues with health
care delivery, and if so--
(A) the effect, if any, of the guidance and oversight by
the Defense Health Agency during the transition period on
those issues; and
(B) the solutions of the Defense Health Agency for
remediating any deficiencies of managed care support
contractors.
(3) The extent to which the Defense Health Agency has
reviewed any lessons learned from prior transitions and
incorporated those lessons into the current transition.
(c) Ongoing Requirement.--The Comptroller General shall
review any transition of managed care support contractors for
the TRICARE program occurring after the date of the review
under subsection (a) and submit to the congressional defense
committees a similar review for each such transition.
(d) TRICARE Program Defined.--In this section, the term
``TRICARE program'' has the meaning given that term in
section 1072 of title 10, United States Code.
TITLE VIII--ACQUISITION POLICY, ACQUISITION MANAGEMENT, AND RELATED
MATTERS
Subtitle A--Acquisition Policy and Management
SEC. 801. PERMANENT SUPPLY CHAIN RISK MANAGEMENT AUTHORITY.
(a) Permanent Extension of Authority.--
(1) In general.--Chapter 137 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
section:
``Sec. 2339a. Requirements for information relating to supply
chain risk
``(a) Authority.--Subject to subsection (b), the head of a
covered agency may--
``(1) carry out a covered procurement action; and
``(2) limit, notwithstanding any other provision of law, in
whole or in part, the disclosure of information relating to
the basis for carrying out a covered procurement action.
``(b) Determination and Notification.--The head of a
covered agency may exercise the authority provided in
subsection (a) only after--
``(1) obtaining a joint recommendation by the Under
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment and the
Chief Information Officer of the Department of Defense, on
the basis of a risk assessment by the Under Secretary of
Defense for Intelligence, that there is a significant supply
chain risk to a covered system;
``(2) making a determination in writing, in unclassified or
classified form, with the concurrence of the Under Secretary
of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment, that--
``(A) use of the authority in subsection (a)(1) is
necessary to protect national security by reducing supply
chain risk;
``(B) less intrusive measures are not reasonably available
to reduce such supply chain risk; and
``(C) in a case where the head of the covered agency plans
to limit disclosure of information under subsection (a)(2),
the risk to national security due to the disclosure of such
information outweighs the risk due to not disclosing such
information; and
``(3) providing a classified or unclassified notice of the
determination made under paragraph (2) to the appropriate
congressional committees, which notice shall include--
``(A) the information required by section 2304(f)(3) of
this title;
``(B) the joint recommendation by the Under Secretary of
Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment and the Chief
Information Officer of the Department of Defense as specified
in paragraph (1);
``(C) a summary of the risk assessment by the Under
Secretary of Defense for Intelligence that serves as the
basis for the joint recommendation specified in paragraph
(1); and
``(D) a summary of the basis for the determination,
including a discussion of less intrusive measures that were
considered and why they were not reasonably available to
reduce supply chain risk.
``(c) Delegation.--The head of a covered agency may not
delegate the authority provided in subsection (a) or the
responsibility to make a determination under subsection (b)
to an official below the level of the service acquisition
executive for the agency concerned.
``(d) Limitation on Disclosure.--If the head of a covered
agency has exercised the authority provided in subsection
(a)(2) to limit disclosure of information--
``(1) no action undertaken by the agency head under such
authority shall be subject to review in a bid protest before
the Government Accountability Office or in any Federal court;
and
``(2) the agency head shall--
``(A) notify appropriate parties of a covered procurement
action and the basis for such action only to the extent
necessary to effectuate the covered procurement action;
``(B) notify other Department of Defense components or
other Federal agencies responsible for procurements that may
be subject to the same or similar supply chain risk, in a
manner and to the extent consistent with the requirements of
national security; and
``(C) ensure the confidentiality of any such notifications.
``(e) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) Head of a covered agency.--The term `head of a
covered agency' means each of the following:
``(A) The Secretary of Defense.
``(B) The Secretary of the Army.
``(C) The Secretary of the Navy.
``(D) The Secretary of the Air Force.
``(2) Covered procurement action.--The term `covered
procurement action' means any of the following actions, if
the action takes place in the course of conducting a covered
procurement:
``(A) The exclusion of a source that fails to meet
qualification standards established in accordance with the
requirements of section 2319 of this title for the purpose of
reducing
[[Page S3443]]
supply chain risk in the acquisition of covered systems.
``(B) The exclusion of a source that fails to achieve an
acceptable rating with regard to an evaluation factor
providing for the consideration of supply chain risk in the
evaluation of proposals for the award of a contract or the
issuance of a task or delivery order.
``(C) The decision to withhold consent for a contractor to
subcontract with a particular source or to direct a
contractor for a covered system to exclude a particular
source from consideration for a subcontract under the
contract.
``(3) Covered procurement.--The term `covered procurement'
means--
``(A) a source selection for a covered system or a covered
item of supply involving either a performance specification,
as provided in section 2305(a)(1)(C)(ii) of this title, or an
evaluation factor, as provided in section 2305(a)(2)(A) of
this title, relating to supply chain risk;
``(B) the consideration of proposals for and issuance of a
task or delivery order for a covered system or a covered item
of supply, as provided in section 2304c(d)(3) of this title,
where the task or delivery order contract concerned includes
a contract clause establishing a requirement relating to
supply chain risk; or
``(C) any contract action involving a contract for a
covered system or a covered item of supply where such
contract includes a clause establishing requirements relating
to supply chain risk.
``(4) Supply chain risk.--The term `supply chain risk'
means the risk that an adversary may sabotage, maliciously
introduce unwanted function, or otherwise subvert the design,
integrity, manufacturing, production, distribution,
installation, operation, or maintenance of a covered system
so as to surveil, deny, disrupt, or otherwise degrade the
function, use, or operation of such system.
``(5) Covered system.--The term `covered system' means a
national security system, as that term is defined in section
3542(b) of title 44.
``(6) Covered item of supply.--The term `covered item of
supply' means an item of information technology (as that term
is defined in section 11101 of title 40) that is purchased
for inclusion in a covered system, and the loss of integrity
of which could result in a supply chain risk for a covered
system.
``(7) Appropriate congressional committees.--The term
`appropriate congressional committees' means--
``(A) in the case of a covered system included in the
National Intelligence Program or the Military Intelligence
Program, the Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate,
the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House
of Representatives, and the congressional defense committees;
and
``(B) in the case of a covered system not otherwise
included in subparagraph (A), the congressional defense
committees.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of such chapter is amended by inserting after the
item relating to section 2339 the following new item:
``2339a. Requirements for information relating to supply chain risk.''.
(b) Repeal of Obsolete Authority.--Section 806(g) of the
Ike Skelton National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2011 (Public Law 111-383; 10 U.S.C. 2304 note) is hereby
repealed.
SEC. 802. COMMERCIALLY AVAILABLE MARKET RESEARCH.
(a) In General.--Subsection (e) of section 2431a of title
10, United States code, is amended by adding at the end the
following new paragraph:
``(10) The term `market research' includes--
``(A) government market research directly with prospective
vendors, including--
``(i) contacting knowledgeable individuals in government
and industry regarding market capabilities to meet
requirements;
``(ii) reviewing the results of recent market research
undertaken to meet similar or identical requirements;
``(iii) publishing formal requests for information in
appropriate technical or scientific journals or business
publications;
``(iv) querying the governmentwide database of contracts
and other procurement instruments intended for use by
multiple agencies;
``(v) participating in interactive, on-line communication
among industry, acquisition personnel, and customers;
``(vi) obtaining source lists of similar items from other
contracting activities or agencies, trade associations, or
other sources;
``(vii) reviewing catalogs and other generally available
product literature published by manufacturers, distributors,
and dealers or available online;
``(viii) conducting interchange meetings or holding
presolicitation conferences to involve potential offerors
early in the acquisition process; and
``(ix) ensuring that any conflicts of interest presented by
vendors providing government capability statements are both
disclosed and mitigated; and
``(B) commercially available third-party market
research.''.
(b) Review.--Not later than 120 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition and Sustainment, in consultation with the Under
Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering, shall
review the guidance of the Department of Defense with regard
to those portions of the Federal Acquisition Regulation
regarding commercially available market research, including
sections 10.001(a)(2)(vi) and 10.002(b). The review shall, at
a minimum--
(1) assess the impact that conducting market research has
on the Department's resources; and
(2) ensure that commercially available market research is
considered among other sources of research, as appropriate,
and reviewed prior to developing new requirements documents
for an acquisition by the Department.
SEC. 803. COMPTROLLER GENERAL ASSESSMENT OF ACQUISITION
PROGRAMS AND RELATED INITIATIVES.
(a) In General.--Chapter 131 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
section:
``Sec. 2229b. Comptroller General assessment on acquisition
programs and initiatives
``(a) Assessment Required.--The Comptroller General of the
United States shall submit to the congressional defense
committees an annual assessment of selected acquisition
programs and initiatives of the Department of Defense by
March 30th of each year, beginning in 2020.
``(b) Analyses To Be Included.--The assessment required
under subsection (a) shall include--
``(1) a macro analysis of how well acquisition programs and
initiatives are performing and reasons for that performance;
``(2) a summary of organizational and legislative changes
and emerging assessment methodologies since the last
assessment, and a discussion of the implications for
execution and oversight of programs and initiatives; and
``(3) specific analyses of individual acquisition programs
and initiatives.
``(c) Acquisition Programs and Initiatives to Be
Considered.--The assessment required under subsection (a)
shall consider the following programs and initiatives:
``(1) Selected weapon systems, as determined appropriate by
the Comptroller General.
``(2) Selected information technology systems and
initiatives, including defense business systems, networks,
and software-intensive systems, as determined appropriate by
the Comptroller General.
``(3) Selected prototyping and rapid fielding activities
and initiatives, as determined appropriate by the Comptroller
General.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of such chapter is amended by inserting after the
item relating to section 2229a the following new item:
``2229b. Comptroller General assessment on acquisition programs and
related initiatives.''.
(c) Repeal of Superseded Authority.--Section 883(d) of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016
(Public Law 114-92; 10 U.S.C. 2222 note) is amended by
striking paragraph (1).
Subtitle B--Amendments to General Contracting Authorities, Procedures,
and Limitations
SEC. 811. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE CONTRACTING DISPUTE MATTERS.
(a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall carry
out a study of the frequency and effects of bid protests
involving the same contract award or proposed award that have
been filed at both the Government Accountability Office and
the United States Court of Federal Claims. The study shall
cover Department of Defense contracts and include, at a
minimum--
(1) the number of protests that have been filed with both
tribunals and results;
(2) the number of such protests where the tribunals
differed in denying or sustaining the action;
(3) the length of time, in average time and median time--
(A) from initial filing at the Government Accountability
Office to decision in the United States Court of Federal
Claims;
(B) from filing with each tribunal to decision by such
tribunal;
(C) from the time at which the basis of the protest is
known to the time of filing in each tribunal; and
(D) in the case of an appeal from a decision of the United
States Court of Federal Claims, from the date of the initial
filing of the appeal to decision in the appeal;
(4) the number of protests where performance was stayed or
enjoined and for how long;
(5) if performance was stayed or enjoined, whether the
requirement was obtained in the interim through another
vehicle or in-house, or whether during the period of the stay
or enjoining the requirement went unfulfilled;
(6) separately for each tribunal, the number of protests
where performance was stayed or enjoined and monetary damages
were awarded, which shall include for how long performance
was stayed or enjoined and the amount of monetary damages;
(7) whether the protestor was a large or small business;
and
(8) whether the protestor was the incumbent in a prior
contract for the same or similar product or service.
(b) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit
to the congressional defense committees, the Committee on the
Judiciary of the Senate, and the Committee on the Judiciary
of the House of Representatives a report on the results of
[[Page S3444]]
the study, along with related recommendations for improving
the expediency of the bid protest process. In preparing the
report, the Secretary shall consult with the Attorney General
of the United States, the Comptroller General of the United
States, and the United States Court of Federal Claims.
(c) Ongoing Data Collection.--Not later than 270 days after
the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense
shall establish and continuously maintain a data repository
to collect on an ongoing basis the information described in
subsection (a) and any additional relevant bid protest data
the Secretary determines necessary and appropriate to allow
the Department of Defense, the Government Accountability
Office, and the United States Court of Federal Claims to
assess and review bid protests over time.
(d) Establishment of Expedited Process for Small Value
Contracts.--
(1) In general.--Not later than December 1, 2019, the
Secretary of Defense shall develop a plan and schedule for an
expedited bid protest process for Department of Defense
contracts with a value of less than $100,000.
(2) Consultation.--In carrying out paragraph (1), the
Secretary of Defense may consult with the Government
Accountability Office and the United States Court of Federal
Claims to the extent such entities may establish a similar
process at their election.
(3) Report.--Not later than May 1, 2019, the Secretary of
Defense shall submit to the congressional defense committees
a report on the plan and schedule for implementation of the
expedited bid protest process, which shall include a request
for any additional authorities the Secretary determines
appropriate for such efforts.
SEC. 812. CONTINUATION OF TECHNICAL DATA RIGHTS DURING
CHALLENGES.
(a) Exercise of Rights in Technical Data Before Final
Disposition of a Challenge.--Section 2321(i) of title 10,
United States Code, is amended--
(1) in the subsection heading, by inserting ``Prior to
and'' after ``Rights and Liability'';
(2) by redesignating paragraphs (1) and (2) as paragraphs
(3) and (4), respectively; and
(3) by inserting before paragraph (3), as so redesignated,
the following new paragraphs:
``(1) Upon issuance of a challenge to a use or release
restriction asserted by a contractor or subcontractor under
the contract made pursuant to subsection (d) or made under
procedures established by the Department of Defense for
challenges to asserted use or release restrictions in
connection with noncommercial computer software, and until
final disposition of such a challenge, the Department of
Defense may exercise rights in the technical data or
noncommercial computer software rights consistent with the
grounds identified in the challenge pursuant to subsection
(d)(3), (or the grounds identified under corresponding
Department of Defense procedures in the case of noncommercial
computer software) in order to meet Department of Defense
mission requirements.
``(2) In the event that the challenge made by the
government is not sustained upon final disposition, the
contractor or subcontractor shall have only a right to
damages against the United States if the United States was
found to have not acted in good faith and as otherwise
provided by law arising from the exercise of rights described
in paragraph (1) during the time period described in such
paragraph.''.
(b) Revision of the Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation
Supplement.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall revise
the Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement, by
interim or final rule, to implement the amendments made by
subsection (a).
(c) Effective Date.--The amendments made by subsection (a)
and the revision required by subsection (b) shall become
effective on the date of publication of the interim or final
rule (whichever is earlier) required by subsection (b) and
shall apply to solicitations issued by Department of Defense
contracting activities after that date unless the senior
procurement executive of the agency concerned grants a waiver
on a case-by-case basis.
(d) Guidance on Technical Data Right Negotiation.--The
Secretary of Defense shall develop policies on the
negotiation of technical data rights for noncommercial
software that reflects the Department of Defense's needs for
technical data rights in the event of a protest or
replacement of incumbent contractor to meet defense
requirements in the most cost effective manner.
SEC. 813. INCREASED MICRO-PURCHASE THRESHOLD.
(a) In General.--Section 2338 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by striking ``Notwithstanding subsection (a)
of section 1902 of title 41, the micro-purchase threshold for
the Department of Defense for purposes of such section is
$5,000'' and inserting ``The micro-purchase threshold for the
Department of Defense is $10,000''.
(b) Conforming Amendment.--Section 1902(a)(1) of title 41,
United States Code, is amended by striking ``sections 2338
and 2339 of title 10 and''.
(c) Repeal of Obsolete Authority.--
(1) In general.--Section 2339 of title 10, United States
Code, is repealed.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 137 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by striking the item relating to section 2339.
SEC. 814. MODIFICATION OF LIMITATIONS ON SINGLE SOURCE TASK
OR DELIVERY ORDER CONTRACTS.
Section 2304a(d)(3)(A) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by striking ``reasonably perform the work'' and
inserting ``efficiently perform the work''.
SEC. 815. PRELIMINARY COST ANALYSIS REQUIREMENT FOR EXERCISE
OF MULTIYEAR CONTRACT AUTHORITY.
Section 2306b(i)(2)(B) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) by striking ``made after the completion of a cost
analysis'' and inserting ``supported by a preliminary cost
analysis''; and
(2) by striking ``for the purpose of section 2334(e)(1) of
this title, and that the analysis supports those preliminary
findings''.
SEC. 816. INCLUSION OF BEST AVAILABLE INFORMATION REGARDING
PAST PERFORMANCE OF SUBCONTRACTORS AND JOINT
VENTURE PARTNERS.
(a) Requirements for Performance of Subcontractors and
Joint Venture Partners.--Not later than 180 days after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense,
in consultation with the Federal Acquisition Regulatory
Council and the Administrator for Federal Procurement Policy,
shall develop policies for the Department of Defense to
ensure the best information regarding past performance of
certain subcontractors and joint venture partners is
available when awarding Department of Defense contracts. The
policies shall include proposed revisions to the Defense
Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement as follows:
(1) Required performance evaluations, as part of a
government-wide evaluation reporting tool, for first-tier
subcontractors performing a portion of the contract valued at
not less than 20 percent of the value of the prime contract,
provided--
(A) the information included in rating the subcontractor is
not inconsistent with the information included in the rating
for the prime contractor;
(B) the subcontractor evaluation is conducted consistent
with the provisions of section 42.15 of the Federal
Acquisition Regulation;
(C) negative evaluations of a subcontractor in no way
obviate the prime contractor's responsibility for successful
completion of the contract and management of its
subcontractors; and
(D) that in the judgment of the contracting officer, the
overall execution of the work is impacted by the performance
of the subcontractor or subcontractors.
(2) Required performance evaluations, as part of a
government-wide evaluation reporting tool, of individual
partners of joint venture-awarded, to ensure that past
performance on joint venture projects is considered in future
awards to individual joint venture partners, provided--
(A) at a minimum, the rating for joint ventures includes an
identification that allows the evaluation to be retrieved for
each partner of the joint venture;
(B) each partner, through the joint venture, is given the
same opportunity to submit comments, rebutting statements, or
additional information, consistent with the provisions of
section 42.15 of the Federal Acquisition Regulation; and
(C) the rating clearly identifies the responsibilities of
joint venture partners for discrete elements of the work
where the partners are not jointly and severally responsible
for the project.
(3) Processes to request exceptions from the annual
evaluation requirement under section 42.1502(a) of the
Federal Acquisition Regulation where submission of the annual
evaluations would not provide the best representation of the
performance of a contractor, including subcontractors and
joint venture partners, including--
(A) where no severable element of the work has been
completed;
(B) where the contracting officer determines that--
(i) an insubstantial portion of the contract work has been
completed in the preceding year; and
(ii) the lack of performance is at non-fault to the
contractor; or
(C) where the contracting officer determines that there is
an issue in dispute which, until resolved, would likely cause
the annual rating to inaccurately reflect the past
performance of the contractor.
(b) Report on Contractor Performance Appeals.--Not later
than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act,
the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the defense
committees a report on contractor and subcontractor past
performance evaluations and appeals, including--
(1) data on the number of performance evaluation appeals
filed by contractors and subcontractors within the previous
five years;
(2) the frequency that an appeal was successful and the
performance evaluation was changed favorably for the
contractor;
(3) the time it takes for an appeal to make its way through
the process from filing to adjudication; and
(4) what impact the appeals process has on the tracking of
information in the performance database system and
consideration of contractor and subcontractor performance on
future contracts.
(c) Agency Progress on Performance Evaluations.--Not later
than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act,
the Secretary of Defense shall develop a scorecard that
compares the timeliness, completeness, and accuracy of
contractor performance evaluations among the Department's
[[Page S3445]]
components. This scorecard shall be reported annually to
Congress and made publicly available not later than December
31 for the prior fiscal year until 2024.
(d) Congressional Access to Performance Data.--
(1) In general.--At the written request of a Chairman or
Ranking Member of one of the appropriate congressional
committees, the Secretary of Defense shall make all
contractor performance evaluations available through
electronic access to data systems or in another manner
specified by the request for designated staff members of the
appropriate congressional committees.
(2) Appropriate congressional committees.--In this
subsection, the term ``appropriate congressional committees''
means--
(A) the congressional defense committees;
(B) the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental
Affairs of the Senate; and
(C) the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform of the
House of Representatives.
SEC. 817. MODIFICATION OF CRITERIA FOR WAIVERS OF REQUIREMENT
FOR CERTIFIED COST AND PRICE DATA.
Section 817(b)(2) of the Bob Stump National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2003 (Public Law 107-314;
10 U.S.C. 2306a note) is amended by striking ``; and'' and
inserting ``; or''.
SEC. 818. SUBCONTRACTING PRICE AND APPROVED PURCHASING
SYSTEMS.
(a) Amendment.--Section 893 of the Ike Skelton National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011 (Public Law
111-383; 10 U.S.C. 2302 note) is amended--
(1) in subsection (g), by adding at the end the following
new paragraph:
``(5) The term `approved purchasing system' has the meaning
given the term in section 44.101 of the Federal Acquisition
Regulation (or any similar regulation).''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(i) Consent to Subcontract.--If the contractor on a
Department of Defense contract requiring a contracting
officer's written consent prior to the contractor entering
into a subcontract has an approved purchasing system, the
contracting officer may not withhold such consent without the
written approval of the program manager.''.
(b) Conforming Regulations.--Not later than 120 days after
the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of
Defense shall revise the Defense Federal Acquisition
Regulation Supplement to conform with the amendments to
section 893 of the Ike Skelton National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2011 (Public Law 111-383; 10 U.S.C. 2302
note) made by this section.
SEC. 819. COMPTROLLER GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES REPORT ON
PROGRESS PAYMENT FINANCING OF DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE CONTRACTS.
(a) Report Required.--Not later than 180 days after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Comptroller General of
the United States shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report on the results of an analysis, conducted
by the Comptroller General, of the effects of current
financing levels of Department of Defense contracts on
contractors of the Department and the budgets of the
Department.
(b) Elements.--
(1) In general.--The report required by subsection (a)
shall include an analysis and assessment of the impact of the
matters specified in paragraph (2), for both government and
business, on--
(A) the relationship between financing amounts and
contractor profit; and
(B) the willingness of contractors to pursue contracts with
the Department.
(2) Covered matters.--The matters specified in this
paragraph are each of the following under Department
contracts:
(A) Past changes to progress payment rates and conditions.
(B) Progress payment rates and limitations on progressing
for undefinitized contract actions.
SEC. 820. AUTHORIZATION TO LIMIT FOREIGN ACCESS TO TECHNOLOGY
THROUGH CONTRACTS.
The Under Secretary of Defense for Research and
Engineering, or a designee of the Under Secretary, may
include in the terms of any contract that the Under Secretary
enters into a provision that--
(1) limits access by select persons or organizations to
technology that is the subject of the contract under terms
defined by the Under Secretary, including by limiting such
access to specific periods of time; and
(2) if the person or organization violates the requirement
described in paragraph (1), the Under Secretary may require
the person or organization to forfeit intellectual property
rights associated with the contract.
SEC. 821. BRIEFING REQUIREMENT ON SERVICES CONTRACTS.
Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of
this Act, and every 180 days thereafter until the
requirements of section 2329(b) of title 10, United States
Code, are met, the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition
and Sustainment shall brief the congressional defense
committees on the progress of Department of Defense efforts
to meet the requirements of such section, including relevant
information on the methodology and implementation plans for
future compliance.
SEC. 822. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON AWARDING OF CONTRACTS TO
RESPONSIBLE COMPANIES THAT PRIMARILY EMPLOY
AMERICAN WORKERS AND DO NOT ACTIVELY TRANSFER
AMERICAN JOBS TO POTENTIAL ADVERSARIES.
It is the sense of Congress that the Department of Defense
should award contracts to responsible companies that
primarily employ United States workers or are partners in the
national technology and industrial base and do not actively
transfer United States jobs to potential adversaries.
Subtitle C--Provisions Relating to Major Defense Acquisition Programs
SEC. 831. PROGRAM COST, FIELDING, AND PERFORMANCE GOALS IN
PLANNING MAJOR ACQUISITION PROGRAMS.
Section 2448a of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (a)--
(A) by striking ``Secretary of Defense'' and inserting
``designated milestone decision authority for the major
defense acquisition program''; and
(B) by striking ``the milestone decision authority for the
major defense acquisition program approves a program that''
and inserting ``the program''; and
(2) by striking subsection (b).
SEC. 832. IMPLEMENTATION OF RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE
INDEPENDENT STUDY ON CONSIDERATION OF
SUSTAINMENT IN WEAPONS SYSTEMS LIFE CYCLE.
(a) Implementation Required.--Not later than 18 months
after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of
Defense shall, except as provided under subsection (b),
commence implementation of each recommendation submitted as
part of the independent assessment produced under section 844
of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2290).
(b) Exceptions.--
(1) Delayed implementation.--The Secretary of Defense may
commence implementation of a recommendation described under
subsection (a) later than the date required under such
subsection if the Secretary provides the congressional
defense committees with a specific justification for the
delay in implementation of such recommendation.
(2) Nonimplementation.--The Secretary of Defense may opt
not to implement a recommendation described under subsection
(a) if the Secretary provides to the congressional defense
committees--
(A) the reasons for the decision not to implement the
recommendation; and
(B) a summary of the alternative actions the Secretary
plans to take to address the purposes underlying the
recommendation.
(c) Implementation Plans.--For each recommendation that the
Secretary is implementing, or that the Secretary plans to
implement, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional
defense committees--
(1) a summary of actions that have been taken to implement
the recommendation; and
(2) a schedule, with specific milestones, for completing
the implementation of the recommendation.
SEC. 833. PILOT PROGRAM TO ACCELERATE MAJOR WEAPONS SYSTEM
PROGRAMS.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish a
pilot program to reform and accelerate the contracting and
pricing processes associated with contracts in excess of
$50,000,000 by--
(1) basing price reasonableness determinations on actual
cost and pricing data for purchases of the same or similar
products for the Department of Defense; and
(2) reducing the cost and pricing data to be submitted in
accordance with section 2306a of title 10, United States
Code.
(b) Sunset.--The authority to carry out the pilot program
under this section shall expire on January 2, 2021.
Subtitle D--Provisions Relating to Acquisition Workforce
SEC. 841. PERMANENT AUTHORITY FOR DEMONSTRATION PROJECTS
RELATING TO ACQUISITION PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT
POLICIES AND PROCEDURES.
(a) Permanent Authority.--Section 1762 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by striking subsections (g) and (h).
(b) Scope of Authority.--Subsection (a) of such section is
amended by striking ``Commencement.--'' and all that follows
through ``a demonstration project,'' and inserting ``In
General.--The Secretary of Defense may carry out
demonstration projects''.
SEC. 842. ESTABLISHMENT OF INTEGRATED REVIEW TEAM ON DEFENSE
ACQUISITION INDUSTRY-GOVERNMENT EXCHANGE.
(a) Study.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 30 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
direct the Defense Business Board to convene an integrated
review team (in this section referred to as the ``exchange
team'') to undertake a study on facilitating the exchange of
defense industry personnel on term assignments within the
Department of Defense.
(2) Member participation.--
(A) Defense business board.--The Chairman of the Defense
Business Board shall select six members from the membership
of the Board to participate on the exchange team, including
one member to lead the team.
(B) Defense innovation board.--The Chairman of the Defense
Innovation Board shall select five appropriate members from
the membership of their Board to participate on the exchange
team.
[[Page S3446]]
(C) Defense science board.--The Chairman of the Defense
Science Board shall select five appropriate members from the
membership of their Board to participate on the exchange
team.
(D) Required experience.--The Chairmen referred to in
subparagraphs (a) through (C) shall ensure that members have
significant legislative or regulatory expertise and reflect
diverse experiences in the public and private sector.
(3) Scope.--The study conducted pursuant to paragraph (1)
shall--
(A) review legal, ethical, and financial disclosure
requirements for industry-government exchanges;
(B) review existing or previous industry-government
exchange programs such as the Department of State's Franklin
Fellows Program and the Information Technology Exchange
Program;
(C) review how the military departments address legal,
ethical, and financial requirements for members of the
reserve components who also maintain civilian employment in
the defense industry;
(D) produce specific and detailed recommendations for any
legislation, including the amendment or repeal of
regulations, as well as non-legislative approaches, that the
members of the exchange team conducting the study determine
necessary to--
(i) reduce barriers to industry-government exchange to
encourage the flow of acquisition best practices;
(ii) ensure continuing financial and ethical integrity; and
(iii) protect the best interests of the Department of
Defense; and
(E) produce such additional recommendations for legislation
as the members consider appropriate.
(4) Access to information.--The Secretary of Defense shall
provide the exchange team with timely access to appropriate
information, data, resources, and analysis so that the
exchange team may conduct a thorough and independent analysis
as required under this subsection.
(b) Briefing.--Not later than December 31, 2018, the
exchange team shall provide an interim briefing to the
congressional defense committees on the study conducted under
subsection (a)
(c) Final Report.--Not later than March 1, 2019, the
exchange team shall submit a final report on the study to the
Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment
and the congressional defense committees.
SEC. 843. EXCHANGE PROGRAM FOR ACQUISITION WORKFORCE
EMPLOYEES.
(a) Program Authorized.--The Secretary of Defense shall
establish an exchange program under which the Under Secretary
of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment shall arrange for
the temporary assignment of civilian personnel in the
Department of Defense acquisition workforce.
(b) Purposes.--The purposes of the exchange program
established pursuant to subsection (a) are--
(1) to familiarize personnel from the acquisition workforce
with the equities, priorities, processes, culture, and
workforce of the acquisition-related defense agencies;
(2) to enable participants in the exchange program to
return the expertise gained through their exchanges to their
original organizations; and
(3) to improve communication between and integration of the
organizations that support the policy, implementation, and
oversight of defense acquisition through lasting
relationships.
(c) Participants.--
(1) Number of participants.--The Under Secretary shall
select not less than 10 and no more than 20 participants per
year for participation in the exchange program established
under subsection (a).
(2) Criteria for selection.--The Under Secretary shall
select participants for the exchange program established
under subsection (a) from among mid-career employees and
based on--
(A) the qualifications and desire to participate in the
program of the employee; and
(B) the technical needs and capacities of the acquisition
workforce, as applicable.
(d) Terms.--Exchanges pursuant to the exchange program
established under subsection (a) shall be for terms of one to
two years, as determined and negotiated by the Under
Secretary. The terms may begin and end on a rolling basis.
(e) Guidance and Implementation.--
(1) Guidance.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Under Secretary shall develop and
submit to the congressional defense committees interim
guidance on the form and contours of the exchange program
established under subsection (a).
(2) Implementation.--Not later than 180 days after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Under Secretary shall
implement the guidance developed under paragraph (1).
Subtitle E--Provisions Relating to Commercial Items
SEC. 851. REPORT ON COMMERCIAL ITEM PROCUREMENT REFORM.
(a) Report Required.--Not later than March 1, 2020, the
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, in
consultation with members of the Defense Business Board as
appropriate, shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services
of the Senate and the House of Representatives a report on
reforms for commercial item procurement.
(b) Elements.--The report required under subsection (a)
shall include the following elements:
(1) A review of recommendations by the independent panel
created under section 809 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92;
112 Public Law 889) pertaining to commercial items.
(2) A review of commercial item provisions from the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016
(Public Law 114-92), the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328), the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law
115-91), and other relevant legislation.
(3) An analysis of the extent to which the Department of
Defense should treat commercial service contracts and
commercial products in a similar manner.
(4) Such other matters with respect to commercial item
procurement as the Assistant Secretary considers appropriate.
Subtitle F--Industrial Base Matters
SEC. 861. NATIONAL TECHNOLOGY AND INDUSTRIAL BASE APPLICATION
PROCESS.
(a) In General.--Subchapter II of chapter 148 of title 10,
United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the
following new section:
``Sec. 2509. National technology and industrial base
application process
``(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall
administer a national technology and industrial base
application process.
``(b) Elements.--The application process required under
subsection (a) shall include the following elements:
``(1) The Secretary shall designate an official within the
Office of the Secretary of Defense responsible for
administration of the national technology and industrial base
application process and associated policy.
``(2) A person or organization that meets the definition of
national technology and industrial base under section 2500(1)
of this title shall have the opportunity to apply for an item
to be covered under the national technology and industrial
base. The application shall include, at a minimum, the
following information:
``(A) Information demonstrating the applicant meets such
definition.
``(B) The section or sections of this chapter, related to
the national technology and industrial base, that the
applicant seeks to modify.
``(C) The applicant's proposed modifications to the section
or sections identified under subparagraph (B).
``(D) For each item the applicant seeks to include in the
national technology and industrial base, the applicant shall
include the following information:
``(i) The extent to which such item has commercial
applications.
``(ii) The number of such items to be procured by current
programs of record.
``(iii) The criticality of such item to a military unit's
mission accomplishment.
``(iv) The estimated cost and other considerations of
reconstituting the manufacturing capability of such item, if
not maintained in the national technology and industrial
base.
``(v) National security regulations or restrictions imposed
on such item that may not be imposed on a non-national
technology and industrial base competitor.
``(vi) Non-national security-related Federal, State, and
local government regulations imposed on such item that may
not be imposed on a non-national technology and industrial
base competitor.
``(vii) The extent to which such item is fielded in current
programs of record.
``(viii) The extent to which cost and pricing data for such
item has been deemed fair and reasonable.
``(c) Consideration of Applications.--
``(1) Responsibility of designated official.--The official
designated pursuant to subsection (b)(1) shall be responsible
for providing complete applications submitted pursuant to
this subsection to the appropriate component acquisition
executive for consideration not later than 15 days after
receipt of such application.
``(2) Review.--Not later than 60 days after receiving a
complete application, the component acquisition executive
shall review such application, make a determination, and
return the application to the official designated pursuant to
subsection (b)(1).
``(3) Elements of determination.--The determination
required under paragraph (2) shall--
``(A) recommend the modification to this chapter proposed
pursuant to subsection (b)(2)(C);
``(B) recommend the modification to this chapter proposed
pursuant to subsection (b)(2)(C) with further modifications;
or
``(C) not recommend the modification to this chapter
proposed pursuant to subsection (b)(2)(C).
``(4) Justification.--The determination required under
paragraph (2) shall also include the rationale and
justification for the determination.
``(d) Recommendations for Legislation.--For applications
recommended under subsection (c), the official designated
pursuant to subsection (b)(1) shall be responsible for
preparing a legislative proposal for consideration by the
Secretary.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of such subchapter is amended by adding at the end
the following new item:
``2509. National technology and industrial base application process.''.
[[Page S3447]]
(c) Effective Date.--Section 2509 of title 10, United
States Code, as added by subsection (a), shall take effect 60
days after the date of the enactment of this Act.
SEC. 862. REPORT ON DEFENSE ELECTRONICS INDUSTRIAL BASE.
(a) In General.--Not later than January 31, 2019, the
Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the Executive
Agent for Printed Circuit Board and Interconnect Technology
and the Director of the Office of Management and Budget,
shall submit to Congress a report examining the health of the
defense electronics industrial base, including analog and
passive electronic parts, substrates, printed boards,
assemblies, connectors, cabling, and related areas, both
domestically and within the national technology and
industrial base.
(b) Elements.--The report required under subsection (a)
shall include the following elements:
(1) An examination of current and planned partnerships with
the commercial industry.
(2) Analysis of the current and future defense electronics
industrial base.
(3) Threat assessment related to system security.
(4) An assessment of the health of the engineering and
production workforce.
(5) A description of the electronics supply chain
requirements of defense systems integral to meeting the goals
of the 2018 National Defense Strategy.
(6) Recommended actions to address areas deemed deficient
or vulnerable, and a plan to formalize long-term resourcing
for the Executive Agent.
(7) Any other areas matters determined relevant by the
Secretary.
SEC. 863. SUPPORT FOR DEFENSE MANUFACTURING COMMUNITIES TO
SUPPORT THE DEFENSE INDUSTRIAL BASE.
(a) Program Authorized.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense may, in
coordination with the Secretary of Commerce and working in
coordination with the defense manufacturing institutes,
establish within the Department of Defense a program to make
long-term investments in critical skills, infrastructure,
research and development, and small business support in order
to strengthen the national security innovation base by
designating and supporting consortiums as defense
manufacturing communities.
(2) Designation.--The program authorized by this section
shall be known as the ``Defense Manufacturing Community
Support Program'' (in this section referred to as the
``Program'').
(b) Designation of Defense Manufacturing Communities
Complementary to Defense Manufacturing Institutes.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense may designate
eligible consortiums as defense manufacturing communities
through a competitive process, and in coordination with the
defense manufacturing institutes.
(2) Eligible consortiums.--The Secretary may establish
eligibility criteria for a consortium to participate in the
Program. In developing such criteria, the Secretary may
consider the merits of--
(A) including members from academia, defense industry,
commercial industry, and State and local government
organizations;
(B) supporting efforts in geographical regions that have
capabilities in key technologies or industrial base supply
chains that are determined critical to national security;
(C) optimal consortium composition and size to promote
effectiveness, collaboration, and efficiency; and
(D) complementarity with defense manufacturing institutes.
(3) Duration.--Each designation under paragraph (1) shall
be for a period designated by the Secretary.
(4) Renewal.--
(A) In general.--The Secretary may renew a designation made
under paragraph (1) for up to two additional two-year
periods. Any designation as a defense manufacturing community
or renewal of such designation that is in effect before the
date of the enactment of this Act shall count toward the
limit set forth in this subparagraph.
(B) Evaluation for renewal.--The Secretary shall establish
criteria for the renewal of a consortium. In establishing
such criteria, the Secretary may consider--
(i) the performance of the consortium in meeting the
established goals of the Program;
(ii) the progress the consortium has made with respect to
project-specific metrics, particularly with respect to those
metrics that were designed to help communities track their
own progress;
(iii) whether any changes to the composition of the
eligible consortium or revisions of the plan for the
consortium would improve the capabilities of the defense
industrial base;
(iv) the effectiveness of coordination with defense
manufacturing institutes; and
(v) such other criteria as the Secretary considers
appropriate.
(5) Application for designation.--An eligible consortium
seeking a designation under paragraph (1) shall submit an
application to the Secretary at such time and in such manner
as the Secretary may require. In developing such procedures,
the Secretary may consider the inclusion of--
(A) a description of the regional boundaries of the
consortium, and the defense manufacturing capacity of the
region;
(B) an evidence-based plan for enhancing the defense
industrial base through the efforts of the consortium;
(C) the investments the consortium proposes and the
strategy of the consortium to address gaps in the defense
industrial base;
(D) a description of the outcome-based metrics, benchmarks,
and milestones that will track and the evaluation methods
that will be used to gauge performance of the consortium;
(E) how the initiatives will complement defense
manufacturing institutes; and
(F) such other matters as the Secretary considers
appropriate.
(c) Financial and Technical Assistance.--
(1) In general.--Under the Program, the Secretary of
Defense may award financial or technical assistance to a
member of a consortium designated as a defense manufacturing
community under the Program as appropriate for purposes of
the Program.
(2) Use of funds.--A recipient of financial or technical
assistance under the Program may use such financial or
technical assistance to support an investment that will
improve the defense industrial base.
(3) Investments supported.--Investments supported under
this subsection may include activities not already provided
for by defense manufacturing institutes on--
(A) infrastructure;
(B) access to capital;
(C) promotion of exports and foreign direct investment;
(D) equipment or facility upgrades;
(E) workforce training, retraining, or recruitment and
retention, including that of women and underrepresented
minorities;
(F) energy or process efficiency;
(G) business incubators;
(H) site preparation;
(I) advanced research and commercialization, including with
Federal laboratories and depots;
(J) supply chain development; and
(K) small business assistance.
(d) Receipt of Transferred Funds.--The Secretary of Defense
may accept amounts transferred to the Secretary from the head
of another agency or a State or local governmental
organization to carry out this section.
Subtitle G--Other Transactions
SEC. 871. CHANGE TO NOTIFICATION REQUIREMENT FOR OTHER
TRANSACTIONS.
Section 2371b(f)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by inserting after the first sentence the following:
``The cost of any such option shall be considered for
purposes of subsection (a)(2) as part of the cost to the
Department of Defense of a transaction (for a prototype).''.
SEC. 872. DATA AND POLICY ON THE USE OF OTHER TRANSACTIONS.
(a) Collection and Storage.--The Service Acquisition
Executives of the military departments shall collect data on
the use of other transactions by their respective
departments, and the Under Secretary of Defense for Research
and Engineering and the Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition and Sustainment shall collect data on all other
use by the Department of Defense of other transactions,
including use by the Defense Agencies. The data shall be
stored in a manner that allows the Assistant Secretary of
Defense for Acquisition access at any time.
(b) Use of Data.--The Assistant Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition shall analyze and leverage the data collected
under subsection (a) to update policy and guidance related to
the use of other transactions.
Subtitle H--Development and Acquisition of Software Intensive and
Digital Products and Services
SEC. 881. CLARIFICATIONS REGARDING PROPRIETARY AND TECHNICAL
DATA.
(a) Validation of Proprietary Data Restrictions.--Section
2321(f) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking ``(1) Except as provided in paragraph (2),
in'' and inserting ``In''; and
(2) by striking paragraph (2).
(b) Rights in Technical Data.--Section 2320 of title 10,
United States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking subsection (f); and
(2) by redesignating subsections (g) and (h) as subsections
(f) and (g), respectively.
SEC. 882. IMPLEMENTATION OF RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE FINAL
REPORT OF THE DEFENSE SCIENCE BOARD TASK FORCE
ON THE DESIGN AND ACQUISITION OF SOFTWARE FOR
DEFENSE SYSTEMS.
(a) Implementation Required.--Not later than 18 months
after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of
Defense shall, except as provided under subsection (b),
commence implementation of each recommendation submitted as
part of the final report of the Defense Science Board Task
Force on the Design and Acquisition of Software for Defense
Systems.
(b) Exceptions.--
(1) Delayed implementation.--The Secretary of Defense may
commence implementation of a recommendation described under
subsection (a) later than the date required under such
subsection if the Secretary provides the congressional
defense committees with a specific justification for the
delay in implementation of such recommendation.
(2) Nonimplementation.--The Secretary of Defense may opt
not to implement a recommendation described under subsection
(a) if the Secretary provides to the congressional defense
committees--
[[Page S3448]]
(A) the reasons for the decision not to implement the
recommendation; and
(B) a summary of the alternative actions the Secretary
plans to take to address the purposes underlying the
recommendation.
(c) Implementation Plans.--For each recommendation that the
Secretary is implementing, or that the Secretary plans to
implement, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional
defense committees--
(1) a summary of actions that have been taken to implement
the recommendation; and
(2) a schedule, with specific milestones, for completing
the implementation of the recommendation.
SEC. 883. IMPLEMENTATION OF PILOT PROGRAM TO USE AGILE OR
ITERATIVE DEVELOPMENT METHODS REQUIRED UNDER
SECTION 873 OF THE NATIONAL DEFENSE
AUTHORIZATION ACT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2018.
(a) In General.--Not later than 30 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
include the following systems for realignment under the pilot
program to use agile or iterative development methods
pursuant to section 873 of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91):
(1) Global Positioning System Next Generation Operational
Control System (GPS OCX).
(2) Integrated Air and Missile Defense Battle Command
System (IBCS).
(3) Command Control Battle Management and Communications
(C2BMC).
(4) The family of Distributed Common Ground Systems.
(5) The family of Global Command and Control Systems.
(6) Joint Space Operations Center Mission Systems (JMS).
(7) Joint Strike Fighter Autonomic Logistics Information
System (ALIS).
(8) Electronic Procurement System (ePS).
(9) Air Force Integrated Personnel and Pay System (AFIPPS).
(10) Navy Personnel and Pay (NP2).
(11) Integrated Personnel and Pay-Army (IPPS-A).
(12) Maintenance, Repair, and Overhaul (MROI).
(13) Defense Enterprise Accounting Management System
(DEAMS).
(14) Army Contract Writing System.
(15) Contracting IT System.
(16) Defense-wide Electronic Procurement Capabilities.
(b) Revisions to List.--The Secretary of Defense shall
notify the congressional defense committees of any revisions
to the list of systems included for realignment under
subsection (a).
SEC. 884. ENABLING AND OTHER ACTIVITIES OF THE CLOUD
EXECUTIVE STEERING GROUP.
(a) Activities Required.--Commencing not later than 90 days
after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Cloud
Executive Steering Group (CESG) established by the Deputy
Secretary of Defense in a directive memorandum dated
September 13, 2017, in order to support its Joint Enterprise
Defense Infrastructure (JEDI) initiative to procure
commercial cloud services, shall conduct certain key enabling
activities as follows:
(1) Advanced commercial network capabilities.--Develop an
approach to rapidly acquire advanced commercial network
capabilities, including software-defined networking, on-
demand bandwidth, and aggregated cloud access gateways,
through commercial service providers in order--
(A) to support the migration of applications and systems to
commercial cloud platforms;
(B) to increase visibility of end-to-end performance to
enable and enforce service level agreements for cloud
services;
(C) to ensure efficient and common cloud access;
(D) to facilitate shifting data and applications from one
cloud platform to another;
(E) to improve cybersecurity; and
(F) to consolidate networks and achieve efficiencies and
improved performance;
(2) Workload and migration analysis.--Conduct an analysis
of existing workloads that would be migrated to the Joint
Enterprise Defense Infrastructure, including--
(A) identifying all of the cloud initiatives across the
Department of Defense, and determining the objectives of such
initiatives in connection with the intended scope of the
Infrastructure;
(B) identifying all the systems and applications that the
Department would intend to migrate to the Infrastructure;
(C) conducting rationalization of applications to identify
applications and systems that may duplicate the processing of
workloads in connection with the Infrastructure; and
(D) as result of such actions, arriving at dispositions
about migration or termination of systems and applications in
connection with the Infrastructure.
(b) Limitation on New Systems and Applications.--The Deputy
Secretary shall require that no new system or application
will be approved for development or modernization without an
assessment that such system or application is already, or can
and would be, cloud-hosted.
(c) Integration and Support.--The Deputy Secretary shall
ensure that the activities conducted under subsection (a) are
integrated with and support the plan of the Department to
acquire and migrate to commercial cloud services.
(d) Transparency and Competition.--The Deputy Secretary
shall ensure that the acquisition approach of the Department
continues to follow the Federal Acquisition Regulation,
including part 16.504(c) of such regulation, regarding
procedures relating to the preference for multiple awards.
Subtitle I--Other Matters
SEC. 891. PROHIBITION ON CERTAIN TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICES
OR EQUIPMENT.
(a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
(1) In its 2011 ``Annual Report to Congress on Military and
Security Developments Involving the People's Republic of
China'', the Department of Defense stated, ``China's defense
industry has benefited from integration with a rapidly
expanding civilian economy and science and technology sector,
particularly elements that have access to foreign technology.
Progress within individual defense sectors appears linked to
the relative integration of each, through China's civilian
economy, into the global production and R&D chain . . .
Information technology companies in particular, including
Huawei, Datang, and Zhongxing, maintain close ties to the
PLA.''.
(2) In a 2011 report titled ``The National Security
Implications of Investments and Products from the People's
Republic of China in the Telecommunications Sector'', the
United States China Commission stated that ``[n]ational
security concerns have accompanied the dramatic growth of
China's telecom sector. . . . Additionally, large Chinese
companies--particularly those `national champions' prominent
in China's `going out' strategy of overseas expansion--are
directly subject to direction by the Chinese Communist Party,
to include support for PRC state policies and goals.''.
(3) The Commission further stated in its report that
``[f]rom this point of view, the clear economic benefits of
foreign investment in the U.S. must be weighed against the
potential security concerns related to infrastructure
components coming under the control of foreign entities. This
seems particularly applicable in the telecommunications
industry, as Chinese companies continue systematically to
acquire significant holdings in prominent global and U.S.
telecommunications and information technology companies.''.
(4) In its 2011 Annual Report to Congress, the United
States China Commission stated that ``[t]he extent of the
state's control of the Chinese economy is difficult to
quantify . . . There is also a category of companies that,
though claiming to be private, are subject to state
influence. Such companies are often in new markets with no
established SOE leaders and enjoy favorable government
policies that support their development while posing
obstacles to foreign competition. Examples include Chinese
telecoms giant Huawei and such automotive companies as
battery maker BYD and vehicle manufacturers Geely and
Chery.''.
(5) General Michael Hayden, who served as Director of the
Central Intelligence Agency and Director of the National
Security Agency, stated in July 2013 that Huawei had ``shared
with the Chinese state intimate and extensive knowledge of
foreign telecommunications systems it is involved with''.
(6) The Federal Bureau of Investigation, in a February 2015
Counterintelligence Strategy Partnership Intelligence Note
stated that, ``[w]ith the expanded use of Huawei Technologies
Inc. equipment and services in U.S. telecommunications
service provider networks, the Chinese Government's potential
access to U.S. business communications is dramatically
increasing. Chinese Government-supported telecommunications
equipment on U.S. networks may be exploited through Chinese
cyber activity, with China's intelligence services operating
as an advanced persistent threat to U.S. networks.''.
(7) The FBI further stated in its February 2015
counterintelligence note that ``China makes no secret that
its cyber warfare strategy is predicated on controlling
global communications network infrastructure''.
(8) At a hearing before the Committee on Armed Services of
the House of Representatives on September 30, 2015, Deputy
Secretary of Defense Robert Work, responding to a question
about the use of Huawei telecommunications equipment, stated,
``In the Office of the Secretary of Defense, absolutely not.
And I know of no other--I don't believe we operate in the
Pentagon, any [Huawei] systems in the Pentagon.''.
(9) At that hearing, the Commander of the United States
Cyber Command, Admiral Mike Rogers, responding to a question
about why such Huawei telecommunications equipment is not
used, stated, ``As we look at supply chain and we look at
potential vulnerabilities within the system, that it is a
risk we felt was unacceptable.''.
(10) In March 2017, ZTE Corporation pled guilty to
conspiring to violate the International Emergency Economic
Powers Act by illegally shipping U.S.-origin items to Iran,
paying the United States Government a penalty of $892,360,064
for activity between January 2010 and January 2016.
(11) The Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign
Assets Control issued a subpoena to Huawei as part of a
Federal investigation of alleged violations of trade
restrictions on Cuba, Iran, Sudan, and Syria.
(12) In the bipartisan ``Investigative Report on the United
States National Security Issues Posed by Chinese
Telecommunication Companies Huawei and ZTE'' released in 2012
[[Page S3449]]
by the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the
House of Representatives, it was recommended that ``U.S.
government systems, particularly sensitive systems, should
not include Huawei or ZTE equipment, including in component
parts. Similarly, government contractors--particularly those
working on contracts for sensitive U.S. programs--should
exclude ZTE or Huawei equipment in their systems.''.
(b) Prohibition on Use or Procurement.--The Secretary of
Defense may not--
(1) procure or obtain or extend or renew a contract to
procure or obtain any equipment, system, or service that uses
covered telecommunications equipment or services as a
substantial or essential component of any system, or as
critical technology as part of any system; or
(2) enter into a contract (or extend or renew a contract)
with an entity that uses any equipment, system, or service
that uses covered telecommunications equipment or services as
a substantial or essential component of any system, or as
critical technology as part of any system.
(c) Effective Dates.--The prohibition under subsection
(b)(1) shall take effect 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act and the prohibition under subsection
(b)(2) shall take effect three years after the date of the
enactment of this Act.
(d) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be
construed to--
(1) prohibit the Secretary of Defense from procuring with
an entity to provide a service that connects to the
facilities of a third-party, such as backhaul, roaming, or
interconnection arrangements; or
(2) cover telecommunications equipment that cannot route or
redirect user data traffic or permit visibility into any user
data or packets that such equipment transmits or otherwise
handles
(e) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Covered foreign country.--The term ``covered foreign
country'' means the People's Republic of China.
(2) Covered telecommunications equipment or services.--The
term ``covered telecommunications equipment or services''
means any of the following:
(A) Telecommunications equipment produced by Huawei
Technologies Company or ZTE Corporation (or any subsidiary or
affiliate of such entities).
(B) Telecommunications services provided by such entities
or using such equipment.
(C) Telecommunications equipment or services produced or
provided by an entity that the Secretary of Defense, in
consultation with the Director of the National Intelligence
or the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
reasonably believes to be an entity owned or controlled by,
or otherwise connected to, the government of a covered
foreign country.
SEC. 892. LIMITATION ON USE OF FUNDS PENDING SUBMITTAL OF
REPORT ON ARMY MARKETING AND ADVERTISING
PROGRAM.
(a) Report Required.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 90 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army shall
submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and
House of Representatives a report on the recommendations
contained in the audit of the Army Audit Agency of the Army's
Marketing and Advertising Program concerning contract
oversight and return on investment.
(2) Elements.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall
address each of the following:
(A) The mitigation and oversight measures implemented to
assure improved program return and contract management,
including the establishment of specific goals to measure
long-term effects of investments in marketing efforts.
(B) The establishment of a review process to regularly
evaluate the effectiveness and efficiency of marketing
efforts, including efforts to better support the accessions
missions of the Army.
(C) The increase of acquisition and marketing experience
within the Army Marketing and Research Group (in this section
referred to as the ``AMRG'').
(D) A workforce analysis of AMRG in cooperation with the
Office of Personnel Management and industry experts assessing
the AMRG organizational structure, staffing, and training,
including an assessment of the workplace climate and culture
internal to the AMRG.
(E) The establishment of an Army Marketing and Advisory
Board comprised of senior Army and marketing and advertising
leaders and an assessment of industry and service marketing
and advertising best practices, including a plan to
incorporate relevant practices.
(F) The status of the implementation of contracting
practices recommended by the Army Audit Agency's audit of
contracting oversight of AMRG contained in Audit Report A-
2018-0033-MTH.
(b) Limitation on Use of Funds.--Not more than 50 percent
of the amounts authorized to be appropriated by this Act or
otherwise made available for the AMRG for fiscal year 2019
for advertising and marketing activities may be obligated or
expended until the Secretary of the Army submits the report
required under subsection (a).
(c) Comptroller General Review.--Not later than 90 days
after the date of the submittal of the report required under
subsection (a), the Comptroller General of the United States
shall conduct a review of the results and implementation of
the recommendations of the Army Audit Agency Audits of the
AMRG on contract oversight and return on investment. The
review shall include an assessment of the effects of the
implementation of the recommendations on the AMRG leadership,
workforce, and business practices, and return on investment.
SEC. 893. PERMANENT SBIR AND STTR AUTHORITY FOR THE
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
Section 9 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 638) is
amended--
(1) in subsection (m), by inserting ``, except with respect
to the Department of Defense'' after ``September 30, 2022'';
and
(2) in subsection (n)(1)(A)--
(A) by inserting ``(or, with respect to the Department of
Defense, any fiscal year)'' after ``2022''; and
(B) by inserting ``(or, with respect to the Department of
Defense, for any fiscal year)'' after ``for that fiscal
year''.
SEC. 894. PROCUREMENT OF TELECOMMUNICATIONS SUPPLIES FOR
EXPERIMENTAL PURPOSES.
Section 2373 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
inserting ``telecommunications,'' after ``space flight,''.
SEC. 895. ACCESS BY DEVELOPMENTAL AND OPERATIONAL TESTING
ACTIVITIES TO DATA REGARDING MODELING AND
SIMULATION ACTIVITY.
(a) In General.--Section 139(e) of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
paragraph:
``(4) The Director shall have prompt access to all data
regarding modeling and simulation activity proposed to be
used by military departments and defense agencies in support
of operational or live fire test and evaluation of military
capabilities. This access shall include data associated with
verification, validation, and accreditation activities.''.
(b) Additional Testing Data.--Developmental Test and
Evaluation activities under the leadership of the Under
Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering and the
Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment
shall have prompt access to all data regarding modeling and
simulation activity proposed to be used by military
departments and defense agencies in support of developmental
test and evaluation of military capabilities. This access
shall include data associated with verification, validation,
and accreditation activities.
TITLE IX--DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT
Subtitle A--Office of the Secretary of Defense and Related Matters
SEC. 901. POWERS AND DUTIES OF THE UNDER SECRETARY OF DEFENSE
FOR RESEARCH AND ENGINEERING IN CONNECTION WITH
PRIORITY EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES.
(a) In General.--In carrying out duties under section 133a
of title 10, United States Code, in connection with the
National Defense Strategy of the Department of Defense of
2018, the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and
Engineering shall have the authority to direct the
Secretaries of the military departments, and the heads of all
other elements of the Department of Defense with regard to
matters for which the Under Secretary has responsibility,
with respect to programs, projects, and activities in
connection with technology areas given priority, including
technology areas as follows:
(1) Directed energy.
(2) Hypersonics.
(3) Artificial intelligence.
(4) Future space satellite architectures.
(b) Direction of Secretary of Defense.--
(1) In general.--The Under Secretary shall carry out any
powers and duties under this section under the authority,
direction, and control of the Secretary.
(2) Construction of authority.--Nothing in this section may
be construed as altering or revising the authority,
direction, and control of the Under Secretary by the
Secretary of Defense and the Deputy Secretary of Defense.
(c) Satellite Architectures.--
(1) No directional authority for space launch vehicles.--
The authority in subsection (a) with respect to future space
satellite architectures does not include the following:
(A) Authority for space launch vehicles.
(B) Authority for direction of the Evolved Expendable
Launch Vehicle program, including any program, project, or
activity relating to the Next Generation Launch System.
(2) Final decisional authority on architectures.--The
Deputy Secretary of Defense shall have final decisional
authority over any decision on future space satellite
architecture under the authority in subsection (a). The
Deputy Secretary shall exercise such final decisional
authority in consultation with the Secretaries of the
military departments.
(d) Coordination.--In executing powers and duties under
this section, the Under Secretary shall consult with
appropriate officials of the military departments and the
Defense Agencies in order to maximize support of effective
and efficient execution of the National Defense Strategy
referred to in subsection (a).
(e) Expiration.--The authority of the Under Secretary under
this section shall expire on the date that is one year after
the date of the enactment of this Act.
[[Page S3450]]
SEC. 902. REDESIGNATION AND MODIFICATION OF RESPONSIBILITIES
OF UNDER SECRETARY OF DEFENSE FOR PERSONNEL AND
READINESS.
(a) Redesignation and Responsibilities as Under Secretary
of Defense for Personnel.--
(1) In general.--Section 136 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended--
(A) by striking ``and Readiness'' each place it appears;
and
(B) by striking subsection (d).
(2) Heading amendment.--The heading of such section is
amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 136. Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel''.
(b) Designation as Chief Human Capital Officer.--Such
section is further amended--
(1) by inserting ``(1)'' after ``(b)''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(2) The Under Secretary is the Chief Human Capital
Officer of the Department of Defense for purposes of chapter
14 of title 5.''.
(c) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 4 of such title is amended by striking
the item relating to section 136 and inserting the following
new item:
``136. Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel.''.
(d) Other Conforming Amendments.--
(1) Title 10, united states code.--Title 10, United States
Code, is further amended as follows:
(A) In section 131(b)(3), by striking subparagraph (E) and
inserting the following new subparagraph (E):
``(D) The Undersecretary of Defense for Personnel.''.
(B) In section 137(c), by striking ``and Readiness''.
(2) Executive schedule level iii.--Section 5314 of title 5,
United States Code, is amended by striking the item relating
to the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness
and inserting the following new item:
``Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel.''.
(e) References.--Any reference to the Under Secretary of
Defense for Personnel and Readiness in any law, regulation,
map, document, record, or other paper of the United States
shall be deemed to be a reference to the Under Secretary of
Defense for Personnel.
SEC. 903. MODIFICATION OF RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE UNDER
SECRETARY OF DEFENSE FOR POLICY.
(a) In General.--Paragraph (2) of section 134(b) of title
10, United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
``(2) The Under Secretary shall assist the Secretary of
Defense in the following:
``(A) Preparing the National Defense Strategy, as required
by section 113 of this title.
``(B) Preparing policy guidance for the preparation of
campaign and contingency plans by the commanders of the
combatant commands, and in reviewing such plans.
``(C) Preparing policy guidance for the development of the
global force posture.
``(D) Preparing policy guidance to direct the formulation
of program and budget requests by the military departments
and other elements of the Department of Defense, and
reviewing such requests in the anual planning, programming,
and budget process.
``(E) Developing planning scenarios that describe the
present and future strategic and operational environments by
which to assess joint force capabilities and readiness.
``(F) Developing specific outcomes that the joint force
should be ready to achieve and conducting assessments of the
readiness of the joint force to achieve such outcomes.
``(G) Devising specific criteria to direct reviews by the
Director of Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation of the
implementation of the capability and readiness priorities of
the Secretary.''.
(b) Effective Date.--The amendment made by subsection (a)
shall take effect on February 1, 2019.
SEC. 904. REPORT ON ALLOCATION OF FORMER RESPONSIBILITIES OF
THE UNDER SECRETARY OF DEFENSE FOR ACQUISITION,
TECHNOLOGY, AND LOGISTICS.
Not later than March 1, 2019, the Secretary of Defense
shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the
Senate and the House of Representatives a report setting
forth the following:
(1) A list of each provision of law, whether within or
outside title 10, United States Code, in force as of the date
of the report that, as of that date, assigns a duty,
responsibility, or other requirement to the Under Secretary
of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics.
(2) For each duty, responsibility, or other requirement
specified in a provision of law listed pursuant to paragraph
(1), the allocation of such duty, responsibility, or
requirement within the Department of Defense, including--
(A) solely to the Under Secretary of Defense for Research
and Engineering;
(B) solely to the Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition and Sustainment;
(C) on a shared basis between the Under Secretary of
Defense for Research and Engineering and the Under Secretary
of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment;
(D) solely to another official or organization of the
Department;
(E) on a shared basis between other officials and
organizations of the Department; or
(F) not allocated.
SEC. 905. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF DEFENSE FOR STRATEGY, PLANS,
ASSESSMENTS, READINESS, AND CAPABILITIES.
(a) In General.--Section 138(b) of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
paragraph:
``(5)(A) One of the Assistant Secretaries is the Assistant
Secretary of Defense for Strategy, Plans, Assessments,
Readiness and Capabilities.
``(B) The principal duty of the Assistant Secretary shall
be to support the Secretary of Defense in developing the
National Defense Strategy (as required by section 113 of this
title) and related policy guidance for the campaign and
contingency plans, force development and defense posture
priorities, and readiness objectives required to execute the
Strategy.
``(C) Subject to the authority, direction, and control of
the Secretary and the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy,
the Assistant Secretary shall be responsible for the
following:
``(i) In matters relating to strategy and force planning,
the following:
``(I) Supporting the Secretary and the Under Secretary in
preparing the National Defense Strategy.
``(II) Producing policy guidance to direct the formulation
of program and budget requests by the military departments
and other elements of the Department, including the Defense
Planning Guidance as required by section 113 of this title,
and review such program and budget requests.
``(III) Proposing alternative force sizes and structures,
joint capabilities and concepts, and roles and missions for
the armed forces to inform the development of annual program
and budget requests.
``(ii) In matters relating to plans and force posture, the
following:
``(I) Supporting the Secretary and the Under Secretary in
producing policy guidance to inform the development of
campaign and contingency plans by the commanders of the
combatant commands, including the Contingency Planning
Guidance for Employment of the Force and the Global Defense
Posture Report as required by section 113 of this title, and
reviewing such plans.
``(II) Advising the Secretary and the Under Secretary on
alternative concepts for the employment and posture of the
joint force to align with the National Defense Strategy and
other approved policy guidance of the Secretary.
``(iii) In matters relating to assessments, the following:
``(I) Developing planning scenarios that describe the
present and future strategic and operational environments by
which to assess joint force capabilities and readiness.
``(II) Producing detailed assessments at the strategic,
campaign, and mission levels (including through war games) to
evaluate the present and future capability and readiness of
the armed forces to conduct joint military campaigns or
competitions that are prioritized in approved policy guidance
of the Secretary.
``(III) Devising specific criteria to direct reviews by the
Director of Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation of the
implementation of the capability and readiness priorities
established in approved policy guidance of the Secretary.
``(iv) In matters relating to readiness, the following:
``(I) Describing the strategic, campaign, and mission
outcomes that the joint force should be ready to achieve and
by which joint force readiness will be assessed, in
accordance with approved strategic guidance of the Secretary.
``(II) Conducting assessments of the readiness of the joint
force to perform the missions prioritized in the National
Defense Strategy and other approved policy guidance of the
Secretary, including through the observation of military
training and exercises.
``(v) In matters relating to strategic capabilities,
developing and supervising policy, program planning and
execution, and allocation and use of resources for any
strategic capabilities designated by the Under Secretary.''.
(b) Effective Date.--The amendment made by this section
shall take effect on February 1, 2019.
SEC. 906. CLARIFICATION OF RESPONSIBILITIES AND DUTIES OF THE
CHIEF INFORMATION OFFICER OF THE DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE.
Section 142(b)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) in subparagraph (A), by inserting ``(other than with
respect to business systems and management)'' after
``sections 3506(a)(2)'';
(2) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``section 11315 of
title 40'' and inserting ``sections 11315 and 11319 of title
40 (other than with respect to business systems and
management)''; and
(3) in subparagraph (C), by striking ``sections 2222,
2223(a), and 2224 of this title'' and inserting ``sections
2223(a) (other than with respect to business systems and
management) and 2224 of this title''.
SEC. 907. SPECIFICATION OF CERTAIN DUTIES OF THE DEFENSE
TECHNICAL INFORMATION CENTER.
(a) In General.--In addition to any other duties specified
for the Defense Technical Information Center by law,
regulation, or Department of Defense directive or
instruction, the duties of the Center shall include the
following:
[[Page S3451]]
(1) To execute the Global Research Watch Program under
section 2365 of title 10, United States Code.
(2) To develop and maintain datasets and other data
repositories on research and engineering activities being
conducted within the Department.
(b) Action Plan.--Not later than 90 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and
the House of Representatives a plan of action for the
commencement by the Defense Technical Information Center of
the duties specified in subsection (a).
SEC. 908. LIMITATION ON TERMINATION OF, AND TRANSFER OF
FUNCTIONS, RESPONSIBILITIES, AND ACTIVITIES OF,
THE STRATEGIC CAPABILITIES OFFICE.
(a) Limitation.--The Secretary of Defense may not terminate
the Strategic Capabilities Office or transfer the functions
or responsibilities of such office to another entity or
organization until the Secretary--
(1) certifies to the congressional defense committees that
the key functions, responsibilities, and activities of the
office will be replicated and managed elsewhere after such
office has been terminated or its functions,
responsibilities, or activities have been transferred;
(2) submits to the congressional defense committees--
(A) a plan to replicate and manage such functions,
responsibilities, and activities elsewhere; and
(B) if the Secretary decides that the Strategic
Capabilities Office, or subsequent entity, should report to
an official other than the Under Secretary for Research and
Engineering, a justification for such decision.
(b) Key Functions.--The key functions of the office
referred to in subsection (a)(1) are the following:
(1) Repurposing existing Government and commercial systems
for new technological advantage.
(2) Developing novel concepts of operation that are lower
cost, more effective, and more responsive to changing threats
than traditional concepts of operation.
(3) Developing joint systems and concepts of operations to
meet emerging threats and military requirements based on
partnerships with the military services and combatant
commanders.
(4) Developing prototypes and new concepts of operations
that can inform the development of requirements and the
establishment of acquisition programs.
(5) Such other functions as the Secretary considers
appropriate.
SEC. 909. TECHNICAL CORRECTIONS TO DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE TEST
RESOURCE MANAGEMENT CENTER AUTHORITY.
Section 196 of title 10, United States Code, is amended in
subsections (c)(1)(B) and (g) by striking ``Under Secretary
of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics'' and
inserting ``Under Secretary of Defense for Research and
Engineering''.
Subtitle B--Organization and Management of Other Department of Defense
Offices and Elements
SEC. 921. MODIFICATION OF CERTAIN RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE
CHAIRMAN OF THE JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF RELATING
TO JOINT FORCE CONCEPT DEVELOPMENT.
Subparagraph (D) of section 153(a)(6) of title 10, United
States Code, is amended to read as follows:
``(D) formulating policies for development and
experimentation on both urgent and long-term concepts for the
joint employment of the armed forces, including establishment
of a process within the Joint Staff for--
``(i) analyzing and prioritizing gaps in capabilities that
could potentially be addressed by joint concept development
using existing or modified joint force capabilities; and
``(ii) ensuring that such joint concepts are tested,
assessed and, if appropriate, fielded to support the joint
force;''.
SEC. 922. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF DEFENSE FOR SPECIAL
OPERATIONS AND LOW-INTENSITY CONFLICT REVIEW OF
UNITED STATES SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND.
(a) Review Required.--The Assistant Secretary of Defense
for Special Operations and Low-Intensity Conflict shall, in
coordination with the Commander of the United States Special
Operations Command, conduct a comprehensive review of the
United States Special Operations Command for purposes of
ensuring that the institutional and operational capabilities
of special operations forces are appropriate to counter
anticipated future threats across the spectrum of conflict.
(b) Scope of Review.--The review required by subsection (a)
shall include, at a minimum, the following:
(1) An assessment of the adequacy of special operations
forces doctrine, organization, training, materiel, education,
personnel, and facilities to implement the 2018 National
Defense Strategy, and recommendations, if any, for
modifications for that purpose.
(2) An assessment of the roles and responsibilities of
special operations forces as assigned by law, Department of
Defense guidance, or other formal designation and
recommendations, if any, for additions to or divestitures of
such roles or responsibilities.
(3) An assessment of the adequacy of the processes through
which the United States Special Operations Command evaluates
and prioritizes the requirements at the geographic combatant
commands for special operations forces and special
operations-unique capabilities and makes recommendations on
the allocation of special operations forces and special
operations-unique capabilities to meet such requirements, and
recommendations, if any, for modifications of such processes.
(4) Any other matters the Assistant Secretary considers
appropriate.
(c) Deadlines.--
(1) Completion of review.--The review required by
subsection (a) shall be completed by not later than 270 days
after the date of the enactment of this Act.
(2) Report.--Not later than 30 days after completion of the
review, the Assistant Secretary shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report on the review,
including the findings and any recommendations of the
Assistant Secretary as a result of the review.
SEC. 923. QUALIFICATIONS FOR APPOINTMENT AS DEPUTY CHIEF
MANAGEMENT OFFICER OF A MILITARY DEPARTMENT.
(a) Department of the Army.--An individual may not be
appointed as Deputy Chief Management Officer of the
Department of the Army unless the individual--
(1) has significant experience in business operations or
management in the public sector; or
(2) has significant experience managing an enterprise in
the private sector.
(b) Department of the Navy.--An individual may not be
appointed as Deputy Chief Management Officer of the
Department of the Navy unless the individual--
(1) has significant experience in business operations or
management in the public sector; or
(2) has significant experience managing an enterprise in
the private sector.
(c) Department of the Air Force.--An individual may not be
appointed as Deputy Chief Management Officer of the
Department of the Air Force unless the individual--
(1) has significant experience in business operations or
management in the public sector; or
(2) has significant experience managing an enterprise in
the private sector.
SEC. 924. EXPANSION OF PRINCIPAL DUTIES OF ASSISTANT
SECRETARY OF THE NAVY FOR RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT, AND ACQUISITION.
Section 5016(b)(4)(A) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by striking ``and acquisition matters'' and inserting
``acquisition, and sustainment (including maintenance)
matters''.
SEC. 925. CROSS-FUNCTIONAL TEAMS IN THE DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE.
(a) Establishment of Certain Teams.--
(1) In general.--Among the cross-functional teams
established by the Secretary of Defense pursuant to
subsection (c) of section 911 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328;
130 Stat. 2345; 10 U.S.C. 111 note) in support of the
organizational strategy for the Department of Defense
required by subsection (a) of that section, the Secretary
shall establish a cross-functional team on each matter as
follows:
(A) Electronic warfare.
(B) Personnel security.
(C) Close combat lethality.
(2) Establishment and activities.--Each cross-functional
team established pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be
established in accordance with subsection (c) of section 911
of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2017, and shall be governed in its activities in accordance
with the provisions of such subsection (c).
(3) Deadline for establishment.--The cross-functional teams
required by paragraph (1) shall be established by not later
than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act.
(b) Additional Cross-functional Teams Matters.--
(1) Criteria for distinguishing among cross-functional
teams.--Not later than 60 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall issue criteria
that distinguish cross-functional teams under section 911 of
the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017
from other types of cross-functional working groups,
committees, integrated product teams, and task forces of the
Department.
(2) Primary responsibility for implementation of teams.--
The Deputy Secretary of Defense shall establish or designate
an office within the Department that shall have primary
responsibility for implementing section 911 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017.
SEC. 926. DEADLINE FOR COMPLETION OF FULL IMPLEMENTATION OF
REQUIREMENTS IN CONNECTION WITH ORGANIZATION OF
THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE FOR MANAGEMENT OF
SPECIAL OPERATIONS FORCES AND SPECIAL
OPERATIONS.
The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that the
implementation of section 922 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328;
130 Stat. 2354) and the amendments made by that section is
fully complete by not later than 90 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act.
Subtitle C--Organization and Management of the Department of Defense
Generally
SEC. 931. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR MAJOR
HEADQUARTERS ACTIVITIES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE.
(a) In General.--Chapter 2 of title 10, United States Code,
is amended by inserting after section 117 the following new
section:
[[Page S3452]]
``Sec. 118. Major headquarters activities: limitation on
funds available
``(a) Overall Limitation.--In any fiscal year after fiscal
year 2020, the aggregate amount that may be obligated and
expended on major headquarters activities may not exceed an
amount equal to 1.6 percent of the average amount authorized
to be appropriated for the Department of Defense (including
for overseas contingency operations) over the 10 fiscal years
ending with the preceding fiscal year.
``(b) Limitations on Availability for Particular
Activities.--Within the amount available for a fiscal year
pursuant to subsection (a), amounts shall be available as
follows:
``(1) For the Office of the Secretary of Defense, not more
than an amount equal to 0.4 percent of the average amount
authorized to be appropriated for the Department of Defense
(including for overseas contingency operations) over the 10
fiscal years ending with the preceding fiscal year.
``(2) For the major headquarters activities of a military
department, not more than an amount equal to 1 percent of the
average amount authorized to be appropriated for the
Department of Defense (including for overseas contingency
operations) for such military department over the 10 fiscal
years ending with the preceding fiscal year.
``(c) Distribution of Remaining Funds.--Any funds available
in a fiscal year for major headquarters activities under
subsection (a) after the operation of subsection (b) in
connection with such fiscal year may be distributed for
availability by the Secretary of Defense among any major
headquarters activities other than the Office of the
Secretary of Defense.
``(d) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) The term `major headquarters activities' has the
meaning given the term `major Department of Defense
headquarters activities' in section 346(b)(3) of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (10 U.S.C. 111
note).
``(2) The term `major headquarters activities of a military
department' means the following:
``(A) In the case of the Army, the Office of the Secretary
of the Army and the Army Staff.
``(B) In the case of the Navy, the Office of the Secretary
of the Navy, the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, and
Headquarters, Marine Corps.
``(C) In the case of the Air Force, the Office of the
Secretary of the Air Force and the Air Staff.
``(3) The term `Office of the Secretary of Defense'
includes the Joint Staff.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 2 of such title is amended by inserting
after the item relating to section 117 the following new
item:
``118. Major headquarters activities: limitation on funds available.''.
SEC. 932. RESPONSIBILITY FOR POLICY ON CIVILIAN CASUALTY
MATTERS.
(a) Designation of Senior Civilian Official.--Not later
than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the
Under Secretary of Defense for Policy shall designate a
senior civilian official of the Department of Defense at or
above the level of Assistant Secretary of Defense to develop,
coordinate, and oversee compliance with the policy of the
Department relating to civilian casualties resulting from
United States military operations.
(b) Responsibilities.--The senior civilian official
designated under subsection (a) shall ensure that the policy
referred to in that subsection provides for--
(1) uniform processes and standards across the combatant
commands for accurately recording kinetic strikes by the
United States military;
(2) the development and dissemination of best practices for
reducing the likelihood of civilian casualties from United
States military operations;
(3) the development of a publicly available Internet portal
for the submittal of allegations of civilian casualties
resulting from United States military operations;
(4) uniform processes and standards across the combatant
commands for reviewing and investigating allegations of
civilian casualties resulting from United States military
operations, including the consideration of relevant
information from all available sources;
(5) uniform processes and standards across the combatant
commands for--
(A) acknowledging the responsibility of the United States
military for civilian casualties resulting from United States
military operations; and
(B) offering ex gratia payments to civilians who have been
injured, or to the families of civilians killed, as a result
of United States military operations, as determined to be
necessary by the designated senior civilian official;
(6) regular engagement with relevant intergovernmental and
nongovernmental organizations; and
(7) public affairs guidance with respect to matters
relating to civilian casualties alleged or confirmed to have
resulted from United States military operations; and
(8) such other matters with respect to civilian casualties
resulting from United States military operations as the
designated senior civilian official considers appropriate.
(c) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the senior civilian official
designated under subsection (a) shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report that describes--
(1) the policy developed by the senior civilian official
under that subsection; and
(2) the efforts of the Department to implement such policy.
SEC. 933. ADDITIONAL MATTERS IN CONNECTION WITH BACKGROUND
AND SECURITY INVESTIGATIONS FOR DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE PERSONNEL.
(a) Additional Matter for Annual Reports.--Subsection
(k)(3) of section 925 of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91) is amended--
(1) by redesignating subparagraphs (H) through (L) as
subparagraphs (I) through (M), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after subparagraph (G) the following new
subparagraph (H):
``(H) The number of denials or revocations of a security
clearance by each authorized adjudicative agency that
occurred separately from a periodic reinvestigation.''.
(b) Sense of Congress.--Such section is further amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (l) as subsection (m); and
(2) by inserting after subsection (k) the following new
subsection (l):
``(l) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress
that--
``(1) personnel security investigations, and continuous
evaluation, form an integral part of the security posture of
the Department of Defense; and
``(2) to the extent practicable, the Department should
coordinate with the security executive agent to ensure that
the results of adjudication decisions, either within initial
investigations or reinvestigations, are communicated in a
transparent manner to ensure public trust in the adjudication
process.''.
SEC. 934. PROGRAM OF EXPEDITED SECURITY CLEARANCES FOR
MISSION-CRITICAL POSITIONS.
(a) In General.--Not later than 90 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Security Executive Agent shall
establish a program for the expedited processing of security
clearances for mission-critical positions, fulfilled by
either Government or contract employees. Under such program,
the Security Executive Agent shall complete the processing of
applications for security clearances--
(1) at the secret level in 15 or fewer days; and
(2) at the top secret level in 45 days or fewer.
(b) Security Executive Agent.--In this section, the term
``Security Executive Agent'' means the Director of National
Intelligence acting as the Security Executive Agent in
accordance with Executive Order 13467 (73 Fed. Reg. 38103; 50
U.S.C. 3161 note).
SEC. 935. INFORMATION SHARING PROGRAM FOR POSITIONS OF TRUST.
(a) Program Required.--Not later than 90 days after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Security Executive
Agent shall establish a program to share between and among
Federal Government agencies and industry partners of the
Federal Government information regarding individuals applying
for and in positions of trust, including derogatory and
suitability information.
(b) Privacy Safeguards.--The Security Executive Agent shall
ensure that the program required by subsection (a) includes
such safeguards for privacy as the Security Executive Agent
considers appropriate.
(c) Provision of Information to the Private Sector.--The
Security Executive Agent shall ensure that under the program
required by subsection (a) sufficient information is provided
to the private sector so that employers in the private sector
can make informed decisions about hiring and retention in
positions of trust, while safeguarding personnel privacy.
(d) Implementation Plan.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 90 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Security Executive Agent shall
submit to Congress a plan for the implementation of the
program required by subsection (a).
(2) Contents.--The plan required by paragraph (1) shall
include the following:
(A) Matters that address privacy, security, and human
resources processes.
(B) Such recommendations as the Security Executive Agent
may have for legislative or administrative action to carry
out or improve the program.
(e) Security Executive Agent.--In this section, the term
``Security Executive Agent'' means the Director of National
Intelligence acting as the Security Executive Agent in
accordance with Executive Order 13467 (73 Fed. Reg. 38103; 50
U.S.C. 3161 note).
SEC. 936. REPORT ON CLEARANCE IN PERSON CONCEPT.
(a) Report Required.--Not later than 90 days after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Security Executive Agent
shall submit to congressional defense and intelligence
committees a report on the requirements, feasibility, and
advisability of implementing a clearance in person concept as
described in subsection (b) for maintaining access to
classified information.
(b) Clearance in Person Concept.--
(1) In general.--Implementation of a clearance in person
concept as described in this subsection would permit an
individual who has been granted a national security clearance
to maintain eligibility for access to classified information,
networks, and facilities after the individual has separated
from service to the Federal Government or
[[Page S3453]]
transferred to a position that no longer requires access to
classified information.
(2) Recognition as current.--The concept described in
paragraph (1) would also ensure that, unless otherwise
directed by the Security Executive Agent, the individual's
security clearance would be recognized as current, regardless
of employment status, with no further need for investigation
or revalidation until the individual obtains a position
requiring access to classified information.
(c) Contents.--The report required by subsection (a) shall
address the following:
(1) Requirements for continuous vetting.
(2) Appropriate safeguards for privacy.
(3) An appropriate funding model.
(4) Fairness to small business concerns and independent
contractors.
(d) Security Executive Agent.--In this section, the term
``Security Executive Agent'' means the Director of National
Intelligence acting as the Security Executive Agent in
accordance with Executive Order 13467 (73 Fed. Reg. 38103; 50
U.S.C. 3161 note).
SEC. 937. STRATEGIC DEFENSE FELLOWS PROGRAM.
(a) Fellowship Program.--
(1) In general.--Not later than one year after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
establish within the Department of Defense a civilian
fellowship program designed to provide leadership development
and the commencement of a career track toward senior
leadership in the Department.
(2) Designation.--The fellowship program shall be known as
the ``Strategic Defense Fellows Program'' (in this section
referred to as the ``fellows program'').
(b) Eligibility.--An individual is eligible for
participation in the fellows program if the individual--
(1) is a citizen of the United States or a lawful permanent
resident of the United States in the year in which the
individual applies for participation in the fellows program;
and
(2) either--
(A) possesses a graduate degree from an accredited
institution of higher education in the United States that was
awarded not later than two years before the date of the
acceptance of the individual into the fellows program; or
(B) will be awarded a graduate degree from an accredited
institution of higher education in the United States not
later than six months after the date of the acceptance of the
individual into the fellows program.
(c) Application.--
(1) Application required.--Each individual seeking to
participate in the fellows program shall submit to the
Secretary an application therefor at such time and in such
manner as the Secretary shall specify.
(2) Elements.--Each application of an individual under this
subsection shall include the following:
(A) Transcripts of educational achievement at the
undergraduate and graduate level.
(B) A resume.
(C) Proof of citizenship or lawful permanent residence.
(D) An endorsement from the applicant's graduate
institution of higher education.
(E) An academic writing sample.
(F) Letters of recommendation addressing the applicant's
character, academic ability, and any extracurricular
activities.
(G) A personal statement by the applicant explaining career
areas of interest and motivations for service in the
Department.
(H) Such other information as the Secretary considers
appropriate.
(d) Selection.--
(1) In general.--Each year, the Secretary shall select
participants in the fellows program from among applicants for
the fellows program for such year who qualify for
participation in the fellows program based on character,
commitment to public service, academic achievement,
extracurricular activities, and such other qualifications for
participation in the fellows program as the Secretary
considers appropriate.
(2) Number.--The number of individuals selected to
participate in the fellows program in any year may not exceed
the numbers as follows:
(A) Ten individuals from each geographic region of the
United States as follows:
(i) The Northeast.
(ii) The Southeast.
(iii) The Midwest.
(iv) The Southwest.
(v) The West.
(B) Ten additional individuals.
(3) Background investigation.--An individual selected to
participate in the fellows program may not participate in the
program unless the individual successfully undergoes a
background investigation applicable to the position to which
the individual will be assigned under the fellows program and
otherwise meets such requirements applicable to assignment to
a sensitive position within the Department that the Secretary
considers appropriate.
(e) Assignment.--
(1) In general.--Each individual who participates in the
fellows program shall be assigned to a position in the Office
of the Secretary of Defense.
(2) Position requirements.--Each Under Secretary of Defense
and each Director of a Defense Agency who reports directly to
the Secretary shall submit to the Secretary each year the
qualifications and skills to be demonstrated by participants
in the fellows program to qualify for assignment under this
subsection for service in a position of the office of such
Under Secretary or Director.
(3) Assignment to positions.--The Secretary shall each year
assign participants in the fellows program to positions in
the offices of the Under Secretaries and Directors described
in paragraph (2). In making such assignments, the Secretary
shall seek to best match the qualifications and skills of
participants in the fellows program with the requirements of
positions available for assignment. Each participant so
assigned shall serve as a special assistant to the Under
Secretary or Director to whom assigned.
(4) Term.--The term of each assignment under the fellows
program shall be one year.
(5) Pay and benefits.--An individual assigned to a position
under the fellows program shall be compensated at the rate of
compensation for employees at level GS-10 of the General
Schedule, and shall be treated as an employee of the United
States during the term of assignment, including for purposes
of eligibility for health care benefits and retirement
benefits available to employees of the United States.
(6) Education loan repayment.--To the extent that funds are
provided in advance in appropriations Acts, the Secretary may
repay any loan of a participant in the fellows program if the
loan is described by subparagraph (A), (B), or (C) of section
16301(a)(1) of title 10, United States Code. Any repayment of
loans under this paragraph shall be on a first-come, first-
served basis.
(f) Career Development.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary shall ensure that
participants in the fellows program--
(A) receive opportunities and support appropriate for the
commencement of a career track within the Department leading
toward a future position of senior leadership within the
Department, including ongoing mentorship support through
appropriate personnel from entities within the Department
such as the Defense Business Board and the Defense Innovation
Board; and
(B) are provided appropriate opportunities for employment
and advancement within the Department upon successful
completion of the fellows program.
(2) Reservation of positions.--In carrying out paragraph
(1)(B), the Secretary shall reserve for participants who
successfully complete the fellows program not fewer than 30
positions in the excepted service within the Department that
are suitable for the commencement of a career track toward
senior leadership within the Department. Any position so
reserved shall not be subject to or covered by any reduction
in headquarters personnel required under any other provision
of law.
(3) Noncompetitive appointment.--Upon the successful
completion of the assignment of a participant in the fellows
program in a position pursuant to subsection (e), the
Secretary may, without regard to the provisions of subchapter
I of chapter 33 of title 5, United States Code, appoint the
participant to a position reserved pursuant to paragraph (2)
if the Secretary determines that such appointment will
contribute to the development of highly qualified future
senior leaders for the Department.
(4) Publication of selection.--The Secretary shall publish
on an Internet website of the Department available to the
public the names of the individuals selected to participate
in the fellows program.
(g) Outreach.--The Secretary shall undertake appropriate
outreach to inform potential participants in the fellows
program of the nature and benefits of participation in the
fellows program.
(h) Regulations.--The Secretary shall carry out this
section in accordance with such regulations as the Secretary
may prescribe for purposes of this section.
(i) Funding.--Of the amounts authorized to be appropriated
for each fiscal year for the Department of Defense for
operation and maintenance, Defense-wide, $10,000,000 may be
available to carry out the fellows program in such fiscal
year.
Subtitle D--Other Matters
SEC. 941. ANALYSIS OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE BUSINESS
MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONS DATASETS TO PROMOTE
SAVINGS AND EFFICIENCIES.
(a) In General.--The Chief Management Officer of the
Department of Defense shall develop a policy on analysis of
Department of Defense datasets on business management and
business operations by the public for purposes of accessing
data analysis capabilities that would promote savings and
efficiencies and otherwise enhance the utility of such
datasets to the Department.
(b) Initial Discharge of Policy.--
(1) In general.--The Chief Management Officer shall
commence the discharge of the policy required pursuant to
subsection (a) by--
(A) identifying one or more matters--
(i) that are of significance to the Department of Defense;
(ii) that are currently unresolved; and
(iii) whose resolution from a business management or
business operations dataset of the Department could benefit
from a method or technique of analysis not currently familiar
to the Department;
(B) identifying between three and five business management
or business operations datasets of the Department not
currently available to the public whose evaluation could
result in novel data analysis solutions toward management or
operations problems of the Department identified by the Chief
Management Officer; and
[[Page S3454]]
(C) encouraging, whether by competition or other
mechanisms, the evaluation of the datasets described in
subparagraph (B) by appropriate persons and entities in the
public or private sector (including academia).
(2) Protection of security and confidentiality.--In
providing for the evaluation of datasets pursuant to this
subsection, the Chief Management Officer shall take
appropriate actions to protect the security and
confidentiality of any information contained in the dataset,
including through special precautions to ensure that any
personally identifiable information is not included and no
release of information will adversely affect national
security missions.
SEC. 942. RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT TO ADVANCE CAPABILITIES OF
THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE IN DATA INTEGRATION
AND ADVANCED ANALYTICS IN CONNECTION WITH
PERSONNEL SECURITY.
(a) Plan Required.--The Under Secretary of Defense for
Intelligence shall develop a plan on research and development
activities to advance the capabilities of the Department of
Defense in data integration and advanced analytics in
connection with personnel security activities of the
Department. The plan shall, to the extent practicable,
provide for the leveraging of the capabilities of other
government entities, institutions of higher education, and
private sector entities with advanced, leading-edge expertise
in data integration and analytics applicable to the
challenges faced by the Department in connection with
personnel security.
(b) Coordination.--Any activities under the plan may be
carried out in coordination with the Defense Digital Service
and the Defense Innovation Board.
(c) Briefing.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Under Secretary shall provide
to the appropriate committees of Congress a briefing on the
plan.
(d) Appropriate Committees of Congress Defined.--In this
section, the term ``appropriate committees of Congress''
means--
(1) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on
Appropriations, and the Select Committee on Intelligence of
the Senate; and
(2) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on
Appropriations, and the Permanent Select Committee on
Intelligence of the House of Representatives.
TITLE X--GENERAL PROVISIONS
Subtitle A--Financial Matters
SEC. 1001. GENERAL TRANSFER AUTHORITY.
(a) Authority To Transfer Authorizations.--
(1) Authority.--Upon determination by the Secretary of
Defense that such action is necessary in the national
interest, the Secretary may transfer amounts of
authorizations made available to the Department of Defense in
this division for fiscal year 2019 between any such
authorizations for that fiscal year (or any subdivisions
thereof). Amounts of authorizations so transferred shall be
merged with and be available for the same purposes as the
authorization to which transferred.
(2) Limitation.--Except as provided in paragraph (3), the
total amount of authorizations that the Secretary may
transfer under the authority of this section may not exceed
$4,500,000,000.
(3) Exception for transfers between military personnel
authorizations.--A transfer of funds between military
personnel authorizations under title IV shall not be counted
toward the dollar limitation in paragraph (2).
(b) Limitations.--The authority provided by subsection (a)
to transfer authorizations--
(1) may only be used to provide authority for items that
have a higher priority than the items from which authority is
transferred; and
(2) may not be used to provide authority for an item that
has been denied authorization by Congress.
(c) Effect on Authorization Amounts.--A transfer made from
one account to another under the authority of this section
shall be deemed to increase the amount authorized for the
account to which the amount is transferred by an amount equal
to the amount transferred.
(d) Notice to Congress.--The Secretary shall promptly
notify Congress of each transfer made under subsection (a).
SEC. 1002. INCLUSION OF FUNDS FOR AIR FORCE PASS-THROUGH
ITEMS IN DEFENSE-WIDE BUDGET FOR THE DEPARTMENT
OF DEFENSE.
(a) In General.--In any budget of the President submitted
to Congress pursuant to section 1105(a) of title 31, United
States Code, for a fiscal year after fiscal year 2019, any
funds for an Air Force pass-through item shall be requested
in the Defense-wide budget of the Department of Defense
rather than the budget of the Air Force.
(b) Air Force Pass-through Item Defined.--In this section,
the term ``Air Force pass-through item'' means a program,
project, or activity for which--
(1) funds would otherwise be requested for the Air Force;
and
(2) funds made available for execution will be executed by
another department, agency, or element of the Department of
Defense.
SEC. 1003. REPORT ON SHIFT IN REQUESTS FOR FUNDS FOR
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ACTIVITIES FROM FUNDS FOR
OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS TO FUNDS
THROUGH THE BASE BUDGET.
(a) Report Required.--Not later than 14 days after the
submittal to Congress of the budget of the President for
fiscal year 2020 pursuant to section 1105 of title 31, United
States Code, the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller)
shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report
on any shift during fiscal year 2020 from requests for funds
for Department of Defense activities for overseas contingency
operations to requests for funds for such activities for the
Department generally (commonly referred to as the ``base
budget'').
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall
include the following:
(1) A description of the assumptions used by the Department
of Defense and the Armed Forces in determining the programs,
projects, and activities for which funds were requested for
fiscal year 2019 for overseas contingency operations for
which funds are requested for fiscal year 2020 for the
Department generally, including any changes to the criteria
for overseas contingency operations funding requests issued
in 2010 and used by the Office of Management and Budget in
identifying the programs, projects, and activities for which
funds are so requested for fiscal year 2020.
(2) The programs, projects, and activities of the
Department for which funds were requested for fiscal year
2019 for overseas contingency operations that are requested
in the budget for fiscal year 2020 to be funded for the
Department generally, and the amount for such programs,
projects, and activities, set forth at the level of detail as
follows:
(A) For procurement, by line item.
(B) For research, development, test, and evaluation, by
program element (PE) number.
(C) For operation and maintenance, by sub-activity group
(SAG).
(D) For military personnel, by sub-activity group.
(E) For revolving and management funds, by sub-activity
group.
(F) For military construction, by project.
SEC. 1004. RANKING OF AUDITABILITY OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF
THE ORGANIZATIONS AND ELEMENTS OF THE
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
(a) Report on Ranking.--Not later than 90 days after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense
shall, in coordination with the Under Secretary of Defense
(Comptroller), submit to the congressional defense committees
a report setting forth a ranking of the auditability of the
financial statements of the departments, agencies,
organizations, and elements of the Department of Defense
according to the progress made toward achieving auditability
as required by law.
(b) Criteria for Ranking.--The criteria to be used for
ranking for purposes of the report under this section shall
be--
(1) the criteria developed by the Under Secretary pursuant
to section 1104 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91) for a similar report
under that section;
(2) other criteria developed by the Under Secretary for
purposes of the report under this section; or
(3) a combination of the criteria described in paragraphs
(1) and (2).
(c) Construction.--The report required by this section is
in addition to the report required by section 1104 of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018.
SEC. 1005. TRANSPARENCY OF ACCOUNTING FIRMS USED TO SUPPORT
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE AUDIT.
The Secretary of Defense shall require any accounting firm
under contract or under consideration for a contract or for
the renewal of an existing contract with the Department of
Defense in support of the audit required under section 3521
of title 31, United States Code, to provide a statement
setting forth the details of any disciplinary proceedings
with respect to the accounting firm or its associated persons
before any entity with the authority to enforce compliance
with rules or laws applying to audit services offered by
accounting firms.
Subtitle B--Naval Vessels and Shipyards
SEC. 1011. DATE OF LISTING OF VESSELS AS BATTLE FORCE SHIPS
IN THE NAVAL VESSEL REGISTER AND OTHER FLEET
INVENTORY MEASURES.
(a) In General.--Section 7301 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (d); and
(2) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new
subsection (c):
``(c) Listing as Battle Force Ship in Naval Vessel
Register.--A covered vessel may not be listed in the Naval
Vessel Register or other fleet inventory measures as a battle
force ship until the delivery date specified in subsection
(a).''.
(b) Definitions.--Such section is further amended by
striking subsection (d), as redesignated by subsection (a)(1)
of this section, and inserting the following new subsection:
``(d) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) The term `covered vessel' means any vessel of the
Navy that is under construction or constructed using amounts
authorized to be appropriated for the Department of Defense
for shipbuilding and conversion, Navy.
``(2) The term `battle force ship' means the following:
``(A) A commissioned United States Ship warship capable of
contributing to combat operations.
``(B) A United States Naval Ship that contributes directly
to Navy warfighting or support missions.''.
[[Page S3455]]
SEC. 1012. ANNUAL REPORTS ON EXAMINATION OF NAVY VESSELS.
Section 7304 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(d) Annual Report.--
``(1) In general.--Not later than March 1 each year, the
board designated under subsection (a) shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report setting forth the
following:
``(A) An overall narrative summary of the material
readiness of Navy ships as compared to established material
requirements standards.
``(B) The overall number and types of vessels inspected
during the preceding fiscal year.
``(C) For in-service vessels, material readiness trends by
inspected functional area as compared to the previous five
years.
``(2) Form.--Each report under this subsection shall be
submitted in an unclassified form that is releasable to the
public without further redaction.
``(3) Termination.--No report shall be required under this
subsection after October 1, 2021.''.
SEC. 1013. LIMITATION ON DURATION OF HOMEPORTING OF CERTAIN
VESSELS IN FOREIGN LOCATIONS.
(a) Limitation.--
(1) In general.--Chapter 633 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by inserting after section 7310 the
following new section:
``Sec. 7310a. Homeporting of certain vessels in overseas
locations: limitation on duration
``(a) In General.--A vessel specified in subsection (b)
that is listed in the Naval Vessel Register may not be
homeported in a location other than in the United States or
Guam for a period of more than 10 consecutive years.
``(b) Specified Vessels.--The vessels specified in this
subsection are the following:
``(1) Aircraft carrier.
``(2) Amphibious ship.
``(3) Cruiser.
``(4) Destroyer.
``(5) Frigate.
``(c) Waiver.--
``(1) In general.--The Chief of Naval Operations may waive
the applicability of subsection (a) to a ship.
``(2) Effectiveness contingent on report.--A waiver under
paragraph (1) with respect to a ship shall go into effect on
the date on which the Chief of Naval Operations submits to
the congressional defense committees a report on the waiver
setting forth the following:
``(A) The ship covered by the waiver.
``(B) The duration of the waiver for such ship
``(C) The justification of the Chief of Naval Operations
for the waiver.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 633 of such title is amended by
inserting after the item relating to section 7310 the
following new item:
``7310a. Homeporting of certain vessels in overseas locations:
limitation on duration.''.
(b) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section
shall take effect on October 1, 2020, and shall apply with
respect to the homeporting of vessels after that date,
regardless of whether the continuous period of homeporting
concerned commenced before that date.
SEC. 1014. SPECIFIC AUTHORIZATION REQUIREMENT FOR NUCLEAR
REFUELING OF AIRCRAFT CARRIERS.
(a) In General.--Chapter 633 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by inserting after section 7314 the
following new section:
``Sec. 7314a. Nuclear refueling of aircraft carriers:
specific authorization required
``Funds may not be obligated or expended for the
procurement of a naval nuclear reactor power unit or
associated reactor components for the nuclear refueling of an
aircraft carrier unless such refueling is specifically
authorized, by ship name and hull number, by statute.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 633 of such title is amended by
inserting after the item relating to section 7314 the
following new item:
``7314a. Nuclear refueling of aircraft carriers: specific authorization
required.''.
SEC. 1015. DISMANTLEMENT AND DISPOSAL OF NUCLEAR-POWERED
AIRCRAFT CARRIERS.
(a) In General.--Chapter 633 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
section:
``Sec. 7320. Nuclear-powered aircraft carriers: dismantlement
and disposal
``(a) In General.--Not less than 90 days before the award
of a contract for the dismantlement and disposal of a
nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, or the provision of funds
to a naval shipyard for the dismantlement and disposal of a
nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, the Secretary of the Navy
shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report
setting forth the following:
``(1) A cost and schedule baseline for the dismantlement
and disposal approved by the service acquisition executive of
the Department of the Navy and the Chief of Naval Operations.
``(2) An independent cost estimate of the dismantlement and
disposal prepared by the Office of Cost Analysis and Program
Evaluation.
``(3) A description of the regulatory framework applicable
to the management of radioactive materials in connection with
the dismantlement and disposal, including, in cases in which
the Navy intends to have another government entity serve as
the regulatory enforcement authority--
``(A) a certification from that entity of its agreement to
serve as the regulatory enforcement authority; and
``(B) a description of the legal basis for the authority of
that entity to serve as the regulatory enforcement authority.
``(b) Supplemental Information With Budgets.--In the
materials submitted to Congress by the Secretary of Defense
in support of the budget of the President for a fiscal year
(as submitted to Congress under section 1105(a) of title 31),
the Secretary of the Navy shall include information on each
dismantlement and disposal of a nuclear-powered aircraft
carrier occurring or planned to occur during the period of
the future-years defense program submitted to Congress with
that budget. Such information shall include, by ship
concerned, the following:
``(1) A summary of activities and significant developments
in connection with such dismantlement and disposal.
``(2) If applicable, a detailed description of cost and
schedule performance against the baseline for such
dismantlement and disposal established pursuant to subsection
(a), including a description of and explanation for any
variance from such baseline.
``(3) A description of the amounts requested, or intended
or estimated to be requested, for such dismantlement and
disposal for each of the following:
``(A) Each fiscal year covered by the future-years defense
program.
``(B) Any fiscal years before the fiscal years covered by
the future-years defense program.
``(C) Any fiscal years after the end of the period of the
future-years defense program.
``(c) Future-years Defense Program Defined.--In this
section, the term `future-years defense program' means the
future-years defense program required by section 221 of this
title.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 633 of such title is amended by adding
at the end the following new item:
``7320. Nuclear-powered aircraft carriers; dismantlement and
disposal.''.
SEC. 1016. NATIONAL DEFENSE SEALIFT FUND.
Section 2218(f)(3)(C) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by striking ``two foreign constructed ships'' and
inserting ``seven foreign constructed ships during the period
beginning with fiscal year 2019 and ending with fiscal year
2030''.
SEC. 1017. LIMITATION ON USE OF FUNDS FOR RETIREMENT OF
HOSPITAL SHIPS.
(a) Limitation.--Except as provided in subsection (b), none
of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or
otherwise made available for fiscal year 2019 for the Navy
may be obligated or expended to retire, prepare to retire,
transfer, or place in storage any hospital ship.
(b) Waiver.--The Secretary of the Navy may waive the
limitation in subsection (a) with respect to a hospital ship
if the Secretary certifies to the congressional defense
committees that the Secretary has--
(1) identified a replacement capability, and the necessary
quantity of systems, to meet all hospital ship requirements
of the combatant commands that are currently being met by
such hospital ship;
(2) achieved initial operational capability of all systems
described in paragraph (1); and
(3) deployed a sufficient quantity of systems described in
paragraph (1) that have achieved initial operational
capability in order to continue to meet or exceed all
requirements of the combatant commands that are currently
being met by such hospital ship.
Subtitle C--Counterterrorism
SEC. 1021. EXTENSION OF PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS FOR
TRANSFER OR RELEASE OF INDIVIDUALS DETAINED AT
UNITED STATES NAVAL STATION, GUANTANAMO BAY,
CUBA, TO THE UNITED STATES.
Section 1033 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91) is amended by striking
``December 31, 2018'' and inserting ``December 31, 2019''.
SEC. 1022. EXTENSION OF PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS TO
CONSTRUCT OR MODIFY FACILITIES IN THE UNITED
STATES TO HOUSE DETAINEES TRANSFERRED FROM
UNITED STATES NAVAL STATION, GUANTANAMO BAY,
CUBA.
Section 1034(a) of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91) is amended by
striking ``December 31, 2018'' and inserting ``December 31,
2019''.
SEC. 1023. EXTENSION OF PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS FOR
TRANSFER OR RELEASE OF INDIVIDUALS DETAINED AT
UNITED STATES NAVAL STATION, GUANTANAMO BAY,
CUBA, TO CERTAIN COUNTRIES.
Section 1035 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91) is amended by striking
``December 31, 2018'' and inserting ``December 31, 2019''.
SEC. 1024. EXTENSION OF PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS TO CLOSE
OR RELINQUISH CONTROL OF UNITED STATES NAVAL
STATION, GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA.
Section 1036 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2018 (Public
[[Page S3456]]
Law 115-91) is amended inserting ``or 2019'' after ``fiscal
year 2018''.
SEC. 1025. AUTHORITY TO TRANSFER INDIVIDUALS DETAINED AT
UNITED STATES NAVAL STATION, GUANTANAMO BAY,
CUBA, TO THE UNITED STATES TEMPORARILY FOR
EMERGENCY OR CRITICAL MEDICAL TREATMENT.
(a) Temporary Transfer for Medical Treatment.--
Notwithstanding section 1033 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91),
as amended by section 1021 of this Act, or any similar
provision of law enacted after September 30, 2015, the
Secretary of Defense may, after consultation with the
Secretary of Homeland Security, temporarily transfer an
individual detained at Guantanamo to a Department of Defense
medical facility in the United States for the sole purpose of
providing the individual medical treatment if the Secretary
of Defense determines that--
(1) the medical treatment of the individual is necessary to
prevent death or imminent significant injury or harm to the
health of the individual;
(2) the necessary medical treatment is not available to be
provided at United States Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba, without incurring excessive and unreasonable costs; and
(3) the Department of Defense has provided for appropriate
security measures for the custody and control of the
individual during any period in which the individual is
temporarily in the United States under this section.
(b) Limitation on Exercise of Authority.--The authority of
the Secretary of Defense under subsection (a) may be
exercised only by the Secretary of Defense or another
official of the Department of Defense at the level of Under
Secretary of Defense or higher.
(c) Conditions of Transfer.--An individual who is
temporarily transferred under the authority in subsection (a)
shall--
(1) while in the United States, remain in the custody and
control of the Secretary of Defense at all times; and
(2) be returned to United States Naval Station, Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba, as soon as feasible after a Department of Defense
physician determines, in consultation with the Commander,
Joint Task Force-Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, that any necessary
follow-up medical care may reasonably be provided the
individual at United States Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay.
(d) Status While in United States.--An individual who is
temporarily transferred under the authority in subsection
(a), while in the United States--
(1) shall be deemed at all times and in all respects to be
in the uninterrupted custody of the Secretary of Defense, as
though the individual remained physically at United States
Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba;
(2) shall not at any time be subject to, and may not apply
for or obtain, or be deemed to enjoy, any right, privilege,
status, benefit, or eligibility for any benefit under any
provision of the immigration laws (as defined in section
101(a)(17) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(17)), or any other law or regulation;
(3) shall not be permitted to avail himself of any right,
privilege, or benefit of any law of the United States beyond
those available to individuals detained at United States
Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay; and
(4) shall not, as a result of such transfer, have a change
in any designation that may have attached to that detainee
while detained at United States Naval Station, Guantanamo
Bay, pursuant to the Authorization for Use of Military Force
(Public Law 107-40), as determined in accordance with
applicable law and regulations.
(e) No Cause of Action.--Any decision to transfer or not to
transfer an individual made under the authority in subsection
(a) shall not give rise to any claim or cause of action.
(f) Limitation on Judicial Review.--
(1) Limitation.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), no
court, justice, or judge shall have jurisdiction to hear or
consider any claim or action against the United States or its
departments, agencies, officers, employees, or agents arising
from or relating to any aspect of the detention, transfer,
treatment, or conditions of confinement of an individual
transferred under this section.
(2) Exception for habeas corpus.--The United States
District Court for the District of Columbia shall have
exclusive jurisdiction to consider an application for writ of
habeas corpus seeking release from custody filed by or on
behalf of an individual who is in the United States pursuant
to a temporary transfer under the authority in subsection
(a). Such jurisdiction shall be limited to that required by
the Constitution, and relief shall be only as provided in
paragraph (3). In such a proceeding the court may not review,
halt, or stay the return of the individual who is the object
of the application to United States Naval Station, Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba, pursuant to subsection (c).
(3) Relief.--A court order in a proceeding covered by
paragraph (2)--
(A) may not order the release of the individual within the
United States; and
(B) shall be limited to an order of release from custody
which, when final, the Secretary of Defense shall implement
in accordance with section 1034 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (10 U.S.C. 801 note).
(g) Notification.--Whenever a temporary transfer of an
individual detained at Guantanamo is made under the authority
of subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense shall notify the
Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of
Representatives of the transfer not later than five days
after the date on which the transfer is made.
(h) Individual Detained at Guantanamo Defined.--In this
section, the term ``individual detained at Guantanamo'' means
an individual located at United States Naval Station,
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, as of October 1, 2009, who--
(1) is not a national of the United States (as defined in
section 101(a)(22) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8
U.S.C. 1101(a)(22)) or a member of the Armed Forces of the
United States; and
(2) is--
(A) in the custody or under the control of the Department
of Defense; or
(B) otherwise detained at United States Naval Station,
Guantanamo Bay.
(i) Applicability.--This section shall apply to an
individual temporarily transferred under the authority in
subsection (a) regardless of the status of any pending or
completed proceeding or detention on the date of the
enactment of this Act.
Subtitle D--Miscellaneous Authorities and Limitations
SEC. 1031. STRATEGIC GUIDANCE DOCUMENTS WITHIN THE DEPARTMENT
OF DEFENSE.
Section 113(g) of title 10, United States Code, is amended
by striking paragraphs (2) through (4) and inserting the
following new paragraphs (2) through (4):
``(2)(A) In implementing the requirement in paragraph (1),
the Secretary, with the advice of the Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, shall each year provide to the officials and
officers referred in paragraph (1)(A), and submit to the
congressional defense committees, written guidance (to be
known as `Defense Planning Guidance') establishing goals,
priorities, and objectives, including fiscal constraints, to
direct the preparation and review of the program and budget
recommendations of all elements of the Department,
including--
``(i) the priority military missions of the Department,
including the assumed force planning scenarios and
constructs;
``(ii) the force size and shape, force posture, defense
capabilities, force readiness, infrastructure, organization,
personnel, technological innovation, and other elements of
the defense program necessary to support the strategy
required by paragraph (1);
``(iii) the resource levels projected to be available for
the period of time for which such recommendations and
proposals are to be effective; and
``(iv) a discussion of any changes in the strategy required
by paragraph (1) and assumptions underpinning the strategy,
as required by paragraph (1).
``(B) The guidance required by this paragraph shall be
produced in February each year in order to support the
planning and budget process. The guidance shall be submitted
to the congressional defense committees together with the
budget of the President (as submitted to Congress pursuant to
section 1105(a) of title 31) for the fiscal year beginning in
the year in which such guidance is submitted.
``(3)(A) In implementing the requirement in paragraph (1)
and in conjunction with the reporting requirement in section
2687a of this title, the Secretary, with the approval of the
President and the advice of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, shall, on the basis provided in subparagraph (E),
provide to the officials and officers referred to in
paragraph (1)(A), and submit to the congressional defense
committees, written guidance (to be known as `Contingency
Planning Guidance' or `Guidance for Employment of the Force')
on the preparation and review of contingency and campaign
plans, including plans for providing support to civil
authorities in an incident of national significance or a
catastrophic incident, for homeland defense, and for military
support to civil authorities.
``(B) The guidance required by this paragraph shall include
the following:
``(i) A description of the manner in which limited existing
forces and resources shall be prioritized and apportioned to
achieve the objectives described in the strategy required by
paragraph (1).
``(ii) A description of the relative priority of
contingency and campaign plans, specific force levels, and
supporting resource levels projected to be available for the
period of time for which such plans are to be effective.
``(C) The guidance required by this paragraph shall include
the following:
``(i) Prioritized global, regional, and functional policy
objectives that the armed forces should plan to achieve,
including plans for deliberate and contingency scenarios.
``(ii) Policy and strategic assumptions that should guide
military planning, including the role of foreign partners.
``(iii) Guidance on global posture and global force
management.
``(iv) Security cooperation priorities.
``(v) Specific guidance on United States and Department
nuclear policy.
``(D) The guidance required by this paragraph shall be the
primary source document to be used by the Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff in--
``(i) executing the global military integration
responsibilities described in section 153 of this title; and
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``(ii) developing implementation guidance for the Joint
Chiefs of Staff and the commanders of the combatant commands.
``(E) The guidance required by this paragraph shall be
produced every two years, or more frequently as needed.
``(F) The guidance required by this paragraph shall be
submitted to the congressional defense committees as required
by subparagraph (A) in February of each year in which
produced, and shall be accompanied by any written
implementation documentation produced by the Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff for purposes of such guidance.
``(4)(A) In implementing the requirement in paragraph (1),
the Secretary, with the advice of the Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, shall each year produce, and submit to the
congressional defense committee, a report (to be known as the
`Global Defense Posture Report') that shall include the
following:
``(i) A description of major changes to United States
forces, capabilities, and equipment assigned and allocated
outside the United States, focused on significant
alterations, additions, or reductions to such global defense
posture that are required to execute the strategy and plans
of the Department.
``(ii) A description of the supporting network of
infrastructure, facilities, pre-positioned stocks, and war
reserve materiel required for execution of major contingency
plans of the Department.
``(iii) A list of all enduring locations, including main
operating bases, forward operating sites, and cooperative
security locations.
``(iv) A description of the status of treaty, access, cost-
sharing, and status-protection agreements with foreign
nations.
``(v) A summary of the priority posture initiatives for
each region by the commanders of the combatant commands.
``(vi) For each military department, a summary of the
implications for overseas posture of any force structure
changes.
``(vii) A description of the costs incurred outside the
United States during the preceding fiscal year in connection
with operating, maintaining, and supporting United States
forces outside the United States for each military
department, broken out by country, and whether for operation
and maintenance, infrastructure, or transportation.
``(viii) A description of the amount of direct support for
the stationing of United States forces provided by each host
nation during the preceding fiscal year.
``(B) The report required by this paragraph shall be
submitted to the congressional defense committees as required
by subparagraph (A) by not later than April 30 each year.
``(C) In this paragraph, the term `United States', when
used in a geographic sense, includes the territories and
possessions of the United States''.
SEC. 1032. GUIDANCE ON THE ELECTRONIC WARFARE MISSION AREA
AND JOINT ELECTROMAGNETIC SPECTRUM OPERATIONS.
(a) Processes and Procedures for Integration.--The
Secretary of Defense shall--
(1) establish processes and procedures to develop,
integrate, and enhance the electronic warfare mission area
and the conduct of joint electromagnetic spectrum operations
in all domains across the Department of Defense; and
(2) ensure that such processes and procedures provide for
integrated defense-wide strategy, planning, and budgeting
with respect to the conduct of such operations by the
Department, including activities conducted to counter and
deter such operations by malign actors.
(b) Designated Senior Official.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary shall designate a senior
official of the Department of Defense (in this section
referred to as the ``designated senior official'') who shall
implement and oversee the processes and procedures
established under subsection (a). The designated senior
official shall be designated by the Secretary from among
individuals serving in the Department at or below the level
of Under Secretary of Defense. The designated senior official
shall oversee and chair the cross-functional team established
pursuant to subsection (c) and the Electronic Warfare
Executive Committee established in March 2015.
(2) Responsibilities.--The designated senior official shall
have, with respect to the implementation and oversight of the
processes and procedures established under subsection (a),
the following responsibilities:
(A) Development of a strategic framework for the conduct
and execution of the electronic warfare mission area and
joint electromagnetic spectrum operations by the Department,
coordinated across all relevant elements of the Department,
including both near-term and long-term guidance for the
conduct of such operations.
(B) Oversight of resource management for the development
and integration of electronic warfare capabilities of the
Department.
(3) Annual certification on budgeting for certain
capabilities.--Each budget for fiscal years 2020 through 2024
submitted by the President to Congress pursuant to section
1105(a) of title 31, United States Code, shall include a
certification by the senior designated official, as chair of
the Electronic Warfare Executive Committee, whether
sufficient funds are requested in such budget for anticipated
activities in such fiscal year for each of the following:
(A) The development of an Electromagnetic Battle Management
capability for joint electromagnetic spectrum operations.
(B) The establishment and operation of associated Joint
Electromagnetic Spectrum Operations cells.
(c) Cross-functional Team for Electronic Warfare.--
(1) Establishment required.--The Secretary shall, in
accordance with section 911(c) of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328;
130 Stat. 2345; 10 U.S.C. 111 note), establish a cross-
functional team for electronic warfare in order to identify
gaps in electronic warfare capabilities and capacities within
the Department across personnel, procedural, and equipment
areas.
(2) Specific duties.--The cross-functional team established
pursuant to paragraph (1) shall provide recommendations to
address gaps identified as described in that paragraph to the
senior designated official.
(d) Plans and Requirements for Electronic Warfare.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary shall require the designated
senior official to task the cross-functional team established
pursuant to subsection (c) to develop requirements and
specific plans for addressing personnel and capability gaps
in the electronic warfare mission area, and plans for future
warfare in that domain (including a roadmap for the next five
years).
(2) Update of strategy.--Not later than 180 days after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the cross-functional team
shall--
(A) update the strategy of the Department of Defense titled
``The DOD Electronic Warfare Strategy'' and dated June 2017
to include the roadmap referred to in paragraph (1); and
(B) submit the updated strategy to the designated senior
official for transmittal to the congressional defense
committees.
(3) Elements.--The requirements and plans developed by the
cross-functional team pursuant to paragraph (1) shall include
the following:
(A) An accounting of the efforts undertaken in support of
the strategy referred to in paragraph (2)(A) since its
issuance in June 2017.
(B) A description of any updates or changes to the strategy
since its issuance, and a description of any anticipated
updates or changes to the strategy as a result of the
designation of the designated senior official.
(C) An assessment of vulnerabilities identified in the May
2015 Electronic Warfare assessment by the Defense Science
Board.
(D) An assessment of the capability of joint forces to
conduct joint electromagnetic spectrum operations against
near-peer adversaries and any capability or capacity gaps in
such capability that need to be addressed, including an
assessment of the ability of joint forces to conduct
coordinated military operations to exploit, attack, protect,
and manage the electromagnetic environment in the Signals
Intelligence, Electronic Warfare, and Spectrum Management
mission areas.
(E) A review of the roles of offices within the Joint
Staff, the Office of the Secretary of Defense, and the
combatant commands with primary responsibility for joint
electromagnetic spectrum policy and operations.
(F) A description of any assumptions about the roles and
contributions of the Department, in coordination with other
departments and agencies of the United States Government,
with respect to the strategy.
(G) A description of actions, performance metrics, and
projected timelines for achieving key capabilities for
electronic warfare and joint electromagnetic spectrum
operations to correspond to the four thematic goals
identified in the strategy and as addressed by the roadmap.
(H) An analysis of any personnel, resourcing, capability,
authority, or other gaps to be addressed in order to ensure
effective implementation of the strategy across all relevant
elements of the Department, including an update on each of
the following:
(i) The development of an Electromagnetic Battle Management
capability for joint electromagnetic spectrum operations.
(ii) The establishment and operation of Joint
Electromagnetic Spectrum Operations cells at critical
combatant command locations.
(I) An investment framework and projected timeline for
addressing any gaps described by subparagraph (H).
(J) In consultation with the Director of the Defense
Intelligence Agency--
(i) a comprehensive assessment of the electronic warfare
capabilities of the Russian Federation and People's Republic
of China;
(ii) a review of vulnerabilities with respect to electronic
systems, such as the Global Positioning System, and in
Department-wide abilities to conduct countermeasures in
response to electronic warfare attacks; and
(iii) a holistic study of all aspects of the manner in
which the Russian Federation and the People's Republic of
China develop electronic warfare doctrine, with order of
battle across multiple domains, and long-term research trends
of each country in connection with such warfare.
(K) Such other matters as the Secretary considers
appropriate.
(4) Periodic status reports.--Not later than 90 days after
the requirements and plans required by paragraph (1) are
submitted in accordance with paragraph (2), and every 90 days
thereafter during the three-year period beginning on the date
such plans
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and requirements are first submitted in accordance with
paragraph (2), the designated senior official shall submit to
the congressional defense committees a report describing the
status of the efforts of the Department in accomplishing the
tasks specified in subparagraphs (B) and (G) of paragraph
(3).
(e) Training and Education.--Consistent with the elements
under subsection (d)(3) of the plans and requirements
required by subsection (d)(1), the cross-functional team
established pursuant to subsection (c) shall provide the
senior designated official recommendations for programs to
provide training and education to such members of the Armed
Forces and civilian employees of the Department as the
Secretary considers appropriate in order to ensure that such
members and employees understand the roles and
vulnerabilities associated with electronic warfare and
dependence on the electromagnetic spectrum.
SEC. 1033. LIMITATION ON USE OF FUNDS FOR UNITED STATES
SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND GLOBAL MESSAGING AND
COUNTER-MESSAGING PLATFORM.
None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act
may be used for United States Special Operations Command's
Global Messaging and Counter-Messaging platform until the
Secretary of Defense submits to the congressional defense
committees a report containing the following elements:
(1) A review of the doctrine, organization, training,
materiel, leadership and education, personnel and facilities
applicable to military information support personnel,
including, at a minimum--
(A) an assessment of current doctrine, organization,
training, materiel, leadership and education, personnel and
facilities; and
(B) recommended changes for enhancing the ability of
military information support personnel to operate effectively
in the current and future information environment.
(2) An implementation plan for the establishment of the
platform, including a timeline for achieving initial and full
operational capability.
(3) A description of the budget requirements for the
platform to reach full operational capability, including an
identification and cost of any infrastructure and equipment
requirements.
(4) A summary of costs to operate and sustain the platform
across the future year's defense plan.
(5) An explanation of the Secretary's guidance to the
combatant commands to ensure unity of effort and prevent the
proliferation of messaging and counter-messaging platforms.
(6) A detailed description of the processes for
deconfliction and, where possible, integration of platform
planning and activities with those of relevant departments
and agencies of the United States Government, including the
Department of State's Global Engagement Center.
(7) An identification of any additional authorities that
may be required for achieving full operational capability of
the platform.
(8) Any other matters deemed relevant by the Secretary.
SEC. 1034. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON THE BASING OF KC-46A AIRCRAFT
OUTSIDE THE CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES.
(a) Finding.--Congress finds that the Department of Defense
is continuing its process of permanently stationing KC-46A
aircraft at installations in the continental United States
(CONUS) and forward-basing outside the continental United
States (OCONUS).
(b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that
the Secretary of the Air Force, as part of the strategic
basing process for KC-46A aircraft, should continue to place
emphasis on and consider the benefits derived from locations
outside the continental United States that--
(1) support day-to-day air refueling operations, operations
plans of the combatant commands, and flexibility for
contingency operations, and have--
(A) a strategic location that is essential to the defense
of the United States and its interests;
(B) receivers for boom or probe-and-drogue training
opportunities with joint and international partners; and
(C) sufficient airfield and airspace availability and
capacity to meet requirements; and
(2) possess facilities that--
(A) take full advantage of existing infrastructure to
provide--
(i) runway, hangars, and aircrew and maintenance
operations; and
(ii) sufficient fuels receipt, storage, and distribution
capacities for a 5-day peacetime operating stock; and
(B) minimize overall construction and operational costs.
SEC. 1035. RELINQUISHMENT OF LEGISLATIVE JURISDICTION OF
CRIMINAL OFFENSES COMMITTED BY JUVENILES ON
MILITARY INSTALLATIONS.
(a) In General.--In the case of any military installation
or portion of a military installation of which exclusive
legislative jurisdiction of criminal offenses committed by
juveniles is retained by the United States as of the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary concerned shall seek
to relinquish to the State, Commonwealth, territory, or
possession concerned legislative jurisdiction of such
offenses such that the United States and the State,
Commonwealth, territory, or possession, as the case may be,
have concurrent legislative jurisdiction of such offenses.
(b) Manner of Relinquishment.--Legislative jurisdiction
shall be relinquished pursuant to subsection (a) in the
manner provided in section 2683(a) of title 10, United States
Code.
(c) Deadline.--The Secretaries concerned shall, to the
extent practicable, complete relinquishment of legislative
jurisdiction pursuant to subsection (a) by not later than one
year after the date of the enactment of this Act.
(d) Reports.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 15 months after the date of
the enactment of this Act, each Secretary concerned shall
submit to Congress a report on the relinquishment of
legislative jurisdiction pursuant to subsection (a).
(2) Elements.--The report of a Secretary under this
subsection shall include the following:
(A) A list of the installations or portions of
installations under the jurisdiction of the Secretary of
which exclusive legislative jurisdiction of criminal offenses
committed by juveniles is retained by the United States as of
the date of the enactment of this Act.
(B) A list of the installations or portions of
installations listed pursuant to subparagraph (A) for which
legislative jurisdiction was relinquished pursuant to
subsection (a) as of the date that is one year after the date
of the enactment of this Act.
(C) A list of the installations or portions of
installations listed pursuant to subparagraph (A) for which
legislative jurisdiction was not relinquished pursuant to
subsection (a) as of the date that is one year after the date
of the enactment of this Act, and, for each such installation
or portion of installation, the reasons why such legislative
jurisdiction was not so relinquished.
(e) Secretary Concerned Defined.--In this section, the term
``Secretary concerned'' has the meaning given that term in
section 101(a)(9) of title 10, United States Code.
SEC. 1036. POLICY ON RESPONSE TO JUVENILE-ON-JUVENILE ABUSE
COMMITTED ON MILITARY INSTALLATIONS.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish a
policy, applicable across the military installations of the
Department of Defense (including installations outside the
United States), on the response of the Department to
allegations of juvenile-on-juvenile abuse on military
installations. The policy shall be designed to ensure a
consistent, standardized response to such allegations across
the Department.
(b) Elements.--The policy required by this section shall
provide for the following:
(1) Any report or other allegation of juvenile-on-juvenile
abuse on a military installation that is received by the
installation commander, a law enforcement organization, a
Family Advocacy Program, a chid development center, or a
Department school operating on the installation or otherwise
under Department administration for the installation shall be
reviewed by the Family Advocacy Program of the installation.
(2) Personnel of Family Advocacy Programs conducting
reviews shall have appropriate training and experience in
working with juveniles.
(3) Family Advocacy Programs conducting reviews shall
conduct a multi-faceted, multi-disciplinary review and
recommend treatment, counseling, or other appropriate
interventions for complainants and respondents.
(4) Each review shall be conducted--
(A) with full involvement of appropriate authorities and
entities, including parents or legal guardians of the
juveniles involved (if practicable); and
(B) to the extent practicable, in a manner that protects
the sensitive nature of the incident concerned, using
language appropriate to the treatment of juveniles in written
policies and communication with families.
(5) The requirement for investigation of a report or other
allegation shall not be deemed to terminate or alter any
otherwise applicable requirement to report or forward the
report or allegation to appropriate Federal, State, or local
authorities as possible criminal activity.
(6) There shall be established and maintained a centralized
database of information on each incident of abuse that is
reviewed by a Family Advocacy Program under this section,
with--
(A) the information in such database kept strictly
confidential; and
(B) because the information involves alleged conduct by
juveniles, additional special precautions taken to ensure the
information is available only to persons who require access
to the information.
(7) There shall be entered into the database, for each
substantiated or unsubstantiated incident of abuse,
appropriate information on the incident, including--
(A) a description of the allegation;
(B) whether or not the review is completed;
(C) whether or not the incident was subject to an
investigation by a law enforcement organization or entity,
and the status and results of such investigation; and
(D) whether or not action was taken in response to the
incident, and the nature of the action, if any, so taken.
Subtitle E--Studies and Reports
SEC. 1041. REPORT ON HIGHEST-PRIORITY ROLES AND MISSIONS OF
THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE AND THE ARMED FORCES.
(a) Sense of Senate.--It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) the National Defense Strategy correctly characterizes
the leading strategic challenges facing the United States as
the reemergence of great power competition, the
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erosion of the United States military technological
advantage, enduring violent extremism and instability in the
broader Middle East and Africa, and continued uncertainty in
the United States about the availability of sufficient
resources for national defense;
(2) the National Defense Strategy correctly prioritizes the
development of a more lethal joint force that is ready to
deter and, if necessary, defeat aggression by great power
competitors with advanced military capabilities, while
conducting counterterrorism operations in a more sustainable
manner, together with allies and partners;
(3) the National Defense Strategy, and the implications of
the Strategy for the size, structure, shape, roles, missions,
and employment of the joint force, was not completed in time
to inform fully the budget of the President for national
defense for fiscal year 2019;
(4) many Department of Defense programs of record are
upgraded replacements of legacy systems that were not
premised on the assumption that future conflict could occur
in highly-contested environments against militarily advanced
near-peer rivals;
(5) considerable growth in the size of the military will
not be possible without growth in the budget, because the
current future-years defense program assumes that defense
spending after fiscal year 2019 will only increase at the
rate of inflation, while costs for two of the largest drivers
of costs for the Department, namely military personnel and
operation and maintenance, continue to grow faster than the
rate of inflation;
(6) the Senate strongly supports the pursuit by the
Department of budgetary savings through internal reform and
efficiencies, but notes that previous attempts to generate
additional resources through such mechanisms did not generate
resources as planned;
(7) increased force modernization investments must be based
on a rigorous reassessment of whether current programs will
meet present and future warfighting requirements against
near-peer rivals that are making rapid military technological
advancements;
(8) the Department must conduct further analytical work in
order--
(A) to facilitate the implementation of the National
Defense Strategy, as recommended by the Commission on the
National Defense Strategy; and
(B) to provide Congress with a more rigorous understanding
of, and justification for, future requests for resources to
organize, train and equip, and employ the Armed Forces; and
(9) the Senate encourages the Secretary of Defense to
refine the National Defense Strategy into more specific
operational tasks and force planning scenarios that the joint
force must be ready and able to perform in order to
facilitate a better understanding of joint force development
priorities and the roles and missions of each Armed Force.
(b) Report on Roles and Missions.--
(1) Report required.--Not later than February 1, 2019, the
Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a report setting forth a re-evaluation of
the highest priority missions of the Department of Defense,
and of the roles of the Armed Forces in the performance of
such missions.
(2) Goals.--The goals of the re-evaluation required for
purposes of the report shall be as follows:
(A) To support implementation of the National Defense
Strategy.
(B) To optimize the effectiveness of the joint force.
(C) To inform the preparation of future defense program and
budget requests by the Secretary, and the consideration of
such requests by Congress.
(c) Elements.--The report required by subsection (b) shall
include the following:
(1) A detailed description of the pacing threats for each
Armed Force, and for special operations forces, and an
assessment of the manner in which such pacing threats
determine the primary role of each Armed Force, and special
operations forces, including the connection between key
operational tasks required by contingency plans.
(2) A specific requirement for the size and composition of
each Armed Force, including the following:
(A) The required total end strength and force structure by
type for the Army.
(B) The required fleet size of the Navy, identified by
class of ships and the corresponding total end strength
requirement once that fleet size is achieved.
(C) The required number of operational Air Force squadrons,
identified by function and the corresponding total end
strength requirement once that number of squadrons is
achieved.
(D) The required total end strength and force structure by
type for the Marine Corps.
(E) The force sizing construct used to determine the end
strength requirements covered by subparagraphs (A) through
(D), the year-by-year plan for achieving such requirements,
relevant force posture assumptions, and the associated
military personnel costs of such plan.
(3) A re-evaluation of the roles of the Armed Forces in
performing low-intensity missions, such as counterterrorism
and security force assistance, including the following:
(A) An assessment whether the joint force would benefit
from having one Armed Force dedicated primarily to low-
intensity missions, thereby enabling the other Armed Forces
to focus more exclusively on advanced peer competitors.
(B) A detailed description of, and accompanying
justification for, the total amount of forces required to
perform the security force assistance mission and the planned
geographic employment of such forces.
(C) A revalidation of the Army plan to construct six
Security Force Assistant Brigades, and an assessment of the
impact, if any, of such plan on the capability of the Army to
perform its primary roles under the National Defense
Strategy.
(D) An assessment whether the security force assistance
mission would be better performed by the Marine Corps, and an
assessment of the end strength and force composition changes,
if any, required for the Marine Corps to assume such mission.
(4) A reassessment of the roles and missions of the total
ground forces, both Army and Marine Corps, to execute the
National Defense Strategy, including the following:
(A) A detailed description of the allocation of roles for
the Army and Marine Corps in deterring and waging war against
advanced peer competitors that can complement the activities
and investments of each such Armed Force and optimize the
capabilities of each such Armed Force.
(B) A detailed description of the appropriate balance and
mix of Army force structure, including light infantry,
mechanized infantry, armor, air defense, fires, engineers,
aviation, signals, and logistics, that is required to perform
the roles and missions of the Army against its pacing
threats.
(C) A detailed description of the modernized capabilities
and concepts to be developed by the Army to contribute to
joint force operations against advanced peer competitors,
including the manner in which Army aviation will evolve in
light of unmanned aerial vehicle technology.
(D) A revalidation of the requirement for ground force
modernization efforts, including the Joint Light Tactical
Vehicle, Future Vertical Lift, and Mobile Protected Fires,
that are not optimized for conflict between the United States
and advanced peer competitors.
(E) A detailed description of requirements for Army forces
needed to support theater operations.
(5) An assessment, based on operational plans, of the
ability of power projection platforms to survive and
effectively perform the highest priority operational missions
described in the National Defense Strategy, including the
following:
(A) An assessment of the feasibility of the current plans
and investments by the Navy and Marine Corps to operate and
defend their sea bases in contested environments.
(B) An assessment whether amphibious forced entry
operations against advanced peer competitors should remain an
enduring mission for the joint force considering the
stressing operational nature and significant resource
requirements of such mission.
(C) An assessment whether a transition from large-deck
amphibious ships to small aircraft carriers would result in a
more lethal and survivable Marine Corps sea base that could
accommodate larger numbers of more diverse strike aircraft.
(D) An assessment of the manner in which an acceleration of
development and fielding of longer-range, unmanned, carrier-
suitable strike aircraft could better meet operational
requirements and alter the requirement for shorter-range,
manned tactical fighter aircraft.
(E) An assessment of the manner in which the emerging
technology to operate large numbers of low-cost, autonomous,
attributable systems in the air, on and under the sea, on
land, and in space could change the manner in which the joint
force projects power globally.
(6) An assessment, based on operational plans, of the
ability of manned, stealthy, penetrating strike platforms to
survive and perform effectively the highest priority
operational missions described in the National Defense
Strategy, including the following:
(A) An assessment whether anticipated advances in stealth
technology and the employment of such technology on existing
or developmental systems, such as the F-35 and B-21 aircraft,
can be expected to outpace and overmatch adversary
capabilities to detect and target such systems.
(B) An assessment of the ability of fourth generation
aircraft with advanced sensors and weapons to perform certain
missions equally or more effectively than the missions
assigned to, or envisioned for, fifth-generation penetrating
strike platforms.
(C) An assessment of the manner in which the emerging
technology to operate large numbers of low-cost, autonomous,
attributable systems in the air, on and under the sea, on
land, and in space could obviate or reduce the requirement
for penetrating strike platforms.
(7) A re-evaluation of the most effective and efficient
means for the joint force to perform the air superiority
mission in both contested and uncontested environments,
including the following:
(A) An assessment of the ability to achieve air superiority
from other domains, including with land-based systems, naval
systems, undersea systems, space-based systems, electronic
warfare systems, or cyber capabilities.
(B) A validation of the envisioned operational and cost
effectiveness of the Penetrating Counter-Air platform, and of
the requirement for developing this system as part of the Air
Force Next Generation Air Dominance program.
[[Page S3460]]
(C) A detailed description of the optimal mix across the
joint force of fourth-generation and fifth-generation fighter
aircraft, bomber aircraft, and Next Generation Air Dominance
systems to fulfill operational demands for air superiority.
(D) A detailed description of the manner in which the joint
force will perform the mission of light aerial attack in
uncontested environments to support counterterrorism and
security force assistance missions, and the mission of
countering violent extremism operations, at the lowest cost
to the readiness of advanced, multirole combat aircraft.
(E) A determination of what Armed Force, in addition to the
Air Force, should have a role in the mission of light air
attack in uncontested environments.
(8) A reevaluation of the roles and missions of the joint
special operations enterprise, including the following:
(A) A detailed assessment whether the joint special
operations enterprise is currently performing too many
missions worldwide, and whether any such missions could be
performed adequately and more economically by conventional
units.
(B) A detailed assessment whether the global allocation of
special operations forces, and especially the most capable
units, is aligned to the pacing threats and priority missions
of the National Defense Strategy.
(C) A detailed description of the changes required to align
the joint special operations enterprise more effectively with
the National Defense Strategy.
(9) An assessment of the manner in which increased use of
the space domain should revise or reallocate the requirements
of the joint force, including the following:
(A) A detailed description of the missions, including joint
moving target indication, air battle management, and missile
and aircraft tracking and targeting, that could be performed
more effectively from space-based platforms due to emerging
technology and operational requirements.
(B) An assessment of the manner in which the joint force
can take advantage of the development and deployment of
disaggregated commercial satellite Internet constellations to
replace legacy tactical communications networks and devices
and achieve multi-domain command and control more effectively
and at lower cost.
(C) An assessment of the manner in which to ensure that the
joint force has access to technologies that deliver superior
offensive space capabilities and a maneuver advantage to and
within the space domain, including reusable launch systems
and spacecraft, on-orbit refueling and manufacturing, on-
orbit power generation, and exploitation of space minerals
and propellants.
(D) A detailed description of the actions to be taken by
components of the Department to promote and protect the
development of a licit space economy, including the
following:
(i) Defense of commercial activities, facilities, and
claims.
(ii) Safety of navigation.
(iii) Rescue and recovery.
(iv) Construction and maintenance of public works in Cis-
Lunar Space.
(v) Active debris remediation.
(vi) Establishment of an on-orbit national strategic
reserve of space minerals and propellants.
(10) A reassessment of the manner in which the joint force
will perform the mission of logistics in contested
environments, including the following:
(A) A revalidation of the requirement for the KC-46 tanker
aircraft, including an assessment of the aerial refueling
requirements in contested environments and a greater reliance
on distributed systems of systems.
(B) A detailed assessment whether the mission of logistics
in contested environments could be better performed by larger
numbers of lower-cost, autonomous systems capable of
dispersed operations on land, at sea, and in the air.
(C) A detailed assessment whether greater forward
stationing of joint force capabilities and personnel would be
more operationally effective in performing the contact and
blunt missions of the National Defense Strategy.
(d) Form.--The report required in subsection (b) shall be
submitted in classified form, and shall include an
unclassified summary.
SEC. 1042. ANNUAL REPORTS BY THE ARMED FORCES ON OUT-YEAR
UNCONSTRAINED TOTAL MUNITIONS REQUIREMENTS AND
OUT-YEAR INVENTORY NUMBERS.
(a) Reports Required.--Chapter 9 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by inserting after section 222a the
following new section:
``Sec. 222b. Armed forces: Out-Year Unconstrained Total
Munitions Requirements; Out-Year inventory numbers
``(a) Annual Reports.--At the same time each year that the
budget for the fiscal year beginning in such year is
submitted to Congress pursuant to section 1105(a) of title
31, the chief of staff of each armed force (other than the
Coast Guard) shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report setting forth for such armed force each
of the following for such fiscal year, broken out as
specified in subsection (b):
``(1) The Out-Year Unconstrained Total Munitions
Requirement.
``(2) The Out-Year inventory numbers.
``(b) Presentation.--The Out-Year Unconstrained Total
Munitions Requirement and Out-Year inventory numbers for an
armed force for a fiscal year pursuant to subsection (a)
shall include specific inventory objective requirements for
each variant of munitions with respect to each of the
following:
``(1) Combat Requirement, broken out by operation plan
(OPLAN).
``(2) Current Operation/Forward Presence Requirement.
``(3) Strategic Readiness Requirement.
``(4) Homeland Defense.
``(5) Training and Testing Requirement.
``(6) Total Out-Year Unconstrained Total Munitions
Requirement, calculated in accordance with the implementation
guidance described in subsection (c).
``(7) Out-year worldwide inventory.
``(c) Implementation Guidance Used.--In submitting
information pursuant to subsection (a) for a fiscal year, the
chief of staff of each armed force shall describe and explain
the munitions requirements process implementation guidance
developed by the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition
and Sustainment and used by such armed force for the
munitions requirements process for such armed force for that
fiscal year.
``(d) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) The term `chief of staff', with respect to the Marine
Corps, means the Commandant of the Marine Corps.
``(2) The term `Out-Year Unconstrained Total Munitions
Requirement' has the meaning given that term in and for
purposes of Department of Defense Instruction 3000.04, or any
successor instruction.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 9 of such title is amended by inserting
after the item relating to section 222a the following new
item:
``222b. Armed forces: Out-Year Unconstrained Total Munitions
Requirements; Out-Year inventory numbers.''.
SEC. 1043. COMPREHENSIVE REVIEW OF OPERATIONAL AND
ADMINISTRATIVE CHAINS-OF-COMMAND AND FUNCTIONS
OF THE DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of the Navy shall conduct a
comprehensive review of the operational and administrative
chains-of-command and functions of the Department of the
Navy.
(b) Elements.--In conducting the review required by
subsection (a), the Secretary shall consider options to do
each of the following:
(1) Increase visibility of unit-level readiness at senior
levels.
(2) Reduce so-called ``double-hatting'' and ``triple-
hatting'' commanders.
(3) Clarify organizations responsible and accountable for
training and certification at the unit, group, and fleet
level.
(4) Simplify reporting requirements applicable to
commanding officers.
(c) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report on the results of
the review required by subsection (a). The report shall
include the following:
(A) The results of the review, including any findings of
the Secretary as a result of the review.
(B) Any organizational changes in operational or
administrative chains-of-command or functions of the
Department undertaken or to be undertaken by the Secretary in
light of the review.
(C) Any recommendations for legislative or administration
action with respect to the operational or administrative
chains-of-command or functions of the Department as the
Secretary considers appropriate in light of the review.
(2) Form.--The report under this subsection shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
SEC. 1044. MILITARY AVIATION READINESS REVIEW IN SUPPORT OF
THE NATIONAL DEFENSE STRATEGY.
(a) Report Required.--Not later than one year after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense
shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the
Senate and the House of Representatives a report on military
aviation readiness in support of the National Defense
Strategy (NDS).
(b) Review for Report Purposes.--
(1) In general.--The report under subsection (a) shall be
based on a review conducted for purposes of the report in
accordance with this section.
(2) Panel.--The review shall be conducted by a panel
consisting of the following:
(A) The Commander of the Air Combat Command, who shall head
the panel.
(B) The Commander of the Army Aviation Branch.
(C) The Chief of Naval Air Forces.
(D) The Deputy Commandant of the Marine Corps for Aviation.
(E) Such other personnel of the Department of Defense as
the Secretary considers appropriate.
(c) Review Elements.--The review required by subsection (b)
shall address the following:
(1) An analysis of the career progression of military
pilots and non-pilot aviators, including a comparison between
military pilot and non-pilot aviators, on the one hand, and
other military specialities, on the other hand, with respect
to each of the following:
(A) Tours of duty.
(B) Assignment lengths.
(C) Minimum service commitments.
(D) Professional performance evaluation systems.
[[Page S3461]]
(E) Statutory and administrative promotion processes.
(2) An analysis of aircrew aviation training for various
aircraft platforms, including--
(A) an historical analysis, covering the past 15 years, of
first and second assignment total flight hours and model-
specific flight hours for military pilots and non-pilot
aviators; and
(B) an analysis of the flight hour program in order to
determine the appropriate level of required monthly flight
hours and sorties to maintain currency (minimum safe level)
and proficiency (minimum level to be tactically competent).
(3) An analysis of the effect of recent operational
deployments on the ability of military pilots and non-pilot
aviators to build and maintain readiness for potential
threats from a near-peer adversary, including--
(A) a comparison of rates of simulator usage for military
pilots and non-pilot aviators within and not within the pre-
deployment training window; and
(B) an assessment of the suitability of training curriculum
to address high-end combat operations against a near-peer
adversary.
(4) An analysis of aviation squadron size and composition,
including--
(A) individual unit-level aircraft allocation;
(B) aviation platform-specific force structure; and
(C) quantity of squadrons within each aviation platform.
(5) An analysis of aviation squadron manning documents on
appropriate levels and composition of military pilots, non-
pilot aviators, and non-aircrew for each squadron in support
of the most current National Defense Strategy, including a
consideration of--
(A) appropriate levels and composition of military pilots,
non-pilot aviators, and non-aircrew for each squadron in
support of such National Defense Strategy;
(B) flight-related workload compared with non-flight
related workload for military pilots and non-pilot aviators;
(C) the number of different aircraft platforms to which
enlisted maintenance personnel are expected to be assigned
throughout a typical career; and
(D) career training milestones for enlisted maintenance
personnel, and the effects of such milestones on military
aviation readiness.
(6) An analysis of logistics programs in support of
military aviation readiness, including--
(A) an evaluation of any shortfalls in logistics programs
that serve as contributing factors to both military pilot
retention and overall readiness of military aviation units;
(B) an analysis of aircraft parts cannibalization rates;
(C) a determination of average mission capable ratings for
aircraft throughout the various stages of the deployment
cycle;
(D) an analysis of rates of reassignment of aircraft from
non-deploying units to deploying units; and
(E) an identification of individual aircraft communities,
if any, with strained supply chains with single-source
suppliers.
SEC. 1045. REPORT ON CAPABILITIES AND CAPACITIES OF ARMORED
BRIGADE COMBAT TEAMS.
(a) In General.--Not later than 60 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army shall
submit to the congressional defense committees a report on
the capabilities and capacities of Armored Brigade Combat
Teams (ABCTs).
(b) Elements.--The report required under subsection (a)
shall include the following:
(1) A description of the total number of Armored Brigade
Combat Teams required to support the National Defense
Strategy (NDS).
(2) A description of the manner in which the Army plans to
equip and field future Armored Brigade Combat Teams.
(3) A description of the total number of mechanized
infantry companies required in support of the Armored Brigade
Combat Teams.
(4) A description of steps being taken to improve the
number and quality of live-fire gunnery exercises executed
each year, including improving execution of battalion and
brigade-level combined arms live-fire exercises both at home
station and at the Combat Training Centers.
(5) A description of training being conducted to train
Armored Brigade Combat Teams in combined arms for air defense
and to counter unmanned aerial vehicles with organic weapons
and tactics.
(6) A plan to improve personnel preparedness by the
reduction of non-deployable soldiers and improvements in
combat vehicle crew stability and material readiness of key
combat systems.
(7) A description of deficiencies in repair parts and
number of qualified mechanics, and a plan to correct such
deficiencies.
(8) A plan for the modernization of the Armored Brigade
Combat Teams.
SEC. 1046. IMPROVEMENT OF ANNUAL REPORT ON CIVILIAN
CASUALTIES IN CONNECTION WITH UNITED STATES
MILITARY OPERATIONS.
(a) Modification and Expansion of Elements.--Subsection (b)
of section 1057 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91) is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by inserting ``, including each
specific mission, strike, engagement, raid, or incident,''
after ``military operations'';
(2) in paragraph (2)(E), by inserting before the period at
the end the following: ``, including a differentiation
between those killed and those injured'';
(3) in paragraph (3), by inserting before the period at the
end the following: ``, and, when appropriate, makes ex gratia
payments to the victims or their families'';
(4) by redesignating paragraph (5) as paragraph (6); and
(5) by inserting after paragraph (4) the following new
paragraph (5):
``(5) Any update or modification to any report under this
section during a previous year.''.
(b) Scope of Unclassified Form of Report.--Subsection (d)
of such section is amended by adding at the end the following
new sentence: ``The unclassified form of each report shall,
at a minimum, be responsive to each element under subsection
(b) of a report under subsection (a), and shall be made
available to the public at the same time it is submitted to
Congress (unless the Secretary certifies in writing that the
publication of such information poses a threat to the
national security interests of the United States).''.
SEC. 1047. REPORT ON DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE PARTICIPATION IN
EXPORT ADMINISTRATION REGULATIONS LICENSE
APPLICATION REVIEW PROCESS.
(a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the
enactment of this Act, and every 180 days thereafter until
the date that is three years after such date of enactment,
the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report on the
participation by the Department of Defense in the process for
reviewing applications for export licenses under the Export
Administration Regulations as a reviewing agency under
Executive Order 12981 (50 U.S.C. 4603 note; relating to
administration of export controls).
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall
include the following:
(1) The number of applications for export licenses under
the Export Administration Regulations reviewed by the
Department of Defense in the 180-day period preceding the
submission of the report.
(2) The number of instances during that 180-day period in
which the Department disagreed with a final determination
made with respect to such an application under the review
procedures set forth in Executive Order 12981.
(3) A summary of such instances, including--
(A) a summary of the applicants for such licenses and the
recipients of items pursuant to such licenses in such
instances;
(B) a description of sensitive technologies involved in
such instances; and
(C) a description of the rationale of the Department for
disagreeing with such determinations.
(4) The number of such applications under review by the
Department or undergoing interagency dispute resolution as of
the date of the submission of the report.
(c) Form.--The report required by subsection (a) shall be
submitted in unclassified form but may include a classified
annex.
(d) Export Administration Regulations Defined.--In this
section, the term ``Export Administration Regulations'' means
subchapter C of chapter VII of title 15, Code of Federal
Regulations.
SEC. 1048. AUTOMATIC SUNSET FOR FUTURE STATUTORY REPORTING
REQUIREMENTS.
(a) In General.--Chapter 23 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by inserting after section 480 the following
new section:
``Sec. 480a. Reports to Congress: termination of indefinite-
duration reports after three years
``(a) In General.--Any provision of law enacted on or after
the date of enactment of this section that includes an
indefinite-duration report requirement shall cease to be
effective, with respect to that requirement, three years
after the date of the enactment of that provision of law
unless that provision of law expressly states that this
section is inapplicable to that requirement or that provision
of law.
``(b) Indefinite-duration Report Requirement Defined.--In
this section, the term `indefinite-duration requirement'
means a requirement in any provision of law for the Secretary
of Defense (or any other officer or employee of the
Department of Defense) to submit to Congress (or any
committee of Congress) a periodic report for which the law
does not--
``(1) state a specific period of time as the period during
which that report is required to be submitted or that
provision of law is in effect; or
``(2) state a specific termination date for the requirement
to submit the report or for that provision of law.
``(c) Periodic Report Defined.--In this section, the term
`periodic report' means a report required to be submitted on
an annual, semiannual, or other regular periodic basis.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 23 of such title is amended by inserting
after the item relating to section 480 the following new
item:
``480a. Reports to Congress: termination of indefinite-duration reports
after three years.''.
[[Page S3462]]
SEC. 1049. REPEAL OF CERTAIN DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE REPORTING
REQUIREMENTS THAT OTHERWISE TERMINATE AS OF
DECEMBER 31, 2021.
(a) Title 10, United States Code.--Title 10, United States
Code, is amended as follows:
(1)(A) Section 229, relating to the display of budget
information for programs for combating terrorism, is
repealed.
(B) The table of sections at the beginning of chapter 9 is
amended by striking the item relating to section 229.
(2)(A) Section 231a, relating to budgeting for life-cycle
costs of aircraft for the Navy, Army, and Air Force, is
repealed.
(B) The table of sections at the beginning of chapter 9 is
amended by striking the item relating to section 231a.
(3) Section 2276, relating to commercial space launch
cooperation, is amended--
(A) by striking subsection (e); and
(B) by redesignating subsections (f) and (g) as subsections
(e) and (f), respectively.
(4) Section 7310, relating to report on repair of certain
vessels in foreign shipyards, is amended by striking
subsection (c).
(b) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2007.--Section 1017 of the John Warner National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2007 (Public Law 109-364;
120 Stat. 2379), relating to obtaining carriage by vessel, is
amended--
(1) by striking subsection (e); and
(2) by redesignating subsection (f) as subsection (e).
(c) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2008.--Section 1034(d) of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (10 U.S.C. 272 note), relating to
distribution of chemical and biological agents to non-Federal
entities, is amended--
(1) by striking subsection (d); and
(2) by redesignating subsection (e) as subsection (d).
(d) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2009.--Section 1047(d) of the Duncan Hunter National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 (10 U.S.C. 2366b
note), relating to reports on bandwidth requirements for
major defense acquisition programs, is amended--
(1) by striking paragraph (2);
(2) by striking ``(d) Formal Review Process for Bandwidth
Requirements .--'' and all that follows through ``(1) In
general.--The Secretary'' and inserting the following:
``(d) Formal Review Process for Bandwidth Requirements.--
The Secretary''; and
(3) by redesignating subparagraphs (A) and (B) as
paragraphs (1) and (2), respectively, and indenting
appropriately.
(e) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2011.--Section 1217 of the Ike Skelton National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011 (22 U.S.C. 7513 note),
relating to authority to establish a program to develop and
carry out infrastructure projects in Afghanistan, is
amended--
(1) by striking subsection (i); and
(2) by redesignating subsection (j) as subsection (i).
(f) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2015.--Section 1026 of the Carl Levin and Howard P. ``Buck''
McKeon National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2015 (Public Law 113-291; 127 Stat. 3490), relating to
availability of funds for retirement of inactivation of
Ticonderoga class cruisers or dock landing ships, is
amended--
(1) by striking subsection (d); and
(2) by redesignating subsection (e) as subsection (d).
(g) Conforming Amendments.--Section 1061 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (10 U.S.C. 111
note) is amended--
(1) in subsection (c), by striking paragraphs (14), (16),
(41), and (59);
(2) in subsection (d), by striking paragraph (3);
(3) in subsection (g), by striking paragraph (3); and
(4) in subsection (i), by striking paragraphs (15), (18),
and (24).
SEC. 1050. REPORT ON POTENTIAL IMPROVEMENTS TO CERTAIN
MILITARY EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS OF THE
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
(a) Report Required.--
(1) In general.--Not later than December 1, 2019, the
Secretary of Defense shall submit to the Committees on Armed
Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a
report setting forth the results of a review and assessment,
obtained by the Secretary for purposes of the report, of the
potential effects on the military education provided by the
educational institutions of the Department of Defense
specified in subsection (b) of the actions described in
subsection (c).
(2) Conducting organization.--The review and assessment
required for purposes of the report shall be performed by an
organization selected by the Secretary from among
organizations independent of the Department that have
expertise in the analysis of matters in connection with
higher education.
(b) Educational Institutions of the Department of
Defense.--The educational institutions of the Department of
Defense specified in this subsection are the following:
(1) The senior level service schools and intermediate level
service schools (as such terms are defined in section 2151(b)
of title 10, United States Code).
(2) The Air Force Institute of Technology.
(3) The National Defense University.
(4) The Joint Special Operations University.
(5) The Army Armament Graduate School.
(6) Any other military educational institution of the
Department specified by the Secretary for purposes of this
section.
(c) Actions.--The actions described in this subsection with
respect to the educational institutions of the Department of
Defense specified in subsection (b) are the following:
(1) Modification of admission and graduation requirements.
(2) Reduction or expansion of degree-granting authority.
(3) Reduction or expansion of the acceptance of research
grants.
(4) Reduction of the number of attending students
generally.
(5) Reduction of the number of attending students through
the sponsoring of education of an increased number of
students at non-Department of Defense education institutions
of higher education.
(6) Increase in the frequency of curriculum changes to
account for emerging subject matters of importance to
national defense.
(7) Modification of civilian faculty management practices,
including employment practices.
(d) Additional Elements.--In addition to the matters
described in subsection (a), the review and report under this
section shall also include the following:
(1) A comparison of admission standards and graduation
requirements of the educational institutions of the
Department of Defense specified in subsection (b) with
admission standards and graduation requirements of public and
private institutions of higher education that are comparable
to the educational institutions of the Department of Defense.
(2) A comparison of the goals and missions of the
educational institutions of the Department of Defense
specified in subsection (b) with the goals and missions of
such public and private institutions of higher education.
(3) Any other matters the Secretary considers appropriate
for purposes of this section.
SEC. 1051. RECRUITING COSTS OF THE ARMED FORCES.
(a) Briefing Required.--Not later than one year after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense
shall brief the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate
and the House of Representatives on the results of a study,
conducted by the Secretary for purposes of the briefing, on
the costs of the Armed Forces in recruiting for members of
the Armed Forces.
(b) Elements.--The briefing required by subsection (a)
shall include the following:
(1) A description of the recruiting costs of each Armed
Force in each of fiscal years 2010 through 2019.
(2) An estimate of the recruiting costs of each Armed Force
in each of fiscal years 2020 through 2024.
(3) A description of the factors that contributed
significantly to the recruiting costs of the Armed Forces
during fiscal years 2010 through 2019.
(4) Any other matters in connection with the recruiting
costs of the Armed Forces that the Secretary considers
appropriate.
Subtitle F--Other Matters
SEC. 1061. AUTHORITY TO TRANSFER FUNDS FOR BIEN HOA DIOXIN
CLEANUP.
(a) Transfer Authority.--Notwithstanding section 2215 of
title 10, United States Code, the Secretary of Defense may
transfer to the Secretary of State, for use by the United
States Agency for International Development, amounts to be
used for the Bien Hoa dioxin cleanup in Vietnam.
(b) Limitation on Amounts.--Not more than $15,000,000 may
be transferred in each of fiscal years 2019 through 2027
under the authority in subsection (a).
(c) Source of Funds.--The Secretary of Defense may transfer
funds appropriated to the Department of Defense for
``Operation and Maintenance, Defense-wide'' under the
authority in subsection (a) .
(d) Additional Transfer Authority.--The transfer authority
provided under subsection (a) is in addition to any other
transfer authority available to the Department of Defense.
SEC. 1062. IMPROVEMENT OF DATABASE ON EMERGENCY RESPONSE
CAPABILITIES.
(a) In General.--Section 1406 of the John Warner National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2007 (Public Law
109-364; 120 Stat. 2436; 10 U.S.C. 113 note) is amended--
(1) by inserting before ``The Secretary'' the following:
``(a) Database Required.--'';
(2) in subsection (a), as designated by paragraph (1)--
(A) in paragraph (1)--
(i) by striking ``each States's National Guard, as reported
by the States'' and inserting ``the National Guard of each
State and Territory, as reported by the States and
Territories''; and
(ii) by inserting ``and Territories'' after ``their home
States''; and
(B) by adding at the end the following new paragraphs:
``(3) Cyber capabilities of the National Guard identified
by the Department as critical for response to domestic
natural or manmade disasters.
``(4) Cyber capabilities of the other reserve components of
the Armed Forces identified by the Department as critical for
response to domestic natural or manmade disasters.''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(b) Information Required To Keep Database Current.--In
maintaining the database
[[Page S3463]]
required by subsection (a), the Secretary shall identify and
revise the information required to be included in the
database at least once every two years for purposes of
keeping the database current.''.
(b) Establishment of Database.--
(1) Deadline for establishment.--The Secretary of Defense
shall establish the database required by section 1406 of the
John Warner National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2007, as amended by subsection (a), by not later than
one year after the date of the enactment of this Act.
(2) Use of existing database or system for certain
capabilities.--The Secretary may meet the requirement with
respect to the capabilities described in subsection (a)(1) of
section 1406 of the John Warner National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2007, as so amended, in
connection with the database required by that section through
use or modification of a current database or tracking system
of the Department of Defense if the Secretary determines that
such action will--
(A) expedite compliance with the requirement; and
(B) achieve such compliance at a cost not greater than the
cost of establishing anew the database otherwise covered by
the requirement.
SEC. 1063. ACCEPTANCE AND DISTRIBUTION BY DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE OF ASSISTANCE FROM CERTAIN NONPROFIT
ENTITIES IN SUPPORT OF MISSIONS OF DEPLOYED
UNITED STATES PERSONNEL AROUND THE WORLD.
(a) Finding.--The Senate finds that Spirit of America, a
privately-funded, nonpartisan, nonprofit organization, acting
in partnership with the Department of Defense, has made an
important contribution in supporting the missions of deployed
United States personnel around the world.
(b) Sense of Senate.--It is the sense of the Senate that
United States military commanders should, consistent with
applicable laws, regulations, and guidance developed
consistent with section 1088 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91),
collaborate with and provide transportation and other
logistical support to covered non-Federal entities, including
Spirit of America, to advance the military missions of the
Armed Forces.
(c) Distribution of Covered Non-Federal Entity Assistance
Abroad Through Department of Defense.--
(1) Acceptance and coordination of assistance.--The
Department of Defense (including members of the Armed Forces)
may, at the discretion of the Secretary of Defense and in
accordance with guidance issued by the Secretary and
developed in coordination with the Secretary of State and the
Administrator of the United States Agency for International
Development--
(A) accept from any covered non-Federal entity
humanitarian, economic, and other nonlethal assistance funded
by private funds in the carrying out of the purposes of such
entity; and
(B) respond to requests from covered non-Federal entities
for the identification of the needs of local populations
abroad for assistance, and coordinate with such entitites in
the provision and distribution of such assistance, in the
carrying out of such purposes.
(2) Distribution of assistance to local populations.--In
accordance with guidance issued by the Secretary of Defense,
and developed in coordination with the Secretary of State and
the Administrator of the United States Agency for
International Development, members of the Armed Forces abroad
may provide to local populations abroad humanitarian,
economic, and other nonlethal assistance provided to the
Department by a covered non-Federal entity pursuant to this
subsection.
(3) Scope of guidance.--The guidance issued pursuant to
this subsection shall ensure that any assistance distributed
pursuant to this subsection shall be for purposes of
supporting the mission or missions of the Department and the
Armed Forces for which such assistance is provided by a
covered non-Federal entity.
(4) Dod support for entity activities.--In accordance with
guidance issued by the Secretary of Defense, the Department,
and the Armed Forces may--
(A) provide transportation, lodging, storage, and other
logistical support--
(i) to personnel of a covered non-Federal entity (whether
in the United States or abroad) who are carrying out the
purposes of such entity; and
(ii) in connection with the acceptance and distribution of
assistance provided by a covered non-Federal entity; and
(B) use assets of the Department and the Armed Forces in
the provision of support described in subparagraph (A).
(d) Covered Non-Federal Entity Defined.--In this section,
the term ``covered non-Federal entity'' means the following:
(1) Spirit of America, a privately-funded, nonpartisan,
nonprofit organization described in section 501(c)(3) of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986 that is exempt from taxation
under section 501(a) of such Code.
(2) Any other organization that--
(A) is based in the United States;
(B) has an independent board of directors and is subject to
independent financial audits;
(C) is substantially privately-funded;
(D) is described in section 501(c)(3) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986 and is exempt from taxation under
section 501(a) of such Code; and
(E) provides international assistance.
SEC. 1064. UNITED STATES POLICY WITH RESPECT TO FREEDOM OF
NAVIGATION AND OVERFLIGHT.
(a) Declaration of Policy.--It is the policy of the United
States to fly, sail, and operate throughout the oceans, seas,
and airspace of the world wherever international law allows.
(b) Implementation of Policy.--In furtherance of the policy
set forth in subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense
should--
(1) plan and execute a robust series of routine and regular
air and naval presence missions throughout the world and
throughout the year, including for critical transportation
corridors and key routes for global commerce;
(2) in addition to the missions executed pursuant to
paragraph (1), execute routine and regular air and maritime
freedom of navigation operations throughout the year, in
accordance with international law, including the use of
expanded military options and maneuvers beyond innocent
passage; and
(3) to the maximum extent practicable, execute the missions
pursuant to paragraphs (1) and (2) with regional partner
countries and allies of the United States.
SEC. 1065. PROHIBITION OF FUNDS FOR CHINESE LANGUAGE
INSTRUCTION PROVIDED BY A CONFUCIUS INSTITUTE.
(a) Prohibition.--None of the funds authorized to be
appropriated by this Act or otherwise made available for
fiscal year 2019 under this Act may be obligated or expended
for Chinese language instruction provided by a Confucius
Institute.
(b) Limitation.--None of the funds authorized to be
appropriated by this Act or otherwise made available for
fiscal year 2019 under this Act may be obligated or expended
to support a Chinese language program at an institution of
higher education that hosts a Confucius Institute.
(c) Waiver.--The Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel
and Readiness may waive the limitation in subsection (b) with
respect to a Chinese language program at a specific
institution of higher education if the Under Secretary of
Defense for Personnel and Readiness--
(1) certifies to the congressional defense committees
that--
(A) Confucius Institute employees and instructors will have
no affiliation with the program;
(B) Confucius Institute employees and instructors will
provide no instruction or support to the program;
(C) Confucius Institute employees and instructors will have
no authority or influence with regard to the curriculum and
activities of the program; and
(D) the institution has made publicly available all
memoranda of understanding, contracts, and other agreements
between the institution and the Confucius Institute, or
between the institution and any agency of or organization
affiliated with the government of the People's Republic of
China; or
(2) certifies to the congressional defense committees
that--
(A) the requirements described in subparagraphs (A) through
(C) of paragraph (1) have been met; and
(B) the waiver of the limitation in subsection (b) is
necessary for national security, and there is no reasonable
alternative to issuing the waiver.
(d) Definitions.--
(1) Chinese language program.--The term ``Chinese language
program'' means any Department of Defense program designed to
provide or support Chinese language instruction, including
the National Security Education Program, the Language
Flagship program, Project Global Officer, and the Language
Training Centers program.
(2) Confucius institute.--The term ``Confucius Institute''
means a Confucius Institute that is operated by the Office of
Chinese Languages Council International, also known as
Hanban, which is affiliated with the Ministry of Education of
the People's Republic of China.
(3) Institution of higher education.--The term
``institution of higher education'' has the meaning given the
term in section 101 of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20
U.S.C. 1001 et seq.).
TITLE XI--CIVILIAN PERSONNEL MATTERS
Subtitle A--Department of Defense Matters
SEC. 1101. INAPPLICABILITY OF CERTIFICATION OF EXECUTIVE
QUALIFICATIONS BY QUALIFICATION REVIEW BOARDS
OF OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT FOR INITIAL
APPOINTMENTS TO SENIOR EXECUTIVE SERVICE
POSITIONS IN DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
(a) Temporary Inapplicability.--Notwithstanding section
3393(c) of title 5, United States Code, or any regulations
implementing that section, and subject to the provisions of
this section, the Secretary of Defense may appoint
individuals for service in the Senior Executive Service of
the Department of Defense without such individuals being
subject to the certification of executive qualifications by a
qualification review board of the Office of Personnel
Management in connection with such appointment otherwise
required by that section.
(b) Qualifications of Individuals Appointed.--The Secretary
shall ensure that individuals appointed under this section
possess the necessary qualifications and experience for the
position to which appointed.
[[Page S3464]]
(c) Limitation.--The total number of appointments made
under this section in any year may not exceed 50
appointments.
(d) Reports.--
(1) Initial report.--Not later than one year after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to
the committees of Congress and official specified in
paragraph (3) a report on the number and type of appointments
made under this section as of the date of the report,
including--
(A) a description of the qualifications of the individuals
appointed; and
(B) data on the time required to appoint the individuals.
(2) Final report.--Not later than two years after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to
the committees of Congress and official specified in
paragraph (3) a report on the use of the authority in this
section. The report shall include the following:
(A) The number and type of appointments made under this
section during the one-year period ending on the date of the
report.
(B) Data on and an assessment whether appointments under
the authority in this section reduced the time to hire when
compared with the time to hire under the current review
system of the Office of Personnel Management.
(C) An assessment of the utility of the appointment
authority and process under this section.
(D) An assessment whether the appointments made under this
section resulted in higher quality new executives for the
Senior Executive Service of the Department when compared with
the executives produced under the current review system of
the Office of Personnel Management.
(E) Any recommendation for the improvement of the selection
and qualification process for the Senior Executive Service of
the Department that the Secretary considers necessary in
order to attract and hire highly qualified candidates for
service in that Senior Executive Service.
(3) Committees of congress and official.--The committees of
Congress and official specified in this paragraph are--
(A) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on
Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs of the Senate;
(B) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on
Oversight and Government Reform of the House of
Representatives; and
(C) the Director of the Office of Personnel Management.
(e) Sunset.--Subsection (a) shall cease to be effective on
the date that is two years after the date of the enactment of
this Act.
SEC. 1102. DIRECT HIRE AUTHORITY FOR SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
REINVENTION LABORATORIES AND MAJOR RANGE AND
TEST FACILITIES BASE FACILITIES FOR RECENT
SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ENGINEERING, AND
MATHEMATICS GRADUATES OF MINORITY-SERVING
INSTITUTIONS.
(a) Authority To Make Direct Appointments.--The director of
any facility specified in subsection (b) may appoint any
qualified recent graduate of a covered educational
institution with a degree in science, technology,
engineering, or mathematics to a position at such facility
described in subsection (d) without regard to the provisions
of subchapter I of chapter 33 of title 5, United States Code.
(b) Facilities.--A facility specified in this subsection is
any facility as follows:
(1) A science and technology reinvention laboratory of the
Department of Defense, as designated pursuant to section
1105(a) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2010 (10 U.S.C. 2358 note).
(2) A facility of the Major Range and Test Facilities Base
of the Department.
(c) Recent Graduates.--For purposes of this section, a
person is a recent graduate of a covered educational
institution if--
(1) the person was awarded a degree by the institution not
more than two years before the date of the appointment of the
person pursuant to this section; or
(2) in the case of any person who has completed a period of
obligated service in a uniformed service of more than four
years as of the date the appointment of the person pursuant
to this section, the person was awarded a degree by the
institution not more than four years before such date of
appointment.
(d) Covered Positions.--The positions to which persons may
be appointed pursuant to this section at a facility specified
in subsection (b) are scientific and engineering positions at
the facility.
(e) Duration of Appointment.--Any appointment pursuant to
this section may be made on a temporary, term, or permanent
basis, at the election of the director of the facility making
such appointment.
(f) Covered Educational Institution Defined.--In this
section, the term ``covered educational institution'' has the
meaning given that term in section 2362(e) of title 10,
United States Code.
(g) Sunset.--
(1) In general.--The authority to make appointments under
this section shall expire on the date that is five years
after the date of the enactment of this Act.
(2) Construction.--Nothing in paragraph (1) shall be
construed to terminate an appointment made under this section
before the expiration date provided in that paragraph in
accordance with the terms of such appointment.
SEC. 1103. INCLUSION OF STRATEGIC CAPABILITIES OFFICE AND
DEFENSE INNOVATION UNIT EXPERIMENTAL OF THE
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE IN PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT
AUTHORITY TO ATTRACT EXPERTS IN SCIENCE AND
ENGINEERING.
(a) In General.--Subsection (a) of section 1599h of title
10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the
following new paragraphs:
``(4) Strategic capabilities office.--The Director of the
Strategic Capabilities Office may carry out a program of
personnel management authority provided in subsection (b) in
order to facilitate recruitment of eminent experts in science
or engineering for the Office.
``(5) DIUx.--The Director of the Defense Innovation Unit
Experimental may carry out a program of personnel management
authority provided in subsection (b) in order to facilitate
recruitment of eminent experts in science or engineering for
the Unit.''.
(b) Scope of Appointment Authority.--Subsection (b)(1) of
such section is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``and'' at the end;
and
(2) by adding at the end the following new subparagraphs:
``(D) in the case of the Strategic Capabilities Office,
appoint scientists and engineers to a total of not more than
5 scientific and engineering positions in the Office; and
``(E) in the case of the Defense Innovation Unit
Experimental, appoint scientists and engineers to a total of
not more than 5 scientific and engineering positions in the
Unit;''.
(c) Extension of Terms of Appointment.--Subsection (c)(2)
of such section is amended by striking ``or the Office of
Operational Test and Evaluation'' and inserting ``the Office
of Operational Test and Evaluation, the Strategic
Capabilities Office, or the Defense Innovation Unit
Experimental''.
SEC. 1104. ENHANCEMENT OF FLEXIBLE MANAGEMENT AUTHORITIES FOR
SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY REINVENTION LABORATORIES
OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
(a) Enhancement of Noncompetitive Conversions of
Appointments of Students Enrolled in Scientific and
Engineering Programs.--Section 2358a(a)(4) of title 10,
United States Code, is amended--
(1) in the paragraph heading, by striking ``to permanent
appointment'' and inserting ``of appointments''; and
(2) by striking ``to a permanent appointment'' and
inserting ``to another temporary appointment or to a term or
permanent appointment''.
(b) Enhancement of Pilot Program on Dynamic Shaping of
Workforce Technical Skills and Expertise.--Section
1109(b)(1)(A) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 1028; 10
U.S.C. 2358 note) is amended by striking ``to appoint'' and
all that follows and inserting ``to make appointments as
follows:
``(i) Appointment of qualified scientific and technical
personnel who are not current Department of Defense civilian
employees into any scientific or technical position in the
laboratory for a period of more than one year but not more
than six years.
``(ii) Appointment of qualified scientific and technical
personnel who are Department civilian employees in term
appointments into any scientific or technical position in the
laboratory for a period of more than one year but not more
than six years.''.
SEC. 1105. INCLUSION OF OFFICE OF SECRETARY OF DEFENSE AMONG
COMPONENTS OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE COVERED
BY DIRECT HIRE AUTHORITY FOR FINANCIAL
MANAGEMENT EXPERTS.
Section 1110(f) of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2017 (10 U.S.C. 1580 note prec.) is amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraphs (1) through (9) as
paragraphs (2) through (10), respectively; and
(2) by inserting before paragraph (2) the following new
paragraph (1):
``(1) The Office of the Secretary of Defense.''.
SEC. 1106. AUTHORITY TO EMPLOY CIVILIAN FACULTY MEMBERS AT
THE JOINT SPECIAL OPERATIONS UNIVERSITY.
Section 1595(c) of title 10, United States Code, is amended
by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(5) The Joint Special Operations University.''.
Subtitle B--Government-Wide Matters
SEC. 1121. ALCOHOL TESTING OF CIVIL SERVICE MARINERS OF THE
MILITARY SEALIFT COMMAND ASSIGNED TO VESSELS.
(a) Alcohol Testing.--Chapter 643 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by inserting after section 7479 the
following new section:
``Sec. 7479a. Civil service mariners of Military Sealift
Command: alcohol testing
``The Secretary of the Navy may prescribe regulations
establishing a program to conduct on-duty reasonable
suspicion alcohol testing and post-accident alcohol testing
of civil service mariners of the Military Sealift Command who
are assigned to vessels.''.
(b) Release of Alcohol Test Results.--
(1) In general.--Section 7479 of such title is amended--
(A) in the heading of subsection (a), by inserting ``or
Alcohol'' after ``Drug''; and
(B) by inserting ``or alcohol'' after ``drug'' each place
it appears.
(2) Heading amendment.--The heading of such section is
amended to read as follows:
[[Page S3465]]
``Sec. 7479. Civil service mariners of Military Sealift
Command: release of drug and alcohol test results to Coast
Guard''.
(c) Table of Sections Amendment.--The table of sections at
the beginning of chapter 643 of such title is amended by
striking the item relating to section 7479 and inserting the
following new items:
``7479. Civil service mariners of Military Sealift Command: release of
drug and alcohol test results to Coast Guard.
``7479a. Civil service mariners of Military Sealift Command: alcohol
testing.''.
SEC. 1122. EXPEDITED HIRING AUTHORITY FOR COLLEGE GRADUATES
AND POST SECONDARY STUDENTS.
(a) In General.--Subchapter I of chapter 31 of title 5,
United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the
following:
``Sec. 3115. Expedited hiring authority for college
graduates; competitive service
``(a) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) Director.--The term `Director' means the Director of
the Office of Personnel Management.
``(2) Institution of higher education.--The term
`institution of higher education' has the meaning given the
term in section 101(a) of the Higher Education Act of 1965
(20 U.S.C. 1001(a)).
``(b) Appointment.--
``(1) In general.--The head of an agency may appoint,
without regard to any provision of sections 3309 through 3319
and 3330, a qualified individual to a position in the
competitive service classified in a professional or
administrative occupational category at the GS-11 level, or
an equivalent level, or below.
``(2) Restrictions.--An appointment under paragraph (1)
shall be made in accordance with regulations prescribed by
the Director.
``(c) Qualifications for Appointment.--The head of an
agency may make an appointment under subsection (b) only if
the individual being appointed--
``(1) has received a baccalaureate or graduate degree from
an institution of higher education;
``(2) applies for the position--
``(A) not later than 2 years after the date on which the
individual being appointed received the degree described in
paragraph (1); or
``(B) in the case of an individual who has completed a
period of not less than 4 years of obligated service in a
uniformed service, not later than 2 years after the date of
the discharge or release of the individual from that service;
and
``(3) meets each minimum qualification standard prescribed
by the Director for the position to which the individual is
being appointed.
``(d) Public Notice and Advertising.--
``(1) In general.--The head of an agency making an
appointment under subsection (b) shall publicly advertise
positions under this section.
``(2) Requirements.--In carrying out paragraph (1), the
head of an agency shall--
``(A) adhere to merit system principles;
``(B) advertise positions in a manner that provides for
diverse and qualified applicants; and
``(C) ensure potential applicants have appropriate
information relevant to the positions available.
``(e) Limitation on Appointments.--
``(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), the
total number of employees that the head of an agency may
appoint under this section during a fiscal year may not
exceed the number equal to 15 percent of the number of
individuals that the agency head appointed during the
previous fiscal year to a position in the competitive service
classified in a professional or administrative occupational
category, at the GS-11 level, or an equivalent level, or
below, under a competitive examining procedure.
``(2) Exceptions.--Under a regulation prescribed under
subsection (f), the Director may establish a lower limit on
the number of individuals that may be appointed under
paragraph (1) of this subsection during a fiscal year based
on any factor the Director considers appropriate.
``(f) Regulations.--Not later than 180 days after the date
of enactment of this section, the Director shall issue
interim regulations, with an opportunity for comment, for the
administration of this section.
``(g) Reporting.--
``(1) In general.--Not later than September 30 of each of
the first 3 fiscal years beginning after the date of
enactment of this section, the head of an agency that makes
an appointment under this section shall submit a report to--
``(A) Congress that assesses the impact of the use of the
authority provided under this section during the fiscal year
in which the report is submitted; and
``(B) the Director that contains data that the Director
considers necessary for the Director to assess the impact and
effectiveness of the authority described in subparagraph (A).
``(2) Content.--The head of an agency shall include in each
report under paragraph (1)--
``(A) the total number of individuals appointed by the
agency under this section, as well as the number of such
individuals who are--
``(i) minorities or members of other underrepresented
groups; or
``(ii) veterans;
``(B) recruitment sources;
``(C) the total number of individuals appointed by the
agency during the applicable fiscal year to a position in the
competitive service classified in a professional or
administrative occupational category at the GS-11 level, or
an equivalent level, or below; and
``(D) any additional data specified by the Director.
``(h) Special Provision Regarding the Department of
Defense.--
``(1) Authority.--Nothing in this section shall preclude
the Secretary of Defense from exercising any authority to
appoint a recent graduate under section 1106 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (10 U.S.C.
note prec. 1580), or any applicable successor statute.
``(2) Regulations.--Any regulations prescribed by the
Director for the administration of this section shall not
apply to the Department of Defense during the period ending
on the date on which the appointment authority of the
Secretary of Defense under section 1106 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (10 U.S.C.
note prec. 1580), or any applicable successor statute,
terminates.
``Sec. 3116. Expedited hiring authority for post-secondary
students; competitive service
``(a) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) Director.--The term `Director' means the Director of
the Office of Personnel Management.
``(2) Institution of higher education.--The term
`institution of higher education' has the meaning given the
term in section 101(a) of the Higher Education Act of 1965
(20 U.S.C. 1001(a)).
``(3) Student.--The term `student' means an individual
enrolled or accepted for enrollment in an institution of
higher education who is pursuing a baccalaureate or graduate
degree on at least a part-time basis as determined by the
institution of higher education.
``(b) Appointment.--
``(1) In general.--The head of an agency may make a time-
limited appointment of a student, without regard to any
provision of sections 3309 through 3319 and 3330, to a
position in the competitive service at the GS-11 level, or an
equivalent level, or below for which the student is
qualified.
``(2) Restrictions.--An appointment under paragraph (1)
shall be made in accordance with regulations prescribed by
the Director.
``(c) Public Notice.--
``(1) In general.--The head of an agency making an
appointment under subsection (b) shall publicly advertise
positions available under this section.
``(2) Requirements.--In carrying out paragraph (1), the
head of an agency shall--
``(A) adhere to merit system principles;
``(B) advertise positions in a manner that provides for
diverse and qualified applicants; and
``(C) ensure potential applicants have appropriate
information relevant to the positions available.
``(d) Limitation on Appointments.--
``(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), the
total number of students that the head of an agency may
appoint under this section during a fiscal year may not
exceed the number equal to 15 percent of the number of
students that the agency head appointed during the previous
fiscal year to a position in the competitive service at the
GS-11 level, or an equivalent level, or below.
``(2) Exceptions.--Under a regulation prescribed under
subsection (g), the Director may establish a lower limit on
the number of students that may be appointed under paragraph
(1) of this subsection during a fiscal year based on any
factor the Director considers appropriate.
``(e) Conversion.--The head of an agency may, without
regard to any provision of chapter 33 or any other provision
of law relating to the examination, certification, and
appointment of individuals in the competitive service,
convert a student serving in an appointment under subsection
(b) to a permanent appointment in the competitive service
within the agency without further competition if the
student--
``(1) has completed the course of study leading to the
baccalaureate or graduate degree;
``(2) has completed not less than 640 hours of current
continuous employment in an appointment under subsection (b);
and
``(3) meets the qualification standards for the position to
which the student will be converted.
``(f) Termination.--The head of an agency shall, without
regard to any provision of chapter 35 or 75, terminate the
appointment of a student appointed under subsection (b) upon
completion of the designated academic course of study unless
the student is selected for conversion under subsection (e).
``(g) Regulations.--Not later than 180 days after the date
of enactment of this section, the Director shall issue
interim regulations, with an opportunity for comment, for the
administration of this section.
``(h) Reporting.--
``(1) In general.--Not later than September 30 of each of
the first 3 fiscal years beginning after the date of
enactment of this section, the head of an agency that makes
an appointment under this section shall submit a report to--
``(A) Congress that assesses the impact of the use of the
authority provided under this section during the fiscal year
in which the report is submitted; and
``(B) the Director that contains data that the Director
considers necessary for the Director to assess the impact and
effectiveness of the authority described in subparagraph (A).
[[Page S3466]]
``(2) Content.--The head of an agency shall include in each
report under paragraph (1)--
``(A) the total number of individuals appointed by the
agency under this section, as well as the number of such
individuals who are--
``(i) minorities or members of other underrepresented
groups; or
``(ii) veterans;
``(B) recruitment sources;
``(C) the total number of individuals appointed by the
agency during the applicable fiscal year to a position in the
competitive service at the GS-11 level, or an equivalent
level, or below; and
``(D) any additional data specified by the Director.
``(i) Special Provision Regarding the Department of
Defense.--
``(1) Authority.--Nothing in this section shall preclude
the Secretary of Defense from exercising any authority to
appoint a post-secondary student under section 1106 of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (10
U.S.C. note prec. 1580), or any applicable successor statute.
``(2) Regulations.--Any regulations prescribed by the
Director for the administration of this section shall not
apply to the Department of Defense during the period ending
on the date on which the appointment authority of the
Secretary of Defense under section 1106 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (10 U.S.C.
note prec. 1580), or any applicable successor statute,
terminates.''.
(b) Table of Sections Amendment.--The table of sections for
subchapter I of chapter 31 of title 5, United States Code, is
amended by adding at the end the following:
``3115. Expedited hiring authority for college graduates; competitive
service.
``3116. Expedited hiring authority for post-secondary students;
competitive service.''.
SEC. 1123. INCREASE IN MAXIMUM AMOUNT OF VOLUNTARY SEPARATION
INCENTIVE PAY AUTHORIZED FOR CIVILIAN
EMPLOYEES.
(a) In General.--Section 3523 of title 5, United States
Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (b)(3)(B), by striking ``$25,000'' and
inserting ``$40,000 (as adjusted in accordance with
subsection (c))''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(c)(1) On March 1 each year, the dollar amount specified
in subsection (b)(3)(B) shall be adjusted by the amount
determined by the Secretary of Labor to represent the
percentage increase, if any, between the Consumer Price Index
(all items; United States city average) published for
December of the preceding year and that price index published
for the December of the year before the preceding year.
``(2) A percentage increase under paragraph (1) shall be
adjusted to the nearest one-tenth of one percent, and an
amount determined under paragraph (1) shall be rounded to the
nearest multiple of $1,000 (or, if midway between multiples
of $1,000, to the next higher multiple of $1,000).''.
(b) Department of Defense Employees.--Section 9902(f)(5) of
such title is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (A)(ii), by striking ``$25,000'' and
inserting ``an amount determined by the Secretary, not to
exceed $40,000 (as adjusted under subparagraph (D)''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following:
``(D)(i) On March 1 each year, the dollar amount specified
in subparagraph (A)(ii) shall be adjusted by the amount
determined by the Secretary of Labor to represent the
percentage increase, if any, between the Consumer Price Index
(all items; United States city average) published for
December of the preceding year and that price index published
for the December of the year before the preceding year.
``(ii) A percentage increase under clause (i) shall be
adjusted to the nearest one-tenth of one percent, and an
amount determined under clause (i) shall be rounded to the
nearest multiple of $1,000 (or, if midway between multiples
of $1,000, to the next higher multiple of $1,000).''.
SEC. 1124. ONE-YEAR EXTENSION OF TEMPORARY AUTHORITY TO GRANT
ALLOWANCES, BENEFITS, AND GRATUITIES TO
CIVILIAN PERSONNEL ON OFFICIAL DUTY IN A COMBAT
ZONE.
Paragraph (2) of section 1603(a) of the Emergency
Supplemental Appropriations Act for Defense, the Global War
on Terror, and Hurricane Recovery, 2006 (Public Law 109-234;
120 Stat. 443), as added by section 1102 of the Duncan Hunter
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009
(Public Law 110-417; 122 Stat. 4616) and most recently
amended by section 1108 of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91), is further
amended by striking ``2019'' and inserting ``2020''.
SEC. 1125. ONE-YEAR EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO WAIVE ANNUAL
LIMITATION ON PREMIUM PAY AND AGGREGATE
LIMITATION ON PAY FOR FEDERAL CIVILIAN
EMPLOYEES WORKING OVERSEAS.
Subsection (a) of section 1101 of the Duncan Hunter
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009
(Public Law 110-417; 122 Stat. 4615), as most recently
amended by section 1105 of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91), is further
amended by striking ``through 2018'' and inserting ``through
2019''.
TITLE XII--MATTERS RELATING TO FOREIGN NATIONS
Subtitle A--Assistance and Training
SEC. 1201. CLARIFICATION OF AUTHORITY FOR USE OF ADVISORS AND
TRAINERS FOR TRAINING OF PERSONNEL OF FOREIGN
MINISTRIES WITH SECURITY MISSIONS UNDER DEFENSE
INSTITUTION CAPACITY BUILDING AUTHORITIES.
Section 332(b) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``assign civilian
employees of the Department of Defense and members of the
armed forces as advisors and trainers'' and inserting
``provide advisors or trainers''; and
(2) in paragraph (2)(B)--
(A) by striking ``assigned'' each place it appears (other
than the last place) and inserting ``provided'';
(B) by striking ``assigned advisor or trainer'' and
inserting ``advisor or trainer so provided''; and
(C) by striking ``each assignment'' and inserting ``each
provision of such an advisor or trainer''.
SEC. 1202. MODIFICATION TO DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE STATE
PARTNERSHIP PROGRAM.
Section 341(b)(2) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by inserting ``assistance'' after ``any''.
SEC. 1203. EXPANSION OF REGIONAL DEFENSE COMBATING TERRORISM
FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM TO INCLUDE IRREGULAR
WARFARE.
(a) In General.--Section 345 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (b) and (c) as subsections
(c) and (d), respectively;
(2) by striking subsection (a) and inserting the following
new subsections (a) and (b):
``(a) Program Authorized.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense may carry out a
program under which the Secretary may pay any costs
associated with the education and training of foreign
military officers, ministry of defense officials, or security
officials at military or civilian educational institutions,
regional centers, conferences, seminars, or other training
programs conducted for purposes of regional defense in
connection with either of the following:
``(A) Combating terrorism.
``(B) Irregular warfare.
``(2) Covered costs.--Costs for which payment may be made
under this section include the costs of transportation and
travel and subsistence costs.
``(3) Designation.--The program authorized by this section
shall be known as the `Regional Defense Combating Terrorism
and Irregular Warfare Fellowship Program'.
``(b) Regulations.--
``(1) In general.--The program authorized by subsection (a)
shall be carried out under regulations prescribed by the
Secretary of Defense.
``(2) Elements.--The regulations shall ensure that--
``(A) the Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of State--
``(i) jointly develop and plan activities under the program
that--
``(I) advance United States security cooperation
objectives; and
``(II) support theater security cooperation planning of the
combatant commands; and
``(ii) coordinate on the implementation of activities under
the program;
``(B) each of the Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of
State designates an individual at the lowest appropriate
level of the Department of Defense or the Department of
State, as applicable, who shall be responsible for program
coordination; and
``(C) to the extent practicable, activities under the
program are appropriately coordinated with, and do not
duplicate or conflict with, activities under International
Military Education and Training (IMET) authorities.
``(3) Submittal to congress.--Upon any update of the
regulations, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the
Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of
Representatives a copy of the regulations as so updated,
together with a description of the update.''; and
(3) in paragraph (3) of subsection (d), as redesignated by
paragraph (1) of this subsection, by striking ``in the global
war on terrorism''.
(b) Conforming Amendments.--
(1) Heading amendment.--The heading of such section is
amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 345. Regional Defense Combating Terrorism and
Irregular Warfare Fellowship Program''.
(2) Table of sections amendment.--The table of sections at
the beginning of subchapter V of chapter 16 of such title is
amended by striking the item relating to section 345 and
inserting the following new item:
``345. Regional Defense Combating Terrorism and Irregular Warfare
Fellowship Program.''.
SEC. 1204. EXTENSION AND MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO SUPPORT
BORDER SECURITY OPERATIONS OF CERTAIN FOREIGN
COUNTRIES.
(a) Expansion of Authority.--Paragraph (1) of subsection
(a) of section 1226 of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2016 (22 U.S.C. 2151 note) is amended to read
as follows:
``(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense, with the
concurrence of the Secretary of State, is authorized to
provide support on a reimbursement basis as follows:
``(A) To the Government of Jordan for purposes of
supporting and enhancing efforts of
[[Page S3467]]
the armed forces of Jordan to increase security and sustain
increased security along the border of Jordan with Syria and
Iraq.
``(B) To the Government of Lebanon for purposes of
supporting and enhancing efforts of the armed forces of
Lebanon to increase security and sustain increased security
along the border of Lebanon with Syria.
``(C) To the Government of Egypt for purposes of supporting
and enhancing efforts of the armed forces of Egypt to
increase security and sustain increased security along the
border of Egypt with Libya.
``(D) To the Government of Tunisia for purposes of
supporting and enhancing efforts of the armed forces of
Tunisia to increase security and sustain increased security
along the border of Tunisia with Libya.
``(E) To the Government of Oman for purposes of supporting
and enhancing efforts of the armed forces of Oman to increase
security and sustain increased security along the border of
Oman with Yemen.
``(F) To the Government of Pakistan for purposes of
supporting and enhancing efforts of the armed forces of
Pakistan to increase security and sustain increased security
along the border of Pakistan with Afghanistan.''.
(b) Certification.--Subsection (d) of such section is
amended to read as follows:
``(d) Notice and Certification Before Exercise.--Not later
than 15 days before providing support under the authority of
subsection (a) to a country that has not previously received
such support, the Secretary of Defense, in consultation with
the Secretary of State, shall submit to the specified
congressional committees a report that--
``(1) sets forth a full description of the support to be
provided, including--
``(A) the purpose of such support;
``(B) the amount of support to be provided; and
``(C) the anticipated duration of the provision of such
support; and
``(2) includes a certification that--
``(A) the recipient country has taken demonstrable steps to
increase security along the border specified for such country
in subsection (a); and
``(B) the provision of such support is in the interest of
United States national security.''.
(c) Limitation on Reimbursement of Pakistan.--Such section
is further amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (e) and (f) as subsections
(g) and (h), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after subsection (d) the following new
subsection (e):
``(e) Limitation on Reimbursement of Pakistan Pending
Certification.--No amount of reimbursement support under
subsection (a)(1)(F) is authorized to be disbursed to the
Government of Pakistan unless the Secretary of Defense
certifies to the congressional defense committees that the
following conditions are met:
``(1) The military and security operations of Pakistan
pertaining to border security and ancillary activities for
which reimbursement is sought have been coordinated with
United States military representatives in advance of the
execution of such operations and activities.
``(2) The goals and desired outcomes of each such operation
or activity have been established and agreed upon in advance
by the United States and Pakistan.
``(3) A process exists to verify the achievement of the
goals and desired outcomes established in accordance with
paragraph (2).
``(4) The Government of Pakistan is making an effort to
actively coordinate with the Government of Afghanistan on
issues relating to border security on the Afghanistan-
Pakistan border.''.
(d) Quarterly Reports.--Such section is further amended by
inserting after subsection (e), as so designated by
subsection (c) of this section, the following new subsection
(f):
``(f) Quarterly Reports.--Not later than 30 days after the
end of each fiscal quarter, the Secretary of Defense shall
submit to the specified congressional committees a report on
reimbursements pursuant to subsection (a) during the
preceding fiscal quarter that includes--
``(1) an identification of each country reimbursed;
``(2) the date of each reimbursement;
``(3) a description of any partner nation border security
efforts for which reimbursement was provided;
``(4) an assessment of the value of partner nation border
security efforts for which reimbursement was provided;
``(5) the total amounts of reimbursement provided to each
partner nation in the preceding four fiscal quarters; and
``(6) such other matters as the Secretary considers
appropriate.''.
(e) Extension.--Subsection (h) of such section, as so
redesignated, is amended by striking ``December 31, 2019''
and inserting ``December 31, 2021''.
SEC. 1205. LEGAL AND POLICY REVIEW OF ADVISE, ASSIST, AND
ACCOMPANY MISSIONS.
(a) In General.--Not later than 120 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Under Secretary of Defense for
Policy shall, in coordination with the General Counsel of the
Department of Defense and the commanders of appropriate
combatant commands, submit to the congressional defense
committees a report on a review, conducted for purposes of
the report, of the legal and policy frameworks associated
with advise, assist, and accompany missions by United States
military personnel.
(b) Elements.--The report and review required by subsection
(a) shall include the following:
(1) An analysis of the risks and benefits of United States
military personnel conducting advise, assist, and accompany
missions with foreign partner forces, and an assessment of
the relation of such risks and benefits to United States
security objectives.
(2) A review of execute orders in order to ensure that such
orders comply with United States law for the employment of
United States military personnel and capabilities to advise,
assist, and accompany foreign partner forces.
(3) An assessment whether the legal and policy frameworks
applicable to advise, assist, and accompany missions by
United States military personnel are adequately communicated
to and understood at all levels of operational command.
(4) An assessment whether approvals related to advise,
assist, and accompany missions are taken at the appropriate
level of command.
(5) A definition, and policy guidance, for the appropriate
use in execute orders of each of the following:
(A) Advise
(B) Assist.
(C) Accompany.
(D) Collective self defense.
(E) Last point of cover and conceal.
(6) Any other matters the Under Secretary considers
appropriate.
(c) Form.--The report required by subsection (a) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
SEC. 1206. TECHNICAL CORRECTIONS RELATING TO DEFENSE SECURITY
COOPERATION STATUTORY REORGANIZATION.
(a) Chapter References.--The following provisions of law
are amended by striking ``chapter 15'' and inserting
``chapter 13'':
(1) Section 886(a)(5) of the Homeland Security Act of 2002
(6 U.S.C. 466(a)(5)).
(2) Section 332(a)(1) of the Consolidated Farm and Rural
Development Act (7 U.S.C. 1982(a)(1)).
(3) Section 101(a)(13)(B) of title 10, United States Code.
(4) Section 115(i)(6) of title 10, United States Code.
(5) Section 12304(c)(1) of title 10, United States Code.
(6) Section 484C(c)(3)(C)(v)) of the Higher Education Act
of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1091c(c)(3)(C)(v)).
(b) Section References.--
(1) Title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(A) in section 386(c)(1), by striking ``Sections 311, 321,
331, 332, 333,'' and inserting ``Sections 246, 251, 252, 253,
321,''; and
(B) in section 10541(b)(9), in the matter preceding
subparagraph (A), by striking ``sections 331, 332, 333,'' and
inserting ``sections 251, 252, 253,''.
(2) Section 484C(c)(3)(C)(i) of the Higher Education Act of
1965 (20 U.S.C. 1091c(c)(3)(C)(i)) is amended by striking
``section 331, 332,'' and inserting ``section 251, 252,''.
SEC. 1207. NAVAL SMALL CRAFT INSTRUCTION AND TECHNICAL
TRAINING SCHOOL.
(a) School Authorized.--
(1) In general.--Subchapter V of chapter 16 of title 10,
United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the
following new section:
``Sec. 351. Naval Small Craft Instruction and Technical
Training School
``(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense may operate an
education and training facility known as the `Naval Small
Craft Instruction and Technical Training School' (in this
section referred to as the `School').
``(b) Designation of Executive Agent.--The Secretary of
Defense shall designate the Secretary of a military
department as the Department of Defense executive agent for
carrying out the responsibilities of the Secretary of Defense
under this section.
``(c) Purpose.--The purpose of the School shall be to
provide to the military and other security forces of one or
more friendly foreign countries education and training to
increase professionalism, readiness, and respect for human
rights through--
``(1) formal courses of instruction; and
``(2) mobile training teams for--
``(A) the operation, employment, maintenance, and logistics
of specialized equipment;
``(B) participation in--
``(i) joint exercises; or
``(ii) coalition or international military operations; and
``(C) improved interoperability between--
``(i) the armed forces; and
``(ii) the military and other security forces of the one or
more friendly foreign countries.
``(d) Personnel Eligible to Receive Education and
Training.--
``(1) Limitation.--The Secretary of Defense may not provide
education or training at the School to any personnel of a
country that is prohibited from receiving such education or
training under any other provision of law.
``(2) Consultation in selection.--The Secretary of Defense
shall consult with the Secretary of State in the selection of
foreign personnel to be provided education and training at
the School.
``(e) Fixed Costs.--The fixed costs of operation and
maintenance of the School in a fiscal year may be paid from
amounts made available for such fiscal year for operation and
maintenance of the Department of Defense.
``(f) Annual Report.--Not later than March 15 each year,
the Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the Secretary
of
[[Page S3468]]
State, shall submit to the appropriate congressional
committees a detailed report on the activities and operating
costs of the School during the preceding fiscal year.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of subchapter V of chapter 16 of such title is
amended by adding at the end the following new item:
``351. Naval Small Craft Instruction and Technical Training School.''.
(b) Report Required.--Not later than 60 days after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
submit to the congressional defense committees a report that
sets forth the following:
(1) The budget requirements for the operation and
sustainment of the Naval Small Craft Instruction and
Technical Training School authorized by section 351 of title
10, United States Code (as added by subsection (a)), during
the period of the future-years defense program submitted to
Congress in fiscal year 2019, including--
(A) a description of the budget requirements relating to
the School for--
(i) Major Force Program-2; and
(ii) Major Force Program-11; and
(B) an identification of any other source of funding for
the School.
(2) The anticipated requirements for facilities for the
School.
(3) An identification of the Secretary of a military
department designated by the Secretary of Defense as
executive agent for the School under subsection (b) of such
section.
(4) The anticipated military construction and facilities
renovation requirements for the School during such period.
(5) Any other matter relating to the School that the
Secretary of Defense considers appropriate.
(c) Limitation on Use of Funds.--
(1) In general.--Nothing in section 351 of title 10, United
States Code (as so added), may be construed as authorizing
the use of funds appropriated for the Department of Defense
for any purpose described in paragraph (2) unless
specifically authorized by an Act of Congress other than that
section or this Act.
(2) Purposes.--The purposes described in this paragraph are
the following:
(A) The operation of a facility other than the Naval Small
Craft Instruction and Technical Training School that is in
operation as of the date of the enactment of this Act for the
provision of education and training authorized to be provided
by the School.
(B) The construction or expansion of any facility of the
School.
Subtitle B--Matters Relating to Afghanistan and Pakistan
SEC. 1211. AFGHANISTAN SECURITY FORCES FUND.
(a) Continuation of Prior Authorities and Notice and
Reporting Requirements.--Funds available to the Department of
Defense for the Afghanistan Security Forces Fund for fiscal
year 2019 shall be subject to the conditions contained in--
(1) subsections (b) through (f) of section 1513 of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008
(Public Law 110-181; 122 Stat. 428), as most recently amended
by section 1521(d)(2)(A) of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328;
130 Stat. 2577); and
(2) section 1521(d)(1) of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017.
(b) Use of Funds.--Section 1513(b)(1) of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 is amended by
striking ``security forces of Afghanistan'' and inserting
``security forces of the Ministry of Defense and the Ministry
of the Interior of the Government of the Islamic Republic of
Afghanistan''.
(c) Equipment Disposition.--
(1) Acceptance of certain equipment.--Subject to paragraph
(2), the Secretary of Defense may accept equipment that is
procured using amounts authorized to be appropriated for the
Afghanistan Security Forces Fund by this Act and is intended
for transfer to the security forces of Afghanistan, but is
not accepted by such security forces.
(2) Conditions on acceptance of equipment.--Before
accepting any equipment under the authority provided by
paragraph (1), the Commander of United States forces in
Afghanistan shall make a determination that such equipment
was procured for the purpose of meeting requirements of the
security forces of Afghanistan, as agreed to by both the
Government of Afghanistan and the Government of the United
States, but is no longer required by such security forces or
was damaged before transfer to such security forces.
(3) Elements of determination.--In making a determination
under paragraph (2) regarding equipment, the Commander of
United States forces in Afghanistan shall consider
alternatives to the acceptance of such equipment by the
Secretary. An explanation of each determination, including
the basis for the determination and the alternatives
considered, shall be included in the relevant quarterly
report required under paragraph (5).
(4) Treatment as department of defense stocks.--Equipment
accepted under the authority provided by paragraph (1) may be
treated as stocks of the Department of Defense upon
notification to the congressional defense committees of such
treatment.
(5) Quarterly reports on equipment disposition.--
(A) In general.--Not later than 90 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act and every 90-day period thereafter
during which the authority provided by paragraph (1) is
exercised, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a report describing the equipment accepted
during the period covered by such report under the following:
(i) This subsection.
(ii) Section 1521(b) of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat.
2575).
(iii) Section 1531(b) of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 1088).
(iv) Section 1532(b) of the Carl Levin and Howard P.
``Buck'' McKeon National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3613).
(v) Section 1531(d) of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2014 (Public Law 113-66; 127 Stat. 938;
10 U.S.C. 2302 note).
(B) Elements.--Each report under subparagraph (A) shall
include a list of all equipment that was accepted during the
period covered by such report and treated as stocks of the
Department of Defense and copies of the determinations made
under paragraph (2), as required by paragraph (3).
(d) Security of Afghan Women.--
(1) In general.--Of the funds available to the Department
of Defense for the Afghan Security Forces Fund for fiscal
year 2019, it is the goal that $25,000,000, but in no event
less than $10,000,000, shall be used for--
(A) the recruitment, integration, retention, training, and
treatment of women in the Afghan National Defense and
Security Forces; and
(B) the recruitment, training, and contracting of female
security personnel for future elections.
(2) Types of programs and activities.--Such programs and
activities may include--
(A) efforts to recruit women into the Afghan National
Defense and Security Forces, including the special operations
forces;
(B) programs and activities of the Afghan Ministry of
Defense Directorate of Human Rights and Gender Integration
and the Afghan Ministry of Interior Office of Human Rights,
Gender and Child Rights;
(C) development and dissemination of gender and human
rights educational and training materials and programs within
the Afghan Ministry of Defense and the Afghan Ministry of
Interior;
(D) efforts to address harassment and violence against
women within the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces;
(E) improvements to infrastructure that address the
requirements of women serving in the Afghan National Defense
and Security Forces, including appropriate equipment for
female security and police forces, and transportation for
policewomen to their station;
(F) support for Afghanistan National Police Family Response
Units; and
(G) security provisions for high-profile female police and
military officers.
(e) Assessment of Afghanistan Progress on Security
Objectives.--
(1) Assessment required.--Not later than May 1, 2019, the
Secretary of Defense shall, in consultation with the
Secretary of State, submit to the Committee on Armed Services
and the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of
Representatives and the Committee on Armed Services and the
Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate an assessment
describing the progress of the Government of the Islamic
Republic of Afghanistan toward meeting shared security
objectives. In conducting such assessment, the Secretary of
Defense shall consider each of the following:
(A) The extent to which the Government of Afghanistan has
taken steps toward increased accountability and reducing
corruption within the Ministries of Defense and Interior.
(B) The extent to which the capability and capacity of the
Afghan National Defense and Security Forces have improved as
a result of Afghanistan Security Forces Fund investment,
including through training.
(C) The extent to which the Afghan National Defense and
Security Forces have been able to increase pressure on the
Taliban, al-Qaeda, the Haqqani network, and other terrorist
organizations, including by re-taking territory, defending
territory, and disrupting attacks.
(D) Whether or not the Government of Afghanistan is
ensuring that supplies, equipment, and weaponry supplied by
the United States are appropriately distributed to security
forces charged with fighting the Taliban and other terrorist
organizations.
(E) The extent to which the Government of Afghanistan has
designated the appropriate staff, prioritized the development
of relevant processes, and provided or requested the
allocation of resources necessary to support a peace and
reconciliation process in Afghanistan.
(F) Such other factors as the Secretaries consider
appropriate.
(2) Withholding of assistance for insufficient progress.--
(A) In general.--If the Secretary of Defense determines, in
coordination with the Secretary of State, pursuant to the
assessment under paragraph (1) that the Government of
Afghanistan has made insufficient progress, the Secretary of
Defense may withhold assistance for the Afghan National
Defense and Security Forces until such time as the Secretary
determines sufficient progress has been made.
[[Page S3469]]
(B) Notice to congress.--If the Secretary of Defense
withholds assistance under subparagraph (A), the Secretary
shall, in coordination with the Secretary of State, provide
notice to Congress not later than 30 days after making the
decision to withhold such assistance.
SEC. 1212. EXTENSION AND MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY FOR
REIMBURSEMENT OF CERTAIN COALITION NATIONS FOR
SUPPORT PROVIDED TO UNITED STATES MILITARY
OPERATIONS.
(a) Extension.--Subsection (a) of section 1233 of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008
(Public Law 110-181; 122 Stat. 393), as most recently amended
by section 1212 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91), is further amended--
(1) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by striking
``October 1, 2017, and ending on December 31, 2018'' and
inserting ``October 1, 2018, and ending on December 31,
2019''; and
(2) by amending paragraph (2) to read as follows:
``(2) Pakistan for certain activities meant to enhance the
security situation in the Afghanistan-Pakistan border region
pursuant to section 1226 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (22 U.S.C. 2151 note),
as amended by the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019.''.
(b) Modification to Limitations.--Subsection (d) of such
section is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1)--
(A) in the first sentence--
(i) by striking ``October 1, 2017, and ending on December
31, 2018'' and inserting ``October 1, 2018, and ending on
December 31, 2019''; and
(ii) by striking ``$900,000,000'' and inserting
``$350,000,000''; and
(B) by striking the second sentence; and
(2) by striking paragraph (3).
(c) Repeal of Provision Relating to Reimbursement to
Pakistan for Security Enhancement Activities.--Such section
is further amended--
(1) by striking subsection (e); and
(2) by redesignating subsections (f) through (h) as
subsections (e) through (g), respectively.
(d) Notice to Congress.--Paragraph (1) of subsection (e) of
such section, as redesignated by subsection (c) of this
section, is amended by striking the second sentence.
SEC. 1213. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO TRANSFER DEFENSE
ARTICLES AND PROVIDE DEFENSE SERVICES TO THE
MILITARY AND SECURITY FORCES OF AFGHANISTAN.
(a) Extension.--Subsection (h) of section 1222 of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013
(Public Law 112-239; 126 Stat. 1992), as most recently
amended by section 1211 of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 115-91), is further
amended by striking ``December 31, 2018'' and inserting
``December 31, 2019''.
(b) Excess Defense Articles.--Subsection (i)(2) of such
section, as so amended, is further amended by striking
``December 31, 2018'' each place it appears and inserting
``December 31, 2019''.
SEC. 1214. MODIFICATION OF REPORTING REQUIREMENTS FOR SPECIAL
IMMIGRANT VISAS FOR AFGHAN ALLIES PROGRAM.
Section 602 of the Afghan Allies Protection Act of 2009 (8
U.S.C. 1101 note) is amended--
(1) in subsection (b)--
(A) by striking paragraph (10);
(B) by redesignating paragraphs (11) through (16) as
paragraphs (10) through (15), respectively;
(C) in paragraph (11)(A), as so redesignated, by striking
``the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2014'' and inserting ``the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019'';
(D) in paragraph (12), as so redesignated, by striking
``paragraph (12)(B)'' and inserting ``paragraph (11)(B)'';
and
(E) in paragraph (13), as so redesignated, in the matter
preceding subparagraph (A), by striking ``a report to the''
and all that follows through ``House of Representatives'' and
inserting ``a report to the appropriate committees of
Congress'';
(2) by striking subsection (c); and
(3) by redesignating subsection (d) as subsection (c).
Subtitle C--Matters Relating to Syria, Iraq, and Iran
SEC. 1221. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO PROVIDE ASSISTANCE TO
COUNTER THE ISLAMIC STATE OF IRAQ AND SYRIA.
(a) Extension.--Subsection (a) of section 1236 of the Carl
Levin and Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291;
128 Stat. 3558), as most recently amended by section 1222 of
the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018
(Public Law 115-91), is further amended by striking
``December 31, 2019'' and inserting ``December 31, 2020''.
(b) Funding.--Subsection (g) of such section 1236, as most
recently so amended, is further amended--
(1) by striking ``for the Department of Defense for
Overseas Contingency Operations for fiscal year 2018'' and
inserting ``for the Department of Defense for Overseas
Contingency Operations for fiscal year 2019''; and
(2) by striking ``$1,269,000,000'' and inserting
``$850,000,000''.
(c) Limitation of Use of Fiscal Year 2019 Funds.--Of the
amounts authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2019 by
this Act for activities under the authority in section 1236
of the Carl Levin and Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015, as amended by
this section, not more than $450,000,000 may be obligated or
expended for such activities until the date on which the
Secretary of Defense has submitted to the congressional
defense committees each of the following:
(1) The report on the United States strategy in Iraq
required by the joint explanatory statement of the committee
of the conference accompanying Conference Report 115-404.
(2) A report setting forth the following:
(A) An explanation of the purpose of a continuing United
States military presence in Iraq, including--
(i) an explanation of the national security objectives of
the United States with respect to Iraq;
(ii) a detailed description of--
(I) the size of a continuing United States military
presence in Iraq; and
(II) the roles and missions associated with a continuing
United States military presence in Iraq; and
(iii) a delineation of the responsibilities in connection
with a continuing United States military presence in Iraq
of--
(I) the Combined Joint Task Force Operation Inherent
Resolve (or a successor task force);
(II) the Office of Security Cooperation in Iraq; and
(III) other United States embassy-based military personnel.
(B) An identification of the specific units of the Iraqi
Security Forces to receive training and equipment or other
support in fiscal year 2019.
(C) A plan for ensuring that any vehicles and equipment
provided to the Iraqi Security Forces pursuant to that
authority are maintained in subsequent fiscal years using
funds of Iraq.
(D) An estimate, by fiscal year, of the funding anticipated
to be required for support of the Iraqi Security Forces
pursuant to that authority during the five fiscal years
beginning with fiscal year 2020.
(E) A detailed plan for the obligation and expenditure of
the funds requested for fiscal year 2019 for the Department
of Defense for Operational Sustainment of the Iraqi Security
Forces.
(F) A plan for the transition to the Government of Iraq of
responsibility for funding for Operational Sustainment of the
Iraqi Security Forces for fiscal years after fiscal year
2019.
(G) A description of any actions carried out under this
paragraph.
SEC. 1222. EXTENSION AND MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO PROVIDE
ASSISTANCE TO THE VETTED SYRIAN OPPOSITION.
(a) Extension.--Section 1209(a) of the Carl Levin and
Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3559), as
most recently amended by section 1221(a) of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law
114-328; 130 Stat. 2485), is further amended by striking
``December 31, 2018'' and inserting ``December 31, 2019''.
(b) Limitation on Use of Funds in General.--
(1) Limitation.--None of the funds authorized to be
appropriated for fiscal year 2019 for the Department of
Defense may be obligated or expended for activities under the
authority in section 1209 of the Carl Levin and Howard P.
``Buck'' McKeon National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2015, as amended by subsection (a), until the later of
the following:
(A) The date on which the President submits the report on
United States strategy in Syria required by section 1221 of
the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018
(Public Law 115-91).
(B) The date that is 30 days after the date on which the
Secretary of Defense submits the report described in
paragraph (2).
(2) Report.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report setting forth the
following:
(A) A detailed description of the internal security forces
of the vetted Syrian opposition to be trained and equipped
under such authority, including a description of their
geographic locations, demographic profiles, political
affiliations, current capabilities, and relation to the
objectives under the authority in section 1209 of the Carl
Levin and Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015, as amended by
subsection (a).
(B) A detailed description of planned capabilities,
including categories of equipment, intended to be provided to
the elements of the vetted Syrian opposition under such
authority.
(C) A description of the planned level of engagement by
United States forces with the elements of the vetted Syrian
opposition after such elements of the vetted Syrian
opposition have been trained and equipped under such
authority, including the oversight of equipment provided
under such authority and the activities conducted by such
vetted Syrian opposition forces.
(D) An explanation of the processes and mechanisms for
local commanders of the vetted Syrian opposition to exercise
command and control of the elements of the vetted Syrian
opposition after such elements of
[[Page S3470]]
the vetted Syrian opposition have been trained and equipped
under such authority.
(E) An explanation of complementary local governance and
other stabilization activities in areas in which elements of
the local internal security forces trained and equipped under
such authority will be operating and the relation of such
local governance and other stabilization activities to the
oversight of such security forces.
(c) Additional Limitations on Use of Funds During Fiscal
Year 2019.--
(1) Certifications in connection with use of funds.--Not
later than 120 days after the date of the enactment of this
Act, and every 120 days thereafter, the Secretary shall
submit to the congressional defense committees a written
certification on the following:
(A) Whether, during the 120-day period ending on the date
of the certification, demonstrable progress was made--
(i) to retake control of territory in Syria from the
Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS); or
(ii) to stabilize areas in Syria formerly held by the
Islamic State of Iraq and Syria.
(B) Whether, during such period, the vetted Syrian
opposition tasked with conducting local security operations
that United States forces are training and equipping under
the authority in section 1209 of the Carl Levin and Howard P.
``Buck'' McKeon National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2015, as amended by subsection (a), were demographically
representative of the local communities and serve local
governance bodies that are similarly representative of the
local communities.
(C) Whether, during such period, the Department of Defense
took actions to mitigate any pause in offensive operations
against the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria through the
training, equipping, and assistance of the vetted Syrian
opposition.
(D) Whether, during such period, support provided under the
authority referred to in subparagraph (B) was consistent with
United States standards regarding respect for human rights,
rule of law, and support for stable and equitable governance.
(E) Whether, during such period, members of the vetted
Syrian opposition receiving support under the authority
referred to in subparagraph (B) continued to demonstrate
respect for human rights and rule of law, violations of human
rights and rule of law by such members were appropriately
investigated, and the individuals responsible for such
violations were appropriately held accountable.
(2) Limitation.--If the Secretary does not make a
certification by the deadline for submittal required for the
certification under paragraph (1), or is unable in the
certification to certify each of the matters specified in
that paragraph, no support may be provided to the vetted
Syrian opposition under the authority in section 1209 of the
Carl Levin and Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015, as amended by
subsection (a), during the period that--
(A) begins on the deadline for submittal of the
certification (if the certification is not made) or the date
of the certification (if the certification does not certify
each of the matters), as applicable; and
(B) ends on the date on which a certification is submitted
under paragraph (1) that certifies each of the matters.
SEC. 1223. EXTENSION AND MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO SUPPORT
OPERATIONS AND ACTIVITIES OF THE OFFICE OF
SECURITY COOPERATION IN IRAQ.
(a) Extension of Authority.--Subsection (f)(1) of section
1215 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2012 (10 U.S.C. 113 note) is amended by striking
``fiscal year 2018'' and inserting ``fiscal year 2019''.
(b) Amount Available.--
(1) In general.--Such section is further amended--
(A) in subsection (c), by striking ``fiscal year 2018 may
not exceed $42,000,000'' and inserting ``fiscal year 2019 may
not exceed $45,300,000''; and
(B) in subsection (d), by striking ``fiscal year 2018'' and
inserting ``fiscal year 2019''.
(2) Limitation of use of fiscal year 2019 funds pending
reports.--Of the amount available for fiscal year 2019 for
section 1215 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2012, as amended by this section, not more than
an amount equal to 25 percent of such amount may be obligated
or expended for the Office of Security Cooperation in Iraq
until 30 days after the later of--
(A) the date on which the report on the United States
strategy on Iraq required by the joint explanatory statement
of the committee of the conference accompanying Conference
Report 115-404 is submitted to the congressional defense
committees; and
(B) the date on which the report required under subsection
(c) is submitted to the appropriate committees of Congress.
(c) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in
cooperation with the Secretary of State, shall submit to the
appropriate committees of Congress a report on the Office of
Security Cooperation in Iraq.
(2) Elements.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall
include the following:
(A) A description of the enduring planned size and missions
of the Office of Security Cooperation in Iraq after the
cessation of major combat operations against the Islamic
State of Iraq and Syria.
(B) A description of the relationship between the Office of
Security Cooperation in Iraq and any planned enduring
presence of other United States forces in Iraq.
(C) A detailed description of any activity to be conducted
by the Office of Security Cooperation in Iraq in fiscal year
2019.
(D) A plan and timeline for the normalization of the Office
of Security Cooperation in Iraq to conform to other offices
of security cooperation, including the transition of funding
from the Department of Defense to the Department of State by
the beginning of fiscal year 2020.
(E) Such other matters with respect to the Office of
Security Cooperation in Iraq as the Secretary of Defense and
the Secretary of State consider appropriate.
(d) Appropriate Committees of Congress Defined.--In this
section, the term ``appropriate committees of Congress''
means--
(1) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on
Foreign Relations of the Senate; and
(2) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on
Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives.
SEC. 1224. SYRIA STUDY GROUP.
(a) Establishment.--There is established a working group to
be known as the ``Syria Study Group'' (in this section
referred to as the ``Group'').
(b) Purpose.--The purpose of the Group is to examine and
make recommendations on the military and diplomatic strategy
of the United States with respect to the conflict in Syria.
(c) Composition.--
(1) Membership.--The Group shall be composed of 12 members,
who shall be appointed as follows:
(A) One member appointed by the chair of the Committee on
Armed Services of the Senate.
(B) One member appointed by the ranking minority member of
the Committee on Armed Services of the Senate.
(C) One member appointed by the chair of the Committee on
Foreign Relations of the Senate.
(D) One member appointed by the ranking minority member of
the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate.
(E) One member appointed by the chair of the Committee on
Armed Services of the House of Representatives.
(F) One member appointed by the ranking minority member of
the Committee on Armed Services of the House of
Representatives.
(G) One member appointed by the chair of the Committee on
Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives.
(H) One member appointed by the ranking minority member of
the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of
Representatives.
(I) One member appointed by the majority leader of the
Senate.
(J) One member appointed by the minority leader of the
Senate.
(K) One member appointed by the Speaker of the House of
Representatives.
(L) One member appointed by the minority leader of the
House of Representatives.
(2) Co-chairs.--
(A) Of the members of the Group, one co-chair shall be
jointly designated by--
(i) the chairs of the Committee on Armed Services and the
Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate;
(ii) the chairs of the Committee on Armed Services and the
Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives;
(iii) the majority leader of the Senate; and
(iv) the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
(B) Of the members of the Group, one co-chair shall be
jointly designated by--
(i) the ranking minority members of the Committee on Armed
Services and the Committee on Foreign Relations of the
Senate;
(ii) the ranking minority members of the Committee on Armed
Services and the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of
Representatives;
(iii) the minority leader of the Senate; and
(iv) the minority leader of the House of Representatives.
(3) Period of appointment.--A member shall be appointed for
the life of the Group.
(4) Vacancies.--Any vacancy in the Group shall be filled in
the same manner as the original appointment.
(d) Duties.--
(1) Review.--The Group shall conduct a review on the
current United States military and diplomatic strategy with
respect to the conflict in Syria that includes a review of
current United States objectives in Syria and the desired end
state in Syria.
(2) Assessment and recommendations.--The Group shall--
(A) conduct a comprehensive assessment of the current
situation in Syria, the impact of such situation on
neighboring countries, the resulting regional and
geopolitical threats to the United States, and current
military, diplomatic, and political efforts to achieve a
stable Syria; and
(B) develop recommendations on the military and diplomatic
strategy of the United States with respect to the conflict in
Syria.
(e) Cooperation of United States Government.--
(1) In general.--The Group shall receive the full and
timely cooperation of the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary
of State, and the Director of National Intelligence in
providing the Group with analyses, briefings,
[[Page S3471]]
and other information necessary for the discharge of the
duties of the Group under subsection (d).
(2) Liaison.--The Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of
State, and the Director of National Intelligence shall each
designate at least one officer or employee of the Department
of Defense, the Department of State, and the Office of the
Director of National Intelligence, respectively, to serve as
a liaison to the Group.
(3) Facilitation.--The United States Institute of Peace
shall take appropriate actions to facilitate the Group in the
discharge of the duties of the Group under this section.
(f) Reports.--
(1) Final report.--
(A) In general.--Not later than June 30, 2019, the Group
shall submit to the President, the Secretary of Defense, the
Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on Foreign
Relations of the Senate, the Committee on Armed Services and
the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of
Representatives, the majority and minority leaders of the
Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and the
minority leader of the House of Representatives a report that
sets forth the findings, conclusions, and recommendations of
the Group under this section.
(B) Elements.--The report required by subparagraph (A)
shall include each of the following:
(i) An assessment of the current security, political,
humanitarian, and economic situations in Syria.
(ii) An assessment of the current participation and
objectives of the various external actors in Syria.
(iii) An assessment of the consequences of continued
conflict in Syria.
(iv) Recommendations for a resolution to the conflict in
Syria, including--
(I) options for a gradual political transition to a post-
Assad Syria; and
(II) actions necessary for reconciliation.
(v) A roadmap for a United States and coalition strategy to
reestablish security and governance in Syria, including
recommendations for the synchronization of stabilization,
development, counterterrorism, and reconstruction efforts.
(vi) Any other matter with respect to the conflict in Syria
that the Group considers to be appropriate.
(2) Interim report.--Not later than February 1, 2019, the
Group shall submit to the Committee on Armed Services and the
Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate, the Committee
on Armed Services and the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the
House of Representatives, the majority and minority leaders
of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives,
and the minority leader of the House of Representatives a
report that describes the status of the review and assessment
under subsection (d) and any interim recommendations
developed by the Group as of the date of the briefing.
(3) Form of report.--The report submitted to Congress under
paragraph (1) shall be submitted in unclassified form, but
may include a classified annex.
(g) Termination.--The Group shall terminate on the date
that is 180 days after the date on which the Group submits
the report required by subsection (f)(1).
SEC. 1225. MODIFICATION OF ANNUAL REPORT ON MILITARY POWER OF
IRAN.
Section 1245(b) of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2010 (10 U.S.C. 113 note) is amended--
(1) in paragraph (3)(B), by inserting ``the Houthis,''
after ``Hamas,''; and
(2) in paragraph (7)--
(A) by inserting ``the Russian Federation,'' after
``Pakistan,''; and
(B) by inserting ``trafficking or'' before ``development''.
Subtitle D--Matters Relating to Europe and the Russian Federation
SEC. 1231. EXTENSION OF LIMITATION ON MILITARY COOPERATION
BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND THE RUSSIAN
FEDERATION.
(a) Extension.--Subsection (a) of section 1232 of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017
(Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2488), as amended by section
1231 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91), is further amended in the
matter preceding paragraph (1) by striking ``fiscal year 2017
or 2018'' and inserting ``fiscal year 2017, 2018, or 2019''.
(b) Rule of Construction.--Such section is further
amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (e) as subsection (f); and
(2) by inserting after subsection (d) the following new
subsection (e):
``(e) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in subsection (a)
shall be construed to limit bilateral military-to-military
dialogue between the United States and the Russian Federation
for the purpose of reducing the risk of conflict.''.
SEC. 1232. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS RELATING TO
SOVEREIGNTY OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION OVER
CRIMEA.
(a) Limitation.--None of the funds authorized to be
appropriated by this Act or otherwise made available for
fiscal year 2019 for the Department of Defense may be
obligated or expended to implement any activity that
recognizes the sovereignty of the Russian Federation over
Crimea.
(b) Waiver.--The Secretary of Defense, with the concurrence
of the Secretary of State, may waive the limitation in
subsection (a) if the Secretary of Defense--
(1) determines that the waiver is in the national security
interest of the United States; and
(2) submits to the Committee on Armed Services and the
Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate and the
Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on Foreign
Affairs of the House of Representatives a notification of the
waiver.
SEC. 1233. EXTENSION OF UKRAINE SECURITY ASSISTANCE
INITIATIVE.
Section 1250 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 1068), as most
recently amended by section 1234 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91),
is further amended--
(1) in subsection (c)--
(A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``for fiscal year 2018
pursuant to subsection (f)(3)'' and inserting ``for fiscal
year 2019 pursuant to subsection (f)(4)''; and
(B) in paragraph (3), by striking ``fiscal year 2018'' and
inserting ``fiscal year 2019'';
(2) in subsection (f), by adding at the end the following
new paragraph:
``(4) For fiscal year 2019, $200,000,000.''; and
(3) in subsection (h), by striking ``December 31, 2020''
and inserting ``December 31, 2021''.
SEC. 1234. SENSE OF SENATE ON RELOCATION OF JOINT
INTELLIGENCE ANALYSIS COMPLEX.
It is the sense of the Senate that, in consideration of any
future plans regarding the relocation of the Joint
Intelligence Analysis Complex of the United States European
Command, the Secretary of Defense should maintain its
geographic location within the United Kingdom and its
collocation with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) Intelligence Fusion Center.
SEC. 1235. SENSE OF SENATE ON ENHANCING DETERRENCE AGAINST
RUSSIAN AGGRESSION IN EUROPE.
(a) Statement of Policy.--To protect the national security
of the United States, it is the policy of the United States
to pursue an integrated approach to strengthening the defense
of allies and partners in Europe as part of a broader, long-
term strategy backed by all elements of United States
national power to deter and, if necessary, defeat Russian
aggression.
(b) Sense of the Senate.--It is the sense of the Senate
that in order to strengthen the defense of allies and
partners in Europe, the Secretary of Defense, in coordination
with the Secretary of State and in consultation with the
commander of United States European Command, should--
(1) prioritize the need for additional United States Army
forward presence in Europe, especially increased forward-
stationed combat enablers to enhance United States Army
capability and capacity in areas such as--
(A) long-range fires;
(B) air and missile defense;
(C) combat engineering;
(D) logistics and sustainment;
(E) warfighting headquarters elements; and
(F) electronic warfare;
(2) conduct a review of the balance of United States Army
presence in Europe between rotationally deployed and forward-
stationed forces, including an examination of transitioning
the rotational presence of a United States Army armored
brigade combat team (ABCT) in Europe to a forward-stationed
ABCT, with consideration of--
(A) the opportunity to more effectively signal the enduring
commitment of the United States--
(i) to assure allies and partners in Europe; and
(ii) to deter Russian aggression;
(B) the significant recurring fiscal costs of rotating
heavy, equipment-intensive units;
(C) the family readiness impacts of lengthy heel-to-toe
rotational deployments;
(D) the potential advantages of interoperability and
cultural proficiency that can be achieved by forward-
stationed forces that have knowledge of local rules,
regulations, culture, customs, geography, and counterpart
military units and officials;
(E) the potential tradeoffs between--
(i) the training readiness and high operational tempo of
rotational units; and
(ii) the higher manning rates of forward-stationed forces;
and
(F) the benefits of National Training Center rotations for
rotationally deployed units as compared to maximized use of
United States Army training areas in Europe, including the
Joint Multinational Readiness Center in Germany, by forward-
stationed units in Europe;
(3) consider options for mitigating personnel impacts of
heel-to-toe rotations of United States forces in Europe,
including designation of Operation Atlantic Resolve as a
named operation;
(4) examine the merit and feasibility of maintaining a
continuous and enduring presence of at least one United
States Army company in Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania;
(5) examine the merit and feasibility of increasing the
presence of United States special operations forces in
Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania to deter aggression, promote
interoperability, build resilience through training
activities focused on countering unconventional warfare
strategies, and enable the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) to take collective action if required;
(6) examine the merit and feasibility of prepositioning
certain equipment and ammunition in Estonia, Latvia, and
Lithuania;
[[Page S3472]]
(7) continue rotational deployments of United States forces
to Romania and Bulgaria while taking full advantage of the
training opportunities available at military locations such
as Camp Mihail Kogalniceanu in Romania and Novo Selo Training
Area in Bulgaria;
(8) examine the implications of Russian military activity
in the Arctic region for United States military capability,
capacity, and force posture;
(9) conduct exercises focused on demonstrating the
capability to flow United States forces from the continental
United States and surge forces from central to eastern Europe
in a nonpermissive environment--
(A) to test and improve strategic and operational logistics
and transportation capabilities;
(B) to identify capability gaps, capacity shortfalls, or
other limiting factors in the execution of operational plans;
and
(C) to identify appropriate corrective action;
(10) consider incorporating cyber protection teams, to the
extent practicable, with rotational forces in Europe with a
focus on training United States and allied forces to operate
against adversary cyber, electronic warfare, and information
operations capabilities;
(11) support robust security assistance for Ukraine,
including defensive lethal assistance, while promoting
necessary defense institutional reforms;
(12) support robust security assistance for Georgia,
including defensive lethal assistance, to strengthen the
defense capabilities and readiness of Georgia, and improve
interoperability with NATO forces;
(13) promote enhanced military-to-military engagement
between the United States and the militaries of the countries
of the Western Balkans to promote interoperability with NATO,
civilian control of the military, procurement reforms, and
regional security cooperation;
(14) develop and implement a comprehensive security
cooperation strategy that rationalizes and prioritizes
support for allies and partners in Europe, including Estonia,
Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Bulgaria, Ukraine,
Moldova, and Georgia;
(15) consider the merit and feasibility of a defense
lending initiative to support allies and partners in Europe,
especially allies and partners that are most vulnerable to
Russian aggression, to supplement and fill gaps in existing
United States security assistance and arms sales mechanisms;
and
(16) in NATO or through other multilateral formats--
(A) promote reforms to accelerate the speed of decision and
deployability within NATO, including delegation to the
Secretary General and the Supreme Allied Commander Europe
(SACEUR) of the authority to deploy the Very High Readiness
Joint Task Force to any location within the territory of NATO
allies in response to a security crisis;
(B) promote a more robust NATO defense planning process
that--
(i) defines clear, stable chains-of-command responsible for
the execution of graduated response plans;
(ii) generates realistic military requirements; and
(iii) provides a basis for assigning allies specific
responsibilities as force providers in contingency plans;
(C) pursue planning agreements with allies and partners in
Europe on rules of engagement and arrangements for command
and control, access, transit, and support in crisis
situations, which occur prior to an invocation of Article 5
of the Washington Treaty by the North Atlantic Council;
(D) promote operational readiness of major combat units as
a key element of alliance burden sharing alongside spending
commitments made at the 2014 Wales Summit, including
through--
(i) the establishment of 30-day readiness targets for NATO
kinetic air squadrons, major naval combatants, and mechanized
maneuver battalions;
(ii) emphasis on allies maintaining fully manned units,
improving readiness of key logistics units, increasing lift
capacity, and maintaining sufficient stocks of equipment and
munitions; and
(iii) the conduct of NATO exercises with a focus on rapid
mobilization and deployment of allied forces;
(E) explore transitioning the Baltic air policing mission
of NATO to a Baltic air defense mission that would--
(i) be fully integrated with the Integrated Air and Missile
Defense of NATO and other regional short- and medium-range
air defense systems; and
(ii) include the participation of NATO and regional
partners such as Sweden and Finland; and
(F) support multilateral efforts to improve maritime domain
awareness in the Baltic Sea, including--
(i) integrating subsurface sensors and anti-submarine
warfare platforms of NATO and other regional partners into a
shared maritime domain awareness framework;
(ii) coordinating the development, procurement, and
employment of aerial, surface, and subsurface unmanned
vehicles as well as mobile air surveillance radars;
(iii) expanding the scope of Sea Surveillance Cooperation
Baltic Sea (SUCBAS) information sharing to include sensitive
or classified data with the goal of creating a common
operating picture; and
(iv) encouraging civil-military collaboration on maritime
domain awareness;
(G) promote alignment of the Permanent Structured
Cooperation, European Defense Fund, and Coordinated Annual
Review on Defense of the European Union (EU) with the NATO
defense planning process;
(H) support NATO-EU cooperation to ensure that--
(i) EU capability development is coherent, complementary,
and interoperable with NATO;
(ii) EU-generated capabilities are available to NATO; and
(iii) EU defense activities are conducted with appropriate
transparency and participation of non-EU states;
(I) support coordinated NATO and EU actions on expediting
or waiving diplomatic clearances for the movement of United
States and allied forces during contingencies;
(J) support cooperative investment frameworks that promote
increased military mobility in Europe;
(K) explore enhancing the role of NATO Force Integration
Units to more centrally coordinate exercises and training by
de-conflicting training engagements, identifying
opportunities for combined activities, and ensuring exercise
design and delivery are responsive to the dynamic security
environment;
(L) support cooperative efforts to improve the cyber
resiliency of commercial systems in Europe, especially port
and rail infrastructure essential for military mobility;
(M) support NATO procurement and training efforts to expand
the use of secure and interoperable communications at the
operational level, especially in the militaries of Estonia,
Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, and Bulgaria;
(N) expand cooperation and joint planning with allies and
partners on intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance
(ISR), including--
(i) exercises related to border security and crisis command
and control; and
(ii) electronic warfare, anti-air, and anti-surface
capabilities;
(O) promote efforts to improve the capability and readiness
of NATO Standing Maritime Groups;
(P) encourage regular review and update of the Alliance
Maritime Strategy of NATO to reflect the changing military
balance in the Black Sea with a particular focus on ISR,
cyber, electronic warfare, and anti-submarine warfare
capabilities as well as defense of ports, airfields, military
bases, and other critical infrastructure;
(Q) explore increasing the frequency, scale, and scope of
NATO and other multilateral exercises in the Black Sea with
the participation of Ukraine and Georgia;
(R) promote integration of United States Marines in Norway
with the United Kingdom-led Joint Expeditionary Force to
increase multilateral cooperation and interoperability
between NATO and regional partners such as Sweden and
Finland;
(S) affirm support for the Open Door policy of NATO,
including the eventual membership of Georgia in NATO; and
(T) promote the contribution of sufficient resources by
NATO allies for the Substantial NATO-Georgia Package, and
encourage NATO allies to make full use of the NATO-Georgian
Joint Training and Evaluation Center.
SEC. 1236. TECHNICAL AMENDMENTS RELATED TO NATO SUPPORT AND
PROCUREMENT ORGANIZATION AND RELATED NATO
AGREEMENTS.
(a) Title 10, United States Code.--Section 2350d of title
10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking ``NATO Support Organization'' each place it
appears and inserting ``NATO Support and Procurement
Organization'';
(2) by striking ``Support Partnership Agreement'' each
place it appears and inserting ``Support or Procurement
Partnership Agreement''; and
(3) in subsection (a)(1), by striking ``Support Partnership
Agreements'' and inserting ``Support or Procurement
Partnership Agreements''.
(b) Arms Export Control Act.--Section 21(e)(3) of the Arms
Export Control Act (22 U.S.C. 2761(e)(3)) is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (A)--
(A) in the matter preceding clause (i), by striking ``North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Support Organization''
and inserting ``North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
Support and Procurement Organization''; and
(B) in clause (i), by striking ``support partnership
agreement'' and inserting ``support or procurement
partnership agreement''; and
(2) in subparagraph (C)(i), in the matter preceding
subclause (I)--
(A) by striking `` `weapon system partnership agreement' ''
and inserting `` `support or procurement partnership
agreement' ''; and
(B) by striking ``North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
Support Organization'' and inserting ``North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO) Support and Procurement Organization''.
SEC. 1237. REPORT ON SECURITY COOPERATION BETWEEN THE RUSSIAN
FEDERATION AND CUBA, NICARAGUA, AND VENEZUELA.
(a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Director of the Defense
Intelligence Agency shall submit to the appropriate
committees of Congress a report on security cooperation
between the Russian Federation
[[Page S3473]]
and each of the countries specified in subsection (b).
(b) Countries.--The countries specified in this subsection
are as follows:
(1) Cuba.
(2) Nicaragua.
(3) Venezuela.
(c) Matters To Be Included.--The report required by
subsection (a) shall include the following:
(1) An assessment of bilateral security cooperation between
the Russian Federation and each country specified in
subsection (b) that includes each of the following:
(A) A list of Russian weapon systems or other military
hardware or technology valued at not less than $1,000,000
provided to or purchased by such country since January 1,
2007.
(B) A description of the participation of the security
forces of such country in training or exercises with the
security forces of the Russian Federation since January 1,
2007.
(C) A description of any security cooperation agreement
between the Russian Federation and such country.
(D) A description of any military or intelligence
infrastructure, facilities, and assets developed by the
Russian Federation in each such country and any associated
agreements or understandings between the Russian Federation
and such country.
(2) An assessment of security cooperation, specifically in
an advisory role, among the countries specified in subsection
(b).
(d) Form.--The report required by subsection (a) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
(e) Appropriate Committees of Congress Defined.--In this
section, the term ``appropriate committees of Congress''
means--
(1) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on
Foreign Relations, and the Committee on Appropriations of the
Senate; and
(2) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on
Foreign Affairs, and the Committee on Appropriations of the
House of Representatives.
SEC. 1238. SENSE OF SENATE ON COUNTERING RUSSIAN MALIGN
INFLUENCE.
It is the sense of the Senate that the Secretary of Defense
and the Secretary of State should--
(1) urgently prioritize the completion of a comprehensive
strategy to counter Russian malign influence; and
(2) submit to Congress the report required by section
1239A(d) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91).
Subtitle E--Matters Relating to the Indo-Pacific Region
SEC. 1241. REDESIGNATION, EXPANSION, AND EXTENSION OF
SOUTHEAST ASIA MARITIME SECURITY INITIATIVE.
(a) Redesignation as Indo-Pacific Maritime Security
Initiative.--
(1) In general.--Subsection (a)(2) of section 1263 of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (10
U.S.C. 333 note) is amended by striking ``the `Southeast Asia
Maritime Security Initiative' '' and inserting ``the `Indo-
Pacific Maritime Security Initiative' ''.
(2) Conforming amendment.--The heading of such section is
amended to read as follows:
``SEC. 1263. INDO-PACIFIC MARITIME SECURITY INITIATIVE.''.
(b) Expansion.--
(1) Expansion of region to receive assistance and
training.--Subsection (a)(1) of such section is amended by
inserting ``and the Indian Ocean'' after ``South China Sea''
in the matter preceding subparagraph (A).
(2) Recipient countries of assistance and training
generally.--Subsection (b) of such section is amended--
(A) in paragraph (2), by striking the comma at the end and
inserting a period; and
(B) by adding at the end the following new paragraphs:
``(6) Bangladesh.
``(7) Sri Lanka.''.
(3) Countries eligible for payment of certain incremental
expenses.--Subsection (e)(2) of such section is amended by
adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(D) India.''.
(c) Extension.--Subsection (h) of such section is amended
by striking ``September 30, 2020'' and inserting ``December
31, 2025''.
SEC. 1242. MODIFICATION OF ANNUAL REPORT ON MILITARY AND
SECURITY DEVELOPMENTS INVOLVING THE PEOPLE'S
REPUBLIC OF CHINA.
Section 1202(b) of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2000 (10 U.S.C. 113 note) is amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraphs (6) through (16) and (17)
through (23) as paragraphs (7) through (17) and (19) through
(25), respectively;
(2) by inserting after paragraph (5) the following new
paragraph (6):
``(6) China's overseas military basing and logistics
infrastructure.'';
(3) in paragraph (8), as so redesignated, by striking
``including technology transfers and espionage'' in the first
sentence and inserting ``including investment, industrial
espionage, cybertheft, academia, and other means of
technology transfer'';
(4) by inserting after paragraph (17), as so redesignated,
the following new paragraph (18):
``(18) An assessment of relations between China and the
Russian Federation with respect to security and military
matters.''; and
(5) by adding at the end the following new paragraphs:
``(26) The relationship between Chinese overseas
investment, including initiatives such as the Belt and Road
Initiative, and Chinese security and military strategy
objectives.
``(27) Efforts by China to influence the media, cultural
institutions, business, and academic and policy communities
of the United States to be more favorable to its security and
military strategy and objectives.
``(28) Efforts by China to monitor and influence, in
support of its security and military strategy and objectives,
the following:
``(A) Chinese citizens in the United States.
``(B) United States citizens of Chinese descent.''.
SEC. 1243. SENSE OF SENATE ON TAIWAN.
It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) the Taiwan Relations Act (22 U.S.C. 3301 et seq.) and
the ``Six Assurances'' are both cornerstones of United States
relations with Taiwan;
(2) the United States should strengthen defense and
security cooperation with Taiwan to support the development
of capable, ready, and modern defense forces necessary for
Taiwan to maintain a sufficient self-defense capability;
(3) the United States should strongly support the
acquisition by Taiwan of defensive weapons through foreign
military sales, direct commercial sales, and industrial
cooperation, with a particular emphasis on asymmetric warfare
and undersea warfare capabilities, consistent with the Taiwan
Relations Act;
(4) the United States should improve the predictability of
arms sales to Taiwan by ensuring timely review of and
response to requests of Taiwan for defense articles and
defense services;
(5) the Secretary of Defense should promote Department of
Defense policies concerning exchanges that enhance the
security of Taiwan, including--
(A) United States participation in appropriate Taiwan
exercises, such as the annual Han Kuang exercise;
(B) Taiwan participation in appropriate United States
exercises; and
(C) exchanges between senior defense officials and general
officers of the United States and Taiwan consistent with the
Taiwan Travel Act (Public Law 115-135);
(6) the United States and Taiwan should expand cooperation
in humanitarian assistance and disaster relief; and
(7) the Secretary of Defense should consider supporting the
visit of a United States hospital ship to Taiwan as part of
the annual ``Pacific Partnership'' mission in order to
improve disaster response planning and preparedness as well
as to strengthen cooperation between the United States and
Taiwan.
SEC. 1244. REDESIGNATION AND MODIFICATION OF SENSE OF
CONGRESS AND INITIATIVE FOR THE INDO-ASIA-
PACIFIC REGION.
(a) Redesignation.--
(1) In general.--Section 1251 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91) is
amended by striking ``Indo-Asia-Pacific'' each place it
appears and inserting ``Indo-Pacific''.
(2) Heading amendments.--
(A) Section heading.--The heading of such section is
amended to read as follows:
``SEC. 1251. SENSE OF CONGRESS AND INITIATIVE FOR THE INDO-
PACIFIC REGION.''.
(B) Subsection headings.--Such section is further amended
in the headings of subsections (b) and (f) by striking
``Indo-Asia-Pacific'' and inserting ``Indo-Pacific''.
(b) Modification of Initiative.--Such section is further
amended--
(1) in subsection (c)--
(A) by striking paragraphs (1) through (4) and inserting
the following new paragraphs (1) through (4):
``(1) Activities to increase the rotational and forward
presence, improve the capabilities, and enhance the posture
of the United States Armed Forces in the Indo-Pacific
region--
``(A) consistent with the National Defense Strategy; and
``(B) to the extent required to minimize the risk of
execution of the contingency plans of the Department of
Defense.
``(2) Activities to improve military and defense
infrastructure, logistics, and assured access in the Indo-
Pacific region to enhance the responsiveness, survivability,
and operational resilience of the United States Armed Forces
in the Indo-Pacific region.
``(3) Activities to enhance the storage and pre-positioning
in the Indo-Pacific region of equipment and munitions of the
United States Armed Forces.
``(4) Bilateral and multilateral military training and
exercises with allies and partner nations in the Indo-Pacific
region.''; and
(B) in paragraph (5)--
(i) in the matter preceding subparagraph (A), by striking
``security capacity'' and all that follows through ``of
allies'' in subparagraph (B) and inserting ``security
capacity of allies''; and
(ii) by redesignating clauses (i) through (v) as
subparagraphs (A) through (E), respectively, and indenting
appropriately;
(2) in subsection (d), by striking ``only''; and
(3) by amending subsection (e) to read as follows:
``(e) Five-year Plan for the Indo-Pacific Stability
Initiative.--
``(1) Plan required.--
``(A) In general.--Not later than March 1, 2019, the
Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the Commander of
the United States Pacific Command, shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a future
[[Page S3474]]
years plan on activities and resources of the Initiative.
``(B) Applicability.--The plan shall apply to the
Initiative with respect to fiscal year 2020 and at least the
four succeeding fiscal years.
``(2) Elements.--The plan required under paragraph (1)
shall include each of the following:
``(A) A description of the objectives of the Initiative.
``(B) A description of the manner in which such objectives
support implementation of the National Defense Strategy and
reduce the risk of execution of the contingency plans of the
Department of Defense by improving the operational resilience
of United States forces in the Indo-Pacific region.
``(C) An assessment of the resource requirements to achieve
such objectives.
``(D) An assessment of any additional rotational or
permanently stationed United States forces in the Indo-
Pacific region required to achieve such objectives.
``(E) An assessment of the logistics requirements,
including force enablers, equipment, supplies, storage, and
maintenance, to achieve such objectives.
``(F) An identification and assessment of required
infrastructure investments to achieve such objectives,
including potential infrastructure investments by host
countries and new construction or upgrades of existing sites
that would be funded by the United States.
``(G) An assessment of any new agreements, or changes to
existing agreements, with other countries for assured access
required to achieve such objectives.
``(H) An assessment of security cooperation investments
required to achieve such objectives.
``(3) Form.--The plan required under paragraph (1) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.''.
SEC. 1245. PROHIBITION ON PARTICIPATION OF THE PEOPLE'S
REPUBLIC OF CHINA IN RIM OF THE PACIFIC
(RIMPAC) NAVAL EXERCISES.
(a) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
(1) the pace and militarization by the Government of the
People's Republic of China of land reclamation activities in
the South China Sea is destabilizing the security of United
States allies and partners and threatening United States core
interests;
(2) these activities of the Government of the People's
Republic of China adversarially threaten the maritime
security of the United States and our allies and partners;
(3) no country that acts adversarially should be invited to
multilateral exercises; and
(4) the involvement of the Government of the People's
Republic of China in multilateral exercises should undergo
reevaluation until such behavior changes.
(b) Conditions for Future Participation in RIMPAC.--The
Secretary of Defense shall not enable or facilitate the
participation of the People's Republic of China in any Rim of
the Pacific (RIMPAC) naval exercise unless the Secretary
certifies to the congressional defense committees that China
has--
(1) ceased all land reclamation activities in the South
China Sea;
(2) removed all weapons from its land reclamation sites;
and
(3) established a consistent four-year track record of
taking actions toward stabilizing the region.
SEC. 1246. ASSESSMENT OF AND REPORT ON GEOPOLITICAL
CONDITIONS IN THE INDO-PACIFIC REGION.
(a) Assessment.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 90 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
select and enter into an agreement with an entity independent
of the Department of Defense to conduct an assessment of the
geopolitical conditions in the Indo-Pacific region that are
necessary for the successful implementation of the National
Defense Strategy.
(2) Matters to be included.--The assessment required by
paragraph (1) shall include a determination of the
geopolitical conditions in the Indo-Pacific region, including
any change in economic and political relations, that are
necessary to support United States military requirements for
forward defense, extensive forward basing, and alliance
formation and strengthening in such region.
(b) Report.--Not later than 270 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the independent entity selected under
subsection (a) shall submit to the appropriate committees of
Congress a report on the results of the assessment conducted
under that subsection.
(c) Department of Defense Support.--The Secretary shall
provide the independent entity selected under subsection (a)
with timely access to appropriate information, data,
resources, and analyses necessary for the independent entity
to conduct the assessment required by that subsection in a
thorough and independent manner.
(d) Appropriate Committees of Congress Defined.--In this
section, the term ``appropriate committees of Congress''
means--
(1) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on
Foreign Relations of the Senate; and
(2) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on
Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives.
SEC. 1247. SENSE OF SENATE ON UNITED STATES-INDIA DEFENSE
RELATIONSHIP.
It is the sense the Senate that the United States should
strengthen and enhance its major defense partnership with
India and work toward mutual security objectives by--
(1) expanding engagement in multilateral frameworks,
including the Quadrilateral Dialogue between the United
States, India, Japan, and Australia, to promote regional
security and defend shared values and common interests in the
rules-based order;
(2) exploring additional steps to implement the ``major
defense partner'' designation to better facilitate military
interoperability, information sharing, and appropriate
technology transfers;
(3) designating the responsible individual within the
Department of Defense to facilitate the major defense
partnership with India, as required by section 1292(a)(1)(B)
of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2559);
(4) pursuing strategic initiatives to help develop India's
defense capabilities, including maritime security
capabilities;
(5) improving cooperation on and coordination of
humanitarian and disaster relief responses;
(6) conducting additional joint exercises with India in the
Persian Gulf, the Indian Ocean region, and the Western
Pacific; and
(7) furthering cooperative efforts to promote security and
stability in Afghanistan.
SEC. 1248. SENSE OF SENATE ON STRATEGIC IMPORTANCE OF
MAINTAINING COMMITMENTS UNDER COMPACTS OF FREE
ASSOCIATION.
(a) Findings.--The Senate makes the following findings:
(1) The Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the
Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau are sovereign
countries in free association with the United States under
the Compacts of Free Association (in this section referred to
as the ``Compacts''), which provide for the exclusive right
of the United States Armed Forces to operate in the areas
covered by the Compacts.
(2) Such exclusive right allows the United States to
curtail the potential expansion of foreign militaries into
areas covered by the Compacts.
(3) Under the Compacts, eligible citizens of the Federated
States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands,
and the Republic of Palau may--
(A) reside, work, and study in the United States without a
visa; and
(B) serve in the United States Armed Forces.
(4) An estimated \1/4\ of the populations of the Federated
States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands,
and the Republic of Palau has relocated to the United States.
(5) Under the Compacts, the Federal Government is required
to provide assistance to any affected jurisdiction in the
United States to defray costs incurred by the affected
jurisdiction for health, educational, social, or public
safety services, or for infrastructure relating to such
services, due to the residence in the affected jurisdiction
of citizens of the Federated States of Micronesia, the
Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.
(b) Sense of Senate.--It is the sense of the Senate that
maintaining the commitments of the United States under the
Compacts is of vital strategic importance to the national
security interests of the United States.
SEC. 1249. SENSE OF SENATE ON UNITED STATES MILITARY FORCES
ON THE KOREAN PENINSULA.
(a) Findings.--The Senate makes the following findings:
(1) On June 25, 1950, the Democratic People's Republic of
Korea (DPRK), under the rule of Kim Il-sung, the grandfather
of Kim Jong-un, launched a surprise attack against forces
from the Republic of Korea (South Korea) and small contingent
of United States forces, thus beginning the Korean War.
(2) In June and July of 1950, the United Nations Security
Council adopted Resolutions 82, 83, and 84 calling for the
Democratic People's Republic of Korea to cease hostilities
and withdraw, to recommend that United Nations member nations
provide forces to repel the Democratic People's Republic of
Korea attack, and stating any forces provided should be
unified under the command of the United States, respectively.
(3) Fighting as part of a 1,000,000-strong, 22-nation
United Nations force, 36,574 members of the United States
Armed Forces and 137,899 members of the South Korean military
lost their lives during the three years of armed hostilities
and brutal conflict in the Korean War.
(4) On July 27, 1953, the Democratic People's Republic of
Korea, Chinese People's Volunteers, and the United Nations
signed an armistice agreement ceasing all hostilities in
Korea and establishing the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ).
(5) Since 1953, lawfully-deployed United States and United
Nations forces have remained alongside their South Korean
counterparts, continuing to protect and defend South Korea
and deter aggression from the Democratic People's Republic of
Korea.
(6) As a lasting testament the blood and treasure lost
during the Korean War and the strong and unwavering alliance
built from the ashes of the conflict, the Korean War Memorial
in Washington, District of Columbia, and the War Memorial of
Korea in Seoul, South Korea, prominently display the
following inscription: ``Our Nation honors her Sons and
Daughters who answered the call to defend a Country they
never knew and a people they never met.''.
[[Page S3475]]
(7) The United States maintains a robust, well-trained, and
ready force of approximately 28,500 members of the Armed
Forces in South Korea, and the presence of the members of the
Armed Forces in South Korea demonstrates the continued
resolve and support of the United States for the enduring
United States-South Korean Alliance.
(8) On December 22, 2017, Kim Jong-un stated, ``The rapid
development of [North Korea's] nuclear force is now exerting
big influence on the world political structure and strategic
environment.''.
(9) On January 1, 2018, Kim Jong-un stated ``The entire
United States is within range of our nuclear weapons, and a
nuclear button is always on my desk. This is reality, not a
threat. This year we should focus on mass producing nuclear
warheads and ballistic missiles for operational
deployment.''.
(10) Despite 11 standalone United Nations Security Council
resolutions against the nuclear and ballistic missile
programs of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, 8 of
which passed during the rule of Kim Jong-un, the Democratic
People's Republic of Korea has continued to illegally and
unlawfully pursue a long-range, nuclear capability meant to
hold hostage the United States and threaten the security of
the neighbors of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
(11) The 2017 National Security Strategy (NSS) states--
(A) ``Our alliance and friendship with South Korea, forged
by the trials of history, is stronger than ever.'';
(B) ``Allies and partners magnify our power . . . [and]
together with our allies, partners, and aspiring partners,
the United States will pursue cooperation with
reciprocity.''; and
(C) with respect to priority actions in the Indo-Pacific
region, ``We will redouble our commitment to established
alliances and partnerships, while expanding and deepening
relationships with new partners that share respect for
sovereignty . . . and the rule of law.''.
(12) Secretary of Defense James Mattis stated, ``Winston
Churchill noted that the only thing harder than fighting with
allies is fighting without them. History proves that we are
stronger when we stand united with others. Accordingly, our
military will be designed, trained, and ready to fight
alongside allies.''.
(13) The 2018 National Defense Strategy (NDS) states,
``Mutually beneficial alliances and partnerships are crucial
to our strategy, providing a durable, asymmetric strategic
advantage that no competitor or rival can match . . . [and
the United States] will strengthen and evolve our alliances
and partnerships into an extended network capable of
deterring or decisively acting to meet the shared challenges
of our time.''.
(14) The unclassified summary of 2018 NDS, an 11-page
document, mentions the term ``allies'' or ``alliances'' over
50 times.
(15) The 2018 NDS states, ``China is a strategic competitor
using predatory economics to intimidate its neighbors . . .
[and] it is increasingly clear that China. . .want[s] to
shape a world consistent with their authoritarian model--
gaining veto authority over other nations' economic,
diplomatic, and security decisions.''.
(16) Foreign policy experts have long contended that the
first priority of the People's Republic of China on the
Korean Peninsula is to ensure that the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea remains a buffer between China and the
democratic South Korea and the United States forces deployed
on the Korean Peninsula.
(17) China continues to provide the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea with most of its food and energy supplies
and, until recently, accounted for approximately 90 percent
of the total trade volume of the Democratic People's Republic
of Korea.
(18) On June 30, 2017, President Donald Trump stated, ``Our
goal is peace, stability and prosperity for the region. But
the United States will defend itself, always will defend
itself, always, and we will always defend our allies. As part
of that commitment, we are working together to ensure fair
burden sharing and support of the United States military
presence in Republic of Korea.''.
(19) South Korea already pays for approximately 50 percent
of the total nonpersonal costs of the 28,500 United States
members of the Armed Forces on the Korean Peninsula,
amounting to $887,500,000 in 2018.
(20) President Moon Jae-in has committed to increasing the
defense spending of South Korea during his term from the
current level 2.4 percent of the gross domestic product to
2.9 percent of the gross domestic product.
(21) News reports published in early May 2018 have stated
that President Trump asked the Secretary of Defense to
provide him with options for removing United States troops
from the Korean Peninsula.
(22) National Security Advisor John Bolton responded, ``The
President has not asked the Pentagon to provide options for
reducing American forces stationed in South Korea.''.
(23) A spokesman for the Secretary stated, ``The president
has not asked the Pentagon to provide options for reducing
American forces stationed in South Korea. The Department of
Defense's mission in South Korea remains the same, and our
force posture has not changed. The Department of Defense
remains committed to supporting the maximum pressure
campaign, developing and maintaining military options for the
President, and reinforcing our ironclad security commitment
with our allies. We all remain committed to complete,
verifiable, and irreversible denuclearization of the Korean
Peninsula.''.
(b) Sense of Senate.--It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) South Korea is a close friend and ally of the United
States, and the United States-South Korea alliance is the
linchpin of peace and security in the Indo-Pacific region;
(2) the presence of United States military forces on the
Korean Peninsula and across the Indo-Pacific region continues
to play a critical role in safeguarding the peaceful and
stable rules-based international order that benefits all
countries;
(3) South Korea has contributed heavily to its own defense
and to the defense of the United States Armed Forces in South
Korea, including by providing $10,000,000,000 of the
$10,800,000,0000 Camp Humphreys project, which is 93 percent
of the funding, to build and relocate United States military
forces to a new base in South Korea;
(4) United States military forces, pursuant to
international law, are lawfully deployed on the Korean
Peninsula;
(5) the nuclear and ballistic missile programs of the
Democratic People's Republic of Korea are clear and
consistent violations of international law;
(6) the long-stated strategic objective of authoritarian
states such as the People's Republic of China, the Russian
Federation, and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea has
been the significant removal of United States military forces
from the Korean Peninsula;
(7) the maximum pressure campaign of the Trump
Administration, including an increase in economic sanctions
and diplomatic measures with United States allies and
regional partners, has worked to bring Kim Jong-un to the
negotiation table; and
(8) the significant removal of United States military
forces from the Korean Peninsula is a non-negotiable item as
it relates to the complete, verifiable, and irreversible
denuclearization of the Democratic People's Republic of
Korea.
Subtitle F--Reports
SEC. 1251. REPORT ON MILITARY AND COERCIVE ACTIVITIES OF THE
PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA IN SOUTH CHINA SEA.
(a) In General.--Except as provided in subsection (d),
immediately after the commencement of any significant
reclamation or militarization activity by the People's
Republic of China in the South China Sea, including any
significant military deployment or operation or
infrastructure construction, the Secretary of Defense, in
coordination with the Secretary of State, shall submit to the
congressional defense committees, and release to the public,
a report on the military and coercive activities of China in
the South China Sea in connection with such activity.
(b) Elements of Report to Public.--Each report on a
significant reclamation or militarization activity under
subsection (a) shall include a short narrative on, and one or
more corresponding images of, such significant reclamation or
militarization activity.
(c) Form.--
(1) Submittal to congress.--Any report under subsection (a)
that is submitted to the congressional defense committees
shall be submitted in unclassified form, but may include a
classified annex.
(2) Release to public.--If a report under subsection (a) is
released to the public, such report shall be so released in
unclassified form.
(d) Waiver.--
(1) Release of report to public.--The Secretary of Defense
may waive the requirement in subsection (a) for the release
to the public of a report on a significant reclamation or
militarization activity if the Secretary determines that the
release to the public of a report on such activity under that
subsection in the form required by subsection (c)(2) would
have an adverse effect on the national security interests of
the United States.
(2) Notice to congress.--If the Secretary issues a waiver
under paragraph (1) with respect to a report on an activity,
not later than 48 hours after the Secretary issues such
waiver, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional
defense committees written notice of, and justification for,
such waiver.
SEC. 1252. REPORT ON TERRORIST USE OF HUMAN SHIELDS.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense, in consultation
with the Secretary of State, shall provide a report on the
use of human shields by terrorist groups to protect otherwise
lawful targets from attack.
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall
include the following:
(1) A description of the lessons learned from the United
States and its allies and partners in addressing the use of
human shields by terrorist organizations such as Hamas,
Hezbollah, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, Al Qaeda, and
any other organization as determined by the Secretary of
Defense.
(2) A description of a specific plan and actions being
taken by the Department of Defense to incorporate the lessons
learned as identified in paragraph (1) into Department of
Defense operating guidance, relevant capabilities, and
tactics, techniques, and procedures to deter, counter, and
address the challenge posed by the use of human shields and
hold accountable terrorist organizations for the use of human
shields.
(c) Submittal of the Report.--Not later than 180 days after
the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of
Defense shall
[[Page S3476]]
submit to the appropriate committees of Congress the report
required in subsection (a).
(d) Form.--The report shall be submitted in unclassified
form, but may include a classified annex.
(e) Appropriate Committees of Congress Defined.--In this
section, the term ``appropriate committees of Congress''
means--
(1) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on
Foreign Relations, and the Committee on the Judiciary of the
Senate; and
(2) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on
Foreign Affairs, and the Committee on the Judiciary of the
House of Representatives.
SEC. 1253. REPORT ON ARCTIC STRATEGIES.
(a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army, the
Secretary of the Navy, and the Secretary of the Air Force
shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report
on the strategy of the Army, the Navy and the Marine Corps,
and the Air Force, respectively, for the Arctic region.
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall
include the following:
(1) A description of the specific means by which each Armed
Force, including regular components, the National Guard, and
the Reserves, will--
(A) enhance the capability of the Armed Forces to defend
the homeland and exercise sovereignty;
(B) strengthen deterrence at home and abroad;
(C) strengthen alliances and partnerships;
(D) preserve freedom of the seas in the Arctic;
(E) engage public, private, and international partners to
improve domain awareness in the Arctic;
(F) develop Department of Defense Arctic infrastructure and
capabilities consistent with changing conditions and needs;
(G) provide support to civil authorities, as directed;
(H) partner with other departments, agencies, and countries
to support human and environmental security; and
(I) support international institutions that promote
regional cooperation and the rule of law.
(2) An analysis of the role of each Armed Force in the
operational and contingency plans for the protection of
United States national security interests in the Arctic
region, including strategic national assets, United States
citizens, territory, freedom of navigation, and economic and
trade interests in the Arctic region, weighed against the
missions described in the Arctic strategy.
(3) A detailed description of near-term and long-term
training, capability, and resource gaps that must be
addressed to fully execute each mission described in the
Arctic strategy against an increasing threat environment.
(4) A description of the Armed Force-specific
infrastructure that may be needed to continue to accomplish
each mission described in the Arctic strategy against an
increasing threat environment, including a cost estimate and
potential construction timeline for such infrastructure.
(5) A description, by Armed Force, of the current and
projected Arctic capabilities of the Russian Federation and
the People's Republic of China, and an analysis of current
and future United States capabilities that are required to
comply with--
(A) each mission described in the Arctic strategy; and
(B) the strategic objectives in the National Defense
Strategy.
(6) With respect to each Armed Force--
(A) an assessment of the level of cooperation between each
Armed Force and other departments and agencies of the United
States Government (including the Department of Homeland
Security and the National Security Agency), State and local
governments, and Tribal entities; and
(B) a plan for increased cooperation between the Armed
Forces and such departments, agencies, and entities.
(c) Form.--The report required by subsection (a) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
SEC. 1254. REPORT ON PERMANENT STATIONING OF A UNITED STATES
ARMY BRIGADE COMBAT TEAM IN THE REPUBLIC OF
POLAND.
(a) In General.--Not later than March 1, 2019, the
Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the Secretary of
State, shall submit to the congressional defense committees a
report on the feasibility and advisability of permanently
stationing a United States Army brigade combat team in the
Republic of Poland.
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall
address the following:
(1) An assessment whether a permanently stationed United
States Army brigade combat team in Poland would enhance
deterrence against Russian aggression in Eastern Europe.
(2) An assessment of the actions the Russian Federation may
take in response to a United States decision to permanently
station such a brigade combat team in Poland.
(3) An assessment of the international political
considerations of permanently stationing such a brigade
combat team in Poland, including within the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization (NATO).
(4) An assessment whether such a brigade combat team in
Poland would support implementation of the National Defense
Strategy.
(5) A description and assessment of the manner in which
such a brigade combat team in Poland may affect the ability
of the Joint Force to execute Department of Defense
contingency plans in Europe.
(6) A description and assessment of the manner in which
such a brigade combat team in Poland would affect the ability
of the Joint Force to respond to a crisis inside the
territory of a North Atlantic Treaty Organization ally that
occurs prior to the invocation of Article 5 of the Washington
Treaty by the North Atlantic Council.
(7) An identification and assessment of--
(A) potential locations in Poland for stationing such a
brigade combat team;
(B) the logistics requirements, including force enablers,
equipment, supplies, storage, and maintenance, that would be
required to support such a brigade combat team in Poland;
(C) infrastructure investments by the United States and
Poland, including new construction or upgrades of existing
sites, that would be required to support such a brigade
combat team in Poland;
(D) any new agreements, or changes to existing agreements,
between the United States and Poland that would be required
for such a brigade combat team in Poland;
(E) any changes to the posture or capabilities of the Joint
Force in Europe that would be required to support such a
brigade combat team in Poland; and
(F) the timeline required to achieve the permanent
stationing of such a brigade combat team in Poland.
(8) An assessment of the willingness and ability of the
Government of Poland to provide host nation support for such
a brigade combat team.
(9) An assessment of whether future growth in United States
Army end strength may be used to source additional forces for
such a brigade combat team In Poland.
(c) Form.--The report required by subsection (a) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
SEC. 1255. REPORTS ON NUCLEAR CAPABILITIES OF THE DEMOCRATIC
PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF KOREA.
(a) Baseline Report.--Not later than 60 days after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in
coordination with the Director of National Intelligence,
shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a
report on the status of the nuclear program of the Democratic
People's Republic of Korea to establish a baseline of
progress for negotiations with the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea with respect to denuclearization.
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall
include the following, to the extent known or suspected:
(1) A description of the location, quantity, capability,
and operational status of the nuclear weapons of the
Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
(2) A description of the location of nuclear research,
development, production, and testing facilities of the
Democratic People's Republic of Korea, including covert
facilities.
(3) A description of the location, quantity, capability,
and operational status of the ballistic missiles of the
Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
(4) A description of the location of the ballistic missile
manufacturing and assembly facilities of the Democratic
People's Republic of Korea.
(5) An assessment of any intelligence gaps with respect to
the information required by this subsection and verification
or inspection measures that may fill such gaps.
(c) Updates.--
(1) In general.--In the case of an agreement between the
United States and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea,
not later than 60 days after the date on which the agreement
is reached, and every 90 days thereafter, the report required
by subsection (a) shall be augmented by a written update.
(2) Elements.--Each written update under paragraph (1)
shall include the following for the preceding 90-day period:
(A) A description of the number of nuclear weapons and
ballistic missiles verifiably dismantled, destroyed, rendered
permanently unusable, or transferred out of the Democratic
People's Republic of Korea.
(B) An identification of the location of nuclear research,
development, production, and testing facilities in the
Democratic People's Republic of Korea identified and
verifiably dismantled, destroyed, or rendered permanently
unusable.
(C) An identification of the location of ballistic missile
manufacturing and assembly facilities in the Democratic
People's Republic of Korea verifiably dismantled, destroyed,
or rendered permanently unusable.
(D) A description of the number of nuclear weapons and
ballistic missiles that remain in or under the control of the
Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
(E) An assessment of the progress made in extending the
breakout period required for the Democratic People's Republic
of Korea to reconstitute its nuclear weapons program and
build a nuclear weapon, as such progress relates to the
information required by subparagraphs (A) through (D).
(d) Verification Assessment Report.--Not later than 180
days after the date on which the report required by
subsection (a) is submitted, and every 180 days thereafter,
the written update required under paragraph (1) of subsection
(c) shall include, in addition to the information required by
subparagraphs (A) through (E) of that subsection,
[[Page S3477]]
the following for the preceding 180-day period:
(1) An assessment of the establishment of safeguards, other
control mechanisms, and other assurances secured from the
Democratic People's Republic of Korea to ensure the
activities of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea
permitted under any agreement will not be used to further any
nuclear-related military or nuclear explosive purpose,
including research on or development of a nuclear explosive
device.
(2) An assessment of the capacity of the United States or
an international organization, including the International
Atomic Energy Agency, to effectively access and investigate
suspicious sites in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea
or allegations of covert nuclear-related activities,
including storage sites for nuclear weapons.
(e) Sunset.--The section shall cease to be effective on the
date that is three years after the date of the enactment of
this Act.
(f) Appropriate Committees of Congress Defined.--In this
section, the term ``appropriate committees of Congress''
means--
(1) the Committee on Armed Services, the Select Committee
on Intelligence, the Committee on Foreign Relations, and the
Committee on Appropriations of the Senate; and
(2) the Committee on Armed Services, the Permanent Select
Committee on Intelligence, the Committee on Foreign Affairs,
and the Committee on Appropriations of the House of
Representatives.
SEC. 1256. REPORT ON UNITED STATES MILITARY TRAINING
OPPORTUNITIES WITH ALLIES AND PARTNERS IN THE
INDO-PACIFIC REGION.
(a) Sense of Senate.--It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) the Secretary of Defense, as part of strategic
initiatives, should continue to place emphasis on and
consider the benefits of United States military training
exercises with allies in the Indo-Pacific region;
(2) the Indo-Pacific region is--
(A) a strategically important region; and
(B) critical to the interests of the United States;
(3) the relationship between the United States and allies
and partners in the Indo-Pacific region is essential for
ensuring peace and security in the region;
(4) interoperability between the United States and allies
in the Indo-Pacific region increases readiness and regional
contingency response time;
(5) the United States should focus on expanding training
with other allied nations and partners in the Indo-Pacific
region;
(6) the United States, working within our framework of
alliances and partnerships, should seek to build the capacity
and capability of our allies and partners in the Indo-Pacific
region and to expand interoperability with them; and
(7) the United States and its partners in the Indo-Pacific
region should continue to work together to build the forces,
infrastructure, relationships, and training needed to respond
to search and rescue and humanitarian assistance needed in
the whole of catastrophic natural disasters.
(b) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
submit to the congressional defense committees a report on
future United States military training opportunities with
allied and partner countries in the Indo-Pacific region.
(2) Elements.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall
include the following:
(A) A detailed description of--
(i) current United States military exercises involving
United States partners and allies in the Indo-Pacific region;
(ii) the manner in which such exercises are intended to
improve the capability and capacity of such partners and
allies; and
(iii) the interoperability of such partners and allies with
the United States Armed Forces.
(B) An analysis of the potential to expand the size, scope,
or makeup of such exercises to include--
(i) additional forces and units of current participants;
(ii) additional capabilities or training; and
(iii) other allies and partners in the Indo-Pacific region
and other regions.
(C) An identification of new United States military
exercises that may be initiated in the Indo-Pacific region
with--
(i) security treaty allies such as Japan, South Korea,
Australia, the Philippines, and Thailand;
(ii) growing partners such as India, Indonesia, Malaysia,
Mongolia, New Zealand, Singapore, Sri Lanka, and Vietnam;
(iii) existing multilateral frameworks, such as the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN);
(iv) allies and partners outside the Indo-Pacific region;
and
(v) potential new allies or partners.
(3) Form.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
Subtitle G--Other Matters
SEC. 1261. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITIES RELATING TO
ACQUISITION AND CROSS-SERVICING AGREEMENTS.
(a) Prohibitions.--Section 2342 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (d) as subsection (f); and
(2) by inserting after subsection (c) the following new
subsections (d) and (e):
``(d) The Secretary of may not use an agreement with any
government of an organization described in subsection (a)(1)
to facilitate the transfer of logistic support, supplies, and
services to any country or organization with which the
Secretary has not signed an agreement described in subsection
(a)(2).
``(e) An agreement described in subsection (a)(2) may not
provide or otherwise constitute a commitment for the
introduction of the armed forces into hostilities.''.
(b) Annual Reports.--Such section is further amended by
adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(g) Not later than January 15 each year, the Secretary
shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a
report on acquisition and cross-servicing activities that
sets forth, in detail, the following:
``(1) A list of agreements in effect pursuant to subsection
(a)(1) during the preceding fiscal year.
``(2) The date on which each agreement listed under
paragraph (1) was signed, and, in the case of an agreement
with a country that is not a member of the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization, the date on which the Secretary notified
Congress pursuant to subsection (b)(2) of the designation of
such country under subsection (a).
``(3) The total dollar amount and major categories of
logistic support, supplies, and services provided during the
preceding fiscal year under each such agreement.
``(4) The total dollar amount and major categories of
reciprocal provisions of logistic support, supplies, and
services received under each such agreement.
``(5) With respect to the calendar year during which the
report is submitted, an assessment of the following:
``(A) The anticipated logistic support, supplies, and
services requirements of the United States.
``(B) The anticipated requirements of other countries for
United States logistic support, supplies, and services.''.
(c) Definitions.--Such section is further amended--
(1) in subsection (b)(2), by striking ``the Committee on
Armed Services'' the first place it appears and all that
follows through ``the House of Representatives'' and
inserting ``the appropriate committees of Congress''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(h) In this section, the term `appropriate committees of
Congress' means--
``(1) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on
Foreign Relations of the Senate; and
``(2) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on
Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives.''.
SEC. 1262. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY FOR TRANSFER OF AMOUNTS FOR
GLOBAL ENGAGEMENT CENTER.
Section 1287(e)(1) of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2546;
22 U.S.C. 2656 note) is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``and'' at the end;
(2) in subparagraph (B), by striking the period at the end
and inserting ``; and''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(C) for fiscal year 2019 are less than $80,000,000, the
Secretary of Defense is authorized to transfer, from amounts
authorized to be appropriated by an Act authorizing funds for
the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2019, to the
Secretary of State an amount, not to exceed $60,000,000, to
be available to carry out the functions of the Center for
fiscal year 2019.''.
SEC. 1263. SENSE OF SENATE ON PURCHASE BY TURKEY OF S-400 AIR
DEFENSE SYSTEM.
It is the sense of the Senate that if the Republic of
Turkey purchases the S-400 air defense system from the
Russian Federation--
(1) such purchase would constitute a significant
transaction within the meaning of section 231(a) of the
Countering Russian Influence in Europe and Eurasia Act of
2017 (title II of Public Law 115-44; 22 U.S.C. 9525(a)); and
(2) the President should faithfully execute that Act by
imposing and applying sanctions under section 235 of that Act
(22 U.S.C. 9529) with respect to any individual or entity
determined to have engaged in such significant transaction as
if such person were a sanctioned person for purposes of such
section 235.
SEC. 1264. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE SUPPORT FOR STABILIZATION
ACTIVITIES IN NATIONAL SECURITY INTEREST OF THE
UNITED STATES.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense may, with the
concurrence of the Secretary of State and in consultation
with the Administrator of the United States Agency for
International Development and the Director of the Office of
Management and Budget, provide support for the stabilization
activities of other Federal agencies specified under
subsection (c).
(b) Designation of Foreign Areas.--
(1) In general.--Amounts authorized to be provided pursuant
to this section shall be available only for support for
stabilization activities--
(A) in a country specified in paragraph (2); and
(B) that the Secretary of Defense, with the concurrence of
the Secretary of State, has determined are in the national
security interest of the United States.
(2) Specified countries.--The countries specified in this
paragraph are as follows:
[[Page S3478]]
(A) Iraq.
(B) Syria.
(C) Afghanistan.
(D) Somalia.
(c) Support to Other Agencies.--
(1) In general.--Support may be provided for stabilization
activities under subsection (a) to the Department of State,
the United States Agency for International Development, or
other Federal agencies, on a reimbursable or nonreimbursable
basis.
(2) Type of support.--Support under subsection (a) may
consist of--
(A) logistic support, supplies, and services; and
(B) equipment.
(d) Requirement for a Stabilization Strategy.--
(1) Limitation.--With respect to any country specified in
subsection (b)(2), no amount of support may be provided under
subsection (a) until 15 days after the date on which the
Secretary of Defense, with the concurrence of the Secretary
of State, submits to the appropriate committees of Congress a
detailed report setting forth a stabilization strategy for
such country.
(2) Elements of determination.--The stabilization strategy
required by paragraph (1) shall set forth the following:
(A) The United States interests in conducting stabilization
activities in the country specified in subsection (b)(2).
(B) The key foreign partners and actors in such country.
(C) The desired end states and objectives of the United
States stabilization activities in such country.
(D) The Department of Defense support intended to be
provided for the stabilization activities of other Federal
agencies under section (a).
(E) Any mechanism for civil-military coordination regarding
support for stabilization activities.
(F) The mechanisms for monitoring and evaluating the
effectiveness of Department of Defense support for United
States stabilization activities in the area.
(e) Requirement for Guidance.--No amount of support may be
provided under subsection (a) until 30 days after the date on
which the Secretary of Defense submits to the appropriate
committees of Congress written guidance for the design,
implementation, monitoring, and evaluation of support
provided under that subsection.
(f) Report.--The Secretary of Defense, with the concurrence
of the Secretary of State, shall submit to the appropriate
committees of Congress on an annual basis a report that
includes the following:
(1) The identification of each foreign area within
countries specified in subparagraph (b)(2) for which support
to stabilization has occurred.
(2) The total amount spent by the Department of Defense,
broken out by recipient Federal agency and activity.
(3) An assessment of the contribution of each activity
toward greater stability.
(4) An articulation of any plans for continued Department
of Defense support to stabilization in the specified foreign
area in order to maintain or improve stability.
(5) Other matters as the Secretary considers to be
appropriate.
(g) Use of Funds.--
(1) Source of funds.--Amounts for activities carried out
under this section in a fiscal year shall be derived only
from amounts authorized to be appropriated for such fiscal
year for the Department of Defense for Operation and
Maintenance, Defense-wide.
(2) Limitation.--Not more than $25,000,000 in each fiscal
year is authorized to be used to provide support under this
section.
(h) Expiration.--The authority provided under this section
may not be exercised after September 30, 2020.
(i) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Appropriate committees of congress.--The term
``appropriate committees of Congress'' means--
(A) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on
Foreign Relations of the Senate; and
(B) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on
Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives.
(2) Logistic support, supplies, and services.--The term
``logistic support, supplies, and services'' has the meaning
given the term in section 2350(1) of title 10 United States
Code.
SEC. 1265. ENHANCEMENT OF U.S.-ISRAEL DEFENSE COOPERATION.
(a) Extension of War Reserves Stockpile Authority.--Section
12001(d) of the Department of Defense Appropriations Act,
2005 (Public Law 108-287; 118 Stat. 1011) is amended by
striking ``after September 30, 2018'' and inserting ``after
September 30, 2023''.
(b) Joint Assessment of Quantity of Precision Guided
Munitions for Use by Israel.--
(1) In general.--The President, acting through the
Secretary of State and the Secretary of Defense, is
authorized to conduct a joint assessment with the Government
of Israel with respect to the matters described in paragraph
(2).
(2) Matters described.--The matters described in this
paragraph are the following:
(A) The quantity and type of precision guided munitions
that are necessary for Israel to combat Hezbollah in the
event of a sustained armed confrontation between Israel and
Hezbollah.
(B) The quantity and type of precision guided munitions
that are necessary for Israel in the event of a sustained
armed confrontation with other armed groups and terrorist
organizations such as Hamas.
(C) The resources the Government of Israel plans to
dedicate to acquire such precision guided munitions.
(D) United States planning to assist Israel to prepare for
sustained armed confrontations described in this subsection
as well as the ability of the United States to resupply
Israel in the event of confrontations described in
subparagraphs (A) and (B), if any.
(3) Report.--
(A) In general.--Not later than 15 days after the date on
which the joint assessment authorized under paragraph (1) is
completed, the President shall submit to the appropriate
congressional committees a report that contains the joint
assessment.
(B) Form.--The report required under subparagraph (A) shall
be submitted in classified form, but may contain an
unclassified summary.
(C) Appropriate congressional committees defined.--In this
paragraph, the term ``appropriate congressional committees''
means--
(i) the Committee on Foreign Relations and the Committee on
Armed Services of the Senate; and
(ii) the Committee on Foreign Affairs and the Committee on
Armed Services of the House of Representatives.
(c) Modification of Rapid Acquisition and Deployment
Procedures.--
(1) Requirement to establish procedures.--Section 806(a) of
the Bob Stump National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2003 (10 U.S.C. 2302 note; Public Law 107-314) is
amended--
(A) in paragraph (1)(C), by striking ``; and'';
(B) in paragraph (2), by striking the period at the end and
inserting ``; and''; and
(C) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(3) urgently needed to support production of precision
guided munitions--
``(A) for the United States to meet requirements; or
``(B) to assist an ally of the United States under direct
missile threat from--
``(i) an organization the Secretary of State has designated
as a foreign terrorist organization pursuant to section 219
of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1189); or
``(ii) a country the government of which the Secretary of
State has determined, for purposes of section 6(j) of the
Export Administration Act of 1979 (50 U.S.C. 4605(j)) (as in
effect pursuant to the International Emergency Economic
Powers Act), section 620A of the Foreign Assistance Act of
1961 (22 U.S.C. 2371), section 40 of the Arms Export Control
Act (22 U.S.C. 2780), or any other provision of law, is a
government that has repeatedly provided support for acts of
international terrorism.''.
(2) Prescription of procedures.--Not later than 180 days
after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of
Defense shall prescribe procedures for the rapid acquisition
and deployment of supplies and associated support services
for purposes described in paragraph (3) of section 806(a) of
the Bob Stump National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2003, as added by paragraph (1)(C).
SEC. 1266. CERTIFICATIONS REGARDING ACTIONS BY SAUDI ARABIA
IN YEMEN.
(a) Restriction.--
(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), if the Secretary
of State is unable under subsection (c) or (d) to certify
that the Government of Saudi Arabia is undertaking the
effort, measures, and actions described in paragraphs (1),
(2), (3), and (4) of subsection (c), no Federal funds may be
obligated or expended after the deadline for the applicable
certification to provide authorized in-flight refueling
pursuant to section 2342 of title 10, United States Code, or
other applicable statutory authority, of Saudi or Saudi-led
coalition non-United States aircraft conducting missions in
Yemen, other than missions related to--
(A) al Qaeda, al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), or
the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS);
(B) countering the transport, assembly, or employment of
ballistic missiles or components in Yemen;
(C) helping coalition aircraft return safely to base in
emergency situations;
(D) force protection of United States aircraft, ships, or
personnel; or
(E) freedom of navigation for United States military and
international commerce.
(2) Waiver.--The Secretary may waive the restriction in
paragraph (1) with respect to a particular certification if
the Secretary--
(A) certifies to the appropriate committees of Congress
that the waiver is in the national security interests of the
United States; and
(B) submits to the appropriate committees of Congress a
report, in written and unclassified form, setting forth--
(i) the effort in subsection (c)(1), measures in subsection
(c)(2), or actions in subsections (c)(3) or (c)(4), or
combination thereof, about which the Secretary is unable to
make the certification;
(ii) a detailed explanation why the Secretary is unable to
make the certification about such effort, measures, or
actions;
(iii) a description of the actions the Secretary is taking
to encourage the Government of Saudi Arabia to undertake such
effort, measures, or actions; and
(iv) a detailed justification for the waiver.
[[Page S3479]]
(b) Reporting Requirement.--Not later than 30 days after
the date of the enactment of this Act, the President or the
President's designee shall provide a briefing to the
appropriate committees of Congress including, at a minimum--
(1) a description of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates' military and political objectives in Yemen and
whether United States assistance to the Saudi-led coalition
has resulted in significant progress towards meeting those
objectives;
(2) a description of efforts by the Government of Saudi
Arabia to avoid disproportionate harm to civilians and
civilian objects in Yemen, and an assessment of whether
United States assistance to the Saudi-led coalition has led
to a demonstrable decrease in civilians killed or injured by
Saudi-led airstrikes and damage to civilian infrastructure;
(3) an assessment of the United Nations Verification and
Inspection Mechanism (UNVIM) in Yemen and an assessment of
the need for existing secondary inspection and clearance
processes and transshipment requirements on humanitarian and
commercial vessels that have been cleared by UNVIM;
(4) a description of the sources of external support for
the Houthi forces, including financial assistance, weapons
transfers, operational planning, training, and advisory
assistance;
(5) an assessment of the applicability of United States and
international sanctions to Houthi forces that have committed
grave human rights abuses, obstructed international aid, and
launched ballistic missiles into Saudi territory, and an
assessment of the applicability of United States and
international sanctions to individuals or entities providing
the Houthi forces with material support; and
(6) an assessment of the effect of the Saudi-led
coalition's military operations in Yemen on the efforts of
the United States to defeat al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula
and the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.
(c) Initial Certification.--Not later than 30 days after
the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of State
shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a
certification indicating whether the Government of Saudi
Arabia is undertaking--
(1) an urgent and good faith effort to support diplomatic
efforts to end the civil war in Yemen;
(2) appropriate measures to alleviate the humanitarian
crisis in Yemen by increasing access for Yemenis to food,
fuel, medicine, and medical evacuation, including through the
appropriate use of Yemen's Red Sea ports, including the port
of Hudaydah, the airport in Sana'a, and external border
crossings with Saudi Arabia;
(3) appropriate actions to reduce any unnecessary delays to
shipments associated with secondary inspection and clearance
processes other than the United Nations Verification and
Inspections Mechanism (UNVIM); and
(4) demonstrable actions to reduce the risk of harm to
civilians and civilian infrastructure resulting from its
military operations in Yemen, including by--
(A) complying with applicable agreements and laws
regulating defense articles purchased or transferred from the
United States; and
(B) taking appropriate steps to avoid disproportionate harm
to civilians and civilian infrastructure.
(d) Subsequent Certifications.--Not later than 180 and 360
days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the
Secretary of State shall submit to the appropriate committees
of Congress a certification indicating whether the Government
of Saudi Arabia is undertaking the effort, measures, and
actions described in paragraphs (1), (2), (3), and (4) of
subsection (c).
(e) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section may be
construed as authorizing the use of military force.
(f) Form of Certifications.--The certifications required
under subsections (c) and (d) shall be written, detailed, and
submitted in unclassified form.
(g) Strategy Required.--Not later than 90 days after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of State, in
coordination with the Secretary of Defense and the
Administrator of the United States Agency for International
Development, shall submit to the appropriate committees of
Congress an unclassified report listing United States
objectives in Yemen and detailing a strategy to accomplish
those objectives. The report shall be unclassified but may
include a classified annex.
(h) Appropriate Committees of Congress Defined.--In this
section, the term ``appropriate committees of Congress''
means--
(1) the Committee on Foreign Relations, the Committee on
Armed Services, and the Committee on Appropriations of the
Senate; and
(2) the Committee on Foreign Affairs, the Committee on
Armed Services, and the Committee on Appropriations of the
House of Representatives.
SEC. 1267. SENSE OF SENATE ON SUPPORT FOR G5 SAHEL JOINT
FORCE COUNTRIES.
It is the sense of the Senate that the United States
should--
(1) work with partners and allies to disrupt violent
extremist organizations in the Sahel region that threaten
United States security interests;
(2) enhance cooperation with G5 Sahel Joint Force
countries, which are--
(A) Burkina Faso;
(B) Mali;
(C) Mauritania;
(D) Niger; and
(E) Chad;
(3) continue to support the efforts of each G5 Sahel Joint
Force country--
(A) to improve security along the respective borders of
each country through the cooperation and deployment of joint
patrols to interdict the cross-border flows of illicit
trafficking and violent extremist groups;
(B) to address underlying sources of instability in each
country through a whole-of-government approach; and
(C) to build and sustain in each country--
(i) an effective, accountable government;
(ii) a capable and professional military; and
(iii) a healthy economy; and
(4) ensure that any assistance of the United States to a G5
Sahel Joint Force country is undertaken as a whole-of-
government effort that balances all instruments of United
States national power.
SEC. 1268. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON BROADENING AND EXPANDING
STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIPS AND ALLIES.
It is the sense of Congress that--
(1) the United States is an ally-rich country and our
potential competitors, such as Russia, China, and North
Korea, are ally-poor countries;
(2) United States allies and partners are critical to
defending peace and prosperity throughout the world;
(3) the rules-based international order supported by the
United States and its allies has ensured, and will continue
to promote, an international system that benefits all
nations;
(4) throughout the world, the United States will continue
to foster relationships with countries with like minds and
beliefs;
(5) as the United States manages multiple strategic
challenges, the enduring strength of the United States
remains in alliances such as the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization, the Rio Treaty, and mutual defense treaties
with Japan, the Republic of Korea, Australia, the
Philippines, and Thailand;
(6) the resolve of the United States remains as strong as
ever to forge new alliances and partnerships with countries
in order to jointly to work with one another on shared
challenges in Europe, the Indo-Pacific and throughout the
world;
(7) the United States will continue to invest in critical
capabilities, build a force posture that decreases the
vulnerabilities of the United States and increases
resiliency, all of which will help reassure the allies and
partners of the United States;
(8) the United States will encourage allies and partners to
be full and cooperative partners in their own defense and the
defense of the free and open international order; and
(9) the United States will continue to deepen and expand
alliances, especially in the Indo-Pacific, and will take no
ally for granted.
SEC. 1269. REMOVAL OF TURKEY FROM THE F-35 PROGRAM.
(a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
(1) The Government of the Republic of Turkey continues to
unlawfully and wrongfully detain Andrew Brunson, a United
States citizen, and continues to deny Mr. Brunson due process
rights consistent with international norms.
(2) The Government of the Republic of Turkey has wrongly
charged Andrew Brunson with belonging to a terrorist
organization and engaging in terrorist activities.
(3) The Government of the Republic of Turkey, including the
senior leadership of the government, bears direct
responsibility for the health and safety of Andrew Brunson
while he remains in the custody of the Government of the
Republic of Turkey.
(4) Congress will not tolerate any foreign government's
efforts to use United States citizens for political leverage.
(5) President Erdogan, along with other senior officials of
the Government of the Republic of Turkey, have publicly and
repeatedly stated the intention of the Government of the
Republic of Turkey to purchase the S-400 system from Russia,
an act that is sanctionable under current United States law.
(6) Any effort by the Government of the Republic of Turkey
to further enhance their relationship with Russia will
degrade the general security of the NATO alliance, and NATO
member countries, and degrade interoperability of the
alliance.
(b) Report.--The Secretary of Defense shall submit to the
appropriate congressional committees a plan to remove the
Government of the Republic of Turkey from participation in
the F-35 program, to include industrial and military aspects
of the program. The plan shall include:
(1) steps required to unwind industrial participation of
Turkish industry in the manufacturing and assembly of the F-
35 program;
(2) costs associated with replacing tooling and other
manufacturing materials held by Turkish industry;
(3) timelines associated with the removal of the Government
of the Republic of Turkey and Turkish industry from
participation in the F-35 program, so as to cause the least
impact on the remaining international program partners; and
(4) steps required to prohibit the transfer of any F-35
aircraft currently owned and operated, by the Government of
the Republic of Turkey, from the territory of the United
States.
[[Page S3480]]
(c) Limitation on the Transfer of the F-35 to Turkey.--The
Department of Defense may not transfer the title for any F-35
aircraft to the Government of the Republic of Turkey, until
such time as the report identified in subsection (b) has been
submitted.
(d) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this
section, the term ``appropriate congressional committees''
means--
(1) the congressional defense committees; and
(2) the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate and
the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of
Representatives.
SEC. 1270. INCREASE IN MINIMUM AMOUNT OF OBLIGATIONS FROM THE
SPECIAL DEFENSE ACQUISITION FUND FOR PRECISION
GUIDED MUNITIONS.
(a) Increase.--Section 114(c)(3) of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by striking ``20 percent'' and inserting
``25 percent''.
(b) Effective Date.--The amendment made by subsection (a)
shall take effect on October 1, 2018, and shall apply with
respect to fiscal years beginning on and after that date.
TITLE XIII--COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION
SEC. 1301. SPECIFICATION OF COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION
FUNDS.
(a) Fiscal Year 2019 Cooperative Threat Reduction Funds
Defined.--In this title, the term ``fiscal year 2019
Cooperative Threat Reduction funds'' means the funds
appropriated pursuant to the authorization of appropriations
in section 301 and made available by the funding table in
section 4301 for the Department of Defense Cooperative Threat
Reduction Program established under section 1321 of the
Department of Defense Cooperative Threat Reduction Act (50
U.S.C. 3711).
(b) Availability of Funds.--Funds appropriated pursuant to
the authorization of appropriations in section 301 and made
available by the funding table in section 4301 for the
Department of Defense Cooperative Threat Reduction Program
shall be available for obligation for fiscal years 2019,
2020, and 2021.
SEC. 1302. FUNDING ALLOCATIONS.
Of the $335,240,000 authorized to be appropriated to the
Department of Defense for fiscal year 2019 in section 301 and
made available by the funding table in section 4301 for the
Department of Defense Cooperative Threat Reduction Program
established under section 1321 of the Department of Defense
Cooperative Threat Reduction Act (50 U.S.C. 3711), the
following amounts may be obligated for the purposes
specified:
(1) For strategic offensive arms elimination, $2,823,000.
(2) For chemical weapons destruction, $5,446,000.
(3) For global nuclear security, $29,001,000.
(4) For cooperative biological engagement, $197,585,000.
(5) For proliferation prevention, $74,937,000.
(6) For activities designated as Other Assessments/
Administrative Costs, $25,448,000.
TITLE XIV--OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS
Subtitle A--Military Programs
SEC. 1401. WORKING CAPITAL FUNDS.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal
year 2019 for the use of the Armed Forces and other
activities and agencies of the Department of Defense for
providing capital for working capital and revolving funds, as
specified in the funding table in section 4501.
SEC. 1402. CHEMICAL AGENTS AND MUNITIONS DESTRUCTION,
DEFENSE.
(a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby
authorized to be appropriated for the Department of Defense
for fiscal year 2019 for expenses, not otherwise provided
for, for Chemical Agents and Munitions Destruction, Defense,
as specified in the funding table in section 4501.
(b) Use.--Amounts authorized to be appropriated under
subsection (a) are authorized for--
(1) the destruction of lethal chemical agents and munitions
in accordance with section 1412 of the Department of Defense
Authorization Act, 1986 (50 U.S.C. 1521); and
(2) the destruction of chemical warfare materiel of the
United States that is not covered by section 1412 of such
Act.
SEC. 1403. DRUG INTERDICTION AND COUNTER-DRUG ACTIVITIES,
DEFENSE-WIDE.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for the
Department of Defense for fiscal year 2019 for expenses, not
otherwise provided for, for Drug Interdiction and Counter-
Drug Activities, Defense-wide, as specified in the funding
table in section 4501.
SEC. 1404. DEFENSE INSPECTOR GENERAL.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for the
Department of Defense for fiscal year 2019 for expenses, not
otherwise provided for, for the Office of the Inspector
General of the Department of Defense, as specified in the
funding table in section 4501.
SEC. 1405. DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal
year 2019 for the Defense Health Program, as specified in the
funding table in section 4501, for use of the Armed Forces
and other activities and agencies of the Department of
Defense in providing for the health of eligible
beneficiaries.
Subtitle B--National Defense Stockpile
SEC. 1411. CONSOLIDATION OF REPORTING REQUIREMENTS UNDER THE
STRATEGIC AND CRITICAL MATERIALS STOCK PILING
ACT.
Section 11 of the Strategic and Critical Materials Stock
Piling Act (50 U.S.C. 98h-2) is amended--
(1) in subsection (a), by striking ``January 15 of'' and
inserting ``February 15''; and
(2) in subsection (b)--
(A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``Not later'' and all
that follows through ``report containing'' and inserting
``Each report under subsection (a) shall also include''; and
(B) in paragraph (2)--
(i) by striking ``Each such report'' in the first sentence
and inserting ``Each report under subsection (a) with respect
to matters covered by this subsection''; and
(ii) by striking ``Each such report'' in the second
sentence and inserting ``Each report under subsection (a)
with respect to such matters''.
Subtitle C--Armed Forces Retirement Home
SEC. 1421. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS FOR ARMED FORCES
RETIREMENT HOME.
There is hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal
year 2019 from the Armed Forces Retirement Home Trust Fund
the sum of $64,300,000 for the operation of the Armed Forces
Retirement Home.
SEC. 1422. EXPANSION OF ELIGIBILITY FOR RESIDENCE AT THE
ARMED FORCES RETIREMENT HOME.
Section 1512 of the Armed Forces Retirement Home Act of
1991 (24 U.S.C. 412) is amended to read as follows:
``SEC. 1512. RESIDENTS OF RETIREMENT HOME.
``(a) Persons Eligible to Be Residents.--Except as provided
in subsection (b), the following persons who served as
members of the Armed Forces, at least one-half of whose
service was not active commissioned service (other than as a
warrant officer or limited-duty officer), are eligible to
become residents of the Retirement Home:
``(1) Persons who are 60 years of age or over and were
discharged or released from service in the Armed Forces after
20 or more years of active service.
``(2) Persons who are determined under rules prescribed by
the Chief Operating Officer to be suffering from a service-
connected disability incurred in the line of duty in the
Armed Forces.
``(3) Persons who served in a war theater during a time of
war declared by Congress or were eligible for hostile fire
special pay under section 310 or 351 of title 37, United
States Code, and who are determined under rules prescribed by
the Chief Operating Officer to be suffering from injuries,
disease, or disability.
``(4) Persons who served in a women's component of the
Armed Forces before June 12, 1948, and are determined under
rules prescribed by the Chief Operating Officer to be
eligible for admission because of compelling personal
circumstances.
``(b) Persons Ineligible to Be Residents.--The following
persons are ineligible to become a resident of the Retirement
Home:
``(1) A person who--
``(A) has been convicted of a felony; or
``(B) was discharged or released from service in the Armed
Forces under other than honorable conditions.
``(2) A person with substance abuse or mental health
problems, except upon a judgment and satisfactory
determination by the Chief Operating Officer that--
``(A) the person has been evaluated by a qualified health
professional selected by the Retirement Home;
``(B) the Retirement Home can accommodate the person's
condition; and
``(C) the person agrees to such conditions of residency as
the Retirement Home may require.
``(c) Acceptance.--To apply for acceptance as a resident of
a facility of the Retirement Home, a person eligible to be a
resident shall submit to the Administrator of that facility
an application in such form and containing such information
as the Chief Operating Officer may require.
``(d) Priorities for Acceptance.--The Chief Operating
Officer shall establish a system of priorities for the
acceptance of residents so that the most deserving applicants
will be accepted whenever the number of eligible applicants
is greater than the Retirement Home can accommodate.
``(e) Spouses of Residents.--
``(1) Authority to admit.--Except as otherwise established
pursuant to subsection (d), the spouse of a person accepted
as a resident of a facility of the Retirement Home may be
admitted to that facility if the spouse--
``(A) is a covered beneficiary within the meaning of
section 1072(5) of title 10, United States Code;
``(B) is not ineligible to become a resident as provided in
subsection (b); and
``(C) submits an application for admittance in accordance
with subsection (c).
``(2) Treatment as resident.--A spouse admitted in
accordance with paragraph (1) shall be a resident of the
Retirement Home consistent with this Act, except as the Chief
Operating Officer may otherwise provide.''.
SEC. 1423. OVERSIGHT OF HEALTH CARE PROVIDED TO RESIDENTS OF
THE ARMED FORCES RETIREMENT HOME.
Section 1513A(c) of the Armed Forces Retirement Home Act of
1991 (24 U.S.C. 413a(c)) is amended--
(1) by striking paragraph (1) and inserting the following
new paragraph (1):
``(1) Facilitate and monitor the timely availability to
residents of the Retirement
[[Page S3481]]
Home such medical, mental health, and dental care services as
such residents may require at locations other than the
Retirement Home.''; and
(2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``Ensure'' and inserting
``Monitor''.
SEC. 1424. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY ON ACCEPTANCE OF GIFTS
FOR THE ARMED FORCES RETIREMENT HOME.
Paragraph (1) of section 1515(f) of the Armed Forces
Retirement Home Act of 1991 (24 U.S.C. 415(f)) is amended to
read as follows:
``(1) The Chief Operating Officer may accept, receive,
solicit, hold, administer, and use any gift, devise, or
bequest, either absolutely or in trust, of real or personal
property, or any income therefrom or other interest therein,
for the benefit of the Retirement Home.''.
SEC. 1425. RELIEF FOR RESIDENTS OF THE ARMED FORCES
RETIREMENT HOME IMPACTED BY INCREASE IN FEES.
(a) Prohibition on Removal for Inability To Pay Fee
Increase.--A resident of the Armed Forces Retirement Home as
of September 30, 2018, may not be removed or released from
the Retirement Home after that date based solely upon the
inability of the resident to pay the amount of any increase
in fees applicable to residents of the Retirement Home that
takes effect on October 1, 2018.
(b) Other Relief.--The Chief Operating Officer of the Armed
Forces Retirement Home shall take all actions practicable to
accommodate residents of the Retirement Home who are impacted
by the fee structure applicable to residents of the
Retirement Home that takes effect on October 1, 2018,
including through hardship relief, additional deductions from
gross income, and other appropriate actions.
SEC. 1426. LIMITATION ON APPLICABILITY OF FEE INCREASE FOR
RESIDENTS OF THE ARMED FORCES RETIREMENT HOME.
In the case of an individual who was a resident of the
Armed Forces Retirement Home as of April 9, 2018, the
increase in fees pursuant to the increase in fees for
residents of the Home scheduled to take effect on October 1,
2018, may not exceed an amount equal to 50 percent of the
fees payable by such individual as such a resident as of
April 9, 2018.
Subtitle D--Other Matters
SEC. 1431. AUTHORITY FOR TRANSFER OF FUNDS TO JOINT
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE-DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS
AFFAIRS MEDICAL FACILITY DEMONSTRATION FUND FOR
CAPTAIN JAMES A. LOVELL HEALTH CARE CENTER,
ILLINOIS.
(a) Authority for Transfer of Funds.--Of the funds
authorized to be appropriated by section 1405 and available
for the Defense Health Program for operation and maintenance,
$113,000,000 may be transferred by the Secretary of Defense
to the Joint Department of Defense-Department of Veterans
Affairs Medical Facility Demonstration Fund established by
subsection (a)(1) of section 1704 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 (Public Law 111-84;
123 Stat. 2571). For purposes of subsection (a)(2) of such
section 1704, any funds so transferred shall be treated as
amounts authorized and appropriated specifically for the
purpose of such a transfer.
(b) Use of Transferred Funds.--For the purposes of
subsection (b) of such section 1704, facility operations for
which funds transferred under subsection (a) may be used are
operations of the Captain James A. Lovell Federal Health Care
Center, consisting of the North Chicago Veterans Affairs
Medical Center, the Navy Ambulatory Care Center, and
supporting facilities designated as a combined Federal
medical facility under an operational agreement covered by
section 706 of the Duncan Hunter National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 (Public Law 110-417;
122 Stat. 4500).
SEC. 1432. ECONOMICAL AND EFFICIENT OPERATION OF WORKING
CAPITAL FUND ACTIVITIES.
Section 2208(e) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) by inserting ``(1)'' after ``(e)''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(2) The accomplishment of the most economical and
efficient organization and operation of working capital fund
activities for the purposes of paragraph (1) shall include
actions toward the following:
``(A) The implementation of a workload plan that optimizes
the efficiency of the workforce operating within a working
capital fund activity and reduces the rate structure.
``(B) Encouraging a working capital fund activity to
perform reimbursable work for other entities to sustain the
efficient use of the workforce.
``(C) Determining the appropriate leadership level for
approving work from outside entities to maximize
efficiency.''.
TITLE XV--AUTHORIZATION OF ADDITIONAL APPROPRIATIONS FOR OVERSEAS
CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS
Subtitle A--Authorizations of Appropriations
SEC. 1501. PURPOSE.
The purpose of this subtitle is to authorize appropriations
for the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2019 to provide
additional funds for overseas contingency operations being
carried out by the Armed Forces.
SEC. 1502. OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal
year 2019 for the Department of Defense for overseas
contingency operations in such amounts as may be designated
as provided in section 251(b)(2)(A)(ii) of the Balanced
Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 (2 U.S.C.
901(b)(2)(A)(ii)).
SEC. 1503. PROCUREMENT.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal
year 2019 for procurement accounts for the Army, the Navy and
the Marine Corps, the Air Force, and Defense-wide activities,
as specified in the funding table in section 4102.
SEC. 1504. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal
year 2019 for the use of the Department of Defense for
research, development, test, and evaluation, as specified in
the funding table in section 4202.
SEC. 1505. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal
year 2019 for the use of the Armed Forces and other
activities and agencies of the Department of Defense for
expenses, not otherwise provided for, for operation and
maintenance, as specified in the funding table in section
4302.
SEC. 1506. MILITARY PERSONNEL.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal
year 2019 for the use of the Armed Forces and other
activities and agencies of the Department of Defense for
expenses, not otherwise provided for, for military personnel,
as specified in the funding table in section 4402.
SEC. 1507. WORKING CAPITAL FUNDS.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal
year 2019 for the use of the Armed Forces and other
activities and agencies of the Department of Defense for
providing capital for working capital and revolving funds, as
specified in the funding table in section 4502.
SEC. 1508. DRUG INTERDICTION AND COUNTER-DRUG ACTIVITIES,
DEFENSE-WIDE.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for the
Department of Defense for fiscal year 2019 for expenses, not
otherwise provided for, for Drug Interdiction and Counter-
Drug Activities, Defense-wide, as specified in the funding
table in section 4502.
SEC. 1509. DEFENSE INSPECTOR GENERAL.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for the
Department of Defense for fiscal year 2019 for expenses, not
otherwise provided for, for the Office of the Inspector
General of the Department of Defense, as specified in the
funding table in section 4502.
SEC. 1510. DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for the
Department of Defense for fiscal year 2019 for expenses, not
otherwise provided for, for the Defense Health Program, as
specified in the funding table in section 4502.
Subtitle B--Financial Matters
SEC. 1521. TREATMENT AS ADDITIONAL AUTHORIZATIONS.
The amounts authorized to be appropriated by this title are
in addition to amounts otherwise authorized to be
appropriated by this Act.
SEC. 1522. SPECIAL TRANSFER AUTHORITY.
(a) Authority To Transfer Authorizations.--
(1) Authority.--Upon determination by the Secretary of
Defense that such action is necessary in the national
interest, the Secretary may transfer amounts of
authorizations made available to the Department of Defense in
this title for fiscal year 2019 between any such
authorizations for that fiscal year (or any subdivisions
thereof). Amounts of authorizations so transferred shall be
merged with and be available for the same purposes as the
authorization to which transferred.
(2) Limitation.--The total amount of authorizations that
the Secretary may transfer under the authority of this
subsection may not exceed $3,500,000,000.
(b) Terms and Conditions.--Transfers under this section
shall be subject to the same terms and conditions as
transfers under section 1001.
(c) Additional Authority.--The transfer authority provided
by this section is in addition to the transfer authority
provided under section 1001.
Subtitle C--Other Matters
SEC. 1531. JOINT IMPROVISED-THREAT DEFEAT ORGANIZATION.
(a) Use and Transfer of Funds.--
(1) In general.--Subsections (b) and (c) of section 1514 of
the John Warner National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2007 (Public Law 109-364; 120 Stat. 2439), as in effect
before the amendments made by section 1503 of the Duncan
Hunter National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2009 (Public Law 110-417; 122 Stat. 4649), shall apply to
amounts made available for fiscal year 2019 for the
Department of Defense for the Joint Improvised-Threat Defeat
Organization.
(2) References to joint improvised explosive device defeat
fund.--In the application of paragraph (1) to the use of
funds described in that paragraph in fiscal year 2019, any
reference in the subsections referred to in that paragraph to
the Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Fund shall be
deemed to be a reference to the Joint Improvised-Threat
Defeat Organization.
(b) Interdiction of Improvised Explosive Device Precursor
Chemicals.--
(1) Availability of funds.--Of the amounts authorized to be
appropriated for
[[Page S3482]]
fiscal year 2019 for the Department of Defense by this Act
for the Joint Improvised-Threat Defeat Organization,
$15,000,000 may be made available to the Secretary of
Defense, with the concurrence of the Secretary of State, to
provide training, equipment, supplies, and services to
ministries and other entities of foreign governments that the
Secretary of Defense has identified as critical for
countering the flow of improvised explosive device precursor
chemicals.
(2) Provision through other united states agencies.--If
jointly agreed upon by the Secretary of Defense and the head
of another department or agency of the United States
Government, the Secretary of Defense may transfer amounts
made available under paragraph (1) to such department or
agency for the provision by such department or agency of
training, equipment, supplies, and services to ministries and
other entities of foreign governments as described in that
paragraph.
(3) Notice to congress.--None of the funds made available
under paragraph (1) may be obligated or expended to supply
training, equipment, supplies, or services to a foreign
country before the date that is 15 days after the date on
which the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the
Secretary of State, has submitted to the congressional
defense committees, the Committee on Foreign Relations of the
Senate, and the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of
Representatives a notice that includes each of the following:
(A) The name of the foreign country for which training,
equipment, supplies, or services are proposed to be supplied.
(B) A description of the training, equipment, supplies, and
services to be provided to such foreign country using such
funds.
(C) A detailed description of the amounts proposed to be
obligated or expended to supply such training, equipment,
supplies, or services, including--
(i) any amounts proposed to be obligated or expended to
support the participation of a department or agency of the
United States Government other than the Department of
Defense; and
(ii) a description of the training, equipment, supplies, or
services proposed to be supplied.
(D) An evaluation of the effectiveness of the efforts of
such foreign country to counter the flow of improvised
explosive device precursor chemicals.
(E) An overall plan for countering the flow of precursor
chemicals in such foreign country.
(4) Expiration.--The authority provided by this subsection
expires on December 31, 2019.
TITLE XVI--STRATEGIC PROGRAMS, CYBER, AND INTELLIGENCE MATTERS
Subtitle A--Space Activities
SEC. 1601. MODIFICATIONS TO SPACE RAPID CAPABILITIES OFFICE.
Section 2273a of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (a), by striking ``joint'';
(2) in subsection (b), in the first sentence, by striking
``Department of Defense Executive Agent for Space'' and
inserting ``Secretary of the Air Force'';
(3) in subsection (c)--
(A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``; and'' and inserting a
semicolon;
(B) in paragraph (2), by striking the period at the end and
inserting ``; and''; and
(C) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(3) to rapidly develop and field new classified space
capabilities.''; and
(4) by striking subsections (d) through (g) and inserting
the following new subsections (d) through (f):
``(d) Acquisition Authority.--The acquisition activities of
the Office shall be subject to the following:
``(1) The Secretary of the Air Force shall designate the
acquisition executive of the Office, who shall provide
streamlined acquisition authority for any project of the
Office.
``(2) The Joint Capabilities Integration and Development
System process shall not apply to any acquisition by the
Office.
``(3) The Joint Force Space Component of the United States
Strategic Command shall establish, validate, and prioritize
program requirements.
``(e) Required Program Element.--
``(1) The Secretary of the Air Force shall ensure, within
budget program elements for space programs, that--
``(A) there are separate, dedicated program elements for
unclassified and classified activities relating to space
rapid capabilities; and
``(B) the Office executes the responsibilities of the
Office through those program elements.
``(2) The Office shall manage the program elements required
by paragraph (1).
``(f) Board of Directors.--The Secretary of the Air Force
shall establish for the Office a Board of Directors (to be
known as the `Space Rapid Capabilities Board of Directors')
to provide coordination, oversight, and approval of projects
for the Office.''.
SEC. 1602. SPACE WARFIGHTING POLICY AND REVIEW OF SPACE
CAPABILITIES.
(a) Space Warfighting Policy.--Not later than March 29,
2019, the Secretary of Defense shall develop a space
warfighting policy.
(b) Review of Space Capabilities.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary shall conduct a review
relating to the national security space enterprise that
evaluates the following:
(A) The resiliency of the national security space
enterprise with respect to a conflict.
(B) The ability of the national security space enterprise
to attribute an attack on a space system in a timely manner.
(C) The ability of the United States--
(i) to resolve a conflict in space; and
(ii) to determine the material means by which such conflict
may be resolved.
(D) The ability of the national security space enterprise--
(i) to defend against aggressive behavior in space at all
levels of conflict;
(ii) to defeat any adversary that demonstrates aggressive
behavior in space at all levels of conflict;
(iii) to deter aggressive behavior in space at all levels
of conflict; and
(iv) to develop a declassification strategy, if required to
demonstrate deterrence.
(E) The effectiveness and efficiency of the national
security space enterprise to rapidly research, develop,
acquire, and deploy space capabilities and capacities--
(i) to deter and defend United States national security
space assets; and
(ii) to respond to any new threat to such space assets.
(F) The current organizational structure of the national
security space enterprise with respect to roles,
responsibilities, and authorities.
(G) Any emerging space threat the Secretary expects the
United States to confront during the 10-year period beginning
on the date of the enactment of this Act.
(H) Such other matters as the Secretary considers
appropriate.
(2) Report.--
(A) In general.--Not later than March 29, 2019, the
Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report on the findings of the review under
paragraph (1).
(B) Form.--The report under subparagraph (A) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
SEC. 1603. REPORT ON ENHANCEMENTS TO THE GLOBAL POSITIONING
SYSTEM OPERATIONAL CONTROL SEGMENT.
(a) In General.--Not later than one year after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
submit to the congressional defense committees a report that
identifies whether the current Global Positioning System
Operational Control Segment (OCS) can be incrementally
improved to achieve capabilities similar to the Next
Generation Operational Control Segment (OCX) used to operate
the Global Positioning System III.
(b) Elements.--The report required under subsection (a)
shall include the following elements:
(1) A cybersecurity review of both OCS and OCX to determine
the specific cybersecurity improvements needed to operate the
system through 2030, including--
(A) the cybersecurity improvements to OCS needed to match
the cybersecurity capabilities that OCX is intended to
provide;
(B) any additional OCS cybersecurity protections needed
beyond those OCX is intended to provide; and
(C) any additional OCX cybersecurity protections needed
beyond those for which OCX is currently contracted.
(2) An incremental development plan for OCS, including--
(A) the number of additional incremental upgrades needed to
achieve capabilities similar to OCX, including a discussion
of--
(i) any additional capabilities needed;
(ii) the specific capabilities in each upgrade;
(iii) the duration of each upgrade; and
(iv) a full schedule to complete all upgrades;
(B) the estimated cost for each incremental OCS upgrade;
and
(C) the total estimated cost across fiscal years for all
OCS upgrades to achieve capabilities similar to OCX and any
additional capabilities.
(3) The date by which the Department of Defense would have
to begin contracting for each incremental OCS upgrade to
ensure availability of OCS for the Global Positioning System
III.
(4) A comparison of current improvements to OCS that are
underway, and additional OCS incremental improvements
described under paragraph 2, to the program of record OCX
capabilities, including--
(A) the acquisition and sustainment cost by fiscal year
through fiscal year 2030 for OCS and OCX;
(B) a comparison schedule between OCS (including
incremental improvements described under paragraph 2) and OCX
that identifies the delivery dates and capability delivered;
and
(C) the cost and schedule required to provide OCX with any
additional needed capabilities that are now required and not
currently in the program of record.
SEC. 1604. STREAMLINE OF COMMERCIAL SPACE LAUNCH OPERATIONS.
Section 1617 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 1106; 51
U.S.C. 50918 note) is amended--
(1) in subsection (c)--
(A) by redesignating paragraphs (2) and (3) as paragraphs
(3) and (4), respectively; and
(B) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following new
paragraph (2):
``(2) Streamlining.--
``(A) In general.--With respect to any licensed activity
under chapter 509 of title 51, United States Code, the
Secretary of Defense
[[Page S3483]]
may not impose any requirement on a licensee or transferee
that is duplicative of, or overlaps in intent with, any
requirement imposed by the Secretary of Transportation under
that chapter.
``(B) Waiver.--The Secretary of Defense may waive the
limitation under subparagraph (A) if the Secretary determines
that imposing a requirement described in that subparagraph is
necessary to avoid negative consequences for the national
security space program.''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(d) Effect of Law.--Nothing in this section limits the
ability of the Secretary of Defense to consult with the
Secretary of Transportation with respect to requirements and
approvals under chapter 509 of title 51, United States
Code.''.
SEC. 1605. REUSABLE LAUNCH VEHICLES.
(a) Reusability.--The Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle
Program shall be designated as the ``National Security Space
Launch Program''.
(b) Reference to Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle
Program.--Any reference in any law, regulation, guidance,
instruction, map, document, record, or other paper of the
United States to the Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle
Program shall be deemed to be a reference to the National
Security Space Launch Program.
(c) Policy.--In carrying out the policy set forth in
section 2273 of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary
of Defense shall pursue a strategy that includes fully or
partially reusable launch systems.
(d) Certification Strategy.--The Secretary shall continue
to develop a process to evaluate and certify launch vehicles
using previously flown components or systems for national
security space launch.
(e) Reporting Requirement.--Not less than 60 days before
the date on which a solicitation for procurement of space
launch services is issued, the Secretary shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report that sets forth--
(1) a determination with respect to whether launch vehicles
using previously flown components, or systems or with
components or systems that are intended to be reused, that
could otherwise meet mission requirements are eligible for
award; and
(2) in the case of a determination that such launch
vehicles shall not be eligible for award, a justification
with respect to the reason for ineligibility.
SEC. 1606. REVIEW OF AND REPORT ON ACTIVITIES OF
INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION.
(a) In General.--Not later than March 1, 2019, the
Secretary of Defense shall--
(1) in coordination with the Administrator of the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration, complete a review of
each program, activity, and future technology research
project of the Department of Defense being carried out on the
International Space Station as of that date; and
(2) submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a
report that describes the results of the review under
paragraph (1).
(b) Appropriate Committees of Congress Defined.--In this
section, the term ``appropriate committees of Congress''
means--
(1) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on
Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate; and
(2) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on
Energy and Commerce, and the Committee on Science, Space, and
Technology of the House of Representatives.
Subtitle B--Defense Intelligence and Intelligence-related Activities
SEC. 1611. FRAMEWORK ON GOVERNANCE, MISSION MANAGEMENT,
RESOURCING, AND EFFECTIVE OVERSIGHT OF
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE COMBAT SUPPORT AGENCIES
THAT ARE ALSO ELEMENTS OF THE INTELLIGENCE
COMMUNITY.
(a) Framework Required.--
(1) In general.--In accordance with section 105 of the
National Security Act of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 3038), section 193
of title 10, United States Code, and section 1018 of the
Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004
(Public Law 108-458; 50 U.S.C. 3023 note), the Secretary of
Defense shall develop and codify in policy a framework and
supporting processes within the Department of Defense to help
ensure that the missions, roles, and functions of the Combat
Support Agencies (CSA) of the Department of Defense that are
also elements of the intelligence community (IC), and other
intelligence components of the Department, are appropriately
balanced and resourced.
(2) Scope.--The framework shall include a consistent,
repeatable process for regular reevaluation of the
responsibilities and resource profiles of the elements
described in paragraph (1) for purposes of preventing
imbalances in priorities, insufficient or misaligned
resources, and mission creep.
(b) Elements.--The framework required by subsection (a)
shall include the following:
(1) A lexicon of relevant terms used by the Department of
Defense to ensure consistent definitions are used in
determinations about the balance described in subsection
(a)(1), which lexicon shall reconcile and codify jointly-used
definitions.
(2) A reevaluation of the intelligence components of the
Department, including the Joint Intelligence Centers and
Joint Intelligence Operations Centers within the combatant
commands, in order to determine which components should be
formally designated as part of the intelligence community and
any components not so designated conform to relevant
tradecraft standards.
(3) A repeatable Department process for evaluating the
addition, transfer, or elimination of defense intelligence
missions, roles, and functions, currently or to be performed
by elements described in subsection (a)(1), which process
shall include the following:
(A) A justification for any proposed addition, transfer, or
elimination of a mission, role, or function.
(B) The identification of the elements in the Federal
Government, if any, that currently perform the mission, role,
or function concerned.
(C) For any proposed addition of a mission, role, or
function, an assessment of the most appropriate element of
the Department to assume it, taking into account current
resource profiles, scope of existing responsibilities,
primary customers, and infrastructure necessary to support
the addition.
(D) For any proposed addition of transfer of a mission,
role, or function--
(i) a determination of the appropriate resource profile for
such mission, role, or function; and
(ii) the identification, in writing, for the Department
elements concerned of the resources anticipated to be needed
and source of such resources within the future-years defense
program in effect at the time of the proposed addition or
transfer.
(c) Briefing.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall provide to the
appropriate committees of Congress a briefing on the
framework required by subsection (a).
(d) Policy.--Not later than 270 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the
appropriate committees of Congress a report setting forth the
policy that codifies the framework required by subsection
(a).
(e) Appropriate Committees of Congress Defined.--In this
section, the term ``appropriate committees of Congress''
means--
(1) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on
Appropriations, and the Select Committee on Intelligence of
the Senate; and
(2) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on
Appropriations, and the Permanent Select Committee on
Intelligence of the House of Representatives.
Subtitle C--Cyberspace-related Matters
PART I--CYBERSPACE GENERALLY
SEC. 1621. POLICY OF THE UNITED STATES ON CYBERSPACE,
CYBERSECURITY, CYBER WARFARE, AND CYBER
DETERRENCE.
(a) In General.--It shall be the policy of the United
States, with respect to matters pertaining to cyberspace,
cybersecurity, and cyber warfare, that the United States
should employ all instruments of national power, including
the use of offensive cyber capabilities, to deter if
possible, and respond when necessary, to any and all cyber
attacks or other malicious cyber activities that target
United States interests with the intent to--
(1) cause casualties among United States persons or persons
of our allies;
(2) significantly disrupt the normal functioning of United
States democratic society or government (including attacks
against critical infrastructure that could damage systems
used to provide key services to the public or government);
(3) threaten the command and control of the United States
Armed Forces, the freedom of maneuver of the United States
Armed Forces, or the industrial base or other infrastructure
on which the United States Armed Forces rely to defend United
States interests and commitments; or
(4) achieve an effect, whether individually or in
aggregate, comparable to an armed attack or imperil a vital
interest of the United States.
(b) Response Options.--In carrying out the policy set forth
in subsection (a), the United States shall plan, develop, and
demonstrate response options to address the full range of
potential cyber attacks on United States interests that could
be conducted by potential adversaries of the United States.
(c) Denial Options.--In carrying out the policy set forth
in subsection (a) through response options developed pursuant
to subsection (b), the United States shall, to the greatest
extent practicable, prioritize the defensibility and
resiliency against cyber attacks and malicious cyber
activities described in subsection (a) of infrastructure
critical to the political integrity, economic security, and
national security of the United States.
(d) Cost-imposition Options.--In carrying out the policy
set forth in subsection (a) through response options
developed pursuant to subsection (b), the United States shall
develop and demonstrate, or otherwise make known to
adversaries of the existence of, cyber capabilities to impose
costs on any foreign power targeting the United States or
United States persons with a cyber attack or malicious cyber
activity described in subsection (a).
(e) Multi-prong Response.--In carrying out the policy set
forth in subsection (a) through response options developed
pursuant to subsection (b), the United States shall--
(1) devote immediate and sustained attention to boosting
the cyber resilience of critical United States strike systems
(including cyber, nuclear, and non-nuclear systems) in
[[Page S3484]]
order to ensure the United States can credibly threaten to
impose unacceptable costs in response to even the most
sophisticated large-scale cyber attack;
(2) develop offensive cyber capabilities and specific plans
and strategies to put at risk targets most valued by
adversaries of the United States and their key decision
makers;
(3) enhance attribution capabilities to reduce the time
required to positively attribute an attack with high
confidence; and
(4) develop intelligence and offensive cyber capabilities
to detect, disrupt, and potentially expose malicious cyber
activities.
(f) Policies Relating to Offensive Cyber Capabilities and
Sovereignty.--It is the policy of the United States that,
when a cyber attack or malicious cyber activity transits or
otherwise relies upon the networks or infrastructure of a
third country--
(1) the United States shall, to the greatest extent
practicable, notify and encourage the government of that
country to take action to eliminate the threat; and
(2) if the government is unable or unwilling to take
action, the United States reserves the right to act
unilaterally (with the consent of that government if
possible, but without such consent if necessary).
(g) Authority of Secretary of Defense.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense has the authority
to develop, prepare, coordinate, and, when appropriately
authorized to do so, conduct military cyber operations in
response to cyber attacks and malicious cyber activities
described in subsection (a) that are carried out against the
United States or United States persons by a foreign power.
(2) Delegation of additional authorities.--The Secretary
may delegate to the Commander of the United States Cyber
Command such authorities of the Secretaries of the military
departments, including authorities relating to manning,
training, and equipping, that the Secretary considers
appropriate.
(3) Use of delegated authorities.--The use by the Commander
of the United States Cyber Command of any authority delegated
to the Commander pursuant to this subsection shall be subject
to the authority, direction, and control of the Secretary.
(4) Rule of construction.--Nothing in this subsection shall
be construed to limit the authority of the President or
Congress to authorize the use of military force.
(h) Foreign Power Defined.--In this section, the term
``foreign power'' has the meaning given that term in section
101 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 (50
U.S.C. 1801).
SEC. 1622. AFFIRMING THE AUTHORITY OF THE SECRETARY OF
DEFENSE TO CONDUCT MILITARY ACTIVITIES AND
OPERATIONS IN CYBERSPACE.
Section 130g of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking ``The Secretary'' and inserting the
following:
``(a) In General.--The Secretary'';
(2) by adding at the end the following new subsections:
``(b) Affirmation of Authority.--(1) Congress affirms that
the Secretary of Defense may conduct military activities or
operations in cyberspace, including clandestine military
activities or operations in cyberspace, to defend the United
States and allies and interests of the United States,
including in response to malicious cyber activity carried out
against the United States or a United States person by a
foreign power.
``(2) Congress affirms that the authority referred to in
paragraph (1) includes the conduct of military activities or
operations in cyberspace short of war and in areas outside of
named areas of conflict for the purpose of preparation of the
environment, influence, force protection, and deterrence of
hostilities, or counterterrorism operations involving the
armed forces of the United States.
``(c) Clandestine Activities or Operations.--A clandestine
military activity or operation in cyberspace shall be
considered a traditional military activity for the purposes
of section 503(e)(2) of the National Security Act of 1947 (50
U.S.C. 3093(e)(2)).
``(d) Congressional Oversight.--The Secretary shall brief
the congressional defense committees about any military
activities or operations in cyberspace, including clandestine
military activities or operations in cyberspace, occurring
during the previous quarter during the quarterly briefing
required by section 484 of this title.
``(e) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall
be construed to limit the authority of the Secretary to
conduct military activities or operations in cyberspace,
including clandestine activities or operations in cyberspace,
or to alter or otherwise affect the War Powers Resolution (50
U.S.C. 1541-1548), the Authorization for Use of Military
Force (Public Law 107-40; 50 U.S.C. 1541 note), or reporting
of sensitive military cyber activities or operations required
by section 130j of this title.
``(f) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) The term `clandestine military activity or operation
in cyberspace' means a military activity or operation carried
out in cyberspace, or associated preparatory actions,
authorized by the President or the Secretary that--
``(A) is marked by, held in, or conducted with secrecy,
where the intent is that the activity or operation will not
be apparent or acknowledged publicly; and
``(B) is to be carried out--
``(i) as part of a military operation plan approved by the
President or the Secretary in anticipation of hostilities or
as directed by the President or the Secretary against--
``(I) adversaries (as defined by the National Security
Strategy); or
``(II) other emergent national security threats;
``(ii) to deter, safeguard, or defend against attacks or
malicious cyber activities against the United States or
Department of Defense information, networks, systems,
installations, facilities, or other assets; or
``(iii) in support of other information related
capabilities such as military deception and psychological
operations.
``(2) The term `foreign power' has the meaning given such
term in section 101 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act of 1978 (50 U.S.C. 1801).
``(3) The term `United States person' has the meaning given
such term in such section.''; and
(3) in subsection (a), as designated by paragraph (1), by
striking ``(as'' and all that follows through ``))''.
SEC. 1623. ACTIVE DEFENSE AND SURVEILLANCE AGAINST RUSSIAN
FEDERATION ATTACKS IN CYBERSPACE.
(a) Authority to Disrupt, Defeat, and Deter Cyber
Attacks.--
(1) In general.--In the event that the National Command
Authority determines that the Russian Federation is
conducting an active, systematic, and ongoing campaign of
attacks against the government or people of the United States
in cyberspace, the National Command Authority may authorize
the Commander of the United States Cyber Command, acting
through the Cyber Mission Forces assigned to the United
States Cyber Command, to take appropriate and proportional
action in cyberspace to disrupt, defeat, and deter such
attacks under the authority and policy of the Secretary of
Defense to conduct cyber operations and information
operations as traditional military activities.
(2) Notification and reporting.--
(A) Notification of operations.--IN exercising the
authority provided in paragraph (1), the Secretary shall
provide notices to the congressional defense committees in
accordance with section 130(f) of title 10, United States
Code.
(B) Quarterly reports by commander of the united states
cyber command.--
(i) In general.--In any fiscal year in which the Commander
of the United States Cyber Command carries out an action
under paragraph (1), the Secretary of Defense shall, not less
frequently than quarterly, submit to the congressional
defense committees a report on the actions of the Commander
under such paragraph in such fiscal year.
(ii) Manner of reporting.--Reports submitted under clause
(i) shall be submitted in a manner that is consistent with
the recurring quarterly report required by section 484 of
title 10, United States Code.
(b) Surveillance.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense, acting through
the Commander of the United States Cyber Command and the
cyber mission forces of such command, may conduct
surveillance in networks outside the United States of
personnel and organizations engaged at the behest or in
support of the Russian Federation in--
(A) stealing and releasing confidential information from
United States persons or supporting organizations who are
campaigning for public office;
(B) generating and planting information and narratives,
including the purchase of advertisements, in social and other
media intended to mislead, sharpen social and political
conflicts, or otherwise manipulate perceptions and opinions
of the people of the United States;
(C) creating networks of subverted computers and associated
false accounts on social media platforms for the purpose of
spreading and amplifying the impact of information and
narratives intended to mislead, sharpen social and political
conflicts, or otherwise manipulate perceptions and opinions
of the people of the United States; and
(D) developing or using cyber capabilities--
(i) to disable, disrupt, or destroy critical infrastructure
of the United States; or
(ii) to cause--
(I) casualties among United States persons or persons of
allies of the United States;
(II) significant damage to private or public property;
(III) significant economic disruption;
(IV) an effect, whether individually or in aggregate,
comparable to that of an armed attack or one that imperils a
vital national security interest of the United States; or
(V) significant disruption of the normal functioning of
United States democratic society or government, including
attacks against or incidents involving critical
infrastructure that could damage systems used to provide key
services to the public or government.
(2) Private sector cooperation.--
(A) In general.--The Secretary shall make arrangements,
directly or through other government organizations, with
private sector media representatives and organizations,
including social media companies, on a voluntary basis, using
the results of the surveillance under paragraph (1) to assist
in the identification of such malicious individuals and
organizations and associated false or counterfeit accounts
created on social media platforms.
[[Page S3485]]
(B) Security clearances.--In carrying out subparagraph (A),
the Secretary may grant such security clearances to
individuals of media organizations as the Secretary considers
necessary and appropriate to share evidence that supports the
Secretary's conclusions regarding the individuals and
organizations engaged in the activities described in
paragraph (1).
(c) Annual Report.--Not less frequently than once each
year, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense
committees and the congressional intelligence committees (as
defined in section 3 of the National Security Act of 1947 (50
U.S.C. 3003)) a report on--
(1) the scope and intensity of the Russian Federation's
information operations and attacks through cyberspace against
the government or people of the United States observed by the
cyber mission forces of the United States Cyber Command and
the National Security Agency;
(2) adjustments of the Department of Defense in the
response directed or recommended by the Secretary with
respect to such operations and attacks; and
(3) whether the authorities under subsections (a) and (b)
should be expanded to include other foreign powers, such as
the Islamic Republic of Iran and the People's Republic of
China.
SEC. 1624. REORGANIZATION AND CONSOLIDATION OF CERTAIN CYBER
PROVISIONS.
(a) In General.--Part I of subtitle A of title 10, United
States Code, is amended--
(1) by transferring sections 130g, 130j, and 130k to
chapter 19; and
(2) in chapter 19, by redesignating sections 130g, 130j,
and 130k, as transferred by subparagraph (A), as sections
394, 395, and 396, respectively.
(b) Conforming Amendment.--Section 108(m) of the
Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act of 2015 (6 U.S.C.
1507(m)) is amended by striking ``under section 130g'' and
inserting ``under section 394''.
(c) Clerical Amendments.--(1) The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 3 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by striking the items relating to sections 130g,
130j, and 130k.
(2) The table of sections at the beginning of chapter 19 of
such title is amended by adding at the end the following new
items:
``394. Authorities concerning military cyber operations.
``395. Notification requirements for sensitive military cyber
operations.
``396. Notification requirements for cyber weapons.''.
SEC. 1625. DESIGNATION OF OFFICIAL FOR MATTERS RELATING TO
INTEGRATING CYBERSECURITY AND INDUSTRIAL
CONTROL SYSTEMS WITHIN THE DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE.
(a) Designation of Integrating Official.--Not later than
180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the
Secretary of Defense shall designate one official to be
responsible for matters relating to integrating cybersecurity
and industrial control systems within the Department of
Defense.
(b) Responsibilities.--The official designated pursuant to
subsection (a) shall be responsible for matters described in
such subsection at all levels of command, from the Department
to the facility using industrial control systems, including
developing Department-wide certification standards for
integration of industrial control systems and taking into
consideration frameworks set forth by the National Institute
of Standards and Technology for the cybersecurity of such
systems.
SEC. 1626. ASSISTANCE FOR SMALL MANUFACTURERS IN THE DEFENSE
INDUSTRIAL SUPPLY CHAIN ON MATTERS RELATING TO
CYBERSECURITY.
(a) Dissemination of Cybersecurity Resources.--
(1) In general.--The Under Secretary of Defense for
Research and Engineering, in consultation with the Director
of the National Institute of Standards and Technology, shall
take such actions as may be necessary to enhance awareness of
cybersecurity threats among small manufacturers in the
defense industrial supply chain.
(2) Priority.--The Under Secretary of Defense for Research
and Engineering shall prioritize efforts to increase
awareness to help reduce cybersecurity risks faced by small
manufacturers described in paragraph (1).
(3) Sector focus.--The Under Secretary of Defense for
Research and Engineering shall carry out this subsection with
a focus on such industry sectors as the Under Secretary
considers critical.
(4) Outreach events.--Under paragraph (1), the Under
Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering shall
conduct outreach to support activities consistent with this
section. Such outreach may include live events with a
physical presence and outreach conducted through Internet
websites.
(b) Voluntary Cybersecurity Self-assessments.--The Under
Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering shall
develop mechanisms to provide assistance to help small
manufacturers conduct voluntary self-assessments in order to
understand operating environments, cybersecurity
requirements, and existing vulnerabilities, including through
the Mentor Protege Program, small business programs, and
engagements with defense laboratories and test ranges.
(c) Transfer of Research Findings and Expertise.--
(1) In general.--The Under Secretary of Defense for
Research and Engineering shall promote the transfer of
appropriate technology and techniques developed in the
Department of Defense to small manufacturers throughout the
United States to implement security measures that are
adequate to protect covered defense information, including
controlled unclassified information.
(2) Coordination with other federal expertise and
capabilities.--The Under Secretary of Defense for Research
and Engineering shall coordinate efforts, when appropriate,
with the expertise and capabilities that exist in Federal
agencies and federally sponsored laboratories.
(3) Agreements.--In carrying out this subsection, the Under
Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering may enter
into agreements with private industry, institutes of higher
education, or a State, United States territory, local, or
tribal government to ensure breadth and depth of coverage to
the United States defense industrial base and to leverage
resources.
(d) Defense Acquisition Workforce Cyber Training Program.--
The Secretary of Defense shall establish a cyber counseling
certification program, or approve a similar existing program,
to certify small business professionals and other relevant
acquisition staff within the Department of Defense to provide
cyber planning assistance to small manufacturers in the
defense industrial supply chain.
(e) Authorities.--In executing this program, the Secretary
may use the following authorities:
(1) The Manufacturing Technology Program established under
section 2521 of title 10, United States Code.
(2) The Centers for Science, Technology, and Engineering
Partnership program under section 2368 of title 10, United
States Code.
(3) The Manufacturing Engineering Education Program
established under section 2196 of title 10, United States
Code.
(4) The Small Business Innovation Research program.
(5) The mentor-protege program.
(6) Other legal authorities as the Secretary deems
necessary for the effective and efficient execution of the
program.
(f) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Resources.--The term ``resources'' means guidelines,
tools, best practices, standards, methodologies, and other
ways of providing information.
(2) Small business concern.--The term ``small business
concern'' means a small business concern as that term is used
in section 3 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 632).
(3) Small manufacturer.--The term ``small manufacturer''
means a small business concern that is a manufacturer.
(4) State.--The term ``State'' means each of the several
States, Territories, and possessions of the United States,
the District of Columbia, and the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico.
SEC. 1627. MODIFICATION OF ACQUISITION AUTHORITY OF THE
COMMANDER OF THE UNITED STATES CYBER COMMAND.
(a) Modification of Limitation on Use of Cyber Operations
Procurement Fund.--Subsection (e) of section 807 of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016
(Public Law 114-92; 10 U.S.C. 2224 note) is amended--
(1) by striking ``$75,000,000'' and inserting
``$250,000,000''; and
(2) by striking ``2021'' and inserting ``2025''.
(b) Extension on Sunset.--Subsection (i)(1) of such section
is amended by striking ``September 30, 2021'' and inserting
``September 30, 2025''.
SEC. 1628. EMAIL AND INTERNET WEBSITE SECURITY AND
AUTHENTICATION.
(a) Implementation of Plan Required.--Except as provided by
subsection (b), the Secretary of Defense shall develop and
implement the plan outlined in Binding Operational Directive
18-01, issued by the Secretary of Homeland Security on
October 16, 2017, relating to email security and
authentication and Internet website security, according to
the schedule established by the Binding Operational Directive
for the rest of the Executive Branch beginning with the date
of enactment of this Act.
(b) Elements.--The actions required of the Secretary of
Defense under subsection (a) include the following:
(1) The adoption of the START Transport Layer Security
(STARTTLS) protocol for encryption.
(2) Enforcement of Sender Policy Framework (SPF), Domain
Keys Identified Mail (DKIM), and Domain-based Message
Authentication, Reporting, and Conformance (DMARC) for email
authentication.
(3) Implementation of Hypertext Transfer Protocol Strict
Transport Security (HSTS).
(c) Waiver.--The Secretary may waive the requirements of
subsection (a) if the Secretary submits to the congressional
defense committees a certification that existing or planned
security measures for the Department of Defense either meet
or exceed the information security requirements of Binding
Operational Directive 18-01.
(d) Future Binding Operational Directives.--The Chief
Information Officer of the Department of Defense shall notify
the congressional defense committees within 180 days of the
issuance by the Secretary of Homeland Security after the date
of the enactment of this Act of any Binding Operational
Directive for cybersecurity whether the Department of Defense
will comply with
[[Page S3486]]
the Directive or how the Department of Defense plans to meet
or exceed the security objectives of the Directive.
SEC. 1629. MATTERS PERTAINING TO THE SHARKSEER CYBERSECURITY
PROGRAM.
(a) Transfer of Program.--Not later than March 1, 2019, the
Secretary of Defense shall transfer the Sharkseer
cybersecurity program from the National Security Agency to
the Defense Information Systems Agency, including all
associated funding and, as the Secretary considers necessary,
personnel.
(b) Limitation on Funding for the Information Systems
Security Program.--Of the funds authorized to be appropriated
by this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2019
or any subsequent fiscal year for research, development,
test, and evaluation for the Information Systems Security
Program for the National Security Agency, not more than 90
percent may be obligated or expended unless the Principal
Cyber Advisor certifies to the congressional defense
committees that the operations and maintenance funding for
the Sharkseer program for fiscal year 2019 and the subsequent
fiscal years of the current Future Years Defense Program are
available or programmed.
(c) Sharkseer Break and Inspect Capability.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that
the decryption capability described in section 1636 of the
Carl Levin and Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291)
is provided by the break and inspect subsystem of the
Sharkseer cybersecurity program, unless the Principal Cyber
Advisor notifies the congressional defense committees on or
before the date that is 90 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act that a superior enterprise solution
will be operational before October 1, 2019.
(2) Integration of capability.--The Secretary shall take
such actions as are necessary to integrate the break and
inspect subsystem of the Sharkseer cybersecurity program with
the Department of Defense public key infrastructure.
(d) Visibility to Endpoints.--The Secretary shall take such
actions as are necessary to enable, by October 1, 2020, the
Sharkseer cybersecurity program and computer network defense
service providers to instantly and automatically determine
the specific identity and location of computer hosts and
other endpoints that received or sent malware detected by the
Sharkseer cybersecurity program or other network perimeter
defenses.
(e) Sandbox as a Service.--The Secretary shall use the
Sharkseer cybersecurity program sandbox-as-a-service
capability as an enterprise solution and terminate all other
such projects, unless the Principal Cyber Advisor notifies
the congressional defense committees on or before the date
that is 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act
that a superior enterprise solution will be operational
before October 1, 2019.
(f) Authorization of Appropriations for Bandwidth
Expansion.--There is authorized to be appropriated
$20,000,000 for procurement, defense-wide, for the Defense
Information Systems Agency to increase the bandwidth of the
Sharkseer cybersecurity program to match the bandwidth of
communications entering the Internet access points of the
Department of Defense.
SEC. 1630. PILOT PROGRAM ON MODELING AND SIMULATION IN
SUPPORT OF MILITARY HOMELAND DEFENSE OPERATIONS
IN CONNECTION WITH CYBER ATTACKS ON CRITICAL
INFRASTRUCTURE.
(a) Pilot Program Required.--
(1) In general.--The Assistant Secretary of Defense for
Homeland Defense and Global Security shall carry out a pilot
program that uses the results of research exercises of local
government, industry, and military responses to combined
natural disasters and cyber attacks on critical
infrastructure in order to identify and develop means of
improving such responses to such combined disasters and
attacks.
(2) Discharge.--The Assistant Secretary shall carry out the
pilot program through the United States Northern Command and
the United States Cyber Command.
(3) Research exercises.--The pilot program shall be based
on lessons learned from the so-called ``Jack Voltaic''
research exercises conducted by the Army Cyber Institute,
industry partners of the Institute, and New York, New York,
and Houston, Texas.
(b) Purpose.--The purpose of the pilot program shall be to
accomplish the following:
(1) The development and demonstration of risk analysis
methodologies, and the application of commercial simulation
and modeling capabilities, based on artificial intelligence
and hyperscale cloud computing technologies, for use by the
Federal Governments, States, and localities, as applicable--
(A) to assess defense critical infrastructure
vulnerabilities and interdependencies to improve military
resiliency;
(B) to determine the likely effectiveness of attacks
described in subsection (a)(1), and countermeasures, tactics,
and tools supporting responsive military homeland defense
operations;
(C) to train personnel in incident response;
(D) to conduct exercises and test scenarios; and
(E) to foster collaboration and learning between and among
departments and agencies of the Federal Government, State and
local governments, and private entities responsible for
critical infrastructure.
(2) The development and demonstration of the foundations
for establishing and maintaining a program of record for a
shared high-fidelity, interactive, affordable, cloud-based
modeling and simulation of critical infrastructure systems
and incident response capabilities that can simulate complex
cyber and physical attacks and disruptions on individual and
multiple sectors on national, regional, State, and local
scales.
(c) Report.--
(1) In general.--At the same time the budget of the
President for fiscal year 2020 is submitted to Congress
pursuant to section 1105(a) of title 31, United States Code,
the Assistant Secretary shall, in consultation with the
Secretary of Homeland Security, submit to the congressional
defense committees a report on the pilot program.
(2) Contents.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall
include the following:
(A) A description of the results of the exercises described
in subsection (a)(3) and any other exercises conducted as
part of the pilot program as of the date of the report.
(B) A list of the cybersecurity units of the National Guard
and Reserves, and a description and assessment of the
progress of the Assistant Secretary and the National
Governors' Association in promoting multi-State mutual
assistance compacts to share resources with respect to
combined natural disaster and cyber attacks described in
subsection (a)(1) as well as an assessment of how the
National Guard's ability to operate under dual jurisdictions
and their existing relationships at the State and local level
could be used in these types of events.
(C) A description of the risk analysis methodologies and
modeling and simulation capabilities developed and
demonstrated pursuant to the pilot program, and an assessment
of the potential for future growth of commercial technology
in support of the homeland defense mission of the Department
of Defense.
(D) Such recommendations as the Secretary considers
appropriate regarding the establishment of a program of
record for the Department on further development and
sustainment of risk analysis methodologies and advanced,
large-scale modeling and simulation on critical
infrastructure and cyber warfare.
(E) Lessons learned from the use of novel risk analysis
methodologies and large-scale modeling and simulation carried
out under the pilot program regarding vulnerabilities,
required capabilities, and reconfigured force structure,
coordination practices, and policy.
(F) Planned steps for implementing the lessons described in
subparagraph (E).
(d) Funding.--Of the amounts authorized to be appropriated
for fiscal year 2019 by section 201 for research,
development, test, and evaluation for the Army and available
for Advanced Concepts and Simulation (Program Element
(62308A)), $10,000,000 may be available for the pilot
program.
SEC. 1631. SECURITY PRODUCT INTEGRATION FRAMEWORK.
(a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
(1) The Department of Defense requires a standard,
enterprise-wide, security product integration framework
(SPIF) that provides a machine-to-machine data exchange
architecture and protocol to achieve interoperability and
automated orchestration and coordinated action between and
among cybersecurity services, devices, appliances, agents,
applications, tools, and command and control centers.
(2) Information security products and services need to be
engineered to consume and act on information, direction, and
cues from other security elements on a network through this
framework.
(3) A security product integration framework should ideally
be non-proprietary or designed as a modular open system.
(4) A security integration framework is essential to
achieve the speed, scale, and agility of response required
for cyber warfare, and to reduce the cost and time needed to
integrate new products and services into the existing
security environment.
(b) Demonstration Program.--The Principal Cyber Adviser,
the Chief Information Officer, and the Commander of the
United States Cyber Command shall select a network or network
segment and associated computer network defense service
provider to conduct a demonstration and evaluation of one or
more existing security product integration frameworks,
including modifying network security systems to enable such
systems to ingest, publish, subscribe, tip and cue, and
request information or services from each other.
SEC. 1632. REPORT ON ENHANCEMENT OF SOFTWARE SECURITY FOR
CRITICAL SYSTEMS.
(a) Report Required.--Not later than March 1, 2019, the
Principal Cyber Adviser to the Secretary of Defense and the
Chief Information Officer of the Department of Defense shall
jointly submit to the congressional defense committees a
report on a study, based on the authorities specified in
subsection (b), on the costs, benefits, technical merits, and
other merits of applying the technology described in
subsection (c) to the vulnerability assessment and
remediation of the following:
(1) Nuclear systems and nuclear command and control.
(2) A critical subset of conventional power projection
capabilities.
(3) Cyber command and control.
(4) Other defense critical infrastructure
(b) Basis for Conduct of Study.--The study required for
purposes of subsection (a) shall be conducted pursuant to the
following:
[[Page S3487]]
(1) Section 1640 of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91).
(2) Section 1650 of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2017 (10 U.S.C. 2224 note).
(3) Section 1647 of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 1118).
(c) Technologies.--The technologies described in this
subsection are the following:
(1) Technology developed and used by Combat Support
Agencies of the Department of Defense to discover flaws and
weaknesses in software code by inputting immense quantities
of pseudo-random data (commonly referred to as ``fuzz'') to
identify inputs that cause the software to fail.
(2) Cloud-based software fuzzing-as-a-service to
continuously test the security of Department of Defense
software repositories at large scale.
(3) Formal programming and protocol language for software
code development and other methods and tools developed under
the High Assurance Cyber Military Systems program of the
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.
(4) The binary analysis and symbolic execution software
security tools developed under the Cyber Grand Challenge of
the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.
SEC. 1633. COMPLY TO CONNECT AND CYBERSECURITY SCORECARD.
(a) Limitation.--After October 1, 2019, no funds may be
obligated or expended to prepare the cybersecurity scorecard
for the Secretary of Defense unless the Department of Defense
is implementing a funded capability to meet the
requirements--
(1) established by the Chief Information Officer and the
Commander of United States Cyber Command pursuant to section
1653 of the National Defense Authorization for Fiscal Year
2017 (Public Law 114-328; 10 U.S.C. 2224 note); and
(2) set forth in the Information Security Continuous
Monitoring Strategy, the Comply-to-Connect Strategy, the
Enterprise Patch Management Service Strategy and Concept of
Operations, and the User Activity Monitoring Strategy.
(b) Report.--Not later than January 10, 2019, the Director
of Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report comparing the
current capabilities of the Department of Defense to--
(1) the requirements described in subsection (a); and
(2) the capabilities deployed by the Department of Homeland
Security and the General Services Administration under the
Continuous Diagnostics and Mitigation program across the non-
Department of Defense departments and agencies of the Federal
Government.
(c) Risk Thresholds.--The Chief Information Officer of the
Department of Defense, in coordination with the Principal
Cyber Advisor, the Director of Operations of the Joint Staff,
and the Commander of United States Cyber Command, shall
establish risk thresholds for systems and network operations
that, when exceeded, would trigger heightened security
measures, such as enhanced monitoring and access policy
changes.
(d) Enterprise Governance, Risk, and Compliance Plan.--Not
later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this
Act, the Chief Information Officer and the Principal Cyber
Advisor shall develop a plan to implement an enterprise
governance, risk, and compliance platform and process to
maintain current status of all information and operational
technology assets, vulnerabilities, threats, and mitigations.
SEC. 1634. CYBERSPACE SOLARIUM COMMISSION.
(a) Establishment.--
(1) In general.--There is established a commission to
develop a consensus on a strategic approach to protecting the
crucial advantages of the United States in cyberspace against
the attempts of adversaries to erode such advantages.
(2) Designation.--The commission established under
paragraph (1) shall be known as the ``Cyberspace Solarium
Commission'' (in this section the ``Commission'').
(b) Membership.--
(1) Composition.--(A) Subject to subparagraph (B), the
Commission shall be composed of 13 members, as follows:
(i) The Principal Deputy Director of National Intelligence.
(ii) The Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security.
(iii) The Deputy Secretary of Defense.
(iv) Three members appointed by the majority leader of the
Senate, in consultation with the Chairman of the Committee on
Armed Services of the Senate, one of whom shall be a member
of the Senate and two of whom shall not be.
(v) Two members appointed by the minority leader of the
Senate, in consultation with the Ranking Member of the
Committee on Armed Services of the Senate, one of whom shall
be a member of the Senate and one of whom shall not be.
(vi) Three members appointed by the Speaker of the House of
Representatives, in consultation with the Chairman of the
Committee on Armed Services of the House of Representatives,
one of whom shall be a member of the House of Representatives
and two of whom shall not be.
(vii) Two members appointed by the minority leader of the
House of Representatives, in consultation with the Ranking
Member of the Committee on Armed Services of the House of
Representatives, one of whom shall be a member of the House
of Representatives and one of whom shall not be.
(B)(i) The members of the Commission who are not members of
Congress and who are appointed under clauses (iv) through
(vii) of subparagraph (A) shall be individuals who are
nationally recognized for expertise, knowledge, or experience
in--
(I) cyber strategy or national-level strategies to combat
long-term adversaries;
(II) cyber technology and innovation;
(III) use of intelligence information by national
policymakers and military leaders; or
(IV) the implementation, funding, or oversight of the
national security policies of the United States.
(ii) An official who appoints members of the Commission may
not appoint an individual as a member of the Commission if,
in the judgment of the official, such individual possesses
any personal or financial interest in the discharge of any of
the duties of the Commission.
(iii) All members of the Commission described in clause (i)
shall possess an appropriate security clearance in accordance
with applicable provisions of law concerning the handling of
classified information.
(2) Co-chairs.--(A) The Commission shall have two co-
chairs, selected from among the members of the Commission.
(B) One co-chair of the Commission shall be a member of the
Democratic Party, and one co-chair shall be a member of the
Republican Party.
(C) The individuals who serve as the co-chairs of the
Commission shall be jointly agreed upon by the President, the
majority leader of the Senate, the minority leader of the
Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and the
minority leader of the House of Representatives.
(c) Appointment; Initial Meeting.--
(1) Appointment.--Members of the Commission shall be
appointed not later than 45 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act.
(2) Initial meeting.--The Commission shall hold its initial
meeting on or before the date that is 60 days after the date
of the enactment of this Act.
(d) Meetings; Quorum; Vacancies.--
(1) In general.--After its initial meeting, the Commission
shall meet upon the call of the co-chairs of the Commission.
(2) Quorum.--Seven members of the Commission shall
constitute a quorum for purposes of conducting business,
except that two members of the Commission shall constitute a
quorum for purposes of receiving testimony.
(3) Vacancies.--Any vacancy in the Commission shall not
affect its powers, but shall be filled in the same manner in
which the original appointment was made.
(4) Quorum with vacancies.--If vacancies in the Commission
occur on any day after 45 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, a quorum shall consist of a majority
of the members of the Commission as of such day.
(e) Actions of Commission.--
(1) In general.--The Commission shall act by resolution
agreed to by a majority of the members of the Commission
voting and present.
(2) Panels.--The Commission may establish panels composed
of less than the full membership of the Commission for
purposes of carrying out the duties of the Commission under
this title. The actions of any such panel shall be subject to
the review and control of the Commission. Any findings and
determinations made by such a panel shall not be considered
the findings and determinations of the Commission unless
approved by the Commission.
(3) Delegation.--Any member, agent, or staff of the
Commission may, if authorized by the co-chairs of the
Commission, take any action which the Commission is
authorized to take pursuant to this title.
(f) Duties.--The duties of the Commission are as follows:
(1) To weigh the costs and benefits of various strategic
options to reach the goal of protecting the advantages
described in subsection (a)(1), including the political
system of the United States, the national security industrial
sector of the United States, and the innovation base of the
United States. The options to be assessed should include
deterrence, norms-based regimes, and cyber persistence.
(2) To review adversarial strategies and intentions,
current programs for the protection of advantages described
in subsection (a)(1), and the capabilities of the Federal
Government to understand if and how adversaries are currently
being deterred or thwarted in their aims and ambitions.
(3) To evaluate the current allocation of resources for
understanding adversarial strategies and intentions and
protecting the advantages described in subsection (a)(1).
(4) In weighing the options for protecting advantages as
described in subsection (a)(1), to consider possible
structures and authorities that need to be established,
revised, or augmented within the Federal Government.
(g) Powers of Commission.--
(1) In general.--(A) The Commission or, on the
authorization of the Commission, any subcommittee or member
thereof, may, for the purpose of carrying out the provisions
of this section--
(i) hold such hearings and sit and act at such times and
places, take such testimony, receive such evidence, and
administer such oaths; and
(ii) require, by subpoena or otherwise, the attendance and
testimony of such witnesses and the production of such books,
records,
[[Page S3488]]
correspondence, memoranda, papers, and documents, as the
Commission or such designated subcommittee or designated
member considers necessary.
(B) Subpoenas may be issued under subparagraph (A)(ii)
under the signature of the co-chairs of the Commission, and
may be served by any person designated by such co-chairs.
(C) The provisions of sections 102 through 104 of the
Revised Statutes of the United States (2 U.S.C. 192-194)
shall apply in the case of any failure of a witness to comply
with any subpoena or to testify when summoned under authority
of this section.
(2) Contracting.--The Commission may, to such extent and in
such amounts as are provided in advance in appropriation
Acts, enter into contracts to enable the Commission to
discharge its duties under this title.
(3) Information from federal agencies.--(A) The Commission
may secure directly from any executive department, agency,
bureau, board, commission, office, independent establishment,
or instrumentality of the Government information,
suggestions, estimates, and statistics for the purposes of
this title.
(B) Each such department, agency, bureau, board,
commission, office, establishment, or instrumentality shall,
to the extent authorized by law, furnish such information,
suggestions, estimates, and statistics directly to the
Commission, upon request of the co-chairs of the Commission.
(C) The Commission shall handle and protect all classified
information provided to it under this section in accordance
with applicable statutes and regulations.
(4) Assistance from federal agencies.--(A) The Secretary of
Defense shall provide to the Commission, on a nonreimbursable
basis, such administrative services, funds, staff,
facilities, and other support services as are necessary for
the performance of the Commission's duties under this title.
(B) The Director of National Intelligence may provide the
Commission, on a nonreimbursable basis, with such
administrative services, staff, and other support services as
the Commission may request.
(C) In addition to the assistance set forth in paragraphs
(1) and (2), other departments and agencies of the United
States may provide the Commission such services, funds,
facilities, staff, and other support as such departments and
agencies consider advisable and as may be authorized by law.
(D) The Commission shall receive the full and timely
cooperation of any official, department, or agency of the
United States Government whose assistance is necessary for
the fulfillment of the duties of the Commission under this
title, including the provision of full and current briefings
and analyses.
(5) Prohibition on withholding information.--No department
or agency of the Government may withhold information from the
Commission on the grounds that providing the information to
the Commission would constitute the unauthorized disclosure
of classified information or information relating to
intelligence sources or methods.
(6) Postal services.--The Commission may use the United
States postal services in the same manner and under the same
conditions as the departments and agencies of the United
States.
(7) Gifts.--The Commission may accept, use, and dispose of
gifts or donations of services or property in carrying out
its duties under this title.
(h) Staff of Commission.--
(1) In general.--(A) The co-chairs of the Commission, in
accordance with rules agreed upon by the Commission, shall
appoint and fix the compensation of a staff director and such
other personnel as may be necessary to enable the Commission
to carry out its duties, without regard to the provisions of
title 5, United States Code, governing appointments in the
competitive service, and without regard to the provisions of
chapter 51 and subchapter III of chapter 53 of such title
relating to classification and General Schedule pay rates,
except that no rate of pay fixed under this subsection may
exceed the equivalent of that payable to a person occupying a
position at level V of the Executive Schedule under section
5316 of such title.
(B) Any Federal Government employee may be detailed to the
Commission without reimbursement from the Commission, and
such detailee shall retain the rights, status, and privileges
of his or her regular employment without interruption.
(C) All staff of the Commission shall possess a security
clearance in accordance with applicable laws and regulations
concerning the handling of classified information.
(2) Consultant services.--(A) The Commission may procure
the services of experts and consultants in accordance with
section 3109 of title 5, United States Code, but at rates not
to exceed the daily rate paid a person occupying a position
at level IV of the Executive Schedule under section 5315 of
such title.
(B) All experts and consultants employed by the Commission
shall possess a security clearance in accordance with
applicable laws and regulations concerning the handling of
classified information.
(i) Compensation and Travel Expenses.--
(1) Compensation.--(A) Except as provided in paragraph (2),
each member of the Commission may be compensated at not to
exceed the daily equivalent of the annual rate of basic pay
in effect for a position at level IV of the Executive
Schedule under section 5315 of title 5, United States Code,
for each day during which that member is engaged in the
actual performance of the duties of the Commission under this
title.
(B) Members of the Commission who are officers or employees
of the United States or Members of Congress shall receive no
additional pay by reason of their service on the Commission.
(2) Travel expenses.--While away from their homes or
regular places of business in the performance of services for
the Commission, members of the Commission may be allowed
travel expenses, including per diem in lieu of subsistence,
in the same manner as persons employed intermittently in the
Government service are allowed expenses under section 5703 of
title 5, United States Code.
(j) Treatment of Information Relating to National
Security.--
(1) In general.--(A) The Director of National Intelligence
shall assume responsibility for the handling and disposition
of any information related to the national security of the
United States that is received, considered, or used by the
Commission under this title.
(B) Any information related to the national security of the
United States that is provided to the Commission by a
congressional intelligence committees or the congressional
armed services committees may not be further provided or
released without the approval of the chairman of such
committees.
(2) Access after termination of commission.--
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, after the
termination of the Commission under subsection (k)(2), only
the members and designated staff of the congressional
intelligence committees, the Director of National
Intelligence (and the designees of the Director), and such
other officials of the executive branch as the President may
designate shall have access to information related to the
national security of the United States that is received,
considered, or used by the Commission.
(k) Final Report; Termination.--
(1) Final report.--Not later than September 1, 2019, the
Commission shall submit to the congressional defense
committees, the congressional intelligence committees, the
Director of National Intelligence, and the Secretary of
Defense, and the Secretary of Homeland Security a final
report on the findings of the Commission.
(2) Termination.--(A) The Commission, and all the
authorities of this section, shall terminate at the end of
the 120-day period beginning on the date on which the final
report under paragraph (1) is submitted to the congressional
defense and intelligence committees.
(B) The Commission may use the 120-day period referred to
in paragraph (1) for the purposes of concluding its
activities, including providing testimony to Congress
concerning the final report referred to in that paragraph and
disseminating the report.
(l) Assessments of Final Report.--Not later than 60 days
after receipt of the final report under subsection (k)(1),
the Director of National Intelligence and the Secretary of
Defense shall each submit to the congressional intelligence
committees and the congressional defense committees an
assessment by the Director or the Secretary, as the case may
be, of the final report. Each assessment shall include such
comments on the findings and recommendations contained in the
final report as the Director or Secretary, as the case may
be, considers appropriate.
(m) Inapplicability of Certain Administrative Provisions.--
(1) Federal advisory committee act.--The provisions of the
Federal Advisory Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.) shall not
apply to the activities of the Commission under this section.
(2) Freedom of information act.--The provisions of section
552 of title 5, United States Code (commonly referred to as
the Freedom of Information Act), shall not apply to the
activities, records, and proceedings of the Commission under
this section.
(n) Funding.--
(1) Authorization of appropriations.--There is authorized
to be appropriated $4,000,000 to carry out this section.
(2) Availability in general.--Subject to paragraph (1), the
Secretary of Defense shall make available to the Commission
such amounts as the Commission may require for purposes of
the activities of the Commission under this section.
(3) Duration of availability.--Amounts made available to
the Commission under paragraph (2) shall remain available
until expended.
(o) Congressional Intelligence Committees Defined.--In this
section, the term ``congressional intelligence committees''
means--
(1) the Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate; and
(2) the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the
House of Representatives.
SEC. 1635. PROGRAM TO ESTABLISH CYBER INSTITUTES AT
INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER LEARNING.
(a) Program Authorized.--The Secretary of Defense may carry
out a program to establish a Cyber Institute at institutions
of higher learning selected under subsection (b) for purposes
of accelerating and focusing the development of foundational
expertise in critical cyber operational skills for future
military and civilian leaders of the Armed Forces and the
Department of Defense, including such leaders of the reserve
components.
(b) Selected Institutions of Higher Learning.--
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(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall select
institutions of higher learning for purposes of the program
established under subsection (a) from among institutions of
higher learning that have a Reserve Officers' Training Corps
program.
(2) Consideration of senior military colleges.--In
selecting institutions of higher learning under paragraph
(1), the Secretary shall consider the senior military
colleges with Reserve Officers' Training Corps programs.
(c) Elements.--Each institute established under the program
authorized by subsection (a) shall include the following:
(1) Programs to provide future military and civilian
leaders of the Armed Forces or the Department of Defense who
possess cyber operational expertise from beginning through
advanced skill levels. Such programs shall include
instruction and practical experiences that lead to recognized
certifications and degrees in the cyber field.
(2) Programs of targeted strategic foreign language
proficiency training for such future leaders that--
(A) are designed to significantly enhance critical cyber
operational capabilities; and
(B) are tailored to current and anticipated readiness
requirements.
(3) Programs related to mathematical foundations of
cryptography and courses in cryptographic theory and practice
designed to complement and reinforce cyber education along
with the strategic language programs critical to cyber
operations.
(4) Programs related to data science and courses in data
science theory and practice designed to complement and
reinforce cyber education along with the strategic language
programs critical to cyber operations.
(5) Programs designed to develop early interest and cyber
talent through summer programs, dual enrollment opportunities
for cyber, strategic language, data science, and cryptography
related courses.
(6) Training and education programs to expand the pool of
qualified cyber instructors necessary to support cyber
education in regional school systems.
(d) Partnerships With Department of Defense and the Armed
Forces.--Any institute established under the program
authorized by subsection (a) may enter into a partnership
with one or more components of the Armed Forces, active or
reserve, or any agency of the Department of Defense to
facilitate the development of critical cyber skills for
students who may pursue a military career.
(e) Partnerships.--Any institute established under the
program authorized by subsection (a) may enter into a
partnership with one or more local educational agencies to
facilitate the development of critical cyber skills.
(f) Senior Military Colleges Defined.--The term ``senior
military colleges'' has the meaning given such term in
section 2111a(f) of title 10, United States Code.
SEC. 1636. ESTABLISHMENT OF CYBERSECURITY FOR DEFENSE
INDUSTRIAL BASE MANUFACTURING ACTIVITY.
(a) Establishment.--
(1) Authority.--The Secretary of Defense may, in
consultation with the Director of the National Institute of
Standards and Technology, establish an activity to assess and
strengthen the cybersecurity resiliency of the defense
industrial base of the United States.
(2) Designation.--The activity that may be established
under paragraph (1) shall be known as the ``Cybersecurity for
Defense Industrial Base Manufacturing Activity''.
(b) Activities.--If the Secretary of Defense exercises the
authority under subsection (a), the Secretary shall utilize
the activity to explore ways to increase the cybersecurity
resilience of the defense industrial supply chain. Such
exploration may include the following:
(1) Developing cybersecurity test capabilities to support
identifying and reducing security vulnerabilities (as defined
in section 102 of the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act
of 2015 (6 U.S.C. 1501)) in defense industrial base
manufacturing processes.
(2) Developing in-person and online training to help small
defense industrial base manufacturers improve their
cybersecurity.
(3) Ensuring that cybersecurity for defense industrial base
manufacturing is included in Department of Defense research
and development roadmaps and threat assessments.
(4) Aggregating, developing, and disseminating capabilities
to address cybersecurity threats that can be provided to and
adopted by defense industrial base manufacturers of all
sizes.
PART II--MITIGATION OF RISKS POSED BY PROVIDERS OF INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY WITH OBLIGATIONS TO FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS
SEC. 1637. DEFINITIONS.
In this part:
(1) Appropriate committees of congress defined.--The term
``appropriate committees of Congress'' means--
(A) the Committee on Armed Services, the Select Committee
on Intelligence, and the Committee on Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs of the Senate; and
(B) the Committee on Armed Services, the Permanent Select
Committee on Intelligence, and the Committee on Homeland
Security of the House of Representatives.
(2) Information technology.--The term ``information
technology'' has the meaning given such term in section 11101
of title 40, United States Code.
(3) National security system.--The term ``national security
system'' has the meaning given such term in section 3552(b)
of title 44, United States Code.
SEC. 1638. IDENTIFICATION OF COUNTRIES OF CONCERN REGARDING
CYBERSECURITY.
(a) Identification of Countries of Concern.--Not later than
180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the
Secretary of Defense shall create a prioritized list of
countries of concern regarding cybersecurity based on
information relating to the following:
(1) A foreign government's engagement in acts of violence
against personnel of the United States or coalition forces.
(2) A foreign government's willingness and record of
providing financing, logistics, training or intelligence to
other persons, countries or entities posing a force
protection or cybersecurity risk to the personnel, financial
systems, critical infrastructure, or information systems of
the United States or coalition forces.
(3) A foreign government's engagement in foreign
intelligence activities against the United States.
(4) A foreign government's direct or indirect participation
in transnational organized crime or criminal activity.
(5) A foreign government's ability and intent to conduct
operations to affect the supply chain of the United States
Government.
(b) Report to Congress.--Not later than one year after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit
to the appropriate committees of Congress the list created
pursuant to subsection (a) and any accompanying analysis that
contributed to the creation of the list.
SEC. 1639. MITIGATION OF RISKS TO NATIONAL SECURITY POSED BY
PROVIDERS OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY PRODUCTS
AND SERVICES WHO HAVE OBLIGATIONS TO FOREIGN
GOVERNMENTS.
(a) Disclosure Required.--The Department of Defense may not
use a product, service, or system relating to information or
operational technology, cybersecurity, an industrial control
system, a weapons system, or computer antivirus provided by a
person unless that person discloses to the Secretary of
Defense the following:
(1) Whether the person has allowed a foreign government to
review or access the code of a product, system, or service
custom-developed for the Department, or is under any
obligation to allow a foreign person or government to review
or access the code of a product, system, or service custom-
developed for the Department as a condition of entering into
an agreement for sale or other transaction with a foreign
government or with a foreign person on behalf of such a
government.
(2) Whether the person has allowed a foreign government
listed in section 1638(a) to review or access the source code
of a product, system, or service that the Department is using
or intends to use, or is under any obligation to allow a
foreign person or government to review or access the source
code of a product, system, or service that the Department is
using or intends to use as a condition of entering into an
agreement for sale or other transaction with a foreign
government or with a foreign person on behalf of such a
government.
(3) In a case in which the person is a United States person
or an affiliate of a United States person, whether or not the
person holds or has sought a license pursuant to the Export
Administration Regulations under subchapter C of chapter VII
of title 15, Code of Federal Regulations, the International
Traffic in Arms Regulations under subchapter M of chapter I
of title 22, Code of Federal Regulations, or successor
regulations, for information technology products, components,
software, or services that contain code custom-developed for
the product, system, or service the Department is using or
intends to use.
(b) Post Procurement.--Procurement contracts for covered
products or systems shall include a clause requiring the
information contained in subsection (a) be disclosed during
the period of the contract if an entity becomes aware of
information requiring disclosure as per that section,
including any mitigation measures taken or anticipated.
(c) Mitigation of Risks.--
(1) In general.--If, after reviewing a disclosure made by a
person under subsection (a), the Secretary determines that
the disclosure relating to a product, system, or service
entails a risk to the national security infrastructure or
data of the United States, or any national security system
under the control of the Department, the Secretary shall take
such measures as the Secretary considers appropriate to
mitigate such risks, including, as the Secretary considers
appropriate, by conditioning any agreement for the use,
procurement, or acquisition of the product, system, or
service on the inclusion of enforceable conditions or
requirements that would mitigate such risks.
(2) Third-party testing standard.--Not later than two years
after the date of the enactment of this Act the Secretary
shall develop such third-party testing standard as the
Secretary considers acceptable for commercial off the shelf
(COTS) products, systems, or services to use when dealing
with foreign governments.
[[Page S3490]]
(d) Exemption of Disclosures From Freedom of Information
Act.--A disclosure under subsection (a) shall not be subject
to section 552 of title 5, United States Code (commonly
referred to as the ``Freedom of Information Act''), or any
other similar provision of Federal or State law requiring the
disclosure of information to the public.
SEC. 1640. ESTABLISHMENT OF REGISTRY OF DISCLOSURES.
(a) Establishment of Registry.--Not later than one year
after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of
Defense shall--
(1) establish within the operational capabilities of the
Committee for National Security Systems (CNSS) or within such
other agency as the Secretary considers appropriate a
registry containing the information disclosed under section
1639; and
(2) upon request, make such information available to any
agency conducting a procurement pursuant to the Federal
Acquisition Regulations or the Defense Federal Acquisition
Regulations.
(b) Exemption of Registry From Freedom of Information
Act.--The contents of the registry established under
subsection (a)(1) shall not be subject to section 552 of
title 5, United States Code (commonly referred to as the
``Freedom of Information Act''), or any other similar
provision of Federal or State law requiring the disclosure of
information to the public.
(c) Annual Reports.--Not later than one year after the date
of the enactment of this Act and not less frequently than
once each year thereafter, the Secretary of Defense shall
submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a report
detailing the number, scope, product classifications, and
mitigation agreements related to each product, system, and
service for which a disclosure is made under section 1639(a).
Subtitle D--Nuclear Forces
SEC. 1641. OVERSIGHT AND MANAGEMENT OF THE COMMAND, CONTROL,
AND COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM FOR THE NATIONAL
LEADERSHIP OF THE UNITED STATES.
(a) Designation of Responsible Individual.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall designate a
single individual to be responsible for oversight and
strategic portfolio management of the command, control, and
communications system for the national leadership of the
United States (as defined in section 171a of title 10, United
States Code), including--
(A) nuclear command, control, and communications;
(B) senior leadership communications systems;
(C) integrated tactical warning and attack assessment
systems, processes, and enablers; and
(D) continuity of government functions for which the
Department of Defense is responsible.
(2) Authorities.--Subject to the authority and direction of
the Secretary, the individual designated under paragraph (1)
shall have the authority to direct the Secretaries of the
military departments and officials in the Office of the
Secretary of Defense with respect to matters described in
paragraph (1), including--
(A) playing a significant and directive role in the
decision processes for all annual and multi-year planning,
programming, budgeting, and execution decisions, including
the authority to realign the elements of the budgets and
budget requests of the military departments that relate to
the matters described in paragraph (1);
(B) ensuring that the military departments comply with the
standards of the Federal Government and the Department of
Defense with respect to matters described in paragraph (1);
and
(C) any other authorities that the Secretary of Defense
considers necessary.
(3) Chairperson of council on oversight of the national
leadership command, control, and communications system.--The
individual designated under paragraph (1) shall serve as the
Chairperson of the Council on Oversight of the National
Leadership Command, Control, and Communications System
established under section 171a of title 10, United States
Code.
(4) Staff.--The individual designated under paragraph (1)
shall have sufficient dedicated full-time personnel to carry
out the responsibilities of that individual under this
subsection and as Chairperson of the Council on Oversight of
the National Leadership Command, Control, and Communications
System.
(b) Modifications to Council on Oversight of the National
Leadership Command, Control, and Communications System.--
(1) Membership.--Subsection (b) of section 171a of title
10, United States Code, is amended--
(A) in paragraph (2), by striking ``, Technology, and
Logistics'' and inserting ``and Sustainment'';
(B) by redesignating paragraphs (3) through (7) as
paragraphs (4) through (8), respectively; and
(C) by inserting after paragraph (2) the following new
paragraph (3):
``(3) The Under Secretary of Defense for Research and
Engineering.''.
(2) Chairperson.--Subsection (c) of such section is amended
to read as follows:
``(c) Chairperson.--The Chairperson of the Council (in this
section referred to as the `Chairperson') shall be the
individual designated by the Secretary of Defense under
section 1641(a) of the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 as responsible for
oversight and strategic portfolio management of the command,
control, and communications system for the national
leadership of the United States.''.
(3) Responsibilities.--Subsection (d) of such section is
amended--
(A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``oversight'' and
inserting ``coordination''; and
(B) in paragraph (2)--
(i) in the matter preceding subparagraph (A), by striking
``oversight'' and inserting ``coordination'';
(ii) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``mitigation'' and
inserting ``recommendations for mitigation actions'';
(iii) by striking subparagraphs (C) and (D) and inserting
the following new subparagraph (C):
``(C) Making recommendations to the Chairperson with
respect to resource prioritization.''; and
(iv) by redesignating subparagraph (E) as subparagraph (D).
(4) Annual reports.--Subsection (e) of such section is
amended, in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by striking
``the Council shall'' and inserting ``the Chairperson
shall''.
(5) Collection of assessments on certain threats.--
Subsection (f) of such section is amended by striking ``The
Council shall'' and inserting ``The Chairperson shall, in
consultation with the Council,''.
(6) Budget and funding matters.--Subsection (g) of such
section is amended--
(A) in paragraph (1), in the matter preceding subparagraph
(A), by striking ``the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff'' and inserting ``the Chairperson'';
(B) in paragraph (2)--
(i) in the matter preceding subparagraph (A), by striking
``the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff'' and inserting
``the Chairperson''; and
(ii) by striking ``the Chairman'' each place it appears and
inserting ``the Chairperson''; and
(C) in paragraph (3), by striking ``the Council shall'' and
inserting ``the Chairperson shall''.
(7) Reports on space architecture development.--Subsection
(i)(1) of such section is amended by striking ``the Under
Secretary of Defense for Acquisitions, Technology, and
Logistics'' and inserting ``the Chairperson''.
(8) Notification of reduction of certain warning time.--
Subsection (j)(2) of such section is amended--
(A) in the matter preceding subparagraph (A)--
(i) in the first sentence, by striking ``the Council'' and
inserting ``the Chairperson, in consultation with the
Council,''; and
(ii) in the second sentence, by striking ``the Council''
and inserting ``the Chairperson''; and
(B) in subparagraph (C), by striking ``the Council'' and
inserting ``the Chairperson''.
(9) Status of acquisition programs.--Subsection (k) of such
section is amended--
(A) in paragraph (1), in the matter preceding subparagraph
(A), by striking ``the co-chairs of the Council, acting
through the senior steering group of the Council,'' and
inserting ``the Chairperson''; and
(B) in paragraph (2), in the matter preceding subparagraph
(A), by striking ``the co-chairs of the Council'' and
inserting ``the Chairperson''.
SEC. 1642. MODIFICATION TO REQUIREMENT FOR CONVENTIONAL LONG-
RANGE STANDOFF WEAPON.
(a) In General.--Section 217(a) of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014 (Public Law 113-66;
127 Stat. 706) is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1)--
(A) by striking subparagraph (A); and
(B) by redesignating subparagraphs (B) and (C) as
subparagraphs (A) and (B), respectively; and
(2) in paragraph (2)--
(A) by striking ``the Secretary may'' and inserting the
following: ``the Secretary--
``(A) may'';
(B) by striking the period at the end and inserting ``;
and''; and
(C) by adding at the end the following:
``(B) shall begin procurement and fielding of a follow-on
air-launched cruise missile to the AGM-86 for conventional
missions not more than five years after the successful
completion of initial operational test and evaluation for
such a missile for nuclear missions.''.
(b) Statement of Policy.--It is the policy of the United
States to design and procure the long-range standoff weapon
to provide a nuclear cruise missile capability to replace the
AGM-86 as part of the modernization of the nuclear triad.
SEC. 1643. EXCHANGE PROGRAM FOR NUCLEAR WEAPONS PROGRAM
EMPLOYEES.
(a) Program Authorized.--The Chairman of the Nuclear
Weapons Council established under section 179 of title 10,
United States Code, and the Administrator for Nuclear
Security, shall jointly establish an exchange program under
which--
(1) the Chairman shall arrange for the temporary assignment
of civilian and military personnel working on nuclear weapons
policy, production, and force structure issues in the Office
of the Secretary of Defense, the Joint Staff, the Navy, or
the Air Force to the Office of the Deputy Administrator for
Defense Programs in the National Nuclear Security
Administration; and
[[Page S3491]]
(2) the Administrator shall arrange for the temporary
assignment of civilian personnel working on programs related
to nuclear weapons in the Office of the Deputy Administrator
for Defense Programs to the elements of the Department of
Defense specified in paragraph (1).
(b) Purposes.--The purposes of the exchange program
established under subsection (a) are--
(1) to familiarize personnel from the Department of Defense
and the National Nuclear Security Administration with the
equities, priorities, processes, culture, and employees of
the other agency;
(2) for participants in the exchange program to return the
expertise gained through their exchanges to their original
agencies at the conclusion of their exchanges; and
(3) to improve communication between and integration of the
agencies that support the formation and oversight of nuclear
weapons policy through lasting relationships across the chain
of command.
(c) Participants.--
(1) Number of participants.--The Chairman and the
Administrator shall each select not fewer than 5 and not more
than 10 participants per year for participation in the
exchange program established under subsection (a). The
Chairman and the Administrator may determine how many
participants to select under this paragraph without regard to
the number of participants selected from the other agency.
(2) Criteria for selection.--
(A) In general.--The Chairman and the Administrator shall
select participants for the exchange program established
under subsection (a) from among mid-career employees and
based on--
(i) the qualifications and desire to participate in the
program of the employee; and
(ii) the technical needs and capacities of the Department
of Defense and the National Nuclear Security Administration,
as applicable.
(B) Department of defense.--In selecting participants from
the Department of Defense for the exchange program
established under subsection (a), the Chairman shall ensure
that there is a mix of military personnel and civilian
employees of the Department.
(d) Terms.--Exchanges pursuant to the exchange program
established under subsection (a) shall be for terms of one to
two years, as determined and negotiated by the Chairman and
the Administrator. Such terms may begin and end on a rolling
basis.
(e) Guidance and Implementation.--
(1) Guidance.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Chairman and the Administrator
shall jointly develop and submit to the congressional defense
committees interim guidance on the form and contours of the
exchange program established under subsection (a).
(2) Implementation.--Not later than 180 days after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Chairman and the
Administrator shall implement the guidance developed under
paragraph (1).
SEC. 1644. PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR CERTAIN PARTS OF
INTERCONTINENTAL BALLISTIC MISSILE FUZES.
(a) Availability of Funds.--Notwithstanding section 1502(a)
of title 31, United States Code, of the amount authorized to
be appropriated for fiscal year 2019 by section 101 and
available for Missile Procurement, Air Force, as specified in
the funding table in division D, $9,841,000 shall be
available for the procurement of covered parts pursuant to
contracts entered into under section 1645(a) of the Carl
Levin and Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291;
128 Stat. 3651).
(b) Covered Parts Defined.--In this section, the term
``covered parts'' means commercially available off-the-shelf
items as defined in section 104 of title 41, United States
Code.
SEC. 1645. PLAN TO TRAIN OFFICERS IN NUCLEAR COMMAND,
CONTROL, AND COMMUNICATIONS.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall, in
consultation with the Secretary of the Air Force, the
Secretary of the Navy, and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, develop a plan to train, educate, manage, and track
officers of the Armed Forces in nuclear command, control, and
communications.
(b) Elements.--The plan required by subsection (a) shall
address--
(1) manpower requirements at various grades;
(2) desired career paths and promotion timing; and
(3) any other matters the Secretary of Defense considers
relevant to develop a mature cadre of officers with nuclear
command, control, and communications expertise.
(c) Submission of Plan.--Not later than 180 days after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense
shall submit the plan required by subsection (a) to the
Committee on Armed Services of the Senate and the Committee
on Armed Services of the House of Representatives.
(d) Implementation.--The plan required by subsection (a)
shall be implemented not later than 18 months after the date
of the enactment of this Act.
SEC. 1646. PLAN FOR ALIGNMENT OF ACQUISITION OF WARHEAD LIFE
EXTENSION PROGRAMS AND DELIVERY VEHICLES FOR
SUCH WARHEADS.
Not later than February 15, 2019, the Chairman of the
Nuclear Weapons Council established under section 179 of
title 10, United States Code, shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a plan containing a proposal
for better aligning the acquisition of warhead life extension
programs by the National Nuclear Security Administration with
the acquisition of the planned delivery vehicles for such
warheads by the Department of Defense.
SEC. 1647. EXTENSION OF ANNUAL REPORT ON PLAN FOR THE NUCLEAR
WEAPONS STOCKPILE, NUCLEAR WEAPONS COMPLEX,
NUCLEAR WEAPONS DELIVERY SYSTEMS, AND NUCLEAR
WEAPONS COMMAND AND CONTROL SYSTEM.
Section 1043 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1576), as most
recently amended by section 1665 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91),
is further amended in subsection (a)(1) by striking ``2019''
and inserting ``2024''.
SEC. 1648. PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS FOR ACTIVITIES TO
MODIFY UNITED STATES AIRCRAFT TO IMPLEMENT OPEN
SKIES TREATY.
(a) In General.--None of the funds authorized to be
appropriated by this Act or otherwise made available for
fiscal year 2019 for research, development, test, and
engineering or aircraft procurement, Air Force, for the
digital visual imaging system may be obligated or expended to
carry out any activities to modify any United States aircraft
for purposes of implementing the Open Skies Treaty until--
(1) the Secretary of Defense submits to the appropriate
congressional committees the certification described in
paragraph (2) of section 1235(b) of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91);
and
(2) the President submits to the appropriate congressional
committees the certification described in paragraph (3) of
such section.
(b) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Appropriate congressional committees.--The term
``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
(A) the congressional defense committees; and
(B) the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate and
the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of
Representatives.
(2) Open skies treaty.--The term ``Open Skies Treaty''
means the Treaty on Open Skies, done at Helsinki March 24,
1992, and entered into force January 1, 2002.
SEC. 1649. SENSE OF SENATE ON NUCLEAR POSTURE REVIEW.
(a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
(1) Secretary of Defense James Mattis said in his opening
statement before the Committee on Armed Services of the House
of Representatives on February 6, 2018, ``Maintaining an
effective nuclear deterrent is much less expensive than
fighting a war that we were unable to deter.''.
(2) In the same statement, Secretary Mattis said,
``Recapitalizing the nuclear weapons complex of laboratories
and plants is also long past due . . . Due to consistent
underfunding, significant and sustained investments will be
required over the coming decade to ensure that the National
Nuclear Security Administration will be able to deliver at
the rate needed to support nuclear deterrence into the 2030s
and beyond.''.
(3) Former Secretary of Defense Ash Carter recently wrote
that ``it is essential to recapitalize the nuclear Triad,
because it is the bedrock of deterrence. During the past 25
years, the United States has made no major new investments in
its nuclear forces, yet other countries have conducted
vigorous buildups. This history does not support the
contention that U.S. investments fuel the nuclear programs of
others. My views are reflected in the latest Nuclear Posture
Review.''.
(4) Former Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Jim Miller
recently wrote, ``Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis's 2018
Nuclear Posture Review offers continuity with past U.S.
policy and plans, including those in the 2010 NPR. It
deserves broad bipartisan support.''.
(5) The Foreign Minister of Japan, Taro Kono, said in a
statement on February 3, 2018, ``Japan highly appreciates the
latest NPR which clearly articulates the U.S. resolve to
ensure the effectiveness of its deterrence and its commitment
to providing extended deterrence to its allies including
Japan, in light of the international security environment
which has been rapidly worsened since the release of the
previous 2010 NPR, in particular, by continued development of
North Korea's nuclear and missile programs.''.
(6) In testimony before the Committee on Armed Services of
the Senate on April 30, 2018, Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis
said, ``Modernizing the nation's nuclear deterrent delivery
systems and our nuclear command and control is the
[Department of Defense's] top priority.''.
(b) Sense of the Senate.--It is the sense of the Senate
that--
(1) the 2018 Nuclear Posture Review is a measured and
appropriate response to the current security environment,
taking into account the developments in other nuclear weapons
states such as the People's Republic of China and the Russian
Federation and the return to great power competition as
identified by two successive Secretaries of Defense and
outlined in the 2018 National Defense Strategy;
[[Page S3492]]
(2) Congress should fully fund the complete nuclear
modernization program of the Department of Defense, including
the Columbia-class submarine, the Ground-Based Strategic
Deterrent, the B-21 long-range bomber, the Long-Range Stand-
Off weapon, the re-engining of the B-52H bomber, and dual-
capable aircraft;
(3) the Department of Defense should organize itself
appropriately to engineer, acquire, and operate nuclear
command, control, and communications systems that are secure,
reliable, and modernized;
(4) Congress should fully fund the National Nuclear
Security Administration component of the nuclear
modernization program, including--
(A) the existing warhead life extension programs and major
alterations, including the W76-2 warhead modification program
and the W80-4 life extension program; and
(B) the recapitalization of infrastructure for production
and processing of plutonium pits, uranium, tritium, lithium,
and trusted strategic radiation-hardened microelectronics;
(5) in order to execute the programs described in this
subsection in the timely fashion required by the Nuclear
Posture Review, the National Nuclear Security Administration
must balance workload, improve management of large programs,
and better integrate its acquisition programs with those of
the Department of Defense;
(6) the United States maintains a steadfast commitment to
the policy of extended deterrence in Europe and East Asia,
and the nuclear modernization program will ensure that
commitment remains credible;
(7) the United States should continue to honor long-held
arms control, nonproliferation, and nuclear security
commitments, and should seek to increase transparency and
predictability through strategic dialogue, risk-reduction
communication channels, and the sharing of best practices;
(8) when complied with by all parties, effective nuclear
nonproliferation and arms control measures and agreements can
support the security of the United States and countries that
are allies or partners of the United States by--
(A) controlling the spread of nuclear materials,
technology, and expertise;
(B) decreasing the risk of misperception and
miscalculation; and
(C) avoiding destabilizing nuclear arms competition; and
(9) the United States should continue to affirm its
commitments to arms control efforts that advance the security
of the United States and countries that are allies or
partners of the United States, and are verifiable and
enforceable, including the Treaty between the United States
of America and the Russian Federation on Measures for the
Further Reduction and Limitation of Strategic Offensive Arms,
signed on April 8, 2010, and entered into force on February
5, 2011 (commonly known as the ``New START Treaty''), which
is in effect through February 2021, and with mutual agreement
may be extended for up to five years.
Subtitle E--Missile Defense Programs
SEC. 1651. EXTENSION OF PROHIBITION RELATING TO MISSILE
DEFENSE INFORMATION AND SYSTEMS.
Section 130h(e) of title 10, United States Code, is amended
by striking ``January 1, 2019'' and inserting ``January 1,
2021''.
SEC. 1652. MULTIYEAR PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR STANDARD
MISSILE-3 IB GUIDED MISSILES.
(a) Authority for Multiyear Procurement.--Subject to
section 2306b of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary
of Defense may enter into one or more multiyear contracts,
beginning with the fiscal year 2019 program year, for the
procurement of Standard Missile-3 Block IB guided missiles.
(b) Authority for Advance Procurement.--The Secretary may
enter into one or more contracts for advance procurement
associated with the missiles for which authorization to enter
into a multiyear procurement contract is provided under
subsection (a).
(c) Cost Analysis Requirement.--The Secretary may not
exercise the authority provided under subsection (a) or (b)
until the Secretary submits to the congressional defense
committees the report and confirmation required under
subparagraphs (A) and (B), respectively, of section
2306b(i)(2) of title 10, United States Code.
(d) Condition for Out-year Contract Payments.--A contract
entered into under subsection (a) shall provide that any
obligation of the United States to make a payment under the
contract for a fiscal year after fiscal year 2019 is subject
to the availability of appropriations for that purpose for
such later fiscal year.
SEC. 1653. EXTENSION OF REQUIREMENT FOR REPORTS ON UNFUNDED
PRIORITIES OF MISSILE DEFENSE AGENCY.
Section 1696 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2017 (130 Stat. 2638; Public Law 114-328) is
amended--
(1) in subsection (a)--
(A) by striking ``Not later than'' and inserting ``Each
year, not later than''
(B) by striking ``for each of fiscal years 2018 and 2019'';
and
(2) in subsection (c), by striking ``the budget if'' and
all that follows through the period at the end and inserting
``the budget if additional resources had been available for
the budget to fund the program, activity, or mission
requirement.''.
SEC. 1654. IRON DOME SHORT-RANGE ROCKET DEFENSE SYSTEM AND
ISRAELI COOPERATIVE MISSILE DEFENSE PROGRAM CO-
DEVELOPMENT AND CO-PRODUCTION.
(a) Iron Dome Short-range Rocket Defense System.--
(1) Availability of funds.--Of the funds authorized to be
appropriated by this Act or otherwise made available for
fiscal year 2019 for procurement, Defense-wide, and available
for the Missile Defense Agency, not more than $70,000,000 may
be provided to the Government of Israel to procure components
for the Iron Dome short-range rocket defense system through
co-production of such components in the United States by
industry of the United States.
(2) Conditions.--
(A) Agreement.--Funds described in paragraph (1) for the
Iron Dome short-range rocket defense program shall be
available subject to the terms and conditions in the
Agreement Between the Department of Defense of the United
States of America and the Ministry of Defense of the State of
Israel Concerning Iron Dome Defense System Procurement,
signed on March 5, 2014, as amended to include co-production
for Tamir interceptors.
(B) Certification.--Not later than 30 days prior to the
initial obligation of funds described in paragraph (1), the
Director of the Missile Defense Agency and the Under
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment shall
jointly submit to the appropriate congressional committees--
(i) a certification that the amended bilateral
international agreement specified in subparagraph (A) is
being implemented as provided in such agreement; and
(ii) an assessment detailing any risks relating to the
implementation of such agreement.
(b) Israeli Cooperative Missile Defense Program, David's
Sling Weapon System Co-production.--
(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), of the funds
authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2019 for
procurement, Defense-wide, and available for the Missile
Defense Agency not more than $50,000,000 may be provided to
the Government of Israel to procure the David's Sling Weapon
System, including for co-production of parts and components
in the United States by United States industry.
(2) Certification.--The Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition and Sustainment shall submit to the appropriate
congressional committees a certification that--
(A) the Government of Israel has demonstrated the
successful completion of the knowledge points, technical
milestones, and production readiness reviews required by the
research, development, and technology agreement and the
bilateral co-production agreement for the David's Sling
Weapon System;
(B) funds specified in paragraph (1) will be provided on
the basis of a one-for-one cash match made by Israel or in
another matching amount that otherwise meets best efforts (as
mutually agreed to by the United States and Israel); and
(C) the level of co-production of parts, components, and
all-up rounds (if appropriate) in the United States by United
States industry for the David's Sling Weapon System is not
less than 50 percent.
(c) Israeli Cooperative Missile Defense Program, Arrow 3
Upper Tier Interceptor Program Co-production.--
(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), of the funds
authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2019 for
procurement, Defense-wide, and available for the Missile
Defense Agency not more than $80,000,000 may be provided to
the Government of Israel for the Arrow 3 Upper Tier
Interceptor Program, including for co-production of parts and
components in the United States by United States industry.
(2) Certification.--Except as provided by paragraph (3),
the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and
Sustainment shall submit to the appropriate congressional
committees a certification that--
(A) the Government of Israel has demonstrated the
successful completion of the knowledge points, technical
milestones, and production readiness reviews required by the
research, development, and technology agreements for the
Arrow 3 Upper Tier Interceptor Program;
(B) funds specified in paragraph (1) will be provided on
the basis of a one-for-one cash match made by Israel or in
another matching amount that otherwise meets best efforts (as
mutually agreed to by the United States and Israel);
(C) the United States has entered into a bilateral
international agreement with Israel that establishes, with
respect to the use of such funds--
(i) in accordance with subparagraph (D), the terms of co-
production of parts and components on the basis of the
greatest practicable co-production of parts, components, and
all-up rounds (if appropriate) by United States industry and
minimizes nonrecurring engineering and facilitization
expenses to the costs needed for co-production;
(ii) complete transparency on the requirement of Israel for
the number of interceptors and batteries that will be
procured, including with respect to the procurement plans,
acquisition strategy, and funding profiles of Israel;
(iii) technical milestones for co-production of parts and
components and procurement;
(iv) a joint affordability working group to consider cost
reduction initiatives; and
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(v) joint approval processes for third-party sales; and
(D) the level of co-production described in subparagraph
(C)(i) for the Arrow 3 Upper Tier Interceptor Program is not
less than 50 percent.
(3) Waiver.--The Under Secretary may waive the
certification required by paragraph (2) if the Under
Secretary certifies to the appropriate congressional
committees that the Under Secretary has received sufficient
data from the Government of Israel to demonstrate--
(A) the funds specified in paragraph (1) are provided to
Israel solely for funding the procurement of long-lead
components and critical hardware in accordance with a
production plan, including a funding profile detailing
Israeli contributions for production, including long-lead
production, of the Arrow 3 Upper Tier Interceptor Program;
(B) such long-lead components have successfully completed
knowledge points, technical milestones, and production
readiness reviews; and
(C) the long-lead procurement will be conducted in a manner
that maximizes co-production in the United States without
incurring nonrecurring engineering activity or cost other
than such activity or cost required for suppliers of the
United States to start or restart production in the United
States.
(d) Number.--In carrying out paragraph (2) of subsection
(b) and paragraph (2) of subsection (c), the Under Secretary
may submit--
(1) one certification covering both the David's Sling
Weapon System and the Arrow 3 Upper Tier Interceptor Program;
or
(2) separate certifications for each respective system.
(e) Timing.--The Under Secretary shall submit to the
congressional defense committees the certifications under
paragraph (2) of subsection (b) and paragraph (2) of
subsection (c) by not later than 60 days before the funds
specified in paragraph (1) of subsections (b) and (c) for the
respective system covered by the certification are provided
to the Government of Israel.
(f) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this
section, the term ``appropriate congressional committees''
means the following:
(1) The congressional defense committees.
(2) The Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate and
the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of
Representatives.
SEC. 1655. METRICS FOR EVALUATING EFFECTIVENESS OF INTEGRATED
BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE SYSTEM AGAINST
OPERATIONALLY REALISTIC BALLISTIC MISSILE
ATTACKS.
(a) Development of Metrics Required.--The Director of the
Missile Defense Agency shall, in coordination with the
Director of Operational Test and Evaluation, the Director of
the Ballistic Missile Defense System Operational Test Agency,
the Commander of the Joint Forces Combatant Command-
Integrated Missile Defense, the service acquisition
executives (as defined in section 101 of title 10, United
States Code), and the commanders of the combatant commands,
develop operationally relevant metrics for evaluating the
effectiveness of the integrated Ballistic Missile Defense
System (BMDS) and its components and elements against
operationally realistic ballistic missile attacks into areas
defended by United States combatant commands.
(b) Incorporation of Metrics Into Annual Reports.--
Beginning in February 2019, the Director of the Missile
Defense Agency shall incorporate the metrics developed under
subsection (a) into the annual reports of the Director to the
congressional defense committees, including an assessment of
progress against such metrics on the acquisition baseline of
the Missile Defense Agency.
(c) Limitation.--Of the funds authorized to be appropriated
for fiscal year 2019 by this Act and available for the
Command and Control, Battle Management and Communications
(C2BMC) program, not more than 50 percent may be obligated or
expended until the Director develops the metrics required by
subsection (a).
SEC. 1656. MODIFICATION OF REQUIREMENT RELATING TO TRANSITION
OF BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE PROGRAMS TO
MILITARY DEPARTMENTS.
Section 1676(b)(2) of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91) is amended by
inserting ``or equivalent approval'' before the period at the
end.
SEC. 1657. SENSE OF THE SENATE ON ACCELERATION OF MISSILE
DEFENSE CAPABILITIES.
(a) Sense of the Senate.--It is the sense of the Senate
that the Missile Defense Agency should--
(1) accelerate the fielding, if technically feasible, of
the planned additional 20 ground-based interceptors with
Redesigned Kill Vehicles (RKV) at Missile Field 4 at Fort
Greely, Alaska, and to mate the Redesigned Kill Vehicles with
the newest booster technology;
(2) weigh the rapid growth in missile and nuclear threats
against the cost and risk of accelerating the Redesigned Kill
Vehicle and the Multi-Object Kill Vehicle development and
deployment;
(3) ensure, prior to its operational deployment, that the
Redesigned Kill Vehicle has demonstrated the ability to
accomplish its intended mission through a successful,
operationally realistic flight test;
(4) rapidly develop and deploy a persistent, space-based
sensor architecture to ensure our missile defenses are more
effective against ballistic missile threats and more
responsive to new and emergent threats from hypersonic and
cruise missiles;
(5) pursue innovative concepts for existing technologies,
such as a missile defense role for the F-35 aircraft; and
(6) invest in advanced technologies, such as boost-phase
warning, tracking, and intercept.
(b) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Director of the Missile
Defense Agency shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report on ways the Missile Defense Agency can
accelerate the construction of Missile Field 4 at Fort
Greely, Alaska, as well as the deployment of 20 ground-based
interceptors with Redesigned Kill Vehicles (RKV) at such
missile field, by at least one year.
(2) Contents.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall
include the following:
(A) A threat-based description of the benefits and risks of
accelerating the construction and deployment referred to in
paragraph (1).
(B) A description of the technical and acquisition risks
and potential effects on the reliability of the Redesigned
Kill Vehicle if deployment is accelerated as described in
paragraph (1).
(C) A description of the cost implications of accelerating
the construction and deployment referred to in paragraph (1).
(D) A description of the effect such acceleration would
have on the Redesigned Kill Vehicle flight test schedule and
the overall Integrated Master Test Plan.
(E) A description of the effect that the acceleration
described in paragraph (1) would have on re-tipping currently
deployed exoatmospheric kill vehicles with the Redesigned
Kill Vehicle.
(F) A description of how such acceleration would align with
the deployment of the long range discrimination radar and the
homeland defense radar-Hawaii.
(G) A cost-benefit analysis and a feasibility assessment
for construction of a fifth missile field at Fort Greely,
Alaska.
(3) Form.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
SEC. 1658. INTEGRATED AIR AND MISSILE DEFENSE FOR EVOLVING
THEATER MISSILE THREATS.
(a) Sense of the Senate.--It is the Sense of the Senate
that--
(1) the United States should utilize regional missile
defense assets to counter and deter against cruise, short-to-
medium-range ballistic, and hypersonic missile threats;
(2) the United States should continue to rapidly work
toward the interoperability of all United States missile
defense systems for a more effective layered defense; and
(3) the United States Army should increase its attention,
focus, and resources developing an integrated air-and-missile
defense architecture to protect both land and air forces from
cruise, short-to-medium-range ballistic, and hypersonic
missile threats.
(b) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 90 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, if consistent with the direction
or recommendations of the Missile Defense Review that
commenced in 2017, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to
the congressional defense committees a report on the
Department's plan for the creation of a fully interoperable
and integrated air and missile defense architecture.
(2) Elements.--Elements of the report required by paragraph
(1) are as follows:
(A) An intelligence assessment of cruise, short-to-medium-
range ballistic, and hypersonic missile threats to the United
States and its deployed forces.
(B) An examination of current United States capabilities to
defeat the threats included in the report required by
subparagraph (A) and an analysis of the existing capability
and resource gaps.
(C) An analysis of the level of integration and
interoperability of United States missile defense systems and
the future requirements needed to become fully integrated and
interoperable to defeat the threats included in the report
required by subparagraph (A).
(D) A description of the current state of survivability of
United States missile defense systems against the full
spectrum of air and missile threats from near-peer threats
and any planned efforts to increase survivability.
(3) Form.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
SEC. 1659. ACCELERATION OF HYPERSONIC MISSILE DEFENSE
PROGRAM.
(a) Acceleration of Program.--The Director of the Missile
Defense Agency shall accelerate the hypersonic missile
defense program of the Missile Defense Agency.
(b) Deployment.--The Director shall deploy such program in
conjunction with a persistent space-based missile defense
sensor program.
(c) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 90 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Director shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report on how hypersonic
missile defense can be accelerated to meet emerging
hypersonic threats.
(2) Contents.--The report submitted under paragraph (1)
shall include the following:
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(A) An estimate of the cost of such acceleration.
(B) The technical requirements and acquisition plan needed
for the Director to develop and deploy a hypersonic missile
defense program.
(C) A testing campaign plan that accelerates the delivery
of hypersonic defense systems to the warfighter.
(3) Form.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
SEC. 1660. SENSE OF THE SENATE ON ALLIED PARTNERSHIPS FOR
MISSILE DEFENSE.
It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) the United States should seek additional opportunities,
at the tactical, operational, and strategic levels, to
provide missile defense capabilities, doctrine,
interoperability, and planning to allies and trusted partners
of the United States;
(2) an expedited foreign military sales arrangement would
be beneficial in delivering such missile defenses to allies
and trusted partners; and
(3) it is important to continue to work with allies and
trusted partners, such as Israel, to learn from their
experience deploying successful missile defense technologies.
SEC. 1660A. SENSE OF THE SENATE ON RESULTS OF TESTS CARRIED
OUT BY MISSILE DEFENSE AGENCY.
It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) tests carried out by the Missile Defense Agency, which
do not achieve an intercept or the main objective, should not
be considered failures;
(2) the Missile Defense Agency--in an effort to deliver
capabilities at the speed of relevance--should recognize the
learning value of individual advancements made by all test
events, rather than viewing any total outcome as an
indication of the reliability of entire missile defense
systems;
(3) the Missile Defense Agency should, as part of its test
program, continue to build an independently accredited
modeling and simulation element to better inform missile
defense performance assessments and test criteria; and
(4) the Missile Defense Agency should continue to pursue an
increasingly rigorous testing regime, in coordination with
the Office of the Director, Operational Test and Evaluation,
to more rapidly deliver capabilities to the warfighter as the
threat evolves.
SEC. 1660B. SENSE OF THE SENATE ON DISCRIMINATION FOR MISSILE
DEFENSE.
(a) Sense of the Senate.--It is the sense of the Senate
that prioritizing discrimination capabilities to improve
missile defense effectiveness against current and future
threats is critically important.
(b) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 90 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Director of the Missile
Defense Agency shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report on the following:
(A) Needed discrimination improvements within the missile
defense architecture.
(B) The Missile Defense Agency's plan to rapidly field
advanced discrimination capabilities.
(C) An analysis of efforts to address discrimination
challenges against emerging adversary threats, including
hypersonic and cruise missiles.
(2) Form.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
SEC. 1660C. DEVELOPMENT AND DEPLOYMENT OF PERSISTENT SPACE-
BASED SENSOR ARCHITECTURE.
(a) Dissociation With Ballistic Missile Defense Review.--
Subsection (a) of section 1683 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91) is
amended by striking ``If consistent'' and all that follows
through ``develop'' and inserting ``Not later than December
31, 2018, the Director of the Missile Defense Agency shall,
in coordination with the Secretary of the Air Force and the
Director of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency,
commence developing''.
(b) Deployment Deadline.--Such subsection is further
amended--
(1) by striking ``(a) In General.--'' and inserting the
following:
``(a) Development and Deployment.--
``(1) Development.--''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(2) Deployment.--The Director of the Missile Defense
Agency shall ensure that the sensor architecture developed
under paragraph (1) is deployed on or before December 31,
2022.''.
(c) Compatibility With Efforts of Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency.--Such section is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (e) and (f) as subsection
(f) and (g), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after subsection (d) the following new
subsection (e):
``(e) Compatibility With Efforts of Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency.--The Director shall ensure that the
sensor architecture developed under subsection (a) is
compatible with efforts of the Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency relating to space-based sensors for missile
defense.''.
(d) Report on Progress.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 90 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, Secretary of Defense shall submit
to the congressional defense committees a report on the
progress of all efforts being made by the Missile Defense
Agency, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, and
the Air Force relating to space-based sensing and tracking
capabilities for missile defense and how each of such
organizations will work together to avoid duplication of
efforts.
(2) Form.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
SEC. 1660D. MODIFICATION OF REQUIREMENT TO DEVELOP A SPACE-
BASED BALLISTIC MISSILE INTERCEPT LAYER.
(a) Dissociation With Ballistic Missile Defense Review.--
Subsection (a) of section 1688 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91) is
amended, in the matter before paragraph (1), by striking ``If
consistent'' and all that follows through ``the Director''
and inserting ``The Director''.
(b) Conforming Amendment.--Subsection (b) of such section
is amended, in the matter before paragraph (1), by striking
``If the Director carries out subsection (a), not later'' and
inserting ``Not later''.
Subtitle F--Other Matters
SEC. 1661. ASSESSMENT OF ELECTRONIC WARFARE CAPABILITIES OF
RUSSIA AND CHINA.
(a) In General.--Not later than 270 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Director of the Defense
Intelligence Agency shall submit to the congressional defense
committees and the congressional intelligence committees (as
defined in section 3 of the National Security Act of 1947 (50
U.S.C. 3003)) country-wide assessments of the electronic
warfare capabilities of the Russian Federation and the
People's Republic of China.
(b) Contents.--The assessments submitted under subsection
(a) shall include, for the countries concerned, the
following:
(1) The electronic warfare doctrine.
(2) The order of battle on land, sea, air, space, and
cyberspace.
(3) The current status of expected direction of technology
and research over the next 10 years.
SEC. 1662. BUDGET EXHIBIT ON SUPPORT PROVIDED TO ENTITIES
OUTSIDE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
(a) In General.--The Under Secretary of Defense
(Comptroller) shall include in the budget justification
materials submitted to Congress in support of the Department
of Defense budget for each fiscal year (as submitted with the
budget of the President under section 1105(a) of title 31,
United States Code) a single budget exhibit containing
relevant details pertaining to support provided by the
Department of Defense to the Executive Office of the
President related to senior leader communications and
continuity of government programs.
(b) Inclusions.--The budget exhibit required by subsection
(a) shall include--
(1) support provided by the White House Military Office,
the White House Communications Agency, special mission area
activities of the Defense Information Systems Agency, and
other relevant programs; and
(2) specific appropriation and line numbers where
appropriate.
(c) Form.--The budget exhibit required by subsection (a)
shall be submitted in unclassified form, but may include a
classified annex.
SEC. 1663. DEVELOPMENT OF ELECTROMAGNETIC BATTLE MANAGEMENT
CAPABILITY FOR JOINT ELECTROMAGNETIC
OPERATIONS.
(a) Designation of Executive Agent.--Not later than 180
days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the
Electronic Warfare Executive Committee shall designate a
military service with the responsibility for acting as
executive agent for the development of an Electromagnetic
Battle Management capability for joint electromagnetic
operations.
(b) Certification Requirement.--Along with the budget for
each fiscal year submitted by the President pursuant to
section 1105(a) of title 31, United States Code, the
Secretary of Defense shall include a certification from the
Electronic Warfare Executive Committee whether sufficient
funds have been budgeted for the development of an
Electromagnetic Battle Management capability for joint
electromagnetic operations.
TITLE XVII--COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN INVESTMENT IN THE UNITED STATES
SEC. 1701. SHORT TITLE.
This title may be cited as the ``Foreign Investment Risk
Review Modernization Act of 2018''.
SEC. 1702. SENSE OF CONGRESS.
(a) In General.--It is the sense of Congress that--
(1) foreign investment provides substantial economic
benefits to the United States, including the promotion of
economic growth, productivity, competitiveness, and job
creation, and the majority of foreign investment transactions
pose little or no risk to the national security of the United
States, especially when those investments are truly passive
in nature;
(2) maintaining the commitment of the United States to open
and fair investment policy also encourages other countries to
reciprocate and helps open new foreign markets for United
States businesses and their products;
(3) it should continue to be the policy of the United
States to enthusiastically welcome and support foreign
investment, consistent with the protection of national
security;
(4) at the same time, the national security landscape has
shifted in recent years, and so
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has the nature of the investments that pose the greatest
potential risk to national security, which warrants a
modernization of the processes and authorities of the
Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States and of
the United States export control system;
(5) the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United
States plays a critical role in protecting the national
security of the United States, and, therefore, it is
essential that the member agencies of the Committee are
adequately resourced and able to hire appropriately qualified
individuals in a timely manner, and that those individuals'
security clearances are processed as a high priority;
(6) the President should conduct a more robust
international outreach effort to urge and help allies and
partners of the United States to establish processes that
parallel the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United
States to screen foreign investments for national security
risks and to facilitate coordination;
(7) the President should lead a collaborative effort with
allies and partners of the United States to strengthen the
multilateral export control regime to more effectively
address the unprecedented industrial policies of certain
countries of special concern, including aggressive efforts to
acquire United States technology, and the blending of civil
and military programs;
(8) any penalties imposed by the United States Government
with respect to an individual or entity pursuant to a
determination that the individual or entity has violated
sanctions imposed by the United States or the export control
laws of the United States should not be reversed for reasons
unrelated to the national security of the United States; and
(9) the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United
States should continue to review transactions for the purpose
of protecting national security and should not consider
issues of national interest absent a national security nexus.
(b) Sense of Congress on Consideration of Covered
Transactions.--It is the sense of Congress that, when
considering national security risks, the Committee on Foreign
Investment in the United States may consider--
(1) whether a transaction involves a country of special
concern that has a demonstrated or declared strategic goal of
acquiring a type of critical technology or critical
infrastructure that would affect United States technological
and industrial leadership in areas related to national
security;
(2) the potential national security-related effects of the
cumulative market share of or a pattern of recent
transactions in any one type of infrastructure, energy asset,
critical material, or critical technology by foreign persons;
(3) whether any foreign person that would acquire an
interest in a United States business or its assets as a
result of a transaction has a history of complying with
United States laws and regulations;
(4) the extent to which a transaction is likely to expose,
either directly or indirectly, personally identifiable
information, genetic information, or other sensitive data of
United States citizens to access by a foreign government or
foreign person that may exploit that information in a manner
that threatens national security; and
(5) whether a transaction is likely to have the effect of
exacerbating or creating new cybersecurity vulnerabilities in
the United States or is likely to result in a foreign
government gaining a significant new capability to engage in
malicious cyber-enabled activities against the United States,
including such activities designed to affect the outcome of
any election for Federal office.
SEC. 1703. DEFINITIONS.
Section 721(a) of the Defense Production Act of 1950 (50
U.S.C. 4565(a)) is amended to read as follows:
``(a) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) Access.--The term `access' means the ability and
opportunity to obtain information, subject to regulations
prescribed by the Committee.
``(2) Committee; chairperson.--The terms `Committee' and
`chairperson' mean the Committee on Foreign Investment in the
United States and the chairperson thereof, respectively.
``(3) Control.--The term `control' means the power to
determine, direct, or decide important matters affecting an
entity, subject to regulations prescribed by the Committee.
``(4) Country of special concern.--
``(A) In general.--The term `country of special concern'
means a country that poses a significant threat to the
national security interests of the United States.
``(B) Rule of construction.--This paragraph shall not be
construed to require the Committee to maintain a list of
countries of special concern.
``(5) Covered transaction.--
``(A) In general.--Except as otherwise provided, the term
`covered transaction' means--
``(i) any transaction described in subparagraph (B)(i); and
``(ii) any transaction described in clauses (ii) through
(v) of subparagraph (B) that is proposed, pending, or
completed on or after the effective date specified in section
1732(b)(1)(A) of the Foreign Investment Risk Review
Modernization Act of 2018.
``(B) Transactions described.--A transaction described in
this subparagraph is any of the following:
``(i) Any merger, acquisition, or takeover that is proposed
or pending after August 23, 1988, by or with any foreign
person that could result in foreign control of any United
States business.
``(ii) Subject to subparagraph (C), the purchase or lease
by a foreign person of, or a concession offered to a foreign
person with respect to, private or public real estate that--
``(I) is located in the United States;
``(II)(aa) is, is located at, or will function as part of,
a land, air, or maritime port; or
``(bb)(AA) is in close proximity to a United States
military installation or another facility or property of the
United States Government that is sensitive for reasons
relating to national security;
``(BB) could reasonably provide the foreign person the
ability to collect information on activities being conducted
at such an installation, facility, or property; or
``(CC) could otherwise expose national security activities
at such an installation, facility, or property to the risk of
foreign surveillance; and
``(III) meets such other criteria as the Committee
prescribes by regulation, as long as such criteria do not
expand the categories of real estate to which this clause
applies beyond the categories described in subclause (II).
``(iii) Any other investment (other than a passive
investment) by a foreign person in any United States critical
technology company or United States critical infrastructure
company that is unaffiliated with the foreign person, subject
to regulations prescribed under subparagraph (C).
``(iv) Any change in the rights that a foreign person has
with respect to a United States business in which the foreign
person has an investment, if that change could result in--
``(I) foreign control of the United States business; or
``(II) an investment described in clause (iii).
``(v) Any other transaction, transfer, agreement, or
arrangement the structure of which is designed or intended to
evade or circumvent the application of this section, subject
to regulations prescribed by the Committee.
``(C) Further definition through regulations.--
``(i) Exception for certain real estate transactions.--A
real estate purchase or lease described in subparagraph
(B)(ii) does not include a lease or purchase of--
``(I) a single `housing unit', as defined by the Census
Bureau; or
``(II) real estate in `urbanized areas', as defined by the
Census Bureau in the most recent census, except as otherwise
prescribed by the Committee in regulations in consultation
with the Secretary of Defense.
``(ii) Certain other investment.--The Committee shall
prescribe regulations further defining covered transactions
described in subparagraph (B)(iii) by reference to the
technology, sector, subsector, transaction type, or other
characteristics of such transactions.
``(iii) Exemption for transactions from identified
countries.--
``(I) In general.--The Committee shall, by regulation,
define circumstances and procedures under which a transaction
otherwise described in clause (ii) or (iii) of subparagraph
(B) is excluded from the definition of `covered transaction'
if each foreign person that is a party to the transaction,
and each foreign person with ownership or control over a
party to the transaction, is from (as determined by the
Committee pursuant to regulations prescribed by the
Committee), a country or part of a country identified by the
Committee for purposes of this clause based on factors
established by the Committee, such as--
``(aa) whether, in the sole judgment of the Committee, the
process of the country for reviewing the national security
effects of foreign investment and associated international
cooperation effectively safeguards national security
interests the country shares with the United States;
``(bb) whether the country is a member country of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization or is designated as a major non-
NATO ally pursuant to section 517 of the Foreign Assistance
Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2321k);
``(cc) whether the country adheres to nonproliferation
control regimes, including treaties and multilateral supply
guidelines, which shall be informed by sources such as the
annual report on `Adherence to and Compliance with Arms
Control, Nonproliferation and Disarmament Agreements and
Commitments' required by section 403 of the Arms Control and
Disarmament Act (22 U.S.C. 2593a);
``(dd) whether excluding transactions by foreign persons
from the country advances the national security objectives of
the United States; and
``(ee) any other factors that the Committee determines to
be appropriate.
``(II) Recurring assessment of identified countries.--The
Committee shall reconsider on a regular basis the
identification of countries and parts of countries under
subclause (I).
``(iv) Exception for air carriers.--For purposes of
subparagraph (B)(iii), the term `other investment' does not
include an investment involving an air carrier, as defined in
section 40102(a)(2) of title 49, United States Code, that
holds a certificate issued under section 41102 of that title.
[[Page S3496]]
``(v) Transfers of certain assets pursuant to bankruptcy
proceedings or other defaults.--The Committee shall prescribe
regulations to clarify that the term `covered transaction'
includes any transaction described in subparagraph (B) that
arises pursuant to a bankruptcy proceeding or other form of
default on debt.
``(D) Passive investment defined.--
``(i) In general.--For purposes of subparagraph (B)(iii),
the term `passive investment' means an investment, direct or
indirect, by a foreign person in a United States critical
infrastructure company or United States critical technology
company that meets the following criteria:
``(I) The investment is not described in subparagraph
(B)(i).
``(II) The investment does not afford the foreign person--
``(aa) access to any material nonpublic technical
information in the possession of the United States critical
infrastructure company or United States critical technology
company;
``(bb) membership or observer rights on the board of
directors or equivalent governing body of the United States
critical infrastructure company or United States critical
technology company or the right to nominate an individual to
a position on the board of directors or equivalent governing
body; or
``(cc) any involvement, other than through voting of
shares, in substantive decisionmaking relating to the
management, governance, or operation of the United States
critical infrastructure company or United States critical
technology company.
``(III) The foreign person does not have a material
parallel strategic partnership or other material financial
relationship, as described in regulations prescribed by the
Committee, with the United States critical infrastructure
company or United States critical technology company.
``(IV) Such other criteria as the Committee may prescribe
by regulation, which shall be consistent with the criteria
specified in subclauses (I), (II), and (III).
``(ii) Material nonpublic technical information defined.--
For purposes of clause (i)(II)(aa), the term `material
nonpublic technical information' has the meaning given that
term in regulations prescribed by the Committee, except that
the term does not include financial information regarding the
performance of a United States critical infrastructure
company or United States critical technology company.
``(iii) Effect of level of ownership interest.--
``(I) In general.--A determination of whether an investment
is a passive investment under clause (i) shall be made
without regard to how low the level of ownership interest a
foreign person would hold or acquire in a United States
critical infrastructure company or United States critical
technology company would be as a result of the investment.
``(II) Regulations.--
``(aa) In general.--The Committee may prescribe regulations
specifying that any investment (other than an investment
described in item (bb)) greater than a certain level or
amount shall not be considered a passive investment under
clause (i).
``(bb) Investment described.--An investment described in
this item is an investment--
``(AA) by a foreign person in a United States critical
infrastructure company or United States critical technology
company through an investment fund;
``(BB) that does not result in the foreign person's
control of the United States critical technology or United
States critical infrastructure company; and
``(CC) that otherwise meets the requirements of clauses
(i) and (iv), as applicable.
``(iv) Specific clarification for investment funds.--
``(I) Treatment of certain investments as passive
investments.--Notwithstanding clause (i)(II)(bb) and subject
to regulations prescribed by the Committee, an indirect
investment by a foreign person in a United States critical
infrastructure company or United States critical technology
company through an investment fund that affords the foreign
person (or a designee of the foreign person) membership as a
limited partner on an advisory board or a committee of the
fund shall be considered a passive investment if--
``(aa) the fund is managed exclusively by a general
partner, a managing member, or an equivalent;
``(bb) the general partner, managing member, or equivalent
is not a foreign person;
``(cc) the advisory board or committee does not have the
ability to approve, disapprove, or otherwise control--
``(AA) investment decisions of the fund; or
``(BB) decisions made by the general partner, managing
member, or equivalent related to entities in which the fund
is invested;
``(dd) the foreign person does not otherwise have the
ability to control the fund, including the authority--
``(AA) to approve, disapprove, or otherwise control
investment decisions of the fund;
``(BB) to approve, disapprove, or otherwise control
decisions made by the general partner, managing member, or
equivalent related to entities in which the fund is invested;
or
``(CC) to unilaterally dismiss, prevent the dismissal of,
select, or determine the compensation of the general partner,
managing member, or equivalent; and
``(ee) the investment otherwise meets the requirements of
this subparagraph.
``(II) Treatment of certain waivers.--
``(aa) In general.--For the purposes of items (cc) and (dd)
of subclause (I) and except as provided in item (bb), a
waiver of a potential conflict of interest, a waiver of an
allocation limitation, or a similar activity, applicable to a
transaction pursuant to the terms of an agreement governing
an investment fund shall not be considered to constitute
control of investment decisions of the fund or decisions
relating to entities in which the fund is invested.
``(bb) Exception.--The Committee may prescribe regulations
providing for exceptions to item (aa) for extraordinary
circumstances.
``(v) Regulations.--The Committee shall prescribe
regulations providing guidance on the types of transactions
that the Committee considers to be passive investment.
``(E) United states critical infrastructure company
defined.--For purposes of this paragraph, the term `United
States critical infrastructure company' means a United States
business that is, owns, operates, or primarily provides
services to, an entity or entities that operate within a
critical infrastructure sector or subsector, as defined by
regulations prescribed by the Committee.
``(F) United states critical technology company defined.--
For purposes of this paragraph, the term `United States
critical technology company' means a United States business
that produces, designs, tests, manufactures, or develops one
or more critical technologies, or a subset of such
technologies, as defined by regulations prescribed by the
Committee.
``(6) Critical infrastructure.--The term `critical
infrastructure' means, subject to regulations prescribed by
the Committee, systems and assets, whether physical or
virtual, so vital to the United States that the incapacity or
destruction of such systems or assets would have a
debilitating impact on national security.
``(7) Critical materials.--The term `critical materials'
means physical materials essential to national security,
subject to regulations prescribed by the Committee.
``(8) Critical technologies.--
``(A) In general.--The term `critical technologies' means
technology, components, or technology items that are
essential or could be essential to national security,
identified for purposes of this section pursuant to
regulations prescribed by the Committee.
``(B) Inclusion of certain items.--The term `critical
technologies' includes the following:
``(i) Defense articles or defense services included on the
United States Munitions List set forth in the International
Traffic in Arms Regulations under subchapter M of chapter I
of title 22, Code of Federal Regulations.
``(ii) Items included on the Commerce Control List set
forth in Supplement No. 1 to part 774 of the Export
Administration Regulations under subchapter C of chapter VII
of title 15, Code of Federal Regulations, and controlled--
``(I) pursuant to multilateral regimes, including for
reasons relating to national security, chemical and
biological weapons proliferation, nuclear nonproliferation,
or missile technology; or
``(II) for reasons relating to regional stability or
surreptitious listening.
``(iii) Specially designed and prepared nuclear equipment,
parts and components, materials, software, and technology
covered by part 810 of title 10, Code of Federal Regulations
(relating to assistance to foreign atomic energy activities).
``(iv) Nuclear facilities, equipment, and material covered
by part 110 of title 10, Code of Federal Regulations
(relating to export and import of nuclear equipment and
material).
``(v) Select agents and toxins covered by part 331 of title
7, Code of Federal Regulations, part 121 of title 9 of such
Code, or part 73 of title 42 of such Code.
``(vi) Emerging and foundational technologies identified
pursuant to section 1725(a) of the Foreign Investment Risk
Review Modernization Act of 2018.
``(9) Foreign government-controlled transaction.--The term
`foreign government-controlled transaction' means any covered
transaction that could result in the control of any United
States business by a foreign government or an entity
controlled by or acting on behalf of a foreign government.
``(10) Foreign person.--
``(A) In general.--The term `foreign person' means--
``(i) any foreign national, foreign government, or foreign
entity; or
``(ii) any entity over which control is exercised or
exercisable by a foreign national, foreign government, or
foreign entity.
``(B) Foreign entity defined.--
``(i) In general.--For purposes of subparagraph (A) and
except as provided in clause (ii), the term `foreign entity'
means any branch, partnership, group or subgroup,
association, estate, trust, corporation or division of a
corporation, or organization organized under the laws of a
foreign country if--
``(I) the principal place of business of the entity is
outside the United States; or
``(II) the equity securities of the entity are primarily
traded on one or more foreign exchanges.
``(ii) Exception.--For purposes of subparagraph (A), the
term `foreign entity' does not include an entity that
demonstrates to the
[[Page S3497]]
Committee that a majority of the equity interest in the
entity is ultimately owned by United States nationals.
``(11) Intelligence community.--The term `intelligence
community' has the meaning given that term in section 3(4) of
the National Security Act of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 3003(4)).
``(12) Investment.--The term `investment' means the
acquisition of equity interest, including contingent equity
interest, as further defined in regulations prescribed by the
Committee.
``(13) Lead agency.--The term `lead agency' means the
agency or agencies designated as the lead agency or agencies
pursuant to subsection (k)(5).
``(14) National security.--The term `national security'
shall be construed so as to include those issues relating to
`homeland security', including its application to critical
infrastructure.
``(15) Party.--The term `party' has the meaning given that
term in regulations prescribed by the Committee.
``(16) United states.--The term `United States' means the
several States, the District of Columbia, and any territory
or possession of the United States.
``(17) United states business.--The term `United States
business' means a person engaged in interstate commerce in
the United States.''.
SEC. 1704. ACCEPTANCE OF WRITTEN NOTICES.
Section 721(b)(1)(C)(i) of the Defense Production Act of
1950 (50 U.S.C. 4565(b)(1)(C)(i)) is amended--
(1) by striking ``Any party'' and inserting the following:
``(I) In general.--Any party''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following:
``(II) Comments and acceptance.--
``(aa) In general.--Subject to item (cc), the Committee
shall provide comments on a draft or final written notice or
accept a final written notice submitted under subclause (I)
with respect to a covered transaction not later than the date
that is 10 business days after the date of submission of the
draft or final notice.
``(bb) Completeness.--If the Committee determines that a
draft or final written notice described in item (aa) is not
complete, the Committee shall notify the party or parties to
the transaction in writing that the notice is not complete
and provide an explanation of all material respects in which
the notice is incomplete.
``(cc) Stipulations required.--The timing requirement under
item (aa) shall apply only in a case in which the parties
stipulate under clause (vi) that the transaction is a covered
transaction.''.
SEC. 1705. INCLUSION OF PARTNERSHIP AND SIDE AGREEMENTS IN
NOTICE.
Section 721(b)(1)(C) of the Defense Production Act of 1950
(50 U.S.C. 4565(b)(1)(C)) is amended by adding at the end the
following:
``(iv) Inclusion of partnership and side agreements.--A
written notice submitted under clause (i) by a party to a
covered transaction shall include a copy of any partnership
agreements, integration agreements, or other side agreements
relating to the transaction, including any such agreements
relating to the transfer of intellectual property, as
specified in regulations prescribed by the Committee.''.
SEC. 1706. DECLARATIONS FOR CERTAIN COVERED TRANSACTIONS.
Section 721(b)(1)(C) of the Defense Production Act of 1950
(50 U.S.C. 4565(b)(1)(C)), as amended by section 1705, is
further amended by adding at the end the following:
``(v) Declarations for certain covered transactions.--
``(I) In general.--A party to any covered transaction may
submit to the Committee a declaration with basic information
regarding the transaction instead of a written notice under
clause (i).
``(II) Regulations.--The Committee shall prescribe
regulations establishing requirements for declarations
submitted under this clause. In prescribing such regulations,
the Committee shall ensure that such declarations are
submitted as abbreviated notifications that would not
generally exceed 5 pages in length.
``(III) Committee response to declaration.--
``(aa) In general.--Upon receiving a declaration under this
clause with respect to a covered transaction, the Committee
may, at the discretion of the Committee--
``(AA) request that the parties to the transaction file a
written notice under clause (i);
``(BB) inform the parties to the transaction that the
Committee is not able to complete action under this section
with respect to the transaction on the basis of the
declaration and that the parties may file a written notice
under clause (i) to seek written notification from the
Committee that the Committee has completed all action under
this section with respect to the transaction;
``(CC) initiate a unilateral review of the transaction
under subparagraph (D); or
``(DD) notify the parties in writing that the Committee
has completed all action under this section with respect to
the transaction.
``(bb) Timing.--The Committee shall take action under item
(aa) not later than 30 days after receiving a declaration
under this clause.
``(cc) Rule of construction.--Nothing in this subclause
(other than item (aa)(CC)) shall be construed to affect the
authority of the President or the Committee to take any
action authorized by this section with respect to a covered
transaction.
``(IV) Mandatory declarations.--
``(aa) Regulations.--The Committee shall prescribe
regulations specifying the types of covered transactions for
which the Committee requires a declaration under this
subclause.
``(bb) Certain covered transactions with foreign government
interests.--
``(AA) In general.--Except as provided in subitem (BB),
the parties to a covered transaction shall submit a
declaration described in subclause (I) with respect to the
transaction if the transaction involves an investment that
results in the acquisition, directly or indirectly, of a
substantial interest in a United States critical
infrastructure company or United States critical technology
company by a foreign person in which a foreign government
has, directly or indirectly, a substantial interest.
``(BB) Exception.--The submission of a declaration
described in subclause (I) shall not be required with respect
to a transaction described in subitem (AA) if each foreign
person that is a party to the transaction, and each foreign
person with ownership or control over a party to the
transaction, is from a country or part of a country
identified by the Committee under subsection (a)(5)(C)(iii).
``(CC) Substantial interest defined.--In this item, the
term `substantial interest' has the meaning given that term
in regulations which the Committee shall prescribe. In
developing those regulations, the Committee shall consider
the means by which a foreign government could influence the
actions of a foreign person, including through board
membership, ownership interest, or shareholder rights. An
interest that is a passive investment (as defined in
subsection (a)(5)(D)) or that is less than a 10 percent
voting interest shall not be considered a substantial
interest.
``(cc) Other declarations required by committee.--The
Committee shall require the submission of a declaration
described in subclause (I) with respect to any covered
transaction identified under regulations prescribed by the
Committee for purposes of this item, at the discretion of the
Committee and based on appropriate factors, such as--
``(AA) the technology, industry, economic sector, or
economic subsector in which the United States business that
is a party to the transaction trades or of which it is a
part;
``(BB) the difficulty of remedying the harm to national
security that may result from completion of the transaction;
``(CC) the difficulty of obtaining information on the
type of covered transaction through other means; and
``(DD) the difficulty of obtaining information on the
ultimate ownership of the foreign person that is a party to
the transaction.
``(dd) Exception.--The submission of a declaration
described in subclause (I) shall not be required pursuant to
this subclause with respect to an investment by an investment
fund if--
``(AA) the fund is managed exclusively by a general
partner, a managing member, or an equivalent;
``(BB) the general partner, managing member, or
equivalent is not a foreign person; and
``(CC) the investment fund satisfies, with respect to any
foreign person with membership as a limited partner on an
advisory board or a committee of the fund, the criteria
specified in items (cc) and (dd) of subsection (a)(5)(D)(iv).
``(ee) Submission of written notice as an alternative.--
Parties to a covered transaction for which a declaration is
required under this subclause may instead elect to submit a
written notice under clause (i).
``(ff) Timing of submission.--
``(AA) In general.--A declaration required to be
submitted with respect to a covered transaction by this
subclause shall be submitted not later than 45 days before
the completion of the transaction.
``(BB) Written notice.--If, pursuant to item (ee), the
parties to a covered transaction elect to submit a written
notice under clause (i) instead of a declaration under this
subclause, the written notice shall be filed not later than
90 days before the completion of the transaction.
``(gg) Penalties.--The Committee may impose a penalty
pursuant to subsection (h)(3) with respect to a party that
fails to comply with this subclause.''.
SEC. 1707. STIPULATIONS REGARDING TRANSACTIONS.
Section 721(b)(1)(C) of the Defense Production Act of 1950
(50 U.S.C. 4565(b)(1)(C)), as amended by section 1706, is
further amended by adding at the end the following:
``(vi) Stipulations regarding transactions.--
``(I) In general.--In a written notice submitted under
clause (i) or a declaration submitted under clause (v) with
respect to a transaction, a party to the transaction may--
``(aa) stipulate that the transaction is a covered
transaction; and
``(bb) if the party stipulates that the transaction is a
covered transaction under item (aa), stipulate that the
transaction is a foreign government-controlled transaction.
``(II) Basis for stipulation.--A written notice submitted
under clause (i) or a declaration submitted under clause (v)
that includes a stipulation under subclause (I) shall
[[Page S3498]]
include a description of the basis for the stipulation.''.
SEC. 1708. AUTHORITY FOR UNILATERAL INITIATION OF REVIEWS.
Section 721(b)(1) of the Defense Production Act of 1950 (50
U.S.C. 4565(b)(1)) is amended--
(1) by redesignating subparagraphs (E) and (F) as
subparagraphs (F) and (G), respectively;
(2) in subparagraph (D)--
(A) in the matter preceding clause (i), by striking
``subparagraph (F)'' and inserting ``subparagraph (G)'';
(B) in clause (i), by inserting ``(other than a covered
transaction described in subparagraph (E))'' after ``any
covered transaction'';
(C) by striking clause (ii) and inserting the following:
``(ii) any covered transaction described in subparagraph
(E), if any party to the transaction submitted false or
misleading material information to the Committee in
connection with the Committee's consideration of the
transaction or omitted material information, including
material documents, from information submitted to the
Committee; or''; and
(D) in clause (iii)--
(i) in the matter preceding subclause (I), by striking
``any covered transaction that has previously been reviewed
or investigated under this section,'' and inserting ``any
covered transaction described in subparagraph (E),'';
(ii) in subclause (I), by striking ``intentionally'';
(iii) in subclause (II), by striking ``an intentional'' and
inserting ``a''; and
(iv) in subclause (III), by inserting ``adequate and
appropriate'' before ``remedies or enforcement tools''; and
(3) by inserting after subparagraph (D) the following:
``(E) Covered transactions described.--A covered
transaction is described in this subparagraph if--
``(i) the Committee has informed the parties to the
transaction in writing that the Committee has completed all
action under this section with respect to the transaction; or
``(ii) the President has announced a decision not to
exercise the President's authority under subsection (d) with
respect to the transaction.''.
SEC. 1709. TIMING FOR REVIEWS AND INVESTIGATIONS.
Section 721(b) of the Defense Production Act of 1950 (50
U.S.C. 4565(b)), as amended by section 1708, is further
amended--
(1) in paragraph (1)(F), by striking ``30'' and inserting
``45'';
(2) in paragraph (2), by striking subparagraph (C) and
inserting the following:
``(C) Timing.--
``(i) In general.--Except as provided in clause (ii), any
investigation under subparagraph (A) shall be completed
before the end of the 45-day period beginning on the date on
which the investigation commenced.
``(ii) Extension for extraordinary circumstances.--
``(I) In general.--In extraordinary circumstances (as
defined by the Committee in regulations), the chairperson
may, at the request of the head of the lead agency, extend an
investigation under subparagraph (A) for one 30-day period.
``(II) Nondelegation.--The authority of the chairperson and
the head of the lead agency referred to in subclause (I) may
not be delegated to any person other than the Deputy
Secretary of the Treasury or the deputy head (or equivalent
thereof) of the lead agency, as the case may be.
``(III) Notification to parties.--If the Committee extends
the deadline under subclause (I) with respect to a covered
transaction, the Committee shall notify the parties to the
transaction of the extension.''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following:
``(8) Tolling of deadlines during lapse in
appropriations.--Any deadline or time limitation under this
subsection shall be tolled during a lapse in
appropriations.''.
SEC. 1710. MONITORING OF NON-NOTIFIED AND NON-DECLARED
TRANSACTIONS.
Section 721(b)(1) of the Defense Production Act of 1950 (50
U.S.C. 4565(b)(1)), as amended by sections 1708 and 1709, is
further amended by adding at the end the following:
``(H) Monitoring of non-notified and non-declared
transactions.--The Committee shall establish a mechanism to
identify covered transactions for which--
``(i) a notice under clause (i) of subparagraph (C) or a
declaration under clause (v) of that subparagraph is not
submitted to the Committee; and
``(ii) information is reasonably available.''.
SEC. 1711. SUBMISSION OF CERTIFICATIONS TO CONGRESS.
Section 721(b)(3)(C) of the Defense Production Act of 1950
(50 U.S.C. 4565(b)(3)(C)) is amended--
(1) in clause (iii)--
(A) in subclause (II), by inserting ``and the Select
Committee on Intelligence'' after ``Urban Affairs''; and
(B) in subclause (IV), by inserting ``and the Permanent
Select Committee on Intelligence'' after ``Financial
Services'';
(2) in clause (iv), by striking subclause (II) and
inserting the following:
``(II) Delegation of certifications.--
``(aa) In general.--Subject to item (bb), the chairperson,
in consultation with the Committee, may determine the level
of official to whom the signature requirement under subclause
(I) for the chairperson and the head of the lead agency may
be delegated. The level of official to whom the signature
requirement may be delegated may differ based on any factor
relating to a transaction that the chairperson, in
consultation with the Committee, deems appropriate, including
the type or value of the transaction.
``(bb) Limitation on delegation with respect to certain
transactions.--The signature requirement under subclause (I)
may be delegated not below the level of the Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury or an equivalent official of the
lead agency in the case of a covered transaction--
``(AA) assessed by the Director of National Intelligence
under paragraph (4) as more likely than not to threaten the
national security of the United States;
``(BB) with respect to which the Committee conducts an
investigation under paragraph (2); or
``(CC) with respect to which a request is made by an
official at the Deputy Assistant Secretary or Assistant
Secretary level of an agency or department represented on the
Committee, or an equivalent thereof, that the transaction be
reviewed by the Assistant Secretary of the Treasury and an
equivalent official of the lead agency.
``(cc) Limitation on delegation with respect to other
transactions.--In the case of any covered transaction not
described in item (bb), the signature requirement under
subclause (I) may be delegated not below the level of a
Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Treasury or an equivalent
official of the lead agency.''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following:
``(v) Authority to consolidate documents.--Instead of
transmitting a separate certified notice or certified report
under subparagraph (A) or (B) with respect to each covered
transaction, the Committee may, on a monthly basis, transmit
such notices and reports in a consolidated document to the
Members of Congress specified in clause (iii).''.
SEC. 1712. ANALYSIS BY DIRECTOR OF NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE.
Section 721(b)(4) of the Defense Production Act of 1950 (50
U.S.C. 4565(b)(4)) is amended--
(1) by striking subparagraph (A) and inserting the
following:
``(A) Analysis required.--
``(i) In general.--Except as provided in subparagraph (B),
the Director of National Intelligence shall expeditiously
carry out a thorough analysis of any threat to the national
security of the United States posed by any covered
transaction, which shall include the identification of any
recognized gaps in the collection of intelligence relevant to
the analysis.
``(ii) Views of intelligence community.--The Director shall
seek and incorporate into the analysis required by clause (i)
the views of all affected or appropriate agencies of the
intelligence community with respect to the transaction.
``(iii) Updates.--At the request of the lead agency, the
Director shall update the analysis conducted under clause (i)
with respect to a covered transaction with respect to which
an agreement was entered into under subsection (l)(3)(A).
``(iv) Independence and objectivity.--The Committee shall
ensure that its processes under this section preserve the
ability of the Director to conduct analysis under clause (i)
that is independent, objective, and consistent with all
applicable directives, policies, and analytic tradecraft
standards of the intelligence community.'';
(2) by redesignating subparagraphs (B), (C), and (D) as
subparagraphs (C), (D), and (E), respectively;
(3) by inserting after subparagraph (A) the following:
``(B) Basic threat information.--
``(i) In general.--The Director of National Intelligence
may provide the Committee with basic information regarding
any threat to the national security of the United States
posed by a covered transaction described in clause (ii)
instead of conducting the analysis required by subparagraph
(A).
``(ii) Covered transaction described.--A covered
transaction is described in this clause if--
``(I) the transaction is described in subsection
(a)(5)(B)(ii);
``(II) the Director of National Intelligence has completed
an analysis pursuant to subparagraph (A) involving each
foreign person that is a party to the transaction during the
12 months preceding the review or investigation of the
transaction under this section; or
``(III) the transaction otherwise meets criteria agreed
upon by the Committee and the Director for purposes of this
subparagraph.'';
(4) in subparagraph (C), as redesignated by paragraph (2),
by striking ``20'' and inserting ``30''; and
(5) by adding at the end the following:
``(F) Assessment of operational impact.--The Director may
provide to the Committee an assessment, separate from the
analyses under subparagraphs (A) and (B), of any operational
impact of a covered transaction on the intelligence community
and a description of any actions that have been or will be
taken to mitigate any such impact.
``(G) Submission to congress.--The Committee shall submit
the analysis required by subparagraph (A) with respect to a
covered transaction to the Select Committee on Intelligence
of the Senate and the Permanent Select Committee on
Intelligence of the House of Representatives upon the
conclusion of action under this section (other than
[[Page S3499]]
compliance plans under subsection (l)(6)) with respect to the
transaction.''.
SEC. 1713. INFORMATION SHARING.
Section 721(c) of the Defense Production Act of 1950 (50
U.S.C. 4565(c)) is amended--
(1) by striking ``Any information'' and inserting the
following:
``(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), any
information'';
(2) by striking ``, except as may be relevant'' and all
that follows and inserting a period; and
(3) by adding at the end the following:
``(2) Exceptions.--Paragraph (1) shall not prohibit the
disclosure of the following:
``(A) Information relevant to any administrative or
judicial action or proceeding.
``(B) Information to Congress or any duly authorized
committee or subcommittee of Congress.
``(C) Information to any domestic or foreign governmental
entity, under the direction of the chairperson, to the extent
necessary for national security purposes and pursuant to
appropriate confidentiality and classification arrangements.
``(D) Information that the parties have consented to be
disclosed to third parties.
``(3) Cooperation with allies and partners.--
``(A) In general.--The chairperson, in consultation with
other members of the Committee, should establish a formal
process for the exchange of information under paragraph
(2)(C) with governments of countries that are allies or
partners of the United States, in the discretion of the
chairperson, to protect the national security of the United
States and those countries.
``(B) Requirements.--The process established under
subparagraph (A) should, in the discretion of the
chairperson--
``(i) be designed to facilitate the harmonization of action
with respect to trends in investment and technology that
could pose risks to the national security of the United
States and countries that are allies or partners of the
United States;
``(ii) provide for the sharing of information with respect
to specific technologies and entities acquiring such
technologies as appropriate to ensure national security; and
``(iii) include consultations and meetings with
representatives of the governments of such countries on a
recurring basis.''.
SEC. 1714. ACTION BY THE PRESIDENT.
(a) In General.--Section 721(d) of the Defense Production
Act of 1950 (50 U.S.C. 4565(d)) is amended--
(1) by striking paragraph (1) and inserting the following:
``(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (4), the President
may, with respect to a covered transaction that threatens to
impair the national security of the United States, take such
action for such time as the President considers appropriate
to suspend or prohibit the transaction or to require
divestment.''; and
(2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``not later than 15
days'' and all that follows and inserting the following:
``with respect to a covered transaction not later than 15
days after the earlier of--
``(A) the date on which the investigation of the
transaction under subsection (b) is completed; or
``(B) the date on which the Committee otherwise refers the
transaction to the President under subsection (l)(2).''.
(b) Civil Penalties.--Section 721(h)(3)(A) of the Defense
Production Act of 1950 (50 U.S.C. 4565(h)(3)(A)) is amended
by striking ``including any mitigation'' and all that follows
through ``subsection (l)'' and inserting ``including any
mitigation agreement entered into, conditions imposed, or
order issued pursuant to this section''.
SEC. 1715. JUDICIAL REVIEW.
Section 721(e) of the Defense Production Act of 1950 (50
U.S.C. 4565(e)) is amended--
(1) by striking ``The actions'' and inserting the
following:
``(1) In general.--The actions''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following:
``(2) Civil actions.--A civil action challenging an action
or finding of the Committee under this section may be brought
only in the United States Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia Circuit.
``(3) Procedures for review of privileged information.--If
a civil action challenging an action or finding of the
Committee under this section is brought, and the court
determines that protected information in the administrative
record, including classified, sensitive law enforcement,
sensitive security, or other information subject to privilege
or protections under any provision of law, is necessary to
resolve the challenge, that information shall be submitted ex
parte and in camera to the court and the court shall maintain
that information under seal.
``(4) Applicability of use of information provisions.--The
use of information provisions of sections 106, 305, 405, and
706 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 (50
U.S.C. 1806, 1825, 1845, and 1881e) shall not apply in a
civil action brought under this subsection.''.
SEC. 1716. MEMBERSHIP AND STAFF OF COMMITTEE.
(a) Hiring Authority.--Section 721(k) of the Defense
Production Act of 1950 (50 U.S.C. 4565(k)) is amended by
striking paragraph (4) and inserting the following:
``(4) Hiring authority.--
``(A) Senior officials.--
``(i) In general.--Each member of the Committee shall
designate an Assistant Secretary, or an equivalent official,
who is appointed by the President, by and with the advice and
consent of the Senate, to carry out such duties related to
the Committee as the member of the Committee may delegate.
``(ii) Department of the treasury.--In addition to
officials of the Department of the Treasury authorized under
section 301 of title 31, United States Code, or any other
provision of law, there are authorized at the Department of
the Treasury, to carry out such duties related to the
Committee as the Secretary of the Treasury may delegate,
consistent with this section and reflecting the expanded
authorities of the Committee and the role of the Department
of the Treasury in implementing those authorities under the
amendments made by the Foreign Investment Risk Review
Modernization Act of 2018, the following:
``(I) One official, who is appointed by the President, by
and with the advice and consent of the Senate, who shall be
compensated at a rate not to exceed the rate of basic pay
payable for level III of the Executive Schedule under section
5314 of title 5, United States Code.
``(II) One official, who is appointed by the President, by
and with the advice and consent of the Senate, who shall be
compensated at a rate not to exceed the rate of basic pay
payable for level IV of the Executive Schedule under section
5315 of title 5, United States Code.
``(B) Special hiring authority.--The heads of the
departments and agencies represented on the Committee may
appoint, without regard to the provisions of sections 3309
through 3318 of title 5, United States Code, candidates
directly to positions in the competitive service (as defined
in section 2102 of that title) in their respective
departments and agencies to administer this section.''.
(b) Procedures for Recusal of Members of Committee for
Conflicts of Interest.--Not later than 90 days after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Committee on Foreign
Investment in the United States shall--
(1) establish procedures for the recusal of any member of
the Committee that has a conflict of interest with respect to
a covered transaction (as defined in section 721 of the
Defense Production Act of 1950, as amended by section 1703);
(2) submit to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban
Affairs of the Senate and the Committee on Financial Services
of the House of Representatives a report describing those
procedures; and
(3) brief the committees specified in paragraph (1) on the
report required by paragraph (2).
SEC. 1717. ACTIONS BY THE COMMITTEE TO ADDRESS NATIONAL
SECURITY RISKS.
Section 721(l) of the Defense Production Act of 1950 (50
U.S.C. 4565(l)) is amended--
(1) in the subsection heading, by striking ``Mitigation,
Tracking, and Postconsummation Monitoring and Enforcement''
and inserting ``Actions by the Committee to Address National
Security Risks'';
(2) by redesignating paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) as
paragraphs (3), (5), and (6), respectively;
(3) by inserting before paragraph (3), as redesignated by
paragraph (2), the following:
``(1) Suspension of transactions.--The Committee, acting
through the chairperson, may suspend a proposed or pending
covered transaction that may pose a risk to the national
security of the United States for such time as the covered
transaction is under review or investigation under subsection
(b).
``(2) Referral to president.--The Committee may, at any
time during the review or investigation of a covered
transaction under subsection (b), complete the action of the
Committee with respect to the transaction and refer the
transaction to the President for action pursuant to
subsection (d).'';
(4) in paragraph (3), as redesignated by paragraph (2)--
(A) in subparagraph (A)--
(i) in the subparagraph heading, by striking ``In general''
and inserting ``Agreements and conditions'';
(ii) by striking ``The Committee'' and inserting the
following:
``(i) In general.--The Committee'';
(iii) by striking ``threat'' and inserting ``risk''; and
(iv) by adding at the end the following:
``(ii) Abandonment of transactions.--If a party to a
covered transaction has voluntarily chosen to abandon the
transaction, the Committee or lead agency, as the case may
be, may negotiate, enter into or impose, and enforce any
agreement or condition with any party to the covered
transaction for purposes of effectuating such abandonment and
mitigating any risk to the national security of the United
States that arises as a result of the covered transaction.
``(iii) Agreements and conditions relating to completed
transactions.--The Committee or lead agency, as the case may
be, may negotiate, enter into or impose, and enforce any
agreement or condition with any party to a completed covered
transaction in order to mitigate any interim risk to the
national security of the United States that may arise as a
result of the covered transaction until such time that the
Committee has completed action pursuant to subsection (b) or
the President has taken action pursuant to subsection (d)
with respect to the transaction.''; and
(B) by striking subparagraph (B) and inserting the
following:
``(B) Limitations.--An agreement may not be entered into or
condition imposed under
[[Page S3500]]
subparagraph (A) with respect to a covered transaction unless
the Committee determines that the agreement or condition
resolves the national security concerns posed by the
transaction, taking into consideration whether the agreement
or condition is reasonably calculated to--
``(i) be effective;
``(ii) allow for compliance with the terms of the agreement
or condition in an appropriately verifiable way; and
``(iii) enable effective monitoring of compliance with and
enforcement of the terms of the agreement or condition.
``(C) Jurisdiction.--The provisions of section 706(b) shall
apply to any mitigation agreement entered into or condition
imposed under subparagraph (A).'';
(5) by inserting after paragraph (3), as redesignated by
paragraph (2), the following:
``(4) Risk-based analysis required.--
``(A) In general.--Any determination of the Committee to
suspend a covered transaction under paragraph (1), to refer a
covered transaction to the President under paragraph (2), or
to negotiate, enter into or impose, or enforce any agreement
or condition under paragraph (3)(A) with respect to a covered
transaction, shall be based on a risk-based analysis,
conducted by the Committee, of the effects on the national
security of the United States of the covered transaction,
which shall include an assessment of the threat,
vulnerabilities, and consequences to national security
related to the transaction.
``(B) Actions of members of the committee.--
``(i) In general.--Any member of the Committee who
concludes that a covered transaction poses an unresolved
national security concern shall recommend to the Committee
that the Committee suspend the transaction under paragraph
(1), refer the transaction to the President under paragraph
(2), or negotiate, enter into or impose, or enforce any
agreement or condition under paragraph (3)(A) with respect to
the transaction. In making that recommendation, the member
shall propose or contribute to the risk-based analysis
required by subparagraph (A).
``(ii) Failure to reach consensus.--If the Committee fails
to reach consensus with respect to a recommendation under
clause (i) regarding a covered transaction, the members of
the Committee who support an alternative recommendation shall
produce--
``(I) a written statement justifying the alternative
recommendation; and
``(II) as appropriate, a risk-based analysis that supports
the alternative recommendation.
``(C) Definitions.--For purposes of subparagraph (A), the
terms `threat', `vulnerabilities', and `consequences to
national security' shall have the meanings given those terms
by the Committee by regulation.'';
(6) in paragraph (5)(B), as redesignated by paragraph (2),
by striking ``(as defined in the National Security Act of
1947)''; and
(7) in paragraph (6), as redesignated by paragraph (2)--
(A) in subparagraph (A)--
(i) by striking ``paragraph (1)'' and inserting ``paragraph
(3)''; and
(ii) by striking the second sentence and inserting the
following: ``The lead agency may, at its discretion, seek and
receive the assistance of other departments or agencies in
carrying out the purposes of this paragraph.'';
(B) in subparagraph (B)--
(i) by striking ``designated agency'' and all that follows
through ``The lead agency in connection'' and inserting
``designated agency.--The lead agency in connection'';
(ii) by striking clause (ii); and
(iii) by redesignating subclauses (I) and (II) as clauses
(i) and (ii), respectively, and by moving such clauses, as so
redesignated, 2 ems to the left; and
(C) by adding at the end the following:
``(C) Compliance plans.--
``(i) In general.--In the case of a covered transaction
with respect to which an agreement is entered into under
paragraph (3)(A), the Committee or lead agency, as the case
may be, shall formulate, adhere to, and keep updated a plan
for monitoring compliance with the agreement.
``(ii) Elements.--Each plan required by clause (i) with
respect to an agreement entered into under paragraph (3)(A)
shall include an explanation of--
``(I) which member of the Committee will have primary
responsibility for monitoring compliance with the agreement;
``(II) how compliance with the agreement will be monitored;
``(III) how frequently compliance reviews will be
conducted;
``(IV) whether an independent entity will be utilized under
subparagraph (E) to conduct compliance reviews; and
``(V) what actions will be taken if the parties fail to
cooperate regarding monitoring compliance with the agreement.
``(D) Effect of lack of compliance.--If, at any time after
a mitigation agreement or condition is entered into or
imposed under paragraph (3)(A), the Committee or lead agency,
as the case may be, determines that a party or parties to the
agreement or condition are not in compliance with the terms
of the agreement or condition, the Committee or lead agency
may, in addition to the authority of the Committee to impose
penalties pursuant to subsection (h)(3) and to unilaterally
initiate a review of any covered transaction under subsection
(b)(1)(D)(iii)--
``(i) negotiate a plan of action for the party or parties
to remediate the lack of compliance, with failure to abide by
the plan or otherwise remediate the lack of compliance
serving as the basis for the Committee to find a material
breach of the agreement or condition;
``(ii) require that the party or parties submit a written
notice under clause (i) of subsection (b)(1)(C) or a
declaration under clause (v) of that subsection with respect
to a covered transaction initiated after the date of the
determination of noncompliance and before the date that is 5
years after the date of the determination to the Committee to
initiate a review of the transaction under subsection (b); or
``(iii) seek injunctive relief.
``(E) Use of independent entities to monitor compliance.--
If the parties to an agreement entered into under paragraph
(3)(A) enter into a contract with an independent entity from
outside the United States Government for the purpose of
monitoring compliance with the agreement, the Committee shall
take such action as is necessary to prevent a conflict of
interest from arising by ensuring that the independent entity
owes no fiduciary duty to the parties.
``(F) Successors and assigns.--Any agreement or condition
entered into or imposed under paragraph (3)(A) shall be
considered binding on all successors and assigns unless and
until the agreement or condition terminates on its own terms
or is otherwise terminated by the Committee in its sole
discretion.
``(G) Additional compliance measures.--Subject to
subparagraphs (A) through (F), the Committee shall develop
and agree upon methods for evaluating compliance with any
agreement entered into or condition imposed with respect to a
covered transaction that will allow the Committee to
adequately ensure compliance without unnecessarily diverting
Committee resources from assessing any new covered
transaction for which a written notice under clause (i) of
subsection (b)(1)(C) or declaration under clause (v) of that
subsection has been filed, and if necessary, reaching a
mitigation agreement with or imposing a condition on a party
to such covered transaction or any covered transaction for
which a review has been reopened for any reason.''.
SEC. 1718. MODIFICATION OF ANNUAL REPORT AND OTHER REPORTING
REQUIREMENTS.
(a) Modification of Annual Report.--Section 721(m) of the
Defense Production Act of 1950 (50 U.S.C. 4565(m)) is
amended--
(1) in paragraph (2)--
(A) by amending subparagraph (A) to read as follows:
``(A) A list of all notices filed and all reviews or
investigations of covered transactions completed during the
period, with--
``(i) a description of the outcome of each review or
investigation, including whether an agreement was entered
into or condition was imposed under subsection (l)(3)(A) with
respect to the transaction being reviewed or investigated,
and whether the President took any action under this section
with respect to that transaction;
``(ii) basic information on each party to each such
transaction;
``(iii) the nature of the business activities or products
of the United States business with which the transaction was
entered into or intended to be entered into; and
``(iv) information about any withdrawal from the
process.''; and
(B) by adding at the end the following:
``(G) Statistics on compliance plans conducted and actions
taken by the Committee under subsection (l)(6), including
subparagraph (D) of that subsection, during that period, a
general assessment of the compliance of parties with
agreements entered into and conditions imposed under
subsection (l)(3)(A) that are in effect during that period,
including a description of any actions taken by the Committee
to impose penalties or initiate a unilateral review pursuant
to subsection (b)(1)(D)(iii), and any recommendations for
improving the enforcement of such agreements and conditions.
``(H) Cumulative and, as appropriate, trend information on
the number of declarations filed under subsection
(b)(1)(C)(v), the actions taken by the Committee in response
to those declarations, the business sectors involved in those
declarations, and the countries involved in those
declarations.
``(I) A description of--
``(i) the methods used by the Committee to monitor non-
notified and non-declared transactions under subsection
(b)(1)(H);
``(ii) potential methods to improve such monitoring and the
resources required to do so; and
``(iii) the number of transactions identified through the
mechanism established under that subsection during the
reporting period and the number of such transactions flagged
for further review.'';
(2) in paragraph (3)--
(A) by striking ``critical technologies'' and all that
follows through ``In order to assist'' and inserting
``critical technologies.--In order to assist'';
(B) by striking subparagraph (B); and
(C) by redesignating clauses (i) and (ii) as subparagraphs
(A) and (B), respectively, and by moving such subparagraphs,
as so redesignated, 2 ems to the left; and
(3) by adding at the end the following:
``(4) Form of report.--
``(A) In general.--All appropriate portions of the annual
report under paragraph (1) may be classified. An unclassified
version of the report, as appropriate, consistent with
safeguarding national security and privacy, shall be made
available to the public.
[[Page S3501]]
``(B) Inclusions in unclassified version.--The unclassified
version of the report required under paragraph (1) shall
include, with respect to covered transactions for the
reporting period--
``(i) the number of notices submitted under subsection
(b)(1)(C)(i);
``(ii) the number of declarations submitted under
subsection (b)(1)(C)(v) and the number of such declarations
that were required under subclause (IV) of that subsection;
``(iii) the number of declarations submitted under
subsection (b)(1)(C)(v) for which the Committee required
resubmission as notices under subsection (b)(1)(C)(i);
``(iv) the average number of days that elapsed between
submission of a declaration under subsection (b)(1)(C)(v) and
the acceptance of the declaration by the Committee;
``(v) information on the time it took the Committee to
provide comments on, or to accept, notices submitted under
subsection (b)(1)(C)(i), including--
``(I) the average number of business days that elapsed
between the date of submission of a draft notice and the date
on which the Committee provided written comments on the draft
notice;
``(II) the average number of business days that elapsed
between the date of submission of a final notice and the date
on which the Committee accepted or provided written comments
on the final notice; and
``(III) if the average number of business days for a
response by the Committee reported under subclause (I) or
(II) exceeded 10 business days--
``(aa) an explanation of the causes of such delays,
including whether such delays are caused by resource
shortages, unusual fluctuations in the volume of notices,
transaction characteristics, or other factors; and
``(bb) an explanation of the steps that the Committee
anticipates taking to mitigate the causes of such delays and
otherwise to improve the ability of the Committee to provide
comments on, or to accept, notices within 10 business days;
``(vi) the number of reviews or investigations conducted
under subsection (b);
``(vii) the number of investigations that were subject to
an extension under subsection (b)(2)(C)(ii);
``(viii) information on the duration of those reviews and
investigations, including the average number of days required
to complete those reviews and investigations;
``(ix) the number of notices submitted under subsection
(b)(1)(C)(i) and declarations submitted under subsection
(b)(1)(C)(v) that were rejected by the Committee;
``(x) the number of such notices and declarations that were
withdrawn by a party to the covered transaction;
``(xi) the number of such withdrawals that were followed by
the submission of a subsequent such notice or declaration
relating to a substantially similar covered transaction; and
``(xii) such other specific, cumulative, or trend
information that the Committee determines is advisable to
provide for an assessment of the time required for reviews
and investigations of covered transactions under this
section.''.
(b) Report on Chinese Investment.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 2 years after the date of
the enactment of this Act, and every 2 years thereafter
through 2026, the Secretary of Commerce shall submit to
Congress and the Committee on Foreign Investment in the
United States a report on foreign direct investment
transactions made by entities of the People's Republic of
China in the United States.
(2) Elements.--Each report required by paragraph (1) shall
include the following:
(A) Total foreign direct investment from the People's
Republic of China in the United States, including total
foreign direct investment disaggregated by ultimate
beneficial owner.
(B) A breakdown of investments from the People's Republic
of China in the United States by value using the following
categories:
(i) Less than $50,000,000.
(ii) Greater than or equal to $50,000,000 and less than
$100,000,000.
(iii) Greater than or equal to $100,000,000 and less than
$1,000,000,000.
(iv) Greater than or equal to $1,000,000,000 and less than
$2,000,000,000.
(v) Greater than or equal to $2,000,000,000 and less than
$5,000,000,000.
(vi) Greater than or equal to $5,000,000,000.
(C) A breakdown of investments from the People's Republic
of China in the United States by 2-digit North American
Industry Classification System code.
(D) A breakdown of investments from the People's Republic
of China in the United States by investment type, using the
following categories:
(i) Businesses established.
(ii) Businesses acquired.
(E) A breakdown of investments from the People's Republic
of China in the United States by government and non-
government investments, including volume, sector, and type of
investment within each category.
(F) A list of companies incorporated in the United States
purchased through government investment by the People's
Republic of China.
(G) The number of United States affiliates of entities
under the jurisdiction of the People's Republic of China, the
total employees at those affiliates, and the valuation for
any publicly traded United States affiliate of such an
entity.
(H) An analysis of patterns in the investments described in
subparagraphs (A) through (F), including in volume, type, and
sector, and the extent to which those patterns of investments
align with the objectives outlined by the Government of the
People's Republic of China in its Made in China 2025 plan,
including a comparative analysis of investments from the
People's Republic of China in the United States and all
foreign direct investment in the United States.
(I) An identification of any limitations on the ability of
the Secretary of Commerce to collect comprehensive
information that is reasonably and lawfully available about
foreign investment in the United States from the People's
Republic of China on a timeline necessary to complete reports
every 2 years as required by paragraph (1), including--
(i) an identification of any discrepancies between
government and private sector estimates of investments from
the People's Republic of China in the United States;
(ii) a description of the different methodologies or data
collection methods, including by private sector entities,
used to measure foreign investment that may result in
different estimates; and
(iii) recommendations for enhancing the ability of the
Secretary of Commerce to improve data collection of
information about foreign investment in the United States
from the People's Republic of China.
(3) Extension of deadline.--If, as a result of a limitation
identified under paragraph (2)(I), the Secretary of Commerce
determines that the Secretary will be unable to submit a
report at the time required by paragraph (1), the Secretary
may request additional time to complete the report.
(c) Report on Certain Investments by State-owned or State-
controlled Entities.--
(1) In general.--Not later than one year after the date of
the enactment of this Act, an appropriate member or members
of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States
shall, in coordination with the chairperson of the Committee,
submit to Congress a report assessing--
(A) national security threats related to investments in the
United States by state-owned or state-controlled entities in
the manufacture or assembly of rolling stock or other assets
for use in freight rail, public transportation, or intercity
passenger rail systems, including the construction of new
facilities;
(B) how the number and types of such investments could
affect any such threats; and
(C) the authority and ability of the Committee to respond
to such threats.
(2) Consultation.--The member or members of the Committee
on Foreign Investment in the United States preparing the
report required by paragraph (1) shall consult with the
Secretary of Transportation and the head of any agency that
is not represented on the Committee that has significant
technical expertise related to the assessments required by
paragraph (1).
SEC. 1719. CERTIFICATION OF NOTICES AND INFORMATION.
Section 721(n) of the Defense Production Act of 1950 (50
U.S.C. 4565(n)) is amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraphs (1) and (2) as
subparagraphs (A) and (B), respectively, and by moving such
subparagraphs, as so redesignated, 2 ems to the right;
(2) by striking ``Each notice'' and inserting the
following:
``(1) In general.--Each notice'';
(3) by striking ``paragraph (3)(B)'' and inserting
``paragraph (6)(B)'';
(4) by striking ``paragraph (1)(A)'' and inserting
``paragraph (3)(A)'';
(5) by adding at the end the following:
``(2) Effect of failure to submit.--The Committee may not
complete a review under this section of a covered transaction
and may recommend to the President that the President suspend
or prohibit the transaction or require divestment under
subsection (d) if the Committee determines that a party to
the transaction has--
``(A) failed to submit a statement required by paragraph
(1); or
``(B) included false or misleading information in a notice
or information described in paragraph (1) or omitted material
information from such notice or information.
``(3) Applicability of law on fraud and false statements.--
The Committee shall prescribe regulations expressly providing
for the application of section 1001 of title 18, United
States Code, to all information provided to the Committee
under this section by any party to a covered transaction.''.
SEC. 1720. IMPLEMENTATION PLANS.
(a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the chairperson of the Committee
on Foreign Investment in the United States and the Secretary
of Commerce shall, in consultation with the appropriate
members of the Committee--
(1) develop plans to implement this title; and
(2) submit to the appropriate congressional committees a
report on the plans developed under paragraph (1), which
shall include a description of--
(A) the timeline and process to implement the provisions
of, and amendments made by, this title;
(B) any additional staff necessary to implement the plans;
and
(C) the resources required to effectively implement the
plans.
(b) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this
section, the term
[[Page S3502]]
``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
(1) the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
and the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate; and
(2) the Committee on Financial Services and the Committee
on Appropriations of the House of Representatives.
SEC. 1721. ASSESSMENT OF NEED FOR ADDITIONAL RESOURCES FOR
COMMITTEE.
The President shall--
(1) determine whether and to what extent the expansion of
the responsibilities of the Committee on Foreign Investment
in the United States pursuant to the amendments made by this
title necessitates additional resources for the Committee and
the departments and agencies represented on the Committee to
perform their functions under section 721 of the Defense
Production Act of 1950, as amended by this title; and
(2) if the President determines that additional resources
are necessary, include in the budget of the President for
fiscal year 2019 and each fiscal year thereafter submitted to
Congress under section 1105(a) of title 31, United States
Code, a request for such additional resources.
SEC. 1722. FUNDING.
Section 721 of the Defense Production Act of 1950 (50
U.S.C. 4565) is amended by adding at the end the following:
``(o) Funding.--
``(1) Establishment of fund.--There is established in the
Treasury of the United States a fund, to be known as the
`Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States Fund'
(in this subsection referred to as the `Fund'), to be
administered by the chairperson.
``(2) Appropriation of funds for the committee.--There are
authorized to be appropriated to the Fund such sums as may be
necessary to perform the functions of the Committee.
``(3) Filing fees.--
``(A) In general.--The Committee may assess and collect a
fee in an amount determined by the Committee in regulations,
to the extent provided in advance in appropriations Acts,
without regard to section 9701 of title 31, United States
Code, and subject to subparagraph (B), with respect to each
covered transaction for which a written notice is submitted
to the Committee under subsection (b)(1)(C)(i). The total
amount of fees collected under this paragraph may not exceed
the costs of administering this section.
``(B) Determination of amount of fee.--
``(i) In general.--In determining the amount of the fee to
be assessed under subparagraph (A) with respect to a covered
transaction, the Committee shall base the amount of the fee
on the value of the transaction, taking into consideration--
``(I) the effect of the fee on small business concerns (as
defined in section 3 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C.
632));
``(II) the expenses of the Committee associated with
conducting activities under this section;
``(III) the effect of the fee on foreign investment; and
``(IV) such other matters as the Committee considers
appropriate.
``(ii) Prioritization fee.--The Committee may establish a
fee or fee scale to prioritize the timing of the response of
the Committee to a draft or final written notice during the
period before the Committee accepts the final written notice
under subsection (b)(1)(C)(i), in the event that the
Committee is unable to respond during the time required by
subclause (II) of that subsection because of an unusually
large influx of notices, or for other reasons.
``(iii) Updates.--The Committee shall periodically
reconsider and adjust the amount of the fee to be assessed
under subparagraph (A) with respect to a covered transaction
to ensure that the amount of the fee does not exceed the
costs of administering this section and otherwise remains
appropriate.
``(C) Deposit and availability of fees.--Notwithstanding
section 3302 of title 31, United States Code, fees collected
under subparagraph (A) shall--
``(i) be deposited into the Fund solely for use in carrying
out activities under this section;
``(ii) to the extent and in the amounts provided in advance
in appropriations Acts, be available to the chairperson;
``(iii) remain available until expended; and
``(iv) be in addition to any appropriations made available
to the members of the Committee.
``(4) Transfer of funds.--To the extent provided in advance
in appropriations Acts, the chairperson may transfer any
amounts in the Fund to any other department or agency
represented on the Committee for the purpose of addressing
emerging needs in carrying out activities under this section.
Amounts so transferred shall be in addition to any other
amounts available to that department or agency for that
purpose.''.
SEC. 1723. CENTRALIZATION OF CERTAIN COMMITTEE FUNCTIONS.
Section 721 of the Defense Production Act of 1950 (50
U.S.C. 4565), as amended by section 1722, is further amended
by adding at the end the following:
``(p) Centralization of Certain Committee Functions.--
``(1) In general.--The chairperson, in consultation with
the Committee, may centralize certain functions of the
Committee within the Department of the Treasury for the
purpose of enhancing interagency coordination and
collaboration in carrying out the functions of the Committee
under this section.
``(2) Functions.--Functions that may be centralized under
paragraph (1) include monitoring non-notified and non-
declared transactions pursuant to subsection (b)(1)(H), and
other functions as determined by the chairperson and the
Committee.
``(3) Rule of construction.--Nothing in this section shall
be construed as limiting the authority of any department or
agency represented on the Committee to represent its own
interests before the Committee.''.
SEC. 1724. CONFORMING AMENDMENTS.
Section 721 of the Defense Production Act of 1950 (50
U.S.C. 4565), as amended by this title, is further amended--
(1) in subsection (b)--
(A) in paragraph (1)(D)(iii)(I), by striking ``subsection
(l)(1)(A)'' and inserting ``subsection (l)(3)(A)''; and
(B) in paragraph (2)(B)(i)(I), by striking ``that threat''
and inserting ``the risk'';
(2) in subsection (d)(4)(A), by striking ``the foreign
interest exercising control'' and inserting ``a foreign
person that would acquire an interest in a United States
business or its assets as a result of the covered
transaction''; and
(3) in subsection (j), by striking ``merger, acquisition,
or takeover'' and inserting ``transaction''.
SEC. 1725. REQUIREMENTS TO IDENTIFY AND CONTROL THE EXPORT OF
EMERGING AND FOUNDATIONAL TECHNOLOGIES.
(a) Identification of Technologies.--
(1) In general.--The President shall establish and, in
coordination with the Secretary of Commerce, the Secretary of
Defense, the Secretary of Energy, the Secretary of State, and
the heads of other Federal agencies as appropriate, lead, a
regular, ongoing interagency process to identify emerging and
foundational technologies that--
(A) are essential to the national security of the United
States; and
(B) are not critical technologies described in clauses (i)
through (v) of section 721(a)(8)(B) of the Defense Production
Act of 1950, as amended by section 1703.
(2) Process.--The interagency process established under
subsection (a) shall--
(A) be informed by multiple sources of information,
including--
(i) publicly available information;
(ii) classified information, including relevant information
provided by the Director of National Intelligence;
(iii) information relating to reviews and investigations of
transactions by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the
United States under section 721 of the Defense Production Act
of 1950 (50 U.S.C. 4565); and
(iv) information provided by the advisory committees
established by the Secretary of Commerce to advise the Under
Secretary of Commerce for Industry and Security on controls
under the Export Administration Regulations, including the
Emerging Technology and Research Advisory Committee;
(B) take into account--
(i) the development of emerging and foundational
technologies in foreign countries;
(ii) the effect export controls imposed pursuant to this
section may have on the development of such technologies in
the United States; and
(iii) the effectiveness of export controls imposed pursuant
to this section on limiting the proliferation of emerging and
foundational technologies to foreign countries; and
(C) include a notice and comment period.
(b) Commerce Controls.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Commerce shall establish
appropriate controls under the Export Administration
Regulations on the export, reexport, or in-country transfer
of technology identified pursuant to subsection (a),
including by prescribing additional regulations.
(2) Levels of control.--
(A) In general.--The Secretary of Commerce may, in
coordination with the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of
State, and the heads of other Federal agencies, as
appropriate, specify the level of control to apply under
paragraph (1) with respect to the export of technology
described in that paragraph, including a requirement for a
license or other authorization for the export, reexport, or
in-country transfer of that technology.
(B) Considerations.--In determining under subparagraph (A)
the level of control appropriate for technology described in
paragraph (1), the Secretary of Commerce shall take into
account--
(i) lists of countries to which exports from the United
States are restricted; and
(ii) the potential end uses and end users of the
technology.
(C) Minimum requirements.--At a minimum, except as provided
by paragraph (4), the Secretary of Commerce shall require a
license for the export, reexport, or in-country transfer of
technology described in paragraph (1) to or in a country
subject to an embargo, including an arms embargo, imposed by
the United States.
(3) Review of license applications.--
(A) Procedures.--The procedures set forth in Executive
Order 12981 (50 U.S.C. 4603 note; relating to administration
of export controls) or a successor order shall apply to the
review of an application for a license or other authorization
for the export, reexport,
[[Page S3503]]
or in-country transfer of technology described in paragraph
(1).
(B) Consideration of information relating to national
security.--In reviewing an application for a license or other
authorization for the export, reexport, or in-country
transfer of technology described in paragraph (1), the
Secretary of Commerce shall take into account information
provided by the Director of National Intelligence regarding
any threat to the national security of the United States
posed by the proposed export, reexport, or transfer. The
Director of National Intelligence shall provide such
information on the request of the Secretary of Commerce.
(C) Disclosures relating to collaborative arrangements.--In
the case of an application for a license or other
authorization for the export, reexport, or in-country
transfer of technology described in paragraph (1) submitted
by or on behalf of a joint venture, joint development
agreement, or similar collaborative arrangement, the
Secretary of Commerce may require the applicant to identify,
in addition to any foreign person participating in the
arrangement, any foreign person with significant ownership
interest in a foreign person participating in the
arrangement.
(4) Exceptions.--
(A) Mandatory exceptions.--The Secretary of Commerce may
not control under this subsection the export of any
technology--
(i) described in section 203(b) of the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1702(b)); or
(ii) if the regulation of the export of that technology is
prohibited under any other provision of law.
(B) Regulatory exceptions.--In prescribing regulations
under paragraph (1), the Secretary of Commerce may include
regulatory exceptions to the requirements of that paragraph.
(C) Additional exceptions.--The Secretary of Commerce shall
not be required to impose under paragraph (1) a requirement
for a license or other authorization with respect to the
export, reexport, or in-country transfer of technology
described in paragraph (1) pursuant to any of the following
transactions:
(i) The sale or license of a finished item and the
provision of associated technology if the United States
person that is a party to the transaction generally makes the
finished item and associated technology available to its
customers, distributors, or resellers.
(ii) The sale or license to a customer of a product and the
provision of integration services or similar services if the
United States person that is a party to the transaction
generally makes such services available to its customers.
(iii) The transfer of equipment and the provision of
associated technology to operate the equipment if the
transfer could not result in the foreign person using the
equipment to produce critical technologies (as defined in
section 721(a) of the Defense Production Act of 1950, as
amended by section 1703).
(iv) The procurement by the United States person that is a
party to the transaction of goods or services, including
manufacturing services, from a foreign person that is a party
to the transaction, if the foreign person has no rights to
exploit any technology contributed by the United States
person other than to supply the procured goods or services.
(v) Any contribution and associated support by a United
States person that is a party to the transaction to an
industry organization related to a standard or specification,
whether in development or declared, including any license of
or commitment to license intellectual property in compliance
with the rules of any standards organization (as defined by
the Secretary by regulation).
(c) Multilateral Controls.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of State, in consultation
with the Secretary of Commerce and the Secretary of Defense,
and the heads of other Federal agencies, as appropriate, may
propose that any technology identified pursuant to subsection
(a) be added to the list of technologies controlled by the
relevant multilateral export control regimes.
(2) Items on commerce control list or united states
munitions list.--
(A) In general.--If the Secretary of State proposes to a
multilateral export control regime under paragraph (1) to add
a technology identified pursuant to subsection (a) to the
control list of that regime and that regime does not add that
technology to the control list during the 3-year period
beginning on the date of the proposal, the applicable agency
head may determine whether national security concerns warrant
the continuation of unilateral export controls with respect
to that technology.
(B) Applicable agency head defined.--In this paragraph, the
term ``applicable agency head'' means--
(i) in the case of technology listed on the Commerce
Control List set forth in Supplement No. 1 to part 774 of the
Export Administration Regulations, the Secretary of Commerce,
in consultation with the Secretary of Defense and the
Secretary of State; and
(ii) in the case of technology listed on the United States
Munitions List set forth in part 121 of title 22, Code of
Federal Regulations, the Secretary of State, in consultation
with the Secretary of Defense and the heads of other Federal
agencies, as appropriate.
(d) Report to Committee on Foreign Investment in the United
States.--Not less frequently than every 180 days, the
Secretary of Commerce, in coordination with the Secretary of
Defense, the Secretary of State, and the heads of other
Federal agencies, as appropriate, shall submit to the
Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States a report
on the results of actions taken pursuant to this section.
(e) Report to Congress.--Not less frequently than every 180
days, the Secretary of Commerce, in coordination with the
Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of State, and the heads
of other Federal agencies, as appropriate, shall submit a
report on the results of actions taken pursuant to this
section, including actions taken pursuant to subsections (a),
(b), and (c), to--
(1) the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs,
the Committee on Foreign Relations, the Committee on Armed
Services, and the Select Committee on Intelligence of the
Senate; and
(2) the Committee on Financial Services, the Committee on
Foreign Affairs, the Committee on Armed Services, and the
Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of
Representatives.
(f) Modifications to Emerging Technology and Research
Advisory Committee.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Commerce shall revise the
objectives of the Emerging Technology and Research Advisory
Committee, established by the Secretary under the Export
Administration Regulations, to include advising the
interagency process established under subsection (a) with
respect to emerging and foundational technologies.
(2) Duties.--The Secretary--
(A) shall revise the duties of the Emerging Technology and
Research Advisory Committee to include identifying emerging
and foundational technologies that may be developed over a
period of 5 years or 10 years; and
(B) may revise the duties of the Advisory Committee to
include identifying trends in--
(i) the ownership by foreign persons and foreign
governments of such technologies;
(ii) the types of transactions related to such technologies
engaged in by foreign persons and foreign governments;
(iii) the blending of private and government investment in
such technologies; and
(iv) efforts to obfuscate ownership of such technologies or
to otherwise circumvent the controls established under this
section.
(3) Meetings.--
(A) Frequency.--The Emerging Technology and Research
Advisory Committee should meet not less frequently than every
120 days.
(B) Attendance.--A representative from each agency
participating in the interagency process established under
subsection (a) should be in attendance at each meeting of the
Emerging Technology and Research Advisory Committee.
(4) Classified information.--Not fewer than half of the
members of the Emerging Technology and Research Advisory
Committee should hold sufficient security clearances such
that classified information, including classified information
described in clauses (ii) and (iii) of subsection (a)(2)(A),
from the interagency process established under subsection (a)
can be shared with those members to inform the advice
provided by the Advisory Committee.
(5) Applicability of federal advisory committee act.--
Subsections (a)(1), (a)(3), and (b) of section 10 and
sections 11, 13, and 14 of the Federal Advisory Committee Act
(5 U.S.C. App.) shall not apply to the Emerging Technology
and Research Advisory Committee.
(6) Report.--The Emerging Technology and Research Advisory
Committee shall include the findings of the Advisory
Committee under this subsection in the annual report to
Congress required by section 14 of the Export Administration
Act of 1979 (50 U.S.C. 4616) (as continued in effect pursuant
to the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C.
1701 et seq.)).
(g) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be
construed to alter or limit--
(1) the authority of the President or the Secretary of
State to designate items as defense articles and defense
services for the purposes of the Arms Export Control Act (22
U.S.C. 2751 et seq.) or to otherwise regulate such items; or
(2) the authority of the President under the Atomic Energy
Act of 1954 (42 U.S.C. 2011 et seq.), the Nuclear Non-
Proliferation Act of 1978 (22 U.S.C. 3201 et seq.), the
Energy Reorganization Act of 1974 (42 U.S.C. 5801 et seq.),
or the Export Administration Act of 1979 (50 U.S.C. 4601 et
seq.) (as continued in effect pursuant to the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.)) or
any other provision of law relating to the control of
exports.
(h) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Export administration regulations.--The term ``Export
Administration Regulations'' means subchapter C of chapter
VII of title 15, Code of Federal Regulations.
(2) In-country transfer.--The term ``in-country transfer''
has the meaning given to the term in the Export
Administration Regulations.
(3) Reexport.--The term ``reexport'' has the meaning given
to the term in the Export Administration Regulations.
(4) United states person.--The term ``United States
person'' means any person subject to the jurisdiction of the
United States.
[[Page S3504]]
SEC. 1726. EXPORT CONTROL ENFORCEMENT AUTHORITY.
(a) Authorities.--In order to enforce the provisions of the
Export Administration Regulations under subchapter C of
chapter VII of title 15, Code of Federal Regulations, issued
under the authority of the International Emergency Economic
Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.) (pursuant to which the
President has continued in effect authorities granted under
the Export Administration Act of 1979 (50 U.S.C. 4601 et
seq.)), the President shall delegate to the Secretary of
Commerce, in addition to existing authorities, the authority
to authorize any law enforcement officer of the Department of
Commerce to conduct investigations (including undercover
investigations) in the United States and in other countries
when permitted under such countries' laws using all
applicable laws of the United States.
(b) Best Practice Guidelines.--The Secretary of Commerce,
in consultation with the heads of appropriate Federal
agencies, may publish and update best practices guidelines to
assist persons in developing and implementing, on a voluntary
basis, effective export control programs in compliance with
the Export Administration Regulations.
(c) Confidentiality of Information.--
(1) Exemptions from disclosure.--
(A) In general.--Information obtained under the Export
Administration Act of 1979 (50 U.S.C. 2601 et seq.) (as
continued in effect pursuant to the International Emergency
Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.)) may be withheld
from disclosure only to the extent permitted by statute,
except that information described in subparagraph (B) shall
be withheld from public disclosure and shall not be subject
to disclosure under section 552(b)(3) of title 5, United
States Code, unless the release of such information is
determined by the Secretary to be in the national interest.
(B) Information described.--Information described in this
subparagraph is information submitted or obtained in
connection with an application for a license or other
authorization to export, reexport, or transfer items or
engage in other activities, a recordkeeping or reporting
requirement, enforcement activity, or other operations under
the Export Administration Act of 1979, including--
(i) the license application, license, or other
authorization itself;
(ii) classification or advisory opinion requests, and any
response to such a request;
(iii) license determinations and information pertaining to
such determinations;
(iv) information or evidence obtained in the course of any
investigation; and
(v) information obtained or furnished in connection with
any international agreement, treaty, or other obligation.
(2) Information to congress and gao.--
(A) In general.--Nothing in this section shall be construed
as authorizing the withholding of information from Congress
or the Comptroller General of the United States.
(B) Availability to congress.--
(i) In general.--Information obtained at any time under any
provision of the Export Administration Act of 1979 or the
Export Administration Regulations, including reports or
license applications required under any such provision, shall
be made available to a committee or subcommittee of Congress
of appropriate jurisdiction, upon the request of the chairman
or ranking member of the committee or subcommittee.
(ii) Prohibition on further disclosure.--No committee or
subcommittee referred to in clause (i), or member thereof,
may disclose any information made available under clause (i)
that is submitted on a confidential basis unless the full
committee determines that the withholding of that information
is contrary to the national interest.
(C) Availability to gao.--
(i) In general.--Information described in subparagraph
(B)(i) shall be subject to the limitations contained in
section 716 of title 31, United States Code.
(ii) Prohibition on further disclosure.--An officer or
employee of the Government Accountability Office may not
disclose, except to Congress in accordance with this
paragraph, any information described in subparagraph (B)(i)
that is submitted on a confidential basis or from which any
individual can be identified.
(3) Information sharing.--
(A) Exchange of information.--The heads of departments,
agencies, and offices with enforcement authorities under the
Export Administration Act of 1979, consistent with protection
of law enforcement and its sources and methods, shall
exchange any licensing and enforcement information with one
another that is necessary to facilitate enforcement efforts
under this section, and shall consult on a regular basis with
one another and with the heads of other departments,
agencies, and offices that obtain information subject to this
paragraph, in order to facilitate the exchange of such
information.
(B) Provision of information by federal officials.--Any
Federal official who obtains information that is relevant to
the enforcement of the Export Administration Act of 1979,
including information pertaining to any investigation, shall
furnish such information to each appropriate department,
agency, or office with enforcement responsibilities under
this section to the extent consistent with the protection of
intelligence, counterintelligence, and law enforcement
sources, methods, and activities.
(C) Exceptions.--The provisions of this paragraph shall not
apply to information subject to the restrictions set forth in
section 9 of title 13, United States Code. Return
information, as defined in section 6103(b) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, may be disclosed only as authorized by
that section.
(D) Information sharing with federal agencies.--Licensing
or enforcement information obtained under the Export
Administration Act of 1979 may be shared with heads of
departments, agencies, and offices that do not have
enforcement authorities under that Act on a case-by-case
basis, at the discretion of the Secretary of Commerce. Such
information may be shared only when the Secretary makes a
determination that the sharing of the information is in the
national interest.
SEC. 1727. PROHIBITION ON MODIFICATION OF CIVIL PENALTIES
UNDER EXPORT CONTROL AND SANCTIONS LAWS.
(a) In General.--Notwithstanding any other provision of
law, the Executive Office of the President may not modify any
civil penalty, including a denial order, implemented by the
Government of the United States with respect to a Chinese
telecommunications company pursuant to a determination that
the company has violated an export control or sanctions law
of the United States until the date that is 30 days after the
President certifies to the appropriate congressional
committees that the company--
(1) has not, for a period of one year, conducted activities
in violation of the laws of the United States; and
(2) is fully cooperating with investigations into the
activities of the company conducted by the Government of the
United States, if any.
(b) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this
section, the term ``appropriate congressional committees''
means--
(1) the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
and the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate; and
(2) the Committee on Financial Services and the Committee
on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives.
SEC. 1728. UNDER SECRETARY OF COMMERCE FOR INDUSTRY AND
SECURITY.
(a) In General.--On and after the date of the enactment of
this Act, any reference in the Export Administration Act of
1979 (50 U.S.C. 4601 et seq.) or any other law or regulation
to the Under Secretary of Commerce for Export Administration
shall be deemed to be a reference to the Under Secretary of
Commerce for Industry and Security.
(b) Title 5.--Section 5314 of title 5, United States Code,
is amended by striking ``Under Secretary of Commerce for
Export Administration'' and inserting ``Under Secretary of
Commerce for Industry and Security''.
(c) Continuation in Office.--The individual serving as
Under Secretary of Commerce for Export Administration on the
day before the date of the enactment of this Act may serve as
the Under Secretary of Commerce for Industry and Security on
and after that date without the need for renomination or
reappointment.
SEC. 1729. LIMITATION ON CANCELLATION OF DESIGNATION OF
SECRETARY OF THE AIR FORCE AS DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE EXECUTIVE AGENT FOR A CERTAIN DEFENSE
PRODUCTION ACT PROGRAM.
(a) Limitation on Cancellation of Designation.--The
Secretary of Defense may not implement the decision, issued
on July 1, 2017, to cancel the designation, under Department
of Defense Directive 4400.01E, entitled ``Defense Production
Act Programs'' and dated October 12, 2001, of the Secretary
of the Air Force as the Department of Defense Executive Agent
for the program carried out under title III of the Defense
Production Act of 1950 (50 U.S.C. 4531 et seq.) until the
date specified in subsection (c).
(b) Designation.--The Secretary of the Air Force shall
continue to serve as the sole and exclusive Department of
Defense Executive Agent for the program described in
subsection (a) until the date specified in subsection (c).
(c) Date Specified.--The date specified in this subsection
is the date of the enactment of a joint resolution or an Act
approving the implementation of the decision described in
subsection (a).
SEC. 1730. REVIEW OF AND REPORT ON CERTAIN DEFENSE
TECHNOLOGIES CRITICAL TO THE UNITED STATES
MAINTAINING SUPERIOR MILITARY CAPABILITIES.
(a) Review Required.--Not later than 180 days after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense
and the Director of National Intelligence, in consultation
with the Air Force Research Laboratory, the Defense Advanced
Projects Research Agency, and such other appropriate research
entities as the Secretary and the Director may identify,
shall--
(1) jointly carry out and complete a review of key national
security technology capability advantages, competitions, and
gaps between the United States and ``near peer'' nations;
(2) develop a definition of ``near peer nation'' for
purposes of paragraph (1); and
(3) submit to the appropriate congressional committees a
report on the findings of the Secretary and the Director with
respect to the review conducted under paragraph (1).
(b) Elements.--The review conducted under paragraph (1) of
subsection (a), and the report required by paragraph (3) of
that subsection, shall identify, at a minimum, the following:
[[Page S3505]]
(1) Key United States industries and research and
development activities expected to be critical to maintaining
a national security technology capability if, during the 5-
year period beginning on the date of the enactment of this
Act, the Secretary and the Director anticipate that--
(A) a United States industrial base shortfall will exist;
and
(B) United States industry will be unable to or otherwise
will not provide the needed capacity in a timely manner
without financial assistance from the United States
Government through existing statutory authorities
specifically intended for that purpose, including assistance
provided under title III of the Defense Production Act of
1950 (50 U.S.C. 4531 et seq.) and other appropriate
authorities.
(2) Key areas in which the United States currently enjoys a
technological advantage.
(3) Key areas in which the United States no longer enjoys a
technological advantage.
(4) Sectors of the defense industrial base in which the
United States lacks adequate productive capacity to meet
critical national defense needs.
(5) Priority areas for which appropriate statutory
industrial base incentives should be applied as the most
cost-effective, expedient, and practical alternative for
meeting the technology or defense industrial base needs
identified under this subsection, including--
(A) sustainment of critical production and supply chain
capabilities;
(B) commercialization of research and development
investments;
(C) scaling of emerging technologies; and
(D) other areas as determined by the Secretary and the
Director.
(6) Priority funding recommendations with respect to key
areas that the Secretary, in consultation with the Director,
determines are--
(A) critical to the United States maintaining superior
military capabilities, especially with respect to potential
peer and near peer military or economic competitors, during
the 5-year period beginning on the date of the enactment of
this Act; and
(B) suitable for long-term investment from funds made
available under title III of the Defense Production Act of
1950 and other appropriate statutory authorities.
(c) Form of Report.--The report required by subsection
(a)(3) shall be submitted in unclassified form, but may
include a classified annex.
(d) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this
section, the term ``appropriate congressional committees''
means--
(1) the Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs,
the Committee on Armed Services, and the Select Committee on
Intelligence of the Senate; and
(2) the Committee on Financial Services, the Committee on
Armed Services, and the Permanent Select Committee on
Intelligence of the House of Representatives.
SEC. 1731. BRIEFING ON INFORMATION FROM TRANSACTIONS REVIEWED
BY COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN INVESTMENT IN THE
UNITED STATES RELATING TO FOREIGN EFFORTS TO
INFLUENCE DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS AND
PROCESSES.
Not later than 60 days after the date of the enactment of
this Act, the Secretary of the Treasury (or a designee of the
Secretary) shall provide a briefing to the Committee on
Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs of the Senate and the
Committee on Financial Services of the House of
Representatives on--
(1) transactions reviewed by the Committee on Foreign
Investment in the United States during the 5-year period
preceding the briefing that the Committee determined would
have allowed foreign persons to inappropriately influence
democratic institutions and processes within the United
States and in other countries; and
(2) the disposition of such reviews, including any steps
taken by the Committee to address the risk of allowing
foreign persons to influence such institutions and processes.
SEC. 1732. EFFECTIVE DATE.
(a) Immediate Applicability of Certain Provisions.--The
following shall take effect on the date of the enactment of
this Act and apply with respect to any covered transaction
the review or investigation of which is initiated under
section 721 of the Defense Production Act of 1950 on or after
such date of enactment:
(1) Sections 1705, 1707, 1708, 1709, 1710, 1713, 1714,
1715, 1716, 1717, 1719, 1720, 1721, 1722, 1723, 1724, 1725,
1726, 1727, 1728, and 1729 and the amendments made by those
sections.
(2) Section 1712 and the amendments made by that section
(except for clause (iii) of section 721(b)(4)(A) of the
Defense Production Act of 1950, as added by section 1712).
(3) Paragraphs (1), (2), (3), (4), (5)(A)(i), (5)(B)(i),
(5)(B)(iv)(I), (5)(B)(v), (5)(C)(v), (6), (7), (8), (9),
(10), (11), (12), (13), (14), (15), (16), and (17) of
subsection (a) of section 721 of the Defense Production Act
of 1950, as amended by section 1703.
(4) Section 721(m)(4) of the Defense Production Act of
1950, as amended by section 1718 (except for clauses (ii),
(iii), (iv), and (v) of subparagraph (B) of that section).
(b) Delayed Applicability of Certain Provisions.--
(1) In general.--Any provision of or amendment made by this
title not specified in subsection (a) shall--
(A) take effect on the date that is 30 days after
publication in the Federal Register of a determination by the
chairperson of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the
United States that the regulations, organizational structure,
personnel, and other resources necessary to administer the
new provisions are in place; and
(B) apply with respect to any covered transaction the
review or investigation of which is initiated under section
721 of the Defense Production Act of 1950 on or after the
date described in subparagraph (A).
(2) Nondelegation of determination.--The determination of
the chairperson of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the
United States under paragraph (1)(A) may not be delegated.
(c) Authorization for Pilot Programs.--
(1) In general.--Beginning on the date of the enactment of
this Act and ending on the date described in subsection
(b)(1)(A), the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United
States may, at its discretion, conduct one or more pilot
programs to implement any authority provided pursuant to any
provision of or amendment made by this title not specified in
subsection (a).
(2) Publication in federal register.--A pilot program may
not commence until the date that is 30 days after publication
in the Federal Register of a determination by the chairperson
of the Committee of the scope of and procedures for the pilot
program. That determination may not be delegated.
SEC. 1733. SEVERABILITY.
If any provision of this title or an amendment made by this
title, or the application of such a provision or amendment to
any person or circumstance, is held to be invalid, the
application of that provision or amendment to other persons
or circumstances and the remainder of the provisions of this
title and the amendments made by this title, shall not be
affected thereby.
DIVISION B--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION AUTHORIZATIONS
SEC. 2001. SHORT TITLE.
This division may be cited as the ``Military Construction
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019''.
SEC. 2002. EXPIRATION OF AUTHORIZATIONS AND AMOUNTS REQUIRED
TO BE SPECIFIED BY LAW.
(a) Expiration of Authorizations After Three Years.--Except
as provided in subsection (b), all authorizations contained
in titles XXI through XXVII and title XXIX for military
construction projects, land acquisition, family housing
projects and facilities, and contributions to the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization Security Investment Program (and
authorizations of appropriations therefor) shall expire on
the later of--
(1) October 1, 2023; or
(2) the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds
for military construction for fiscal year 2024.
(b) Exception.--Subsection (a) shall not apply to
authorizations for military construction projects, land
acquisition, family housing projects and facilities, and
contributions to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
Security Investment Program (and authorizations of
appropriations therefor), for which appropriated funds have
been obligated before the later of--
(1) October 1, 2023; or
(2) the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds
for fiscal year 2024 for military construction projects, land
acquisition, family housing projects and facilities, or
contributions to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
Security Investment Program.
SEC. 2003. EFFECTIVE DATE.
Titles XXI through XXVII and title XXIX shall take effect
on the later of--
(1) October 1, 2018; or
(2) the date of the enactment of this Act.
TITLE XXI--ARMY MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
SEC. 2101. AUTHORIZED ARMY CONSTRUCTION AND LAND ACQUISITION
PROJECTS.
(a) Inside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated
pursuant to the authorization of appropriations in section
2103(a) and available for military construction projects
inside the United States as specified in the funding table in
section 4601, the Secretary of the Army may acquire real
property and carry out military construction projects for the
installations or locations inside the United States, and in
the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Army: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Installation Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alabama..................................... Anniston Army Depot.............................. $5,200,000
California.................................. Fort Irwin....................................... $29,000,000
Colorado.................................... Fort Carson...................................... $77,000,000
[[Page S3506]]
Georgia..................................... Fort Gordon...................................... $99,000,000
Hawaii...................................... Wheeler Army Airfield............................ $50,000,000
Indiana..................................... Crane Army Ammunition Activity................... $16,000,000
Kentucky.................................... Fort Campbell.................................... $50,000,000
Fort Knox........................................ $26,000,000
New Jersey.................................. Picatinny Arsenal................................ $41,000,000
New Mexico.................................. White Sands Missile Range........................ $40,000,000
New York.................................... West Point Military Reservation.................. $160,000,000
North Carolina.............................. Fort Bragg....................................... $10,000,000
South Carolina.............................. Fort Jackson..................................... $52,000,000
Texas....................................... Fort Bliss....................................... $24,000,000
Fort Hood........................................ $9,600,000
Virginia.................................... Arlington National Cemetery Southern Expansion... $30,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Outside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated
pursuant to the authorization of appropriations in section
2103(a) and available for military construction projects
outside the United States as specified in the funding table
in section 4601, the Secretary of the Army may acquire real
property and carry out military construction projects for the
installations or locations outside the United States, and in
the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Army: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Country Installation Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Germany....................................... East Camp Grafenwoehr.......................... $31,000,000
Honduras...................................... Soto Cano Air Base............................. $21,000,000
Korea......................................... Camp Tango..................................... $17,500,000
Kuwait........................................ Camp Arifjan................................... $44,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2102. FAMILY HOUSING.
(a) Construction and Acquisition.--Using amounts
appropriated pursuant to the authorization of appropriations
in section 2103(a) and available for military family housing
functions as specified in the funding table in section 4601,
the Secretary of the Army may construct or acquire family
housing units (including land acquisition and supporting
facilities) at the installations or locations, in the number
of units, and in the amounts set forth in the following
table:
Army: Family Housing
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State/Country Installation or Location Units Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Italy.................................. Vicenza.................... Family Housing New $95,134,000
Construction............
Korea.................................. Camp Walker................ Family Housing $68,000,000
Replacement Construction
Puerto Rico............................ Fort Buchanan.............. Family Housing $26,000,000
Replacement Construction
Wisconsin Fort McCoy................. Family Housing New $6,200,000
Construction.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Planning and Design.--Using amounts appropriated
pursuant to the authorization of appropriations in section
2103(a) and available for military family housing functions
as specified in the funding table in section 4601, the
Secretary of the Army may carry out architectural and
engineering services and construction design activities with
respect to the construction or improvement of family housing
units in an amount not to exceed $18,326,000.
SEC. 2103. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, ARMY.
(a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby
authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years beginning
after September 30, 2018, for military construction, land
acquisition, and military family housing functions of the
Department of the Army as specified in the funding table in
section 4601.
(b) Limitation on Total Cost of Construction Projects.--
Notwithstanding the cost variations authorized by section
2853 of title 10, United States Code, and any other cost
variation authorized by law, the total cost of all projects
carried out under section 2101 of this Act may not exceed the
total amount authorized to be appropriated under subsection
(a), as specified in the funding table in section 4601.
SEC. 2104. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATIONS OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR
2015 PROJECTS.
(a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the
Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015
(division B of Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3669), the
authorization set forth in the table in subsection (b), as
provided in section 2101 of that Act (128 Stat. 3670), shall
remain in effect until October 1, 2019, or the date of the
enactment of an Act authorizing funds for military
construction for fiscal year 2020, whichever is later.
(b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as
follows:
Army: Extension of 2015 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Installation or
State/Country Location Project Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California........................... Military Ocean Access Control Point... $9,900,000
Terminal, Concord.
Japan................................ Kadena Air Base........ Missile Magazine....... $10,600,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2105. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATIONS OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR
2016 PROJECT.
(a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the
Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016
(division B of Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 1145) the
authorization set forth in the table in subsection (b), as
provided in section 2101 of that Act (129 Stat. 1146), shall
remain in effect until October 1, 2023, or the date of the
enactment of an Act authorizing funds for military
construction for fiscal year 2024, whichever is later.
(b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as
follows:
[[Page S3507]]
Army: Extension of 2016 Project Authorization
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Virginia...................................... Arlington Cemetery (DAR)....................... $60,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XXII--NAVY MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
SEC. 2201. AUTHORIZED NAVY CONSTRUCTION AND LAND ACQUISITION
PROJECTS.
(a) Inside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated
pursuant to the authorization of appropriations in section
2204(a) and available for military construction projects
inside the United States as specified in the funding table in
section 4601, the Secretary of the Navy may acquire real
property and carry out military construction projects for the
installations or locations inside the United States, and in
the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Navy: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Installation or Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arizona...................................... Camp Navajo..................................... $14,800,000
California................................... Camp Pendleton................................. $199,630,000
Coronado........................................ $77,780,000
Lemoore......................................... $112,690,000
Miramar......................................... $31,980,000
Point Mugu...................................... $22,150,000
San Diego....................................... $156,540,000
San Nicolas Island.............................. $31,010,000
Seal Beach...................................... $139,630,000
District of Columbia........................ Naval Observatory.............................. $115,600,000
Florida...................................... Mayport......................................... $111,460,000
Naval Air Station Whiting Field................. $10,000,000
Georgia...................................... Marine Corps Logistics Base Albany.............. $31,900,000
Hawaii....................................... Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam.................. $45,000,000
Kaneohe Bay..................................... $66,100,000
Pearl City...................................... $78,320,000
Maine........................................ Kittery........................................ $149,685,000
Mississippi.................................. Naval Construction Battalion Center............. $22,300,000
North Carolina............................... Cherry Point Marine Corps Air Station........... $240,830,000
Camp Lejeune.................................... $51,300,000
Pennsylvania................................. Philadelphia.................................... $71,050,000
South Carolina............................... Beaufort........................................ $15,817,000
Parris Island................................... $35,190,000
Utah......................................... Hill Air Force Base............................. $105,520,000
Virginia..................................... Portsmouth...................................... $26,120,000
Quantico........................................ $13,100,000
Washington................................... Bangor.......................................... $88,960,000
Whidbey Island.................................. $27,380,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Outside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated
pursuant to the authorization of appropriations in section
2204(a) and available for military construction projects
outside the United States as specified in the funding table
in section 4601, the Secretary of the Navy may acquire real
property and carry out military construction projects for the
installations or locations outside the United States, and in
the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Navy: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Country Installation or Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bahamas....................................... Andros Island................................... $31,050,000
Bahrain Island................................ SW Asia......................................... $26,340,000
Cuba.......................................... Guantanamo Bay.................................. $85,000,000
Germany....................................... Panzer Kaserne.................................. $43,950,000
Guam.......................................... Joint Region Marianas........................... $279,657,000
Japan......................................... Kadena Air Base................................. $9,049,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2202. FAMILY HOUSING.
(a) Construction and Acquisition.--Using amounts
appropriated pursuant to the authorization of appropriations
in section 2204(a) and available for military family housing
functions as specified in the funding table in section 4601,
the Secretary of the Navy may construct or acquire family
housing units (including land acquisition and supporting
facilities) at the installation or location, in the number of
units, and in the amount set forth in the following table:
Navy: Family Housing
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Installation or Location Units Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Guam................................... Joint Region Marianas...... Replace Andersen Housing $83,441,000
PH III..................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Planning and Design.--Using amounts appropriated
pursuant to the authorization of appropriations in section
2204(a) and available for military family housing functions
as specified in the funding table in section 4601, the
Secretary of the Navy may carry out architectural and
engineering services and construction design activities with
respect to the construction or improvement of family housing
units in an amount not to exceed $4,502,000.
SEC. 2203. IMPROVEMENTS TO MILITARY FAMILY HOUSING UNITS.
Subject to section 2825 of title 10, United States Code,
and using amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization
of appropriations in section 2204(a) and available for
military family housing functions as specified in the funding
table in section 4601, the Secretary of the Navy may improve
existing military family housing units in an amount not to
exceed $16,638,000.
SEC. 2204. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, NAVY.
(a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby
authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years beginning
after September 30, 2018, for military construction,
[[Page S3508]]
land acquisition, and military family housing functions of
the Department of the Navy, as specified in the funding table
in section 4601.
(b) Limitation on Total Cost of Construction Projects.--
Notwithstanding the cost variations authorized by section
2853 of title 10, United States Code, and any other cost
variation authorized by law, the total cost of all projects
carried out under section 2201 of this Act may not exceed the
total amount authorized to be appropriated under subsection
(a), as specified in the funding table in section 4601.
TITLE XXIII--AIR FORCE MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
SEC. 2301. AUTHORIZED AIR FORCE CONSTRUCTION AND LAND
ACQUISITION PROJECTS.
(a) Inside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated
pursuant to the authorization of appropriations in section
2304(a) and available for military construction projects
inside the United States as specified in the funding table in
section 4601, the Secretary of the Air Force may acquire real
property and carry out military construction projects for the
installations or locations inside the United States, and in
the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Air Force: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Installation or Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alaska......................................... Eielson Air Force Base...................... $63,800,000
Arizona........................................ Davis-Monthan Air Force Base................ $15,000,000
Luke Air Force Base......................... $40,000,000
Florida........................................ Eglin Air Force Base........................ $62,863,000
MacDill Air Force Base...................... $3,100,000
Maryland....................................... Joint Base Andrews.......................... $50,000,000
Massachusetts.................................. Hanscom Air Force Base...................... $225,000,000
Nebraska....................................... Offutt Air Force Base....................... $9,500,000
Nevada......................................... Creech Air Force Base....................... $59,000,000
Nellis Air Force Base....................... $5,900,000
New Mexico..................................... Holloman Air Force Base..................... $85,000,000
Kirtland Air Force Base..................... $7,000,000
New York....................................... Rome Lab.................................... $14,200,000
North Dakota.................................. Minot Air Force Base........................ $66,000,000
Ohio........................................... Wright-Patterson Air Force Base............. $116,100,000
Oklahoma....................................... Altus Air Force Base........................ $12,000,000
Tinker Air Force Base....................... $166,000,000
South Carolina................................. Shaw Air Force Base......................... $53,000,000
Utah........................................... Hill Air Force Base......................... $26,000,000
Washington..................................... White Bluff................................. $14,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Outside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated
pursuant to the authorization of appropriations in section
2304(a) and available for military construction projects
outside the United States as specified in the funding table
in section 4601, the Secretary of the Air Force may acquire
real property and carry out military construction projects
for the installations or locations outside the United States,
and in the amount, set forth in the following table:
Air Force: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Country Installation or Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Guam........................................... Joint Region Marianas....................... $9,800,000
Mariana Islands-Tinian......................... Tinian...................................... $50,700,000
Qatar.......................................... Al Udeid.................................... $70,400,000
United Kingdom................................. RAF Lakenheath.............................. $148,467,000
Worldwide Classified........................... Classified Location......................... $18,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2302. FAMILY HOUSING.
Using amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of
appropriations in section 2304(a) and available for military
family housing functions as specified in the funding table in
section 4601, the Secretary of the Air Force may carry out
architectural and engineering services and construction
design activities with respect to the construction or
improvement of family housing units in an amount not to
exceed $3,199,000.
SEC. 2303. IMPROVEMENTS TO MILITARY FAMILY HOUSING UNITS.
Subject to section 2825 of title 10, United States Code,
and using amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization
of appropriations in section 2304(a) and available for
military family housing functions as specified in the funding
table in section 4601, the Secretary of the Air Force may
improve existing military family housing units in an amount
not to exceed $75,247,000.
SEC. 2304. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, AIR FORCE.
(a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby
authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years beginning
after September 30, 2018, for military construction, land
acquisition, and military family housing functions of the
Department of the Air Force, as specified in the funding
table in section 4601.
(b) Limitation on Total Cost of Construction Projects.--
Notwithstanding the cost variations authorized by section
2853 of title 10, United States Code, and any other cost
variation authorized by law, the total cost of all projects
carried out under section 2301 of this Act may not exceed the
total amount authorized to be appropriated under subsection
(a), as specified in the funding table in section 4601.
SEC. 2305. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN
PHASED PROJECT AUTHORIZED IN FISCAL YEARS 2015,
2016, AND 2017.
In the case of the authorization contained in the table in
section 2301(b) of the Military Construction Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (division B of Public Law 113-291;
128 Stat. 3679) for Royal Air Force Croughton, for JIAC
Consolidation Phase 1, the authorization contained in the
table in section 2301(b) of the Military Construction
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (division B of Public
Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 1153) for Croughton Royal Air Force,
for JIAC Consolidation Phase 2, and the authorization
contained in the table in section 2301(b) of the Military
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (division
B of Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2697) for Royal Air Force
Croughton, for JIAC Consolidation Phase 3, the location shall
be United Kingdom, Unspecified.
SEC. 2306. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN
FISCAL YEAR 2017 PROJECT.
In the case of the authorization contained in the table in
section 2301(a) of the Military Construction Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (division B of Public Law 114-328;
130 Stat. 2696) for Joint Base San Antonio, Texas, for
construction of a basic military training recruit dormitory,
the Secretary of the Air Force may construct a 26,537 square
meter dormitory in the amount of $92,300,000.
SEC. 2307. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN
FISCAL YEAR 2018 PROJECT.
In the case of the authorization contained in the table in
section 2301(a) of the Military Construction Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (division B of Public Law 115-91;
131 Stat. 1825) for the United States Air Force Academy,
Colorado, for construction of a cyberworks facility, the
Secretary of the Air Force may construct a facility of up to
4,462 square meters that includes two real property gifts of
construction of 929 and 465 square meters if such gift is
accepted by the Secretary in accordance with section 2601 of
title 10, United States Code.
SEC. 2308. ADDITIONAL AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL
YEAR 2019 PROJECTS.
(a) Project Authorizations.--The Secretary of the Air Force
may carry out military construction projects to construct--
[[Page S3509]]
(1) a 6,702 square meter Joint Simulation Environment
Facility at Edwards Air Force Base, California, in the amount
of $43,000,000;
(2) a 4,833 square meter Cyberspace Test Facility at Eglin
Air Force Base, Florida, in the amount of $38,000,000; and
(3) a 4,735 square meter Joint Simulation Environment
Facility at Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada, in the amount of
$30,000,000.
(b) Use of Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation
Funds.--As provided for in the Defense Laboratory
Modernization Pilot Program authorized by section 2803 of the
Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016
(Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 1169), the Secretary may use
funds available for research, development, test, and
evaluation for the projects described in subsection (a).
TITLE XXIV--DEFENSE AGENCIES MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
SEC. 2401. AUTHORIZED DEFENSE AGENCIES CONSTRUCTION AND LAND
ACQUISITION PROJECTS.
(a) Inside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated
pursuant to the authorization of appropriations in section
2403(a) and available for military construction projects
inside the United States as specified in the funding table in
section 4601, the Secretary of Defense may acquire real
property and carry out military construction projects for the
installations or locations inside the United States, and in
the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Defense Agencies: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Installation or Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alaska........................................ Clear Air Force Station......................... $174,000,000
Fort Greely..................................... $8,000,000
Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson................. $14,000,000
Arkansas...................................... Little Rock Air Force Base...................... $14,000,000
California.................................... Camp Pendleton.................................. $12,596,000
Coronado........................................ $71,088,000
Defense Distribution Depot-Tracy................ $18,800,000
Colorado...................................... Fort Carson..................................... $24,297,000
CONUS Classified.............................. Classified Location............................. $49,222,000
Kentucky..................................... Fort Campbell................................... $82,298,000
Maine......................................... Kittery......................................... $11,600,000
Maryland...................................... Fort Meade...................................... $805,000,000
Missouri...................................... St. Louis....................................... $447,800,000
New Jersey.................................... Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst................ $10,200,000
North Carolina............................... Fort Bragg...................................... $32,366,000
New River....................................... $32,580,000
Oklahoma...................................... McAlester....................................... $7,000,000
Texas......................................... Joint Base San Antonio.......................... $10,200,000
Red River Army Depot............................ $71,500,000
Virginia...................................... Dam Neck........................................ $8,959,000
Fort A.P. Hill.................................. $11,734,000
Fort Belvoir.................................... $6,127,000
Humphreys Engineer Center....................... $20,257,000
Joint Base Langley-Eustis....................... $12,700,000
Pentagon........................................ $35,850,000
Washington................................... Joint Base Lewis-McChord........................ $26,200,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Outside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated
pursuant to the authorization of appropriations in section
2403(a) and available for military construction projects
outside the United States as specified in the funding table
in section 4601, the Secretary of Defense may acquire real
property and carry out military construction projects for the
installations or locations outside the United States, and in
the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Defense Agencies: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Country Installation or Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Belgium...................................... U.S. Army Garrison Benelux (Chievres)......... $14,305,000
Cuba......................................... Guantanamo Bay................................ $9,080,000
Djibouti..................................... Camp Lemonnier................................ $3,750,000
Germany...................................... Baumholder.................................... $11,504,000
Kaiserslautern Air Base....................... $99,955,000
Weisbaden..................................... $56,048,000
Greece....................................... NSA Souda Bay................................. $2,230,000
Guam........................................ Naval Base Guam............................... $4,634,000
NSA Naples.................................... $990,000
Japan........................................ Camp McTureous................................ $94,851,000
Iwakuni....................................... $33,200,000
Kadena Air Base............................... $21,400,000
Yokosuka...................................... $170,386,000
Unspecified Worldwide........................ Unspecified................................... $15,693,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2402. ENERGY RESILIENCE AND CONSERVATION INVESTMENT
PROGRAM.
Using amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of
appropriations in section 2403(a) and available for energy
conservation projects as specified in the funding table in
section 4601, the Secretary of Defense may carry out energy
conservation projects under chapter 173 of title 10, United
States Code, for the installations or locations outside the
United States, and in the amounts set forth in the following
table:
Energy Conservation Projects: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Installation or Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alabama....................................... Anniston Army Depot............................. $20,000,000
California.................................... Naval Base Ventura County....................... $6,530,000
Colorado...................................... Schriever Air Force Base........................ $4,044,000
Florida....................................... MacDill Air Force Base.......................... $3,700,000
Hawaii........................................ Bellows Air Force Base.......................... $2,944,000
Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam.................. $4,500,000
[[Page S3510]]
Idaho......................................... Mountain Home Air Force Base.................... $5,980,000
Indiana....................................... NSA Crane....................................... $6,890,000
Kansas........................................ Salina Training Center.......................... $3,500,000
Louisiana..................................... Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base New Orleans $5,340,000
Maryland...................................... NSA Bethesda.................................... $22,000,000
New Mexico.................................... Kirtland Air Force Base......................... $462,000
Ohio.......................................... Wright-Patterson Air Force Base................. $7,900,000
Pennsylvania.................................. Fort Indiantown Gap............................. $2,150,000
South Carolina................................ Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort............... $22,402,000
Texas......................................... Camp Mabry...................................... $5,500,000
Sheppard Air Force Base......................... $9,404,000
Virginia...................................... Naval Air Station Oceana........................ $2,520,000
NRO Headquarters................................ $571,000
Washington................................... Naval Base Kitsap............................... $1,790,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2403. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, DEFENSE AGENCIES.
(a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby
authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years beginning
after September 30, 2018, for military construction, land
acquisition, and military family housing functions of the
Department of Defense (other than the military departments),
as specified in the funding table in section 4601.
(b) Limitation on Total Cost of Construction Projects.--
Notwithstanding the cost variations authorized by section
2853 of title 10, United States Code, and any other cost
variation authorized by law, the total cost of all projects
carried out under section 2401 of this Act may not exceed the
total amount authorized to be appropriated under subsection
(a), as specified in the funding table in section 4601.
SEC. 2404. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATIONS OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR
2015 PROJECTS.
(a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the
Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015
(division B of Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3669), the
authorizations set forth in the table in subsection (b), as
provided in section 2401 of that Act (128 Stat. 3681), and
amended by section 2406 of the Military Construction
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (division B of Public
Law 115-91; 131 Stat. 1831), shall remain in effect until
October 1, 2019, or the date of the enactment of an Act
authorizing funds for military construction for fiscal year
2020, whichever is later.
(b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as
follows:
Defense Agencies: Extension of 2015 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State/Country Installation or Location Project Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Japan.................................. Commander Fleet Activities E.J. King High School $37,681,000
Sasebo.................... Replacement/Renovation..
Okinawa.................... Kubasaki High School $99,420,000
Replacement/Renovation..
New Mexico............................. Cannon Air Force Base...... SOF Squadron Operations $23,333,000
Facility (STS)..........
Virginia............................... Pentagon................... Redundant Chilled Water $15,100,000
Loop....................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2405. AUTHORIZATION OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2018 PROJECT.
The table in section 2401(a) of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (division B of Public
Law 105-91) is amended by inserting after the item relating
to South Carolina the following new item:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Texas.......................... Fort Bliss Blood $8,300,000
Processing Center
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XXV--INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS
Subtitle A--North Atlantic Treaty Organization Security Investment
Program
SEC. 2501. AUTHORIZED NATO CONSTRUCTION AND LAND ACQUISITION
PROJECTS.
The Secretary of Defense may make contributions for the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization Security Investment
Program as provided in section 2806 of title 10, United
States Code, in an amount not to exceed the sum of the amount
authorized to be appropriated for this purpose in section
2502 and the amount collected from the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization as a result of construction previously financed
by the United States.
SEC. 2502. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, NATO.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal
years beginning after September 30, 2018, for contributions
by the Secretary of Defense under section 2806 of title 10,
United States Code, for the share of the United States of the
cost of projects for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
Security Investment Program authorized by section 2501 as
specified in the funding table in section 4601.
Subtitle B--Host Country In-kind Contributions
SEC. 2511. REPUBLIC OF KOREA FUNDED CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS.
Pursuant to agreement with the Republic of Korea for
required in-kind contributions, the Secretary of Defense may
accept military construction projects for the installations
or locations, and in the amounts, set forth in the following
table:
Republic of Korea Funded Construction Projects
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Installation or
Country Component Location Project Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Korea........................... Army.............. Camp Carroll...... Upgrade Electrical $52,000,000
Distribution,
Phase 2..........
Army.............. Camp Humphreys.... Site Development.. $7,800,000
Army.............. Camp Humphreys.... Air Support $25,000,000
Operations
Squadron.........
Army.............. Camp Humphreys.... Unaccompanied $76,000,000
Enlisted
Personnel
Housing, P2......
Army.............. Camp Humphreys.... Echelon Above $123,000,000
Brigade Engineer
Battalion, VMF...
Army.............. Camp Walker....... Repair/ Replace $8,000,000
Sewer Piping
System...........
Navy.............. Chinhae........... Indoor Training $7,400,000
Pool.............
Navy.............. Pohang Air Base... Replace Ordnance $87,000,000
Storage Magazines
Air Force......... Gimhae Air Base... Airfield Damage $7,600,000
Repair Warehouse.
[[Page S3511]]
Air Force......... Gwangju Air Base.. Airfield Damage $7,600,000
Repair Warehouse.
Air Force......... Kunsan Air Base... Explosive Ordnance $8,000,000
Disposal Facility
Air Force......... Kunsan Air Base... Upgrade Flow- $23,000,000
Through Fuel
System...........
Air Force......... Osan Air Base..... 5th Recon- $12,000,000
naissance
Squadron Aircraft
Shelter..........
Air Force......... Osan Air Base..... Airfield Damage $22,000,000
Repair Facility..
Air Force......... Osan Air Base..... Commun-ications HQ $45,000,000
Building.........
Air Force......... Suwon Air Base.... Airfield Damage $7,200,000
Repair Warehouse.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XXVI--GUARD AND RESERVE FORCES FACILITIES
Subtitle A--Project Authorizations and Authorization of Appropriations
SEC. 2601. AUTHORIZED ARMY NATIONAL GUARD CONSTRUCTION AND
LAND ACQUISITION PROJECTS.
Using amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of
appropriations in section 2606 and available for the National
Guard and Reserve as specified in the funding table in
section 4601, the Secretary of the Army may acquire real
property and carry out military construction projects for the
Army National Guard locations inside the United States, and
in the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Army National Guard
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alaska...................................... Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson.................. $27,000,000
Illinois.................................... Marseilles....................................... $5,000,000
Montana..................................... Malta............................................ $15,000,000
Nevada...................................... North Las Vegas.................................. $32,000,000
New Hampshire............................... Pembroke......................................... $12,000,000
North Dakota................................ Fargo............................................ $32,000,000
Ohio........................................ Camp Ravenna..................................... $7,400,000
Oklahoma.................................... Lexington........................................ $11,000,000
Oregon...................................... Boardman......................................... $11,000,000
South Dakota................................ Rapid City....................................... $15,000,000
Texas....................................... Houston.......................................... $15,000,000
Virginia.................................... Sandston......................................... $89,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2602. AUTHORIZED ARMY RESERVE CONSTRUCTION AND LAND
ACQUISITION PROJECTS.
Using amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of
appropriations in section 2606 and available for the National
Guard and Reserve as specified in the funding table in
section 4601, the Secretary of the Army may acquire real
property and carry out military construction projects for the
Army Reserve locations inside the United States, and in the
amounts, set forth in the following table:
Army Reserve
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California.................................... Barstow........................................ $34,000,000
Wisconsin..................................... Fort McCoy..................................... $23,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2603. AUTHORIZED NAVY RESERVE AND MARINE CORPS RESERVE
CONSTRUCTION AND LAND ACQUISITION PROJECTS.
Using amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of
appropriations in section 2606 and available for the National
Guard and Reserve as specified in the funding table in
section 4601, the Secretary of the Navy may acquire real
property and carry out military construction projects for the
Navy Reserve and Marine Corps Reserve locations inside the
United States, and in the amounts, set forth in the following
table:
Navy Reserve and Marine Corps Reserve
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California.................................... Seal Beach..................................... $21,740,000
Georgia....................................... Benning........................................ $13,630,000
Pennsylvania.................................. Pittsburgh..................................... $17,650,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2604. AUTHORIZED AIR NATIONAL GUARD CONSTRUCTION AND
LAND ACQUISITION PROJECTS.
Using amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of
appropriations in section 2606 and available for the National
Guard and Reserve as specified in the funding table in
section 4601, the Secretary of the Air Force may acquire real
property and carry out military construction projects for the
Air National Guard locations inside the United States, and in
the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Air National Guard
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California.................................... Channel Islands Air National Guard Station..... $8,000,000
Hawaii........................................ Joint Base Peal Harbor-Hickam.................. $17,000,000
[[Page S3512]]
Illinois...................................... General Wayne A. Downing Peoria International $9,000,000
Airport.
Louisiana..................................... Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base New $15,000,000
Orleans.
New York...................................... Francis S. Gabreski Airport.................... $20,000,000
Pennsylvania.................................. Fort Indiantown Gap............................ $8,000,000
Puerto Rico................................... Luis Munoz Marin International Airport......... $50,000,000
Virginia...................................... Joint Base Langley-Eustis...................... $10,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2605. AUTHORIZED AIR FORCE RESERVE CONSTRUCTION AND LAND
ACQUISITION PROJECTS.
Using amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of
appropriations in section 2606 and available for the National
Guard and Reserve as specified in the funding table in
section 4601, the Secretary of the Air Force may acquire real
property and carry out military construction projects for the
Air Force Reserve locations inside the United States, and in
the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Air Force Reserve
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Indiana...................................... Grissom Air Reserve Base....................... $21,500,000
Minnesota..................................... St. Paul International Airport................. $9,000,000
Mississippi................................... Keesler Air Force Base......................... $4,550,000
New York...................................... Niagara Falls International Airport............ $14,000,000
Texas......................................... Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base Fort Worth $3,100,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2606. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, NATIONAL GUARD
AND RESERVE.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal
years beginning after September 30, 2018, for the costs of
acquisition, architectural and engineering services, and
construction of facilities for the Guard and Reserve Forces,
and for contributions therefor, under chapter 1803 of title
10, United States Code (including the cost of acquisition of
land for those facilities), as specified in the funding table
in section 4601.
Subtitle B--Other Matters
SEC. 2611. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN
FISCAL YEAR 2016 PROJECT.
In the case of the authorization contained in the table in
section 2603 of the Military Construction Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2016 (division B of Public Law 114-92; 129
Stat. 1164) for construction of a Reserve Training Center
Complex at Dam Neck, Virginia, the Secretary of the Navy may
construct the Reserve Training Center Complex at Joint
Expeditionary Base Little Creek-Story, Virginia.
SEC. 2612. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN
FISCAL YEAR 2018 PROJECT.
In the case of the authorization contained in the table in
section 2601 of the Military Construction Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2018 (division B of Public Law 115-91; 131
Stat. 1834) for Fort Belvoir, Virginia, for additions and
alterations to the National Guard Readiness Center, the
Secretary of the Army may construct a new readiness center.
If a new readiness center is constructed, no funds above the
previously authorized $15,000,000 may be made available for
such purpose.
SEC. 2613. ADDITIONAL AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL
YEAR 2019 PROJECT.
(a) Project Authorization.--The Secretary of the Navy may
carry out a military construction project to construct a
50,000 square foot reserve training center, 6,600 square foot
combat vehicle maintenance and storage facility, 2,400 square
foot vehicle wash rack, 1,600 square foot covered training
area, road improvements, and associated supporting
facilities, and may acquire approximately 8.5 acres of
adjacent land and obtain necessary interest in land at
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in the amount of $17,650,000.
(b) Use of Unobligated Prior-year Navy Military
Construction Reserve Funds.--The Secretary may use available,
unobligated Navy military construction reserve funds for the
project described in subsection (a).
(c) Congressional Notification.--The Secretary of the Navy
shall provide information in accordance with section 2851(c)
of title 10, United States Code, regarding the project
described in subsection (a). If it becomes necessary to
exceed the estimated project cost, the Secretary shall
utilize the authority provided by section 2853 of such title
regarding authorized cost and scope of work variations.
TITLE XXVII--BASE REALIGNMENT AND CLOSURE ACTIVITIES
SEC. 2701. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS FOR BASE
REALIGNMENT AND CLOSURE ACTIVITIES FUNDED
THROUGH DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE BASE CLOSURE
ACCOUNT.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal
years beginning after September 30, 2018, for base
realignment and closure activities, including real property
acquisition and military construction projects, as authorized
by the Defense Base Closure and Realignment Act of 1990 (part
A of title XXIX of Public Law 101-510; 10 U.S.C. 2687 note)
and funded through the Department of Defense Base Closure
Account established by section 2906 of such Act (as amended
by section 2711 of the Military Construction Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2013 (division B of Public Law 112-239;
126 Stat. 2140)), as specified in the funding table in
section 4601.
SEC. 2702. PROHIBITION ON CONDUCTING ADDITIONAL BASE
REALIGNMENT AND CLOSURE (BRAC) ROUND.
Nothing in this Act shall be construed to authorize an
additional Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) round.
TITLE XXVIII--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION AND GENERAL PROVISIONS
Subtitle A--Military Construction Program and Military Family Housing
Changes
SEC. 2801. ADDITIONAL AUTHORITY TO OBTAIN ARCHITECTURAL AND
ENGINEERING SERVICES AND CONSTRUCTION DESIGN
FOR DEFENSE LABORATORY MODERNIZATION PILOT
PROGRAM.
Section 2803 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 1169; 10
U.S.C. 2358 note) is amended--
(1) in subsection (a), by striking ``subsection (d)'' and
inserting ``subsection (e)'';
(2) in subsection (b)(1), by striking ``, site preparation,
and advance planning and design'' and inserting ``and site
preparation'';
(3) in subsection (d), by striking ``subsection (c)(1)''
and inserting ``subsection (d)(1)'';
(4) by redesignating subsections (c), (d), (e), and (f) as
subsections (d), (e), (f), and (g), respectively;
(5) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new
subsection:
``(c) Architectural and Engineering Services and
Construction Design.--Using amounts appropriated or otherwise
made available to the military departments for research,
development, test, and evaluation, the Secretary of the
military department concerned may obtain architectural and
engineering services and carry out construction design in
connection with a military construction project described in
subsection (a). This authority is not subject to the
condition in subsection (b).'';
(6) in subsection (d), as redesignated by paragraph (4)--
(A) in paragraph (1), by adding at the end the following:
``This requirement does not include architectural and
engineering services and construction design under subsection
(c).''; and
(B) in paragraph (2), by inserting ``other than funds used
pursuant to subsection (c)'' after ``subsection (a)''; and
(7) in subsection (g), as redesignated by paragraph (4), by
striking ``2020'' and inserting ``2025''.
SEC. 2802. MODIFICATION OF CONTRACT AUTHORITY FOR
ACQUISITION, CONSTRUCTION, OR FURNISHING OF
TEST FACILITIES AND EQUIPMENT.
Section 2353(a) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) by inserting after the first sentence the following:
``The acquisition or construction of these research,
developmental, or test facilities shall be subject to the
cost principles applicable to allowable contract expenses.'';
and
(2) by adding at the end the following: ``The acquisition
or construction of facilities under the authority of this
section shall not be governed by sections 2802, 2805, or 2811
of this title and their associated implementing regulations.
The Secretary of Defense and the Secretaries of the military
departments shall promulgate regulations necessary to give
full force and effect to this section.''.
[[Page S3513]]
SEC. 2803. EXTENSION OF TEMPORARY, LIMITED AUTHORITY TO USE
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE FUNDS FOR
CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS IN CERTAIN AREAS OUTSIDE
THE UNITED STATES.
(a) Extension of Authority.--Subsection (h) of section 2808
of the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2004 (division B of Public Law 108-136; 117 Stat. 1723),
as most recently amended by section 2804 of the Military
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (division
B of Public Law 115-91), is further amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``December 31, 2018'' and
inserting ``December 31, 2019''; and
(2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``fiscal year 2019'' and
inserting ``fiscal year 2020''.
(b) Limitation on Use of Authority.--Subsection (c)(1) of
such section is amended--
(1) by striking ``$100,000,000'' and inserting
``$50,000,000'';
(2) by striking ``October 1, 2017'' and inserting ``October
1, 2018'';
(3) by striking ``December 31, 2018'' and inserting
``December 31, 2019''; and
(4) by striking ``fiscal year 2019'' and inserting ``fiscal
year 2020''.
SEC. 2804. UNSPECIFIED MINOR MILITARY CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS
RELATED TO REVITALIZATION AND RECAPITALIZATION
OF DEFENSE INDUSTRIAL BASE FACILITIES.
Section 2805 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(g) Defense Industrial Base Facility Revitalization.--(1)
For the revitalization and recapitalization of Defense
Industrial Base Facilities owned by the United States and
under the jurisdiction of the Secretary concerned, the
Secretary concerned may obligate and expend--
``(A) from appropriations available to the Secretary
concerned for operation and maintenance, amounts necessary to
carry out an unspecified minor military construction project
costing not more than $6,000,000, notwithstanding subsection
(c); or
``(B) from appropriations available to the Secretary
concerned for military construction not otherwise authorized
by law or from funds authorized to be made available section
2363(a) of this title, amounts necessary to carry out an
unspecified minor military construction project costing not
more than $6,000,000.
``(2) For purposes of this subsection, an unspecified minor
military construction project is a military construction
project that (notwithstanding subsection (a)) has an approved
cost equal to or less than $6,000,000.
``(3) If the Secretary concerned makes a decision to carry
out an unspecified minor military construction project to
which this subsection applies, the Secretary concerned shall
notify the appropriate committees of Congress of that
decision, of the justification for the project, and of the
estimated cost of the project. The project may then be
carried out only after the end of the 14-day period beginning
on the date the notification is received by the committees in
an electronic medium pursuant to section 480 of this title.
``(4) In this section, the term `defense industrial base
facility' means any Department of Defense depot, arsenal,
shipyard, or plant located within the United States.
``(5) The authority to carry out a project under this
subsection expires on September 30, 2023.''.
SEC. 2805. CONGRESSIONAL OVERSIGHT OF PROJECTS CARRIED OUT
PURSUANT TO LAWS OTHER THAN MILITARY
CONSTRUCTION AUTHORIZATION ACTS.
Section 2802(e)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) by striking ``Secretary concerned shall--'' and all
that follows through ``comply with the congressional
notification requirement'' and inserting ``Secretary
concerned shall comply with the congressional notification
requirement''; and
(2) by inserting ``and submit to the congressional defense
committees any materials required to be submitted to Congress
or any other congressional committees pursuant to the
congressional notification requirement'' after ``road project
will be carried out''.
Subtitle B--Project Management and Oversight Reforms
SEC. 2811. UPDATES AND MODIFICATIONS TO DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
FORM 1391, UNIFIED FACILITIES CRITERIA, AND
MILITARY INSTALLATION MASTER PLANS.
(a) Flood Risk Disclosure for Military Construction.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall modify
Department of Defense Form 1391 to require, with respect to
any proposed major or minor military construction project
requiring congressional notification or approval--
(A) disclosure whether a proposed project will be sited
within or partially within a 100-year floodplain, according
to the most recent available Federal Emergency Management
Agency flood hazard data; and
(B) if the proposed project will be sited within or
partially within a 100-year floodplain, the specific risk
mitigation plan.
(2) Delineation of floodplain.--To the extent that Federal
Emergency Management Agency flood hazard data are not
available for a proposed major or minor military construction
site, the Secretary concerned shall establish a process for
delineating the 100-year floodplain using risk analysis that
is consistent with the standards used to inform Federal flood
risk assessments.
(3) Reporting requirements.--For proposed projects that are
to be sited within or partially within a 100-year floodplain,
the Secretary concerned shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a report with the following:
(A) An assessment of flood vulnerability for the proposed
project.
(B) Any information concerning alternative construction
sites that were considered, and an explanation of why those
sites do not satisfy mission requirements.
(C) A description of planned flood mitigation measures.
(4) Minimum flood mitigation requirements.--When mitigating
the flood risk of a major or minor military construction
project within or partially within the 100-year floodplain,
the Secretary concerned shall require any mitigation plan to
assume an additional--
(A) 2 feet above the base flood elevation for non-mission
critical buildings, as determined by the Secretary; and
(B) 3 feet above the base flood elevation for mission-
critical buildings, as determined by the Secretary.
(b) Disclosure Requirements for Department of Defense Form
1391.--Not later than 30 days after the date of the enactment
of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall amend Department
of Defense Form 1391 to require, for each requested military
construction project--
(1) disclosure whether the project was included in the
prior year's future-years defense program submitted to
Congress pursuant to section 221 of title 10, United States
Code; and
(2) inclusion of an energy study or life cycle analysis.
(c) Incorporation of Changing Environmental Condition
Projections in Military Construction Designs and
Modifications.--Not later than 30 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall amend
section 3-5.6.2.3 of United Facilities Criteria (UFC) 2-100-
01 and UFC 2-100-02 (or any similar successor regulations) to
provide that in order to anticipate changing environmental
conditions during the design life of existing or planned new
facilities and infrastructure, projections from reliable and
authorized sources such as the Census Bureau (for population
projections), the National Academies of Sciences (for land
use change projections and climate projections), the U.S.
Geological Survey (for land use change projections), and the
U.S. Global Change Research Office and National Climate
Assessment (for climate projections) shall be considered and
incorporated into military construction designs and
modifications.
(d) Inclusion of Consideration of Energy and Climate
Resiliency Efforts in Master Plans for Major Military
Installations.--Section 2864 of title 10, United States Code,
is amended--
(1) in subsection (a)(2)--
(A) in subparagraph (C), by striking ``and'' at the end;
(B) in subparagraph (D), by striking the period at the end
and inserting ``; and''; and
(C) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(E) energy and climate resiliency efforts.''; and
(2) in subsection (d), by adding at the end the following
new paragraph:
``(3) The term `energy and climate resiliency' means
anticipation, preparation for, and adaptation to utility
disruptions and changing environmental conditions and the
ability to withstand, respond to, and recover rapidly from
utility disruptions while ensuring the sustainment of
mission-critical operations.''.
(e) Definition of Military Installation Resilience.--
Section 101(e) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(8) Military installation resilience.--The term `military
installation resilience' means the capability of a military
installation to avoid, prepare for, minimize the effect of,
adapt to, and recover from extreme weather events, or from
anticipated or unanticipated changes in environmental
conditions, that do, or have the potential to, adversely
affect the military installation or essential transportation,
logistical, or other necessary resources outside of the
military installation that are necessary in order to
maintain, improve, or rapidly reestablish installation
mission assurance and mission-essential functions.''.
(f) Adjustment and Diversification Assistance for
Responding to Threats to the Resilience of a Military
Installation.--Section 2391(b)(1) of title 10, United States
Code, is amended--
(1) by striking ``, or (E) by the closure'' and inserting
``, (E) by threats to military installation resilience, or
(F) by the closure'';
(2) by striking ``(A), (B), (C), or (E)'' and inserting
``(A), (B), (C), or (F)''; and
(3) by striking ``action described in clause (D), if the
Secretary determines that the encroachment of the civilian
community'' and inserting ``action described in clause (D) or
(E), if the Secretary determines that either the encroachment
of the civilian community or threats to military installation
resilience''.
SEC. 2812. WORK IN PROCESS CURVE CHARTS AND OUTLAY TABLES FOR
MILITARY CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS.
(a) Required Submissions.--
(1) In general.--Subchapter III of chapter 169 of title 10,
United States Code, is amended by inserting after section
2864 the following new section:
[[Page S3514]]
``Sec. 2865. Work in Process Curve charts and outlay tables
required for military construction projects
``Along with the budget for each fiscal year submitted by
the President pursuant to section 1105(a) of title 31, United
States Code, the Secretary of Defense and the Secretaries of
the military departments shall include for any military
construction project over $35,000,000, as an addendum to be
included within the same document as the 1391s for the
Military Construction Program budget documentation, a Project
Spending Plan that includes--
``(1) a Work in Process Curve chart to identify funding,
obligations, and outlay figures; and
``(2) a monthly outlay table for funding, obligations, and
outlay figures.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of such subchapter is amended by inserting after
the item relating to section 2864 the following new item:
``2865. Work in Process Curve charts and outlay tables required for
military construction projects.''.
(b) Department of Defense Guidance.--The Secretary of
Defense shall, in coordination with the Under Secretary of
Defense (Comptroller), update Department of Defense Financial
Management Regulation 7000.14-R, and any other appropriate
instructions and guidance, to ensure that the Department of
Defense takes appropriate actions to comply with section 2865
of title 10, United States Code, as added by this section.
Subtitle C--Land Conveyances
SEC. 2821. LAND EXCHANGE, AIR FORCE PLANT 44, TUCSON,
ARIZONA.
(a) Land Conveyance and Restoration of Real Property
Improvements Authorized.--In connection with a project
planned by the Tuscon Airport Authority (in this section
referred to as ``TAA'') to relocate and extend a parallel
runway and make other airfield safety enhancements at the
Tucson International Airport, the Secretary of the Air Force
(in this section referred to as the ``Secretary'') may--
(1) convey to TAA all right, title, and interest of the
United States in and to all or any part of a parcel of real
property, including any improvements thereon, consisting of
approximately 58 acres on Air Force Plant 44, Arizona, and
located adjacent to Tucson International Airport;
(2) agree to terminate all or a portion of any deed
restrictions made for the benefit of the United States that
limit construction on Tucson International Airport within 750
feet of the Airport's southwest property boundary with Air
Force Plant 44; and
(3) using cash or in-kind consideration as provided in
subsection (b)--
(A) construct new explosives storage facilities to replace
the explosives storage facilities located on the land
described in paragraph (1) and explosives storage facilities
located on Air Force Plant 44 within the end-of-runway clear
zone associated with the TAA airfield enhancement project;
and
(B) construct new fencing as necessary to accommodate the
changes in the boundary of Air Force Plant 44.
(b) Consideration.--As consideration for the land
conveyance, deed restriction termination, replacement of real
property improvements, and installation of fencing authorized
under subsection (a), the following consideration must be
received by the United States before the Secretary may make
any conveyance or termination of real property interests of
the United States as described in subsection (a):
(1) All right, title, and interest of the owner or owners
thereof to the parcels of real property consisting of
approximately 160 acres directly adjacent to the south
boundary of Air Force Plant 44.
(2) The cost to the Secretary, in accordance with current
design standards, of--
(A) replacing the real property structures on Air Force
Plant 44 made unusable due to the land transfers and
termination of deed restrictions, with structures of at least
equivalent capacity and functionality; and
(B) installing the necessary boundary fencing due to the
changes in the boundary of Air Force Plant 44.
(c) Direct Payment of Consideration to Government
Contractors.--The Secretary may require that any cash
consideration to be received under this section be paid,
directly or through the Air Force design and construction
agent, to the contractors performing design or construction
of the real property improvements described in subsection
(a)(3).
(d) Payment of Costs of Conveyances.--
(1) Payment required.--The Secretary may require TAA to
cover costs to be incurred by the Secretary to carry out the
land exchange and other transactions authorized under this
section, or to reimburse the Secretary for such costs,
including survey costs, appraisal costs, costs related to
environmental documentation, and other administrative costs
related to the conveyances. If amounts are collected from TAA
in advance of the Secretary incurring the actual costs, and
the amount collected exceeds the costs actually incurred by
the Secretary to carry out such transactions, the Secretary
shall refund the excess amount to TAA.
(2) Treatment of amounts received.--Amounts received as
reimbursements under paragraph (1) shall be used in
accordance with section 2695(c) of title 10, United States
Code.
(e) Description of Property.--The exact acreage and legal
description of the real property to be exchanged under this
section shall be determined by a survey satisfactory to the
Secretary.
(f) Additional Terms and Conditions.--The Secretary may
require such additional terms and conditions in connection
with the land exchange and other transactions under this
section as the Secretary considers appropriate to protect the
interests of the United States. Without limiting the
foregoing, the Secretary may establish a deed restriction on
any part of the 58 acres described in subsection (a)(1) to
accommodate existing Quantity Distance arcs.
SEC. 2822. LAND CONVEYANCE, EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE, FLORIDA.
(a) Conveyance Authorized.--The Secretary of the Air Force
may convey, without consideration, to the Air Force Enlisted
Village, a nonprofit corporation (in this section referred to
as the ``Village''), all right, title, and interest of the
United States in and to a parcel of real property, including
improvements thereon, consisting of approximately 80 acres
located adjacent to Eglin Air Force Base, Florida, for the
purpose of independent-living and assisted-living apartments
for veterans. The conveyance under this subsection is subject
to valid existing rights.
(b) Reversionary Interest.--If the Secretary determines at
any time that the real property conveyed under subsection (a)
is not being used in accordance with the purpose of the
conveyance specified in subsection (a), all right, title, and
interest in and to such real property, including any
improvements thereto, shall, at the option of the Secretary,
revert to and become the property of the United States, and
the United States shall have the right of immediate entry
onto such real property. A determination by the Secretary
under this subsection shall be made on the record after an
opportunity for a hearing.
(c) Payment of Costs of Conveyance.--
(1) Payment required.--The Secretary may require the
Village to cover all costs (except costs for environmental
remediation of the property) to be incurred by the Secretary,
or to reimburse the Secretary for costs incurred by the
Secretary, to carry out the conveyance under this section,
including survey costs, costs for environmental
documentation, and any other administrative costs related to
the conveyance. If amounts are collected from the Village in
advance of the Secretary incurring the actual costs, and the
amount collected exceeds the costs actually incurred by the
Secretary to carry out the conveyance, the Secretary shall
refund the excess amount to the Village.
(2) Treatment of amounts received.--Amounts received under
paragraph (1) as reimbursement for costs incurred by the
Secretary to carry out the conveyance under subsection (a)
shall be credited to the fund or account that was used to
cover the costs incurred by the Secretary in carrying out the
conveyance, or to an appropriate fund or account currently
available to the Secretary for the purposes for which the
costs were paid. Amounts so credited shall be merged with
amounts in such fund or account and shall be available for
the same purposes, and subject to the same conditions and
limitations, as amounts in such fund or account.
(d) Description of Property.--The exact acreage and legal
description of the property to be conveyed under subsection
(a) shall be determined by a survey satisfactory to the
Secretary
(e) Additional Terms and Conditions.--The Secretary may
require such additional terms and conditions in connection
with the conveyance under subsection (a) as the Secretary
considers appropriate to protect the interests of the United
States.
Subtitle D--Other Matters
SEC. 2831. COMMEMORATION OF FREEDMAN'S VILLAGE.
(a) Freedman's Village Gate.--The Secretary of the Army
shall, as part of the southern expansion of Arlington
National Cemetery, name the newly constructed gate located at
the intersection of Hobson Drive and Southgate Road,
``Freedman's Village Gate''.
(b) Permanent Easement.--The Secretary of the Army is
directed to grant to Arlington County a permanent easement of
no less than 0.1 acres of land within the right-of-way of
Southgate Road to the south and west of Hobson Drive and west
of the planned joint base access road that is also continuous
with Foxcroft Heights Park for the purpose of commemorating
Freedman's Village.
(c) Relocation of Commemoration in Event Location Is Used
for Burial Purposes.--In the event Arlington National
Cemetery subsequently acquires the property used for the
commemoration described under subsection (b) for burial
purposes, the Army shall relocate any commemoration of
Freedman's Village to an appropriate location.
(d) Reimbursement.--The Secretary of Defense may accept
reimbursement from Arlington County for any costs associated
with commemorating Freedman's Village.
SEC. 2832. STRATEGIC PLAN TO IMPROVE CAPABILITIES OF
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE TRAINING RANGES AND
INSTALLATIONS.
(a) Plan Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall develop
and implement a comprehensive strategic plan to identify and
address deficits in the capabilities of Department of Defense
training ranges to support current and anticipated readiness
requirements to execute the National Defense Strategy (NDS).
[[Page S3515]]
(b) Evaluation.--As part of the preparation of the
strategic plan, the Secretary shall conduct an evaluation of
the following:
(1) The adequacy of current training range resources to
include the ability to train against near-peer or peer
threats in a realistic 5th Generation environment.
(2) The adequacy of current training enablers to meet
current and anticipated demands of the Armed Forces.
(c) Elements.--The strategic plan shall include the
following:
(1) Proposals to enhance the capabilities of training
ranges to address any limitations or constraints on current
Department resources, including any climatically induced
impacts or shortfalls.
(2) Goals and milestones for tracking actions under the
plan and measuring progress in carrying out such actions.
(3) Projected funding requirements for implementing actions
under the plan.
(d) Development and Implementation.--The Under Secretary of
Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment, as the principal
staff assistant to the Secretary on installation management,
shall have lead responsibility for developing and overseeing
implementation of the strategic plan and for coordination of
the discharge of the plan by components of the Department.
(e) Report on Implementation.--Not later than April 1,
2020, the Secretary shall, through the Under Secretary of
Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment, submit to Congress a
report on the progress made in implementing this section,
including the following:
(1) A description of the strategic plan.
(2) A description of the results of the evaluation
conducted under subsection (b).
(3) Such recommendations as the Secretary considers
appropriate with respect to improvements of the capabilities
of training ranges and enablers.
(f) Progress Reports.--Not later than April 1, 2019, and
annually thereafter for 3 years, the Secretary shall, through
the Under Secretary, submit to Congress a report setting
forth the following:
(1) A description of the progress made during the preceding
fiscal year in implementing the strategic plan.
(2) A description of any additional actions taken, or to be
taken, to address limitations and constraints on training
ranges and enablers.
(3) Assessments of individual training ranges addressing
the evaluation conducted under subsection (b).
(g) Additional Report Element.--Each report under
subsections (e) and (f) shall also include a list of
significant modifications to training range inventory, such
as range closures or expansions, during the preceding fiscal
year, including any limitations or impacts due to climatic
conditions.
SEC. 2833. NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN LANDS ENVIRONMENTAL
MITIGATION PROGRAM.
(a) In General.--Chapter 160 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
section:
``Sec. 2712. Native American lands environmental mitigation
program
``(a) Establishment.--The Secretary of Defense may
establish and carry out a program to mitigate the
environmental effects of Department of Defense actions on
Indian lands and culturally connected locations.
``(b) Program Activities.--The activities that may be
carried out under the program established under subsection
(a) are the following:
``(1) Identification, investigation, and documentation of
suspected environmental effects attributable to past
Department of Defense actions.
``(2) Development of mitigation options for such
environmental effects, including development of cost-to-
complete estimates and a system for prioritizing mitigation
actions.
``(3) Direct mitigation actions that the Secretary
determines are necessary and appropriate to mitigate the
adverse environmental effects of past Department of Defense
actions.
``(4) Demolition and removal of unsafe buildings and
structures used by, under the jurisdiction of, or formerly
used by or under the jurisdiction of the Department of
Defense.
``(5) Training, technical assistance, and administrative
support to facilitate the meaningful participation of Indian
tribes in mitigation actions under the program.
``(6) Development and execution of a policy governing
consultation with Indian tribes that have been or may be
affected by Department of Defense actions, including training
Department of Defense personnel to ensure compliance with the
policy.
``(c) Cooperative Agreements.--(1) In carrying out the
program established under subsection (a), the Secretary of
Defense may enter into a cooperative agreement with an Indian
tribe or an instrumentality of tribal government.
``(2) Notwithstanding chapter 63 of title 31, a cooperative
agreement under this section may be used to acquire property
or services for the direct benefit of the United States
Government.
``(3) Any cooperative agreement under this section for the
procurement of severable services may begin in one fiscal
year and end in another fiscal year provided the total period
of performance does not exceed five calendar years.
``(d) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) The term `Indian land' includes--
``(A) any land located within the boundaries and a part of
an Indian reservation, pueblo, or rancheria;
``(B) any land that has been allotted to an individual
Indian, but has not been conveyed to such Indian with full
power of alienation;
``(C) Alaska Native village and regional corporation lands;
and
``(D) lands and waters upon which any federally recognized
Indian tribe has rights reserved by treaty, act of Congress,
or action by the President.
``(2) The term `Indian tribe' means any Indian tribe, band,
nation, or other organized group or community, including any
Alaska Native village or regional or village corporation as
defined in or established pursuant to the Alaska Native
Claims Settlement Act (43 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.), which is
recognized as eligible for the special programs and services
provided by the United States to Indians because of their
status as Indians.
``(3) The term `culturally connected location' means a
location or place that has demonstrable significance to
Indians or Alaska Natives based on its association with the
traditional beliefs, customs, and practices of a living
community, including locations or places where religious,
ceremonial, subsistence, medicinal, economic, or other
lifeways practices have historically taken place.''.
(b) Table of Sections Amendment.--The table of sections at
the beginning of such chapter is amended by inserting after
the item relating to section 2711 the following new item:
``2712. Native American lands environmental mitigation program.''.
SEC. 2834. DEFENSE COMMUNITY INFRASTRUCTURE PILOT PROGRAM.
Section 2391 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (d) and (e) as subsections
(e) and (f), respectively;
(2) by inserting after subsection (c) the following new
subsection:
``(d) Defense Community Infrastructure Pilot Program.--(1)
The Secretary of Defense may make grants, conclude
cooperative agreements, and supplement funds available under
Federal programs administered by agencies other than the
Department of Defense to assist State and local governments
to address deficiencies in community infrastructure
supportive of a military installation, if the Secretary
determines that such assistance will enhance the military
value, resilience, or military family quality of life at such
military installation.
``(2) The Secretary shall establish criteria for the
selection of community infrastructure projects to receive
assistance under paragraph (1). The criteria shall include a
requirement that the State or local government agree to
contribute not less than 30 percent of the funding for the
community infrastructure project, unless the community
infrastructure project is located in a rural area, or for
reasons related to national security, in which case the
Secretary may waive the requirement for a State or local
government contribution.
``(3) Amounts appropriated or otherwise made available for
assistance under paragraph (1) may remain available until
expended.
``(4) The authority under this subsection shall expire on
September 30, 2023.''; and
(3) in subsection (e), as redesignated by paragraph (1), by
adding at the end the following new paragraphs:
``(4) The term `community infrastructure' means any
transportation project; school, hospital, police, fire,
emergency response, or other community support facility; or
water, waste-water, telecommunications, electric, gas, or
other utility infrastructure project that is located off of a
military installation and owned by a State or local
government.
``(5) The term `rural area' means a city, town, or
unincorporated area that has a population of not more than
20,000 inhabitants.''.
SEC. 2835. REPRESENTATION OF INSTALLATION INTERESTS IN
NEGOTIATIONS AND PROCEEDINGS WITH CARRIERS AND
OTHER PUBLIC UTILITIES.
Section 501(c) of title 40, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraphs (1) and (2) as
subparagraphs (A) and (B), respectively;
(2) by inserting ``(1)'' before ``For transportation''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(2) Prior to representing any installation of the
Department of Defense in any proceeding under this
subsection, the Administrator or any persons or entities
acting on behalf of the Administrator shall--
``(A) notify the senior mission commander of the
installation; and
``(B) solicit and represent the interests of the
installation as determined by the installation's senior
mission commander.''.
SEC. 2836. WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE LAND ENHANCEMENTS.
(a) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Map.--The term ``Map'' means the map entitled ``White
Sands National Park Proposed Boundary Revision & Transfer of
Lands Between National Park Service & Department of the
Army'', numbered 142/136,271, and dated February 14, 2017.
(2) Military munitions.--The term ``military munitions''
has the meaning given the term in section 101(e) of title 10,
United States Code.
(3) Missile range.--The term ``missile range'' means the
White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, administered by the
Secretary of the Army.
[[Page S3516]]
(4) Monument.--The term ``Monument'' means the White Sands
National Monument, New Mexico, established by Presidential
Proclamation No. 2025 (54 U.S.C. 320301 note), dated January
18, 1933, and administered by the Secretary.
(5) Munitions debris.--The term ``munitions debris'' has
the meaning given the term in volume 8 of the Department of
Defense Manual Number 6055.09-M entitled ``DoD Ammunitions
and Explosives Safety Standards'' and dated February 29, 2008
(as in effect on the date of enactment of this Act).
(6) Park.--The term ``Park'' means the White Sands National
Park established by subsection (b)(2)(A).
(7) Public land order.--The term ``Public Land Order''
means Public Land Order 833, dated May 21, 1952 (17 Fed. Reg.
4822).
(8) Secretary.--The term ``Secretary'' means the Secretary
of the Interior.
(9) State.--The term ``State'' means the State of New
Mexico.
(b) White Sands National Park.--
(1) Findings.--Congress finds that--
(A) White Sands National Monument was established on
January 18, 1933, by President Herbert Hoover under chapter
3203 of title 54, United States Code (commonly known as the
``Antiquities Act of 1906'');
(B) President Hoover proclaimed that the Monument was
established ``for the preservation of the white sands and
additional features of scenic, scientific, and educational
interest'';
(C) the Monument was expanded by Presidents Roosevelt,
Eisenhower, Carter, and Clinton in 1934, 1942, 1953, 1978,
and 1996, respectively;
(D) the Monument contains a substantially more diverse set
of nationally significant historical, archaeological,
scientific, and natural resources than were known of at the
time the Monument was established, including a number of
recent discoveries;
(E) the Monument is recognized as a major unit of the
National Park System with extraordinary values enjoyed by
more visitors each year since 1995 than any other unit in the
State;
(F) the Monument contributes significantly to the local
economy by attracting tourists; and
(G) designation of the Monument as a national park would
increase public recognition of the diverse array of
nationally significant resources at the Monument and
visitation to the unit.
(2) Establishment of white sands national park.--
(A) Establishment.--To protect, preserve, and restore its
scenic, scientific, educational, natural, geological,
historical, cultural, archaeological, paleontological,
hydrological, fish, wildlife, and recreational values and to
enhance visitor experiences, there is established in the
State the White Sands National Park as a unit of the National
Park System.
(B) Abolishment of white sands national monument.--
(i) Abolishment.--Due to the establishment of the Park, the
Monument is abolished.
(ii) Incorporation.--The land and interests in land that
comprise the Monument are incorporated in, and shall be
considered to be part of, the Park.
(C) References.--Any reference in a law, map, regulation,
document, paper, or other record of the United States to the
``White Sands National Monument'' shall be considered to be a
reference to the ``White Sands National Park''.
(D) Availability of funds.--Any funds available for the
Monument shall be available for the Park.
(E) Administration.--The Secretary shall administer the
Park in accordance with--
(i) this subsection; and
(ii) the laws generally applicable to units of the National
Park System, including section 100101(a), chapter 1003,
sections 100751(a), 100752, 100753, and 102101, and chapter
3201 of title 54, United States Code.
(F) World heritage list nomination.--
(i) County concurrence.--The Secretary shall not submit a
nomination for the Park to be included on the World Heritage
List of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization unless each county in which the Park is
located concurs in the nomination.
(ii) Army notification.--Before submitting a nomination for
the Park to be included on the World Heritage List of the
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization, the Secretary shall notify the Secretary of the
Army of the intent of the Secretary to nominate the Park.
(G) Effect.--Nothing in this paragraph affects--
(i) valid existing rights (including water rights);
(ii) permits or contracts issued by the Monument;
(iii) existing agreements, including agreements with the
Department of Defense;
(iv) the jurisdiction of the Department of Defense
regarding the restricted airspace above the Park; or
(v) the airshed classification of the Park under the Clean
Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.).
(c) Modification of Boundaries of White Sands National Park
and White Sands Missile Range.--
(1) Transfers of administrative jurisdiction.--
(A) Transfer of administrative jurisdiction to the
secretary.--
(i) In general.--Administrative jurisdiction over the land
described in clause (ii) is transferred from the Secretary of
the Army to the Secretary.
(ii) Description of land.--The land referred to in clause
(i) is--
(I) the approximately 2,826 acres of land identified as
``To NPS, lands inside current boundary'' on the Map; and
(II) the approximately 5,766 acres of land identified as
``To NPS, new additions'' on the Map.
(B) Transfer of administrative jurisdiction to the
secretary of the army.--
(i) In general.--Administrative jurisdiction over the land
described in clause (ii) is transferred from the Secretary to
the Secretary of the Army.
(ii) Description of land.--The land referred to in clause
(i) is the approximately 3,737 acres of land identified as
``To DOA'' on the Map.
(2) Boundary modifications.--
(A) Park.--
(i) In general.--The boundary of the Park is revised to
reflect the boundary depicted on the Map.
(ii) Map.--
(I) In general.--The Secretary, in coordination with the
Secretary of the Army, shall prepare and keep on file for
public inspection in the appropriate office of the Secretary
a map and a legal description of the revised boundary of the
Park.
(II) Effect.--The map and legal description under subclause
(I) shall have the same force and effect as if included in
this section, except that the Secretary may correct clerical
and typographical errors in the map and legal description.
(iii) Boundary survey.--As soon as practicable after the
date of the establishment of the Park and subject to the
availability of funds, the Secretary shall complete an
official boundary survey of the Park.
(B) Missile range.--
(i) In general.--The boundary of the missile range and the
Public Land Order are modified to exclude the land
transferred to the Secretary under paragraph (1)(A) and to
include the land transferred to the Secretary of the Army
under paragraph (1)(B).
(ii) Map.--The Secretary shall prepare a map and legal
description depicting the revised boundary of the missile
range.
(C) Conforming amendment.--Section 2854 of Public Law 104-
201 (54 U.S.C. 320301 note) is repealed.
(3) Administration.--
(A) Park.--The Secretary shall administer the land
transferred under paragraph (1)(A) in accordance with laws
(including regulations) applicable to the Park.
(B) Missile range.--Subject to subparagraph (C), the
Secretary of the Army shall administer the land transferred
to the Secretary of the Army under paragraph (1)(B) as part
of the missile range.
(C) Infrastructure; resource management.--
(i) Range road 7.--
(I) Infrastructure management.--To the maximum extent
practicable, in planning, constructing, and managing
infrastructure on the land described in subclause (III), the
Secretary of the Army shall apply low-impact development
techniques and strategies to prevent impacts within the
missile range and the Park from stormwater runoff from the
land described in that subclause.
(II) Resource management.--The Secretary of the Army
shall--
(aa) manage the land described in subclause (III) in a
manner consistent with the protection of natural and cultural
resources within the missile range and the Park and in
accordance with section 101(a)(1)(B) of the Sikes Act (16
U.S.C. 670a(a)(1)(B)), division A of subtitle III of title
54, United States Code, and the Native American Graves
Protection and Repatriation Act (25 U.S.C. 3001 et seq.); and
(bb) include the land described in subclause (III) in the
integrated natural and cultural resource management plan for
the missile range.
(III) Description of land.--The land referred to in
subclauses (I) and (II) is the land that is transferred to
the administrative jurisdiction of the Secretary of the Army
under paragraph (1)(B) and located in the area east of Range
Road 7 in--
(aa) T. 17 S., R. 5 E., sec. 31;
(bb) T. 18 S., R. 5 E.; and
(cc) T. 19 S., R. 5 E., sec. 5.
(ii) Fence.--
(I) In general.--The Secretary of the Army shall continue
to allow the Secretary to maintain the fence shown on the Map
until such time as the Secretary determines that the fence is
unnecessary for the management of the Park.
(II) Removal.--If the Secretary determines that the fence
is unnecessary for the management of the Park under subclause
(I), the Secretary shall promptly remove the fence at the
expense of the Department of the Interior.
(D) Research.--The Secretary of the Army and the Secretary
may enter into an agreement to allow the Secretary to conduct
certain research in the area identified as ``Cooperative Use
Research Area'' on the Map.
(E) Military munitions and munitions debris.--
(i) Response action.--With respect to any Federal
liability, the Secretary of the Army shall remain responsible
for any response action addressing military munitions or
munitions debris on the land transferred under
[[Page S3517]]
paragraph (1)(A) to the same extent as on the day before the
date of enactment of this Act.
(ii) Investigation of military munitions and munitions
debris.--
(I) In general.--The Secretary may request that the
Secretary of the Army conduct 1 or more investigations of
military munitions or munitions debris on any land
transferred under paragraph (1)(A).
(II) Access.--The Secretary shall give access to the
Secretary of the Army to the land covered by a request under
subclause (I) for the purposes of conducting the 1 or more
investigations under that subclause.
(III) Limitation.--An investigation conducted under this
clause shall be subject to available appropriations.
(iii) Applicable law.--Any activities undertaken under this
subparagraph shall be carried out in accordance with--
(I) the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation,
and Liability Act of 1980 (42 U.S.C. 9601 et seq.);
(II) the purposes for which the Park was established; and
(III) any other applicable law.
SEC. 2837. AUTHORITY TO TRANSFER FUNDS FOR CONSTRUCTION OF
INDIAN RIVER BRIDGE.
Notwithstanding the limitation in section 2215 of title 10,
United States Code, the Secretary of Defense may transfer to
the Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration up to 50 percent of the shared costs of
constructing the Indian River Bridge. The authority under
this section shall expire on October 1, 2022.
TITLE XXIX--OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
SEC. 2901. AUTHORIZED ARMY CONSTRUCTION AND LAND ACQUISITION
PROJECTS.
The Secretary of the Army may acquire real property and
carry out the military construction projects for the
installation outside the United States, and in the amount,
set forth in the following table:
Army: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Country Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bulgaria Nevo Selo FOS................................ $5,200,000
Poland Drawsko Pomorski Training Area............... $17,000,000
Powidz Air Base.............................. $87,000,000
Zagan Training Area.......................... $40,400,000
Romania Mihail Kogalniceanu FOS...................... $21,651,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2902. AUTHORIZED NAVY CONSTRUCTION AND LAND ACQUISITION
PROJECTS.
The Secretary of the Navy may acquire real property and
carry out the military construction projects for the
installations outside the United States, and in the amounts,
set forth in the following table:
Navy: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Country Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Greece........................................ Souda Bay...................................... $47,850,000
Italy......................................... Sigonella...................................... $66,050,000
Spain......................................... Rota........................................... $21,590,000
United Kingdom................................ Lossiemouth.................................... $79,130,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2903. AUTHORIZED AIR FORCE CONSTRUCTION AND LAND
ACQUISITION PROJECTS.
The Secretary of the Air Force may acquire real property
and carry out the military construction projects for the
installations outside the United States, and in the amounts,
set forth in the following table:
Air Force: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Country Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Germany....................................... Ramstein Air Base.............................. $119,000,000
Norway........................................ Rygge.......................................... $13,800,000
Slovakia...................................... Malacky........................................ $59,000,000
United Kingdom................................ RAF Fairford................................... $106,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2904. AUTHORIZED DEFENSE AGENCIES CONSTRUCTION AND LAND
ACQUISITION PROJECTS.
The Secretary of Defense may acquire real property and
carry out the military construction projects for the
installations outside the United States, and in the amounts,
set forth in the following table:
Defense Agencies: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Country Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estonia....................................... Unspecified.................................... $15,700,000
Qatar......................................... Al Udeid....................................... $60,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page S3518]]
SEC. 2905. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal
years beginning after September 30, 2018, for the military
construction projects outside the United States authorized by
this title as specified in the funding table in section 4601.
DIVISION C--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY AUTHORIZATIONS AND
OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS
TITLE XXXI--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY PROGRAMS
Subtitle A--National Security Programs and Authorizations
SEC. 3101. NATIONAL NUCLEAR SECURITY ADMINISTRATION.
(a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby
authorized to be appropriated to the Department of Energy for
fiscal year 2019 for the activities of the National Nuclear
Security Administration in carrying out programs as specified
in the funding table in section 4701.
(b) Authorization of New Plant Projects.--From funds
referred to in subsection (a) that are available for carrying
out plant projects, the Secretary of Energy may carry out new
plant projects for the National Nuclear Security
Administration as follows:
Project 19-D-670, 138kV Power Transmission System
Replacement, Nevada National Security Site, Nevada,
$6,000,000.
Project 19-D-660, Lithium Production Capability, Y-12
National Security Complex, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, $19,000,000.
Project 19-D-930, KS Overhead Piping, Kesselring Site, West
Milton, New York, $10,994,000.
SEC. 3102. DEFENSE ENVIRONMENTAL CLEANUP.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated to the
Department of Energy for fiscal year 2019 for defense
environmental cleanup activities in carrying out programs as
specified in the funding table in section 4701.
SEC. 3103. OTHER DEFENSE ACTIVITIES.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated to the
Department of Energy for fiscal year 2019 for other defense
activities in carrying out programs as specified in the
funding table in section 4701.
SEC. 3104. NUCLEAR ENERGY.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated to the
Department of Energy for fiscal year 2019 for nuclear energy
as specified in the funding table in section 4701.
Subtitle B--Program Authorizations, Restrictions, and Limitations
SEC. 3111. CLARIFICATION OF ROLES AND AUTHORITIES OF NATIONAL
NUCLEAR SECURITY ADMINISTRATION.
(a) Amendments to Department of Energy Organization Act.--
(1) Under secretary for nuclear security.--Section
202(c)(3) of the Department of Energy Organization Act (42
U.S.C. 7132(c)(3)) is amended by striking ``Act.'' and all
that follows through ``may be delegated'' and inserting the
following: ``Act (50 U.S.C. 2402). In carrying out the
functions of the Administrator, the Under Secretary shall be
subject to the authority of the Secretary in accordance with
section 3219 of that Act (50 U.S.C. 2409). Such authority may
be delegated''.
(2) Establishment of policy.--Section 213 of the Department
of Energy Organization Act (42 U.S.C. 7144) is amended--
(A) in subsection (a), by inserting ``, acting through the
Under Secretary for Nuclear Security,'' after ``The
Secretary'';
(B) in subsection (b)--
(i) by striking ``programs and activities of the
Administration'' and inserting ``regulations, policies, and
activities of the Administration with respect to health and
safety'' ; and
(ii) by striking ``those programs and activities'' and
inserting ``those regulations, policies, and activities'';
and
(C) by striking subsection (c).
(b) Amendments to National Nuclear Security Administration
Act.--
(1) Administrator for nuclear security.--Section 3212 of
the National Nuclear Security Administration Act (50 U.S.C.
2402) is amended--
(A) in subsection (b)--
(i) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by striking
``and activities'' and inserting ``, policies, regulations,
and rules''; and
(ii) in paragraph (9), by striking the end period and
inserting ``, subject to the policies of the Department of
Energy.''; and
(B) in subsection (d)--
(i) by striking ``may'' and inserting ``shall''; and
(ii) by striking ``, unless disapproved by the Secretary of
Energy'' and inserting ``to carry out the mission and
functions of the Administration, except as provided by
section 3219''.
(2) General counsel.--Section 3217 of the National Nuclear
Security Administration Act (50 U.S.C. 2407) is amended--
(A) by striking ``There is'' and inserting the following:
``(a) In General.--There is'';
(B) by striking the end period and inserting ``and shall
report to the Administrator.''; and
(C) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(b) Avoidance of Coordination and Duplication.--The
General Counsel shall be independent from and may not
duplicate the efforts of the General Counsel of the
Department of Energy appointed under section 202(e) of the
Department of Energy Organization Act (42 U.S.C. 7132(e)).''.
(3) Staff.--Section 3218 of the National Nuclear Security
Administration Act (50 U.S.C. 2408) is amended by adding at
the end the following new subsections:
``(c) Reporting.--The staff of the Administration shall
report to the Administrator through the appropriate
structures of the Administration.
``(d) Avoidance of Coordination and Duplication.--The staff
of the Administration performing functions specified in
subsection (b) shall be independent from and may not
duplicate the efforts of staff of elements of the Department
of Energy other than the Administration that perform
functions similar to the functions specified in subsection
(b).
``(e) Applicability of Prohibition on Dual Office
Holding.--The prohibition under section 3220(d) shall apply
to staff of the Administration performing functions specified
in subsection (b).''.
(4) Authority of secretary.--
(A) In general.--Section 3219 of the National Nuclear
Security Administration Act (50 U.S.C. 2409) is amended--
(i) in the section heading, by striking ``to modify
organization of'' and inserting ``with respect to'';
(ii) by striking ``Notwithstanding'' and inserting the
following:
``(a) In General.--(1) The Secretary of Energy, acting
through the Administrator, shall be responsible for setting
broad priorities for the Administration.
``(2) The Secretary may disapprove any action, policy,
regulation, or rule of the Administrator if--
``(A) the Secretary submits to the congressional defense
committees justification for such disapproval; and
``(B) a period of 15 days has elapsed following the date on
which such justification was submitted.
``(3) Except as provided by this section, the Administrator
shall have complete authority to establish and conduct
oversight of policies, activities, and procedures of the
Administration without direction or oversight by the
Secretary.
``(4) The authority of the Secretary under paragraphs (1)
and (2) may be delegated only to the Deputy Secretary of
Energy, without further redelegation.
``(b) Organization of Administration.--Notwithstanding'';
and
(iii) in subsection (b), as designated by clause (ii), by
striking ``subsection (b) or (c) of''.
(B) Clerical amendment.--The table of contents for the
National Nuclear Security Administration Act is amended by
striking the item relating to section 3219 and inserting the
following new item:
``Sec. 3219. Scope of authority of Secretary of Energy with respect to
Administration.''.
(5) Status of personnel.--Section 3220 of the National
Nuclear Security Administration Act (50 U.S.C. 2410) is
amended--
(A) in subsection (a)--
(i) in paragraph (1)--
(I) by striking subparagraph (A); and
(II) by redesignating subparagraphs (B) and (C) as
subparagraphs (A) and (B), respectively; and
(ii) in paragraph (2), by striking the end period and
inserting ``, except as provided by section 3219.''; and
(B) in subsection (b), by striking the end period and
inserting ``and except as provided by section 3219.''.
(6) Office of defense nuclear security.--Section 3232 of
the National Nuclear Security Administration Act (50 U.S.C.
2422) is amended--
(A) in subsection (a), by striking ``Secretary of Energy''
and all that follows and inserting ``Administrator.''; and
(B) in subsection (b)--
(i) in paragraph (1), by striking ``Secretary and''; and
(ii) in paragraph (2)--
(I) by striking ``Secretary'' and inserting ``Secretary of
Energy''; and
(II) by striking ``Department'' and inserting ``Department
of Energy''.
(7) Counterintelligence programs.--Section 3233 of the
National Nuclear Security Administration Act (50 U.S.C. 2423)
is amended--
(A) in subsection (a), by inserting ``, in coordination
with the Administrator,'' after ``Secretary of Energy''; and
(B) in subsection (b), by inserting ``, in coordination
with the Administrator,'' after ``Secretary of Energy''.
(8) Authorized personnel levels.--
(A) In general.--Section 3241A of the National Nuclear
Security Administration Act (50 U.S.C. 2441a) is amended--
(i) in the section heading, by striking ``authorized'' and
inserting ``annual report on'';
(ii) by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
``(a) In General.--The Administrator shall include in the
budget justification materials submitted to Congress in
support of the budget of the Administration for each fiscal
year (as submitted with the budget of the President under
section 1105(a) of title 31, United States Code) a report
containing the following information as of the date of the
report:
``(1) The number of full-time equivalent employees of the
Office of the Administrator.
``(2) The number of service support contracts of the
Administration and whether such contracts are funded using
program or program direction funds.
[[Page S3519]]
``(3) The number of full-time equivalent contractor
employees working under each contract identified under
paragraph (2).
``(4) The number of full-time equivalent contractor
employees described in paragraph (3) that have been employed
under such a contract for a period greater than two years.
``(5) With respect to each contract identified under
paragraph (2)--
``(A) the cost of the contract; and
``(B) identification of the program or program direction
accounts that support the contract.'';
(iii) by striking subsection (c);
(iv) by redesignating subsections (d) and (e) as
subsections (c) and (d), respectively; and
(v) by striking subsection (f).
(B) Clerical amendment.--The table of contents for the
National Nuclear Security Administration Act is amended by
striking the item relating to section 3241A and inserting the
following new item:
``Sec. 3241A. Annual report on personnel levels of the Office of the
Administrator.''.
(9) Compliance with federal acquisition regulation.--
Section 3262 of the National Nuclear Security Administration
Act (50 U.S.C. 2462) is amended--
(A) by striking ``The Administrator'' and inserting the
following:
``(a) In General.--The Administrator'';
(B) by inserting ``specific to the Administration'' after
``procedures''; and
(C) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(b) Requirement for Procedures.--The procedures
established under subsection (a) shall be separate from
procedures applied to elements of the Department of Energy
other than the Administration.''.
(10) Definitions.--Section 3281(2)(A) of the National
Nuclear Security Administration Act (50 U.S.C. 2471(2)(A)) is
amended by striking ``Plant'' and inserting ``National
Security Campus''.
(c) Amendments to Atomic Energy Defense Act.--
(1) Definitions.--Section 4002(9)(A) of the Atomic Energy
Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2501(9)(A)) is amended striking
``Plant'' and inserting ``National Security Campus''.
(2) Stockpile stewardship program.--Section 4201(a) of the
Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2521(a)) is amended by
striking ``The Secretary, acting through the Administrator,''
and inserting ``The Administrator''.
(3) Stockpile stewardship criteria.--Section 4202 of the
Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2522) is amended--
(A) in subsection (a)--
(i) by striking ``Secretary of Energy'' and inserting
``Administrator''; and
(ii) by striking ``Department of Energy'' and inserting
``Administration''; and
(B) in subsection (b)--
(i) in the subsection heading, by striking ``Secretary''
and inserting ``Department'';
(ii) by striking ``Secretary of Energy'' and inserting
``Administrator''; and
(iii) by striking ``Secretary of Defense'' and inserting
``Chairman of the Nuclear Weapons Council''.
(4) Stockpile stewardship, management, and responsiveness
plan.--Section 4203 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50
U.S.C. 2523) is amended--
(A) in subsection (d)(4)(A)(ii), by striking ``quadrennial
defense review if such strategy has not been submitted as of
the date of the plan'' and inserting ``national defense
strategy'';
(B) in subsection (e)(1)(A)(i), by striking ``or the most
recent quadrennial defense review, as applicable under
subsection (d)(4)(A), and the'' and inserting ``, the
national defense strategy, and the most recent''; and
(C) in subsection (f)--
(i) by striking paragraph (4);
(ii) by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph (4); and
(iii) by inserting after paragraph (2) the following new
paragraph (3):
``(3) The term `national defense strategy' means the review
of the defense programs and policies of the United States
that is carried out every four years under section 113(g) of
title 10, United States Code.''.
(5) Stockpile management program.--Section 4204 of the
Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2524) is amended--
(A) in subsection (a), in the matter preceding paragraph
(1), by striking ``Secretary of Energy, acting through the
Administrator and in consultation with the Secretary of
Defense'' and inserting ``Administrator, in consultation with
the Nuclear Weapons Council''; and
(B) in subsection (b), in the matter preceding paragraph
(1), by striking ``Secretary of Energy'' and inserting
``Administrator''.
(6) Nuclear test ban readiness program.--Section 4207 of
the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2527) is amended, in
subsections (a) and (c), by striking ``Secretary of Energy''
and inserting ``Administrator''.
(7) Requirements for specific request for new or modified
nuclear weapons.--Section 4209 of the Atomic Energy Defense
Act (50 U.S.C. 2529) is amended--
(A) in subsection (a)(1)--
(i) by striking ``Secretary of Energy'' and inserting
``Administrator'';
(ii) by striking ``Secretary'' and inserting
``Administrator''; and
(iii) by striking ``in the budget'' and all that follows
and inserting ``in the budget justification materials
submitted to Congress in support of the Department of Energy
budget for that fiscal year (as submitted with the budget of
the President under section 1105(a) of title 31, United
States Code).'';
(B) in subsection (b), by striking ``The Secretary shall
include in a request for funds under subsection (a)'' and
inserting ``A request for funds under subsection (a) shall
include''; and
(C) in subsection (c), by striking ``Secretary'' and
inserting ``Secretary of Energy''.
(8) Manufacturing infrastructure for nuclear weapons
stockpile.--Section 4212 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50
U.S.C. 2532) is amended--
(A) in subsection (a)(1), in the matter preceding
subparagraph (A)--
(i) by striking ``Secretary of Energy'' and inserting
``Administrator''; and
(ii) by inserting ``most recent'' before ``Nuclear Posture
Review''; and
(B) in subsection (b)--
(i) in paragraph (2), by striking ``Plant'' and inserting
``National Security Complex''; and
(ii) in paragraph (4), by striking ``Plant'' and inserting
``National Security Campus''.
(9) Reports on life extension programs.--
(A) In general.--Section 4216 of the Atomic Energy Defense
Act (50 U.S.C. 2536) is amended--
(i) in the section heading, by striking ``lifetime'' and
inserting ``life''; and
(ii) by striking ``lifetime'' each place it appears and
inserting ``life''.
(B) Clerical amendment.--The table of contents for the
Atomic Energy Defense Act is amended by striking the item
relating to section 4216 and inserting the following new
item:
``Sec. 4216. Reports on life extension programs.''.
(10) Selected acquisition reports.--Section 4217 of the
Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2537) is amended--
(A) in subsection (a)(1), by striking ``the Secretary of
Energy, acting through the Administrator,'' and inserting
``the Administrator''; and
(B) in subsection (b)--
(i) in paragraph (1), in the matter preceding subparagraph
(A), by striking ``Secretary of Energy, acting through the
Administrator,'' and inserting ``Administrator''; and
(ii) in paragraph (2)(B), by striking ``the Secretary or''.
(11) Advice on safety, security, and reliability of nuclear
weapons stockpile.--Section 4218 of the Atomic Energy Defense
Act (50 U.S.C. 2538) is amended--
(A) in subsection (d), by striking ``or the Commander of
the United States Strategic Command''; and
(B) in subsection (e)--
(i) by striking ``, a member of the Nuclear Weapons
Council, or the Commander of the United States Strategic
Command'' and inserting ``or a member of the Nuclear Weapons
Council''; and
(ii) by striking ``member, or Commander'' and inserting
``or member''.
(12) Stockpile responsiveness plan.--Section 4220(b) of the
Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2538b(b)) is amended--
(A) by striking ``Secretary of Energy, acting through the
Administrator and'' and inserting ``Administrator,''; and
(B) by striking ``Secretary of Defense'' and inserting
``Nuclear Weapons Council''.
(13) Tritium production program.--Section 4231 of the
Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2541) is amended--
(A) in subsection (a), by striking ``Secretary of Energy''
and inserting ``Administrator''; and
(B) in subsections (b) and (c), by striking ``Secretary''
and inserting ``Administrator''.
(14) Modernization and consolidation of tritium recycling
facilities.--Section 4234 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act
(50 U.S.C. 2544) is amended, in the matter preceding
paragraph (1), by striking ``Secretary of Energy'' and
inserting ``Administrator''.
(15) Procedures for meeting tritium production
requirements.--Section 4235 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act
(50 U.S.C. 2545) is amended--
(A) in subsection (a), by striking ``Secretary of Energy''
and inserting ``Administrator'';
(B) in subsection (b), by striking ``Secretary'' and
inserting ``Administrator''; and
(C) by striking subsection (c).
(16) Certification of status of security of facilities.--
Section 4506 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C.
2657) is amended--
(A) in subsection (a)--
(i) in paragraph (1)--
(I) in the matter preceding subparagraph (A)--
(aa) by striking ``September 30'' and inserting ``December
31''; and
(bb) by striking ``Secretary of Energy'' and inserting
``congressional defense committees''; and
(II) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``and the Department
of Energy'';
(ii) in paragraph (2), by striking ``to the Secretary'';
and
(iii) by striking paragraph (3); and
(B) in subsection (b)(1), in the matter preceding
subparagraph (A), by striking ``December 1 of each even-
numbered year, the Secretary'' and inserting ``December 31 of
each even-numbered year, the Secretary of Energy''.
(17) Certificates of commendation for exemplary service.--
[[Page S3520]]
(A) In general.--Section 4605 of the Atomic Energy Defense
Act (50 U.S.C. 2705) is amended--
(i) in the section heading, by striking ``department of
energy'' and inserting ``administration'';
(ii) in subsection (a)--
(I) by striking ``Department of Energy'' and inserting
``Administration'';
(II) by striking ``a Department'' and inserting ``an
Administration''; and
(III) by striking ``the Department'' each place it appears
and inserting ``the Administration''; and
(iii) in subsection (c)--
(I) in the subsection heading, by striking ``Department of
Energy'' and inserting ``Administration''; and
(II) by striking ``Department of Energy'' each place it
appears and inserting ``Administration''.
(B) Clerical amendment.--The table of contents for the
Atomic Energy Defense Act is amended by striking the item
relating to section 4605 and inserting the following:
``Sec. 4605. Authority to provide certificate of commendation to
Administration and contractor employees for exemplary
service in stockpile stewardship and security.''.
(18) Executive management training.--Section 4621 of the
Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2721) is amended--
(A) in subsection (a)--
(i) by inserting ``and the Administrator'' after
``Secretary of Energy''; and
(ii) by inserting ``and the Administration'' after
``Department of Energy''; and
(B) in subsection (b)(1), by inserting ``and
Administration'' after ``Department of Energy''.
(19) Stockpile stewardship recruitment and training
program.--Section 4622 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50
U.S.C. 2722) is amended--
(A) in subsection (a), by striking ``Secretary of Energy''
and inserting ``Administrator''; and
(B) in subsection (c), by striking ``Secretary'' and
inserting ``Administrator''.
(20) Fellowship program.--Section 4623 of the Atomic Energy
Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2723) is amended--
(A) in subsection (a)--
(i) by striking ``Secretary of Energy'' and inserting
``Administrator''; and
(ii) by striking ``Secretary'' and inserting
``Administrator'';
(B) in subsection (b)(1), by striking ``Department of
Energy'' and inserting ``Administration'';
(C) in subsections (c) and (d), by striking ``Secretary''
and inserting ``Administrator'';
(D) in subsection (e), by striking ``Secretary'' and all
that follows through ``Defense Programs,'' and inserting
``Administrator shall''; and
(E) in subsection (f)--
(i) in paragraph (1), by striking ``Secretary'' and
inserting ``Administrator''; and
(ii) in paragraph (2), by striking ``Secretary of Energy''
and inserting ``Administrator''.
(21) Transfer of weapons activities funds.--Section 4711 of
the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2751) is amended--
(A) in subsection (a)--
(i) by striking ``Secretary of Energy'' and inserting
``Administrator''; and
(ii) by striking ``Department of Energy'' and inserting
``Administration'';
(B) in subsection (d), by striking ``Secretary, acting
through the Administrator,'' and inserting ``Administrator'';
and
(C) in subsection (e)(1)--
(i) by striking ``Department of Energy'' and inserting
``Administration''; and
(ii) by striking ``Department'' and inserting
``Administration''.
(22) Notification of cost overruns.--Section 4713(c)(2)(B)
of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2753(c)(2)(B)) is
amended by inserting ``or the Administration'' after
``Department of Energy''.
(23) Life-cycle cost estimates.--Section 4714(a) of the
Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2754(a)) is amended--
(A) by striking ``413.3'' and inserting ``413.3B''; and
(B) by inserting ``, or a successor order,'' after
``assets)''.
(24) Unfunded priorities.--
(A) In general.--Section 4716 of the Atomic Energy Defense
Act (50 U.S.C. 2756) is amended in the section heading by
striking ``national nuclear security administration'' and
inserting ``administration''.
(B) Clerical amendment.--The table of contents for the
Atomic Energy Defense Act is amended by striking the item
relating to section 4716 and inserting the following new
item:
``Sec. 4716. Unfunded priorities of the Administration.''.
(25) Reviews of capital assets acquisition projects.--
Section 4733(d)(3)(B) of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50
U.S.C. 2773(d)(3)(B)) is amended by striking ``413.3'' and
inserting ``413.3B''.
(26) Laboratory-directed research and development
programs.--Section 4811 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50
U.S.C. 2791) is amended--
(A) in subsection (a), by inserting ``or the
Administration'' after ``Department of Energy'';
(B) in subsection (b)--
(i) by striking ``The Secretary'' and inserting ``(1)
Except as provided by paragraph (2), the Secretary'';
(ii) by striking ``such laboratories'' and inserting
``government-owned, contractor-operated laboratories funded
out of funds available to the Department of Energy''; and
(iii) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(2) The Administrator shall prescribe regulations for the
conduct of laboratory-directed research and development at
government-owned, contractor-operated laboratories funded out
of funds available to the Administration.''; and
(C) in subsection (c)--
(i) by inserting ``or the Administration'' after
``Department of Energy''; and
(ii) by inserting ``or the Administrator, as applicable,''
after ``Secretary''.
(27) Report on use of funds for research and development.--
Section 4812A of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C.
2793) is amended--
(A) in subsection (a)--
(i) in the subsection heading, by striking ``Required'' and
inserting ``of Secretary of Energy''; and
(ii) in the second sentence, by striking ``national
security mission of the Department of Energy'' and inserting
``defense environmental cleanup and other defense missions of
the Department of Energy (other than the national security
mission of the Administration)'';
(B) by redesignating subsections (b) and (c) as subsections
(c) and (d), respectively; and
(C) by inserting after subsection (a) the following new
subsection (b):
``(b) Report of Administrator.--The Administrator shall
submit to the congressional defense committees, with the
report of the Secretary required by subsection (a), a report
on the funds expended during the preceding fiscal year on
activities under the laboratory-directed research and
development program of the Administration. The purpose of the
report is to permit an assessment of the extent to which such
activities support the national security mission of the
Administration.''.
SEC. 3112. NATIONAL NUCLEAR SECURITY ADMINISTRATION PERSONNEL
SYSTEM.
(a) In General.--Subtitle C of the National Nuclear
Security Administration Act (50 U.S.C. 2441 et seq.) is
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``SEC. 3248. ALTERNATIVE PERSONNEL SYSTEM.
``(a) In General.--The Administrator may adapt the pay
banding and performance-based pay adjustment demonstration
project carried out by the Administration under the authority
provided by section 4703 of title 5, United States Code, into
a permanent alternative personnel system for the
Administration (to be known as the `National Nuclear Security
Administration Personnel System') and implement that system
with respect to employees of the Administration.
``(b) Modifications.--In adapting the demonstration project
described in subsection (a) into a permanent alternative
personnel system, the Administrator--
``(1) may, subject to paragraph (2), revise the
requirements and limitations of the demonstration project to
the extent necessary; and
``(2) shall--
``(A) ensure that the permanent alternative personnel
system is carried out in a manner consistent with the final
plan for the demonstration project published in the Federal
Register on December 21, 2007 (72 Fed. Reg. 72776);
``(B) ensure that significant changes in the system not
take effect until revisions to the plan for the demonstration
project are approved by the Office of Personnel Management
and published in the Federal Register;
``(C) ensure that procedural modifications or
clarifications to the final plan for the demonstration
project be made through local notification processes;
``(D) authorize, and establish incentives for, employees of
the Administration to have rotational assignments among
different programs of the Administration, the headquarters
and field offices of the Administration, and the management
and operating contractors of the Administration; and
``(E) establish requirements for employees of the
Administration who are in the permanent alternative personnel
system described in subsection (a) to be promoted to senior-
level positions in the Administration, including requirements
with respect to--
``(i) professional training and continuing education; and
``(ii) a certain number and types of rotational assignments
under subparagraph (D), as determined by the Administrator.
``(c) Application to Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program.--The
Director of the Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program established
pursuant to section 4101 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50
U.S.C. 2511) and section 3216 of this Act may, with the
concurrence of the Secretary of the Navy, apply the
alternative personnel system under subsection (a) to--
``(1) all employees of the Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program
in the competitive service (as defined in section 2102 of
title 5, United States Code); and
``(2) all employees of the Department of Navy who are
assigned to the Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program and are in
the excepted service (as defined in section 2103 of title 5,
United States Code) (other than such employees in statutory
excepted service systems).''.
(b) Briefing.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act,
[[Page S3521]]
the Administrator for Nuclear Security shall provide a
briefing to the appropriate congressional committees on the
implementation of section 3248 of the National Nuclear
Security Administration Act, as added by subsection (a).
(2) Appropriate congressional committees defined.--In this
subsection, the term ``appropriate congressional committees''
means--
(A) the congressional defense committees;
(B) the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources of the
Senate and the Committee on Energy and Commerce of the House
of Representatives; and
(C) the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental
Affairs of the Senate and the Committee on Oversight and
Government Reform of the House of Representatives.
(c) Conforming Amendments.--Section 3116 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law
115-91) is amended--
(1) by striking subsection (a);
(2) by redesignating subsections (b), (c), and (d) as
subsections (a), (b), and (c), respectively; and
(3) in paragraph (1) of subsection (c), as so
redesignated--
(A) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``implementation of''
and all that follows through ``subsection (b)'' and inserting
``implementation of subsection (a)''; and
(B) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``subsection (c)'' and
inserting ``subsection (b)''.
(d) Clerical Amendment.--The table of contents for the
National Nuclear Security Administration Act is amended by
inserting after the item relating to section 3247 the
following new item:
``Sec. 3248. Alternative personnel system.''.
SEC. 3113. AMENDMENTS TO THE ATOMIC ENERGY ACT OF 1954.
(a) Consultations.--Section 57 b.(2) of the Atomic Energy
Act of 1954 (42 U.S.C. 2077(b)(2)) is amended by inserting
after ``the Department of Defense.'' the following: ``The
Department of State, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the
Department of Commerce, and the Department of Defense shall
submit to the Secretary of Energy their comments on the
determination of the Secretary under the previous sentence
and any information and analysis needed to support their
positions.''.
(b) Delegation of Functions.--Section 161 of the Atomic
Energy Act of 1954 (42 U.S.C. 2201) is amended by striking
subsection n. and inserting the following new subsection n.:
``n. delegate to the General Manager or other officers of
the Commission--
``(1) the functions assigned to the Commission under
section 57 b. on a case-by-case basis consistent with the
national security interests of the United States; and
``(2) any of the other functions assigned to the Commission
under this Act except those specified in section 51, 61, 108,
123, 145 b. (with respect to the determination of those
persons to whom the Commission may reveal Restricted Data in
the national interest), 145 f., or 161 a.;''.
(c) Civil Penalties.--Section 234 a. of the Atomic Energy
Act (42 U.S.C. 2282(a)) is amended--
(1) by striking ``57,''; and
(2) by striking ``or (2)'' and inserting ``(2) violates any
provision of section 57, or (3)''.
(d) Report.--Section 3136(e)(2) of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (42 U.S.C.
2077a(e)(2)) is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (C), by striking ``; and'' and
inserting a semicolon;
(2) by redesignating subparagraph (D) as subparagraph (E);
(3) by inserting after subparagraph (C) the following new
subparagraph (D):
``(D) any delegation of the functions under such section 57
b. made under section 161 n.(1) of that Act, including to
whom such functions were delegated;'';
(4) in subparagraph (E), as redesignated by paragraph (2),
by striking the period at the end and inserting ``; and'';
and
(5) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(F)(i) an explanation and justification of any
determination under paragraph (2) of such section 57 b. that
an authorization to transfer United States civil nuclear
technology to a foreign country is not in the interest of the
United States, and any conditions placed on such an
authorization, including any such determination or conditions
resulting from coordination with the Department of State, the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the Department of Commerce,
and the Department of Defense; and
``(ii) an explanation and justification of any extensions
of the deadlines established under the procedures required by
section 57 b.''.
(e) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that
the Secretary of Energy has the authority to impose civil
penalties for violations of section 57 b.(2) of the Atomic
Energy Act of 1954 (42 U.S.C. 2077(b)(2)), any rule,
regulation, or order issued under that section, or any term,
condition, or limitation of any license or certification
issued under that section.
(f) Regulations.--Not later than one year after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Energy shall--
(1) revise the regulations of the Department of Energy to
reflect the authority of the Secretary to impose civil
penalties for the violations described in subsection (e); or
(2) submit to Congress a report describing--
(A) why the Secretary cannot make such revisions; and
(B) what additional amendments to law would be required to
enable the Secretary to do so.
SEC. 3114. EXTENSION OF ENHANCED PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY TO
MANAGE SUPPLY CHAIN RISK.
Section 4806(g)(3) of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50
U.S.C. 2786(g)(3)) is amended by striking ``four'' and
inserting ``10''.
SEC. 3115. PILOT PROGRAM ON CONDUCT BY DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
OF BACKGROUND REVIEWS FOR ACCESS BY CERTAIN
INDIVIDUALS TO NATIONAL SECURITY LABORATORIES.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Energy shall establish a
pilot program to assess the feasibility and advisability of
conducting background reviews required by section 4502(a) of
the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2652(a)) within the
Department of Energy.
(b) Requirements.--Under the pilot program established
under subsection (a), the Secretary may admit an individual
described in section 4502(a) of the Atomic Energy Defense Act
(50 U.S.C. 2652(a)) to a facility of a national security
laboratory described in that section if, in addition to the
conduct of a background review under subsection (a) with
respect to that individual--
(1) the Secretary determines that the admission of that
individual to that facility is in the national interest and
will further science, technology, and engineering
capabilities in support of the mission of the Department of
Energy; and
(2) a security plan is developed and implemented to
mitigate the risks associated with the admission of that
individual to that facility.
(c) Roles of Secretary and Director of National
Intelligence and Director of Federal Bureau of
Investigation.--
(1) Role of secretary.--Under the pilot program under
subsection (a), the Secretary shall conduct background
reviews for all individuals described in section 4502(a) of
the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2652(a)) seeking
admission to facilities of national security laboratories
described in that section. Such reviews by the Secretary
shall be conducted independent of and in addition to
background reviews conducted by the Director of National
Intelligence and the Director of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation under that section.
(2) Roles of director of national intelligence and director
of federal bureau of investigation.--Notwithstanding
paragraph (1), during the period during which the pilot
program established under subsection (a) is being carried
out, the Director of National Intelligence and the Director
of the Federal Bureau of Investigation shall retain primary
responsibility for the conduct of all background reviews
required by section 4502(a) of the Atomic Energy Defense Act
(50 U.S.C. 2652(a)).
(d) Termination.--The pilot program established under
subsection (a) shall terminate on the date that is two years
after the date of the enactment of this Act.
(e) Report Required.--Not later than 90 days after the date
on which the pilot program established under subsection (a)
terminates under subsection (d), the Secretary of Energy, in
consultation with the Director of National Intelligence and
the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, shall
submit to the appropriate congressional committees a report
on the conduct of background reviews under the pilot program
that includes--
(1) a comparison of the effectiveness of and timelines
required for background reviews conducted by the Secretary
under the pilot program and background reviews conducted by
the Director of National Intelligence and the Director of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation under section 4502(a) of the
Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2652(a)); and
(2) the number of such reviews conducted for individuals
who are citizens or agents of each country on the sensitive
countries list referred to in that section.
(f) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Appropriate congressional committees.--The term
``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
(A) the Committee on Armed Services and the Select
Committee on Intelligence of the Senate; and
(B) the Committee on Armed Services and the Permanent
Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of
Representatives.
(2) National security laboratory.--The term ``national
security laboratory'' has the meaning given that term in
section 4002 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C.
2501).
SEC. 3116. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY FOR ACCEPTANCE OF
CONTRIBUTIONS FOR ACCELERATION OF REMOVAL OR
SECURITY OF FISSILE MATERIALS, RADIOLOGICAL
MATERIALS, AND RELATED EQUIPMENT AT VULNERABLE
SITES WORLDWIDE.
Section 3132(f)(7) of the Ronald W. Reagan National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2005 (50 U.S.C. 2569(f)(7))
is amended by striking ``December 31, 2018'' and inserting
``December 31, 2023''.
SEC. 3117. MODIFICATION OF LIMITATION ON DEVELOPMENT OF LOW-
YIELD NUCLEAR WEAPONS.
(a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
(1) The global posture of strategic nuclear forces has
changed dramatically during the
[[Page S3522]]
10 years preceding the date of the enactment of this Act.
(2) The Government of the Russian Federation--
(A) is violating the Treaty between the United States of
America and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics on the
Elimination of their Intermediate-Range and Shorter-Range
Missiles, signed at Washington December 8, 1987, and entered
into force June 1, 1988 (commonly known as the ``INF
Treaty'');
(B) is expanding its nuclear delivery systems beyond the
limitations provided for under the Treaty between the United
States of America and the Russian Federation on Measures for
the Further Reduction and Limitation of Strategic Offensive
Arms, signed on April 8, 2010, and entered into force on
February 5, 2011 (commonly known as the ``New START
Treaty''); and
(C) has considerable numerical advantages over the United
States in tactical nuclear weapons.
(3) Congress concurs with the findings of the 2018 Nuclear
Posture Review.
(4) United States nuclear forces must adjust to new
strategic realities.
(b) Modification of Limitation.--Section 3116(c) of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2004
(Public Law 108-136; 117 Stat. 1746; 50 U.S.C. 2529 note) is
amended by striking ``specifically authorized by Congress''
and inserting ``the Secretary specifically requests funding
for the development of that weapon pursuant to section
4209(a) of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C.
2529(a))''.
SEC. 3118. PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS FOR TERMINATING
ACTIVITIES AT MOX FACILITY.
(a) In General.--None of the funds authorized to be
appropriated or otherwise made available for the Department
of Energy by this Act or any other Act for any fiscal year
before fiscal year 2020 may be obligated or expended--
(1) to terminate construction and project support
activities at the MOX facility; or
(2) to convert the MOX facility to be used for any purpose
other than its original mission.
(b) Definitions.--In this section, the terms ``MOX
facility'' and ``project support activities'' have the
meanings given those terms in section 3121(c) of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law
115-91).
Subtitle C--Plans and Reports
SEC. 3121. MODIFICATIONS TO COST-BENEFIT ANALYSES FOR
COMPETITION OF MANAGEMENT AND OPERATING
CONTRACTS.
Section 3121 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2013 (Public Law 112-239; 126 Stat. 2175), as
most recently amended by section 3135 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92;
129 Stat. 1207), is further amended--
(1) by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
``(a) Reports Required.--If the Administrator for Nuclear
Security awards a new contract to manage and operate a
facility of the National Nuclear Security Administration, the
Administrator shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report described in subsection (b) with respect
to the contract by not later than 30 days after the
completion of the period required to transition to the
contract.'';
(2) in subsection (b)(3), by inserting ``, the costs of the
transition to the contract from the previous contract,''
after ``conducting the competition''; and
(3) in subsection (d)--
(A) by amending paragraph (2) to read as follows:
``(2) Comprehensive review.--
``(A) Determination.--Except as provided in paragraph (3),
the Comptroller General shall determine, in consultation with
the congressional defense committees, whether to conduct a
comprehensive review of a report required by subsection (a).
``(B) Submission.--The Comptroller General shall submit a
comprehensive review conducted under subparagraph (A) of a
report required by subsection (a) to the congressional
defense committees not later than 3 years after that report
is submitted to such committees.
``(C) Elements.--A comprehensive review conducted under
subparagraph (A) of a report required by subsection (a) shall
include an assessment, based on the most current information
available, of the following:
``(i) The actual cost savings achieved compared to cost
savings estimated under subsection (b)(1), and any increased
costs incurred under the contract that were unexpected or
uncertain at the time the contract was awarded.
``(ii) Any disruptions or delays in mission activities or
deliverables resulting from the competition for the contract
compared to the disruptions and delays estimated under
subsection (b)(4).
``(iii) Whether expected benefits of the competition with
respect to mission performance or operations have been
achieved.
``(iv) Such other matters as the Comptroller General
considers appropriate.''; and
(B) by striking paragraph (3).
SEC. 3122. REVIEW OF DEFENSE ENVIRONMENTAL CLEANUP
ACTIVITIES.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Energy shall enter into
an arrangement with the National Academies of Sciences,
Engineering, and Medicine to conduct a review of the defense
environmental cleanup activities of the Office of
Environmental Management of the Department of Energy.
(b) Elements.--The review conducted under subsection (a)
shall include--
(1) an assessment of--
(A) project management practices with respect to the
activities described in subsection (a);
(B) the outcomes of such activities; and
(C) the appropriateness of the level of engagement and
oversight of the Office of Environmental Management with
respect to such activities; and
(2) recommendations with respect to actions to enhance the
effectiveness of such activities.
SEC. 3123. SURVEY OF WORKFORCE OF NATIONAL SECURITY
LABORATORIES AND NUCLEAR WEAPONS PRODUCTION
FACILITIES.
(a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Administrator for Nuclear
Security shall submit to the congressional defense committees
a report that includes--
(1) a detailed proposal for a survey of the workforce of
the national security laboratories and nuclear weapons
production facilities that is modeled on the Federal Employee
Viewpoint Survey of the Office of Personnel Management;
(2) the determination of the Administrator with respect to
whether to implement the survey; and
(3) if the Administrator determines not to implement the
survey, a description of the reasons for that determination.
(b) Implementation Factors.--The report required by
subsection (a) shall address factors associated with
implementation of the survey described in that subsection,
including--
(1) the costs of designing the survey;
(2) the time required for and the costs of administering
the survey and analyzing the data from the survey;
(3) the periodicity of administering the survey to
ascertain trends; and
(4) any other matters the Administrator considers
appropriate.
(c) Definitions.--In this section, the terms ``national
security laboratory'' and ``nuclear weapons production
facility'' have the meanings given those terms in section
4002 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2501).
SEC. 3124. ELIMINATION OF CERTAIN REPORTS.
(a) Report of Owner's Agent on Hanford Waste Treatment and
Immobilization Plant Contract.--Section 4446 of the Atomic
Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2626) is amended--
(1) by striking subsection (d); and
(2) by redesignating subsections (e) and (f) as subsections
(d) and (e), respectively.
(b) Future-years Defense Environmental Management Plan.--
(1) In general.--Section 4402A of the Atomic Energy Defense
Act (50 U.S.C. 2582a) is repealed.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of contents for the
Atomic Energy Defense Act is amended by striking the item
relating to section 4402A.
(c) Annual Certification of Shipments to Waste Isolation
Pilot Plant.--Section 3115 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328;
130 Stat. 2759) is repealed.
SEC. 3125. IMPLEMENTATION OF NUCLEAR POSTURE REVIEW BY
NATIONAL NUCLEAR SECURITY ADMINISTRATION.
(a) Report Required.--Not later than December 1, 2018, the
Administrator for Nuclear Security shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report on the
implementation of the 2018 Nuclear Posture Review by the
National Nuclear Security Administration.
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall
include the following:
(1) A list of specific actions associated with
implementation of the policies set forth in the 2018 Nuclear
Posture Review applicable to the National Nuclear Security
Administration.
(2) For each such action--
(A) an identification of the office within the
Administration with responsibility for the action; and
(B) key milestones for the action.
(3) A discussion of any challenges to successfully
implementing such actions.
(4) A description of the process established for monitoring
the implementation of such actions.
(5) A description of policy decisions by the Administrator
that are necessary to complete the implementation of such
actions.
TITLE XXXII--DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD
SEC. 3201. AUTHORIZATION.
There are authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year
2019, $31,243,000 for the operation of the Defense Nuclear
Facilities Safety Board under chapter 21 of the Atomic Energy
Act of 1954 (42 U.S.C. 2286 et seq.).
TITLE XXXV--MARITIME ADMINISTRATION
SEC. 3501. MARITIME ADMINISTRATION.
Section 109 of title 49, United States Code, is amended to
read as follows:
``Sec. 109. Maritime Administration
``(a) Organization and Mission.--The Maritime
Administration is an administration in the Department of
Transportation. The mission of the Maritime Administration is
to foster, promote, and develop the merchant maritime
industry of the United States.
``(b) Maritime Administrator.--The head of the Maritime
Administration is the Maritime Administrator, who is
appointed by the
[[Page S3523]]
President by and with the advice and consent of the Senate.
The Administrator shall report directly to the Secretary of
Transportation and carry out the duties prescribed by the
Secretary.
``(c) Deputy Maritime Administrator.--The Maritime
Administration shall have a Deputy Maritime Administrator,
who is appointed in the competitive service by the Secretary,
after consultation with the Administrator. The Deputy
Administrator shall carry out the duties prescribed by the
Administrator. The Deputy Administrator shall be Acting
Administrator during the absence or disability of the
Administrator and, unless the Secretary designates another
individual, during a vacancy in the office of Administrator.
``(d) Duties and Powers Vested in Secretary.--All duties
and powers of the Maritime Administration are vested in the
Secretary.
``(e) Regional Offices.--The Maritime Administration shall
have regional offices for the Atlantic, Gulf, Great Lakes,
and Pacific port ranges, and may have other regional offices
as necessary. The Secretary shall appoint a qualified
individual as Director of each regional office. The Secretary
shall carry out appropriate activities and programs of the
Maritime Administration through the regional offices.
``(f) Interagency and Industry Relations.--The Secretary
shall establish and maintain liaison with other agencies, and
with representative trade organizations throughout the United
States, concerned with the transportation of commodities by
water in the export and import foreign commerce of the United
States, for the purpose of securing preference to vessels of
the United States for the transportation of those
commodities.
``(g) Detailing Officers From Armed Forces.--To assist the
Secretary in carrying out duties and powers relating to the
Maritime Administration, not more than five officers of the
Armed Forces may be detailed to the Secretary at any one
time, in addition to details authorized by any other law.
During the period of a detail, the Secretary shall pay the
officer an amount that, when added to the officer's pay and
allowances as an officer in the Armed Forces, makes the
officer's total pay and allowances equal to the amount that
would be paid to an individual performing work the Secretary
considers to be of similar importance, difficulty, and
responsibility as that performed by the officer during the
detail.
``(h) Contracts, Cooperative Agreements, and Audits.--
``(1) Contracts and cooperative agreements.--In the same
manner that a private corporation may make a contract within
the scope of its authority under its charter, the Secretary
may make contracts and cooperative agreements for the United
States Government and disburse amounts to--
``(A) carry out the Secretary's duties and powers under
this section, subtitle V of title 46, and all other Maritime
Administration programs; and
``(B) protect, preserve, and improve collateral held by the
Secretary to secure indebtedness.
``(2) Audits.--The financial transactions of the Secretary
under paragraph (1) shall be audited by the Comptroller
General. The Comptroller General shall allow credit for an
expenditure shown to be necessary because of the nature of
the business activities authorized by this section or
subtitle V of title 46. At least once a year, the Comptroller
General shall report to Congress any departure by the
Secretary from this section or subtitle V of title 46.
``(i) Grant Administrative Expenses.--Except as otherwise
provided by law, the administrative and related expenses for
the administration of any grant programs by the Maritime
Administrator may not exceed 3 percent.
``(j) Authorization of Appropriations.--
``(1) In general.--Except as otherwise provided in this
subsection, there are authorized to be appropriated such
amounts as may be necessary to carry out the duties and
powers of the Secretary relating to the Maritime
Administration.
``(2) Limitations.--Only those amounts specifically
authorized by law may be appropriated for the use of the
Maritime Administration for--
``(A) acquisition, construction, or reconstruction of
vessels;
``(B) construction-differential subsidies incident to the
construction, reconstruction, or reconditioning of vessels;
``(C) costs of national defense features;
``(D) payments of obligations incurred for operating-
differential subsidies;
``(E) expenses necessary for research and development
activities, including reimbursement of the Vessel Operations
Revolving Fund for losses resulting from expenses of
experimental vessel operations;
``(F) the Vessel Operations Revolving Fund;
``(G) National Defense Reserve Fleet expenses;
``(H) expenses necessary to carry out part B of subtitle V
of title 46; and
``(I) other operations and training expenses related to the
development of waterborne transportation systems, the use of
waterborne transportation systems, and general
administration.''.
SEC. 3502. PERMANENT AUTHORITY OF SECRETARY OF TRANSPORTATION
TO ISSUE VESSEL WAR RISK INSURANCE.
(a) In General.--Section 53912 of title 46, United States
Code, is repealed.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 539 of such title is amended by striking
the item relating to section 53912.
DIVISION D--FUNDING TABLES
SEC. 4001. AUTHORIZATION OF AMOUNTS IN FUNDING TABLES.
(a) In General.--Whenever a funding table in this division
specifies a dollar amount authorized for a project, program,
or activity, the obligation and expenditure of the specified
dollar amount for the project, program, or activity is hereby
authorized, subject to the availability of appropriations.
(b) Merit-based Decisions.--A decision to commit, obligate,
or expend funds with or to a specific entity on the basis of
a dollar amount authorized pursuant to subsection (a) shall--
(1) be based on merit-based selection procedures in
accordance with the requirements of sections 2304(k) and 2374
of title 10, United States Code, or on competitive
procedures; and
(2) comply with other applicable provisions of law.
(c) Relationship to Transfer and Programming Authority.--An
amount specified in the funding tables in this division may
be transferred or reprogrammed under a transfer or
reprogramming authority provided by another provision of this
Act or by other law. The transfer or reprogramming of an
amount specified in such funding tables shall not count
against a ceiling on such transfers or reprogrammings under
section 1001 or section 1522 of this Act or any other
provision of law, unless such transfer or reprogramming would
move funds between appropriation accounts.
(d) Applicability to Classified Annex.--This section
applies to any classified annex that accompanies this Act.
(e) Oral Written Communications.--No oral or written
communication concerning any amount specified in the funding
tables in this division shall supersede the requirements of
this section.
TITLE XLI--PROCUREMENT
SEC. 4101. PROCUREMENT.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4101. PROCUREMENT (In Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2019 Senate
Line Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, ARMY
FIXED WING
2 UTILITY F/W AIRCRAFT............ 744 744
3 MQ-1 UAV........................ 43,326 43,326
4 RQ-11 (RAVEN)................... 46,416 46,416
ROTARY
7 AH-64 APACHE BLOCK IIIA REMAN... 753,248 753,248
8 AH-64 APACHE BLOCK IIIA REMAN AP 174,550 174,550
9 AH-64 APACHE BLOCK IIIB NEW 284,687 284,687
BUILD..........................
10 AH-64 APACHE BLOCK IIIB NEW 58,600 58,600
BUILD AP.......................
11 UH-60 BLACKHAWK M MODEL (MYP)... 988,810 988,810
12 UH-60 BLACKHAWK M MODEL (MYP) AP 106,150 106,150
13 UH-60 BLACK HAWK A AND L MODELS. 146,138 146,138
14 CH-47 HELICOPTER................ 99,278 99,278
15 CH-47 HELICOPTER AP............. 24,235 24,235
MODIFICATION OF AIRCRAFT
18 UNIVERSAL GROUND CONTROL 27,114 27,114
EQUIPMENT (UAS)................
19 GRAY EAGLE MODS2................ 97,781 97,781
20 MULTI SENSOR ABN RECON (MIP).... 52,274 52,274
21 AH-64 MODS...................... 104,996 104,996
22 CH-47 CARGO HELICOPTER MODS 7,807 7,807
(MYP)..........................
23 GRCS SEMA MODS (MIP)............ 5,573 5,573
24 ARL SEMA MODS (MIP)............. 7,522 7,522
[[Page S3524]]
25 EMARSS SEMA MODS (MIP).......... 20,448 20,448
26 UTILITY/CARGO AIRPLANE MODS..... 17,719 17,719
27 UTILITY HELICOPTER MODS......... 6,443 6,443
28 NETWORK AND MISSION PLAN........ 123,614 123,614
29 COMMS, NAV SURVEILLANCE......... 161,969 161,969
30 DEGRADED VISUAL ENVIRONMENT..... 30,000 30,000
31 GATM ROLLUP..................... 26,848 26,848
32 RQ-7 UAV MODS................... 103,246 103,246
33 UAS MODS........................ 17,644 17,644
GROUND SUPPORT AVIONICS
34 AIRCRAFT SURVIVABILITY EQUIPMENT 57,170 57,170
35 SURVIVABILITY CM................ 5,853 5,853
36 CMWS............................ 13,496 13,496
37 COMMON INFRARED COUNTERMEASURES 36,839 36,839
(CIRCM)........................
OTHER SUPPORT
38 AVIONICS SUPPORT EQUIPMENT...... 1,778 1,778
39 COMMON GROUND EQUIPMENT......... 34,818 34,818
40 AIRCREW INTEGRATED SYSTEMS...... 27,243 27,243
41 AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL............. 63,872 63,872
42 INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES........... 1,417 1,417
43 LAUNCHER, 2.75 ROCKET........... 1,901 1,901
44 LAUNCHER GUIDED MISSILE: LONGBOW 991 991
HELLFIRE XM2...................
TOTAL AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, ARMY 3,782,558 3,782,558
MISSILE PROCUREMENT, ARMY
SURFACE-TO-AIR MISSILE SYSTEM
1 LOWER TIER AIR AND MISSILE 111,395 111,395
DEFENSE (AMD)..................
2 MSE MISSILE..................... 871,276 871,276
3 INDIRECT FIRE PROTECTION 145,636 645,636
CAPABILITY INC 2-I.............
Acceleration of cruise [500,000]
missile defense.............
4 INDIRECT FIRE PROTECTION 31,286 31,286
CAPABILITY INC 2-I AP..........
AIR-TO-SURFACE MISSILE SYSTEM
6 JOINT AIR-TO-GROUND MSLS (JAGM). 276,462 276,462
ANTI-TANK/ASSAULT MISSILE SYS
8 JAVELIN (AAWS-M) SYSTEM SUMMARY. 303,665 303,665
9 TOW 2 SYSTEM SUMMARY............ 105,014 105,014
10 TOW 2 SYSTEM SUMMARY AP......... 19,949 19,949
11 GUIDED MLRS ROCKET (GMLRS)...... 359,613 359,613
12 MLRS REDUCED RANGE PRACTICE 20,964 20,964
ROCKETS (RRPR).................
MODIFICATIONS
15 PATRIOT MODS.................... 313,228 313,228
16 ATACMS MODS..................... 221,656 141,656
Requested quantity exceeds [-80,000]
maximum.....................
17 GMLRS MOD....................... 266 266
18 STINGER MODS.................... 94,756 94,756
19 AVENGER MODS.................... 48,670 48,670
20 ITAS/TOW MODS................... 3,173 3,173
21 MLRS MODS....................... 383,216 383,216
22 HIMARS MODIFICATIONS............ 10,196 10,196
SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS
23 SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS......... 27,737 27,737
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT & FACILITIES
24 AIR DEFENSE TARGETS............. 6,417 6,417
25 PRODUCTION BASE SUPPORT......... 1,202 1,202
TOTAL MISSILE PROCUREMENT, ARMY. 3,355,777 3,775,777
PROCUREMENT OF W&TCV, ARMY
TRACKED COMBAT VEHICLES
2 ARMORED MULTI PURPOSE VEHICLE 479,801 379,801
(AMPV).........................
Program decrease............ [-100,000]
MODIFICATION OF TRACKED COMBAT
VEHICLES
4 STRYKER (MOD)................... 287,490 138,100
Army requested transfer..... [-149,390]
5 STRYKER UPGRADE................. 21,900 171,290
Army requested transfer..... [149,390]
6 BRADLEY PROGRAM (MOD)........... 625,424 301,424
Program decrease............ [-324,000]
7 M109 FOV MODIFICATIONS.......... 26,482 26,482
8 PALADIN INTEGRATED MANAGEMENT 351,802 461,802
(PIM)..........................
Program increase............ [110,000]
9 IMPROVED RECOVERY VEHICLE (M88A2 110,500 110,500
HERCULES)......................
10 ASSAULT BRIDGE (MOD)............ 2,120 2,120
11 ASSAULT BREACHER VEHICLE........ 62,407 62,407
12 M88 FOV MODS.................... 4,517 4,517
13 JOINT ASSAULT BRIDGE............ 142,255 142,255
14 M1 ABRAMS TANK (MOD)............ 927,600 927,600
15 ABRAMS UPGRADE PROGRAM.......... 1,075,999 1,075,999
WEAPONS & OTHER COMBAT VEHICLES
18 M240 MEDIUM MACHINE GUN (7.62MM) 1,955 1,955
19 MULTI-ROLE ANTI-ARMOR ANTI- 23,345 23,345
PERSONNEL WEAPON S.............
20 GUN AUTOMATIC 30MM M230......... 7,434 7,434
21 MACHINE GUN, CAL .50 M2 ROLL.... 22,330 22,330
22 MORTAR SYSTEMS.................. 12,470 12,470
23 XM320 GRENADE LAUNCHER MODULE 697 697
(GLM)..........................
24 COMPACT SEMI-AUTOMATIC SNIPER 46,236 46,236
SYSTEM.........................
25 CARBINE......................... 69,306 69,306
26 SMALL ARMS--FIRE CONTROL........ 7,929 7,929
27 COMMON REMOTELY OPERATED WEAPONS 35,968 35,968
STATION........................
28 HANDGUN......................... 48,251 48,251
MOD OF WEAPONS AND OTHER COMBAT
VEH
29 MK-19 GRENADE MACHINE GUN MODS.. 1,684 1,684
30 M777 MODS....................... 3,086 3,086
31 M4 CARBINE MODS................. 31,575 31,575
32 M2 50 CAL MACHINE GUN MODS...... 21,600 21,600
[[Page S3525]]
33 M249 SAW MACHINE GUN MODS....... 3,924 3,924
34 M240 MEDIUM MACHINE GUN MODS.... 6,940 6,940
35 SNIPER RIFLES MODIFICATIONS..... 2,747 2,747
36 M119 MODIFICATIONS.............. 5,704 5,704
37 MORTAR MODIFICATION............. 3,965 3,965
38 MODIFICATIONS LESS THAN $5.0M 5,577 5,577
(WOCV-WTCV)....................
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT & FACILITIES
39 ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M (WOCV- 3,174 3,174
WTCV)..........................
40 PRODUCTION BASE SUPPORT (WOCV- 3,284 3,284
WTCV)..........................
41 SMALL ARMS EQUIPMENT (SOLDIER 1,640 1,640
ENH PROG)......................
TOTAL PROCUREMENT OF W&TCV, ARMY 4,489,118 4,175,118
PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, ARMY
SMALL/MEDIUM CAL AMMUNITION
1 CTG, 5.56MM, ALL TYPES.......... 41,848 35,148
FY2018 Omnibus forward [-6,700]
finance.....................
2 CTG, 7.62MM, ALL TYPES.......... 86,199 86,199
3 CTG, HANDGUN, ALL TYPES......... 20,158 20,158
4 CTG, .50 CAL, ALL TYPES......... 65,573 65,573
5 CTG, 20MM, ALL TYPES............ 8,198 8,198
7 CTG, 30MM, ALL TYPES............ 77,995 77,995
8 CTG, 40MM, ALL TYPES............ 69,781 69,781
MORTAR AMMUNITION
9 60MM MORTAR, ALL TYPES.......... 45,280 45,280
10 81MM MORTAR, ALL TYPES.......... 46,853 46,853
11 120MM MORTAR, ALL TYPES......... 83,003 83,003
TANK AMMUNITION
12 CARTRIDGES, TANK, 105MM AND 168,101 168,101
120MM, ALL TYPES...............
ARTILLERY AMMUNITION
13 ARTILLERY CARTRIDGES, 75MM & 39,341 39,341
105MM, ALL TYPES...............
14 ARTILLERY PROJECTILE, 155MM, ALL 211,442 211,442
TYPES..........................
15 PROJ 155MM EXTENDED RANGE M982.. 100,906 100,906
16 ARTILLERY PROPELLANTS, FUZES AND 236,677 136,677
PRIMERS, ALL...................
Ammunition Cuts............. [-100,000]
MINES
17 MINES & CLEARING CHARGES, ALL 15,905 15,905
TYPES..........................
ROCKETS
18 SHOULDER LAUNCHED MUNITIONS, ALL 4,503 4,503
TYPES..........................
19 ROCKET, HYDRA 70, ALL TYPES..... 211,211 211,211
OTHER AMMUNITION
20 CAD/PAD, ALL TYPES.............. 10,428 10,428
21 DEMOLITION MUNITIONS, ALL TYPES. 44,656 44,656
22 GRENADES, ALL TYPES............. 19,896 19,896
23 SIGNALS, ALL TYPES.............. 10,121 10,121
24 SIMULATORS, ALL TYPES........... 11,464 11,464
MISCELLANEOUS
25 AMMO COMPONENTS, ALL TYPES...... 5,224 5,224
26 NON-LETHAL AMMUNITION, ALL TYPES 4,310 4,310
27 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION 11,193 11,193
(AMMO).........................
28 AMMUNITION PECULIAR EQUIPMENT... 10,500 10,500
29 FIRST DESTINATION TRANSPORTATION 18,456 18,456
(AMMO).........................
30 CLOSEOUT LIABILITIES............ 100 100
PRODUCTION BASE SUPPORT
32 INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES........... 394,133 394,133
33 CONVENTIONAL MUNITIONS 157,535 157,535
DEMILITARIZATION...............
34 ARMS INITIATIVE................. 3,771 3,771
TOTAL PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, 2,234,761 2,128,061
ARMY...........................
OTHER PROCUREMENT, ARMY
TACTICAL VEHICLES
1 TACTICAL TRAILERS/DOLLY SETS.... 16,512 16,512
2 SEMITRAILERS, FLATBED:.......... 16,951 16,951
3 AMBULANCE, 4 LITTER, 5/4 TON, 50,123 50,123
4X4............................
4 GROUND MOBILITY VEHICLES (GMV).. 46,988 46,988
6 JOINT LIGHT TACTICAL VEHICLE.... 1,319,436 1,069,436
Program reduction........... [-250,000]
7 TRUCK, DUMP, 20T (CCE).......... 6,480 6,480
8 FAMILY OF MEDIUM TACTICAL VEH 132,882 132,882
(FMTV).........................
9 FIRETRUCKS & ASSOCIATED 14,842 14,842
FIREFIGHTING EQUIP.............
10 FAMILY OF HEAVY TACTICAL 138,105 138,105
VEHICLES (FHTV)................
12 HVY EXPANDED MOBILE TACTICAL 31,892 31,892
TRUCK EXT SERV.................
13 TACTICAL WHEELED VEHICLE 38,128 38,128
PROTECTION KITS................
14 MODIFICATION OF IN SVC EQUIP.... 78,507 78,507
NON-TACTICAL VEHICLES
16 HEAVY ARMORED VEHICLE........... 790 790
17 PASSENGER CARRYING VEHICLES..... 1,390 1,390
18 NONTACTICAL VEHICLES, OTHER..... 15,415 15,415
COMM--JOINT COMMUNICATIONS
20 SIGNAL MODERNIZATION PROGRAM.... 150,777 150,777
21 TACTICAL NETWORK TECHNOLOGY MOD 469,117 469,117
IN SVC.........................
22 SITUATION INFORMATION TRANSPORT. 62,727 62,727
23 JOINT INCIDENT SITE 13,895 13,895
COMMUNICATIONS CAPABILITY......
24 JCSE EQUIPMENT (USREDCOM)....... 4,866 4,866
COMM--SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS
27 DEFENSE ENTERPRISE WIDEBAND 108,133 108,133
SATCOM SYSTEMS.................
28 TRANSPORTABLE TACTICAL COMMAND 56,737 56,737
COMMUNICATIONS.................
29 SHF TERM........................ 13,100 13,100
30 SMART-T (SPACE)................. 9,160 9,160
31 GLOBAL BRDCST SVC--GBS.......... 25,647 25,647
32 ENROUTE MISSION COMMAND (EMC)... 37,401 37,401
COMM--C3 SYSTEM
36 COE TACTICAL SERVER 20,500 20,500
INFRASTRUCTURE (TSI)...........
COMM--COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS
38 HANDHELD MANPACK SMALL FORM FIT 351,565 351,565
(HMS)..........................
[[Page S3526]]
40 RADIO TERMINAL SET, MIDS LVT(2). 4,641 4,641
41 TRACTOR DESK.................... 2,187 2,187
42 TRACTOR RIDE.................... 9,411 9,411
44 SPIDER FAMILY OF NETWORKED 17,515 17,515
MUNITIONS INCR.................
45 TACTICAL COMMUNICATIONS AND 819 819
PROTECTIVE SYSTEM..............
46 UNIFIED COMMAND SUITE........... 17,807 17,807
47 COTS COMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT... 191,835 191,835
48 FAMILY OF MED COMM FOR COMBAT 25,177 25,177
CASUALTY CARE..................
COMM--INTELLIGENCE COMM
50 CI AUTOMATION ARCHITECTURE (MIP) 9,740 9,740
51 DEFENSE MILITARY DECEPTION 2,667 2,667
INITIATIVE.....................
INFORMATION SECURITY
53 FAMILY OF BIOMETRICS............ 8,319 8,319
54 INFORMATION SYSTEM SECURITY 2,000 2,000
PROGRAM-ISSP...................
55 COMMUNICATIONS SECURITY (COMSEC) 88,337 88,337
56 DEFENSIVE CYBER OPERATIONS...... 51,343 51,343
57 INSIDER THREAT PROGRAM--UNIT 330 330
ACTIVITY MONITO................
58 PERSISTENT CYBER TRAINING 3,000 3,000
ENVIRONMENT....................
COMM--LONG HAUL COMMUNICATIONS
59 BASE SUPPORT COMMUNICATIONS..... 34,434 34,434
COMM--BASE COMMUNICATIONS
60 INFORMATION SYSTEMS............. 95,558 95,558
61 EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT 4,736 4,736
MODERNIZATION PROGRAM..........
62 HOME STATION MISSION COMMAND 24,479 24,479
CENTERS (HSMCC)................
63 INSTALLATION INFO INFRASTRUCTURE 216,433 216,433
MOD PROGRAM....................
ELECT EQUIP--TACT INT REL ACT
(TIARA)
66 JTT/CIBS-M (MIP)................ 10,268 10,268
68 DCGS-A (MIP).................... 261,863 261,863
69 JOINT TACTICAL GROUND STATION 5,434 5,434
(JTAGS) (MIP)..................
70 TROJAN (MIP).................... 20,623 20,623
71 MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP (INTEL SPT) 45,998 47,798
(MIP)..........................
SOUTHCOM SIGINT Suite COMSAT [1,800]
RF..........................
72 CI HUMINT AUTO REPRTING & 296 296
COLL(CHARCS)(MIP)..............
76 ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M (MIP)..... 410 410
ELECT EQUIP--ELECTRONIC WARFARE
(EW)
77 LIGHTWEIGHT COUNTER MORTAR RADAR 9,165 9,165
78 EW PLANNING & MANAGEMENT TOOLS 5,875 5,875
(EWPMT)........................
79 AIR VIGILANCE (AV) (MIP)........ 8,497 8,497
83 CI MODERNIZATION (MIP).......... 486 486
ELECT EQUIP--TACTICAL SURV. (TAC
SURV)
84 SENTINEL MODS................... 79,629 79,629
85 NIGHT VISION DEVICES............ 153,180 153,180
87 SMALL TACTICAL OPTICAL RIFLE 22,882 22,882
MOUNTED MLRF...................
88 RADIATION MONITORING SYSTEMS.... 17,393 17,393
90 INDIRECT FIRE PROTECTION FAMILY 46,740 46,740
OF SYSTEMS.....................
91 FAMILY OF WEAPON SIGHTS (FWS)... 140,737 140,737
93 PROFILER........................ 171 171
94 JOINT BATTLE COMMAND--PLATFORM 405,239 405,239
(JBC-P)........................
95 JOINT EFFECTS TARGETING SYSTEM 66,574 66,574
(JETS).........................
96 MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP (LLDR)...... 20,783 20,783
97 COMPUTER BALLISTICS: LHMBC XM32. 8,553 8,553
98 MORTAR FIRE CONTROL SYSTEM...... 21,489 21,489
99 COUNTERFIRE RADARS.............. 162,121 162,121
ELECT EQUIP--TACTICAL C2 SYSTEMS
100 ARMY COMMAND POST INTEGRATED 2,855 2,855
INFRASTRUCTURE (...............
101 FIRE SUPPORT C2 FAMILY.......... 19,153 19,153
102 AIR & MSL DEFENSE PLANNING & 33,837 33,837
CONTROL SYS....................
103 LIFE CYCLE SOFTWARE SUPPORT 5,136 5,136
(LCSS).........................
104 NETWORK MANAGEMENT 18,329 18,329
INITIALIZATION AND SERVICE.....
105 MANEUVER CONTROL SYSTEM (MCS)... 38,015 38,015
106 GLOBAL COMBAT SUPPORT SYSTEM- 15,164 15,164
ARMY (GCSS-A)..................
107 INTEGRATED PERSONNEL AND PAY 29,239 29,239
SYSTEM-ARMY (IPP...............
109 RECONNAISSANCE AND SURVEYING 6,823 6,823
INSTRUMENT SET.................
110 MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIPMENT (ENFIRE) 1,177 1,177
ELECT EQUIP--AUTOMATION
111 ARMY TRAINING MODERNIZATION..... 12,265 12,265
112 AUTOMATED DATA PROCESSING EQUIP. 201,875 186,875
Consolidating more IT [-15,000]
purchases...................
113 GENERAL FUND ENTERPRISE BUSINESS 10,976 10,976
SYSTEMS FAM....................
114 HIGH PERF COMPUTING MOD PGM 66,330 66,330
(HPCMP)........................
115 CONTRACT WRITING SYSTEM......... 5,927 5,927
116 RESERVE COMPONENT AUTOMATION SYS 27,896 27,896
(RCAS).........................
ELECT EQUIP--AUDIO VISUAL SYS (A/
V)
117 TACTICAL DIGITAL MEDIA.......... 4,392 4,392
118 ITEMS LESS THAN $5M (SURVEYING 1,970 1,970
EQUIPMENT).....................
ELECT EQUIP--SUPPORT
119 PRODUCTION BASE SUPPORT (C-E)... 506 506
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............. 4,501 4,501
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
CHEMICAL DEFENSIVE EQUIPMENT
121 PROTECTIVE SYSTEMS.............. 2,314 2,314
122 FAMILY OF NON-LETHAL EQUIPMENT 7,478 7,478
(FNLE).........................
124 CBRN DEFENSE.................... 173,954 173,954
BRIDGING EQUIPMENT
125 TACTICAL BRIDGING............... 98,229 98,229
126 TACTICAL BRIDGE, FLOAT-RIBBON... 64,438 64,438
127 COMMON BRIDGE TRANSPORTER (CBT) 79,916 79,916
RECAP..........................
ENGINEER (NON-CONSTRUCTION)
EQUIPMENT
128 HANDHELD STANDOFF MINEFIELD 8,471 8,471
DETECTION SYS-HST..............
129 GRND STANDOFF MINE DETECTN SYSM 29,883 29,883
(GSTAMIDS).....................
130 AREA MINE DETECTION SYSTEM 11,594 11,594
(AMDS).........................
131 HUSKY MOUNTED DETECTION SYSTEM 40,834 40,834
(HMDS).........................
132 ROBOTIC COMBAT SUPPORT SYSTEM 4,029 4,029
(RCSS).........................
133 EOD ROBOTICS SYSTEMS 14,208 14,208
RECAPITALIZATION...............
[[Page S3527]]
134 ROBOTICS AND APPLIQUE SYSTEMS... 31,456 31,456
136 REMOTE DEMOLITION SYSTEMS....... 1,748 1,748
137 < $5M, COUNTERMINE EQUIPMENT.... 7,829 7,829
138 FAMILY OF BOATS AND MOTORS...... 5,806 5,806
COMBAT SERVICE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
139 HEATERS AND ECU'S............... 9,852 9,852
140 SOLDIER ENHANCEMENT............. 1,103 1,103
141 PERSONNEL RECOVERY SUPPORT 5,875 5,875
SYSTEM (PRSS)..................
142 GROUND SOLDIER SYSTEM........... 92,487 92,487
143 MOBILE SOLDIER POWER............ 30,774 30,774
145 FIELD FEEDING EQUIPMENT......... 17,521 17,521
146 CARGO AERIAL DEL & PERSONNEL 44,855 44,855
PARACHUTE SYSTEM...............
147 FAMILY OF ENGR COMBAT AND 17,173 17,173
CONSTRUCTION SETS..............
148 ITEMS LESS THAN $5M (ENG SPT)... 2,000 2,000
PETROLEUM EQUIPMENT
149 QUALITY SURVEILLANCE EQUIPMENT.. 1,770 1,770
150 DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS, PETROLEUM 39,730 39,730
& WATER........................
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
151 COMBAT SUPPORT MEDICAL.......... 57,752 57,752
MAINTENANCE EQUIPMENT
152 MOBILE MAINTENANCE EQUIPMENT 37,722 37,722
SYSTEMS........................
153 ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M (MAINT EQ) 4,985 4,985
CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT
155 SCRAPERS, EARTHMOVING........... 7,961 7,961
156 HYDRAULIC EXCAVATOR............. 1,355 1,355
158 ALL TERRAIN CRANES.............. 13,031 13,031
159 HIGH MOBILITY ENGINEER EXCAVATOR 46,048 46,048
(HMEE).........................
160 ENHANCED RAPID AIRFIELD 980 980
CONSTRUCTION CAPAP.............
161 CONST EQUIP ESP................. 37,017 37,017
162 ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M (CONST 6,103 6,103
EQUIP).........................
RAIL FLOAT CONTAINERIZATION
EQUIPMENT
163 ARMY WATERCRAFT ESP............. 27,711 27,711
164 ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M (FLOAT/ 8,385 8,385
RAIL)..........................
GENERATORS
165 GENERATORS AND ASSOCIATED EQUIP. 133,772 133,772
166 TACTICAL ELECTRIC POWER 8,333 8,333
RECAPITALIZATION...............
MATERIAL HANDLING EQUIPMENT
167 FAMILY OF FORKLIFTS............. 12,901 12,901
TRAINING EQUIPMENT
168 COMBAT TRAINING CENTERS SUPPORT. 123,228 123,228
169 TRAINING DEVICES, NONSYSTEM..... 228,598 228,598
170 CLOSE COMBAT TACTICAL TRAINER... 33,080 33,080
171 AVIATION COMBINED ARMS TACTICAL 32,700 32,700
TRAINER........................
172 GAMING TECHNOLOGY IN SUPPORT OF 25,161 25,161
ARMY TRAINING..................
TEST MEASURE AND DIG EQUIPMENT
(TMD)
173 CALIBRATION SETS EQUIPMENT...... 4,270 4,270
174 INTEGRATED FAMILY OF TEST 76,295 76,295
EQUIPMENT (IFTE)...............
175 TEST EQUIPMENT MODERNIZATION 9,806 9,806
(TEMOD)........................
OTHER SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
176 M25 STABILIZED BINOCULAR........ 4,368 4,368
177 RAPID EQUIPPING SOLDIER SUPPORT 9,879 9,879
EQUIPMENT......................
178 PHYSICAL SECURITY SYSTEMS (OPA3) 54,043 54,043
179 BASE LEVEL COMMON EQUIPMENT..... 6,633 6,633
180 MODIFICATION OF IN-SVC EQUIPMENT 49,797 49,797
(OPA-3)........................
181 PRODUCTION BASE SUPPORT (OTH)... 2,301 2,301
182 SPECIAL EQUIPMENT FOR USER 11,608 11,608
TESTING........................
183 TRACTOR YARD.................... 4,956 4,956
OPA2
184 INITIAL SPARES--C&E............. 9,817 9,817
TOTAL OTHER PROCUREMENT, ARMY... 7,999,529 7,736,329
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, NAVY
COMBAT AIRCRAFT
1 F/A-18E/F (FIGHTER) HORNET...... 1,937,553 1,937,553
2 F/A-18E/F (FIGHTER) HORNET AP... 58,799 58,799
3 JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER CV......... 1,144,958 1,023,958
Program Realignment......... [-121,000]
4 JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER CV AP...... 140,010 140,010
5 JSF STOVL....................... 2,312,847 2,312,847
6 JSF STOVL AP.................... 228,492 228,492
7 CH-53K (HEAVY LIFT)............. 1,113,804 1,113,804
8 CH-53K (HEAVY LIFT) AP.......... 161,079 161,079
9 V-22 (MEDIUM LIFT).............. 806,337 806,337
10 V-22 (MEDIUM LIFT) AP........... 36,955 36,955
11 H-1 UPGRADES (UH-1Y/AH-1Z)...... 820,755 820,755
14 P-8A POSEIDON................... 1,803,753 1,803,753
15 P-8A POSEIDON AP................ 180,000 180,000
16 E-2D ADV HAWKEYE................ 742,693 917,693
UPL--1 additional Aircraft.. [175,000]
17 E-2D ADV HAWKEYE AP............. 240,734 240,734
71 O/A-X LIGHT ATTACK AIRCRAFT..... 0 100,000
Initial procurement for [100,000]
light attack aircraft.......
AIRLIFT AIRCRAFT
18 C-40A........................... 206,000 0
Funded in FY18 Omnibus...... [-206,000]
OTHER AIRCRAFT
20 KC-130J......................... 160,433 160,433
21 KC-130J AP...................... 110,013 110,013
22 MQ-4 TRITON..................... 568,743 568,743
23 MQ-4 TRITON AP.................. 58,522 58,522
24 MQ-8 UAV........................ 54,761 54,761
25 STUASL0 UAV..................... 14,866 14,866
26 VH-92A EXECUTIVE HELO........... 649,015 649,015
72 UAV............................. 0 100,000
[[Page S3528]]
Procurement of UAV.......... [100,000]
MODIFICATION OF AIRCRAFT
27 AEA SYSTEMS..................... 25,277 25,277
28 AV-8 SERIES..................... 58,577 58,577
29 ADVERSARY....................... 14,606 14,606
30 F-18 SERIES..................... 1,213,482 1,227,382
UPL--EA-18G Advanced Modes / [13,900]
Cognitive EW................
31 H-53 SERIES..................... 70,997 70,997
32 SH-60 SERIES.................... 130,661 130,661
33 H-1 SERIES...................... 87,143 87,143
34 EP-3 SERIES..................... 3,633 3,633
35 P-3 SERIES...................... 803 803
36 E-2 SERIES...................... 88,780 88,780
37 TRAINER A/C SERIES.............. 11,660 11,660
38 C-2A............................ 11,327 11,327
39 C-130 SERIES.................... 79,075 79,075
40 FEWSG........................... 597 597
41 CARGO/TRANSPORT A/C SERIES...... 8,932 8,932
42 E-6 SERIES...................... 181,821 181,821
43 EXECUTIVE HELICOPTERS SERIES.... 23,566 23,566
44 SPECIAL PROJECT AIRCRAFT........ 7,620 7,620
45 T-45 SERIES..................... 195,475 195,475
46 POWER PLANT CHANGES............. 21,521 21,521
47 JPATS SERIES.................... 27,644 27,644
48 AVIATION LIFE SUPPORT MODS...... 15,864 15,864
49 COMMON ECM EQUIPMENT............ 166,306 191,306
UPL--F/A-18 E/F Adaptative [25,000]
Radar Countermeasures.......
50 COMMON AVIONICS CHANGES......... 117,551 117,551
51 COMMON DEFENSIVE WEAPON SYSTEM.. 1,994 1,994
52 ID SYSTEMS...................... 40,696 40,696
53 P-8 SERIES...................... 71,251 71,251
54 MAGTF EW FOR AVIATION........... 11,590 11,590
55 MQ-8 SERIES..................... 37,907 37,907
57 V-22 (TILT/ROTOR ACFT) OSPREY... 214,820 214,820
58 NEXT GENERATION JAMMER (NGJ).... 952 952
59 F-35 STOVL SERIES............... 36,618 70,118
F-35B Modifications Increase [33,500]
60 F-35 CV SERIES.................. 21,236 26,236
F-35C Modifications Increase [5,000]
61 QRC............................. 101,499 101,499
62 MQ-4 SERIES..................... 48,278 48,278
63 RQ-21 SERIES.................... 6,904 6,904
AIRCRAFT SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS
64 SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS......... 1,792,920 1,842,920
F-35B and F-35C spares [50,000]
quantity increase...........
AIRCRAFT SUPPORT EQUIP &
FACILITIES
65 COMMON GROUND EQUIPMENT......... 421,606 421,606
66 AIRCRAFT INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES.. 24,496 24,496
67 WAR CONSUMABLES................. 42,108 42,108
68 OTHER PRODUCTION CHARGES........ 1,444 1,444
69 SPECIAL SUPPORT EQUIPMENT....... 49,489 49,489
70 FIRST DESTINATION TRANSPORTATION 1,951 1,951
TOTAL AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, NAVY 19,041,799 19,217,199
WEAPONS PROCUREMENT, NAVY
MODIFICATION OF MISSILES
1 TRIDENT II MODS................. 1,078,750 1,078,750
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT & FACILITIES
2 MISSILE INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES... 6,998 6,998
STRATEGIC MISSILES
3 TOMAHAWK........................ 98,570 98,570
TACTICAL MISSILES
4 AMRAAM.......................... 211,058 211,058
5 SIDEWINDER...................... 77,927 122,927
Navy UPL: Increase to [45,000]
maximum capacity............
6 JSOW............................ 1,330 1,330
7 STANDARD MISSILE................ 490,210 490,210
8 STANDARD MISSILE AP............. 125,683 125,683
9 SMALL DIAMETER BOMB II.......... 91,272 91,272
10 RAM............................. 96,221 96,221
11 JOINT AIR GROUND MISSILE (JAGM). 24,109 24,109
14 STAND OFF PRECISION GUIDED 11,378 11,378
MUNITIONS (SOPGM)..............
15 AERIAL TARGETS.................. 137,137 137,137
16 OTHER MISSILE SUPPORT........... 3,318 3,318
17 LRASM........................... 81,190 111,190
Navy UPL: Increase to [30,000]
maximum capacity............
18 LCS OTH MISSILE................. 18,156 18,156
MODIFICATION OF MISSILES
19 ESSM............................ 98,384 98,384
20 HARPOON MODS.................... 14,840 26,840
Navy UPL: Increase to max [12,000]
capacity....................
21 HARM MODS....................... 187,985 74,085
Reduce procurement due to [-113,900]
test results................
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT & FACILITIES
23 WEAPONS INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES... 2,006 2,006
24 FLEET SATELLITE COMM FOLLOW-ON.. 66,779 66,779
ORDNANCE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
25 ORDNANCE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT...... 62,008 62,008
TORPEDOES AND RELATED EQUIP
26 SSTD............................ 6,353 6,353
27 MK-48 TORPEDO................... 92,616 103,616
Navy UPL: Increase to [11,000]
maximum capacity............
28 ASW TARGETS..................... 12,324 12,324
MOD OF TORPEDOES AND RELATED
EQUIP
[[Page S3529]]
29 MK-54 TORPEDO MODS.............. 105,946 105,946
30 MK-48 TORPEDO ADCAP MODS........ 40,005 40,005
31 QUICKSTRIKE MINE................ 9,758 9,758
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
32 TORPEDO SUPPORT EQUIPMENT....... 79,371 79,371
33 ASW RANGE SUPPORT............... 3,872 3,872
DESTINATION TRANSPORTATION
34 FIRST DESTINATION TRANSPORTATION 3,726 3,726
GUNS AND GUN MOUNTS
35 SMALL ARMS AND WEAPONS.......... 15,067 15,067
MODIFICATION OF GUNS AND GUN
MOUNTS
36 CIWS MODS....................... 63,318 63,318
37 COAST GUARD WEAPONS............. 40,823 40,823
38 GUN MOUNT MODS.................. 74,618 74,618
39 LCS MODULE WEAPONS.............. 11,350 5,350
Early to need............... [-6,000]
41 AIRBORNE MINE NEUTRALIZATION 22,249 22,249
SYSTEMS........................
SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS
43 SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS......... 135,688 135,688
TOTAL WEAPONS PROCUREMENT, NAVY. 3,702,393 3,680,493
PROCUREMENT OF AMMO, NAVY & MC
NAVY AMMUNITION
1 GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS........... 79,871 79,871
2 JDAM............................ 87,900 87,900
3 AIRBORNE ROCKETS, ALL TYPES..... 151,431 151,431
4 MACHINE GUN AMMUNITION.......... 11,344 11,344
5 PRACTICE BOMBS.................. 49,471 49,471
6 CARTRIDGES & CART ACTUATED 56,227 56,227
DEVICES........................
7 AIR EXPENDABLE COUNTERMEASURES.. 66,382 66,382
8 JATOS........................... 2,907 2,907
9 5 INCH/54 GUN AMMUNITION........ 72,657 72,657
10 INTERMEDIATE CALIBER GUN 33,613 20,613
AMMUNITION.....................
Alamo LRIP ahead of testing. [-13,000]
11 OTHER SHIP GUN AMMUNITION....... 42,142 42,142
12 SMALL ARMS & LANDING PARTY AMMO. 49,888 49,888
13 PYROTECHNIC AND DEMOLITION...... 10,931 10,931
15 AMMUNITION LESS THAN $5 MILLION. 1,106 1,106
MARINE CORPS AMMUNITION
19 MORTARS......................... 28,266 28,266
21 DIRECT SUPPORT MUNITIONS........ 63,664 63,664
22 INFANTRY WEAPONS AMMUNITION..... 59,295 59,295
26 COMBAT SUPPORT MUNITIONS........ 31,577 31,577
28 AMMO MODERNIZATION.............. 15,001 15,001
29 ARTILLERY MUNITIONS............. 86,297 86,297
30 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION...... 6,239 6,239
TOTAL PROCUREMENT OF AMMO, NAVY 1,006,209 993,209
& MC...........................
SHIPBUILDING AND CONVERSION,
NAVY
FLEET BALLISTIC MISSILE SHIPS
1 OHIO REPLACEMENT SUBMARINE AP... 3,005,330 3,005,330
OTHER WARSHIPS
2 CARRIER REPLACEMENT PROGRAM..... 1,598,181 1,598,181
4 VIRGINIA CLASS SUBMARINE........ 4,373,382 4,373,382
5 VIRGINIA CLASS SUBMARINE AP..... 2,796,401 3,046,401
FY19-23 MYP EOQ or SIB [250,000]
expansion...................
7 CVN REFUELING OVERHAULS AP...... 449,597 449,597
8 DDG 1000........................ 270,965 0
Cost growth transfer to Line [-270,965]
28..........................
9 DDG-51.......................... 5,253,327 5,225,827
Multiyear procurement [-27,500]
contract savings............
10 DDG-51 AP....................... 391,928 641,928
Enable greater long lead [250,000]
material procurement........
11 LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP............ 646,244 576,244
Align Plans and Other costs [-70,000]
with end of production......
AMPHIBIOUS SHIPS
12 LPD -17......................... 0 650,000
AP for FY2020 LPD Flight II [650,000]
and/or MYP EOQ..............
13 EXPEDITIONARY SEA BASE (ESB).... 650,000 650,000
AUXILIARIES, CRAFT AND PRIOR YR
PROGRAM COST
16 TAO FLEET OILER................. 977,104 977,104
17 TAO FLEET OILER AP.............. 75,046 75,046
18 TOWING, SALVAGE, AND RESCUE SHIP 80,517 80,517
(ATS)..........................
20 LCU 1700........................ 41,520 41,520
21 OUTFITTING...................... 634,038 562,038
Unjustified cost growth..... [-72,000]
22 SHIP TO SHORE CONNECTOR......... 325,375 325,375
23 SERVICE CRAFT................... 72,062 97,062
Accelerate detail design and [25,000]
construction of YP-703
Flight II...................
24 LCAC SLEP....................... 23,321 23,321
28 COMPLETION OF PY SHIPBUILDING 207,099 478,064
PROGRAMS.......................
Cost growth transfer from [270,965]
Line 8......................
29 CABLE SHIP...................... 0 250,000
Program increase............ [250,000]
TOTAL SHIPBUILDING AND 21,871,437 23,126,937
CONVERSION, NAVY...............
OTHER PROCUREMENT, NAVY
SHIP PROPULSION EQUIPMENT
1 SURFACE POWER EQUIPMENT......... 19,700 19,700
GENERATORS
3 SURFACE COMBATANT HM&E.......... 23,495 23,495
NAVIGATION EQUIPMENT
4 OTHER NAVIGATION EQUIPMENT...... 63,330 73,330
Accelerate ECDIS-N 9.3, 9.4, [10,000]
9.5 implementation..........
[[Page S3530]]
OTHER SHIPBOARD EQUIPMENT
5 SUB PERISCOPE, IMAGING AND SUPT 178,421 178,421
EQUIP PROG.....................
6 DDG MOD......................... 487,999 487,999
7 FIREFIGHTING EQUIPMENT.......... 28,143 28,143
8 COMMAND AND CONTROL SWITCHBOARD. 2,248 2,248
9 LHA/LHD MIDLIFE................. 37,694 37,694
10 POLLUTION CONTROL EQUIPMENT..... 20,883 20,883
11 SUBMARINE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT..... 37,155 37,155
12 VIRGINIA CLASS SUPPORT EQUIPMENT 66,328 66,328
13 LCS CLASS SUPPORT EQUIPMENT..... 47,241 47,241
14 SUBMARINE BATTERIES............. 27,987 27,987
15 LPD CLASS SUPPORT EQUIPMENT..... 65,033 65,033
16 DDG 1000 CLASS SUPPORT EQUIPMENT 89,700 51,300
Procurement early to need... [-38,400]
17 STRATEGIC PLATFORM SUPPORT EQUIP 22,254 22,254
18 DSSP EQUIPMENT.................. 3,629 3,629
19 CG MODERNIZATION................ 276,446 276,446
20 LCAC............................ 3,709 3,709
21 UNDERWATER EOD PROGRAMS......... 78,807 78,807
22 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION...... 126,865 101,865
Insufficient justification [-25,000]
for CVN-78 in-service
requirements................
23 CHEMICAL WARFARE DETECTORS...... 2,966 2,966
24 SUBMARINE LIFE SUPPORT SYSTEM... 11,968 11,968
REACTOR PLANT EQUIPMENT
25 REACTOR POWER UNITS............. 346,325 346,325
26 REACTOR COMPONENTS.............. 497,063 497,063
OCEAN ENGINEERING
27 DIVING AND SALVAGE EQUIPMENT.... 10,706 10,706
SMALL BOATS
28 STANDARD BOATS.................. 49,771 49,771
PRODUCTION FACILITIES EQUIPMENT
29 OPERATING FORCES IPE............ 225,181 225,181
OTHER SHIP SUPPORT
31 LCS COMMON MISSION MODULES 46,732 46,732
EQUIPMENT......................
32 LCS MCM MISSION MODULES......... 124,147 152,063
Transfer Cobra trainer from [8,616]
Line 53.....................
Transfer Knifefish and UISS [19,300]
trainers from Line 52.......
33 LCS ASW MISSION MODULES......... 57,294 39,294
Excess procurement ahead of [-18,000]
satisfactory testing........
34 LCS SUW MISSION MODULES......... 26,006 14,506
Excess procurement ahead of [-11,500]
satisfactory testing........
35 LCS IN-SERVICE MODERNIZATION.... 70,526 70,526
LOGISTIC SUPPORT
36 LSD MIDLIFE & MODERNIZATION..... 4,784 4,784
SHIP SONARS
37 SPQ-9B RADAR.................... 20,309 20,309
38 AN/SQQ-89 SURF ASW COMBAT SYSTEM 115,459 115,459
39 SSN ACOUSTIC EQUIPMENT.......... 318,189 318,189
40 UNDERSEA WARFARE SUPPORT 10,134 10,134
EQUIPMENT......................
ASW ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT
41 SUBMARINE ACOUSTIC WARFARE 23,815 23,815
SYSTEM.........................
42 SSTD............................ 11,277 6,277
AN/SLQ-32E contract delay... [-5,000]
43 FIXED SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM....... 237,780 237,780
44 SURTASS......................... 57,872 57,872
ELECTRONIC WARFARE EQUIPMENT
45 AN/SLQ-32....................... 420,344 420,344
RECONNAISSANCE EQUIPMENT
46 SHIPBOARD IW EXPLOIT............ 220,883 220,883
47 AUTOMATED IDENTIFICATION SYSTEM 4,028 4,028
(AIS)..........................
OTHER SHIP ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT
48 COOPERATIVE ENGAGEMENT 44,173 38,173
CAPABILITY.....................
Common Array Block antenna [-6,000]
program delay...............
49 NAVAL TACTICAL COMMAND SUPPORT 10,991 10,991
SYSTEM (NTCSS).................
50 ATDLS........................... 34,526 34,526
51 NAVY COMMAND AND CONTROL SYSTEM 3,769 3,769
(NCCS).........................
52 MINESWEEPING SYSTEM REPLACEMENT. 35,709 16,409
Transfer Knifefish and UISS [-19,300]
trainers to Line 32.........
53 SHALLOW WATER MCM............... 8,616 0
Transfer Cobra trainer to [-8,616]
Line 32.....................
54 NAVSTAR GPS RECEIVERS (SPACE)... 10,703 10,703
55 AMERICAN FORCES RADIO AND TV 2,626 2,626
SERVICE........................
56 STRATEGIC PLATFORM SUPPORT EQUIP 9,467 9,467
AVIATION ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT
57 ASHORE ATC EQUIPMENT............ 70,849 70,849
58 AFLOAT ATC EQUIPMENT............ 47,890 47,890
59 ID SYSTEMS...................... 26,163 26,163
60 JOINT PRECISION APPROACH AND 38,094 38,094
LANDING SYSTEM (...............
61 NAVAL MISSION PLANNING SYSTEMS.. 11,966 11,966
OTHER SHORE ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT
62 TACTICAL/MOBILE C4I SYSTEMS..... 42,010 42,010
63 DCGS-N.......................... 12,896 12,896
64 CANES........................... 423,027 423,027
65 RADIAC.......................... 8,175 8,175
66 CANES-INTELL.................... 54,465 54,465
67 GPETE........................... 5,985 5,985
68 MASF............................ 5,413 5,413
69 INTEG COMBAT SYSTEM TEST 6,251 6,251
FACILITY.......................
70 EMI CONTROL INSTRUMENTATION..... 4,183 4,183
71 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION...... 148,350 142,950
NGSSR installation funding [-5,400]
early to need...............
SHIPBOARD COMMUNICATIONS
72 SHIPBOARD TACTICAL 45,450 45,450
COMMUNICATIONS.................
73 SHIP COMMUNICATIONS AUTOMATION.. 105,087 105,087
[[Page S3531]]
74 COMMUNICATIONS ITEMS UNDER $5M.. 41,123 41,123
SUBMARINE COMMUNICATIONS
75 SUBMARINE BROADCAST SUPPORT..... 30,897 30,897
76 SUBMARINE COMMUNICATION 78,580 78,580
EQUIPMENT......................
SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS
77 SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS 41,205 41,205
78 NAVY MULTIBAND TERMINAL (NMT)... 113,885 113,885
SHORE COMMUNICATIONS
79 JOINT COMMUNICATIONS SUPPORT 4,292 4,292
ELEMENT (JCSE).................
CRYPTOGRAPHIC EQUIPMENT
80 INFO SYSTEMS SECURITY PROGRAM 153,526 153,526
(ISSP).........................
81 MIO INTEL EXPLOITATION TEAM..... 951 951
CRYPTOLOGIC EQUIPMENT
82 CRYPTOLOGIC COMMUNICATIONS EQUIP 14,209 17,009
SOUTHCOM CCO Sensor (2 [2,800]
suites).....................
OTHER ELECTRONIC SUPPORT
86 COAST GUARD EQUIPMENT........... 40,713 40,713
SONOBUOYS
88 SONOBUOYS--ALL TYPES............ 177,891 213,891
Navy UPL.................... [36,000]
AIRCRAFT SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
89 WEAPONS RANGE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT. 93,864 93,864
90 AIRCRAFT SUPPORT EQUIPMENT...... 111,724 111,724
91 ADVANCED ARRESTING GEAR (AAG)... 11,054 11,054
92 METEOROLOGICAL EQUIPMENT........ 21,072 21,072
93 DCRS/DPL........................ 656 656
94 AIRBORNE MINE COUNTERMEASURES... 11,299 11,299
95 LAMPS EQUIPMENT................. 594 594
96 AVIATION SUPPORT EQUIPMENT...... 39,374 39,374
97 UMCS-UNMAN CARRIER 35,405 35,405
AVIATION(UCA)MISSION CNTRL.....
SHIP GUN SYSTEM EQUIPMENT
98 SHIP GUN SYSTEMS EQUIPMENT...... 5,337 5,337
SHIP MISSILE SYSTEMS EQUIPMENT
99 SHIP MISSILE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.. 213,090 213,090
100 TOMAHAWK SUPPORT EQUIPMENT...... 92,890 92,890
FBM SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
101 STRATEGIC MISSILE SYSTEMS EQUIP. 271,817 271,817
ASW SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
102 SSN COMBAT CONTROL SYSTEMS...... 129,501 129,501
103 ASW SUPPORT EQUIPMENT........... 19,436 19,436
OTHER ORDNANCE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
104 EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE DISPOSAL 14,258 14,258
EQUIP..........................
105 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION...... 5,378 5,378
OTHER EXPENDABLE ORDNANCE
106 SUBMARINE TRAINING DEVICE MODS.. 65,543 65,543
107 SURFACE TRAINING EQUIPMENT...... 230,425 230,425
CIVIL ENGINEERING SUPPORT
EQUIPMENT
108 PASSENGER CARRYING VEHICLES..... 4,867 4,867
109 GENERAL PURPOSE TRUCKS.......... 2,674 2,674
110 CONSTRUCTION & MAINTENANCE EQUIP 20,994 20,994
111 FIRE FIGHTING EQUIPMENT......... 17,189 17,189
112 TACTICAL VEHICLES............... 19,916 19,916
113 AMPHIBIOUS EQUIPMENT............ 7,400 7,400
114 POLLUTION CONTROL EQUIPMENT..... 2,713 2,713
115 ITEMS UNDER $5 MILLION.......... 35,540 35,540
116 PHYSICAL SECURITY VEHICLES...... 1,155 1,155
SUPPLY SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
117 SUPPLY EQUIPMENT................ 18,786 18,786
118 FIRST DESTINATION TRANSPORTATION 5,375 5,375
119 SPECIAL PURPOSE SUPPLY SYSTEMS.. 580,371 580,371
TRAINING DEVICES
120 TRAINING SUPPORT EQUIPMENT...... 3,400 3,400
121 TRAINING AND EDUCATION EQUIPMENT 24,283 24,283
COMMAND SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
122 COMMAND SUPPORT EQUIPMENT....... 66,681 66,681
123 MEDICAL SUPPORT EQUIPMENT....... 3,352 3,352
125 NAVAL MIP SUPPORT EQUIPMENT..... 1,984 1,984
126 OPERATING FORCES SUPPORT 15,131 15,131
EQUIPMENT......................
127 C4ISR EQUIPMENT................. 3,576 3,576
128 ENVIRONMENTAL SUPPORT EQUIPMENT. 31,902 31,902
129 PHYSICAL SECURITY EQUIPMENT..... 175,436 195,436
New Navy port waterborne [20,000]
security barriers increase..
130 ENTERPRISE INFORMATION 25,393 25,393
TECHNOLOGY.....................
OTHER
133 NEXT GENERATION ENTERPRISE 96,269 96,269
SERVICE........................
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............. 15,681 15,681
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS
134 SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS......... 326,838 326,838
TOTAL OTHER PROCUREMENT, NAVY... 9,414,355 9,373,855
PROCUREMENT, MARINE CORPS
TRACKED COMBAT VEHICLES
1 AAV7A1 PIP...................... 156,249 78,149
Unjustified investment in a [-78,100]
vehicle with low/limited
combat utility..............
2 AMPHIBIOUS COMBAT VEHICLE 1.1... 167,478 167,478
3 LAV PIP......................... 43,701 43,701
ARTILLERY AND OTHER WEAPONS
5 155MM LIGHTWEIGHT TOWED HOWITZER 47,158 47,158
6 ARTILLERY WEAPONS SYSTEM........ 134,246 134,246
7 WEAPONS AND COMBAT VEHICLES 40,687 40,687
UNDER $5 MILLION...............
OTHER SUPPORT
8 MODIFICATION KITS............... 22,904 22,904
GUIDED MISSILES
[[Page S3532]]
9 GROUND BASED AIR DEFENSE........ 18,334 18,334
10 ANTI-ARMOR MISSILE-JAVELIN...... 3,020 3,020
11 FAMILY ANTI-ARMOR WEAPON SYSTEMS 13,760 13,760
(FOAAWS).......................
12 ANTI-ARMOR MISSILE-TOW.......... 59,702 59,702
COMMAND AND CONTROL SYSTEMS
13 COMMON AVIATION COMMAND AND 35,467 35,467
CONTROL SYSTEM (C..............
REPAIR AND TEST EQUIPMENT
14 REPAIR AND TEST EQUIPMENT....... 46,081 46,081
OTHER SUPPORT (TEL)
15 MODIFICATION KITS............... 971 971
COMMAND AND CONTROL SYSTEM (NON-
TEL)
16 ITEMS UNDER $5 MILLION (COMM & 69,203 69,203
ELEC)..........................
17 AIR OPERATIONS C2 SYSTEMS....... 14,269 14,269
RADAR + EQUIPMENT (NON-TEL)
18 RADAR SYSTEMS................... 6,694 6,694
19 GROUND/AIR TASK ORIENTED RADAR 224,969 224,969
(G/ATOR).......................
INTELL/COMM EQUIPMENT (NON-TEL)
21 GCSS-MC......................... 1,187 1,187
22 FIRE SUPPORT SYSTEM............. 60,189 60,189
23 INTELLIGENCE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.. 73,848 73,848
25 UNMANNED AIR SYSTEMS (INTEL).... 3,848 3,848
26 DCGS-MC......................... 16,081 16,081
OTHER SUPPORT (NON-TEL)
30 NEXT GENERATION ENTERPRISE 87,120 87,120
NETWORK (NGEN).................
31 COMMON COMPUTER RESOURCES....... 68,914 68,914
32 COMMAND POST SYSTEMS............ 124,838 99,870
Operational limitations of [-24,968]
NOTM........................
33 RADIO SYSTEMS................... 279,680 279,680
34 COMM SWITCHING & CONTROL SYSTEMS 36,649 36,649
35 COMM & ELEC INFRASTRUCTURE 83,971 83,971
SUPPORT........................
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............. 3,626 3,626
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
ADMINISTRATIVE VEHICLES
36 COMMERCIAL CARGO VEHICLES....... 25,441 25,441
TACTICAL VEHICLES
37 MOTOR TRANSPORT MODIFICATIONS... 11,392 11,392
38 JOINT LIGHT TACTICAL VEHICLE.... 607,011 607,011
39 FAMILY OF TACTICAL TRAILERS..... 2,393 2,393
40 TRAILERS........................ 6,540 6,540
ENGINEER AND OTHER EQUIPMENT
41 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL EQUIP 496 496
ASSORT.........................
42 TACTICAL FUEL SYSTEMS........... 54 54
43 POWER EQUIPMENT ASSORTED........ 21,062 21,062
44 AMPHIBIOUS SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.... 5,290 5,290
45 EOD SYSTEMS..................... 47,854 47,854
MATERIALS HANDLING EQUIPMENT
46 PHYSICAL SECURITY EQUIPMENT..... 28,306 28,306
GENERAL PROPERTY
47 FIELD MEDICAL EQUIPMENT......... 33,513 33,513
48 TRAINING DEVICES................ 52,040 41,632
Excess to need.............. [-10,408]
49 FAMILY OF CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT 36,156 36,156
50 FAMILY OF INTERNALLY 606 606
TRANSPORTABLE VEH (ITV)........
OTHER SUPPORT
51 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION...... 11,608 11,608
SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS
53 SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS......... 25,804 25,804
TOTAL PROCUREMENT, MARINE CORPS. 2,860,410 2,746,934
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE
TACTICAL FORCES
1 F-35............................ 4,261,021 4,193,521
Program Realignment......... [-67,500]
2 F-35 AP......................... 406,000 406,000
18 O/A-X LIGHT ATTACK AIRCRAFT..... 0 350,000
Procurement of OA-X aircraft [350,000]
and long lead materials.....
OTHER COMBAT AIRCRAFT
3 C-135B.......................... 222,176 222,176
TACTICAL AIRLIFT
4 KC-46A TANKER................... 2,559,911 2,312,011
Interim contractor support.. [-102,700]
Restore program [-145,200]
accountability..............
OTHER AIRLIFT
5 C-130J.......................... 35,858 35,858
6 HC-130J......................... 129,437 129,437
8 MC-130J......................... 770,201 770,201
9 MC-130J AP...................... 218,000 218,000
HELICOPTERS
11 COMBAT RESCUE HELICOPTER........ 680,201 680,201
MISSION SUPPORT AIRCRAFT
13 CIVIL AIR PATROL A/C............ 2,719 2,719
OTHER AIRCRAFT
14 TARGET DRONES................... 139,053 139,053
15 COMPASS CALL MODS............... 108,113 108,113
17 MQ-9............................ 221,707 341,707
Increase to accelerate [120,000]
Advanced Battle Management
System......................
STRATEGIC AIRCRAFT
19 B-2A............................ 60,301 60,301
20 B-1B............................ 51,290 51,290
21 B-52............................ 105,519 100,719
Air Force requested [-14,800]
realignment.................
LRASM certification......... [10,000]
TACTICAL AIRCRAFT
23 A-10............................ 98,720 163,720
[[Page S3533]]
Additional replacement wings [65,000]
24 C-130J.......................... 10,831 10,831
25 F-15............................ 548,109 548,109
26 F-16............................ 324,323 324,323
27 F-22A........................... 250,710 250,710
29 F-35 MODIFICATIONS.............. 247,271 297,271
F-35A Modifications increase [50,000]
30 F-15 EPAW....................... 147,685 147,685
31 INCREMENT 3.2B.................. 9,007 9,007
33 KC-46A TANKER................... 8,547 8,547
AIRLIFT AIRCRAFT
34 C-5............................. 77,845 77,845
36 C-17A........................... 102,121 102,121
37 C-21............................ 17,516 17,516
38 C-32A........................... 4,537 4,537
39 C-37A........................... 419 419
TRAINER AIRCRAFT
41 GLIDER MODS..................... 137 137
42 T-6............................. 22,550 22,550
43 T-1............................. 21,952 21,952
44 T-38............................ 70,623 70,623
OTHER AIRCRAFT
45 U-2 MODS........................ 48,774 48,774
46 KC-10A (ATCA)................... 11,104 11,104
47 C-12............................ 4,900 4,900
48 VC-25A MOD...................... 36,938 36,938
49 C-40............................ 251 251
50 C-130........................... 22,094 96,094
T56 Series 3.5 Engine [74,000]
Enhancement packages........
51 C-130J MODS..................... 132,045 132,045
52 C-135........................... 113,076 113,076
53 OC-135B......................... 5,913 5,913
54 COMPASS CALL MODS............... 49,885 49,885
55 COMBAT FLIGHT INSPECTION (CFIN). 499 499
56 RC-135.......................... 394,532 394,532
57 E-3............................. 133,906 133,906
58 E-4............................. 67,858 67,858
59 E-8............................. 9,919 34,919
Central Computer upgrade [25,000]
design......................
60 AIRBORNE WARNING AND CNTR SYS 57,780 57,780
(AWACS) 40/45..................
61 FAMILY OF BEYOND LINE-OF-SIGHT 14,293 14,293
TERMINALS......................
62 H-1............................. 2,940 2,940
63 H-60............................ 55,466 55,466
64 RQ-4 MODS....................... 23,715 23,715
65 HC/MC-130 MODIFICATIONS......... 37,754 37,754
66 OTHER AIRCRAFT.................. 62,010 62,010
67 MQ-9 MODS....................... 171,548 171,548
69 CV-22 MODS...................... 60,416 60,416
AIRCRAFT SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS
70 INITIAL SPARES/REPAIR PARTS..... 956,408 1,006,408
F-35A spares................ [50,000]
COMMON SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
71 AIRCRAFT REPLACEMENT SUPPORT 81,241 81,241
EQUIP..........................
POST PRODUCTION SUPPORT
74 B-2A............................ 1,763 1,763
75 B-2B............................ 35,861 35,861
76 B-52............................ 12,819 12,819
77 C-17A........................... 10,114 10,114
79 F-15............................ 2,545 2,545
81 F-16............................ 11,718 11,718
82 F-22A........................... 14,489 14,489
83 OTHER AIRCRAFT.................. 9,928 9,928
84 RQ-4 POST PRODUCTION CHARGES.... 40,641 40,641
INDUSTRIAL PREPAREDNESS
86 INDUSTRIAL RESPONSIVENESS....... 17,378 17,378
WAR CONSUMABLES
88 WAR CONSUMABLES................. 29,342 29,342
OTHER PRODUCTION CHARGES
89 OTHER PRODUCTION CHARGES........ 1,502,386 1,502,386
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............. 28,278 28,278
TOTAL AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, AIR 16,206,937 16,620,737
FORCE..........................
MISSILE PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE
MISSILE REPLACEMENT EQUIPMENT--
BALLISTIC
1 MISSILE REPLACEMENT EQ-BALLISTIC 36,786 36,786
TACTICAL
2 JOINT AIR-SURFACE STANDOFF 430,708 430,708
MISSILE........................
3 LRASM0.......................... 44,185 54,385
Restore reduction........... [10,200]
4 SIDEWINDER (AIM-9X)............. 121,253 121,253
5 AMRAAM.......................... 337,886 337,886
6 PREDATOR HELLFIRE MISSILE....... 113,765 113,765
7 SMALL DIAMETER BOMB............. 105,034 105,034
8 SMALL DIAMETER BOMB II.......... 100,861 92,861
Unit price adjustment....... [-8,000]
INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES
9 INDUSTR'L PREPAREDNS/POL 787 787
PREVENTION.....................
CLASS IV
10 ICBM FUZE MOD................... 15,767 15,767
11 ICBM FUZE MOD AP................ 4,100 4,100
12 MM III MODIFICATIONS............ 129,199 129,199
13 AGM-65D MAVERICK................ 288 288
14 AIR LAUNCH CRUISE MISSILE (ALCM) 47,632 47,632
MISSILE SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS
[[Page S3534]]
16 REPLEN SPARES/REPAIR PARTS...... 97,481 97,481
SPECIAL PROGRAMS
18 SPECIAL UPDATE PROGRAMS......... 188,539 188,539
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............. 895,183 895,183
TOTAL MISSILE PROCUREMENT, AIR 2,669,454 2,671,654
FORCE..........................
SPACE PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE
SPACE PROGRAMS
1 ADVANCED EHF.................... 29,829 29,829
2 AF SATELLITE COMM SYSTEM........ 35,400 35,400
3 COUNTERSPACE SYSTEMS............ 1,121 1,121
4 FAMILY OF BEYOND LINE-OF-SIGHT 27,867 27,867
TERMINALS......................
5 WIDEBAND GAPFILLER 61,606 61,606
SATELLITES(SPACE)..............
6 GENERAL INFORMATION TECH--SPACE. 3,425 3,425
7 GPS III SPACE SEGMENT........... 69,386 69,386
8 GLOBAL POSTIONING (SPACE)....... 2,181 2,181
9 INTEG BROADCAST SERV............ 16,445 16,445
10 SPACEBORNE EQUIP (COMSEC)....... 31,895 31,895
12 MILSATCOM....................... 11,265 11,265
13 EVOLVED EXPENDABLE LAUNCH 709,981 709,981
CAPABILITY.....................
14 EVOLVED EXPENDABLE LAUNCH 994,555 994,555
VEH(SPACE).....................
15 SBIR HIGH (SPACE)............... 138,397 138,397
17 NUDET DETECTION SYSTEM.......... 7,705 7,705
18 ROCKET SYSTEMS LAUNCH PROGRAM... 47,609 47,609
19 SPACE FENCE..................... 51,361 51,361
20 SPACE MODS...................... 148,065 148,065
21 SPACELIFT RANGE SYSTEM SPACE.... 117,637 117,637
SPARES
22 SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS......... 21,812 21,812
TOTAL SPACE PROCUREMENT, AIR 2,527,542 2,527,542
FORCE..........................
PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, AIR
FORCE
ROCKETS
1 ROCKETS......................... 345,911 345,911
CARTRIDGES
2 CARTRIDGES...................... 163,840 163,840
BOMBS
3 PRACTICE BOMBS.................. 20,876 20,876
4 GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS........... 259,308 259,308
5 MASSIVE ORDNANCE PENETRATOR 38,111 38,111
(MOP)..........................
6 JOINT DIRECT ATTACK MUNITION.... 234,198 234,198
7 B61............................. 109,292 109,292
8 B61 AP.......................... 52,731 52,731
OTHER ITEMS
9 CAD/PAD......................... 51,455 51,455
10 EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE DISPOSAL 6,038 6,038
(EOD)..........................
11 SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS......... 524 524
12 MODIFICATIONS................... 1,270 1,270
13 ITEMS LESS THAN $5,000,000...... 4,604 4,604
FLARES
15 FLARES.......................... 125,286 125,286
FUZES
16 FUZES........................... 109,358 109,358
SMALL ARMS
17 SMALL ARMS...................... 64,502 64,502
TOTAL PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, 1,587,304 1,587,304
AIR FORCE......................
OTHER PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE
PASSENGER CARRYING VEHICLES
1 PASSENGER CARRYING VEHICLES..... 6,949 6,949
CARGO AND UTILITY VEHICLES
2 MEDIUM TACTICAL VEHICLE......... 36,002 36,002
3 CAP VEHICLES.................... 1,022 1,022
4 CARGO AND UTILITY VEHICLES...... 42,696 49,879
Procurement of 7 DABs for [7,183]
PACOM.......................
SPECIAL PURPOSE VEHICLES
5 JOINT LIGHT TACTICAL VEHICLE.... 30,145 30,145
6 SECURITY AND TACTICAL VEHICLES.. 1,230 3,903
Procurement of 7 DABs for [2,673]
PACOM.......................
7 SPECIAL PURPOSE VEHICLES........ 43,003 53,693
Procurement of 7 DABs for [10,690]
PACOM.......................
FIRE FIGHTING EQUIPMENT
8 FIRE FIGHTING/CRASH RESCUE 23,328 32,308
VEHICLES.......................
Procurement of 7 DABs for [8,980]
PACOM.......................
MATERIALS HANDLING EQUIPMENT
9 MATERIALS HANDLING VEHICLES..... 11,537 31,309
Procurement of 7 DABs for [19,772]
PACOM.......................
BASE MAINTENANCE SUPPORT
10 RUNWAY SNOW REMOV AND CLEANING 37,600 40,353
EQU............................
Procurement of 7 DABs for [2,753]
PACOM.......................
11 BASE MAINTENANCE SUPPORT 104,923 104,923
VEHICLES.......................
COMM SECURITY EQUIPMENT(COMSEC)
12 COMSEC EQUIPMENT................ 114,372 114,372
INTELLIGENCE PROGRAMS
13 INTERNATIONAL INTEL TECH & 8,290 8,290
ARCHITECTURES..................
14 INTELLIGENCE TRAINING EQUIPMENT. 2,099 2,099
15 INTELLIGENCE COMM EQUIPMENT..... 37,415 37,415
ELECTRONICS PROGRAMS
16 AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL & LANDING 57,937 57,937
SYS............................
18 BATTLE CONTROL SYSTEM--FIXED.... 3,012 3,012
19 THEATER AIR CONTROL SYS 19,989 19,989
IMPROVEMEN.....................
20 WEATHER OBSERVATION FORECAST.... 45,020 45,020
21 STRATEGIC COMMAND AND CONTROL... 32,836 32,836
22 CHEYENNE MOUNTAIN COMPLEX....... 12,454 12,454
[[Page S3535]]
23 MISSION PLANNING SYSTEMS........ 14,263 14,263
25 INTEGRATED STRAT PLAN & ANALY 7,769 7,769
NETWORK (ISPAN)................
SPCL COMM-ELECTRONICS PROJECTS
26 GENERAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY.. 40,450 40,450
27 AF GLOBAL COMMAND & CONTROL SYS. 6,619 6,619
28 MOBILITY COMMAND AND CONTROL.... 10,192 10,192
29 AIR FORCE PHYSICAL SECURITY 159,313 161,315
SYSTEM.........................
Procurement of 7 DABs for [2,002]
PACOM.......................
30 COMBAT TRAINING RANGES.......... 132,675 132,675
31 MINIMUM ESSENTIAL EMERGENCY COMM 140,875 140,875
N..............................
32 WIDE AREA SURVEILLANCE (WAS).... 92,104 92,104
33 C3 COUNTERMEASURES.............. 45,152 45,152
34 GCSS-AF FOS..................... 483 483
35 DEFENSE ENTERPRISE ACCOUNTING & 802 802
MGT SYS........................
36 MAINTENANCE REPAIR & OVERHAUL 12,207 12,207
INITIATIVE.....................
37 THEATER BATTLE MGT C2 SYSTEM.... 7,644 7,644
38 AIR & SPACE OPERATIONS CENTER 40,066 40,066
(AOC)..........................
AIR FORCE COMMUNICATIONS
41 BASE INFORMATION TRANSPT INFRAST 22,357 22,357
(BITI) WIRED...................
42 AFNET........................... 102,836 102,836
43 JOINT COMMUNICATIONS SUPPORT 3,145 3,145
ELEMENT (JCSE).................
44 USCENTCOM....................... 13,194 13,194
ORGANIZATION AND BASE
45 TACTICAL C-E EQUIPMENT.......... 161,231 161,231
47 RADIO EQUIPMENT................. 12,142 12,142
48 CCTV/AUDIOVISUAL EQUIPMENT...... 6,505 6,505
49 BASE COMM INFRASTRUCTURE........ 169,404 169,404
MODIFICATIONS
50 COMM ELECT MODS................. 10,654 10,654
PERSONAL SAFETY & RESCUE EQUIP
51 PERSONAL SAFETY AND RESCUE 51,906 51,906
EQUIPMENT......................
DEPOT PLANT+MTRLS HANDLING EQ
52 MECHANIZED MATERIAL HANDLING 88,298 88,298
EQUIP..........................
BASE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
53 BASE PROCURED EQUIPMENT......... 17,031 17,031
54 ENGINEERING AND EOD EQUIPMENT... 82,635 82,635
55 MOBILITY EQUIPMENT.............. 9,549 9,549
56 BASE MAINTENANCE AND SUPPORT 24,005 48,048
EQUIPMENT......................
Procurement of 7 DABs for [24,043]
PACOM.......................
SPECIAL SUPPORT PROJECTS
58 DARP RC135...................... 26,262 26,262
59 DCGS-AF......................... 448,290 448,290
61 SPECIAL UPDATE PROGRAM.......... 913,813 913,813
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............. 17,258,069 17,258,069
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS
63 SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS......... 86,365 86,365
TOTAL OTHER PROCUREMENT, AIR 20,890,164 20,968,260
FORCE..........................
PROCUREMENT, DEFENSE-WIDE
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, OSD
43 MAJOR EQUIPMENT, OSD............ 35,295 35,295
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, NSA
42 INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY 5,403 5,403
PROGRAM (ISSP).................
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, WHS
46 MAJOR EQUIPMENT, WHS............ 497 497
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DISA
7 INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY.... 21,590 41,590
Sharkseer................... [20,000]
8 TELEPORT PROGRAM................ 33,905 33,905
9 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION...... 27,886 27,886
10 NET CENTRIC ENTERPRISE SERVICES 1,017 1,017
(NCES).........................
11 DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEM 150,674 150,674
NETWORK........................
13 WHITE HOUSE COMMUNICATION AGENCY 94,610 94,610
14 SENIOR LEADERSHIP ENTERPRISE.... 197,246 197,246
15 JOINT REGIONAL SECURITY STACKS 140,338 140,338
(JRSS).........................
16 JOINT SERVICE PROVIDER.......... 107,182 87,682
General reduction........... [-19,500]
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DLA
18 MAJOR EQUIPMENT................. 5,225 5,225
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DSS
21 MAJOR EQUIPMENT................. 1,196 1,196
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DCAA
1 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION...... 2,542 2,542
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, TJS
44 MAJOR EQUIPMENT, TJS............ 4,360 4,360
45 MAJOR EQUIPMENT, TJS--CE2T2..... 904 904
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, MISSILE DEFENSE
AGENCY
26 THAAD........................... 874,068 874,068
27 GROUND BASED MIDCOURSE.......... 409,000 409,000
28 GROUND BASED MIDCOURSE AP....... 115,000 115,000
29 AEGIS BMD....................... 593,488 593,488
30 AEGIS BMD AP.................... 115,206 115,206
31 BMDS AN/TPY-2 RADARS............ 13,185 13,185
32 ISRAELI PROGRAMS................ 80,000 80,000
33 SHORT RANGE BALLISTIC MISSILE 50,000 50,000
DEFENSE (SRBMD)................
34 AEGIS ASHORE PHASE III.......... 15,000 15,000
35 IRON DOME....................... 70,000 70,000
36 AEGIS BMD HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE. 97,057 97,057
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DHRA
3 PERSONNEL ADMINISTRATION........ 10,630 10,630
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DEFENSE THREAT
REDUCTION AGENCY
23 VEHICLES........................ 207 207
24 OTHER MAJOR EQUIPMENT........... 5,592 5,592
[[Page S3536]]
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DODEA
20 AUTOMATION/EDUCATIONAL SUPPORT & 1,723 1,723
LOGISTICS......................
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DCMA
2 MAJOR EQUIPMENT................. 3,873 3,873
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DMACT
19 MAJOR EQUIPMENT................. 13,106 13,106
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............. 589,691 589,691
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
AVIATION PROGRAMS
50 ROTARY WING UPGRADES AND 148,351 148,351
SUSTAINMENT....................
51 UNMANNED ISR.................... 57,708 57,708
52 NON-STANDARD AVIATION........... 18,731 18,731
53 U-28............................ 32,301 32,301
54 MH-47 CHINOOK................... 131,033 131,033
55 CV-22 MODIFICATION.............. 32,529 32,529
56 MQ-9 UNMANNED AERIAL VEHICLE.... 24,621 24,621
57 PRECISION STRIKE PACKAGE........ 226,965 226,965
58 AC/MC-130J...................... 165,813 165,813
59 C-130 MODIFICATIONS............. 80,274 80,274
SHIPBUILDING
60 UNDERWATER SYSTEMS.............. 136,723 136,723
AMMUNITION PROGRAMS
61 ORDNANCE ITEMS <$5M............. 357,742 357,742
OTHER PROCUREMENT PROGRAMS
62 INTELLIGENCE SYSTEMS............ 85,699 85,699
63 DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND/ 17,863 17,863
SURFACE SYSTEMS................
64 OTHER ITEMS <$5M................ 112,117 112,117
65 COMBATANT CRAFT SYSTEMS......... 7,313 7,313
66 SPECIAL PROGRAMS................ 14,026 14,026
67 TACTICAL VEHICLES............... 88,608 88,608
68 WARRIOR SYSTEMS <$5M............ 438,590 438,590
69 COMBAT MISSION REQUIREMENTS..... 19,408 19,408
70 GLOBAL VIDEO SURVEILLANCE 6,281 6,281
ACTIVITIES.....................
71 OPERATIONAL ENHANCEMENTS 18,509 18,509
INTELLIGENCE...................
73 OPERATIONAL ENHANCEMENTS........ 367,433 367,433
CBDP
74 CHEMICAL BIOLOGICAL SITUATIONAL 166,418 166,418
AWARENESS......................
75 CB PROTECTION & HAZARD 144,519 144,519
MITIGATION.....................
TOTAL PROCUREMENT, DEFENSE-WIDE. 6,786,271 6,786,771
JOINT URGENT OPERATIONAL NEEDS
FUND
JOINT URGENT OPERATIONAL NEEDS
FUND
1 JOINT URGENT OPERATIONAL NEEDS 100,025 100,025
FUND...........................
TOTAL JOINT URGENT OPERATIONAL 100,025 100,025
NEEDS FUND.....................
TOTAL PROCUREMENT............... 130,526,043 131,998,763
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4102. PROCUREMENT FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4102. PROCUREMENT FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS (In Thousands
of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2019 Senate
Line Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, ARMY
FIXED WING
3 MQ-1 UAV........................ 60,000 60,000
ROTARY
11 UH-60 BLACKHAWK M MODEL (MYP)... 21,246 21,246
14 CH-47 HELICOPTER................ 25,000 25,000
MODIFICATION OF AIRCRAFT
17 MQ-1 PAYLOAD (MIP).............. 11,400 11,400
19 GRAY EAGLE MODS2................ 32,000 32,000
20 MULTI SENSOR ABN RECON (MIP).... 51,000 51,000
32 RQ-7 UAV MODS................... 50,868 50,868
33 UAS MODS........................ 3,402 3,402
GROUND SUPPORT AVIONICS
36 CMWS............................ 84,387 84,387
37 COMMON INFRARED COUNTERMEASURES 24,060 24,060
(CIRCM)........................
TOTAL AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, ARMY 363,363 363,363
MISSILE PROCUREMENT, ARMY
SURFACE-TO-AIR MISSILE SYSTEM
2 MSE MISSILE..................... 260,000 260,000
AIR-TO-SURFACE MISSILE SYSTEM
5 HELLFIRE SYS SUMMARY............ 255,040 255,040
ANTI-TANK/ASSAULT MISSILE SYS
8 JAVELIN (AAWS-M) SYSTEM SUMMARY. 31,120 31,120
11 GUIDED MLRS ROCKET (GMLRS)...... 624,500 624,500
13 HIGH MOBILITY ARTILLERY ROCKET 171,138 171,138
SYSTEM (HIMARS.................
14 LETHAL MINIATURE AERIAL MISSILE 112,973 112,973
SYSTEM (LMAMS..................
MODIFICATIONS
16 ATACMS MODS..................... 225,580 225,580
21 MLRS MODS....................... 122,000 122,000
TOTAL MISSILE PROCUREMENT, ARMY. 1,802,351 1,802,351
PROCUREMENT OF W&TCV, ARMY
[[Page S3537]]
TRACKED COMBAT VEHICLES
1 BRADLEY PROGRAM................. 205,000 205,000
2 ARMORED MULTI PURPOSE VEHICLE 230,359 230,359
(AMPV).........................
MODIFICATION OF TRACKED COMBAT
VEHICLES
6 BRADLEY PROGRAM (MOD)........... 50,000 50,000
8 PALADIN INTEGRATED MANAGEMENT 67,000 67,000
(PIM)..........................
9 IMPROVED RECOVERY VEHICLE (M88A2 42,354 42,354
HERCULES)......................
14 M1 ABRAMS TANK (MOD)............ 34,000 34,000
15 ABRAMS UPGRADE PROGRAM.......... 455,000 455,000
WEAPONS & OTHER COMBAT VEHICLES
18 M240 MEDIUM MACHINE GUN (7.62MM) 126 126
22 MORTAR SYSTEMS.................. 11,842 11,842
25 CARBINE......................... 1,800 1,800
27 COMMON REMOTELY OPERATED WEAPONS 3,378 3,378
STATION........................
MOD OF WEAPONS AND OTHER COMBAT
VEH
32 M2 50 CAL MACHINE GUN MODS...... 4,920 4,920
34 M240 MEDIUM MACHINE GUN MODS.... 7 7
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT & FACILITIES
39 ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M (WOCV- 1,397 1,397
WTCV)..........................
TOTAL PROCUREMENT OF W&TCV, ARMY 1,107,183 1,107,183
PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, ARMY
SMALL/MEDIUM CAL AMMUNITION
1 CTG, 5.56MM, ALL TYPES.......... 3,392 3,392
2 CTG, 7.62MM, ALL TYPES.......... 40 40
3 CTG, HANDGUN, ALL TYPES......... 17 17
4 CTG, .50 CAL, ALL TYPES......... 189 189
5 CTG, 20MM, ALL TYPES............ 1,605 1,605
7 CTG, 30MM, ALL TYPES............ 25,000 25,000
MORTAR AMMUNITION
9 60MM MORTAR, ALL TYPES.......... 218 218
10 81MM MORTAR, ALL TYPES.......... 484 484
ARTILLERY AMMUNITION
14 ARTILLERY PROJECTILE, 155MM, ALL 79,400 79,400
TYPES..........................
15 PROJ 155MM EXTENDED RANGE M982.. 72,985 72,985
16 ARTILLERY PROPELLANTS, FUZES AND 63,900 63,900
PRIMERS, ALL...................
ROCKETS
18 SHOULDER LAUNCHED MUNITIONS, ALL 22,242 22,242
TYPES..........................
19 ROCKET, HYDRA 70, ALL TYPES..... 39,974 39,974
OTHER AMMUNITION
21 DEMOLITION MUNITIONS, ALL TYPES. 5 5
22 GRENADES, ALL TYPES............. 8 8
MISCELLANEOUS
27 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION 66 66
(AMMO).........................
TOTAL PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, 309,525 309,525
ARMY...........................
OTHER PROCUREMENT, ARMY
TACTICAL VEHICLES
2 SEMITRAILERS, FLATBED:.......... 8,000 8,000
3 AMBULANCE, 4 LITTER, 5/4 TON, 20,770 20,770
4X4............................
10 FAMILY OF HEAVY TACTICAL 115,400 115,400
VEHICLES (FHTV)................
12 HVY EXPANDED MOBILE TACTICAL 6,682 6,682
TRUCK EXT SERV.................
13 TACTICAL WHEELED VEHICLE 50,000 50,000
PROTECTION KITS................
14 MODIFICATION OF IN SVC EQUIP.... 186,377 186,377
COMM--SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS
28 TRANSPORTABLE TACTICAL COMMAND 7,100 7,100
COMMUNICATIONS.................
COMM--COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS
37 JOINT TACTICAL RADIO SYSTEM..... 1,560 1,560
42 TRACTOR RIDE.................... 13,190 13,190
45 TACTICAL COMMUNICATIONS AND 9,549 9,549
PROTECTIVE SYSTEM..............
47 COTS COMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT... 22,000 22,000
COMM--INTELLIGENCE COMM
50 CI AUTOMATION ARCHITECTURE (MIP) 9,800 9,800
INFORMATION SECURITY
55 COMMUNICATIONS SECURITY (COMSEC) 3 3
COMM--LONG HAUL COMMUNICATIONS
59 BASE SUPPORT COMMUNICATIONS..... 690 690
COMM--BASE COMMUNICATIONS
60 INFORMATION SYSTEMS............. 8,750 8,750
63 INSTALLATION INFO INFRASTRUCTURE 60,337 60,337
MOD PROGRAM....................
ELECT EQUIP--TACT INT REL ACT
(TIARA)
68 DCGS-A (MIP).................... 37,806 37,806
70 TROJAN (MIP).................... 6,926 6,926
71 MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP (INTEL SPT) 2,011 2,011
(MIP)..........................
75 BIOMETRIC TACTICAL COLLECTION 5,370 5,370
DEVICES (MIP)..................
ELECT EQUIP--ELECTRONIC WARFARE
(EW)
80 CREW............................ 42,651 42,651
81 FAMILY OF PERSISTENT 20,050 20,050
SURVEILLANCE CAP. (MIP)........
82 COUNTERINTELLIGENCE/SECURITY 12,974 12,974
COUNTERMEASURES................
ELECT EQUIP--TACTICAL SURV. (TAC
SURV)
85 NIGHT VISION DEVICES............ 463 463
86 LONG RANGE ADVANCED SCOUT 2,861 2,861
SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM............
87 SMALL TACTICAL OPTICAL RIFLE 60 60
MOUNTED MLRF...................
[[Page S3538]]
88 RADIATION MONITORING SYSTEMS.... 11 11
90 INDIRECT FIRE PROTECTION FAMILY 251,062 251,062
OF SYSTEMS.....................
91 FAMILY OF WEAPON SIGHTS (FWS)... 525 525
94 JOINT BATTLE COMMAND--PLATFORM 26,146 26,146
(JBC-P)........................
96 MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP (LLDR)...... 4,050 4,050
97 COMPUTER BALLISTICS: LHMBC XM32. 960 960
98 MORTAR FIRE CONTROL SYSTEM...... 7,660 7,660
99 COUNTERFIRE RADARS.............. 165,200 165,200
ELECT EQUIP--AUTOMATION
112 AUTOMATED DATA PROCESSING EQUIP. 28,475 28,475
CHEMICAL DEFENSIVE EQUIPMENT
121 PROTECTIVE SYSTEMS.............. 27 27
122 FAMILY OF NON-LETHAL EQUIPMENT 20,200 20,200
(FNLE).........................
123 BASE DEFENSE SYSTEMS (BDS)...... 39,200 39,200
124 CBRN DEFENSE.................... 2,317 2,317
ENGINEER (NON-CONSTRUCTION)
EQUIPMENT
129 GRND STANDOFF MINE DETECTN SYSM 16,000 16,000
(GSTAMIDS).....................
130 AREA MINE DETECTION SYSTEM 1 1
(AMDS).........................
132 ROBOTIC COMBAT SUPPORT SYSTEM 4,850 4,850
(RCSS).........................
136 REMOTE DEMOLITION SYSTEMS....... 1 1
COMBAT SERVICE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
139 HEATERS AND ECU'S............... 270 270
141 PERSONNEL RECOVERY SUPPORT 4,300 4,300
SYSTEM (PRSS)..................
142 GROUND SOLDIER SYSTEM........... 1,725 1,725
144 FORCE PROVIDER.................. 55,800 55,800
145 FIELD FEEDING EQUIPMENT......... 1,035 1,035
146 CARGO AERIAL DEL & PERSONNEL 1,980 1,980
PARACHUTE SYSTEM...............
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
151 COMBAT SUPPORT MEDICAL.......... 17,527 17,527
MAINTENANCE EQUIPMENT
153 ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M (MAINT EQ) 268 268
CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT
159 HIGH MOBILITY ENGINEER EXCAVATOR 25,700 25,700
(HMEE).........................
GENERATORS
165 GENERATORS AND ASSOCIATED EQUIP. 569 569
TEST MEASURE AND DIG EQUIPMENT
(TMD)
174 INTEGRATED FAMILY OF TEST 9,495 9,495
EQUIPMENT (IFTE)...............
OTHER SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
176 M25 STABILIZED BINOCULAR........ 33 33
177 RAPID EQUIPPING SOLDIER SUPPORT 18,000 18,000
EQUIPMENT......................
178 PHYSICAL SECURITY SYSTEMS (OPA3) 6,000 6,000
179 BASE LEVEL COMMON EQUIPMENT..... 2,080 2,080
180 MODIFICATION OF IN-SVC EQUIPMENT 19,200 19,200
(OPA-3)........................
TOTAL OTHER PROCUREMENT, ARMY... 1,382,047 1,382,047
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, NAVY
OTHER AIRCRAFT
25 STUASL0 UAV..................... 35,065 35,065
MODIFICATION OF AIRCRAFT
32 SH-60 SERIES.................... 4,858 4,858
34 EP-3 SERIES..................... 5,380 5,380
44 SPECIAL PROJECT AIRCRAFT........ 2,165 2,165
49 COMMON ECM EQUIPMENT............ 9,820 9,820
51 COMMON DEFENSIVE WEAPON SYSTEM.. 3,206 3,206
61 QRC............................. 2,410 2,410
63 RQ-21 SERIES.................... 17,215 17,215
TOTAL AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, NAVY 80,119 80,119
WEAPONS PROCUREMENT, NAVY
STRATEGIC MISSILES
3 TOMAHAWK........................ 82,800
Buy-back Tomahawk........... [82,800]
TACTICAL MISSILES
4 AMRAAM.......................... 1,183 1,183
5 SIDEWINDER...................... 381 381
12 HELLFIRE........................ 1,530 1,530
15 AERIAL TARGETS.................. 6,500 6,500
GUNS AND GUN MOUNTS
35 SMALL ARMS AND WEAPONS.......... 1,540 1,540
MODIFICATION OF GUNS AND GUN
MOUNTS
38 GUN MOUNT MODS.................. 3,000 3,000
TOTAL WEAPONS PROCUREMENT, NAVY. 14,134 96,934
PROCUREMENT OF AMMO, NAVY & MC
NAVY AMMUNITION
1 GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS........... 62,530 62,530
2 JDAM............................ 93,019 93,019
3 AIRBORNE ROCKETS, ALL TYPES..... 2,163 2,163
4 MACHINE GUN AMMUNITION.......... 5,000 5,000
6 CARTRIDGES & CART ACTUATED 5,334 5,334
DEVICES........................
7 AIR EXPENDABLE COUNTERMEASURES.. 36,580 36,580
8 JATOS........................... 747 747
11 OTHER SHIP GUN AMMUNITION....... 2,538 2,538
[[Page S3539]]
13 PYROTECHNIC AND DEMOLITION...... 1,807 1,807
15 AMMUNITION LESS THAN $5 MILLION. 2,229 229
Excess balances............. [-2,000]
MARINE CORPS AMMUNITION
19 MORTARS......................... 2,018 2,018
21 DIRECT SUPPORT MUNITIONS........ 632 632
22 INFANTRY WEAPONS AMMUNITION..... 779 779
26 COMBAT SUPPORT MUNITIONS........ 164 164
29 ARTILLERY MUNITIONS............. 31,001 31,001
TOTAL PROCUREMENT OF AMMO, NAVY 246,541 244,541
& MC...........................
OTHER PROCUREMENT, NAVY
OTHER SHIPBOARD EQUIPMENT
21 UNDERWATER EOD PROGRAMS......... 9,200 9,200
SMALL BOATS
28 STANDARD BOATS.................. 19,060 19,060
ASW ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT
43 FIXED SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM....... 56,950 56,950
SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS
77 SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS 3,200 3,200
CRYPTOLOGIC EQUIPMENT
82 CRYPTOLOGIC COMMUNICATIONS EQUIP 2,000 2,000
SONOBUOYS
88 SONOBUOYS--ALL TYPES............ 21,156 21,156
OTHER ORDNANCE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
104 EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE DISPOSAL 33,580 33,580
EQUIP..........................
CIVIL ENGINEERING SUPPORT
EQUIPMENT
108 PASSENGER CARRYING VEHICLES..... 170 170
109 GENERAL PURPOSE TRUCKS.......... 400 400
111 FIRE FIGHTING EQUIPMENT......... 770 770
112 TACTICAL VEHICLES............... 7,298 7,298
SUPPLY SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
118 FIRST DESTINATION TRANSPORTATION 500 500
COMMAND SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
123 MEDICAL SUPPORT EQUIPMENT....... 6,500 6,500
128 ENVIRONMENTAL SUPPORT EQUIPMENT. 2,200 2,200
129 PHYSICAL SECURITY EQUIPMENT..... 19,389 19,389
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............. 4,800 4,800
TOTAL OTHER PROCUREMENT, NAVY... 187,173 187,173
PROCUREMENT, MARINE CORPS
INTELL/COMM EQUIPMENT (NON-TEL)
22 FIRE SUPPORT SYSTEM............. 5,583 5,583
TACTICAL VEHICLES
37 MOTOR TRANSPORT MODIFICATIONS... 44,440 44,440
ENGINEER AND OTHER EQUIPMENT
45 EOD SYSTEMS..................... 8,000 8,000
TOTAL PROCUREMENT, MARINE CORPS. 58,023 58,023
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE
OTHER AIRLIFT
6 HC-130J......................... 100,000 100,000
OTHER AIRCRAFT
17 MQ-9............................ 339,740 339,740
18 RQ-20B PUMA..................... 13,500 13,500
STRATEGIC AIRCRAFT
20 B-1B............................ 4,000 4,000
22 LARGE AIRCRAFT INFRARED 149,778 149,778
COUNTERMEASURES................
TACTICAL AIRCRAFT
23 A-10............................ 10,350 10,350
OTHER AIRCRAFT
45 U-2 MODS........................ 7,900 7,900
54 COMPASS CALL MODS............... 36,400 36,400
59 E-8............................. 13,000 13,000
63 H-60............................ 40,560 40,560
65 HC/MC-130 MODIFICATIONS......... 87,900 87,900
66 OTHER AIRCRAFT.................. 53,731 53,731
68 MQ-9 UAS PAYLOADS............... 16,000 16,000
AIRCRAFT SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS
70 INITIAL SPARES/REPAIR PARTS..... 91,500 91,500
COMMON SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
71 AIRCRAFT REPLACEMENT SUPPORT 32,529 32,529
EQUIP..........................
72 OTHER PRODUCTION CHARGES........ 22,000 22,000
TOTAL AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, AIR 1,018,888 1,018,888
FORCE..........................
MISSILE PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE
TACTICAL
2 JOINT AIR-SURFACE STANDOFF 61,600 84,400
MISSILE........................
Buy-back JASSM-ER........... [22,800]
5 AMRAAM.......................... 2,600 2,600
6 PREDATOR HELLFIRE MISSILE....... 255,000 255,000
7 SMALL DIAMETER BOMB............. 140,724 140,724
CLASS IV
[[Page S3540]]
13 AGM-65D MAVERICK................ 33,602 33,602
TOTAL MISSILE PROCUREMENT, AIR 493,526 516,326
FORCE..........................
PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, AIR
FORCE
CARTRIDGES
2 CARTRIDGES...................... 29,587 29,587
BOMBS
4 GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS........... 551,862 551,862
6 JOINT DIRECT ATTACK MUNITION.... 738,451 738,451
FLARES
15 FLARES.......................... 12,116 12,116
FUZES
16 FUZES........................... 81,000 81,000
SMALL ARMS
17 SMALL ARMS...................... 8,500 8,500
TOTAL PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, 1,421,516 1,421,516
AIR FORCE......................
OTHER PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE
PASSENGER CARRYING VEHICLES
1 PASSENGER CARRYING VEHICLES..... 9,680 9,680
CARGO AND UTILITY VEHICLES
2 MEDIUM TACTICAL VEHICLE......... 9,680 9,680
4 CARGO AND UTILITY VEHICLES...... 19,680 19,680
SPECIAL PURPOSE VEHICLES
6 SECURITY AND TACTICAL VEHICLES.. 24,880 24,880
7 SPECIAL PURPOSE VEHICLES........ 34,680 34,680
FIRE FIGHTING EQUIPMENT
8 FIRE FIGHTING/CRASH RESCUE 9,736 9,736
VEHICLES.......................
MATERIALS HANDLING EQUIPMENT
9 MATERIALS HANDLING VEHICLES..... 24,680 24,680
BASE MAINTENANCE SUPPORT
10 RUNWAY SNOW REMOV AND CLEANING 9,680 9,680
EQU............................
11 BASE MAINTENANCE SUPPORT 9,680 9,680
VEHICLES.......................
INTELLIGENCE PROGRAMS
15 INTELLIGENCE COMM EQUIPMENT..... 6,156 6,156
ELECTRONICS PROGRAMS
16 AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL & LANDING 56,884 56,884
SYS............................
SPCL COMM-ELECTRONICS PROJECTS
29 AIR FORCE PHYSICAL SECURITY 46,236 46,236
SYSTEM.........................
37 THEATER BATTLE MGT C2 SYSTEM.... 2,500 2,500
ORGANIZATION AND BASE
45 TACTICAL C-E EQUIPMENT.......... 27,911 27,911
PERSONAL SAFETY & RESCUE EQUIP
51 PERSONAL SAFETY AND RESCUE 13,600 13,600
EQUIPMENT......................
BASE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
53 BASE PROCURED EQUIPMENT......... 28,800 28,800
54 ENGINEERING AND EOD EQUIPMENT... 53,500 53,500
55 MOBILITY EQUIPMENT.............. 78,562 78,562
56 BASE MAINTENANCE AND SUPPORT 28,055 28,055
EQUIPMENT......................
SPECIAL SUPPORT PROJECTS
59 DCGS-AF......................... 2,000 2,000
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............. 3,229,364 3,229,364
TOTAL OTHER PROCUREMENT, AIR 3,725,944 3,725,944
FORCE..........................
PROCUREMENT, DEFENSE-WIDE
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DISA
8 TELEPORT PROGRAM................ 3,800 3,800
17 DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEMS 12,000 12,000
NETWORK........................
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DEFENSE THREAT
REDUCTION AGENCY
25 COUNTER IED & IMPROVISED THREAT 5,534 5,534
TECHNOLOGIES...................
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............. 41,559 41,559
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
AVIATION PROGRAMS
47 MANNED ISR...................... 5,000 5,000
48 MC-12........................... 5,000 5,000
49 MH-60 BLACKHAWK................. 27,600 27,600
51 UNMANNED ISR.................... 17,000 17,000
52 NON-STANDARD AVIATION........... 13,000 13,000
53 U-28............................ 51,722 51,722
54 MH-47 CHINOOK................... 36,500 36,500
AMMUNITION PROGRAMS
61 ORDNANCE ITEMS <$5M............. 100,850 100,850
OTHER PROCUREMENT PROGRAMS
62 INTELLIGENCE SYSTEMS............ 16,500 16,500
64 OTHER ITEMS <$5M................ 7,700 7,700
67 TACTICAL VEHICLES............... 59,891 59,891
68 WARRIOR SYSTEMS <$5M............ 21,135 21,135
69 COMBAT MISSION REQUIREMENTS..... 10,000 10,000
71 OPERATIONAL ENHANCEMENTS 10,805 10,805
INTELLIGENCE...................
73 OPERATIONAL ENHANCEMENTS........ 126,539 126,539
TOTAL PROCUREMENT, DEFENSE-WIDE. 572,135 572,135
TOTAL PROCUREMENT............... 12,782,468 12,886,068
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page S3541]]
TITLE XLII--RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION
SEC. 4201. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4201. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION (In Thousands of
Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Program FY 2019 Senate
Line Element Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
.............. RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
ARMY
.............. BASIC RESEARCH
1 0601101A IN-HOUSE 11,585 11,585
LABORATORY
INDEPENDENT
RESEARCH.
2 0601102A DEFENSE 276,912 289,412
RESEARCH
SCIENCES.
.............. Basic [7,500]
research
increase.
.............. Quantum [5,000]
information
sciences.
3 0601103A UNIVERSITY 65,283 65,283
RESEARCH
INITIATIVES.
4 0601104A UNIVERSITY AND 92,115 97,115
INDUSTRY
RESEARCH
CENTERS.
.............. Basic [5,000]
research
program
increase.
.............. SUBTOTAL BASIC 445,895 463,395
RESEARCH.
..............
.............. APPLIED
RESEARCH
5 0602105A MATERIALS 28,600 28,600
TECHNOLOGY.
6 0602120A SENSORS AND 32,366 37,366
ELECTRONIC
SURVIVABILITY.
.............. Program [5,000]
increase.
7 0602122A TRACTOR HIP.... 8,674 8,674
8 0602126A TRACTOR JACK... 400 400
9 0602211A AVIATION 64,847 59,847
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Mission [-5,000]
systems /
engine and
drives
coordinatio
n.
10 0602270A ELECTRONIC 25,571 25,571
WARFARE
TECHNOLOGY.
11 0602303A MISSILE 50,183 50,183
TECHNOLOGY.
12 0602307A ADVANCED 29,502 29,502
WEAPONS
TECHNOLOGY.
13 0602308A ADVANCED 28,500 38,500
CONCEPTS AND
SIMULATION.
.............. Pilot for [10,000]
cyber
modeling
and
simulation.
14 0602601A COMBAT VEHICLE 70,450 70,450
AND AUTOMOTIVE
TECHNOLOGY.
15 0602618A BALLISTICS 75,541 75,541
TECHNOLOGY.
16 0602622A CHEMICAL, SMOKE 5,032 5,032
AND EQUIPMENT
DEFEATING
TECHNOLOGY.
17 0602623A JOINT SERVICE 12,394 12,394
SMALL ARMS
PROGRAM.
18 0602624A WEAPONS AND 40,444 42,944
MUNITIONS
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Advanced [2,500]
warheads
technology.
19 0602705A ELECTRONICS AND 58,283 58,283
ELECTRONIC
DEVICES.
20 0602709A NIGHT VISION 29,582 29,582
TECHNOLOGY.
21 0602712A COUNTERMINE 21,244 21,244
SYSTEMS.
22 0602716A HUMAN FACTORS 24,131 26,631
ENGINEERING
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. General [2,500]
program
increase.
23 0602720A ENVIRONMENTAL 13,242 13,242
QUALITY
TECHNOLOGY.
24 0602782A COMMAND, 55,003 50,003
CONTROL,
COMMUNICATIONS
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. General [-5,000]
Program
Reduction.
25 0602783A COMPUTER AND 14,958 14,958
SOFTWARE
TECHNOLOGY.
26 0602784A MILITARY 78,159 78,159
ENGINEERING
TECHNOLOGY.
27 0602785A MANPOWER/ 21,862 21,862
PERSONNEL/
TRAINING
TECHNOLOGY.
28 0602786A WARFIGHTER 40,566 40,566
TECHNOLOGY.
29 0602787A MEDICAL 90,075 90,075
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. SUBTOTAL 919,609 929,609
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
..............
.............. ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT
30 0603001A WARFIGHTER 39,338 39,338
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
31 0603002A MEDICAL 62,496 62,496
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
32 0603003A AVIATION 124,958 119,958
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Platform [-5,000]
design and
structures
systems.
33 0603004A WEAPONS AND 102,686 122,686
MUNITIONS
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Accelerate [20,000]
ERCA gun.
34 0603005A COMBAT VEHICLE 119,739 192,239
AND AUTOMOTIVE
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Modular [2,500]
scalable
powertrain.
.............. Prototype [70,000]
Next
Generation
Combat
Vehicle.
35 0603006A SPACE 13,000 13,000
APPLICATION
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
36 0603007A MANPOWER, 8,044 8,044
PERSONNEL AND
TRAINING
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
37 0603009A TRACTOR HIKE... 22,631 22,631
38 0603015A NEXT GENERATION 25,682 25,682
TRAINING &
SIMULATION
SYSTEMS.
40 0603125A COMBATING 3,762 3,762
TERRORISM--TEC
HNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
41 0603130A TRACTOR NAIL... 4,896 4,896
42 0603131A TRACTOR EGGS... 6,041 6,041
43 0603270A ELECTRONIC 31,491 31,491
WARFARE
TECHNOLOGY.
44 0603313A MISSILE AND 61,132 61,132
ROCKET
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
45 0603322A TRACTOR CAGE... 16,845 16,845
46 0603461A HIGH 183,322 188,322
PERFORMANCE
COMPUTING
MODERNIZATION
PROGRAM.
.............. Program [5,000]
increase.
47 0603606A LANDMINE 11,104 11,104
WARFARE AND
BARRIER
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
48 0603607A JOINT SERVICE 5,885 5,885
SMALL ARMS
PROGRAM.
49 0603710A NIGHT VISION 61,376 61,376
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
50 0603728A ENVIRONMENTAL 9,136 9,136
QUALITY
TECHNOLOGY
DEMONSTRATIONS.
51 0603734A MILITARY 25,864 38,864
ENGINEERING
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Minor [8,000]
MILCON.
.............. Program [5,000]
increase.
52 0603772A ADVANCED 34,883 37,383
TACTICAL
COMPUTER
SCIENCE AND
SENSOR
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. PNT [2,500]
research.
53 0603794A C3 ADVANCED 52,387 47,387
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. General [-5,000]
program
decrease.
[[Page S3542]]
.............. SUBTOTAL 1,026,698 1,129,698
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
..............
.............. ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES
54 0603305A ARMY MISSLE 10,777 10,777
DEFENSE
SYSTEMS
INTEGRATION.
56 0603327A AIR AND MISSILE 42,802 42,802
DEFENSE
SYSTEMS
ENGINEERING.
57 0603619A LANDMINE 45,254 45,254
WARFARE AND
BARRIER--ADV
DEV.
58 0603627A SMOKE, 22,700 22,700
OBSCURANT AND
TARGET
DEFEATING SYS-
ADV DEV.
59 0603639A TANK AND MEDIUM 41,974 55,974
CALIBER
AMMUNITION.
.............. Army UPL: [14,000]
Test and
evaluation
of M999
155mm.
60 0603645A ARMORED SYSTEM 119,395 119,395
MODERNIZATION-
-ADV DEV.
61 0603747A SOLDIER SUPPORT 8,746 8,746
AND
SURVIVABILITY.
62 0603766A TACTICAL 35,667 43,667
ELECTRONIC
SURVEILLANCE
SYSTEM--ADV
DEV.
.............. ISR [8,000]
capabilitie
s to
support
long range
field
artillery.
63 0603774A NIGHT VISION 7,350 7,350
SYSTEMS
ADVANCED
DEVELOPMENT.
64 0603779A ENVIRONMENTAL 14,749 14,749
QUALITY
TECHNOLOGY--DE
M/VAL.
65 0603790A NATO RESEARCH 3,687 3,687
AND
DEVELOPMENT.
66 0603801A AVIATION--ADV 10,793 10,793
DEV.
67 0603804A LOGISTICS AND 14,248 14,248
ENGINEER
EQUIPMENT--ADV
DEV.
68 0603807A MEDICAL 34,284 34,284
SYSTEMS--ADV
DEV.
69 0603827A SOLDIER 18,044 18,044
SYSTEMS--ADVAN
CED
DEVELOPMENT.
70 0604017A ROBOTICS 95,660 95,660
DEVELOPMENT.
71 0604020A CROSS 38,000 38,000
FUNCTIONAL
TEAM (CFT)
ADVANCED
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPING.
72 0604100A ANALYSIS OF 9,765 9,765
ALTERNATIVES.
73 0604113A FUTURE TACTICAL 12,393 12,393
UNMANNED
AIRCRAFT
SYSTEM (FTUAS).
74 0604114A LOWER TIER AIR 120,374 120,374
MISSILE
DEFENSE
(LTAMD) SENSOR.
75 0604115A TECHNOLOGY 95,347 95,347
MATURATION
INITIATIVES.
76 0604117A MANEUVER--SHORT 95,085 95,085
RANGE AIR
DEFENSE (M-
SHORAD).
77 0604118A TRACTOR BEAM... 52,894 52,894
79 0604121A SYNTHETIC 77,939 77,939
TRAINING
ENVIRONMENT
REFINEMENT &
PROTOTYPING.
80 0604319A INDIRECT FIRE 51,030 81,030
PROTECTION
CAPABILITY
INCREMENT 2-
INTERCEPT
(IFPC2).
.............. Accelerate [30,000]
delivery
and
capacity
for IFPC.
81 0305251A CYBERSPACE 65,817 70,817
OPERATIONS
FORCES AND
FORCE SUPPORT.
.............. Army Cyber [5,000]
Center of
Excellence.
82 1206120A ASSURED 146,300 146,300
POSITIONING,
NAVIGATION AND
TIMING (PNT).
83 1206308A ARMY SPACE 38,319 38,319
SYSTEMS
INTEGRATION.
.............. SUBTOTAL 1,329,393 1,386,393
ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES.
..............
.............. SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION
84 0604201A AIRCRAFT 32,293 32,293
AVIONICS.
85 0604270A ELECTRONIC 78,699 78,699
WARFARE
DEVELOPMENT.
88 0604328A TRACTOR CAGE... 17,050 17,050
89 0604601A INFANTRY 83,155 83,155
SUPPORT
WEAPONS.
90 0604604A MEDIUM TACTICAL 3,704 3,704
VEHICLES.
91 0604611A JAVELIN........ 10,623 10,623
92 0604622A FAMILY OF HEAVY 11,950 11,950
TACTICAL
VEHICLES.
93 0604633A AIR TRAFFIC 12,347 12,347
CONTROL.
95 0604642A LIGHT TACTICAL 8,212 8,212
WHEELED
VEHICLES.
96 0604645A ARMORED SYSTEMS 393,613 318,613
MODERNIZATION
(ASM)--ENG DEV.
.............. Mobile [-75,000]
Protected
Firepower
decrease.
97 0604710A NIGHT VISION 139,614 139,614
SYSTEMS--ENG
DEV.
98 0604713A COMBAT FEEDING, 4,507 4,507
CLOTHING, AND
EQUIPMENT.
99 0604715A NON-SYSTEM 49,436 49,436
TRAINING
DEVICES--ENG
DEV.
100 0604741A AIR DEFENSE 95,172 95,172
COMMAND,
CONTROL AND
INTELLIGENCE--
ENG DEV.
101 0604742A CONSTRUCTIVE 22,628 22,628
SIMULATION
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
102 0604746A AUTOMATIC TEST 13,297 13,297
EQUIPMENT
DEVELOPMENT.
103 0604760A DISTRIBUTIVE 9,145 9,145
INTERACTIVE
SIMULATIONS
(DIS)--ENG DEV.
104 0604768A BRILLIANT ANTI- 9,894 9,894
ARMOR
SUBMUNITION
(BAT).
105 0604780A COMBINED ARMS 21,964 21,964
TACTICAL
TRAINER (CATT)
CORE.
106 0604798A BRIGADE 49,288 49,288
ANALYSIS,
INTEGRATION
AND EVALUATION.
107 0604802A WEAPONS AND 183,100 183,100
MUNITIONS--ENG
DEV.
108 0604804A LOGISTICS AND 79,706 79,706
ENGINEER
EQUIPMENT--ENG
DEV.
109 0604805A COMMAND, 15,970 15,970
CONTROL,
COMMUNICATIONS
SYSTEMS--ENG
DEV.
110 0604807A MEDICAL 44,542 44,542
MATERIEL/
MEDICAL
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
EQUIPMENT--ENG
DEV.
111 0604808A LANDMINE 50,817 50,817
WARFARE/
BARRIER--ENG
DEV.
112 0604818A ARMY TACTICAL 178,693 178,693
COMMAND &
CONTROL
HARDWARE &
SOFTWARE.
113 0604820A RADAR 39,338 39,338
DEVELOPMENT.
114 0604822A GENERAL FUND 37,851 37,851
ENTERPRISE
BUSINESS
SYSTEM (GFEBS).
115 0604823A FIREFINDER..... 45,473 45,473
116 0604827A SOLDIER 10,395 10,395
SYSTEMS--WARRI
OR DEM/VAL.
117 0604852A SUITE OF 69,204 78,204
SURVIVABILITY
ENHANCEMENT
SYSTEMS--EMD.
.............. Suite of [9,000]
Vehicle
Protection
Systems.
118 0604854A ARTILLERY 1,781 1,781
SYSTEMS--EMD.
119 0605013A INFORMATION 113,758 113,758
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
120 0605018A INTEGRATED 166,603 166,603
PERSONNEL AND
PAY SYSTEM-
ARMY (IPPS-A).
121 0605028A ARMORED MULTI- 118,239 118,239
PURPOSE
VEHICLE (AMPV).
122 0605029A INTEGRATED 3,211 3,211
GROUND
SECURITY
SURVEILLANCE
RESPONSE
CAPABILITY
(IGSSR-C).
123 0605030A JOINT TACTICAL 15,889 15,889
NETWORK CENTER
(JTNC).
124 0605031A JOINT TACTICAL 41,972 41,972
NETWORK (JTN).
125 0605032A TRACTOR TIRE... 41,166 41,166
126 0605033A GROUND-BASED 5,175 5,175
OPERATIONAL
SURVEILLANCE
SYSTEM--EXPEDI
TIONARY (GBOSS-
E).
127 0605034A TACTICAL 4,496 4,496
SECURITY
SYSTEM (TSS).
128 0605035A COMMON INFRARED 51,178 51,178
COUNTERMEASURE
S (CIRCM).
129 0605036A COMBATING 11,311 11,311
WEAPONS OF
MASS
DESTRUCTION
(CWMD).
[[Page S3543]]
131 0605038A NUCLEAR 17,154 17,154
BIOLOGICAL
CHEMICAL
RECONNAISSANCE
VEHICLE
(NBCRV) SENSOR
SUITE.
132 0605041A DEFENSIVE CYBER 36,626 36,626
TOOL
DEVELOPMENT.
133 0605042A TACTICAL 3,829 3,829
NETWORK RADIO
SYSTEMS (LOW-
TIER).
134 0605047A CONTRACT 41,928 0
WRITING SYSTEM.
.............. Duplication [-41,928]
concern in
contract
writing
systems.
135 0605049A MISSILE WARNING 28,276 28,276
SYSTEM
MODERNIZATION
(MWSM).
136 0605051A AIRCRAFT 21,965 21,965
SURVIVABILITY
DEVELOPMENT.
137 0605052A INDIRECT FIRE 157,710 157,710
PROTECTION
CAPABILITY INC
2--BLOCK 1.
138 0605053A GROUND ROBOTICS 86,167 86,167
139 0605054A EMERGING 42,866 42,866
TECHNOLOGY
INITIATIVES.
140 0605380A AMF JOINT 15,984 15,984
TACTICAL RADIO
SYSTEM (JTRS).
141 0605450A JOINT AIR-TO- 11,773 11,773
GROUND MISSILE
(JAGM).
142 0605457A ARMY INTEGRATED 277,607 277,607
AIR AND
MISSILE
DEFENSE
(AIAMD).
143 0605766A NATIONAL 12,340 12,340
CAPABILITIES
INTEGRATION
(MIP).
144 0605812A JOINT LIGHT 2,686 2,686
TACTICAL
VEHICLE (JLTV)
ENGINEERING
AND
MANUFACTURING
DEVELOPMENT PH.
145 0605830A AVIATION GROUND 2,706 2,706
SUPPORT
EQUIPMENT.
147 0303032A TROJAN--RH12... 4,521 4,521
150 0304270A ELECTRONIC 8,922 8,922
WARFARE
DEVELOPMENT.
151 1205117A TRACTOR BEARS.. 23,170 23,170
.............. SUBTOTAL SYSTEM 3,192,689 3,084,761
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION.
..............
.............. RDT&E
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT
152 0604256A THREAT 12,835 12,835
SIMULATOR
DEVELOPMENT.
153 0604258A TARGET SYSTEMS 12,135 12,135
DEVELOPMENT.
154 0604759A MAJOR T&E 82,996 107,996
INVESTMENT.
.............. Program [25,000]
increase.
155 0605103A RAND ARROYO 19,821 19,821
CENTER.
156 0605301A ARMY KWAJALEIN 246,574 246,574
ATOLL.
157 0605326A CONCEPTS 30,430 30,430
EXPERIMENTATIO
N PROGRAM.
159 0605601A ARMY TEST 305,759 320,759
RANGES AND
FACILITIES.
.............. Increase to [15,000]
help manage
directed
energy
workloads.
160 0605602A ARMY TECHNICAL 62,379 62,379
TEST
INSTRUMENTATIO
N AND TARGETS.
161 0605604A SURVIVABILITY/ 40,496 40,496
LETHALITY
ANALYSIS.
162 0605606A AIRCRAFT 3,941 3,941
CERTIFICATION.
163 0605702A METEOROLOGICAL 9,767 9,767
SUPPORT TO
RDT&E
ACTIVITIES.
164 0605706A MATERIEL 21,226 21,226
SYSTEMS
ANALYSIS.
165 0605709A EXPLOITATION OF 13,026 13,026
FOREIGN ITEMS.
166 0605712A SUPPORT OF 52,718 52,718
OPERATIONAL
TESTING.
167 0605716A ARMY EVALUATION 57,049 57,049
CENTER.
168 0605718A ARMY MODELING & 2,801 2,801
SIM X-CMD
COLLABORATION
& INTEG.
169 0605801A PROGRAMWIDE 60,942 60,942
ACTIVITIES.
170 0605803A TECHNICAL 29,050 29,050
INFORMATION
ACTIVITIES.
171 0605805A MUNITIONS 42,332 42,332
STANDARDIZATIO
N,
EFFECTIVENESS
AND SAFETY.
172 0605857A ENVIRONMENTAL 3,216 3,216
QUALITY
TECHNOLOGY
MGMT SUPPORT.
173 0605898A ARMY DIRECT 54,145 54,145
REPORT
HEADQUARTERS--
R&D - MHA.
174 0606001A MILITARY GROUND- 4,896 4,896
BASED CREW
TECHNOLOGY.
175 0606002A RONALD REAGAN 63,011 63,011
BALLISTIC
MISSILE
DEFENSE TEST
SITE.
176 0606003A COUNTERINTEL 2,636 2,636
AND HUMAN
INTEL
MODERNIZATION.
177 0606942A ASSESSMENTS AND 88,300 88,300
EVALUATIONS
CYBER
VULNERABILITIE
S.
.............. SUBTOTAL RDT&E 1,322,481 1,362,481
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT.
..............
9999999999 CLASSIFIED 5,955 5,955
PROGRAMS.
.............. OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT
181 0603778A MLRS PRODUCT 8,886 8,886
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM.
182 0603813A TRACTOR PULL... 4,067 4,067
183 0605024A ANTI-TAMPER 4,254 4,254
TECHNOLOGY
SUPPORT.
184 0607131A WEAPONS AND 16,022 16,022
MUNITIONS
PRODUCT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAMS.
185 0607133A TRACTOR SMOKE.. 4,577 4,577
186 0607134A LONG RANGE 186,475 186,475
PRECISION
FIRES (LRPF).
187 0607135A APACHE PRODUCT 31,049 31,049
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM.
188 0607136A BLACKHAWK 35,240 35,240
PRODUCT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM.
189 0607137A CHINOOK PRODUCT 157,822 157,822
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM.
190 0607138A FIXED WING 4,189 4,189
PRODUCT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM.
191 0607139A IMPROVED 192,637 192,637
TURBINE ENGINE
PROGRAM.
194 0607142A AVIATION ROCKET 60,860 60,860
SYSTEM PRODUCT
IMPROVEMENT
AND
DEVELOPMENT.
195 0607143A UNMANNED 52,019 52,019
AIRCRAFT
SYSTEM
UNIVERSAL
PRODUCTS.
196 0607665A FAMILY OF 2,400 2,400
BIOMETRICS.
197 0607865A PATRIOT PRODUCT 65,369 65,369
IMPROVEMENT.
198 0202429A AEROSTAT JOINT 1 1
PROJECT--COCOM
EXERCISE.
199 0203728A JOINT AUTOMATED 30,954 30,954
DEEP OPERATION
COORDINATION
SYSTEM
(JADOCS).
200 0203735A COMBAT VEHICLE 411,927 411,927
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAMS.
202 0203743A 155MM SELF- 40,676 40,676
PROPELLED
HOWITZER
IMPROVEMENTS.
203 0203744A AIRCRAFT 17,706 17,706
MODIFICATIONS/
PRODUCT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAMS.
204 0203752A AIRCRAFT ENGINE 146 146
COMPONENT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM.
205 0203758A DIGITIZATION... 6,316 6,316
206 0203801A MISSILE/AIR 1,643 1,643
DEFENSE
PRODUCT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM.
207 0203802A OTHER MISSILE 4,947 4,947
PRODUCT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAMS.
208 0203808A TRACTOR CARD... 34,050 34,050
210 0205410A MATERIALS 1,464 1,464
HANDLING
EQUIPMENT.
211 0205412A ENVIRONMENTAL 249 249
QUALITY
TECHNOLOGY--OP
ERATIONAL
SYSTEM DEV.
212 0205456A LOWER TIER AIR 79,283 79,283
AND MISSILE
DEFENSE (AMD)
SYSTEM.
213 0205778A GUIDED MULTIPLE- 154,102 154,102
LAUNCH ROCKET
SYSTEM (GMLRS).
216 0303028A SECURITY AND 12,280 12,280
INTELLIGENCE
ACTIVITIES.
[[Page S3544]]
217 0303140A INFORMATION 68,533 68,533
SYSTEMS
SECURITY
PROGRAM.
218 0303141A GLOBAL COMBAT 68,619 68,619
SUPPORT SYSTEM.
220 0303150A WWMCCS/GLOBAL 2,034 2,034
COMMAND AND
CONTROL SYSTEM.
223 0305172A COMBINED 1,500 1,500
ADVANCED
APPLICATIONS.
224 0305179A INTEGRATED 450 450
BROADCAST
SERVICE (IBS).
225 0305204A TACTICAL 6,000 6,000
UNMANNED
AERIAL
VEHICLES.
226 0305206A AIRBORNE 12,416 12,416
RECONNAISSANCE
SYSTEMS.
227 0305208A DISTRIBUTED 38,667 38,667
COMMON GROUND/
SURFACE
SYSTEMS.
229 0305232A RQ-11 UAV...... 6,180 6,180
230 0305233A RQ-7 UAV....... 12,863 12,863
231 0307665A BIOMETRICS 4,310 4,310
ENABLED
INTELLIGENCE.
233 0708045A END ITEM 53,958 53,958
INDUSTRIAL
PREPAREDNESS
ACTIVITIES.
234 1203142A SATCOM GROUND 12,119 12,119
ENVIRONMENT
(SPACE).
235 1208053A JOINT TACTICAL 7,400 7,400
GROUND SYSTEM.
.............. SUBTOTAL 1,922,614 1,922,614
OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
..............
.............. TOTAL RESEARCH, 10,159,379 10,278,951
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
ARMY.
..............
.............. RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
NAVY
.............. BASIC RESEARCH
1 0601103N UNIVERSITY 119,433 124,433
RESEARCH
INITIATIVES.
.............. Basic [5,000]
research
program
increase.
2 0601152N IN-HOUSE 19,237 19,237
LABORATORY
INDEPENDENT
RESEARCH.
3 0601153N DEFENSE 458,708 468,708
RESEARCH
SCIENCES.
.............. Basic [5,000]
research
program
increase.
.............. Quantum [5,000]
information
sciences.
.............. SUBTOTAL BASIC 597,378 612,378
RESEARCH.
..............
.............. APPLIED
RESEARCH
4 0602114N POWER 14,643 17,143
PROJECTION
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
.............. Directed [2,500]
energy.
5 0602123N FORCE 124,049 124,049
PROTECTION
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
6 0602131M MARINE CORPS 59,607 59,607
LANDING FORCE
TECHNOLOGY.
7 0602235N COMMON PICTURE 36,348 36,348
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
8 0602236N WARFIGHTER 56,197 48,697
SUSTAINMENT
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
.............. ONR global [-7,500]
growth.
9 0602271N ELECTROMAGNETIC 83,800 83,800
SYSTEMS
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
10 0602435N OCEAN 42,998 42,998
WARFIGHTING
ENVIRONMENT
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
11 0602651M JOINT NON- 6,349 6,349
LETHAL WEAPONS
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
12 0602747N UNDERSEA 58,049 78,049
WARFARE
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
.............. General [20,000]
program
increase.
13 0602750N FUTURE NAVAL 147,771 147,771
CAPABILITIES
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
14 0602782N MINE AND 37,545 37,545
EXPEDITIONARY
WARFARE
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
15 0602792N INNOVATIVE 159,697 164,697
NAVAL
PROTOTYPES
(INP) APPLIED
RESEARCH.
.............. Directed [5,000]
energy and
electronic
warfare/
unmanned
and
autonomous
systems.
16 0602861N SCIENCE AND 64,418 64,418
TECHNOLOGY
MANAGEMENT--ON
R FIELD
ACITIVITIES.
.............. SUBTOTAL 891,471 911,471
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
..............
.............. ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT
19 0603123N FORCE 2,423 2,423
PROTECTION
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
21 0603640M USMC ADVANCED 150,245 140,245
TECHNOLOGY
DEMONSTRATION
(ATD).
.............. Unjustified [-10,000]
growth.
22 0603651M JOINT NON- 13,313 13,313
LETHAL WEAPONS
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
23 0603671N NAVY ADVANCED 131,502 131,502
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT
(ATD).
24 0603673N FUTURE NAVAL 232,996 232,996
CAPABILITIES
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
25 0603680N MANUFACTURING 58,657 58,657
TECHNOLOGY
PROGRAM.
30 0603801N INNOVATIVE 161,859 166,359
NAVAL
PROTOTYPES
(INP) ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
.............. DE & EW/ [4,500]
unmanned
and
autonomous
systems.
.............. SUBTOTAL 750,995 745,495
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
..............
.............. ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES
31 0603207N AIR/OCEAN 29,747 29,747
TACTICAL
APPLICATIONS.
32 0603216N AVIATION 7,050 7,050
SURVIVABILITY.
33 0603251N AIRCRAFT 793 793
SYSTEMS.
34 0603254N ASW SYSTEMS 7,058 7,058
DEVELOPMENT.
35 0603261N TACTICAL 3,540 3,540
AIRBORNE
RECONNAISSANCE.
36 0603382N ADVANCED COMBAT 59,741 62,241
SYSTEMS
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Locust/HCUS/ [2,500]
INP
Transition.
37 0603502N SURFACE AND 62,727 36,727
SHALLOW WATER
MINE
COUNTERMEASURE
S.
.............. Barracuda [-26,000]
EDMs ahead
of PDR and
CDR.
38 0603506N SURFACE SHIP 8,570 8,570
TORPEDO
DEFENSE.
39 0603512N CARRIER SYSTEMS 5,440 5,440
DEVELOPMENT.
40 0603525N PILOT FISH..... 162,222 162,222
41 0603527N RETRACT LARCH.. 11,745 11,745
42 0603536N RETRACT JUNIPER 114,265 114,265
43 0603542N RADIOLOGICAL 740 740
CONTROL.
44 0603553N SURFACE ASW.... 1,122 1,122
45 0603561N ADVANCED 109,086 112,586
SUBMARINE
SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT.
.............. Advanced [3,500]
submarine
propulsion
development.
46 0603562N SUBMARINE 9,374 9,374
TACTICAL
WARFARE
SYSTEMS.
47 0603563N SHIP CONCEPT 89,419 107,419
ADVANCED
DESIGN.
.............. CHAMP [18,000]
acceleratio
n.
48 0603564N SHIP 13,348 13,348
PRELIMINARY
DESIGN &
FEASIBILITY
STUDIES.
[[Page S3545]]
49 0603570N ADVANCED 256,137 256,137
NUCLEAR POWER
SYSTEMS.
50 0603573N ADVANCED 22,109 22,109
SURFACE
MACHINERY
SYSTEMS.
51 0603576N CHALK EAGLE.... 29,744 29,744
52 0603581N LITTORAL COMBAT 27,997 27,997
SHIP (LCS).
53 0603582N COMBAT SYSTEM 16,351 16,351
INTEGRATION.
54 0603595N OHIO 514,846 514,846
REPLACEMENT.
55 0603596N LCS MISSION 103,633 133,033
MODULES.
.............. Project [-5,000]
2552: Align
with
deferred
LCS-6 SSMM
test.
.............. Transfer [16,700]
from PE
64028N.
.............. Transfer [10,100]
from PE
64126N.
.............. Transfer [7,600]
from PE
64127N.
56 0603597N AUTOMATED TEST 7,931 7,931
AND ANALYSIS.
57 0603599N FRIGATE 134,772 134,772
DEVELOPMENT.
58 0603609N CONVENTIONAL 9,307 9,307
MUNITIONS.
60 0603635M MARINE CORPS 1,828 1,828
GROUND COMBAT/
SUPPORT SYSTEM.
61 0603654N JOINT SERVICE 43,148 43,148
EXPLOSIVE
ORDNANCE
DEVELOPMENT.
62 0603713N OCEAN 5,915 5,915
ENGINEERING
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
63 0603721N ENVIRONMENTAL 19,811 19,811
PROTECTION.
64 0603724N NAVY ENERGY 25,656 25,656
PROGRAM.
65 0603725N FACILITIES 5,301 5,301
IMPROVEMENT.
66 0603734N CHALK CORAL.... 267,985 267,985
67 0603739N NAVY LOGISTIC 4,059 4,059
PRODUCTIVITY.
68 0603746N RETRACT MAPLE.. 377,878 377,878
69 0603748N LINK PLUMERIA.. 381,770 381,770
70 0603751N RETRACT ELM.... 60,535 60,535
73 0603790N NATO RESEARCH 9,652 9,652
AND
DEVELOPMENT.
74 0603795N LAND ATTACK 15,529 0
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Program [-15,529]
delay and
no GLGP EMD
FYDP
funding.
75 0603851M JOINT NON- 27,581 27,581
LETHAL WEAPONS
TESTING.
76 0603860N JOINT PRECISION 101,566 101,566
APPROACH AND
LANDING
SYSTEMS--DEM/
VAL.
77 0603925N DIRECTED ENERGY 223,344 223,344
AND ELECTRIC
WEAPON SYSTEMS.
78 0604014N F/A -18 108,700 132,700
INFRARED
SEARCH AND
TRACK (IRST).
.............. IRST block [24,000]
II risk
reduction.
79 0604027N DIGITAL WARFARE 26,691 26,691
OFFICE.
80 0604028N SMALL AND 16,717 0
MEDIUM
UNMANNED
UNDERSEA
VEHICLES.
.............. Transfer to [-16,717]
PE 63596N.
81 0604029N UNMANNED 30,187 30,187
UNDERSEA
VEHICLE CORE
TECHNOLOGIES.
82 0604030N RAPID 48,796 48,796
PROTOTYPING,
EXPERIMENTATIO
N AND
DEMONSTRATION..
83 0604031N LARGE UNMANNED 92,613 71,413
UNDERSEA
VEHICLES.
.............. Early to [-21,200]
need.
84 0604112N GERALD R. FORD 58,121 58,121
CLASS NUCLEAR
AIRCRAFT
CARRIER (CVN
78--80).
86 0604126N LITTORAL 17,622 7,522
AIRBORNE MCM.
.............. Transfer to [-10,100]
PE 63596N.
87 0604127N SURFACE MINE 18,154 10,554
COUNTERMEASURE
S.
.............. Transfer to [-7,600]
PE 63596N.
88 0604272N TACTICAL AIR 47,278 47,278
DIRECTIONAL
INFRARED
COUNTERMEASURE
S (TADIRCM).
90 0604289M NEXT GENERATION 11,081 11,081
LOGISTICS.
92 0604320M RAPID 7,107 7,107
TECHNOLOGY
CAPABILITY
PROTOTYPE.
93 0604454N LX (R)......... 5,549 5,549
94 0604536N ADVANCED 87,669 87,669
UNDERSEA
PROTOTYPING.
95 0604659N PRECISION 132,818 132,818
STRIKE WEAPONS
DEVELOPMENT
PROGRAM.
96 0604707N SPACE AND 7,230 7,230
ELECTRONIC
WARFARE (SEW)
ARCHITECTURE/
ENGINEERING
SUPPORT.
97 0604786N OFFENSIVE ANTI- 143,062 143,062
SURFACE
WARFARE WEAPON
DEVELOPMENT.
99 0303354N ASW SYSTEMS 8,889 8,889
DEVELOPMENT--M
IP.
100 0304240M ADVANCED 25,291 25,291
TACTICAL
UNMANNED
AIRCRAFT
SYSTEM.
101 0304240N ADVANCED 9,300 9,300
TACTICAL
UNMANNED
AIRCRAFT
SYSTEM.
102 0304270N ELECTRONIC 466 466
WARFARE
DEVELOPMENT--M
IP.
.............. SUBTOTAL 4,293,713 4,273,967
ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES.
..............
.............. SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION
103 0603208N TRAINING SYSTEM 12,798 12,798
AIRCRAFT.
104 0604212N OTHER HELO 32,128 32,128
DEVELOPMENT.
105 0604214M AV-8B AIRCRAFT-- 46,363 30,163
ENG DEV.
.............. Lacks [-16,200]
operational
justificati
on/need.
107 0604215N STANDARDS 3,771 3,771
DEVELOPMENT.
108 0604216N MULTI-MISSION 16,611 16,611
HELICOPTER
UPGRADE
DEVELOPMENT.
109 0604218N AIR/OCEAN 17,368 17,368
EQUIPMENT
ENGINEERING.
110 0604221N P-3 2,134 2,134
MODERNIZATION
PROGRAM.
111 0604230N WARFARE SUPPORT 9,729 9,729
SYSTEM.
112 0604231N TACTICAL 57,688 57,688
COMMAND SYSTEM.
113 0604234N ADVANCED 223,565 223,565
HAWKEYE.
114 0604245M H-1 UPGRADES... 58,097 58,097
116 0604261N ACOUSTIC SEARCH 42,485 42,485
SENSORS.
117 0604262N V-22A.......... 143,079 143,079
118 0604264N AIR CREW 20,980 30,980
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
.............. Increase to [10,000]
advance
aircrew
physiologic
al
monitoring.
119 0604269N EA-18.......... 147,419 242,719
.............. UPL--EA-18G [95,300]
Advanced
Modes /
Cognitive
EW.
120 0604270N ELECTRONIC 89,824 121,424
WARFARE
DEVELOPMENT.
.............. UPL--EA-18G [31,600]
Offensive
Airborne
Electronic
Attack
Special
Mission Pod.
121 0604273M EXECUTIVE HELO 245,064 245,064
DEVELOPMENT.
123 0604274N NEXT GENERATION 459,529 459,529
JAMMER (NGJ).
124 0604280N JOINT TACTICAL 3,272 3,272
RADIO SYSTEM--
NAVY (JTRS-
NAVY).
[[Page S3546]]
125 0604282N NEXT GENERATION 115,253 115,253
JAMMER (NGJ)
INCREMENT II.
126 0604307N SURFACE 397,403 397,403
COMBATANT
COMBAT SYSTEM
ENGINEERING.
127 0604311N LPD-17 CLASS 939 50,939
SYSTEMS
INTEGRATION.
.............. Mk 41 VLS [50,000]
integration.
128 0604329N SMALL DIAMETER 104,448 104,448
BOMB (SDB).
129 0604366N STANDARD 165,881 184,881
MISSILE
IMPROVEMENTS.
.............. Navy UPL: [19,000]
SM-6 Blk 1B
21" rocket
motor.
130 0604373N AIRBORNE MCM... 10,831 10,831
131 0604378N NAVAL 33,429 33,429
INTEGRATED
FIRE CONTROL--
COUNTER AIR
SYSTEMS
ENGINEERING.
132 0604501N ADVANCED ABOVE 35,635 35,635
WATER SENSORS.
133 0604503N SSN-688 AND 126,932 126,932
TRIDENT
MODERNIZATION.
134 0604504N AIR CONTROL.... 62,448 62,448
135 0604512N SHIPBOARD 9,710 9,710
AVIATION
SYSTEMS.
136 0604518N COMBAT 19,303 19,303
INFORMATION
CENTER
CONVERSION.
137 0604522N AIR AND MISSILE 27,059 27,059
DEFENSE RADAR
(AMDR) SYSTEM.
138 0604530N ADVANCED 184,106 184,106
ARRESTING GEAR
(AAG).
139 0604558N NEW DESIGN SSN. 148,233 148,233
140 0604562N SUBMARINE 60,824 60,824
TACTICAL
WARFARE SYSTEM.
141 0604567N SHIP CONTRACT 60,062 66,062
DESIGN/ LIVE
FIRE T&E.
.............. Planning to [6,000]
support
FY21 award
of LHA-9.
142 0604574N NAVY TACTICAL 4,642 4,642
COMPUTER
RESOURCES.
144 0604601N MINE 25,756 25,756
DEVELOPMENT.
145 0604610N LIGHTWEIGHT 95,147 95,147
TORPEDO
DEVELOPMENT.
146 0604654N JOINT SERVICE 7,107 7,107
EXPLOSIVE
ORDNANCE
DEVELOPMENT.
147 0604703N PERSONNEL, 6,539 6,539
TRAINING,
SIMULATION,
AND HUMAN
FACTORS.
148 0604727N JOINT STANDOFF 441 441
WEAPON SYSTEMS.
149 0604755N SHIP SELF 180,391 180,391
DEFENSE
(DETECT &
CONTROL).
150 0604756N SHIP SELF 178,538 178,538
DEFENSE
(ENGAGE: HARD
KILL).
151 0604757N SHIP SELF 120,507 120,507
DEFENSE
(ENGAGE: SOFT
KILL/EW).
152 0604761N INTELLIGENCE 29,715 29,715
ENGINEERING.
153 0604771N MEDICAL 8,095 8,095
DEVELOPMENT.
154 0604777N NAVIGATION/ID 121,026 121,026
SYSTEM.
155 0604800M JOINT STRIKE 66,566 66,566
FIGHTER (JSF)--
EMD.
156 0604800N JOINT STRIKE 65,494 65,494
FIGHTER (JSF)--
EMD.
159 0605013M INFORMATION 14,005 14,005
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
160 0605013N INFORMATION 268,567 178,467
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
.............. Duplication [-26,300]
concern in
contract
writing
systems.
.............. Lengthy [-63,800]
delivery
timelines
for Navy
Personnel
and Pay
System.
161 0605024N ANTI-TAMPER 5,618 5,618
TECHNOLOGY
SUPPORT.
162 0605212M CH-53K RDTE.... 326,945 326,945
164 0605215N MISSION 32,714 32,714
PLANNING.
165 0605217N COMMON AVIONICS 51,486 51,486
166 0605220N SHIP TO SHORE 1,444 1,444
CONNECTOR
(SSC).
167 0605327N T-AO 205 CLASS. 1,298 1,298
168 0605414N UNMANNED 718,942 718,942
CARRIER
AVIATION (UCA).
169 0605450M JOINT AIR-TO- 6,759 6,759
GROUND MISSILE
(JAGM).
171 0605500N MULTI-MISSION 37,296 37,296
MARITIME
AIRCRAFT (MMA).
172 0605504N MULTI-MISSION 160,389 160,389
MARITIME (MMA)
INCREMENT III.
173 0605611M MARINE CORPS 98,223 98,223
ASSAULT
VEHICLES
SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION.
174 0605813M JOINT LIGHT 2,260 2,260
TACTICAL
VEHICLE (JLTV)
SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION.
175 0204202N DDG-1000....... 161,264 161,264
180 0304785N TACTICAL 44,098 44,098
CRYPTOLOGIC
SYSTEMS.
182 0306250M CYBER 6,808 6,808
OPERATIONS
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
.............. SUBTOTAL SYSTEM 6,042,480 6,148,080
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION.
..............
.............. MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT
183 0604256N THREAT 94,576 94,576
SIMULATOR
DEVELOPMENT.
184 0604258N TARGET SYSTEMS 10,981 10,981
DEVELOPMENT.
185 0604759N MAJOR T&E 77,014 77,014
INVESTMENT.
186 0605126N JOINT THEATER 48 48
AIR AND
MISSILE
DEFENSE
ORGANIZATION.
187 0605152N STUDIES AND 3,942 3,942
ANALYSIS
SUPPORT--NAVY.
188 0605154N CENTER FOR 48,797 48,797
NAVAL ANALYSES.
189 0605285N NEXT GENERATION 5,000 5,000
FIGHTER.
191 0605804N TECHNICAL 1,029 1,029
INFORMATION
SERVICES.
192 0605853N MANAGEMENT, 87,565 78,565
TECHNICAL &
INTERNATIONAL
SUPPORT.
.............. Insufficien [-9,000]
t budget
justificati
on.
193 0605856N STRATEGIC 4,231 4,231
TECHNICAL
SUPPORT.
194 0605861N RDT&E SCIENCE 1,072 1,072
AND TECHNOLOGY
MANAGEMENT.
195 0605863N RDT&E SHIP AND 97,471 97,471
AIRCRAFT
SUPPORT.
196 0605864N TEST AND 373,834 373,834
EVALUATION
SUPPORT.
197 0605865N OPERATIONAL 21,554 21,554
TEST AND
EVALUATION
CAPABILITY.
198 0605866N NAVY SPACE AND 16,227 16,227
ELECTRONIC
WARFARE (SEW)
SUPPORT.
200 0605873M MARINE CORPS 24,303 24,303
PROGRAM WIDE
SUPPORT.
201 0605898N MANAGEMENT HQ-- 43,262 43,262
R&D.
202 0606355N WARFARE 41,918 41,918
INNOVATION
MANAGEMENT.
203 0606942M ASSESSMENTS AND 7,000 7,000
EVALUATIONS
CYBER
VULNERABILITIE
S.
204 0606942N ASSESSMENTS AND 48,800 48,800
EVALUATIONS
CYBER
VULNERABILITIE
S.
205 0305327N INSIDER THREAT. 1,682 1,682
206 0902498N MANAGEMENT 1,579 1,579
HEADQUARTERS
(DEPARTMENTAL
SUPPORT
ACTIVITIES).
208 1206867N SEW 8,684 8,684
SURVEILLANCE/
RECONNAISSANCE
SUPPORT.
.............. SUBTOTAL 1,020,569 1,011,569
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT.
..............
9999999999 CLASSIFIED 1,549,503 1,549,503
PROGRAMS.
[[Page S3547]]
.............. OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT
210 0604227N HARPOON 5,426 5,426
MODIFICATIONS.
211 0604840M F-35 C2D2...... 259,122 259,122
212 0604840N F-35 C2D2...... 252,360 252,360
213 0607658N COOPERATIVE 130,515 130,515
ENGAGEMENT
CAPABILITY
(CEC).
214 0607700N DEPLOYABLE 3,127 3,127
JOINT COMMAND
AND CONTROL.
215 0101221N STRATEGIC SUB & 157,679 157,679
WEAPONS SYSTEM
SUPPORT.
216 0101224N SSBN SECURITY 43,198 43,198
TECHNOLOGY
PROGRAM.
217 0101226N SUBMARINE 11,311 11,311
ACOUSTIC
WARFARE
DEVELOPMENT.
218 0101402N NAVY STRATEGIC 39,313 39,313
COMMUNICATIONS.
219 0204136N F/A-18 193,086 193,086
SQUADRONS.
220 0204163N FLEET 25,014 25,014
TELECOMMUNICAT
IONS
(TACTICAL).
221 0204228N SURFACE SUPPORT 11,661 11,661
222 0204229N TOMAHAWK AND 282,395 291,095
TOMAHAWK
MISSION
PLANNING
CENTER (TMPC).
.............. Restore MST [8,700]
to maintain
2020 IOC.
223 0204311N INTEGRATED 36,959 71,959
SURVEILLANCE
SYSTEM.
.............. Additional [35,000]
TRAPS units.
224 0204313N SHIP-TOWED 15,454 15,454
ARRAY
SURVEILLANCE
SYSTEMS.
225 0204413N AMPHIBIOUS 6,073 6,073
TACTICAL
SUPPORT UNITS
(DISPLACEMENT
CRAFT).
226 0204460M GROUND/AIR TASK 45,029 45,029
ORIENTED RADAR
(G/ATOR).
227 0204571N CONSOLIDATED 104,903 104,903
TRAINING
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
228 0204574N CRYPTOLOGIC 4,544 4,544
DIRECT SUPPORT.
229 0204575N ELECTRONIC 66,889 66,889
WARFARE (EW)
READINESS
SUPPORT.
230 0205601N HARM 120,762 21,522
IMPROVEMENT.
.............. Cancel ER [-99,240]
program.
231 0205604N TACTICAL DATA 104,696 116,696
LINKS.
.............. UPL--Tactic [12,000]
al
Targeting
Network
Technology
acceleratio
n.
232 0205620N SURFACE ASW 28,421 28,421
COMBAT SYSTEM
INTEGRATION.
233 0205632N MK-48 ADCAP.... 94,155 94,155
234 0205633N AVIATION 121,805 136,805
IMPROVEMENTS.
.............. UPL--F/A-18 [15,000]
E/F Super
Hornet
Engine
Enhancement
s.
235 0205675N OPERATIONAL 117,028 117,028
NUCLEAR POWER
SYSTEMS.
236 0206313M MARINE CORPS 174,779 174,779
COMMUNICATIONS
SYSTEMS.
237 0206335M COMMON AVIATION 4,826 4,826
COMMAND AND
CONTROL SYSTEM
(CAC2S).
238 0206623M MARINE CORPS 97,152 97,152
GROUND COMBAT/
SUPPORTING
ARMS SYSTEMS.
239 0206624M MARINE CORPS 30,156 30,156
COMBAT
SERVICES
SUPPORT.
240 0206625M USMC 39,976 39,976
INTELLIGENCE/
ELECTRONIC
WARFARE
SYSTEMS (MIP).
241 0206629M AMPHIBIOUS 22,637 0
ASSAULT
VEHICLE.
.............. Lacks [-22,637]
operational
justificati
on/need.
242 0207161N TACTICAL AIM 40,121 40,121
MISSILES.
243 0207163N ADVANCED MEDIUM 32,473 32,473
RANGE AIR-TO-
AIR MISSILE
(AMRAAM).
249 0303138N CONSOLIDATED 23,697 23,697
AFLOAT NETWORK
ENTERPRISE
SERVICES
(CANES).
250 0303140N INFORMATION 44,228 44,228
SYSTEMS
SECURITY
PROGRAM.
252 0305192N MILITARY 6,081 6,081
INTELLIGENCE
PROGRAM (MIP)
ACTIVITIES.
253 0305204N TACTICAL 8,529 8,529
UNMANNED
AERIAL
VEHICLES.
254 0305205N UAS INTEGRATION 41,212 41,212
AND
INTEROPERABILI
TY.
255 0305208M DISTRIBUTED 7,687 7,687
COMMON GROUND/
SURFACE
SYSTEMS.
256 0305208N DISTRIBUTED 42,846 42,846
COMMON GROUND/
SURFACE
SYSTEMS.
257 0305220N MQ-4C TRITON... 14,395 14,395
258 0305231N MQ-8 UAV....... 9,843 9,843
259 0305232M RQ-11 UAV...... 524 524
260 0305234N SMALL (LEVEL 0) 5,360 5,360
TACTICAL UAS
(STUASL0).
261 0305239M RQ-21A......... 10,914 10,914
262 0305241N MULTI- 81,231 81,231
INTELLIGENCE
SENSOR
DEVELOPMENT.
263 0305242M UNMANNED AERIAL 5,956 5,956
SYSTEMS (UAS)
PAYLOADS (MIP).
264 0305421N RQ-4 219,894 219,894
MODERNIZATION.
265 0308601N MODELING AND 7,097 7,097
SIMULATION
SUPPORT.
266 0702207N DEPOT 36,560 36,560
MAINTENANCE
(NON-IF).
267 0708730N MARITIME 7,284 7,284
TECHNOLOGY
(MARITECH).
268 1203109N SATELLITE 39,174 39,174
COMMUNICATIONS
(SPACE).
.............. SUBTOTAL 4,885,060 4,833,883
OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
..............
.............. TOTAL RESEARCH, 18,481,666 18,536,843
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
NAVY.
..............
.............. RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
AF
.............. BASIC RESEARCH
1 0601102F DEFENSE 348,322 358,322
RESEARCH
SCIENCES.
.............. Basic [5,000]
research
program
increase.
.............. Quantum [5,000]
information
sciences.
2 0601103F UNIVERSITY 154,991 154,991
RESEARCH
INITIATIVES.
3 0601108F HIGH ENERGY 14,506 17,006
LASER RESEARCH
INITIATIVES.
.............. Directed [2,500]
energy
research.
.............. SUBTOTAL BASIC 517,819 530,319
RESEARCH.
..............
.............. APPLIED
RESEARCH
4 0602102F MATERIALS...... 125,373 129,373
.............. Advanced [4,000]
materials
analysis.
5 0602201F AEROSPACE 130,547 135,547
VEHICLE
TECHNOLOGIES.
.............. High speed [5,000]
systems
technology
(hypersonic
vehicle
structures).
6 0602202F HUMAN 112,518 112,518
EFFECTIVENESS
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
7 0602203F AEROSPACE 190,919 213,419
PROPULSION.
.............. Affordable [15,000]
Responsive
Modular
Rocket.
.............. Multi-mode [3,000]
propulsion.
[[Page S3548]]
.............. Solid [2,000]
rocket
motor
produce on-
demand.
.............. Turbine [2,500]
engine
technology.
8 0602204F AEROSPACE 166,534 159,034
SENSORS.
.............. General [-7,500]
program
reduction.
9 0602298F SCIENCE AND 8,288 8,288
TECHNOLOGY
MANAGEMENT--
MAJOR
HEADQUARTERS
ACTIVITIES.
11 0602602F CONVENTIONAL 112,841 112,841
MUNITIONS.
12 0602605F DIRECTED ENERGY 141,898 145,898
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Skywave [4,000]
technologie
s
laboratory.
13 0602788F DOMINANT 162,420 162,420
INFORMATION
SCIENCES AND
METHODS.
14 0602890F HIGH ENERGY 43,359 55,859
LASER RESEARCH.
.............. Directed [2,500]
energy
research.
.............. High [10,000]
powered
microwave.
15 1206601F SPACE 117,645 123,645
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Wargaming [6,000]
and
simulator
lab.
.............. SUBTOTAL 1,312,342 1,358,842
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
..............
.............. ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT
16 0603112F ADVANCED 34,426 31,926
MATERIALS FOR
WEAPON SYSTEMS.
.............. General [-5,000]
program
reduction.
.............. Materials [2,500]
affordabili
ty.
17 0603199F SUSTAINMENT 15,150 16,150
SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY
(S&T).
.............. Prevention/ [1,000]
enhanced
maintainabi
lity
technologie
s.
18 0603203F ADVANCED 39,968 39,968
AEROSPACE
SENSORS.
19 0603211F AEROSPACE 121,002 131,002
TECHNOLOGY DEV/
DEMO.
.............. Design/ [10,000]
Manufacture
aircraft
aft body
drag
reduction
devices.
20 0603216F AEROSPACE 115,462 139,462
PROPULSION AND
POWER
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. General [9,000]
program
increase.
.............. Multi-mode [5,000]
propulsion.
.............. Technology [10,000]
for the
Sustainment
of
Strategic
Systems.
21 0603270F ELECTRONIC 55,319 60,319
COMBAT
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. RF/EO/IR [5,000]
warning and
countermeas
ures.
22 0603401F ADVANCED 54,895 54,895
SPACECRAFT
TECHNOLOGY.
23 0603444F MAUI SPACE 10,674 10,674
SURVEILLANCE
SYSTEM (MSSS).
24 0603456F HUMAN 36,463 36,463
EFFECTIVENESS
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
25 0603601F CONVENTIONAL 194,981 194,981
WEAPONS
TECHNOLOGY.
26 0603605F ADVANCED 43,368 53,368
WEAPONS
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Demonstrato [10,000]
r laser
weapon
system.
27 0603680F MANUFACTURING 42,025 42,025
TECHNOLOGY
PROGRAM.
28 0603788F BATTLESPACE 51,064 51,064
KNOWLEDGE
DEVELOPMENT
AND
DEMONSTRATION.
.............. SUBTOTAL 814,797 862,297
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
..............
.............. ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES
30 0603260F INTELLIGENCE 5,568 5,568
ADVANCED
DEVELOPMENT.
32 0603742F COMBAT 18,194 18,194
IDENTIFICATION
TECHNOLOGY.
33 0603790F NATO RESEARCH 2,305 2,305
AND
DEVELOPMENT.
35 0603851F INTERCONTINENTA 41,856 41,856
L BALLISTIC
MISSILE--DEM/
VAL.
37 0604015F LONG RANGE 2,314,196 2,314,196
STRIKE--BOMBER.
38 0604201F INTEGRATED 14,894 14,894
AVIONICS
PLANNING AND
DEVELOPMENT.
39 0604257F ADVANCED 34,585 34,585
TECHNOLOGY AND
SENSORS.
40 0604288F NATIONAL 9,740 9,740
AIRBORNE OPS
CENTER (NAOC)
RECAP.
41 0604317F TECHNOLOGY 12,960 12,960
TRANSFER.
42 0604327F HARD AND DEEPLY 71,501 71,501
BURIED TARGET
DEFEAT SYSTEM
(HDBTDS)
PROGRAM.
43 0604414F CYBER 62,618 62,618
RESILIENCY OF
WEAPON SYSTEMS-
ACS.
46 0604776F DEPLOYMENT & 28,350 38,350
DISTRIBUTION
ENTERPRISE R&D.
.............. Tanker [10,000]
prototype.
48 0604858F TECH TRANSITION 1,186,075 1,408,875
PROGRAM.
.............. Acceleratio [100,000]
n of
Hypersonic
Conventiona
l Strike
Weapon.
.............. Low cost [80,000]
attritable
aircraft
prototype.
.............. Rapid [42,800]
Sustainment
Initiative.
49 0605230F GROUND BASED 345,041 414,441
STRATEGIC
DETERRENT.
.............. UPL program [69,400]
acceleratio
n.
50 0207110F NEXT GENERATION 503,997 503,997
AIR DOMINANCE.
51 0207455F THREE 40,326 40,326
DIMENSIONAL
LONG-RANGE
RADAR (3DELRR).
52 0208099F UNIFIED 29,800 29,800
PLATFORM (UP).
54 0305236F COMMON DATA 41,880 41,880
LINK EXECUTIVE
AGENT (CDL EA).
55 0305601F MISSION PARTNER 10,074 10,074
ENVIRONMENTS.
56 0306250F CYBER 253,825 253,825
OPERATIONS
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
57 0306415F ENABLED CYBER 16,325 16,325
ACTIVITIES.
59 0901410F CONTRACTING 17,577 0
INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY
SYSTEM.
.............. Duplication [-17,577]
concern.
60 1203164F NAVSTAR GLOBAL 286,629 286,629
POSITIONING
SYSTEM (USER
EQUIPMENT)
(SPACE).
61 1203710F EO/IR WEATHER 7,940 7,940
SYSTEMS.
62 1206422F WEATHER SYSTEM 138,052 138,052
FOLLOW-ON.
63 1206425F SPACE SITUATION 39,338 39,338
AWARENESS
SYSTEMS.
64 1206434F MIDTERM POLAR 383,113 383,113
MILSATCOM
SYSTEM.
65 1206438F SPACE CONTROL 91,018 91,018
TECHNOLOGY.
66 1206730F SPACE SECURITY 45,542 45,542
AND DEFENSE
PROGRAM.
67 1206760F PROTECTED 51,419 51,419
TACTICAL
ENTERPRISE
SERVICE (PTES).
68 1206761F PROTECTED 29,776 29,776
TACTICAL
SERVICE (PTS).
69 1206855F PROTECTED 29,379 29,379
SATCOM
SERVICES
(PSCS)--AGGREG
ATED.
70 1206857F OPERATIONALLY 366,050 316,050
RESPONSIVE
SPACE.
.............. Space RCO [-50,000]
Solar Power
Project--Ea
rly to need.
.............. SUBTOTAL 6,529,943 6,764,566
ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES.
[[Page S3549]]
..............
.............. SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION
71 0604200F FUTURE ADVANCED 39,602 39,602
WEAPON
ANALYSIS &
PROGRAMS.
72 0604201F INTEGRATED 58,531 58,531
AVIONICS
PLANNING AND
DEVELOPMENT.
73 0604222F NUCLEAR WEAPONS 4,468 4,468
SUPPORT.
74 0604270F ELECTRONIC 1,909 1,909
WARFARE
DEVELOPMENT.
75 0604281F TACTICAL DATA 207,746 257,746
NETWORKS
ENTERPRISE.
.............. Increase to [50,000]
accelerate
21st
Century
Battle
Management
Command and
Control.
76 0604287F PHYSICAL 14,421 14,421
SECURITY
EQUIPMENT.
77 0604329F SMALL DIAMETER 73,158 73,158
BOMB (SDB)--
EMD.
81 0604429F AIRBORNE 7,153 7,153
ELECTRONIC
ATTACK.
83 0604602F ARMAMENT/ 58,590 58,590
ORDNANCE
DEVELOPMENT.
84 0604604F SUBMUNITIONS... 2,990 2,990
85 0604617F AGILE COMBAT 20,028 20,028
SUPPORT.
86 0604618F JOINT DIRECT 15,787 15,787
ATTACK
MUNITION.
87 0604706F LIFE SUPPORT 8,919 8,919
SYSTEMS.
88 0604735F COMBAT TRAINING 35,895 35,895
RANGES.
89 0604800F F-35--EMD...... 69,001 69,001
90 0307581F JSTARS RECAP... 0 50,000
.............. Continue [50,000]
JSTARS
recap GMTI
radar
development.
91 0604932F LONG RANGE 614,920 699,920
STANDOFF
WEAPON.
.............. UPL Program [85,000]
acceleratio
n.
92 0604933F ICBM FUZE 172,902 172,902
MODERNIZATION.
97 0605221F KC-46.......... 88,170 88,170
98 0605223F ADVANCED PILOT 265,465 265,465
TRAINING.
99 0605229F COMBAT RESCUE 457,652 457,652
HELICOPTER.
105 0605830F ACQ WORKFORCE- 3,617 3,617
GLOBAL BATTLE
MGMT.
106 0605931F B-2 DEFENSIVE 261,758 261,758
MANAGEMENT
SYSTEM.
107 0101125F NUCLEAR WEAPONS 91,907 91,907
MODERNIZATION.
108 0207171F F-15 EPAWSS.... 137,095 137,095
109 0207328F STAND IN ATTACK 43,175 43,175
WEAPON.
110 0207423F ADVANCED 14,888 14,888
COMMUNICATIONS
SYSTEMS.
111 0207701F FULL COMBAT 1,015 1,015
MISSION
TRAINING.
116 0401310F C-32 EXECUTIVE 7,943 7,943
TRANSPORT
RECAPITALIZATI
ON.
117 0401319F PRESIDENTIAL 673,032 673,032
AIRCRAFT
RECAPITALIZATI
ON (PAR).
118 0701212F AUTOMATED TEST 13,653 13,653
SYSTEMS.
119 1203176F COMBAT SURVIVOR 939 939
EVADER LOCATOR.
120 1203269F GPS IIIC....... 451,889 451,889
121 1203940F SPACE SITUATION 46,668 46,668
AWARENESS
OPERATIONS.
122 1206421F COUNTERSPACE 20,676 20,676
SYSTEMS.
123 1206425F SPACE SITUATION 134,463 134,463
AWARENESS
SYSTEMS.
124 1206426F SPACE FENCE.... 20,215 20,215
125 1206431F ADVANCED EHF 151,506 151,506
MILSATCOM
(SPACE).
126 1206432F POLAR MILSATCOM 27,337 27,337
(SPACE).
127 1206433F WIDEBAND GLOBAL 3,970 3,970
SATCOM (SPACE).
128 1206441F SPACE BASED 60,565 60,565
INFRARED
SYSTEM (SBIRS)
HIGH EMD.
129 1206442F EVOLVED SBIRS.. 643,126 743,126
.............. Accelerate [100,000]
sensor
development.
130 1206853F EVOLVED 245,447 245,447
EXPENDABLE
LAUNCH VEHICLE
PROGRAM
(SPACE)--EMD.
.............. SUBTOTAL SYSTEM 5,272,191 5,557,191
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION.
..............
.............. MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT
131 0604256F THREAT 34,256 34,256
SIMULATOR
DEVELOPMENT.
132 0604759F MAJOR T&E 91,844 106,844
INVESTMENT.
.............. Test [15,000]
infrastruct
ure
improvement
s.
133 0605101F RAND PROJECT 34,614 34,614
AIR FORCE.
135 0605712F INITIAL 18,043 18,043
OPERATIONAL
TEST &
EVALUATION.
136 0605807F TEST AND 692,784 692,784
EVALUATION
SUPPORT.
137 0605826F ACQ WORKFORCE- 233,924 233,924
GLOBAL POWER.
138 0605827F ACQ WORKFORCE- 263,488 263,488
GLOBAL VIG &
COMBAT SYS.
139 0605828F ACQ WORKFORCE- 153,591 153,591
GLOBAL REACH.
140 0605829F ACQ WORKFORCE- 232,315 232,315
CYBER,
NETWORK, & BUS
SYS.
141 0605830F ACQ WORKFORCE- 169,868 169,868
GLOBAL BATTLE
MGMT.
142 0605831F ACQ WORKFORCE- 226,219 226,219
CAPABILITY
INTEGRATION.
143 0605832F ACQ WORKFORCE- 38,400 38,400
ADVANCED PRGM
TECHNOLOGY.
144 0605833F ACQ WORKFORCE- 125,761 125,761
NUCLEAR
SYSTEMS.
147 0605898F MANAGEMENT HQ-- 10,642 10,642
R&D.
148 0605976F FACILITIES 162,216 162,216
RESTORATION
AND
MODERNIZATION-
-TEST AND
EVALUATION
SUPPORT.
149 0605978F FACILITIES 28,888 28,888
SUSTAINMENT--T
EST AND
EVALUATION
SUPPORT.
150 0606017F REQUIREMENTS 35,285 35,285
ANALYSIS AND
MATURATION.
153 0308602F ENTEPRISE 20,545 20,545
INFORMATION
SERVICES (EIS).
154 0702806F ACQUISITION AND 12,367 12,367
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT.
155 0804731F GENERAL SKILL 1,448 1,448
TRAINING.
157 1001004F INTERNATIONAL 3,998 3,998
ACTIVITIES.
158 1206116F SPACE TEST AND 23,254 23,254
TRAINING RANGE
DEVELOPMENT.
159 1206392F SPACE AND 169,912 169,912
MISSILE CENTER
(SMC) CIVILIAN
WORKFORCE.
160 1206398F SPACE & MISSILE 10,508 10,508
SYSTEMS
CENTER--MHA.
161 1206860F ROCKET SYSTEMS 19,721 19,721
LAUNCH PROGRAM
(SPACE).
162 1206864F SPACE TEST 25,620 25,620
PROGRAM (STP).
.............. SUBTOTAL 2,839,511 2,854,511
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT.
..............
9999999999 CLASSIFIED 16,534,124 16,534,124
PROGRAMS.
.............. OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT
[[Page S3550]]
165 0604233F SPECIALIZED 11,344 11,344
UNDERGRADUATE
FLIGHT
TRAINING.
167 0605018F AF INTEGRATED 47,287 13,141
PERSONNEL AND
PAY SYSTEM (AF-
IPPS).
.............. Poor agile [-34,146]
development
implementat
ion and
lenghty
delivery
timeline.
168 0605024F ANTI-TAMPER 32,770 32,770
TECHNOLOGY
EXECUTIVE
AGENCY.
169 0605117F FOREIGN 68,368 68,368
MATERIEL
ACQUISITION
AND
EXPLOITATION.
170 0605278F HC/MC-130 RECAP 32,574 32,574
RDT&E.
171 0606018F NC3 INTEGRATION 26,112 26,112
172 0606942F ASSESSMENTS AND 99,100 99,100
EVALUATIONS
CYBER
VULNERABILITIE
S.
173 0101113F B-52 SQUADRONS. 280,414 295,214
.............. Air Force [14,800]
requested
realignment.
174 0101122F AIR-LAUNCHED 5,955 5,955
CRUISE MISSILE
(ALCM).
175 0101126F B-1B SQUADRONS. 76,030 76,030
176 0101127F B-2 SQUADRONS.. 105,561 105,561
177 0101213F MINUTEMAN 156,047 156,047
SQUADRONS.
179 0101316F WORLDWIDE JOINT 10,442 10,442
STRATEGIC
COMMUNICATIONS.
180 0101324F INTEGRATED 22,833 22,833
STRATEGIC
PLANNING &
ANALYSIS
NETWORK.
181 0101328F ICBM REENTRY 18,412 18,412
VEHICLES.
183 0102110F UH-1N 288,022 288,022
REPLACEMENT
PROGRAM.
184 0102326F REGION/SECTOR 9,252 9,252
OPERATION
CONTROL CENTER
MODERNIZATION
PROGRAM.
186 0205219F MQ-9 UAV....... 115,345 115,345
188 0207131F A-10 SQUADRONS. 26,738 26,738
189 0207133F F-16 SQUADRONS. 191,564 191,564
190 0207134F F-15E SQUADRONS 192,883 192,883
191 0207136F MANNED 15,238 15,238
DESTRUCTIVE
SUPPRESSION.
192 0207138F F-22A SQUADRONS 603,553 603,553
193 0207142F F-35 SQUADRONS. 549,501 549,501
194 0207161F TACTICAL AIM 37,230 37,230
MISSILES.
195 0207163F ADVANCED MEDIUM 61,393 61,393
RANGE AIR-TO-
AIR MISSILE
(AMRAAM).
196 0207227F COMBAT RESCUE-- 647 647
PARARESCUE.
198 0207249F PRECISION 14,891 14,891
ATTACK SYSTEMS
PROCUREMENT.
199 0207253F COMPASS CALL... 13,901 13,901
200 0207268F AIRCRAFT ENGINE 121,203 121,203
COMPONENT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM.
202 0207325F JOINT AIR-TO- 60,062 60,062
SURFACE
STANDOFF
MISSILE
(JASSM).
203 0207410F AIR & SPACE 106,102 106,102
OPERATIONS
CENTER (AOC).
204 0207412F CONTROL AND 6,413 6,413
REPORTING
CENTER (CRC).
205 0207417F AIRBORNE 120,664 130,664
WARNING AND
CONTROL SYSTEM
(AWACS).
.............. Increase to [10,000]
accelerate
21st
Century
Battle
Management
Command and
Control.
206 0207418F TACTICAL 2,659 2,659
AIRBORNE
CONTROL
SYSTEMS.
208 0207431F COMBAT AIR 10,316 10,316
INTELLIGENCE
SYSTEM
ACTIVITIES.
209 0207444F TACTICAL AIR 6,149 6,149
CONTROL PARTY-
MOD.
210 0207448F C2ISR TACTICAL 1,738 1,738
DATA LINK.
211 0207452F DCAPES......... 13,297 13,297
212 0207573F NATIONAL 1,788 1,788
TECHNICAL
NUCLEAR
FORENSICS.
213 0207581F JOINT 14,888 14,888
SURVEILLANCE/
TARGET ATTACK
RADAR SYSTEM
(JSTARS).
214 0207590F SEEK EAGLE..... 24,699 24,699
215 0207601F USAF MODELING 17,078 17,078
AND SIMULATION.
216 0207605F WARGAMING AND 6,141 6,141
SIMULATION
CENTERS.
218 0207697F DISTRIBUTED 4,225 4,225
TRAINING AND
EXERCISES.
219 0208006F MISSION 63,653 63,653
PLANNING
SYSTEMS.
220 0208007F TACTICAL 6,949 6,949
DECEPTION.
221 0208087F AF OFFENSIVE 40,526 40,526
CYBERSPACE
OPERATIONS.
222 0208088F AF DEFENSIVE 24,166 24,166
CYBERSPACE
OPERATIONS.
223 0208097F JOINT CYBER 13,000 13,000
COMMAND AND
CONTROL (JCC2).
224 0208099F UNIFIED 28,759 28,759
PLATFORM (UP).
229 0301017F GLOBAL SENSOR 3,579 3,579
INTEGRATED ON
NETWORK (GSIN).
230 0301112F NUCLEAR 29,620 29,620
PLANNING AND
EXECUTION
SYSTEM (NPES).
237 0301401F AIR FORCE SPACE 6,633 6,633
AND CYBER NON-
TRADITIONAL
ISR FOR
BATTLESPACE
AWARENESS.
238 0302015F E-4B NATIONAL 57,758 57,758
AIRBORNE
OPERATIONS
CENTER (NAOC).
240 0303131F MINIMUM 99,088 99,088
ESSENTIAL
EMERGENCY
COMMUNICATIONS
NETWORK
(MEECN).
241 0303133F HIGH FREQUENCY 51,612 51,612
RADIO SYSTEMS.
242 0303140F INFORMATION 34,612 34,612
SYSTEMS
SECURITY
PROGRAM.
244 0303142F GLOBAL FORCE 2,170 2,170
MANAGEMENT--DA
TA INITIATIVE.
246 0304260F AIRBORNE SIGINT 106,873 106,873
ENTERPRISE.
247 0304310F COMMERCIAL 3,472 3,472
ECONOMIC
ANALYSIS.
250 0305015F C2 AIR 8,608 8,608
OPERATIONS
SUITE--C2 INFO
SERVICES.
251 0305020F CCMD 1,586 1,586
INTELLIGENCE
INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY.
252 0305099F GLOBAL AIR 4,492 4,492
TRAFFIC
MANAGEMENT
(GATM).
254 0305111F WEATHER SERVICE 26,942 26,942
255 0305114F AIR TRAFFIC 6,271 6,271
CONTROL,
APPROACH, AND
LANDING SYSTEM
(ATCALS).
256 0305116F AERIAL TARGETS. 8,383 8,383
259 0305128F SECURITY AND 418 418
INVESTIGATIVE
ACTIVITIES.
261 0305146F DEFENSE JOINT 3,845 3,845
COUNTERINTELLI
GENCE
ACTIVITIES.
268 0305202F DRAGON U-2..... 48,518 48,518
270 0305206F AIRBORNE 175,334 175,334
RECONNAISSANCE
SYSTEMS.
271 0305207F MANNED 14,223 14,223
RECONNAISSANCE
SYSTEMS.
272 0305208F DISTRIBUTED 24,554 24,554
COMMON GROUND/
SURFACE
SYSTEMS.
273 0305220F RQ-4 UAV....... 221,690 221,690
274 0305221F NETWORK-CENTRIC 14,288 14,288
COLLABORATIVE
TARGETING.
275 0305238F NATO AGS....... 51,527 51,527
276 0305240F SUPPORT TO DCGS 26,579 26,579
ENTERPRISE.
278 0305600F INTERNATIONAL 8,464 8,464
INTELLIGENCE
TECHNOLOGY AND
ARCHITECTURES.
280 0305881F RAPID CYBER 4,303 4,303
ACQUISITION.
284 0305984F PERSONNEL 2,466 2,466
RECOVERY
COMMAND & CTRL
(PRC2).
[[Page S3551]]
285 0307577F INTELLIGENCE 4,117 4,117
MISSION DATA
(IMD).
287 0401115F C-130 AIRLIFT 105,988 105,988
SQUADRON.
288 0401119F C-5 AIRLIFT 25,071 25,071
SQUADRONS (IF).
289 0401130F C-17 AIRCRAFT 48,299 48,299
(IF).
290 0401132F C-130J PROGRAM. 15,409 15,409
291 0401134F LARGE AIRCRAFT 4,334 4,334
IR
COUNTERMEASURE
S (LAIRCM).
292 0401218F KC-135S........ 3,493 3,493
293 0401219F KC-10S......... 6,569 6,569
294 0401314F OPERATIONAL 3,172 3,172
SUPPORT
AIRLIFT.
295 0401318F CV-22.......... 18,502 18,502
296 0401840F AMC COMMAND AND 1,688 1,688
CONTROL SYSTEM.
297 0408011F SPECIAL TACTICS 2,541 2,541
/ COMBAT
CONTROL.
298 0702207F DEPOT 1,897 1,897
MAINTENANCE
(NON-IF).
299 0708055F MAINTENANCE, 50,933 15,873
REPAIR &
OVERHAUL
SYSTEM.
.............. Poor agile [-35,060]
development
implementat
ion.
300 0708610F LOGISTICS 13,787 13,787
INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY
(LOGIT).
301 0708611F SUPPORT SYSTEMS 4,497 4,497
DEVELOPMENT.
302 0804743F OTHER FLIGHT 2,022 2,022
TRAINING.
303 0808716F OTHER PERSONNEL 108 108
ACTIVITIES.
304 0901202F JOINT PERSONNEL 2,023 2,023
RECOVERY
AGENCY.
305 0901218F CIVILIAN 3,772 3,772
COMPENSATION
PROGRAM.
306 0901220F PERSONNEL 6,358 6,358
ADMINISTRATION.
307 0901226F AIR FORCE 1,418 1,418
STUDIES AND
ANALYSIS
AGENCY.
308 0901538F FINANCIAL 99,734 87,918
MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
.............. Poor agile [-11,816]
development
implementat
ion.
309 1201921F SERVICE SUPPORT 14,161 14,161
TO STRATCOM--
SPACE
ACTIVITIES.
310 1202247F AF TENCAP...... 26,986 26,986
311 1203001F FAMILY OF 80,168 80,168
ADVANCED BLOS
TERMINALS (FAB-
T).
312 1203110F SATELLITE 17,808 17,808
CONTROL
NETWORK
(SPACE).
314 1203165F NAVSTAR GLOBAL 8,937 8,937
POSITIONING
SYSTEM (SPACE
AND CONTROL
SEGMENTS).
315 1203173F SPACE AND 59,935 59,935
MISSILE TEST
AND EVALUATION
CENTER.
316 1203174F SPACE 21,019 21,019
INNOVATION,
INTEGRATION
AND RAPID
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
317 1203179F INTEGRATED 8,568 8,568
BROADCAST
SERVICE (IBS).
318 1203182F SPACELIFT RANGE 10,641 10,641
SYSTEM (SPACE).
319 1203265F GPS III SPACE 144,543 144,543
SEGMENT.
320 1203400F SPACE 16,278 16,278
SUPERIORITY
INTELLIGENCE.
321 1203614F JSPOC MISSION 72,256 62,256
SYSTEM.
.............. Assumed [-10,000]
cost
savings.
322 1203620F NATIONAL SPACE 42,209 42,209
DEFENSE CENTER.
325 1203913F NUDET DETECTION 19,778 19,778
SYSTEM (SPACE).
326 1203940F SPACE SITUATION 19,572 19,572
AWARENESS
OPERATIONS.
327 1206423F GLOBAL 513,235 513,235
POSITIONING
SYSTEM III--
OPERATIONAL
CONTROL
SEGMENT.
.............. SUBTOTAL 22,891,740 22,825,518
OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
..............
.............. TOTAL RESEARCH, 40,178,343 40,753,244
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
AF.
..............
.............. RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
DW
.............. BASIC RESEARCH
1 0601000BR DTRA BASIC 37,023 37,023
RESEARCH.
2 0601101E DEFENSE 422,130 429,630
RESEARCH
SCIENCES.
.............. Basic [5,000]
research
program
increase.
.............. Critical [2,500]
materials.
3 0601110D8Z BASIC RESEARCH 42,702 52,702
INITIATIVES.
.............. Quantum [5,000]
information
sciences.
.............. University- [5,000]
lab
research
partnership.
4 0601117E BASIC 47,825 57,825
OPERATIONAL
MEDICAL
RESEARCH
SCIENCE.
.............. TBI [10,000]
Treatment
for blast
injuries.
5 0601120D8Z NATIONAL 85,919 85,919
DEFENSE
EDUCATION
PROGRAM.
6 0601228D8Z HISTORICALLY 30,412 30,412
BLACK COLLEGES
AND
UNIVERSITIES/
MINORITY
INSTITUTIONS.
7 0601384BP CHEMICAL AND 42,103 42,103
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
PROGRAM.
.............. SUBTOTAL BASIC 708,114 735,614
RESEARCH.
..............
.............. APPLIED
RESEARCH
8 0602000D8Z JOINT MUNITIONS 19,170 21,670
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Insensitive [2,500]
munitions.
9 0602115E BIOMEDICAL 101,300 101,300
TECHNOLOGY.
11 0602234D8Z LINCOLN 51,596 51,596
LABORATORY
RESEARCH
PROGRAM.
12 0602251D8Z APPLIED 60,688 53,188
RESEARCH FOR
THE
ADVANCEMENT OF
S&T PRIORITIES.
.............. General [-7,500]
program
reduction.
13 0602303E INFORMATION & 395,317 395,317
COMMUNICATIONS
TECHNOLOGY.
14 0602383E BIOLOGICAL 38,640 38,640
WARFARE
DEFENSE.
15 0602384BP CHEMICAL AND 192,674 192,674
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
PROGRAM.
16 0602668D8Z CYBER SECURITY 14,969 14,969
RESEARCH.
17 0602702E TACTICAL 335,466 332,966
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. General [2,500]
program
increase.
.............. MAD-FIRES [-5,000]
reduction.
18 0602715E MATERIALS AND 226,898 211,898
BIOLOGICAL
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. General [-15,000]
program
reduction.
19 0602716E ELECTRONICS 333,847 333,847
TECHNOLOGY.
20 0602718BR COUNTER WEAPONS 161,151 161,151
OF MASS
DESTRUCTION
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
21 0602751D8Z SOFTWARE 9,300 9,300
ENGINEERING
INSTITUTE
(SEI) APPLIED
RESEARCH.
22 1160401BB SOF TECHNOLOGY 35,921 35,921
DEVELOPMENT.
.............. SUBTOTAL 1,976,937 1,954,437
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
[[Page S3552]]
..............
.............. ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT
23 0603000D8Z JOINT MUNITIONS 25,598 25,598
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
24 0603122D8Z COMBATING 125,271 111,271
TERRORISM
TECHNOLOGY
SUPPORT.
.............. General [-14,000]
program
reduction.
25 0603133D8Z FOREIGN 24,532 24,532
COMPARATIVE
TESTING.
27 0603160BR COUNTER WEAPONS 299,858 299,858
OF MASS
DESTRUCTION
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
28 0603176C ADVANCED 13,017 13,017
CONCEPTS AND
PERFORMANCE
ASSESSMENT.
29 0603178C WEAPONS 0 13,400
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. MDA UPL: [13,400]
Accelerate
hypersonic
missile
defense.
31 0603180C ADVANCED 20,365 42,565
RESEARCH.
.............. Accelerate [22,200]
hypersonic
missile
defense.
32 0603225D8Z JOINT DOD-DOE 18,644 18,644
MUNITIONS
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
34 0603286E ADVANCED 277,603 282,603
AEROSPACE
SYSTEMS.
.............. Hypersonics [5,000]
weapons
programs
development
and
transition.
35 0603287E SPACE PROGRAMS 254,671 364,671
AND TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Blackjack [110,000]
increase.
36 0603288D8Z ANALYTIC 19,472 19,472
ASSESSMENTS.
37 0603289D8Z ADVANCED 37,263 37,263
INNOVATIVE
ANALYSIS AND
CONCEPTS.
38 0603291D8Z ADVANCED 13,621 13,621
INNOVATIVE
ANALYSIS AND
CONCEPTS--MHA.
39 0603294C COMMON KILL 189,753 189,753
VEHICLE
TECHNOLOGY.
40 0603342D8W DEFENSE 29,364 29,864
INNOVATION
UNIT
EXPERIMENTAL
(DIUX).
.............. Defense [500]
technology
innovation.
41 0603375D8Z TECHNOLOGY 83,143 103,143
INNOVATION.
.............. Commercial [20,000]
SAR
satellites.
42 0603384BP CHEMICAL AND 142,826 142,826
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
PROGRAM--ADVAN
CED
DEVELOPMENT.
43 0603527D8Z RETRACT LARCH.. 161,128 161,128
44 0603618D8Z JOINT 12,918 12,918
ELECTRONIC
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
45 0603648D8Z JOINT 106,049 106,049
CAPABILITY
TECHNOLOGY
DEMONSTRATIONS.
46 0603662D8Z NETWORKED 12,696 5,196
COMMUNICATIONS
CAPABILITIES.
.............. General [-7,500]
program
reduction.
47 0603680D8Z DEFENSE-WIDE 114,637 121,637
MANUFACTURING
SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY
PROGRAM.
.............. Enhancing [5,000]
cybersecuri
ty for
small
vendors.
.............. Eye [2,000]
protection
system.
48 0603680S MANUFACTURING 49,667 52,167
TECHNOLOGY
PROGRAM.
.............. General [2,500]
program
increase.
49 0603699D8Z EMERGING 48,338 48,338
CAPABILITIES
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
50 0603712S GENERIC 11,778 12,778
LOGISTICS R&D
TECHNOLOGY
DEMONSTRATIONS.
.............. General [1,000]
program
increase.
52 0603716D8Z STRATEGIC 76,514 86,514
ENVIRONMENTAL
RESEARCH
PROGRAM.
.............. Readiness [10,000]
Increase.
53 0603720S MICROELECTRONIC 168,931 173,931
S TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT
AND SUPPORT.
.............. Tunable [5,000]
filter,
support for
microelectr
onics
development.
54 0603727D8Z JOINT 5,992 5,992
WARFIGHTING
PROGRAM.
55 0603739E ADVANCED 111,099 118,599
ELECTRONICS
TECHNOLOGIES.
.............. Support for [7,500]
the
Electronics
Resurgence
Initiative.
56 0603760E COMMAND, 185,984 185,984
CONTROL AND
COMMUNICATIONS
SYSTEMS.
57 0603766E NETWORK-CENTRIC 438,569 428,569
WARFARE
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. General [-10,000]
program
reduction.
58 0603767E SENSOR 190,128 191,628
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Sensors and [1,500]
processing
systems
technology.
59 0603769D8Z DISTRIBUTED 13,564 13,564
LEARNING
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
60 0603781D8Z SOFTWARE 15,050 15,050
ENGINEERING
INSTITUTE.
61 0603826D8Z QUICK REACTION 69,626 59,626
SPECIAL
PROJECTS.
.............. General [-10,000]
program
reduction.
62 0603833D8Z ENGINEERING 19,415 19,415
SCIENCE &
TECHNOLOGY.
63 0603924D8Z HIGH ENERGY 69,533 69,533
LASER ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
PROGRAM.
64 0603941D8Z TEST & 96,389 111,389
EVALUATION
SCIENCE &
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Hypersonics [10,000]
and
directed
energy test.
.............. Workforce [5,000]
development.
65 0604055D8Z OPERATIONAL 40,582 50,582
ENERGY
CAPABILITY
IMPROVEMENT.
.............. Readiness [10,000]
Increase.
66 0303310D8Z CWMD SYSTEMS... 26,644 26,644
67 1160402BB SOF ADVANCED 79,380 79,380
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
300 8888 NATIONAL 0 150,000
SECURITY
INNOVATION
ACTIVITIES.
.............. Establish [150,000]
office for
capital
investment.
.............. SUBTOTAL 3,699,612 4,038,712
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
..............
.............. ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT
AND PROTOTYPES
68 0603161D8Z NUCLEAR AND 28,140 28,140
CONVENTIONAL
PHYSICAL
SECURITY
EQUIPMENT
RDT&E ADC&P.
69 0603600D8Z WALKOFF........ 92,222 92,222
70 0603821D8Z ACQUISITION 2,506 2,506
ENTERPRISE
DATA &
INFORMATION
SERVICES.
71 0603851D8Z ENVIRONMENTAL 40,016 50,016
SECURITY
TECHNICAL
CERTIFICATION
PROGRAM.
.............. Readiness [10,000]
Increase.
72 0603881C BALLISTIC 214,173 398,273
MISSILE
DEFENSE
TERMINAL
DEFENSE
SEGMENT.
.............. MDA UPL: [184,100]
USFK JEON.
73 0603882C BALLISTIC 926,359 718,359
MISSILE
DEFENSE
MIDCOURSE
DEFENSE
SEGMENT.
.............. Reduce FY19 [-208,000]
Numbers.
74 0603884BP CHEMICAL AND 129,886 129,886
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
PROGRAM--DEM/
VAL.
75 0603884C BALLISTIC 220,876 244,876
MISSILE
DEFENSE
SENSORS.
.............. MDA UPL: [24,000]
USFK JEON.
76 0603890C BMD ENABLING 540,926 540,926
PROGRAMS.
77 0603891C SPECIAL 422,348 422,348
PROGRAMS--MDA.
[[Page S3553]]
78 0603892C AEGIS BMD...... 767,539 767,539
81 0603896C BALLISTIC 475,168 425,168
MISSILE
DEFENSE
COMMAND AND
CONTROL,
BATTLE
MANAGEMENT AND
COMMUNICATI.
.............. Inconsisten [-50,000]
t
capability
delivery.
82 0603898C BALLISTIC 48,767 48,767
MISSILE
DEFENSE JOINT
WARFIGHTER
SUPPORT.
83 0603904C MISSILE DEFENSE 54,925 54,925
INTEGRATION &
OPERATIONS
CENTER (MDIOC).
84 0603906C REGARDING 16,916 16,916
TRENCH.
85 0603907C SEA BASED X- 149,715 116,715
BAND RADAR
(SBX).
.............. Reduce FY19 [-33,000]
Numbers.
86 0603913C ISRAELI 300,000 300,000
COOPERATIVE
PROGRAMS.
87 0603914C BALLISTIC 365,681 437,581
MISSILE
DEFENSE TEST.
.............. MDA UPL: [71,900]
USFK JEON.
88 0603915C BALLISTIC 517,852 486,352
MISSILE
DEFENSE
TARGETS.
.............. MDA UPL: [4,500]
USFK JEON.
.............. Reduce FY19 [-36,000]
Numbers.
89 0603920D8Z HUMANITARIAN 11,347 11,347
DEMINING.
90 0603923D8Z COALITION 8,528 8,528
WARFARE.
91 0604016D8Z DEPARTMENT OF 3,477 8,477
DEFENSE
CORROSION
PROGRAM.
.............. Corrosion [5,000]
prevention.
92 0604115C TECHNOLOGY 148,822 228,822
MATURATION
INITIATIVES.
.............. Laser [80,000]
scaling for
boost phase
intercept.
93 0604132D8Z MISSILE DEFEAT 58,607 58,607
PROJECT.
94 0604134BR COUNTER 12,993 12,993
IMPROVISED-
THREAT
DEMONSTRATION,
PROTOTYPE
DEVELOPMENT,
AND TESTING.
95 0604181C HYPERSONIC 120,444 130,944
DEFENSE.
.............. Accelerate [10,500]
hypersonic
missile
defense.
96 0604250D8Z ADVANCED 1,431,702 1,481,702
INNOVATIVE
TECHNOLOGIES.
.............. Quartermast [50,000]
er
Pathfinder.
97 0604294D8Z TRUSTED & 233,142 238,642
ASSURED
MICROELECTRONI
CS.
.............. New trust [5,500]
approach
development.
98 0604331D8Z RAPID 99,333 99,333
PROTOTYPING
PROGRAM.
99 0604400D8Z DEPARTMENT OF 3,781 3,781
DEFENSE (DOD)
UNMANNED
SYSTEM COMMON
DEVELOPMENT.
100 0604673C PACIFIC 95,765 95,765
DISCRIMINATING
RADAR.
101 0604682D8Z WARGAMING AND 3,768 3,768
SUPPORT FOR
STRATEGIC
ANALYSIS (SSA).
103 0604826J JOINT C5 22,435 22,435
CAPABILITY
DEVELOPMENT,
INTEGRATION
AND
INTEROPERABILI
TY ASSESSMENTS.
104 0604873C LONG RANGE 164,562 164,562
DISCRIMINATION
RADAR (LRDR).
105 0604874C IMPROVED 561,220 421,820
HOMELAND
DEFENSE
INTERCEPTORS.
.............. Reduce FY19 [-139,400]
Numbers.
106 0604876C BALLISTIC 61,017 61,017
MISSILE
DEFENSE
TERMINAL
DEFENSE
SEGMENT TEST.
107 0604878C AEGIS BMD TEST. 95,756 95,756
108 0604879C BALLISTIC 81,001 81,001
MISSILE
DEFENSE SENSOR
TEST.
109 0604880C LAND-BASED SM-3 27,692 27,692
(LBSM3).
111 0604887C BALLISTIC 81,934 72,634
MISSILE
DEFENSE
MIDCOURSE
SEGMENT TEST.
.............. Reduce FY19 [-9,300]
Numbers.
112 0604894C MULTI-OBJECT 8,256 8,256
KILL VEHICLE.
113 0300206R ENTERPRISE 2,600 2,600
INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY
SYSTEMS.
114 0303191D8Z JOINT 3,104 3,104
ELECTROMAGNETI
C TECHNOLOGY
(JET) PROGRAM.
115 0305103C CYBER SECURITY 985 985
INITIATIVE.
116 1206893C SPACE TRACKING 36,955 36,955
& SURVEILLANCE
SYSTEM.
117 1206895C BALLISTIC 16,484 89,484
MISSILE
DEFENSE SYSTEM
SPACE PROGRAMS.
.............. MDA UPL: [73,000]
Initiate
missile
defense
tracking
system.
.............. SUBTOTAL 8,709,725 8,752,525
ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT
AND PROTOTYPES.
..............
.............. SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT
AND
DEMONSTRATION
118 0604161D8Z NUCLEAR AND 8,333 8,333
CONVENTIONAL
PHYSICAL
SECURITY
EQUIPMENT
RDT&E SDD.
119 0604165D8Z PROMPT GLOBAL 263,414 263,414
STRIKE
CAPABILITY
DEVELOPMENT.
120 0604384BP CHEMICAL AND 388,701 388,701
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
PROGRAM--EMD.
121 0604771D8Z JOINT TACTICAL 19,503 19,503
INFORMATION
DISTRIBUTION
SYSTEM (JTIDS).
122 0605000BR COUNTER WEAPONS 6,163 6,163
OF MASS
DESTRUCTION
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
123 0605013BL INFORMATION 11,988 0
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
.............. Lengthy [-11,988]
delivery
timelines.
124 0605021SE HOMELAND 296 296
PERSONNEL
SECURITY
INITIATIVE.
125 0605022D8Z DEFENSE 1,489 1,489
EXPORTABILITY
PROGRAM.
126 0605027D8Z OUSD(C) IT 9,590 9,590
DEVELOPMENT
INITIATIVES.
127 0605070S DOD ENTERPRISE 3,173 3,173
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT
AND
DEMONSTRATION.
128 0605075D8Z DCMO POLICY AND 2,105 3,105
INTEGRATION.
.............. Data and [1,000]
advanced
analytics.
129 0605080S DEFENSE AGENCY 21,156 21,156
INITIATIVES
(DAI)--FINANCI
AL SYSTEM.
130 0605090S DEFENSE RETIRED 10,731 10,731
AND ANNUITANT
PAY SYSTEM
(DRAS).
132 0605210D8Z DEFENSE-WIDE 6,374 0
ELECTRONIC
PROCUREMENT
CAPABILITIES.
.............. Duplication [-6,374]
concern.
133 0605294D8Z TRUSTED & 56,178 58,678
ASSURED
MICROELECTRONI
CS.
.............. New trust [2,500]
approach
development.
134 0303141K GLOBAL COMBAT 2,512 2,512
SUPPORT SYSTEM.
135 0305304D8Z DOD ENTERPRISE 2,435 2,435
ENERGY
INFORMATION
MANAGEMENT
(EEIM).
136 0305310D8Z CWMD SYSTEMS: 17,048 17,048
SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT
AND
DEMONSTRATION.
.............. SUBTOTAL SYSTEM 831,189 816,327
DEVELOPMENT
AND
DEMONSTRATION.
..............
9999999999 CLASSIFIED 45,604 45,604
PROGRAMS.
.............. MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT
137 0604774D8Z DEFENSE 6,661 6,661
READINESS
REPORTING
SYSTEM (DRRS).
138 0604875D8Z JOINT SYSTEMS 4,088 4,088
ARCHITECTURE
DEVELOPMENT.
139 0604940D8Z CENTRAL TEST 258,796 268,796
AND EVALUATION
INVESTMENT
DEVELOPMENT
(CTEIP).
.............. Advanced [10,000]
hypersonic
wind tunnel
experimenta
tion.
140 0604942D8Z ASSESSMENTS AND 31,356 31,356
EVALUATIONS.
[[Page S3554]]
141 0605001E MISSION SUPPORT 65,646 65,646
142 0605100D8Z JOINT MISSION 84,184 89,184
ENVIRONMENT
TEST
CAPABILITY
(JMETC).
.............. Cyber range [5,000]
capacity
and
development.
143 0605104D8Z TECHNICAL 22,576 17,576
STUDIES,
SUPPORT AND
ANALYSIS.
.............. General [-5,000]
program
reduction.
144 0605126J JOINT 52,565 52,565
INTEGRATED AIR
AND MISSILE
DEFENSE
ORGANIZATION
(JIAMDO).
146 0605142D8Z SYSTEMS 38,872 38,872
ENGINEERING.
147 0605151D8Z STUDIES AND 3,534 3,534
ANALYSIS
SUPPORT--OSD.
148 0605161D8Z NUCLEAR MATTERS- 5,050 5,050
PHYSICAL
SECURITY.
149 0605170D8Z SUPPORT TO 11,450 11,450
NETWORKS AND
INFORMATION
INTEGRATION.
150 0605200D8Z GENERAL SUPPORT 1,693 1,693
TO USD
(INTELLIGENCE).
151 0605384BP CHEMICAL AND 102,883 102,883
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
PROGRAM.
159 0605790D8Z SMALL BUSINESS 2,545 2,545
INNOVATION
RESEARCH
(SBIR)/ SMALL
BUSINESS
TECHNOLOGY
TRANSFER.
160 0605798D8Z DEFENSE 24,487 24,487
TECHNOLOGY
ANALYSIS.
161 0605801KA DEFENSE 56,853 56,853
TECHNICAL
INFORMATION
CENTER (DTIC).
162 0605803SE R&D IN SUPPORT 24,914 24,914
OF DOD
ENLISTMENT,
TESTING AND
EVALUATION.
163 0605804D8Z DEVELOPMENT 20,179 25,179
TEST AND
EVALUATION.
.............. Improve [5,000]
software
testing
capabilitie
s.
164 0605898E MANAGEMENT HQ-- 13,643 13,643
R&D.
165 0605998KA MANAGEMENT HQ-- 4,124 4,124
DEFENSE
TECHNICAL
INFORMATION
CENTER (DTIC).
166 0606100D8Z BUDGET AND 5,768 5,768
PROGRAM
ASSESSMENTS.
167 0606225D8Z ODNA TECHNOLOGY 1,030 1,030
AND RESOURCE
ANALYSIS.
168 0606589D8W DEFENSE DIGITAL 1,000 1,000
SERVICE (DDS)
DEVELOPMENT
SUPPORT.
169 0606942C ASSESSMENTS AND 3,400 3,400
EVALUATIONS
CYBER
VULNERABILITIE
S.
170 0606942S ASSESSMENTS AND 4,000 4,000
EVALUATIONS
CYBER
VULNERABILITIE
S.
171 0203345D8Z DEFENSE 3,008 3,008
OPERATIONS
SECURITY
INITIATIVE
(DOSI).
172 0204571J JOINT STAFF 6,658 6,658
ANALYTICAL
SUPPORT.
175 0303166J SUPPORT TO 652 652
INFORMATION
OPERATIONS
(IO)
CAPABILITIES.
176 0303260D8Z DEFENSE 1,005 1,005
MILITARY
DECEPTION
PROGRAM OFFICE
(DMDPO).
177 0305172K COMBINED 21,363 21,363
ADVANCED
APPLICATIONS.
180 0305245D8Z INTELLIGENCE 109,529 109,529
CAPABILITIES
AND INNOVATION
INVESTMENTS.
181 0306310D8Z CWMD SYSTEMS: 1,244 1,244
RDT&E
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT.
184 0804768J COCOM EXERCISE 42,940 42,940
ENGAGEMENT AND
TRAINING
TRANSFORMATION
(CE2T2)--NON-
MHA.
185 0901598C MANAGEMENT HQ-- 28,626 28,626
MDA.
187 0903235K JOINT SERVICE 5,104 5,104
PROVIDER (JSP).
.............. SUBTOTAL 1,117,030 1,132,030
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT.
..............
9999999999 CLASSIFIED 3,877,898 3,887,898
PROGRAMS.
.............. Classified [10,000]
increase.
.............. OPERATIONAL
SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT
189 0604130V ENTERPRISE 9,750 9,750
SECURITY
SYSTEM (ESS).
190 0605127T REGIONAL 1,855 1,855
INTERNATIONAL
OUTREACH (RIO)
AND
PARTNERSHIP
FOR PEACE
INFORMATION
MANA.
191 0605147T OVERSEAS 304 304
HUMANITARIAN
ASSISTANCE
SHARED
INFORMATION
SYSTEM
(OHASIS).
192 0607210D8Z INDUSTRIAL BASE 10,376 10,376
ANALYSIS AND
SUSTAINMENT
SUPPORT.
193 0607310D8Z CWMD SYSTEMS: 5,915 5,915
OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
194 0607327T GLOBAL THEATER 5,869 5,869
SECURITY
COOPERATION
MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION
SYSTEMS (G-
TSCMIS).
195 0607384BP CHEMICAL AND 48,741 48,741
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
(OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT).
196 0208043J PLANNING AND 3,037 3,037
DECISION AID
SYSTEM (PDAS).
197 0208045K C4I 62,814 62,814
INTEROPERABILI
TY.
203 0302019K DEFENSE INFO 16,561 16,561
INFRASTRUCTURE
ENGINEERING
AND
INTEGRATION.
204 0303126K LONG-HAUL 14,769 14,769
COMMUNICATIONS
-DCS.
205 0303131K MINIMUM 17,579 17,579
ESSENTIAL
EMERGENCY
COMMUNICATIONS
NETWORK
(MEECN).
207 0303136G KEY MANAGEMENT 31,737 31,737
INFRASTRUCTURE
(KMI).
208 0303140D8Z INFORMATION 7,940 7,940
SYSTEMS
SECURITY
PROGRAM.
209 0303140G INFORMATION 229,252 229,252
SYSTEMS
SECURITY
PROGRAM.
210 0303140K INFORMATION 19,611 19,611
SYSTEMS
SECURITY
PROGRAM.
211 0303150K GLOBAL COMMAND 46,900 46,900
AND CONTROL
SYSTEM.
212 0303153K DEFENSE 7,570 7,570
SPECTRUM
ORGANIZATION.
213 0303228K JOINT 7,947 7,947
INFORMATION
ENVIRONMENT
(JIE).
215 0303430K FEDERAL 39,400 39,400
INVESTIGATIVE
SERVICES
INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY.
224 0305186D8Z POLICY R&D 6,262 3,262
PROGRAMS.
.............. General [-3,000]
program
reduction.
225 0305199D8Z NET CENTRICITY. 16,780 16,780
227 0305208BB DISTRIBUTED 6,286 6,286
COMMON GROUND/
SURFACE
SYSTEMS.
230 0305208K DISTRIBUTED 2,970 2,970
COMMON GROUND/
SURFACE
SYSTEMS.
233 0305327V INSIDER THREAT. 5,954 10,954
.............. Personnel [5,000]
security
and
continuous
evaluation.
234 0305387D8Z HOMELAND 2,198 2,198
DEFENSE
TECHNOLOGY
TRANSFER
PROGRAM.
240 0307577D8Z INTELLIGENCE 6,889 6,889
MISSION DATA
(IMD).
242 0708012K LOGISTICS 1,317 1,317
SUPPORT
ACTIVITIES.
243 0708012S PACIFIC 1,770 1,770
DISASTER
CENTERS.
244 0708047S DEFENSE 1,805 1,805
PROPERTY
ACCOUNTABILITY
SYSTEM.
246 1105219BB MQ-9 UAV....... 18,403 18,403
248 1160403BB AVIATION 184,993 184,993
SYSTEMS.
249 1160405BB INTELLIGENCE 10,625 10,625
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
250 1160408BB OPERATIONAL 102,307 102,307
ENHANCEMENTS.
251 1160431BB WARRIOR SYSTEMS 46,942 46,942
252 1160432BB SPECIAL 2,479 2,479
PROGRAMS.
253 1160434BB UNMANNED ISR... 27,270 27,270
254 1160480BB SOF TACTICAL 1,121 1,121
VEHICLES.
255 1160483BB MARITIME 42,471 42,471
SYSTEMS.
256 1160489BB GLOBAL VIDEO 4,780 4,780
SURVEILLANCE
ACTIVITIES.
257 1160490BB OPERATIONAL 12,176 12,176
ENHANCEMENTS
INTELLIGENCE.
[[Page S3555]]
258 1203610K TELEPORT 2,323 2,323
PROGRAM.
.............. SUBTOTAL 4,973,946 4,985,946
OPERATIONAL
SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT.
..............
.............. TOTAL RESEARCH, 22,016,553 22,415,591
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
DW.
..............
.............. OPERATIONAL
TEST & EVAL,
DEFENSE
.............. MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT
1 0605118OTE OPERATIONAL 85,685 85,685
TEST AND
EVALUATION.
2 0605131OTE LIVE FIRE TEST 64,332 64,332
AND EVALUATION.
3 0605814OTE OPERATIONAL 70,992 81,892
TEST
ACTIVITIES AND
ANALYSES.
.............. Increase [10,900]
for test
and
evaluation
technologie
s.
.............. SUBTOTAL 221,009 231,909
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT.
..............
.............. TOTAL 221,009 231,909
OPERATIONAL
TEST & EVAL,
DEFENSE.
..............
.............. TOTAL RDT&E.... 91,056,950 92,216,538
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4202. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION FOR
OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4202. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS (In Thousands of
Dollars)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2019 Senate
Line Program Element Item Request Authorized
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
.................................. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST &
EVAL, ARMY
.................................. ADVANCED COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES
56 0603327A AIR AND MISSILE DEFENSE SYSTEMS 1,000 1,000
ENGINEERING.
58 0603627A SMOKE, OBSCURANT AND TARGET 1,500 1,500
DEFEATING SYS-ADV DEV.
61 0603747A SOLDIER SUPPORT AND SURVIVABILITY. 3,000 3,000
76 0604117A MANEUVER--SHORT RANGE AIR DEFENSE 23,000 23,000
(M-SHORAD).
.................................. SUBTOTAL ADVANCED COMPONENT 28,500 28,500
DEVELOPMENT & PROTOTYPES.
..................................
.................................. SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT & DEMONSTRATION
88 0604328A TRACTOR CAGE...................... 12,000 12,000
100 0604741A AIR DEFENSE COMMAND, CONTROL AND 119,300 119,300
INTELLIGENCE--ENG DEV.
125 0605032A TRACTOR TIRE...................... 66,760 66,760
128 0605035A COMMON INFRARED COUNTERMEASURES 2,670 2,670
(CIRCM).
136 0605051A AIRCRAFT SURVIVABILITY DEVELOPMENT 34,933 34,933
147 0303032A TROJAN--RH12...................... 1,200 1,200
.................................. SUBTOTAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT & 236,863 236,863
DEMONSTRATION.
..................................
.................................. OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT
184 0607131A WEAPONS AND MUNITIONS PRODUCT 2,548 2,548
IMPROVEMENT PROGRAMS.
185 0607133A TRACTOR SMOKE..................... 7,780 7,780
206 0203801A MISSILE/AIR DEFENSE PRODUCT 2,000 2,000
IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.
209 0205402A INTEGRATED BASE DEFENSE-- 8,000 8,000
OPERATIONAL SYSTEM DEV.
216 0303028A SECURITY AND INTELLIGENCE 23,199 23,199
ACTIVITIES.
226 0305206A AIRBORNE RECONNAISSANCE SYSTEMS... 14,000 14,000
231 0307665A BIOMETRICS ENABLED INTELLIGENCE... 2,214 2,214
.................................. SUBTOTAL OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS 59,741 59,741
DEVELOPMENT.
..................................
.................................. TOTAL RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST 325,104 325,104
& EVAL, ARMY.
..................................
.................................. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST &
EVAL, NAVY
.................................. ADVANCED COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES
41 0603527N RETRACT LARCH..................... 18,000 18,000
61 0603654N JOINT SERVICE EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE 13,900 13,900
DEVELOPMENT.
74 0603795N LAND ATTACK TECHNOLOGY............ 1,400 1,400
.................................. SUBTOTAL ADVANCED COMPONENT 33,300 33,300
DEVELOPMENT & PROTOTYPES.
..................................
.................................. SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT & DEMONSTRATION
149 0604755N SHIP SELF DEFENSE (DETECT & 1,100 1,100
CONTROL).
.................................. SUBTOTAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT & 1,100 1,100
DEMONSTRATION.
..................................
9999999999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............... 117,282 117,282
.................................. OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT
236 0206313M MARINE CORPS COMMUNICATIONS 16,130 16,130
SYSTEMS.
.................................. SUBTOTAL OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS 133,412 133,412
DEVELOPMENT.
..................................
.................................. TOTAL RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST 167,812 167,812
& EVAL, NAVY.
..................................
.................................. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST &
EVAL, AF
.................................. ADVANCED COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES
65 1206438F SPACE CONTROL TECHNOLOGY.......... 1,100 1,100
70 1206857F OPERATIONALLY RESPONSIVE SPACE.... 12,395 12,395
.................................. SUBTOTAL ADVANCED COMPONENT 13,495 13,495
DEVELOPMENT & PROTOTYPES.
..................................
9999999999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............... 188,127 188,127
.................................. OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT
186 0205219F MQ-9 UAV.......................... 4,500 4,500
[[Page S3556]]
187 0205671F JOINT COUNTER RCIED ELECTRONIC 4,000 4,000
WARFARE.
188 0207131F A-10 SQUADRONS.................... 1,000 1,000
217 0207610F BATTLEFIELD ABN COMM NODE (BACN).. 42,349 42,349
228 0208288F INTEL DATA APPLICATIONS........... 1,200 1,200
254 0305111F WEATHER SERVICE................... 3,000 3,000
268 0305202F DRAGON U-2........................ 22,100 22,100
272 0305208F DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND/SURFACE 29,500 29,500
SYSTEMS.
310 1202247F AF TENCAP......................... 5,000 5,000
.................................. SUBTOTAL OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS 300,776 300,776
DEVELOPMENT.
..................................
.................................. TOTAL RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST 314,271 314,271
& EVAL, AF.
..................................
.................................. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST &
EVAL, DW
.................................. ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT
24 0603122D8Z COMBATING TERRORISM TECHNOLOGY 25,000 25,000
SUPPORT.
26 0603134BR COUNTER IMPROVISED-THREAT 13,648 13,648
SIMULATION.
.................................. SUBTOTAL ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY 38,648 38,648
DEVELOPMENT.
..................................
.................................. ADVANCED COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT AND
PROTOTYPES
94 0604134BR COUNTER IMPROVISED-THREAT 242,668 242,668
DEMONSTRATION, PROTOTYPE
DEVELOPMENT, AND TESTING.
.................................. SUBTOTAL ADVANCED COMPONENT 242,668 242,668
DEVELOPMENT AND PROTOTYPES.
..................................
9999999999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............... 192,131 192,131
.................................. OPERATIONAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT
250 1160408BB OPERATIONAL ENHANCEMENTS.......... 3,632 3,632
251 1160431BB WARRIOR SYSTEMS................... 11,040 11,040
253 1160434BB UNMANNED ISR...................... 11,700 11,700
254 1160480BB SOF TACTICAL VEHICLES............. 725 725
.................................. SUBTOTAL OPERATIONAL SYSTEM 219,228 219,228
DEVELOPMENT.
..................................
.................................. TOTAL RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST 500,544 500,544
& EVAL, DW.
..................................
.................................. TOTAL RDT&E....................... 1,307,731 1,307,731
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XLIII--OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
SEC. 4301. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4301. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE (In Thousands of Dollars)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2019 Senate
Line Item Request Authorized
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY
OPERATING FORCES
010 MANEUVER UNITS....................................................... 2,076,360 2,076,360
020 MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES............................................. 107,946 107,946
030 ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE............................................... 732,485 732,485
040 THEATER LEVEL ASSETS................................................. 1,169,508 1,169,508
050 LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT....................................... 1,180,460 1,180,460
060 AVIATION ASSETS...................................................... 1,467,500 1,467,500
070 FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT................................... 4,285,211 4,285,211
080 LAND FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS........................................ 482,201 482,201
090 LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE........................................ 1,536,851 1,536,851
100 BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT.............................................. 8,274,299 8,274,299
110 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION.................. 3,516,859 3,516,859
120 MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL HEADQUARTERS.............................. 438,733 438,733
180 US AFRICA COMMAND.................................................... 231,518 231,518
190 US EUROPEAN COMMAND.................................................. 150,268 150,268
200 US SOUTHERN COMMAND.................................................. 195,964 210,264
SOUTHCOM ABN GFE Sensor (GEOINT/SIGINT).......................... [4,200]
SOUTHCOM Cyber HUMINT (CME/OPS).................................. [1,000]
SOUTHCOM OSINT/PAI (CME/LIC/TOOLS)............................... [1,600]
SOUTHCOM Overland Airborne ISR Flight Hours...................... [7,200]
SOUTHCOM SIGINT Suite COMSAT RF.................................. [300]
210 US FORCES KOREA...................................................... 59,625 59,625
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 25,905,788 25,920,088
MOBILIZATION
220 STRATEGIC MOBILITY................................................... 370,941 370,941
230 ARMY PREPOSITIONED STOCKS............................................ 573,560 573,560
240 INDUSTRIAL PREPAREDNESS.............................................. 7,678 7,678
SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION................................................ 952,179 952,179
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
250 OFFICER ACQUISITION.................................................. 135,832 135,832
260 RECRUIT TRAINING..................................................... 54,819 54,819
[[Page S3557]]
270 ONE STATION UNIT TRAINING............................................ 69,599 69,599
280 SENIOR RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS............................... 518,998 518,998
290 SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING........................................... 1,020,073 1,020,073
300 FLIGHT TRAINING...................................................... 1,082,190 1,082,190
310 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION................................... 220,399 220,399
320 TRAINING SUPPORT..................................................... 611,482 611,482
330 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........................................... 698,962 498,962
Marketing Cuts................................................... [-200,000]
340 EXAMINING............................................................ 162,049 162,049
350 OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION..................................... 215,622 215,622
360 CIVILIAN EDUCATION AND TRAINING...................................... 176,914 176,914
370 JUNIOR RESERVE OFFICER TRAINING CORPS................................ 174,430 174,430
SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING..................................... 5,141,369 4,941,369
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................................................. 1,259,622 1,259,622
ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES
390 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........................................... 588,047 588,047
400 CENTRAL SUPPLY ACTIVITIES............................................ 931,462 931,462
410 LOGISTIC SUPPORT ACTIVITIES.......................................... 696,114 696,114
420 AMMUNITION MANAGEMENT................................................ 461,637 461,637
430 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 447,564 447,564
440 SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........................................... 2,069,127 2,069,127
450 MANPOWER MANAGEMENT.................................................. 261,021 261,021
460 OTHER PERSONNEL SUPPORT.............................................. 379,541 379,541
470 OTHER SERVICE SUPPORT................................................ 1,699,767 1,699,767
480 ARMY CLAIMS ACTIVITIES............................................... 192,686 192,686
490 REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT............................................... 240,917 240,917
500 FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT AND AUDIT READINESS............................. 291,569 291,569
510 INTERNATIONAL MILITARY HEADQUARTERS.................................. 442,656 442,656
520 MISC. SUPPORT OF OTHER NATIONS....................................... 48,251 48,251
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES.................................. 10,009,981 10,009,981
UNDISTRIBUTED
1 UNDISTRIBUTED........................................................ 0 -200,000
Army misrepresentation of civilian pay budget request............ [-200,000]
SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED............................................... 0 -200,000
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY.................................. 42,009,317 41,623,617
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY RES
OPERATING FORCES
010 MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES............................................. 13,867 13,867
020 ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE............................................... 536,438 536,438
030 THEATER LEVEL ASSETS................................................. 113,225 113,225
040 LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT....................................... 551,141 551,141
050 AVIATION ASSETS...................................................... 89,073 89,073
060 FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT................................... 409,531 409,531
070 LAND FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS........................................ 101,411 101,411
080 LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE........................................ 60,114 60,114
090 BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT.............................................. 595,728 595,728
100 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION.................. 304,658 304,658
110 MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL HEADQUARTERS.............................. 22,175 22,175
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 2,797,361 2,797,361
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
120 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........................................... 11,832 11,832
130 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 18,218 18,218
140 SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........................................... 25,069 25,069
150 MANPOWER MANAGEMENT.................................................. 6,248 6,248
160 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........................................... 58,181 58,181
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES.................................... 119,548 119,548
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY RES.............................. 2,916,909 2,916,909
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARNG
OPERATING FORCES
010 MANEUVER UNITS....................................................... 810,269 810,269
020 MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES............................................. 193,402 193,402
030 ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE............................................... 753,815 753,815
040 THEATER LEVEL ASSETS................................................. 84,124 84,124
050 LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT....................................... 31,881 31,881
060 AVIATION ASSETS...................................................... 973,874 973,874
070 FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT................................... 784,086 784,086
080 LAND FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS........................................ 51,353 51,353
[[Page S3558]]
090 LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE........................................ 221,633 221,633
100 BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT.............................................. 1,129,942 1,129,942
110 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION.................. 919,947 919,947
120 MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL HEADQUARTERS.............................. 1,010,524 1,010,524
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 6,964,850 6,964,850
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
130 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........................................... 10,017 10,017
140 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 72,746 72,746
150 SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........................................... 83,105 83,105
160 MANPOWER MANAGEMENT.................................................. 10,678 10,678
170 OTHER PERSONNEL SUPPORT.............................................. 254,753 254,753
180 REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT............................................... 3,146 3,146
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES.................................... 434,445 434,445
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARNG.................................. 7,399,295 7,399,295
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY
OPERATING FORCES
010 MISSION AND OTHER FLIGHT OPERATIONS.................................. 5,372,399 5,372,399
020 FLEET AIR TRAINING................................................... 2,023,351 2,023,351
030 AVIATION TECHNICAL DATA & ENGINEERING SERVICES....................... 56,225 56,225
040 AIR OPERATIONS AND SAFETY SUPPORT.................................... 156,081 156,081
050 AIR SYSTEMS SUPPORT.................................................. 682,379 682,379
060 AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE........................................... 1,253,756 1,253,756
070 AIRCRAFT DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT.................................... 66,649 66,649
080 AVIATION LOGISTICS................................................... 939,368 939,368
090 MISSION AND OTHER SHIP OPERATIONS.................................... 4,439,566 4,439,566
100 SHIP OPERATIONS SUPPORT & TRAINING................................... 997,663 997,663
110 SHIP DEPOT MAINTENANCE............................................... 8,751,526 8,751,526
120 SHIP DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT........................................ 2,168,876 2,168,876
130 COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS AND ELECTRONIC WARFARE......................... 1,349,593 1,351,293
SOUTHCOM CCO Sensor Integration.................................. [1,700]
150 SPACE SYSTEMS AND SURVEILLANCE....................................... 215,255 215,255
160 WARFARE TACTICS...................................................... 632,446 632,446
170 OPERATIONAL METEOROLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY............................. 373,046 373,046
180 COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES................................................ 1,452,075 1,452,075
190 EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE AND DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT................... 153,719 153,719
210 COMBATANT COMMANDERS CORE OPERATIONS................................. 63,039 63,039
220 COMBATANT COMMANDERS DIRECT MISSION SUPPORT.......................... 89,339 89,339
230 MILITARY INFORMATION SUPPORT OPERATIONS.............................. 8,475 8,475
240 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES................................................ 424,088 424,088
260 FLEET BALLISTIC MISSILE.............................................. 1,361,947 1,361,947
280 WEAPONS MAINTENANCE.................................................. 823,952 823,952
290 OTHER WEAPON SYSTEMS SUPPORT......................................... 494,101 494,101
300 ENTERPRISE INFORMATION............................................... 921,936 876,936
General reduction................................................ [-45,000]
310 SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND MODERNIZATION........................... 2,040,389 2,446,389
FSRM to 100% max executable...................................... [406,000]
320 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................... 4,414,753 4,414,753
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 41,725,992 42,088,692
MOBILIZATION
330 SHIP PREPOSITIONING AND SURGE........................................ 549,142 549,142
340 READY RESERVE FORCE.................................................. 310,805 310,805
360 SHIP ACTIVATIONS/INACTIVATIONS....................................... 161,150 161,150
370 EXPEDITIONARY HEALTH SERVICES SYSTEMS................................ 120,338 120,338
390 COAST GUARD SUPPORT.................................................. 24,097 24,097
SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION................................................ 1,165,532 1,165,532
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
400 OFFICER ACQUISITION.................................................. 145,481 145,481
410 RECRUIT TRAINING..................................................... 9,637 9,637
420 RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS...................................... 149,687 149,687
430 SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING........................................... 879,557 879,557
450 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION................................... 184,436 184,436
460 TRAINING SUPPORT..................................................... 223,159 223,159
470 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........................................... 181,086 181,086
480 OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION..................................... 96,006 96,006
490 CIVILIAN EDUCATION AND TRAINING...................................... 72,083 72,083
500 JUNIOR ROTC.......................................................... 54,156 54,156
SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING..................................... 1,995,288 1,995,288
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................................................. 574,994 574,994
[[Page S3559]]
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
510 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 1,089,964 1,089,964
530 CIVILIAN MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT........................... 164,074 164,074
540 MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT........................... 418,350 418,350
580 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........................................... 167,106 167,106
600 PLANNING, ENGINEERING, AND PROGRAM SUPPORT........................... 333,556 333,556
610 ACQUISITION, LOGISTICS, AND OVERSIGHT................................ 663,690 663,690
650 INVESTIGATIVE AND SECURITY SERVICES.................................. 705,087 705,087
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES.................................... 4,116,821 4,116,821
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY.................................. 49,003,633 49,366,333
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS
OPERATING FORCES
010 OPERATIONAL FORCES................................................... 873,320 873,320
020 FIELD LOGISTICS...................................................... 1,094,187 1,094,187
030 DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................................................... 314,182 314,182
040 MARITIME PREPOSITIONING.............................................. 98,136 98,136
050 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES................................................ 183,546 183,546
060 SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION............................. 832,636 832,636
070 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................... 2,151,390 2,151,390
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 5,547,397 5,547,397
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
080 RECRUIT TRAINING..................................................... 16,453 16,453
090 OFFICER ACQUISITION.................................................. 1,144 1,144
100 SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING........................................... 106,360 106,360
110 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION................................... 46,096 46,096
120 TRAINING SUPPORT..................................................... 389,751 389,751
130 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........................................... 201,662 201,662
140 OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION..................................... 32,461 32,461
150 JUNIOR ROTC.......................................................... 24,217 24,217
SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING..................................... 818,144 818,144
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................................................. 50,859 50,859
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
160 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........................................... 29,735 29,735
170 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 386,375 386,375
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES.................................... 466,969 466,969
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS.......................... 6,832,510 6,832,510
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY RES
OPERATING FORCES
010 MISSION AND OTHER FLIGHT OPERATIONS.................................. 569,584 569,584
020 INTERMEDIATE MAINTENANCE............................................. 6,902 6,902
030 AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE........................................... 109,776 109,776
040 AIRCRAFT DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT.................................... 538 538
050 AVIATION LOGISTICS................................................... 18,888 18,888
060 SHIP OPERATIONS SUPPORT & TRAINING................................... 574 574
070 COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS................................................ 17,561 17,561
080 COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES................................................ 121,070 121,070
090 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES................................................ 337 337
100 ENTERPRISE INFORMATION............................................... 23,964 23,964
110 SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND MODERNIZATION........................... 36,356 36,356
120 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................... 103,562 103,562
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 1,009,112 1,009,112
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
130 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 1,868 1,868
140 MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT........................... 12,849 12,849
160 ACQUISITION AND PROGRAM MANAGEMENT................................... 3,177 3,177
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES.................................... 17,894 17,894
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY RES.............................. 1,027,006 1,027,006
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MC RESERVE
OPERATING FORCES
010 OPERATING FORCES..................................................... 99,173 99,173
020 DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................................................... 19,430 19,430
030 SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND MODERNIZATION........................... 39,962 39,962
040 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................... 101,829 101,829
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 260,394 260,394
[[Page S3560]]
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
050 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 11,176 11,176
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES.................................... 11,176 11,176
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MC RESERVE............................ 271,570 271,570
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................................................. 1,164,810 1,164,810
OPERATING FORCES
010 PRIMARY COMBAT FORCES................................................ 758,178 783,178
Increase for F-35 sustainment to accelerate depot component [25,000]
repair capability................................................
020 COMBAT ENHANCEMENT FORCES............................................ 1,509,027 1,509,027
030 AIR OPERATIONS TRAINING (OJT, MAINTAIN SKILLS)....................... 1,323,330 1,323,330
040 DEPOT PURCHASE EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE................................. 3,511,830 3,511,830
050 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION.................. 2,892,705 2,917,705
Additional demo.................................................. [25,000]
060 CONTRACTOR LOGISTICS SUPPORT AND SYSTEM SUPPORT...................... 7,613,084 8,258,984
Increase for JSTARS buy-back..................................... [95,900]
WSS to 100% executable........................................... [550,000]
070 FLYING HOUR PROGRAM.................................................. 4,345,208 4,395,208
Increase for JSTARS buy-back..................................... [50,000]
080 BASE SUPPORT......................................................... 5,989,215 5,989,215
090 GLOBAL C3I AND EARLY WARNING......................................... 928,023 928,023
100 OTHER COMBAT OPS SPT PROGRAMS........................................ 1,080,956 1,080,956
110 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES................................................ 879,032 879,032
130 LAUNCH FACILITIES.................................................... 183,777 183,777
140 SPACE CONTROL SYSTEMS................................................ 404,072 404,072
170 US NORTHCOM/NORAD.................................................... 187,375 187,375
180 US STRATCOM.......................................................... 529,902 529,902
190 US CYBERCOM.......................................................... 329,474 329,474
200 US CENTCOM........................................................... 166,024 166,024
210 US SOCOM............................................................. 723 723
220 US TRANSCOM.......................................................... 535 535
918 UNDISTRIBUTED........................................................ 0 156,800
Procurement of 7 DABs for PACOM.................................. [156,800]
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 33,797,280 34,699,980
MOBILIZATION
230 AIRLIFT OPERATIONS................................................... 1,307,695 1,307,695
240 MOBILIZATION PREPAREDNESS............................................ 144,417 144,417
SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION................................................ 1,452,112 1,452,112
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
280 OFFICER ACQUISITION.................................................. 133,187 133,187
290 RECRUIT TRAINING..................................................... 25,041 25,041
300 RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS (ROTC)............................... 117,338 117,338
330 SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING........................................... 401,996 401,996
340 FLIGHT TRAINING...................................................... 477,064 477,064
350 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION................................... 276,423 276,423
360 TRAINING SUPPORT..................................................... 95,948 95,948
380 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........................................... 154,530 154,530
390 EXAMINING............................................................ 4,132 4,132
400 OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION..................................... 223,150 223,150
410 CIVILIAN EDUCATION AND TRAINING...................................... 209,497 209,497
420 JUNIOR ROTC.......................................................... 59,908 59,908
SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING..................................... 2,178,214 2,178,214
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................................................. 1,222,456 1,222,456
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
430 LOGISTICS OPERATIONS................................................. 681,788 681,788
440 TECHNICAL SUPPORT ACTIVITIES......................................... 117,812 117,812
480 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 953,102 953,102
490 SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........................................... 358,389 358,389
500 OTHER SERVICEWIDE ACTIVITIES......................................... 1,194,862 1,194,862
510 CIVIL AIR PATROL..................................................... 29,594 29,594
540 INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT................................................ 74,959 74,959
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES.................................... 4,632,962 4,632,962
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE............................. 42,060,568 42,963,268
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AF RESERVE
OPERATING FORCES
010 PRIMARY COMBAT FORCES................................................ 1,853,437 1,853,437
020 MISSION SUPPORT OPERATIONS........................................... 205,369 205,369
[[Page S3561]]
030 DEPOT PURCHASE EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE................................. 345,576 345,576
040 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION.................. 120,736 123,536
Additional demo.................................................. [2,800]
050 CONTRACTOR LOGISTICS SUPPORT AND SYSTEM SUPPORT...................... 241,239 293,239
WSS to 91%....................................................... [52,000]
060 BASE SUPPORT......................................................... 385,922 385,922
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 3,152,279 3,207,079
ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICEWIDE ACTIVITIES
070 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 71,188 71,188
080 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........................................... 19,429 19,429
090 MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERS MGMT (ARPC)............................... 9,386 9,386
100 OTHER PERS SUPPORT (DISABILITY COMP)................................. 7,512 7,512
110 AUDIOVISUAL.......................................................... 440 440
SUBTOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICEWIDE ACTIVITIES................... 107,955 107,955
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AF RESERVE............................ 3,260,234 3,315,034
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ANG
OPERATING FORCES
010 AIRCRAFT OPERATIONS.................................................. 2,619,940 2,621,540
Restoring O&M associated with buyback of 3 PMAI JSTARS aircraft.. [1,600]
020 MISSION SUPPORT OPERATIONS........................................... 623,265 623,265
030 DEPOT PURCHASE EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE................................. 748,287 748,287
040 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION.................. 303,792 303,792
050 CONTRACTOR LOGISTICS SUPPORT AND SYSTEM SUPPORT...................... 1,061,759 1,061,759
060 BASE SUPPORT......................................................... 988,333 999,333
PFAS Transfer.................................................... [11,000]
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 6,345,376 6,357,976
ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES
070 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 45,711 45,711
080 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........................................... 36,535 36,535
SUBTOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES.................. 82,246 82,246
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ANG................................... 6,427,622 6,440,222
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, DEFENSE-WIDE
OPERATING FORCES
010 JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF................................................ 430,215 432,715
Operational logistics exercise elements.......................... [2,500]
020 JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF--CE2T2......................................... 602,186 602,186
040 SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND/OPERATING FORCES.......................... 5,389,250 5,389,250
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 6,421,651 6,424,151
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
050 DEFENSE ACQUISITION UNIVERSITY....................................... 181,601 181,601
060 JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF................................................ 96,565 96,565
070 SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND/TRAINING AND RECRUITING................... 370,583 370,583
SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING..................................... 648,749 648,749
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................................................. 15,645,192 15,645,192
ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES
080 CIVIL MILITARY PROGRAMS.............................................. 166,131 166,131
100 DEFENSE CONTRACT AUDIT AGENCY........................................ 625,633 625,633
110 DEFENSE CONTRACT MANAGEMENT AGENCY................................... 1,465,354 1,465,354
120 DEFENSE HUMAN RESOURCES ACTIVITY..................................... 859,923 859,923
130 DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEMS AGENCY................................... 2,106,930 2,106,930
150 DEFENSE LEGAL SERVICES AGENCY........................................ 27,403 27,403
160 DEFENSE LOGISTICS AGENCY............................................. 379,275 379,275
170 DEFENSE MEDIA ACTIVITY............................................... 207,537 207,537
180 DEFENSE PERSONNEL ACCOUNTING AGENCY.................................. 130,696 130,696
190 DEFENSE SECURITY COOPERATION AGENCY.................................. 754,711 754,711
200 DEFENSE SECURITY SERVICE............................................. 789,175 852,775
Additional civilian FTE.......................................... [18,600]
New mission needs................................................ [45,000]
220 DEFENSE TECHNOLOGY SECURITY ADMINISTRATION........................... 34,951 34,951
230 DEFENSE THREAT REDUCTION AGENCY...................................... 553,329 553,329
250 DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE EDUCATION ACTIVITY............................. 2,892,284 2,942,284
Impact aid for children with severe disabilities................. [10,000]
Impact aid for schools with military dependent students.......... [40,000]
260 MISSILE DEFENSE AGENCY............................................... 499,817 499,817
280 OFFICE OF ECONOMIC ADJUSTMENT........................................ 70,035 70,035
290 OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE................................... 1,519,655 1,565,655
[[Page S3562]]
CDC Health Study (sec. 312)...................................... [10,000]
Clearinghouse.................................................... [1,000]
Defense Environmental International Cooperations (DEIC).......... [1,000]
Defense Fellows Program.......................................... [10,000]
DOD emerging contaminants........................................ [1,000]
DOD environmental resilience..................................... [1,000]
DOD Rewards Program Cut.......................................... [-3,000]
Readiness and Environmental Protection Initiative Increase....... [25,000]
300 SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND/ADMIN & SVC-WIDE ACTIVITIES............... 97,787 97,787
310 WASHINGTON HEADQUARTERS SERVICES..................................... 456,407 456,407
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES.................................. 29,282,225 29,441,825
TOTAL OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, DEFENSE-WIDE........................ 36,352,625 36,514,725
MISCELLANEOUS APPROPRIATIONS
US COURT OF APPEALS FOR ARMED FORCES, DEF
010 US COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ARMED FORCES, DEFENSE.................... 14,662 14,662
SUBTOTAL US COURT OF APPEALS FOR ARMED FORCES, DEF................... 14,662 14,662
OVERSEAS HUMANITARIAN, DISASTER, AND CIVIC AID
010 OVERSEAS HUMANITARIAN, DISASTER AND CIVIC AID........................ 107,663 107,663
SUBTOTAL OVERSEAS HUMANITARIAN, DISASTER, AND CIVIC AID.............. 107,663 107,663
COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION ACCOUNT
010 FORMER SOVIET UNION (FSU) THREAT REDUCTION........................... 335,240 335,240
SUBTOTAL COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION ACCOUNT........................ 335,240 335,240
DOD ACQUISITION WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT FUND
010 ACQ WORKFORCE DEV FD................................................. 400,000 400,000
SUBTOTAL DOD ACQUISITION WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT FUND.................. 400,000 400,000
ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, ARMY
060 ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, ARMY...................................... 203,449 203,449
SUBTOTAL ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, ARMY............................. 203,449 203,449
ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, NAVY
080 ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, NAVY...................................... 329,253 329,253
SUBTOTAL ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, NAVY............................. 329,253 329,253
ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, AIR FORCE
100 ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, AIR FORCE................................. 296,808 285,808
PFAS Transfer.................................................... [-11,000]
SUBTOTAL ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, AIR FORCE........................ 296,808 285,808
ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, DEFENSE
120 ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, DEFENSE................................... 8,926 8,926
SUBTOTAL ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, DEFENSE.......................... 8,926 8,926
ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION FORMERLY USED SITES
140 ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION FORMERLY USED SITES........................ 212,346 212,346
SUBTOTAL ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION FORMERLY USED SITES............... 212,346 212,346
TOTAL MISCELLANEOUS APPROPRIATIONS................................... 1,908,347 1,897,347
UNDISTRIBUTED
UNDISTRIBUTED
999 UNDISTRIBUTED........................................................ 0 -216,520
Foreign Currency Fluctuation..................................... [-267,000]
JROTC............................................................ [5,480]
Operation and Maintenance, Air Force DSMOA....................... [10,000]
Operation and Maintenance, Air National Guard DSMOA.............. [15,000]
Operation and Maintenance, Army DSMOA............................ [10,000]
Operation and Maintenance, Navy DSMOA............................ [10,000]
SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED............................................... 0 -216,520
TOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED.................................................. 0 -216,520
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE........................................ 199,469,636 200,351,316
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4302. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY
OPERATIONS.
[[Page S3563]]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4302. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS
(In Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2019 Senate
Line Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY
OPERATING FORCES
010 MANEUVER UNITS................ 1,179,339 1,179,339
030 ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE........ 25,983 25,983
040 THEATER LEVEL ASSETS.......... 2,189,916 2,189,916
050 LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT 188,609 188,609
060 AVIATION ASSETS............... 120,787 120,787
070 FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS 3,867,286 3,867,286
SUPPORT......................
080 LAND FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS. 550,068 550,068
090 LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE. 195,873 195,873
100 BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT....... 109,560 109,560
110 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, 60,807 60,807
RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION..
140 ADDITIONAL ACTIVITIES......... 5,992,222 5,992,222
150 COMMANDERS EMERGENCY RESPONSE 10,000 10,000
PROGRAM......................
160 RESET......................... 1,036,454 1,036,454
180 US AFRICA COMMAND............. 248,796 248,796
190 US EUROPEAN COMMAND........... 98,127 98,127
200 US SOUTHERN COMMAND........... 2,550 2,550
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES..... 15,876,377 15,876,377
MOBILIZATION
230 ARMY PREPOSITIONED STOCKS..... 158,753 158,753
SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION......... 158,753 158,753
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS........... 1,074,270 1,074,270
ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES
390 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION.... 712,230 712,230
400 CENTRAL SUPPLY ACTIVITIES..... 44,168 44,168
410 LOGISTIC SUPPORT ACTIVITIES... 5,300 5,300
420 AMMUNITION MANAGEMENT......... 38,597 38,597
460 OTHER PERSONNEL SUPPORT....... 109,019 109,019
490 REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT........ 191,786 191,786
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWIDE 2,175,370 2,175,370
ACTIVITIES...................
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, 18,210,500 18,210,500
ARMY.........................
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY
RES
OPERATING FORCES
020 ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE........ 20,700 20,700
060 FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS 700 700
SUPPORT......................
090 BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT....... 20,487 20,487
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES..... 41,887 41,887
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, 41,887 41,887
ARMY RES.....................
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARNG
OPERATING FORCES
010 MANEUVER UNITS................ 42,519 42,519
020 MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES...... 778 778
030 ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE........ 12,093 12,093
040 THEATER LEVEL ASSETS.......... 708 708
060 AVIATION ASSETS............... 28,135 28,135
070 FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS 5,908 5,908
SUPPORT......................
100 BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT....... 18,877 18,877
120 MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL 956 956
HEADQUARTERS.................
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES..... 109,974 109,974
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
150 SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS.... 755 755
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD 755 755
ACTIVITIES...................
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, 110,729 110,729
ARNG.........................
AFGHANISTAN SECURITY FORCES
FUND
AFGHAN NATIONAL ARMY
090 SUSTAINMENT................... 1,522,777 1,522,777
100 INFRASTRUCTURE................ 137,732 137,732
110 EQUIPMENT AND TRANSPORTATION.. 71,922 71,922
120 TRAINING AND OPERATIONS....... 175,846 175,846
SUBTOTAL AFGHAN NATIONAL ARMY. 1,908,277 1,908,277
AFGHAN NATIONAL POLICE
130 SUSTAINMENT................... 527,554 527,554
140 INFRASTRUCTURE................ 42,984 42,984
[[Page S3564]]
150 EQUIPMENT AND TRANSPORTATION.. 14,554 14,554
160 TRAINING AND OPERATIONS....... 181,922 181,922
SUBTOTAL AFGHAN NATIONAL 767,014 767,014
POLICE.......................
AFGHAN AIR FORCE
170 SUSTAINMENT................... 942,279 942,279
180 INFRASTRUCTURE................ 30,350 30,350
190 EQUIPMENT AND TRANSPORTATION.. 572,310 572,310
200 TRAINING AND OPERATIONS....... 277,191 277,191
SUBTOTAL AFGHAN AIR FORCE..... 1,822,130 1,822,130
AFGHAN SPECIAL SECURITY FORCES
210 SUSTAINMENT................... 353,734 353,734
220 INFRASTRUCTURE................ 43,132 43,132
230 EQUIPMENT AND TRANSPORTATION.. 151,790 151,790
240 TRAINING AND OPERATIONS....... 153,373 153,373
SUBTOTAL AFGHAN SPECIAL 702,029 702,029
SECURITY FORCES..............
TOTAL AFGHANISTAN SECURITY 5,199,450 5,199,450
FORCES FUND..................
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY
OPERATING FORCES
010 MISSION AND OTHER FLIGHT 435,507 435,507
OPERATIONS...................
030 AVIATION TECHNICAL DATA & 800 800
ENGINEERING SERVICES.........
040 AIR OPERATIONS AND SAFETY 9,394 9,394
SUPPORT......................
050 AIR SYSTEMS SUPPORT........... 193,384 193,384
060 AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE.... 173,053 173,053
070 AIRCRAFT DEPOT OPERATIONS 3,524 3,524
SUPPORT......................
080 AVIATION LOGISTICS............ 60,219 60,219
090 MISSION AND OTHER SHIP 942,960 942,960
OPERATIONS...................
100 SHIP OPERATIONS SUPPORT & 20,236 20,236
TRAINING.....................
110 SHIP DEPOT MAINTENANCE........ 1,022,647 1,022,647
130 COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS AND 59,553 59,553
ELECTRONIC WARFARE...........
160 WARFARE TACTICS............... 16,651 16,651
170 OPERATIONAL METEOROLOGY AND 31,118 31,118
OCEANOGRAPHY.................
180 COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES......... 635,560 635,560
190 EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE AND 4,334 4,334
DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT.....
220 COMBATANT COMMANDERS DIRECT 24,800 24,800
MISSION SUPPORT..............
240 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES......... 355 355
280 WEAPONS MAINTENANCE........... 493,033 493,033
290 OTHER WEAPON SYSTEMS SUPPORT.. 12,780 12,780
310 SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND 67,321 67,321
MODERNIZATION................
320 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT........ 211,394 211,394
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES..... 4,418,623 4,418,623
MOBILIZATION
370 EXPEDITIONARY HEALTH SERVICES 12,902 12,902
SYSTEMS......................
390 COAST GUARD SUPPORT........... 165,000 165,000
SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION......... 177,902 177,902
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
430 SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING.... 51,138 51,138
SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND 51,138 51,138
RECRUITING...................
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS........... 16,076 16,076
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
510 ADMINISTRATION................ 4,145 4,145
540 MILITARY MANPOWER AND 7,503 7,503
PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT.........
580 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION.... 69,297 69,297
610 ACQUISITION, LOGISTICS, AND 10,912 10,912
OVERSIGHT....................
650 INVESTIGATIVE AND SECURITY 1,559 1,559
SERVICES.....................
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD 109,492 109,492
ACTIVITIES...................
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, 4,757,155 4,757,155
NAVY.........................
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE,
MARINE CORPS
OPERATING FORCES
010 OPERATIONAL FORCES............ 734,505 734,505
020 FIELD LOGISTICS............... 212,691 212,691
030 DEPOT MAINTENANCE............. 53,040 53,040
070 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT........ 23,047 23,047
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES..... 1,023,283 1,023,283
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
[[Page S3565]]
120 TRAINING SUPPORT.............. 30,459 30,459
SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND 30,459 30,459
RECRUITING...................
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS........... 4,650 4,650
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
160 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION.... 61,400 61,400
170 ADMINISTRATION................ 2,108 2,108
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD 68,158 68,158
ACTIVITIES...................
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, 1,121,900 1,121,900
MARINE CORPS.................
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY
RES
OPERATING FORCES
020 INTERMEDIATE MAINTENANCE...... 500 500
030 AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE.... 11,400 11,400
080 COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES......... 13,737 13,737
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES..... 25,637 25,637
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, 25,637 25,637
NAVY RES.....................
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MC
RESERVE
OPERATING FORCES
010 OPERATING FORCES.............. 2,550 2,550
040 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT........ 795 795
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES..... 3,345 3,345
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, 3,345 3,345
MC RESERVE...................
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AIR
FORCE
OPERATING FORCES
010 PRIMARY COMBAT FORCES......... 166,274 166,274
020 COMBAT ENHANCEMENT FORCES..... 1,492,580 1,492,580
030 AIR OPERATIONS TRAINING (OJT, 110,237 110,237
MAINTAIN SKILLS).............
040 DEPOT PURCHASE EQUIPMENT 209,996 209,996
MAINTENANCE..................
050 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, 92,412 92,412
RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION..
060 CONTRACTOR LOGISTICS SUPPORT 1,289,693 1,289,693
AND SYSTEM SUPPORT...........
070 FLYING HOUR PROGRAM........... 2,355,264 2,355,264
080 BASE SUPPORT.................. 1,141,718 1,141,718
090 GLOBAL C3I AND EARLY WARNING.. 13,537 13,537
100 OTHER COMBAT OPS SPT PROGRAMS. 224,713 224,713
110 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES......... 17,353 17,353
120 TACTICAL INTEL AND OTHER 36,098 36,098
SPECIAL ACTIVITIES...........
130 LAUNCH FACILITIES............. 385 385
140 SPACE CONTROL SYSTEMS......... 38,966 38,966
170 US NORTHCOM/NORAD............. 725 725
180 US STRATCOM................... 2,056 2,056
190 US CYBERCOM................... 35,189 35,189
200 US CENTCOM.................... 162,691 162,691
210 US SOCOM...................... 19,000 19,000
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES..... 7,408,887 7,408,887
MOBILIZATION
230 AIRLIFT OPERATIONS............ 1,287,659 1,287,659
240 MOBILIZATION PREPAREDNESS..... 107,064 107,064
SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION......... 1,394,723 1,394,723
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
280 OFFICER ACQUISITION........... 300 300
290 RECRUIT TRAINING.............. 340 340
330 SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING.... 25,327 25,327
340 FLIGHT TRAINING............... 844 844
350 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT 1,199 1,199
EDUCATION....................
360 TRAINING SUPPORT.............. 1,320 1,320
SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND 29,330 29,330
RECRUITING...................
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS........... 51,108 51,108
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
430 LOGISTICS OPERATIONS.......... 154,485 154,485
440 TECHNICAL SUPPORT ACTIVITIES.. 13,608 13,608
480 ADMINISTRATION................ 4,814 4,814
490 SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS.... 131,123 131,123
500 OTHER SERVICEWIDE ACTIVITIES.. 97,471 97,471
540 INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT......... 240 240
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD 452,849 452,849
ACTIVITIES...................
[[Page S3566]]
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, 9,285,789 9,285,789
AIR FORCE....................
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AF
RESERVE
OPERATING FORCES
030 DEPOT PURCHASE EQUIPMENT 51,000 51,000
MAINTENANCE..................
060 BASE SUPPORT.................. 9,500 9,500
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES..... 60,500 60,500
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, 60,500 60,500
AF RESERVE...................
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ANG
OPERATING FORCES
020 MISSION SUPPORT OPERATIONS.... 3,560 3,560
060 BASE SUPPORT.................. 12,310 12,310
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES..... 15,870 15,870
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, 15,870 15,870
ANG..........................
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE,
DEFENSE-WIDE
OPERATING FORCES
010 JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF......... 28,671 28,671
040 SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND/ 3,733,161 3,733,161
OPERATING FORCES.............
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES..... 3,761,832 3,761,832
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS........... 1,944,813 1,944,813
ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES
100 DEFENSE CONTRACT AUDIT AGENCY. 1,781 1,781
110 DEFENSE CONTRACT MANAGEMENT 21,723 21,723
AGENCY.......................
130 DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEMS 111,702 111,702
AGENCY.......................
150 DEFENSE LEGAL SERVICES AGENCY. 127,023 127,023
170 DEFENSE MEDIA ACTIVITY........ 14,377 14,377
190 DEFENSE SECURITY COOPERATION 2,208,442 1,658,442
AGENCY.......................
Coalition Support Funds... [-550,000]
230 DEFENSE THREAT REDUCTION 302,250 302,250
AGENCY.......................
250 DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE 31,620 31,620
EDUCATION ACTIVITY...........
290 OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF 16,579 16,579
DEFENSE......................
310 WASHINGTON HEADQUARTERS 7,766 7,766
SERVICES.....................
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWIDE 4,788,076 4,238,076
ACTIVITIES...................
TOTAL OPERATION AND 8,549,908 7,999,908
MAINTENANCE, DEFENSE-WIDE....
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE. 47,382,670 46,832,670
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XLIV--MILITARY PERSONNEL
SEC. 4401. MILITARY PERSONNEL.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4401. MILITARY PERSONNEL (In Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2019 Senate
Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MILITARY PERSONNEL
MILITARY PERSONNEL APPROPRIATIONS
MILITARY PERSONNEL APPROPRIATIONS..... 140,689,301 137,627,221
End strength cut................. [-993,200]
Foreign Currency Fluctuation..... [-133,000]
JROTC............................ 1,220
Military Personnel Underexecution [-1,937,100]
SUBTOTAL MILITARY PERSONNEL 140,689,301 137,627,221
APPROPRIATIONS.......................
MEDICARE-ELIGIBLE RETIREE HEALTH FUND
CONTRIBUTIONS
MEDICARE-ELIGIBLE RETIREE HEALTH FUND 7,533,090 7,533,090
CONTRIBUTIONS........................
SUBTOTAL MEDICARE-ELIGIBLE RETIREE 7,533,090 7,533,090
HEALTH FUND CONTRIBUTIONS............
TOTAL MILITARY PERSONNEL.............. 148,222,391 145,160,311
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4402. MILITARY PERSONNEL FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY
OPERATIONS.
[[Page S3567]]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4402. MILITARY PERSONNEL FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS (In
Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2019 Senate
Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MILITARY PERSONNEL
MILITARY PERSONNEL APPROPRIATIONS
MILITARY PERSONNEL APPROPRIATIONS..... 4,660,661 4,660,661
SUBTOTAL MILITARY PERSONNEL 4,660,661 4,660,661
APPROPRIATIONS.......................
TOTAL MILITARY PERSONNEL.............. 4,660,661 4,660,661
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XLV--OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS
SEC. 4501. OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4501. OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS (In Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2019 Senate
Line Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
WORKING CAPITAL FUND
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, ARMY
010 Industrial Operations.......... 59,002 59,002
020 Supply Management--Army........ 99,763 99,763
SUBTOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, 59,002 59,002
ARMY..........................
SUBTOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, 99,763 99,763
ARMY..........................
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, AIR FORCE
020 Supplies and Materials......... 69,054 69,054
SUBTOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, 69,054 69,054
AIR FORCE.....................
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, DEFENSE-
WIDE
020 Supply Chain Management--Def... 48,096 48,096
SUBTOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, 48,096 48,096
DEFENSE-WIDE..................
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, DECA
010 Working Capital Fund, DECA..... 1,266,200 1,266,200
SUBTOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, 1,266,200 1,266,200
DECA..........................
TOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND..... 1,542,115 1,542,115
CHEM AGENTS & MUNITIONS
DESTRUCTION
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
1 Chem Demilitarization--O&M..... 105,997 105,997
SUBTOTAL OPERATION AND 105,997 105,997
MAINTENANCE...................
RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST,
AND EVALUATION
2 Chem Demilitarization--RDT&E... 886,728 886,728
SUBTOTAL RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, 886,728 886,728
TEST, AND EVALUATION..........
PROCUREMENT
3 Chem Demilitarization--Proc.... 1,091 1,091
SUBTOTAL PROCUREMENT........... 1,091 1,091
TOTAL CHEM AGENTS & MUNITIONS 993,816 993,816
DESTRUCTION...................
DRUG INTERDICTION & CTR-DRUG
ACTIVITIES, DEF
DRUG INTERDICTION AND COUNTER
DRUG ACTIVITIES
010 Drug Interdiction and Counter- 547,171 547,171
Drug Activities, Defense......
SUBTOTAL DRUG INTERDICTION AND 547,171 547,171
COUNTER DRUG ACTIVITIES.......
DRUG DEMAND REDUCTION PROGRAM
020 Drug Demand Reduction Program.. 117,900 117,900
SUBTOTAL DRUG DEMAND REDUCTION 117,900 117,900
PROGRAM.......................
READINESS COUNTERDRUG
ACTIVITIES
040 Drug Interdiction and Counter- 5,276 5,276
Drug Activities, Defense......
SUBTOTAL READINESS COUNTERDRUG 5,276 5,276
ACTIVITIES....................
NATIONAL GUARD COUNTER-DRUG
PROGRAM
030 National Guard Counter-Drug 117,178 117,178
Program.......................
SUBTOTAL NATIONAL GUARD COUNTER- 117,178 117,178
DRUG PROGRAM..................
TOTAL DRUG INTERDICTION & CTR- 787,525 787,525
DRUG ACTIVITIES, DEF..........
OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
[[Page S3568]]
010 Office of the Inspector General 327,611 327,611
SUBTOTAL OPERATION AND 327,611 327,611
MAINTENANCE...................
RDT&E
020 Office of the Inspector General 1,602 1,602
SUBTOTAL RDT&E................. 1,602 1,602
PROCUREMENT
030 Office of the Inspector General 60 60
SUBTOTAL PROCUREMENT........... 60 60
TOTAL OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR 329,273 329,273
GENERAL.......................
DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE
010 In-House Care.................. 9,738,569 9,738,569
020 Private Sector Care............ 15,103,735 15,103,735
030 Consolidated Health Support.... 2,107,961 2,107,961
040 Information Management......... 2,039,878 2,039,878
050 Management Activities.......... 307,629 307,629
060 Education and Training......... 756,778 759,278
Specialized medical pilot [2,500]
program....................
070 Base Operations/Communications. 2,090,845 2,090,845
SUBTOTAL OPERATION & 32,145,395 32,147,895
MAINTENANCE...................
RDT&E
080 R&D Research................... 11,386 11,386
090 R&D Exploratry Development..... 75,010 75,010
100 R&D Advanced Development....... 275,258 275,258
110 R&D Demonstration/Validation... 117,529 117,529
120 R&D Engineering Development.... 151,985 151,985
130 R&D Management and Support..... 63,755 63,755
140 R&D Capabilities Enhancement... 15,714 15,714
SUBTOTAL RDT&E................. 710,637 710,637
PROCUREMENT
150 PROC Initial Outfitting........ 33,056 33,056
160 PROC Replacement & 343,424 343,424
Modernization.................
180 PROC DoD Healthcare Management 496,680 496,680
System Modernization..........
SUBTOTAL PROCUREMENT........... 873,160 873,160
TOTAL DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM... 33,729,192 33,731,692
TOTAL OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS..... 37,381,921 37,384,421
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4502. OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY
OPERATIONS.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4502. OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS (In
Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2019 Senate
Line Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
WORKING CAPITAL FUND
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, ARMY
020 Supply Management--Army........ 6,600 6,600
SUBTOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, 6,600 6,600
ARMY..........................
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, AIR FORCE
020 Supplies and Materials......... 8,590 8,590
SUBTOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, 8,590 8,590
AIR FORCE.....................
TOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND..... 15,190 15,190
DRUG INTERDICTION & CTR-DRUG
ACTIVITIES, DEF
DRUG INTERDICTION AND COUNTER
DRUG ACTIVITIES
010 Drug Interdiction and Counter- 153,100 153,100
Drug Activities, Defense......
SUBTOTAL DRUG INTERDICTION AND 153,100 153,100
COUNTER DRUG ACTIVITIES.......
TOTAL DRUG INTERDICTION & CTR- 153,100 153,100
DRUG ACTIVITIES, DEF..........
OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
010 Office of the Inspector General 24,692 24,692
[[Page S3569]]
SUBTOTAL OPERATION AND 24,692 24,692
MAINTENANCE...................
TOTAL OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR 24,692 24,692
GENERAL.......................
DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE
010 In-House Care.................. 72,627 72,627
020 Private Sector Care............ 277,066 277,066
030 Consolidated Health Support.... 2,375 2,375
SUBTOTAL OPERATION & 352,068 352,068
MAINTENANCE...................
TOTAL DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM... 352,068 352,068
COUNTER-ISIS TRAIN AND EQUIP
FUND
COUNTER-ISIS TRAIN AND EQUIP
FUND (CTEF)
010 IRAQ........................... 850,000 850,000
020 SYRIA.......................... 300,000 300,000
030 Other.......................... 250,000 250,000
SUBTOTAL COUNTER-ISIS TRAIN AND 1,400,000 1,400,000
EQUIP FUND (CTEF).............
TOTAL COUNTER-ISIS TRAIN AND 1,400,000 1,400,000
EQUIP FUND....................
TOTAL OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS..... 1,945,050 1,945,050
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XLVI--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
SEC. 4601. MILITARY CONSTRUCTION.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4601. MILITARY CONSTRUCTION (In Thousands of Dollars)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State/Country and FY 2019 Senate
Account Installation Project Title Request Authorized
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
ARMY
Alabama
ARMY Anniston Army Depot Weapon Maintenance Shop.. 5,200 5,200
California
ARMY Fort Irwin Multipurpose Range 29,000 29,000
Complex.
Colorado
ARMY Fort Carson Vehicle Maintenance Shop. 77,000 77,000
Georgia
ARMY Fort Gordon Cyber Instructional Fac 99,000 99,000
and Network Ctr.
Germany
ARMY East Camp Grafenwoehr Mission Training Complex. 31,000 31,000
Hawaii
ARMY Fort Shafter Command and Control 105,000 105,000
Facility, Incr 4.
ARMY Wheeler Army Airfield Rotary wing parking apron 0 50,000
Honduras
ARMY Soto Cano AB Barracks................. 21,000 21,000
Indiana
ARMY Crane Army Ammunition Railcar Holding Area..... 16,000 16,000
Activity
Kentucky
ARMY Fort Campbell Microgrid and power plant 0 18,000
ARMY Fort Campbell Vehicle Maintenance Shop. 32,000 32,000
ARMY Fort Knox Digital Air/Ground 26,000 26,000
Integration Range.
Korea
ARMY Camp Tango Command and Control 17,500 17,500
Facility.
Kuwait
ARMY Camp Arifjan Vehicle Maintenance Shop. 44,000 44,000
New Jersey
ARMY Picatinny Arsenal Munitions Disassembly 41,000 41,000
Complex.
New Mexico
ARMY White Sands Missile Information Systems 40,000 40,000
Range Facility.
New York
ARMY West Point Military Engineering Center....... 95,000 95,000
Reservation
ARMY West Point Military Parking Structure........ 65,000 65,000
Reservation
North Carolina
ARMY Fort Bragg Dining Facility.......... 10,000 10,000
South Carolina
ARMY Fort Jackson Trainee Barracks Complex 52,000 52,000
3, PH2.
Texas
ARMY Fort Bliss Supply Support Activity.. 24,000 24,000
ARMY Fort Hood Supply Support Activity.. 0 9,600
Virginia
ARMY Arlington National Arlington National 0 30,000
Cemetery Cemetery Southern
Expansion.
Worldwide Unspecified
ARMY Unspecified Worldwide Host Nation Support...... 34,000 34,000
Locations
ARMY Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 71,068 71,068
Locations
ARMY Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 72,000 72,000
Locations Construction.
[[Page S3570]]
ARMY Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 5,000 5,000
Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL ARMY 1,011,768 1,119,368
......................
NAVY
Arizona
NAVY Camp Navajo Missile Motor Magazines 0 14,800
and U&SI.
Bahamas
NAVY Andros Island AUTEC Austere Quarters... 31,050 31,050
Bahrain Island
NAVY SW Asia Fleet Maintenance 26,340 26,340
Facility & TOC.
California
NAVY Camp Pendleton 62 Area Mess Hall & 0 71,700
Consolidated Warehouse.
NAVY Camp Pendleton Supply Warehouse SOI-West 0 16,600
NAVY Camp Pendleton Potable Water 47,230 47,230
Distribution
Improvements.
NAVY Camp Pendleton AAV-ACV Maintenance & 49,410 49,410
Warehouse Facility.
NAVY Camp Pendleton Full Motion Trainer 10,670 10,670
Facility.
NAVY Camp Pendleton Electrical Upgrades...... 4,020 4,020
NAVY Coronado CMV-22B Airfield 77,780 77,780
Improvements.
NAVY Lemoore F-35 Maintenance Hangar.. 112,690 112,690
NAVY Miramar F-35 Vertical Landing 20,480 20,480
Pads and Taxiway.
NAVY Miramar Airfield Security 11,500 11,500
Improvements.
NAVY Point Mugu Directed Energy Systems 22,150 22,150
Intergration Lab.
NAVY San Diego Harbor Drive Switching 48,440 48,440
Station.
NAVY San Diego Pier 8 Replacement....... 108,100 108,100
NAVY San Nicolas Island Missile Assembly Build & 31,010 31,010
High Explosive Mag.
NAVY Seal Beach Missile Magazines........ 0 21,800
NAVY Seal Beach Causeway, Boat Channel & 117,830 117,830
Turning Basin.
District of Columbia
NAVY Naval Observatory Master Time Clocks & 115,600 115,600
Operations Facility.
Florida
NAVY Mayport LCS Support Facility..... 82,350 82,350
NAVY Mayport LCS Operational Training 29,110 29,110
Facility Addition.
NAVY NAS Whiting Field Air Traffic Control Tower 0 10,000
(North Field).
Georgia
NAVY MCLB Albany Welding and Body Repair 0 31,900
Shop Facility.
Germany
NAVY Panzer Kaserne Marforeur HQ 43,950 43,950
Modernization and
Expansion.
Guam
NAVY Joint Region Marianas Ace Gym & Dining......... 27,910 27,910
NAVY Joint Region Marianas Earth Covered Magazines.. 52,270 52,270
NAVY Joint Region Marianas Ordnance Ops............. 22,020 22,020
NAVY Joint Region Marianas Machine Gun Range........ 141,287 15,000
NAVY Joint Region Marianas Unaccompanied Enlisted 36,170 36,170
Housing.
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba
NAVY Guantanamo Bay Solid Waste Management 85,000 85,000
Facility.
Hawaii
NAVY Joint Base Pearl Drydock Waterfront 45,000 45,000
Harbor-Hickam Facility.
NAVY Kaneohe Bay Corrosion Control Hangar. 66,100 66,100
NAVY Pearl City Water Transmission Line.. 78,320 78,320
Japan
NAVY Kadena AB Tactical Operations 9,049 9,049
Center.
Maine
NAVY Kittery Extend Portal Crane Rail. 39,725 39,725
NAVY Kittery Dry Dock #1 Superflood 109,960 109,960
Basin.
Mississippi
NAVY Naval Construction Expeditionary Combat 0 22,300
Battalion Center Skills Student Berthing.
North Carolina
NAVY Camp Lejeune 2nd Radio BN Complex, 0 51,300
Phase 2.
NAVY Cherry Point Marine Aircraft Maintenance 133,970 27,000
Corps Air Station Hangar.
NAVY Cherry Point Marine Flightline Utility 106,860 106,860
Corps Air Station Modernization.
Pennsylvania
NAVY Philadelphia Submarine Propulsor 71,050 71,050
Manufacturing Support
Fac.
South Carolina
NAVY MCAS Beaufort Cryogenics Facility...... 0 6,300
NAVY MCAS Beaufort Recycling/Hazardous Waste 9,517 9,517
Facility.
NAVY Parris Island Range Improvements & 35,190 35,190
Modernization, Phase 2.
Utah
NAVY Hill AFB D5 Missile Motor Receipt/ 105,520 105,520
Storage Facility.
Virginia
NAVY Portsmouth Ships Maintenance 26,120 26,120
Facility.
NAVY Quantico Ammunition Supply Point 0 13,100
Upgrade, Phase 2.
NAVY Quantico TBS Fire Station......... 21,980 0
Washington
NAVY Bangor Pier and Maintenance 88,960 88,960
Facility.
NAVY Whidbey Island Fleet Support Facility... 19,450 19,450
NAVY Whidbey Island Next Generation Jammer 7,930 7,930
Facility.
Worldwide Unspecified
NAVY Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 0 25,000
Locations Construction.
NAVY Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 28,579 28,579
Locations Construction.
NAVY Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 185,542 185,542
Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL NAVY 2,543,189 2,572,752
[[Page S3571]]
......................
AIR FORCE
Alaska
AIR FORCE Eielson AFB F-35A School AGE Facility 22,500 22,500
AIR FORCE Eielson AFB F-35A CATM Range......... 19,000 19,000
AIR FORCE Eielson AFB F-35 Aircraft Maintenance 6,800 6,800
Unit Admin Facility.
AIR FORCE Eielson AFB F-35 Conventional 15,500 15,500
Munitions Maintenance
Fac.
Arizona
AIR FORCE Davis-Monthan AFB AGE Facility............. 0 15,000
AIR FORCE Luke AFB F-35A Squad Ops #6....... 17,000 17,000
AIR FORCE Luke AFB F-35A ADAL AMU B914 Sq 6. 23,000 23,000
Florida
AIR FORCE Eglin AFB F-35A Student Dormitory 28,000 28,000
II.
AIR FORCE Eglin AFB F-35A Integrated Trng 34,863 34,863
Center Academics Bldg.
AIR FORCE MacDill AFB KC135 Beddown Add Flight 3,100 3,100
Simulator Training.
Guam
AIR FORCE Joint Region Marianas Hayman Munitions Storage 9,800 9,800
Igloos MSA 2.
Mariana Islands
AIR FORCE Tinian APR--Cargo Pad With 46,000 46,000
Taxiway Extension.
AIR FORCE Tinian APR--Maintenance Support 4,700 4,700
Facility.
Maryland
AIR FORCE Joint Base Andrews Child Development Center. 0 13,000
AIR FORCE Joint Base Andrews PAR Relocate Haz Cargo 37,000 37,000
Pad and EOD Range.
AIR FORCE Joint Base Andrews Presidential Aircraft 154,000 121,250
Recap Complex, Inc. 2.
Massachusetts
AIR FORCE Hanscom AFB MIT-Lincoln Laboratory 225,000 175,000
(West Lab CSL/MIF).
Nebraska
AIR FORCE Offutt AFB Parking Lot, USSTRATCOM.. 9,500 9,500
Nevada
AIR FORCE Creech AFB MQ-9 CPIP Operations & 28,000 28,000
Command Center Fac..
AIR FORCE Creech AFB MQ-9 CPIP GCS Operations 31,000 31,000
Facility.
AIR FORCE Nellis AFB CRH Simulator............ 5,900 5,900
New Mexico
AIR FORCE Holloman AFB MQ-9 FTU Ops Facility.... 85,000 85,000
AIR FORCE Kirtland AFB Wyoming Gate Upgrade for 0 7,000
Anti-Terrorism
Compliance.
New York
AIR FORCE Rome Lab Anti-Terrorism Perimeter 0 14,200
Security / Entry Control
Point.
North Dakota
AIR FORCE Minot AFB Consolidated Helo/TRF Ops/ 66,000 66,000
AMU and Alert Fac.
Ohio
AIR FORCE Wright-Patterson AFB ADAL Intelligence 116,100 116,100
Production Complex
(NASIC).
Oklahoma
AIR FORCE Altus AFB KC-46A FTU/FTC Simulator 12,000 12,000
Facility PH 3.
AIR FORCE Tinker AFB KC-46A Depot Maintenance 81,000 81,000
Hangar.
AIR FORCE Tinker AFB KC-46A Depot Fuel 85,000 85,000
Maintenance Hangar.
Qatar
AIR FORCE Al Udeid Personnel Deployment 40,000 40,000
Processing Facility.
AIR FORCE Al Udeid Flightline Support 30,400 30,400
Facilities.
South Carolina
AIR FORCE Shaw AFB CPIP MQ-9 MCE Group...... 53,000 53,000
Texas
AIR FORCE Joint Base San Antonio- BMT Recruit Dormitory 6.. 25,000 25,000
Lackland
United Kingdom
AIR FORCE Royal Air Force F-35A Fuel System 16,880 16,880
Lakenheath Maintenance Dock 2 Bay.
AIR FORCE Royal Air Force F-35A Parking Apron...... 27,431 27,431
Lakenheath
AIR FORCE Royal Air Force F-35A AGE Facility....... 12,449 12,449
Lakenheath
AIR FORCE Royal Air Force F-35A ADAL Parts Store... 13,926 13,926
Lakenheath
AIR FORCE Royal Air Force F-35A 6 Bay Hangar....... 39,036 39,036
Lakenheath
AIR FORCE Royal Air Force F-35A Dorm............... 29,541 29,541
Lakenheath
AIR FORCE Royal Air Force F-35A ADAL Conventional 9,204 9,204
Lakenheath Munitions MX.
Utah
AIR FORCE Hill AFB Composite Aircraft 0 26,000
Antenna Calibration Fac.
Washington
AIR FORCE White Bluff ADAL JPRA C2 Mission 0 14,000
Support Facility.
Worldwide Classified
AIR FORCE Classified Location TACMOR--Utilities and 18,000 18,000
Infrastructure Support.
Worldwide Unspecified
AIR FORCE Various Worldwide Planning and Design...... 0 20,000
Locations
AIR FORCE Various Worldwide Planning and Design...... 195,577 195,577
Locations
AIR FORCE Various Worldwide Planning and Design...... 11,000 11,000
Locations
AIR FORCE Various Worldwide Unspecified Minor 38,500 38,500
Locations Military Construction.
........................
SUBTOTAL AIR FORCE 1,725,707 1,752,157
......................
DEFENSE-WIDE
Alabama
DEFENSE-WIDE Anniston Army Depot Install microgrid........ 0 20,000
Alaska
DEFENSE-WIDE Clear AFS Long Range Discrim Radar 174,000 130,000
Sys Complex Ph2.
DEFENSE-WIDE Fort Greely Missile Field #1 8,000 8,000
Expansion.
DEFENSE-WIDE Joint Base Elmendorf- Operations Facility 14,000 14,000
Richardson Replacement.
Arkansas
DEFENSE-WIDE Little Rock AFB Hydrant Fuel System 14,000 14,000
Alterations.
[[Page S3572]]
Belgium
DEFENSE-WIDE U.S. Army Garrison Europe West District 14,305 14,305
Benelux (Chievres) Superintendent's Office.
California
DEFENSE-WIDE Camp Pendleton SOF EOD Facility--West... 3,547 3,547
DEFENSE-WIDE Camp Pendleton SOF Human Performance 9,049 9,049
Training Center-West.
DEFENSE-WIDE Coronado SOF NSWG-1 Operations 25,172 25,172
Support Facility.
DEFENSE-WIDE Coronado SOF Close Quarters Combat 12,768 12,768
Facility.
DEFENSE-WIDE Coronado SOF ATC Applied 14,819 14,819
Instruction Facility.
DEFENSE-WIDE Coronado SOF ATC Training Facility 18,329 18,329
DEFENSE-WIDE Defense Distribution Main Access Control Point 18,800 18,800
Depot-Tracy Upgrades.
DEFENSE-WIDE NB Ventura County SNI Energy Storage System 0 6,530
Colorado
DEFENSE-WIDE Fort Carson SOF Human Performance 15,297 15,297
Training Center.
DEFENSE-WIDE Fort Carson SOF Mountaineering 9,000 9,000
Facility.
Conus Classified
DEFENSE-WIDE Classified Location Battalion Complex, PH2... 49,222 49,222
Djibouti
DEFENSE-WIDE Camp Lemonnier ECIP-Install PV Ground 0 3,750
Array.
Germany
DEFENSE-WIDE Baumholder SOF Joint Parachute 11,504 11,504
Rigging Facility.
DEFENSE-WIDE Kaiserslautern AB Kaiserslautern Middle 99,955 99,955
School.
DEFENSE-WIDE Rhine Ordnance Medical Center 319,589 319,589
Barracks Replacement Inc. 8.
DEFENSE-WIDE Weisbaden Clay Kaserne Elementary 56,048 56,048
School.
Greece
DEFENSE-WIDE NSA Souda Bay Energy Management Control 0 2,230
Systems (EMCS).
Guam
DEFENSE-WIDE Naval Base Guam P-691 NBG 74 Facilities 0 4,634
Automated Controls.
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba
DEFENSE-WIDE Guantanamo Bay Working Dog Treatment 9,080 9,080
Facility Replacement.
Hawaii
DEFENSE-WIDE Bellows AFB Expand PV and provide 0 2,944
energy resilience to
fire crash rescue.
Japan
DEFENSE-WIDE Camp McTureous Bechtel Elementary School 94,851 94,851
DEFENSE-WIDE Iwakuni Fuel Pier................ 33,200 33,200
DEFENSE-WIDE Kadena AB Truck Unload Facilities.. 21,400 21,400
DEFENSE-WIDE Yokosuka Kinnick High School...... 170,386 40,000
Kansas
DEFENSE-WIDE Salina Training Center PV/Water Conservation & 0 3,500
Energy Resilience.
Kentucky
DEFENSE-WIDE Fort Campbell Ft Campbell Middle School 62,634 62,634
DEFENSE-WIDE Fort Campbell SOF Logistics Support 5,435 5,435
Operations Facility.
DEFENSE-WIDE Fort Campbell SOF Air/Ground Integ. 9,091 9,091
Urban Live Fire Range.
DEFENSE-WIDE Fort Campbell SOF Multi-Use Helicopter 5,138 5,138
Training Facility.
Louisiana
DEFENSE-WIDE JRB NAS New Orleans Distribution Switchgear.. 0 5,340
Maine
DEFENSE-WIDE Kittery Consolidated Warehouse 11,600 11,600
Replacement.
Maryland
DEFENSE-WIDE Fort Meade NSAW Recapitalize 218,000 191,600
Building #2 Inc 4.
DEFENSE-WIDE Fort Meade NSAW Recapitalize 99,000 99,000
Building #3 Inc 1.
DEFENSE-WIDE Fort Meade Mission Support 30,000 30,000
Operations Warehouse
Facility.
Missouri
DEFENSE-WIDE St Louis Next NGA West (N2W) 213,600 50,000
Complex Phase 1 Inc. 2.
DEFENSE-WIDE St Louis Next NGA West (N2W) 110,000 110,000
Complex Phase 2 Inc. 1.
New Jersey
DEFENSE-WIDE Joint Base McGuire-Dix- Hot Cargo Hydrant System 10,200 10,200
Lakehurst Replacement.
North Carolina
DEFENSE-WIDE Fort Bragg SOF Replace Training Maze 12,109 12,109
and Tower.
DEFENSE-WIDE Fort Bragg SOF SERE Resistance 20,257 20,257
Training Lab. Complex.
DEFENSE-WIDE New River Amb Care Center/Dental 32,580 32,580
Clinic Replacement.
Oklahoma
DEFENSE-WIDE McAlester Bulk Diesel System 7,000 7,000
Replacement.
South Carolina
DEFENSE-WIDE MCAS Beaufort Electrical Hardening and 0 22,402
Black Start CHP System.
Texas
DEFENSE-WIDE Camp Mabry Install microgrid........ 0 5,500
DEFENSE-WIDE Joint Base San Antonio- Energy Aerospace 10,200 10,200
Lackland Operations Facility.
DEFENSE-WIDE Red River Army Depot General Purpose Warehouse 71,500 71,500
United Kingdom
DEFENSE-WIDE Croughton RAF Ambulatory Care Center 10,000 0
Addition/Alteration.
Virginia
DEFENSE-WIDE Dam Neck SOF Magazines............ 8,959 8,959
DEFENSE-WIDE Fort A.P. Hill Training Campus.......... 11,734 11,734
DEFENSE-WIDE Fort Belvoir Human Performance 6,127 6,127
Training Center.
DEFENSE-WIDE Humphreys Engineer Maintenance and Supply 20,257 20,257
Center Facility.
DEFENSE-WIDE Joint Base Langley- Fuel Facilities 6,900 6,900
Eustis Replacement.
DEFENSE-WIDE Joint Base Langley- Ground Vehicle Fueling 5,800 5,800
Eustis Facility Replacement.
DEFENSE-WIDE NAS Oceana Super Flight Line 0 2,520
Electrical Distribtion
System (FLEDS).
DEFENSE-WIDE Pentagon North Village VACP & 12,200 12,200
Fencing.
DEFENSE-WIDE Pentagon Exterior Infrastruc. & 23,650 23,650
Security Improvements.
Washington
DEFENSE-WIDE Joint Base Lewis- Refueling Facility....... 26,200 26,200
McChord
Worldwide Unspecified
[[Page S3573]]
DEFENSE-WIDE Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design-- 0 5,000
Locations ERCIP.
DEFENSE-WIDE Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 55,925 55,925
Locations
DEFENSE-WIDE Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 496 496
Locations
DEFENSE-WIDE Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 10,000 10,000
Locations Construction.
DEFENSE-WIDE Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 14,184 14,184
Locations
DEFENSE-WIDE Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 13,642 13,642
Locations Construction.
DEFENSE-WIDE Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 5,000 5,000
Locations Construction.
DEFENSE-WIDE Unspecified Worldwide Energy Resilience and 150,000 150,000
Locations Conserv. Invest. Prog..
DEFENSE-WIDE Unspecified Worldwide Contingency Construction. 10,000 10,000
Locations
DEFENSE-WIDE Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 3,000 3,000
Locations Construction.
DEFENSE-WIDE Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 14,300 14,300
Locations
DEFENSE-WIDE Unspecified Worldwide ERCIP Design............. 10,000 10,000
Locations
DEFENSE-WIDE Unspecified Worldwide Exercise Related Minor 12,479 12,479
Locations Construction.
DEFENSE-WIDE Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 2,036 2,036
Locations
DEFENSE-WIDE Various Worldwide Planning & Design........ 42,705 42,705
Locations
DEFENSE-WIDE Various Worldwide Unspecified Minor 17,366 17,366
Locations Construction.
DEFENSE-WIDE Various Worldwide Planning and Design...... 55,699 55,699
Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL DEFENSE-WIDE 2,693,324 2,403,288
......................
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD
Alaska
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD Joint Base Elmendorf- United States Property & 27,000 27,000
Richardson Fiscal Office.
Illinois
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD Marseilles Automated Record Fire 5,000 5,000
Range.
Montana
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD Malta National Guard Readiness 15,000 15,000
Center.
Nevada
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD North Las Vegas National Guard Readiness 32,000 32,000
Center.
New Hampshire
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD Pembroke National Guard Readiness 12,000 12,000
Center.
North Dakota
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD Fargo National Guard Readiness 32,000 32,000
Center.
Ohio
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD Camp Ravenna Automated Multipurpose 7,400 7,400
Machine Gun Range.
Oklahoma
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD Lexington Aircraft vehicle storage 0 11,000
building.
Oregon
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD Boardman Tactical unmanned aerial 0 11,000
vehicle hangar.
South Dakota
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD Rapid City National Guard Readiness 15,000 15,000
Center.
Texas
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD Houston Unheated vehicle storage 0 15,000
(aircraft).
Virginia
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD Sandston Army aviation support 0 89,000
facility.
Worldwide Unspecified
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 18,100 18,100
Locations Construction.
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 16,622 16,622
Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL ARMY NATIONAL GUARD 180,122 306,122
......................
AIR NATIONAL GUARD
California
AIR NATIONAL GUARD Channel Islands Angs Construct C-130J Flight 8,000 8,000
Simulator Facility.
Hawaii
AIR NATIONAL GUARD Joint Base Pearl Construct Addition to F- 17,000 17,000
Harbor-Hickam 22 LO/CRF B3408.
Illinois
AIR NATIONAL GUARD Gen. Wayne A. Downing Construct New Fire Crash/ 9,000 9,000
Peoria International Rescue Station.
Airport
Louisiana
AIR NATIONAL GUARD JRB NAS New Orleans NORTHCOM--Construct Alert 15,000 15,000
Apron.
New York
AIR NATIONAL GUARD Francis S. Gabreski Security Forces/ 20,000 20,000
Airport Comm.training Facility.
Pennsylvania
AIR NATIONAL GUARD Fort Indiantown Gap Replace Operations 8,000 8,000
Training/Dining Hall.
Puerto Rico
AIR NATIONAL GUARD Luis Munoz Marin Hurricane Maria-- 0 15,000
International Communications Facility.
AIR NATIONAL GUARD Luis Munoz Marin Hurricane Maria-- 0 35,000
International Airport Maintenance Hangar.
Virginia
AIR NATIONAL GUARD Joint Base Langley- Construct Cyber Ops 10,000 10,000
Eustis Facility.
Worldwide Unspecified
AIR NATIONAL GUARD Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 0 4,000
Locations
AIR NATIONAL GUARD Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 23,626 23,626
Locations Construction.
AIR NATIONAL GUARD Various Worldwide Planning and Design...... 18,500 18,500
Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL AIR NATIONAL GUARD 129,126 183,126
......................
ARMY RESERVE
California
ARMY RESERVE Barstow ECS Modified TEMF / 34,000 34,000
Warehouse.
Wisconsin
ARMY RESERVE Fort McCoy Transient Training 23,000 23,000
Barracks.
Worldwide Unspecified
ARMY RESERVE Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 2,064 2,064
Locations Construction.
[[Page S3574]]
ARMY RESERVE Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 5,855 5,855
Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL ARMY RESERVE 64,919 64,919
......................
NAVY RESERVE
California
NAVY RESERVE Seal Beach Reserve Training Center.. 21,740 21,740
Georgia
NAVY RESERVE Benning Reserve Training Center.. 13,630 13,630
Worldwide Unspecified
NAVY RESERVE Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 3,000 3,000
Locations Construction.
NAVY RESERVE Unspecified Worldwide Planning & Design........ 4,695 4,695
Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL NAVY RESERVE 43,065 43,065
......................
AIR FORCE RESERVE
Indiana
AIR FORCE RESERVE Grissom ARB Aerial Port Facility..... 0 9,400
AIR FORCE RESERVE Grissom ARB Add/Alter Aircraft 12,100 12,100
Maintenance Hangar.
Minnesota
AIR FORCE RESERVE Minneapolis-St Paul Small Arms Range......... 9,000 9,000
IAP
Mississippi
AIR FORCE RESERVE Keesler AFB Aeromedical Staging 4,550 4,550
Squadron Facility.
New York
AIR FORCE RESERVE Niagara Falls IAP Physical Fitness Center.. 14,000 14,000
Texas
AIR FORCE RESERVE Fort Worth Munitions Training/Admin 3,100 3,100
Facility.
Worldwide Unspecified
AIR FORCE RESERVE Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 0 5,000
Locations
AIR FORCE RESERVE Unspecified Worldwide Planning & Design........ 4,055 4,055
Locations
AIR FORCE RESERVE Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 3,358 3,358
Locations Construction.
........................
SUBTOTAL AIR FORCE RESERVE 50,163 64,563
......................
NATO SECURITY INVESTMENT PROGRAM
Worldwide Unspecified
NATO SECURITY INVESTMENT NATO Security NATO Security Investment 171,064 171,064
PROGRAM Investment Program Program.
........................
SUBTOTAL NATO SECURITY INVESTMENT PROGRAM 171,064 171,064
......................
TOTAL MILITARY CONSTRUCTION 8,612,447 8,680,424
......................
FAMILY HOUSING
CONSTRUCTION, ARMY
Germany
CONSTRUCTION, ARMY Baumholder Family Housing 32,000 32,000
Improvements.
Italy
CONSTRUCTION, ARMY Vicenza Family Housing New 95,134 95,134
Construction.
Korea
CONSTRUCTION, ARMY Camp Humphreys Family Housing New 85,000 85,000
Construction Incr 3.
CONSTRUCTION, ARMY Camp Walker Family Housing 68,000 68,000
Replacement Construction.
Puerto Rico
CONSTRUCTION, ARMY Fort Buchanan Family Housing 26,000 26,000
Replacement Construction.
Wisconsin
CONSTRUCTION, ARMY Fort McCoy Family Housing New 6,200 6,200
Construction.
Worldwide Unspecified
CONSTRUCTION, ARMY Unspecified Worldwide Family Housing P & D..... 18,326 18,326
Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL CONSTRUCTION, ARMY 330,660 330,660
......................
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, ARMY
Worldwide Unspecified
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Management............... 36,302 36,302
ARMY Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Services................. 10,502 10,502
ARMY Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Furnishings.............. 15,842 15,842
ARMY Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Miscellaneous............ 408 408
ARMY Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Maintenance.............. 75,530 75,530
ARMY Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Utilities................ 57,872 57,872
ARMY Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Leasing.................. 161,252 161,252
ARMY Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Housing Privitization 18,801 18,801
ARMY Locations Support.
........................
SUBTOTAL OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, ARMY 376,509 376,509
......................
CONSTRUCTION, NAVY AND MARINE CORPS
[[Page S3575]]
Mariana Islands
CONSTRUCTION, NAVY AND Guam Replace Andersen Housing 83,441 83,441
MARINE CORPS PH III.
Worldwide Unspecified
CONSTRUCTION, NAVY AND Unspecified Worldwide Improvements, Washington 16,638 16,638
MARINE CORPS Locations DC.
CONSTRUCTION, NAVY AND Unspecified Worldwide P&D Washington DC........ 4,502 4,502
MARINE CORPS Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL CONSTRUCTION, NAVY AND MARINE CORPS 104,581 104,581
......................
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, NAVY AND MARINE CORPS
Worldwide Unspecified
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Utilities................ 60,252 60,252
NAVY AND MARINE CORPS Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Furnishings.............. 16,395 16,395
NAVY AND MARINE CORPS Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Management............... 50,870 50,870
NAVY AND MARINE CORPS Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Miscellaneous............ 148 148
NAVY AND MARINE CORPS Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Services................. 16,261 16,261
NAVY AND MARINE CORPS Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Leasing.................. 62,515 62,515
NAVY AND MARINE CORPS Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Maintenance.............. 86,328 86,328
NAVY AND MARINE CORPS Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Housing Privatization 21,767 21,767
NAVY AND MARINE CORPS Locations Support.
........................
SUBTOTAL OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, NAVY AND MARINE CORPS 314,536 314,536
......................
CONSTRUCTION, AIR FORCE
Worldwide Unspecified
CONSTRUCTION, AIR FORCE Unspecified Worldwide Construction Improvements 75,247 75,247
Locations
CONSTRUCTION, AIR FORCE Unspecified Worldwide Planning & Design........ 3,199 3,199
Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL CONSTRUCTION, AIR FORCE 78,446 78,446
......................
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE
Worldwide Unspecified
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Housing Privatization.... 22,205 22,205
AIR FORCE Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Utilities................ 48,566 48,566
AIR FORCE Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Management............... 54,423 54,423
AIR FORCE Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Services................. 13,669 13,669
AIR FORCE Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Furnishings.............. 30,645 30,645
AIR FORCE Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Miscellaneous............ 2,171 2,171
AIR FORCE Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Leasing.................. 15,832 15,832
AIR FORCE Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Maintenance.............. 129,763 129,763
AIR FORCE Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE 317,274 317,274
......................
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, DEFENSE-WIDE
Worldwide Unspecified
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Utilities................ 4,100 4,100
DEFENSE-WIDE Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Furnishings.............. 416 416
DEFENSE-WIDE Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Utilities................ 106 106
DEFENSE-WIDE Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Leasing.................. 13,046 13,046
DEFENSE-WIDE Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Maintenance.............. 121 121
DEFENSE-WIDE Locations
[[Page S3576]]
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Furnishings.............. 643 643
DEFENSE-WIDE Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Leasing.................. 38,232 38,232
DEFENSE-WIDE Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Furnishings.............. 01 01
DEFENSE-WIDE Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Services................. 02 02
DEFENSE-WIDE Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Utilities................ 09 09
DEFENSE-WIDE Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Maintenance.............. 1,542 1,542
DEFENSE-WIDE Locations
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, Unspecified Worldwide Management............... 155 155
DEFENSE-WIDE Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, DEFENSE-WIDE 58,373 58,373
......................
IMPROVEMENT FUND
Worldwide Unspecified
IMPROVEMENT FUND Unspecified Worldwide Administrative Expenses-- 1,653 1,653
Locations FHIF.
........................
SUBTOTAL IMPROVEMENT FUND 1,653 1,653
......................
UNACCMP HSG IMPRV FUND
Worldwide Unspecified
UNACCMP HSG IMPRV FUND Unaccompanied Housing Administrative Expenses-- 600 600
Improvement Fund UHIF.
........................
SUBTOTAL UNACCMP HSG IMPRV FUND 600 600
......................
TOTAL FAMILY HOUSING 1,582,632 1,582,632
......................
DEFENSE BASE REALIGNMENT AND CLOSURE
ARMY
Worldwide Unspecified
ARMY Base Realignment & Base Realignment and 62,796 62,796
Closure, Army Closure.
........................
......................
NAVY
Worldwide Unspecified
NAVY Unspecified Worldwide Base Realignment & 151,839 151,839
Locations Closure.
........................
......................
AIR FORCE
Worldwide Unspecified
AIR FORCE Unspecified Worldwide DoD BRAC Activities--Air 52,903 52,903
Locations Force.
........................
......................
TOTAL DEFENSE BASE REALIGNMENT AND CLOSURE 267,538 267,538
......................
TOTAL MILITARY CONSTRUCTION, FAMILY HOUSING, AND BRAC 10,462,617 10,530,594
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4602. MILITARY CONSTRUCTION FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY
OPERATIONS.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4602. MILITARY CONSTRUCTION FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS (In Thousands of Dollars)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State or Country and FY 2019 Senate
Account Installation Project Title Request Authorized
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
ARMY
Bulgaria
ARMY Nevo Selo FOS EDI: Ammunition Holding 5,200 5,200
Area.
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba
ARMY Guantanamo Bay OCO: High Value Detention 69,000 0
Facility.
Poland
ARMY Drawsko Pomorski EDI: Staging Areas........ 17,000 17,000
Training Area
ARMY Powidz AB EDI: Rail Extension & 14,000 14,000
Railhead.
ARMY Powidz AB EDI: Ammunition Storage 52,000 52,000
Facility.
ARMY Powidz AB EDI: Bulk Fuel Storage.... 21,000 21,000
ARMY Zagan Training Area EDI: Rail Extension and 6,400 6,400
Railhead.
ARMY Zagan Training Area EDI: Staging Areas........ 34,000 34,000
Romania
ARMY Mihail Kogalniceanu FOS EDI: Explosives & Ammo 21,651 21,651
Load/Unload Apron.
Worldwide Unspecified
ARMY Unspecified Worldwide EDI: Planning and Design.. 20,999 20,999
Locations
.........................
SUBTOTAL ARMY 261,250 192,250
.......................
NAVY
Greece
[[Page S3577]]
NAVY Souda Bay EDI: Marathi Logistics 6,200 6,200
Support Center.
NAVY Souda Bay EDI: Joint Mobility 41,650 41,650
Processing Center.
Italy
NAVY Sigonella EDI: P-8A Taxiway......... 66,050 66,050
Spain
NAVY Rota EDI: Port Operations 21,590 21,590
Facilities.
United Kingdom
NAVY Lossiemouth EDI: P-8 Base Improvements 79,130 79,130
Worldwide Unspecified
NAVY Unspecified Worldwide EDI: Planning and Design.. 12,700 12,700
Locations
.........................
SUBTOTAL NAVY 227,320 227,320
.......................
AIR FORCE
Germany
AIR FORCE Ramstein AB EDI--KMC DABS-FEV/RH 119,000 119,000
Storage Warehouses.
Norway
AIR FORCE Rygge AS EDI--Construct Taxiway.... 13,800 13,800
Slovakia
AIR FORCE Malacky AB EDI--Regional Munitions 59,000 59,000
Storage Area.
United Kingdom
AIR FORCE RAF Fairford EDI--Construct DABS-FEV 87,000 87,000
Storage.
AIR FORCE RAF Fairford EDI--Munitions Holding 19,000 19,000
Area.
Worldwide Unspecified
AIR FORCE Unspecified Worldwide EDI--Planning & Design 48,000 48,000
Locations Funds.
.........................
SUBTOTAL AIR FORCE 345,800 345,800
.......................
DEFENSE-WIDE
Estonia
DEFENSE-WIDE Unspecified Estonia EDI: SOF Training Facility 9,600 9,600
DEFENSE-WIDE Unspecified Estonia EDI: SOF Operations 6,100 6,100
Facility.
Qatar
DEFENSE-WIDE Al Udeid OCO: Trans-Regional 60,000 60,000
Logistics Complex.
Worldwide Unspecified
DEFENSE-WIDE Unspecified Worldwide EDI: Planning and Design.. 7,100 7,100
Locations
DEFENSE-WIDE Various Worldwide EDI: Planning and Design.. 4,250 4,250
Locations
.........................
SUBTOTAL DEFENSE-WIDE 87,050 87,050
.......................
TOTAL MILITARY CONSTRUCTION 921,420 852,420
.......................
TOTAL MILITARY CONSTRUCTION, FAMILY HOUSING, AND BRAC 921,420 852,420
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XLVII--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY PROGRAMS
SEC. 4701. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY PROGRAMS.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4701. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY PROGRAMS (In Thousands
of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2019 Senate
Program Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Discretionary Summary By Appropriation
Energy And Water Development, And
Related Agencies
Appropriation Summary:
Energy Programs
Nuclear Energy...................... 136,090 136,090
Atomic Energy Defense Activities
National nuclear security
administration:
Weapons activities................ 11,017,078 11,017,078
Defense nuclear nonproliferation.. 1,862,825 1,862,825
Naval reactors.................... 1,788,618 1,788,618
Federal salaries and expenses..... 422,529 422,529
Total, National nuclear security 15,091,050 15,091,050
administration.........................
Environmental and other defense
activities:
Defense environmental cleanup..... 5,630,217 5,630,217
Other defense activities.......... 853,300 853,300
Defense nuclear waste disposal.... 30,000 0
Total, Environmental & other defense 6,513,517 6,483,517
activities.............................
Total, Atomic Energy Defense Activities. 21,604,567 21,574,567
Total, Discretionary Funding............ 21,740,657 21,710,657
Nuclear Energy
Idaho sitewide safeguards and security.. 136,090 136,090
[[Page S3578]]
Total, Nuclear Energy................... 136,090 136,090
Weapons Activities
Directed stockpile work
Life extension programs and major
alterations
B61 Life extension program.......... 794,049 794,049
W76 Life extension program.......... 113,888 0
Split into W76-1 and W76-2 lines. [-113,888]
W76-1 Life extension program........ 0 48,888
Complete W76-1 life extension.... [48,888]
W76-2 Warhead modification program.. 0 65,000
NPR Implementation............... [65,000]
W88 Alt 370......................... 304,285 304,285
W80-4 Life extension program........ 654,766 654,766
IW-1................................ 53,000 53,000
Total, Life extension programs and major 1,919,988 1,919,988
alterations............................
Stockpile systems
B61 Stockpile systems............... 64,547 64,547
W76 Stockpile systems............... 94,300 94,300
W78 Stockpile systems............... 81,329 81,329
W80 Stockpile systems............... 80,204 80,204
B83 Stockpile systems............... 35,082 35,082
W87 Stockpile systems............... 83,107 83,107
W88 Stockpile systems............... 180,913 180,913
Total, Stockpile systems................ 619,482 619,482
Weapons dismantlement and disposition
Operations and maintenance.......... 56,000 56,000
Stockpile services
Production support.................. 512,916 512,916
Research and development support.... 38,129 38,129
R&D certification and safety........ 216,582 216,582
Management, technology, and 300,736 300,736
production.........................
Total, Stockpile services............... 1,068,363 1,068,363
Strategic materials
Uranium sustainment................. 87,182 87,182
Plutonium sustainment............... 361,282 361,282
Tritium sustainment................. 205,275 205,275
Lithium sustainment................. 29,135 29,135
Domestic uranium enrichment......... 100,704 100,704
Strategic materials sustainment..... 218,794 218,794
Total, Strategic materials.............. 1,002,372 1,002,372
Total, Directed stockpile work.......... 4,666,205 4,666,205
Research, development, test and
evaluation (RDT&E)
Science
Advanced certification.............. 57,710 57,710
Primary assessment technologies..... 95,057 95,057
Dynamic materials properties........ 131,000 131,000
Advanced radiography................ 32,544 32,544
Secondary assessment technologies... 77,553 77,553
Academic alliances and partnerships. 53,364 53,364
Enhanced Capabilities for 117,632 117,632
Subcritical Experiments............
Total, Science.......................... 564,860 564,860
Engineering
Enhanced surety..................... 43,226 43,226
Weapon systems engineering 27,536 27,536
assessment technology..............
Nuclear survivability............... 48,230 48,230
Enhanced surveillance............... 58,375 58,375
Stockpile Responsiveness............ 34,000 34,000
Total, Engineering ..................... 211,367 211,367
Inertial confinement fusion ignition
and high yield
Ignition............................ 22,434 22,434
Support of other stockpile programs. 17,397 17,397
Diagnostics, cryogenics and 51,453 51,453
experimental support...............
Pulsed power inertial confinement 8,310 8,310
fusion.............................
Facility operations and target 319,333 319,333
production.........................
Total, Inertial confinement fusion and 418,927 418,927
high yield.............................
[[Page S3579]]
Advanced simulation and computing
Advanced simulation and computing... 656,401 656,401
Construction:
18-D-670, Exascale Class Computer 24,000 24,000
Cooling Equipment, LANL..........
18-D-620, Exascale Computing 23,000 23,000
Facility Modernization Project,
LLNL.............................
Total, Construction..................... 47,000 47,000
Total, Advanced simulation and computing 703,401 703,401
Advanced manufacturing
Additive manufacturing.............. 17,447 17,447
Component manufacturing development. 48,477 48,477
Process technology development...... 30,914 30,914
Total, Advanced manufacturing........... 96,838 96,838
Total, RDT&E............................ 1,995,393 1,995,393
Infrastructure and operations
Operations of facilities.............. 891,000 891,000
Safety and environmental operations... 115,000 115,000
Maintenance and repair of facilities.. 365,000 365,000
Recapitalization:
Infrastructure and safety........... 431,631 431,631
Capability based investments........ 109,057 109,057
Total, Recapitalization................. 540,688 540,688
Program increase to address high-
priority deferred maintenance
Construction:
19-D-670, 138kV Power Transmission 6,000 6,000
System Replacement, NNSS...........
19-D-660, Lithium Production 19,000 19,000
Capability, Y-12...................
18-D-650, Tritium Production 27,000 27,000
Capability, SRS....................
17-D-640, U1a Complex Enhancements 53,000 53,000
Project, NNSS......................
16-D-515, Albuquerque complex 47,953 47,953
project............................
06-D-141 Uranium processing facility 703,000 703,000
Y-12, Oak Ridge, TN................
04-D-125 Chemistry and metallurgy 235,095 235,095
research facility replacement
project, LANL......................
Total, Construction..................... 1,091,048 1,091,048
Total, Infrastructure and operations.... 3,002,736 3,002,736
Secure transportation asset
Operations and equipment.............. 176,617 176,617
Program direction..................... 102,022 102,022
Total, Secure transportation asset...... 278,639 278,639
Defense nuclear security
Operations and maintenance............ 690,638 690,638
Total, Defense nuclear security......... 690,638 690,638
Information technology and cybersecurity 221,175 221,175
Legacy contractor pensions.............. 162,292 162,292
Total, Weapons Activities............... 11,017,078 11,017,078
Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation
Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation
Programs
Global material security
International nuclear security...... 46,339 46,339
Domestic radiological security...... 90,764 90,764
International radiological security. 59,576 59,576
Nuclear smuggling detection and 140,429 140,429
deterrence.........................
Total, Global material security......... 337,108 337,108
Material management and minimization
HEU reactor conversion.............. 98,300 98,300
Nuclear material removal............ 32,925 32,925
Material disposition................ 200,869 200,869
Total, Material management & 332,094 332,094
minimization...........................
Nonproliferation and arms control..... 129,703 129,703
Defense nuclear nonproliferation R&D 456,095 456,095
Nonproliferation Construction:
18-D-150 Surplus Plutonium 59,000 59,000
Disposition Project................
99-D-143 Mixed Oxide (MOX) Fuel 220,000 220,000
Fabrication Facility, SRS..........
Total, Nonproliferation construction.... 279,000 279,000
[[Page S3580]]
Total, Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation 1,534,000 1,534,000
Programs...............................
Legacy contractor pensions.............. 28,640 28,640
Nuclear counterterrorism and incident 319,185 319,185
response program.......................
Use of prior year balances.............. -19,000 -19,000
Total, Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation. 1,862,825 1,862,825
Naval Reactors
Naval reactors development.............. 514,951 514,951
Columbia-Class reactor systems 138,000 138,000
development............................
S8G Prototype refueling................. 250,000 250,000
Naval reactors operations and 525,764 525,764
infrastructure.........................
Construction:........................... 0
19-D-930, KS Overhead Piping.......... 10,994 10,994
17-D-911, BL Fire System Upgrade...... 13,200 13,200
14-D-901 Spent fuel handling 287,000 287,000
recapitalization project, NRF........
Total, Construction..................... 311,194 311,194
Program direction....................... 48,709 48,709
Total, Naval Reactors................... 1,788,618 1,788,618
Federal Salaries And Expenses
Program direction....................... 422,529 422,529
Total, Office Of The Administrator...... 422,529 422,529
Defense Environmental Cleanup
Closure sites:
Closure sites administration.......... 4,889 4,889
Richland:
River corridor and other cleanup 89,577 89,577
operations...........................
Central plateau remediation........... 562,473 562,473
Richland community and regulatory 5,121 5,121
support..............................
Construction:
18-D-404 WESF Modifications and 1,000 1,000
Capsule Storage....................
Total, Construction..................... 1,000 1,000
Total, Hanford site..................... 658,171 658,171
Office of River Protection:
Waste Treatment Immobilization Plant 15,000 15,000
Commissioning........................
Rad liquid tank waste stabilization 677,460 677,460
and disposition......................
Construction:
15-D-409 Low activity waste 56,053 56,053
pretreatment system, ORP...........
01-D-416 A-D WTP Subprojects A-D. 675,000 675,000
01-D-416 E--Pretreatment Facility 15,000 15,000
Total, Construction..................... 746,053 746,053
Total, Office of River protection....... 1,438,513 1,438,513
Idaho National Laboratory:
SNF stabilization and disposition-- 17,000 17,000
2012.................................
Solid waste stabilization and 148,387 148,387
disposition..........................
Radioactive liquid tank waste 137,739 137,739
stabilization and disposition........
Soil and water remediation--2035...... 42,900 42,900
Idaho community and regulatory support 3,200 3,200
Total, Idaho National Laboratory........ 349,226 349,226
NNSA sites and Nevada off-sites
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory 1,704 1,704
Nuclear facility D & D Separations 15,000 15,000
Process Research Unit................
Nevada................................ 60,136 60,136
Sandia National Laboratories.......... 2,600 2,600
Los Alamos National Laboratory........ 191,629 191,629
Total, NNSA sites and Nevada off-sites.. 271,069 271,069
Oak Ridge Reservation:
OR Nuclear facility D & D
OR-0041--D&D--Y-12.................. 30,214 30,214
OR-0042--D&D--ORNL.................. 60,007 60,007
Total, OR Nuclear facility D & D........ 90,221 90,221
U233 Disposition Program.............. 45,000 45,000
[[Page S3581]]
OR cleanup and waste disposition
OR cleanup and disposition.......... 67,000 67,000
Construction:
17-D-401 On-site waste disposal 5,000 5,000
facility.........................
14-D-403 Outfall 200 Mercury 11,274 11,274
Treatment Facility...............
Total, Construction..................... 16,274 16,274
Total, OR cleanup and waste disposition. 83,274 83,274
OR community & regulatory support..... 4,711 4,711
OR technology development and 3,000 3,000
deployment...........................
Total, Oak Ridge Reservation............ 226,206 226,206
Savannah River Sites:
Nuclear Material Management........... 351,331 351,331
Environmental Cleanup
Environmental Cleanup............... 166,105 166,105
Construction:
18-D-402, Emergency Operations 1,259 1,259
Center...........................
Total, Environmental Cleanup............ 167,364 167,364
SR community and regulatory support... 4,749 4,749
Radioactive liquid tank waste 805,686 805,686
stabilization and disposition......
Construction:
18-D-401, SDU #8/9................ 37,450 37,450
17-D-402--Saltstone Disposal Unit 41,243 41,243
#7...............................
05-D-405 Salt waste processing 65,000 65,000
facility, Savannah River Site....
Total, Construction..................... 143,693 143,693
Total, Savannah River site.............. 1,472,823 1,472,823
Waste Isolation Pilot Plant
Operations and maintenance............ 220,000 220,000
Central characterization project...... 19,500 19,500
Critical Infrastructure Repair/ 46,695 46,695
Replacement..........................
Transportation........................ 25,500 25,500
Construction:
15-D-411 Safety significant 84,212 84,212
confinement ventilation system,
WIPP...............................
15-D-412 Exhaust shaft, WIPP........ 1,000 1,000
Total, Construction..................... 85,212 85,212
Total, Waste Isolation Pilot Plant...... 396,907 396,907
Program direction....................... 300,000 300,000
Program support......................... 6,979 6,979
Minority Serving Institution Partnership 6,000 6,000
Safeguards and Security
Oak Ridge Reservation................. 14,023 14,023
Paducah............................... 15,577 15,577
Portsmouth............................ 15,078 15,078
Richland/Hanford Site................. 86,686 86,686
Savannah River Site................... 183,357 183,357
Waste Isolation Pilot Project......... 6,580 6,580
West Valley........................... 3,133 3,133
Total, Safeguards and Security.......... 324,434 324,434
Technology development.................. 25,000 25,000
HQEF-0040--Excess Facilities............ 150,000 150,000
Total, Defense Environmental Cleanup.... 5,630,217 5,630,217
Other Defense Activities
Environment, health, safety and security
Environment, health, safety and 135,194 135,194
security.............................
Program direction..................... 70,653 70,653
Total, Environment, Health, safety and 205,847 205,847
security...............................
Independent enterprise assessments
Independent enterprise assessments.... 24,068 24,068
Program direction..................... 52,702 52,702
Total, Independent enterprise 76,770 76,770
assessments............................
Specialized security activities......... 254,378 254,378
Office of Legacy Management
Legacy management..................... 140,575 140,575
Program direction..................... 18,302 18,302
Total, Office of Legacy Management...... 158,877 158,877
[[Page S3582]]
Defense related administrative support
Chief financial officer............... 48,484 48,484
Chief information officer............. 96,793 96,793
Project management oversight and 8,412 8,412
Assessments..........................
Total, Defense related administrative 153,689 153,689
support................................
Office of hearings and appeals.......... 5,739 5,739
Subtotal, Other defense activities...... 855,300 855,300
Rescission of prior year balances (OHA). -2,000 -2,000
Total, Other Defense Activities......... 853,300 853,300
Defense Nuclear Waste Disposal
Yucca mountain and interim storage...... 30,000 0
Program cut........................... [-30,000]
Total, Defense Nuclear Waste Disposal... 30,000 0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
DIVISION E--ADDITIONAL PROVISIONS
TITLE LI--PROCUREMENT
SEC. 5101. BRIEFING ON PROCUREMENT PLAN FOR ACQUIRED POSITION
NAVIGATION AND TIMING (APNT) SOLUTION.
Not later than September 1, 2018, the Secretary of the
Army, in coordination with the Director of the Army's
Acquired Position Navigation and Timing (APNT) Cross
Functional Team (CFT) pilot, shall provide to the
congressional defense committees a briefing that outlines
potential courses of action to begin immediate procurement of
APNT systems, subject to successful test and evaluation.
SEC. 5102. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON KC-46A AERIAL REFUELING
TANKER EMERGENT REQUIREMENTS.
It is the sense of Congress that--
(1) the KC-46A aircraft will serve as the backbone of the
Air Force's critical aerial refueling mission for the next
several decades, replacing the aging 1950's-era KC-135
Stratotanker fleet;
(2) the Air Force has provided funding for numerous
military construction projects at installations across the
country to prepare for the delivery and bed down of the KC-
46A aircraft;
(3) as the KC-46A program matures and requirements become
better defined, additional military construction and
facilities, sustainment, restoration and modernization (FSRM)
funding is likely to be necessary to properly support the
fielding of the aircraft, house additional personnel, and
meet unforeseen requirements of the tanker mission; and
(4) the Secretary of the Air Force should continue to
review and validate new emergent requirements and prepare to
provide additional military construction and FSRM funding in
its budget request for fiscal year 2020 and future years as
needed.
SEC. 5103. ADDITIONAL ELEMENT IN THE QUARTERLY UPDATES ON THE
F-35 JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER PROGRAM.
The element on the assessment of the F-35 Joint Strike
Fighter program under section 152(b)(3) in the quarterly
updates on that program under section 152 shall include an
assessment of efforts to ensure that excessive sustainment
costs do not threaten the Department of Defense's ability to
purchase the required number of aircraft.
TITLE LII--RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION
SEC. 5201. JOINT ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT, AND TRANSITION ACTIVITIES.
The near-term actionable recommendations of the Secretary
of Defense under section 226(e)(3)(B) shall include
recommendations on research into systems that integrate the
strengths and reliability of artificial intelligence and
machine learning with the inductive reasoning power of a
human.
SEC. 5202. SCOPE OF COMPETITIVE ACQUISITION STRATEGY FOR THE
BRADLEY FIGHTING VEHICLE TRANSMISSION
REPLACEMENT.
The plan to use full and open competition in the
acquisition strategy for the Bradley Fighting Vehicle
transmission replacement required by section 241(b)(2) shall
be based on the Federal Acquisition Regulation rather than to
the maximum extent practicable.
SEC. 5203. PILOT PROGRAM TO TEST MACHINE-VISION TECHNOLOGIES
TO DETERMINE THE AUTHENTICITY AND SECURITY OF
MICROELECTRONIC PARTS IN WEAPON SYSTEMS.
(a) Pilot Program Authorized.--The Under Secretary of
Defense for Research and Engineering, in coordination with
the Defense Microelectronics Activity, shall establish a
pilot program to test the feasibility and reliability of
using machine-vision technologies to determine the
authenticity and security of microelectronic parts in weapon
systems.
(b) Objectives of Pilot Program.--The objective of the
pilot program required by subsection (a) shall include
determining the following:
(1) The effectiveness and technology readiness level of
machine-vision technologies to determine the authenticity of
microelectronic parts at the time of the creation of such
part through final insertion of such part into weapon
systems.
(2) The best method of incorporating machine-vision
technologies into the process of developing, transporting,
and inserting microelectronics into weapon systems.
(3) The rules, regulations, or processes that hinder the
development and incorporation of machine-vision technologies,
and the application of such rules, regulations, or processes
to mitigate counterfeit microelectronics proliferation
throughout the Department of Defense.
(c) Consultation.--In carrying out the pilot program
required by subsection (a), the Under Secretary may consult
with the following:
(1) Manufacturers of semiconductors or electronics.
(2) Industry associations relating to semiconductors or
electronics.
(3) Original equipment manufacturers of products for the
Department of Defense.
(4) Nontraditional defense contractors (as defined in
section 2302 of title 10, United States Code) that are
machine-vision companies.
(5) Federal laboratories (as defined in section 2500 of
title 10, United States Code).
(6) Other elements of the Department of Defense that fall
under the authority of the Under Secretary of Defense for
Research and Engineering.
(d) Commencement and Duration.--The pilot program
established under this section shall be established not later
than April 1, 2019, and all activities under such pilot
program shall terminate not later than December 31, 2020.
TITLE LIII--OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
SEC. 5301. PRIORITIZATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS FOR
FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION, AND
MODERNIZATION DEMOLITION.
The Secretary of Defense shall establish prioritization
metrics for facilities deemed eligible for demolition within
the Facilities Sustainment, Restoration, and Modernization
(FSRM) process. Those metrics shall include full spectrum
readiness and environmental impacts, including the removal of
contamination.
SEC. 5302. CORE SAMPLING AT JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS.
(a) Site Investigation Required.--The Secretary of the Air
Force shall conduct a core sampling study along the proposed
route of the W-6 wastewater treatment line on Air Force real
property, in compliance with best engineering practices, to
determine if any regulated or hazardous substances are
present in the soil along the proposed route.
(b) Report Required.--Not later than 120 days after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Air
Force shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the
Senate and the House of Representatives a report on the
results of the core samples taken pursuant to subsection (a).
SEC. 5303. TRANSPORTATION TO CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES OF
RETIRED MILITARY WORKING DOGS OUTSIDE THE
CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES THAT ARE SUITABLE FOR
ADOPTION IN THE UNITED STATES.
Section 2583(f) of title 10, United States Code, is amended
by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(3)(A) In the case of a military working dog located
outside the continental United States (OCONUS) at the time of
retirement that is suitable for adoption at that time, the
Secretary of the military department concerned shall
undertake transportation of
[[Page S3583]]
the dog to the continental United States (including
transportation by contract at United States expense) for
adoption under this section unless--
``(i) the dog is adopted as described in paragraph (2)(A);
or
``(ii) transportation of the dog to the continental United
States would not be in the best interests of the dog for
medical reasons.
``(B) Nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to alter
the preference in adoption of retired military working dogs
for former handlers as set forth in subsection (g).''.
SEC. 5304. ADDITIONAL ELEMENT IN REPORT ON COLD WEATHER
CAPABILITIES AND READINESS OF THE UNITED STATES
ARMED FORCES.
The report on cold weather capabilities and readiness of
the United States Armed Forces required by section 322 shall
also include an analysis of potential partnerships with
State, local, tribal, and private entities to maximize
training potential and to utilize local expertise.
SEC. 5305. REPORT ON AIR FORCE TRAINING RANGE REQUIREMENTS TO
ADDRESS FIFTH GENERATION THREATS.
(a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
(1) The Department of Defense needs to ensure that air
training ranges are properly equipped to prepare pilots for
operating in any battlespace where they may have to operate.
(2) The ongoing development of anti-aircraft technology
among near-peer competitors of the United States, and the
proliferation of that technology to a widening array of
potential battlefields, necessitates maximum preparedness
among United States fighter and bomber pilots.
(3) Years of focusing on low intensity stability operations
and multiple budget cycles under spending caps have resulted
in an under capitalization of fifth generation training
resources.
(b) Report.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Air Force shall
submit to the congressional defense committees a report on
the needs of the Air Force to ensure pilots can train against
the full range of fifth generation threats at training
ranges, including--
(1) the appropriate mix of live and virtual threats that
should be available on the training ranges;
(2) the need to have threat representative simulators at
those training ranges;
(3) the plan to meet those needs;
(4) the resources required to meet those needs; and
(5) the timeline for meeting those needs.
SEC. 5306. ANNUAL REPORT ON DIFFERENCES IN SHIP REPAIR
CONTRACT AND FINAL DELIVERY COSTS.
(a) Report Required.--The Secretary of the Navy shall
submit to the congressional defense committees a report on
the differences between the final contract and final delivery
cost for each ship repair, including a description of any
growth work that was added after the contract award and a
detailed explanation on why the growth work was not included
in original contract proposal.
(b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that it
is important to create and maintain a stable work load for
the defense industrial base at ship repair yards.
SEC. 5307. REPORT ON AIR FORCE AIRFIELD OPERATIONAL
REQUIREMENTS.
(a) In General.--Not later than February 1, 2019, the
Secretary of the Air Force shall conduct an assessment and
submit to the congressional defense committees a report
detailing the operational requirements for Air Force
airfields.
(b) Elements.--The report required under subsection (a)
shall include the following elements:
(1) An assessment of the state of airfields where runway
degradation currently poses a threat to operations and
airfields where such degradation threatens operations in the
next five and ten years.
(2) A description of the operational requirements for
airfields, including an assessment of the impact to
operations, cost to repair, cost to replace, remaining useful
life, and the required daily maintenance to ensure runways
are acceptable for full operations.
(3) A description of any challenges with infrastructure
acquisition methods and processes.
(4) An assessment of the operational impact in the event a
runway were to become inoperable due to a major degradation
incident, such as a crack or fracture resulting from lack of
maintenance and repair.
(5) A plan to address any shortfalls associated with the
Air Force's runway infrastructure.
(c) Form.--The report required under subsection (a) shall
be in unclassified form but may contain a classified annex as
necessary.
TITLE LV--MILITARY PERSONNEL POLICY
SEC. 5501. REPORT ON PARTICIPATION IN THE TRANSITION
ASSISTANCE PROGRAM.
(a) Report Required.--Not later than February 28, 2019, the
Secretary of Defense shall submit to the Committees on Armed
Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a
report on participation in the Transition Assistance Program
under section 1144 of title 10, United States Code, by
members of the Armed Forces.
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall
include the following:
(1) Information on the participation of members of the
Armed Forces in the Transition Assistance Program during
2018, including the following:
(A) The number of members who were eligible for
participation in the Program during 2018, in aggregate and by
component of the Armed Forces.
(B) The number of members who participated in the Program
during 2018, in aggregate and by component of the Armed
Forces, for each service as follows:
(i) Preseparation counseling provided by the Department of
Defense.
(ii) Briefings provided by the Department of Veterans
Affairs.
(iii) Employment workshops provided by the Department of
Labor.
(C) The number of members who did not participate in the
Program during 2018 due to a waiver of the participation
requirement under section 114(c)(2) of title 10, United Stats
Code, for each service set forth in subparagraph (B).
(2) Such recommendations for legislative or administrative
action as the Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the
Secretary of Labor, the Secretary of Veterans Affairs, and
the Secretary of Homeland Security, considers appropriate to
increase participation of members of the Armed Forces in each
service set forth in paragraph (1)(B).
(3) Assessments of the Transition Assistance Program by
members of the Armed Forces who participated in the Program
during 2018, including the following:
(A) A summary of the data obtained by the Department of
Defense through assessments of the Program by participants in
the Program during 2018, including data obtained through the
assessments as follows:
(i) The Transition Goals Plans Success (GPS) Participant
Assessment.
(ii) Status of Forces Surveys (SOFS).
(B) A summary of the conclusions derived by the Secretary
of Defense from the data described in subparagraph (A).
(4) Such recommendations for improvements to the Transition
Assistance Program as the Secretary of Defense considers
appropriate in light of the data described by paragraph
(3)(A) and the conclusions described by paragraph (3)(B),
including recommendations for such legislative or
administrative action as the Secretary considers appropriate
to carry out such improvements.
SEC. 5502. BRIEFING ON THE STATUS OF THE PLAN OF THE ARMY TO
TRANSITION TO NEW INSECTICIDE PRETREATMENTS ON
COMBAT UNIFORMS.
Not later than 60 days after the date of the enactment of
this Act, the Secretary of the Army shall provide to the
Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of
Representatives a briefing the status of approval of, and any
plan to transition to, the use of new insecticide
pretreatments on combat uniforms.
TITLE LVIII--ACQUISITION POLICY, ACQUISITION MANAGEMENT, AND RELATED
MATTERS
SEC. 5801. INSTRUCTION ON PILOT PROGRAM REGARDING EMPLOYMENT
OF PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES.
Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of
this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall update the Defense
Federal Acquisition Regulatory Supplement to include an
instruction on the pilot program regarding employment of
persons with disabilities authorized under section 853 of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2004
(Public Law 108-136; 10 U.S.C. 2302 note).
SEC. 5802. DEVELOPING INNOVATION AND GROWING THE INTERNET OF
THINGS.
(a) Findings; Sense of Congress.--
(1) Findings.--Congress finds that--
(A) the Internet of Things refers to the growing number of
connected and interconnected devices;
(B) estimates indicate that more than 50,000,000,000
devices will be connected to the internet by 2020;
(C) the Internet of Things has the potential to generate
trillions of dollars in new economic activity around the
world;
(D) businesses across the United States can develop new
services and products, improve operations, simplify
logistics, cut costs, and pass savings on to consumers by
utilizing the Internet of Things and related innovations;
(E) the United States leads the world in the development of
technologies that support the internet and the United States
technology sector is well-positioned to lead in the
development of technologies for the Internet of Things;
(F) the United States Government can implement this
technology to better deliver services to the public; and
(G) the Senate unanimously passed Senate Resolution 110,
114th Congress, agreed to March 24, 2015, calling for a
national strategy for the development of the Internet of
Things.
(2) Sense of congress.--It is the sense of Congress that
policies governing the Internet of Things should maximize the
potential and development of the Internet of Things to
benefit all stakeholders, including businesses, governments,
and consumers.
(b) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Commission.--The term ``Commission'' means the Federal
Communications Commission.
(2) Secretary.--The term ``Secretary'' means the Secretary
of Commerce.
(3) Steering committee.--The term ``steering committee''
means the steering committee established under subsection
(c)(5).
[[Page S3584]]
(4) Working group.--The term ``working group'' means the
working group convened under subsection (c)(1).
(c) Federal Working Group.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary shall convene a working
group of Federal stakeholders for the purpose of providing
recommendations and a report to Congress relating to the
aspects of the Internet of Things described in paragraph (2).
(2) Duties.--The working group shall--
(A) identify any Federal regulations, statutes, grant
practices, budgetary or jurisdictional challenges, and other
sector-specific policies that are inhibiting, or could
inhibit, the development of the Internet of Things;
(B) consider policies or programs that encourage and
improve coordination among Federal agencies with jurisdiction
over the Internet of Things;
(C) consider any findings or recommendations made by the
steering committee and, where appropriate, act to implement
those recommendations; and
(D) examine--
(i) how Federal agencies can benefit from utilizing the
Internet of Things;
(ii) the use of Internet of Things technology by Federal
agencies as of the date on which the working group performs
the examination;
(iii) the preparedness and ability of Federal agencies to
adopt Internet of Things technology in the future; and
(iv) any additional security measures that Federal agencies
may need to take to--
(I) safely and securely use the Internet of Things,
including measures that ensure the security of critical
infrastructure; and
(II) enhance the resiliency of Federal systems against
cyber threats to the Internet of Things.
(3) Agency representatives.--In convening the working group
under paragraph (1), the Secretary may appoint
representatives, and shall specifically consider seeking
representation, from--
(A) the Department of Commerce, including--
(i) the National Telecommunications and Information
Administration;
(ii) the National Institute of Standards and Technology;
and
(iii) the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration;
(B) the Department of Transportation;
(C) the Department of Homeland Security;
(D) the Office of Management and Budget;
(E) the National Science Foundation;
(F) the Commission;
(G) the Federal Trade Commission;
(H) the Office of Science and Technology Policy;
(I) the Department of Energy; and
(J) the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
(4) Nongovernmental stakeholders.--The working group shall
consult with nongovernmental stakeholders, including--
(A) the steering committee;
(B) information and communications technology
manufacturers, suppliers, service providers, and vendors;
(C) subject matter experts representing industrial sectors
other than the technology sector that can benefit from the
Internet of Things, including the energy, agriculture, and
health care sectors;
(D) small, medium, and large businesses;
(E) think tanks and academia;
(F) nonprofit organizations and consumer groups;
(G) rural stakeholders; and
(H) other stakeholders with relevant expertise, as
determined by the Secretary.
(5) Steering committee.--
(A) Establishment.--There is established within the
Department of Commerce a steering committee to advise the
working group.
(B) Duties.--The steering committee shall advise the
working group with respect to--
(i) the identification of any Federal regulations,
statutes, grant practices, programs, budgetary or
jurisdictional challenges, and other sector-specific policies
that are inhibiting, or could inhibit, the development of the
Internet of Things;
(ii) whether adequate spectrum is available to support the
growing Internet of Things and what legal or regulatory
barriers may exist to providing any spectrum needed in the
future;
(iii) policies or programs that--
(I) promote or are related to the privacy of individuals
who use or are affected by the Internet of Things;
(II) may enhance the security of the Internet of Things,
including the security of critical infrastructure;
(III) may protect users of the Internet of Things; and
(IV) may encourage coordination among Federal agencies with
jurisdiction over the Internet of Things;
(iv) the opportunities and challenges associated with the
use of Internet of Things technology by small businesses; and
(v) any international proceeding, international
negotiation, or other international matter affecting the
Internet of Things to which the United States is or should be
a party.
(C) Membership.--The Secretary shall appoint to the
steering committee members representing a wide range of
stakeholders outside of the Federal Government with expertise
relating to the Internet of Things, including--
(i) information and communications technology
manufacturers, suppliers, service providers, and vendors;
(ii) subject matter experts representing industrial sectors
other than the technology sector that can benefit from the
Internet of Things, including the energy, agriculture, and
health care sectors;
(iii) small, medium, and large businesses;
(iv) think tanks and academia;
(v) nonprofit organizations and consumer groups;
(vi) rural stakeholders; and
(vii) other stakeholders with relevant expertise, as
determined by the Secretary.
(D) Report.--Not later than 1 year after the date of
enactment of this Act, the steering committee shall submit to
the working group a report that includes any findings made
by, or recommendations of, the steering committee.
(E) Independent advice.--
(i) In general.--The steering committee shall set the
agenda of the steering committee in carrying out the duties
of the steering committee under subparagraph (B).
(ii) Suggestions.--The working group may suggest topics or
items for the steering committee to study and the steering
committee shall take those suggestions into consideration in
carrying out the duties of the steering committee.
(iii) Report.--The steering committee shall ensure that the
report submitted under subparagraph (D) is the result of the
independent judgment of the steering committee.
(F) Termination.--The steering committee shall terminate on
the date on which the working group submits the report under
paragraph (6) unless, on or before that date, the Secretary
files a new charter for the steering committee under section
9(c) of the Federal Advisory Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.).
(6) Report to congress.--
(A) In general.--Not later than 18 months after the date of
enactment of this Act, the working group shall submit to
Congress a report that includes--
(i) the findings and recommendations of the working group
with respect to the duties of the working group under
paragraph (2);
(ii) the report submitted by the steering committee under
paragraph (5)(D), as the report was received by the working
group;
(iii) recommendations for action or reasons for inaction,
as applicable, with respect to each recommendation made by
the steering committee in the report submitted under
paragraph (5)(D); and
(iv) an accounting of any progress made by Federal agencies
to implement recommendations made by the working group or the
steering committee.
(B) Copy of report.--The working group shall submit a copy
of the report described in subparagraph (A) to--
(i) the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation
and the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources of the
Senate;
(ii) the Committee on Energy and Commerce of the House of
Representatives; and
(iii) any other committee of Congress, upon request to the
working group.
(d) Assessing Spectrum Needs.--
(1) In general.--The Commission, in consultation with the
National Telecommunications and Information Administration,
shall issue a notice of inquiry seeking public comment on the
current, as of the date of enactment of this Act, and future
spectrum needs of the Internet of Things.
(2) Requirements.--In issuing the notice of inquiry under
paragraph (1), the Commission shall seek comments that
consider and evaluate--
(A) whether adequate spectrum is available to support the
growing Internet of Things;
(B) what regulatory barriers may exist to providing any
needed spectrum for the Internet of Things; and
(C) what the role of licensed and unlicensed spectrum is
and will be in the growth of the Internet of Things.
(3) Report.--Not later than 1 year after the date of
enactment of this Act, the Commission shall submit to the
Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the
Senate and the Committee on Energy and Commerce of the House
of Representatives a report summarizing the comments
submitted in response to the notice of inquiry issued under
paragraph (1).
TITLE LIX--DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT
SEC. 5901. CLARIFICATION OF CERTAIN RISK ASSESSMENT
REQUIREMENTS OF THE CHAIRMAN OF THE JOINT
CHIEFS OF STAFF IN CONNECTION WITH THE NATIONAL
MILITARY STRATEGY.
Section 153(b) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) in paragraph (1)(D)(iii), by striking ``military
strategic and operational risks'' and inserting ``military
risk''; and
(2) in paragraph (2)(B)(ii), by striking ``military
strategic and operational risks to United States interests
and the military strategic and operational risks in executing
the National Military Strategy (or update)'' and inserting
``military strategic risks to United States interests and
military risks in executing the National Military Strategy
(or update)''.
TITLE LX--GENERAL PROVISIONS
SEC. 6001. BUSINESS CASE ANALYSIS OF READY RESERVE FORCE
RECAPITALIZATION OPTIONS.
(a) Business Case Analysis Required.--Not later than 120
days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the
Secretary of the
[[Page S3585]]
Navy shall, in consultation with the Administrator of the
Maritime Administration and the Commander of United States
Transportation Command, submit to the congressional defense
committees a report setting forth a business case analysis of
recapitalization options for the Ready Reserve Force (RRF).
(b) Elements.--The business case analysis required by
subsection (a) shall include the following:
(1) Each sealift capability area, and the associated
capacity, for which Ready Reserve Force vessels are required
to be recapitalized through fiscal year 2048.
(2) The categories of vessels being considered in each area
specified pursuant to paragraph (1), including the following:
(A) United States purpose-built vessels (such as Common
Hull Auxiliary Multi-mission Platform).
(B) United States non-purpose built vessels (such as
vessels formerly engaged in Jones Act trade).
(C) Foreign-built vessels that participated in the Maritime
Security Program.
(D) Foreign-built vessels that did not participate in the
Maritime Security Program.
(3) For each category of vessel specified pursuant to
paragraph (2), the following:
(A) Anticipated availability of vessels within such
category in the timeframe needed to meet United States
Transportation Command sealift requirements.
(B) Anticipated purchase price, if applicable.
(C) Anticipated cost and scope of modernization.
(D) Anticipated duration of modernization period.
(E) Anticipated service life as a Ready Reserve Force
vessel.
(F) Anticipated military utility.
(G) Ability of one such vessel to replace more than one
existing Ready Reserve Force vessel.
(4) A cost-benefit determination on the mix of capabilities
and vessels identified pursuant to paragraphs (1) through (3)
that could ensure United States Transportation Command
sealift requirements are met through fiscal year 2048, which
determination shall include a comparison of the useful
service life of each category of vessels specified pursuant
to paragraph (2) with the costs of such category of vessels.
SEC. 6002. TRANSFER OF EXCESS NAVAL VESSEL TO BAHRAIN.
(a) Transfer by Grant.--The President is authorized to
transfer to the Government of Bahrain the OLIVER HAZARD PERRY
class guided missile frigate ex-USS ROBERT G. BRADLEY (FFG-
49) on a grant basis under section 516 of the Foreign
Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2321j).
(b) Grant Not Counted in Annual Total of Transferred Excess
Defense Articles.--The value of the vessel transferred to the
Government of Bahrain on a grant basis pursuant to authority
provided by subsection (a) shall not be counted against the
aggregate value of excess defense articles transferred in any
fiscal year under section 516 of the Foreign Assistance Act
of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2321j).
(c) Costs of Transfer.--Any expense incurred by the United
States in connection with the transfer authorized by this
section shall be charged to the Government of Bahrain
notwithstanding section 516(e) of the Foreign Assistance Act
of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2321j(e)).
(d) Repair and Refurbishment in United States Shipyards.--
To the maximum extent practicable, the President shall
require, as a condition of the transfer of a vessel under
this section, that the Government of Bahrain have such repair
or refurbishment of the vessel as is needed, before the
vessel joins the naval forces of that country, performed at a
shipyard located in the United States, including a United
States Navy shipyard.
(e) Expiration of Authority.--The authority to transfer a
vessel under this section shall expire at the end of the
three-year period beginning on the date of the enactment of
this Act.
SEC. 6003. MEMBERS OF PANEL CONDUCTING REVIEW OF MILITARY
AVIATION READINESS IN SUPPORT OF THE NATIONAL
DEFENSE STRATEGY.
Notwithstanding subparagraph (C) of section 1044(b)(2), the
official who shall be referred to in that subparagraph is the
Commander, Naval Air Forces.
SEC. 6004. STUDY ON PHASING OUT OPEN BURN PITS.
(a) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit
to Congress a report that includes--
(1) details of any ongoing use of open burn pits; and
(2) the feasibility of phasing out the use of open burn
pits by using technology incinerators.
(b) Open Burn Pit Defined.--In this section, the term
``open burn pit'' means an area of land--
(1) that is designated by the Secretary of Defense to be
used for disposing solid waste by burning in the outdoor air;
and
(2) does not contain a commercially manufactured
incinerator or other equipment specifically designed and
manufactured for the burning of solid waste.
SEC. 6005. AIRBORNE HAZARDS AND OPEN BURN PIT REGISTRY.
Beginning not later than one year after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall carry
out an annual education campaign to inform individuals who
may be eligible to enroll in the Airborne Hazards and Open
Burn Pit Registry of such eligibility. Each such campaign
shall include at least one electronic method and one physical
mailing method to provide such information.
SEC. 6006. IMPROVING SMALL BUSINESS LOAN PROGRAMS FOR
EMPLOYEE-OWNED BUSINESS CONCERNS.
(a) Definitions.--In this section--
(1) the terms ``Administration'' and ``Administrator'' mean
the Small Business Administration and the Administrator
thereof, respectively;
(2) the term ``cooperative'' has the meaning given the term
in section 7(a)(35) of the Small Business Act, as added by
subsection (b);
(3) the term ``employee-owned business concern'' means--
(A) a cooperative; and
(B) a qualified employee trust;
(4) the terms ``qualified employee trust'' and ``small
business concern'' have the meanings given those terms in
section 3 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 632); and
(5) the term ``small business development center'' means a
small business development center described in section 21 of
the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 648).
(b) Expansion of 7(a) Loans.--
(1) In general.--Section 7(a) of the Small Business Act (15
U.S.C. 636(a)) is amended--
(A) in paragraph (15)--
(i) in subparagraph (A)--
(I) by striking ``this subsection to qualified employee
trusts'' and inserting ``this subsection--
``(i) to qualified employee trusts'';
(II) in clause (i), as so designated--
(aa) by inserting ``, and for any transaction costs
associated with purchasing,'' after ``purchasing'';
(bb) by striking the period at the end and inserting ``;
and''; and
(III) by adding at the end the following:
``(ii) to a small business concern under a plan approved by
the Administrator, if the proceeds from the loan are only
used to make a loan to a qualified employee trust, and for
any transaction costs associated with making that loan, that
results in the qualified employee trust owning at least 51
percent of the small business concern.'';
(ii) in subparagraph (B)--
(I) in the matter preceding clause (i), by inserting ``or
by the small business concern'' after ``the trustee of such
trust'';
(II) in clause (ii), by striking ``and'' at the end;
(III) in clause (iii), by striking the period at the end
and inserting ``, and''; and
(IV) by adding at the end the following:
``(iv) with respect to a loan made to a trust, or to a
cooperative in accordance with paragraph (35)--
``(I) a seller of the small business concern may remain
involved as an officer, director, or key employee of the
small business concern when a qualified employee trust or
cooperative has acquired 100 percent of ownership of the
small business concern; and
``(II) any seller of the small business concern who remains
as an owner of the small business concern, regardless of the
percentage of ownership interest, shall be required to
provide a personal guarantee by the Administration.''; and
(iii) by adding at the end the following:
``(F) A small business concern that makes a loan to a
qualified employee trust under subparagraph (A)(ii) is not
required to contain the same terms and conditions as the loan
made to the small business concern that is guaranteed by the
Administration under such subparagraph.
``(G) With respect to a loan made to a qualified employee
trust under this paragraph, or to a cooperative in accordance
with paragraph (35), the Administrator may, as determined
appropriate by the Administrator, elect to not require any
mandatory equity to be provided by the qualified employee
trust or cooperative to make the loan.''; and
(B) by adding at the end the following:
``(35) Loans to cooperatives.--
``(A) Definition.--In this paragraph, the term
`cooperative' means an entity that is determined to be a
cooperative by the Administrator, in accordance with
applicable Federal and State laws and regulations.
``(B) Authority.--The Administration shall guarantee loans
made to a cooperative for the purpose described in paragraph
(15).''.
(2) Delegation of authority to preferred lenders.--Section
5(b)(7) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 634(b)(7)) is
amended by inserting ``, including loans guaranteed under
paragraph (15) or (35) of section 7(a)'' after ``deferred
participation loans''.
(c) Small Business Investment Company Program Outreach.--
The Administrator shall provide outreach and educational
materials to companies licensed under section 301(c) of the
Small Business Investment Act of 1958 (15 U.S.C. 681(c)) to
increase the use of funds to make investments in company
transitions to employee-owned business concerns.
(d) Small Business Microloan Program Outreach.--The
Administrator shall provide outreach and educational
materials to intermediaries under section 7(m) of the Small
Business Act (15 U.S.C. 636(m)) to increase the use of funds
to make loans to employee-owned business concerns, including
transitions to employee-owned business concerns.
(e) Small Business Development Center Outreach and
Assistance.--
(1) Establishment.--The Administrator shall establish a
Small Business Employee
[[Page S3586]]
Ownership and Cooperatives Promotion Program to offer
technical assistance and training on the transition to
employee ownership through cooperatives and qualified
employee trusts.
(2) Small business development centers.--
(A) In general.--In carrying out the program established
under paragraph (1), the Administrator shall enter into
agreements with small business development centers under
which the centers shall--
(i) provide access to information and resources on employee
ownership through cooperatives or qualified employee trusts
as a business succession strategy;
(ii) conduct training and educational activities; and
(iii) carry out the activities described in subparagraph
(U) of section 21(c)(3) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C.
648(c)(3)), as added by subparagraph (B).
(B) Additional services.--Section 21(c)(3) of the Small
Business Act (15 U.S.C. 648(c)(3)) is amended--
(i) in subparagraph (S), by striking ``and'' at the end;
(ii) in subparagraph (T), by striking the period at the end
and inserting ``; and''; and
(iii) by adding at the end the following:
``(U) encouraging and assisting the provision of succession
planning to small business concerns with a focus on
transitioning to cooperatives, as defined in section
7(a)(35), and qualified employee trusts (collectively
referred to in this subparagraph as `employee-owned business
concerns'), including by--
``(i) providing training to individuals to promote the
successful management, governance, or operation of a business
purchased by those individuals in the formation of an
employee-owned business concern;
``(ii) assisting employee-owned business concerns that meet
applicable size standards established under section 3(a) with
education and technical assistance with respect to financing
and contracting programs administered by the Administration;
``(iii) coordinating with lenders on conducting outreach on
financing through programs administered by the Administration
that may be used to support the transition of ownership to
employees;
``(iv) supporting small business concerns in exploring or
assessing the possibility of transitioning to an employee-
owned business concern; and
``(v) coordinating with the cooperative development centers
of the Department of Agriculture, the land grant extension
network, the Manufacturing Extension Partnership, community
development financial institutions, employee ownership
associations and service providers, and local, regional and
national cooperative associations.''.
(f) Interagency Working Group.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 90 days after the date of
enactment of this Act, the Administrator or a designee of the
Administrator shall coordinate and chair an interagency
working group, which shall--
(A) develop recommendations on how Federal programs can
promote, support, and increase the number of employee-owned
business concerns;
(B) ensure coordination with Federal agencies and national
and local employee ownership, cooperative, and small business
organizations; and
(C) publish a report on the activities of the interagency
working group that is indexed and maintained for public
review.
(2) Meetings.--The interagency working group described in
paragraph (1) shall meet in person or via electronic
resources at such times as determined necessary by the
Administrator, but not less frequently than biannually.
(g) Amendment to Report to Congress on Status of Employee-
owned Firms.--Section 7(a)(15) of the Small Business Act (15
U.S.C. 636(a)(15)), as amended by this section, is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (E), by striking ``Administration.''
and inserting ``Administration, which shall include--
``(i) the total number of loans made to cooperatives and
qualified employee trusts (collectively referred to in this
subparagraph as `employee-owned business concerns') that were
guaranteed by the Administrator under this section or section
502 of the Small Business Investment Act of 1958 (15 U.S.C.
696), including the number of loans made--
``(I) to small business concerns owned and controlled by
socially and economically disadvantaged individuals; and
``(II) to cooperatives;
``(ii) the total number of financings made to employee-
owned business concerns by companies licensed under section
301(c) of the Small Business Investment Act of 1958 (15
U.S.C. 696(c)), including the number of financings made--
``(I) to small business concerns owned and controlled by
socially and economically disadvantaged individuals; and
``(II) to cooperatives; and
``(iii) any outreach and educational activities conducted
by the Administration with respect to employee-owned business
concerns.''; and
(A) by adding at the end the following:
``(H) In this paragraph--
``(i) the term `cooperative' has the meaning given the term
in paragraph (35); and
``(ii) the term `small business concern owned and
controlled by socially and economically disadvantaged
individuals' has the meaning given the term in section
8(d)(3)(C).''.
(h) Report on Cooperative Lending.--
(1) Sense of congress.--It is the sense of Congress that
cooperatives have a unique business structure and are unable
to access the lending programs of the Administration
effectively due to loan guarantee requirements that are
incompatible with the business structure of cooperatives.
(2) Study and report.--
(A) Study.--The Administrator, in coordination with
lenders, stakeholders, and Federal agencies, shall study and
recommend practical alternatives for cooperatives that will
satisfy the loan guarantee requirements of the
Administration.
(B) Report.--Not later than 120 days after the date of
enactment of this Act, the Administrator shall submit to
Congress the recommendations developed under paragraph (1)
and a plan to implement those recommendations.
SEC. 6007. COMPTROLLER GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES REVIEW OF
EFFECT OF OTHER-THAN-HONORABLE DISCHARGES ON
VETERAN EMPLOYMENT OUTCOMES.
(a) Review Required.--Not later than one year after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Comptroller General of
the United States shall, in consultation with the Secretary
of Defense, the Secretary of Veterans Affairs, and the
Secretary of Labor, complete a review of the effect of
discharges and releases from service in the active military,
naval, or air service under conditions other than honorable
on employment outcomes for veterans who were so discharged or
released.
(b) Elements.--The review required by subsection (a) shall
include the following:
(1) An assessment of the effect of a discharge or release
described in subsection (a) on a veteran's employment
outcomes.
(2) Development of recommendations for legislative or
administrative action to reduce the negative effect of such a
discharge or release on employment outcomes, including
potential educational campaigns.
(3) An assessment of agency outreach or other relevant
efforts to inform veterans of their ability to seek a change
to their character of discharge through a discharge review
board.
(4) An assessment of the progress of the Secretary of
Defense in implementing the recommendations of the
Comptroller General published in the Government
Accountability Office report GAO-17-260 in May of 2017 on
actions needed to ensure post-traumatic stress disorder and
traumatic brain injury are considered in misconduct
separations.
(5) A review and development of recommended areas for
improvement in the implementation by the Department of
Defense of its August 25, 2017, clarifying guidance to
Military Discharge Review Boards and Board for Correction of
Military/Naval Records related to mental health conditions,
sexual assault, or sexual harassment. Such review shall
include identifying statistics on the number of upgrades and
discharge reliefs requested and granted and the average
timeframe for review of such requests.
(c) Report.--Not later than 90 days after the date on which
the Comptroller General completes the review required by
subsection (a), the Comptroller General shall submit to
Congress a report on the results of the review.
(d) Definitions.--In this section, the terms ``active
military, naval, or air service'', ``discharge or release'',
and ``veteran'' have the meaning given such terms in section
101 of title 38, United States Code.
SEC. 6008. COMPTROLLER GENERAL STUDY ON AVAILABILITY OF LONG-
TERM CARE OPTIONS FOR VETERANS FROM DEPARTMENT
OF VETERANS AFFAIRS.
(a) In General.--The Comptroller General of the United
States shall conduct a study on the availability of long-term
care options from the Department of Veterans Affairs for
veterans with combat-related disabilities, including veterans
who served in the Armed Forces after September 11, 2001.
(b) Elements.--The study required by subsection (a) shall--
(1) determine the potential demand for long-term care by
veterans eligible for health care from the Department;
(2) determine the capacity of the Department for providing
all four levels of long-term care, which are independent
living, assisted living, nursing home care, and memory care;
(3) identify the number of veterans with combat-related
disabilities who require a personal care assistant and which
facilities of the Department provide this service; and
(4) examine the value of long-term care benefits provided
by the Department, including personal care assistant
services, to identify the potential elements of a pilot
program that affords aging veterans the choice of receiving
long-term care benefits at nonprofit continuing care
retirement communities.
(c) Report.--Not later than January 1, 2020, the
Comptroller General shall submit to the Committee on Armed
Services and the Committee on Veterans' Affairs of the Senate
and the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on
Veterans' Affairs of the House of Representatives a report on
the study conducted under this section.
SEC. 6009. SENSE OF CONGRESS RELATING TO SOO LOCKS, SAULT
SAINTE MARIE, MICHIGAN.
It is the sense of Congress that--
(1) the Soo Locks in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, are of
critical importance to the national security of the United
States;
[[Page S3587]]
(2) the Soo Locks are the only waterway connection from
Lake Superior to the Lower Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence
Seaway;
(3) only the Poe Lock is of sufficient size to allow for
the passage of the largest cargo vessels that transport well
over 90 percent of all iron ore mined in the United States,
and this lock is nearing the end of its 50-year useful
lifespan;
(4) a report issued by the Office of Cyber and
Infrastructure Analysis of the Department of Homeland
Security concluded that an unscheduled 6-month outage of the
Poe Lock would cause--
(A) a dramatic increase in national and regional
unemployment; and
(B) 75 percent of Great Lakes steel production, and nearly
all North American appliance, automobile, railcar, and
construction, farm, and mining equipment production to cease;
(5) the Corps of Engineers is reevaluating a past economic
evaluation report to update the benefit-to-cost ratio for
building a new lock at the Soo Locks; and
(6) the Secretary of the Army and all relevant Federal
agencies should--
(A) expedite the completion of the report described in
paragraph (5) and ensure the analysis adequately reflects the
critical importance of the Soo Locks infrastructure to the
national security and economy of the United States; and
(B) expedite all other necessary reviews, analysis, and
approvals needed to speed the required upgrades at the Soo
Locks.
TITLE LXI--CIVILIAN PERSONNEL MATTERS
SEC. 6101. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE CYBER SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM
SCHOLARSHIPS AND GRANTS.
(a) Additional Considerations.--Section 2200c of title 10,
United States Code, is amended--
(1) by inserting before ``In the selection'' the following:
``(a) Centers of Academic Excellence in Cyber Education.--
''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(b) Certain Institutions of Higher Education.--In the
selection of a recipient for the award of a scholarship or
grant under this chapter, consideration shall be given to
whether--
``(1) in the case of a scholarship, the institution of
higher education at which the recipient pursues a degree is
an institution described in section 371(a) of the Higher
Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1067q(a)); and
``(2) in the case of a grant, the recipient is an
institution described in such section.''.
(b) Clerical Amendments.--
(1) Section heading.--The heading of section 2200c of title
10, United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 2200c. Special considerations in awarding scholarships
and grants''.
(2) Table of sections.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 112 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by striking the item relating to section 2200c and
inserting the following new item:
``2200c. Special considerations in awarding scholarships and grants.''.
Subtitle LXII--Matters Relating to Foreign Nations
SEC. 6201. COORDINATION OF EFFORTS TO NEGOTIATE FREE TRADE
AGREEMENTS WITH CERTAIN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICAN
COUNTRIES.
(a) In General.--The Chief Executive Officer of the
Millennium Challenge Corporation shall consult and coordinate
with the United States Trade Representative and the
Administrator of the United States Agency for International
Development with respect to countries described in subsection
(b) for the purpose of developing and carrying out the plan
required by section 116(b) of the African Growth and
Opportunity Act (19 U.S.C. 3723(b)).
(b) Countries Described.--A country is described in this
paragraph if the country--
(1) is identified under section 110(b)(1) of the Trade
Preferences Extension Act of 2015 (Public Law 114-27; 19
U.S.C. 3705 note); and
(2)(A) has entered into a Millennium Challenge Compact
pursuant to section 609 of the Millennium Challenge Act of
2003 (22 U.S.C. 7708); or
(B) is selected by the Board of Directors of the Millennium
Challenge Corporation under subsection (c) of section 607 of
that Act (22 U.S.C. 7706) from among the countries determined
to be eligible countries under subsection (a) of that
section.
SEC. 6202. TREATMENT OF RWANDAN PATRIOTIC FRONT AND RWANDAN
PATRIOTIC ARMY UNDER IMMIGRATION AND
NATIONALITY ACT.
(a) Removal of Treatment as Terrorist Organizations.--
(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), the
Rwandan Patriotic Front and the Rwandan Patriotic Army shall
be excluded from the definition of terrorist organization (as
defined in section 212(a)(3)(B)(vi)(III) of the Immigration
and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1182(a)(3)(B)(vi)(III))) for
purposes of such section 212(a)(3)(B) for any period before
August 1, 1994.
(2) Exception.--
(A) In general.--The Secretary of State, in consultation
with the Secretary of Homeland Security and the Attorney
General, or the Secretary of Homeland Security, in
consultation with the Secretary of State and the Attorney
General, as applicable, may suspend the application of
paragraph (1) for the Rwandan Patriotic Front or the Rwandan
Patriotic Army in the sole and unreviewable discretion of
such applicable Secretary.
(B) Report.--Not later than, or contemporaneously with, a
suspension of paragraph (1) under subparagraph (A), the
Secretary of State or the Secretary of Homeland Security, as
applicable, shall submit to the appropriate committees of
Congress a report on the justification for such suspension.
(b) Relief From Inadmissibility.--
(1) Activities before august 1, 1994.--Section 212(a)(3)(B)
of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C.
1182(a)(3)(B)) shall not apply to an alien with respect to
any activity undertaken by the alien in association with the
Rwandan Patriotic Front or the Rwandan Patriotic Army before
August 1, 1994.
(2) Exception.--
(A) In general.--Paragraph (1) shall not apply if the
Secretary of State or the Secretary of Homeland Security, as
applicable, determines in the sole unreviewable discretion of
such applicable Secretary that, in the totality of the
circumstances, such alien--
(i) poses a threat to the safety and security of the United
States; or
(ii) does not merit a visa, admission to the United States,
or a grant of an immigration benefit or protection.
(B) Implementation.--Subparagraph (A) shall be implemented
by the Secretary of State and the Secretary of Homeland
Security, in consultation with the Attorney General.
(c) Appropriate Committees of Congress Defined.--In this
section, the term ``appropriate committees of Congress''
means--
(1) the Committee on the Judiciary, the Committee on
Foreign Relations, the Committee on Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs, and the Committee on Appropriations of
the Senate; and
(2) the Committee on the Judiciary, the Committee on
Foreign Affairs, the Committee on Homeland Security, and the
Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives.
SEC. 6203. SYRIAN WAR CRIMES ACCOUNTABILITY.
(a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
(1) March 2017 marks the sixth year of the ongoing conflict
in Syria.
(2) As of February 2017--
(A) more than 13,000,000 people are in need of humanitarian
assistance in Syria;
(B) approximately 6,600,000 people are displaced from their
homes inside Syria; and
(C) approximately 5,600,000 Syrians have fled to
neighboring countries as refugees.
(3) Since the conflict in Syria began, the United States
has provided more than $8,000,000,000 to meet humanitarian
needs in Syria, making the United States the world's single
largest donor by far to the Syrian humanitarian response.
(4) In response to growing concerns over systemic human
rights violations in Syria, the Independent International
Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic (referred
to in this subsection as ``COI'') was established on August
22, 2011. The purpose of COI is to ``investigate all alleged
violations of international human rights law since March 2011
in the Syrian Arab Republic, to establish the facts and
circumstances that may amount to such violations and of the
crimes perpetrated and, where possible, to identify those
responsible with a view to ensuring that perpetrators of
violations, including those that may constitute crimes
against humanity, are held accountable''.
(5) On December 21, 2016, the United Nations General
Assembly adopted a resolution to establish the International,
Impartial and Independent Mechanism to Assist in the
Investigation and Prosecution of Those Responsible for the
Most Serious Crimes under International Law Committed in the
Syrian Arab Republic since March 2011.
(6) In 2017, then Secretary of State Rex Tillerson stated
``ISIS is clearly responsible for genocide against Yezidis,
Christians, and Shia Muslims in areas it controls or has
controlled. ISIS is also responsible for crimes against
humanity and ethnic cleansing directed at these same groups,
and in some cases against Sunni Muslims, Kurds, and other
minorities . . . . The protection of these groups, and others
subject to violent extremism, is a human rights priority for
the Trump administration.''.
(7) On February 7, 2017, Amnesty International reported
that between 5,000 and 13,000 people were extrajudicially
executed in the Saydnaya Military Prison between September
2011 and December 2015.
(8) In February 2017, COI released a report--
(A) stating that a joint United Nations-Syrian Arab Red
Crescent convoy in Orum al-Kubra, Syria, was attacked by air
on September 19, 2016;
(B) explaining that the attack killed at least 14 civilian
aid workers, injured at least 15 others, and destroyed
trucks, food, medicine, clothes, and other supplies; and
(C) concluding that ``the attack was meticulously planned
and ruthlessly carried out by the Syrian air force to
purposefully hinder the delivery of humanitarian aid and
target aid workers, constituting the war crimes of
deliberately attacking humanitarian relief personnel, denial
of humanitarian aid and targeting civilians.''.
(9) On October 26, 2017, the Organization for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons-United Nations Joint
Investigative Mechanism
[[Page S3588]]
transmitted its sixth report, which concluded that the Syrian
Arab Armed Forces and the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria
(ISIS) have both used chemical weapons against villages in
Syria, including the use of sarin by the forces of the
Government of Syria in Khan Sheikhoun in April 2017.
(10) On August 8, 2017, COI released a report stating that
certain offenses, including deliberately attacking hospitals,
holding back humanitarian aid as a tactic to control civilian
populations, and the continued use of chemical weapons
against civilians, constitute war crimes and crimes against
humanity.
(11) Physicians for Human Rights reported that, between
March 2011 and the end of December 2017, Syrian government
and allied forces--
(A) had committed 446 attacks on 330 separate medical
facilities (including through the use of indiscriminate
barrel bombs on at least 80 occasions); and
(B) had killed 847 medical personnel.
(12) The Department of State's 2017 Country Reports on
Human Rights Practices--
(A) states that President Bashar al-Assad ``engaged in
frequent violations and abuses, including massacres,
indiscriminate killings, kidnapping of civilians, arbitrary
detentions, and rape as a war tactic.'';
(B) explains that ``these attacks included bombardment with
improvised explosive devices, commonly referred to as `barrel
bombs' . . .''; and
(C) reports that ``[t]he government [of Syria] continued
the use of torture and rape, including of children''.
(13) In February 2016, COI reported that--
(A) ``crimes against humanity continue to be committed by
[Syrian] Government forces and by ISIS'';
(B) the Syrian government has ``committed the crimes
against humanity of extermination, murder, rape or other
forms of sexual violence, torture, imprisonment, enforce
disappearance and other inhuman acts''; and
(C) ``[a]ccountability for these and other crimes must form
part of any political solution''.
(14) Credible civil society organizations collecting
evidence of war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide
in Syria report that at least 12 countries in western Europe
and North America have requested assistance on investigating
such crimes.
(15) In April 2018, the COI--
(A) reported at least 34 chemical attacks during the period
beginning in 2013 and ending in January 2018, many of which--
(i) used chlorine or sarin, a nerve agent; and
(ii) were conducted by the Government of Syria.
(16) According to the World Health Organization, following
the April 7, 2018, chemical weapons attack in Douma, Eastern
Ghouta, an estimated 500 people were treated for ``signs and
symptoms consistent with exposure to toxic chemicals''.
(17) On April 13, 2018, United States Ambassador to the
United States Nikki Haley stated: ``The United States
estimates that Assad has used chemical weapons in the Syrian
war at least 50 times. Public estimates are as high as 200.''
(b) Sense of Congress.--Congress--
(1) strongly condemns--
(A) the ongoing violence, use of chemical weapons,
targeting of civilian populations with barrel, incendiary,
and cluster bombs and SCUD missiles, and systematic gross
human rights violations carried out by the Government of
Syria and pro-government forces under the direction of
President Bashar al-Assad; and
(B) all abuses committed by violent extremist groups and
other combatants involved in the civil war in Syria;
(2) expresses its support for the people of Syria seeking
democratic change;
(3) urges all parties to the conflict--
(A) to immediately halt indiscriminate attacks on
civilians;
(B) to allow for the delivery of humanitarian and medical
assistance; and
(C) to end sieges of civilian populations;
(4) calls on the President to support efforts in Syria, and
on the part of the international community, to ensure
accountability for war crimes, crimes against humanity, and
genocide committed during the conflict; and
(5) supports the request in United Nations Security Council
Resolutions 2139 (2014), 2165 (2014), and 2191 (2014) for the
Secretary-General to regularly report to the Security Council
on implementation on the resolutions, including of paragraph
2 of Resolution 2139, which ``demands that all parties
immediately put an end to all forms of violence [and] cease
and desist from all violations of international humanitarian
law and violations and abuses of human rights''.
(c) Report on Accountability for War Crimes, Crimes Against
Humanity, and Genocide in Syria.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of State shall submit a
report on war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide
in Syria to the appropriate congressional committees not
later than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this
Act and another such report not later than 180 days after the
Secretary of State determines that the violence in Syria has
ceased.
(2) Elements.--The reports required under paragraph (1)
shall include--
(A) a description of alleged war crimes, crimes against
humanity, and genocide perpetrated during the civil war in
Syria, including--
(i) incidents that may constitute war crimes, crimes
against humanity, or genocide committed by the regime of
President Bashar al-Assad and all forces fighting on its
behalf;
(ii) incidents that may constitute war crimes, crimes
against humanity, or genocide committed by violent extremist
groups, anti-government forces, and any other combatants in
the conflict;
(iii) any incidents that may violate the principle of
medical neutrality and, if possible, the identification of
the individual or individuals who engaged in or organized
such incidents; and
(iv) if possible, a description of the conventional and
unconventional weapons used for such crimes and the origins
of such weapons; and
(B) a description and assessment by the Department of State
Office of Global Criminal Justice, the United States Agency
for International Development, the Department of Justice, and
other appropriate agencies of programs that the United States
Government has undertaken to ensure accountability for war
crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide perpetrated
against the people of Syria by the regime of President Bashar
al-Assad, violent extremist groups, and other combatants
involved in the conflict, including programs--
(i) to train investigators within and outside of Syria on
how to document, investigate, develop findings of, and
identify and locate alleged perpetrators of war crimes,
crimes against humanity, or genocide, including--
(I) the number of United States Government or contract
personnel currently designated to work full-time on these
issues; and
(II) the identification of the authorities and
appropriations being used to support such training efforts;
(ii) to promote and prepare for a transitional justice
process or processes for the perpetrators of war crimes,
crimes against humanity, and genocide in Syria beginning in
March 2011;
(iii) to document, collect, preserve, and protect evidence
of war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide in
Syria, including support for Syrian, foreign, and
international nongovernmental organizations, and other
entities, including the International, Impartial and
Independent Mechanism to Assist in the Investigation and
Prosecution of Persons Responsible for the Most Serious
Crimes under International Law Committed in the Syrian Arab
Republic since March 2011 and the Independent International
Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic; and
(iv) to assess the influence of accountability measures on
efforts to reach a negotiated settlement to the Syrian
conflict during the reporting period.
(3) Form.--The report required under paragraph (1) may be
submitted in unclassified or classified form, but shall
include a publicly available annex.
(4) Protection of witnesses and evidence.--The Secretary
shall take due care to ensure that the identification of
witnesses and physical evidence are not publicly disclosed in
a manner that might place such persons at risk of harm or
encourage the destruction of evidence by the Government of
Syria, violent extremist groups, anti-government forces, or
any other combatants or participants in the conflict.
(d) Transitional Justice Study.--Not later than 180 days
after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of
State (acting through appropriate officials and offices,
which may include the Office of Global Criminal Justice),
after consultation with the Department of Justice, the United
States Agency for International Development, and other
appropriate Federal agencies, shall--
(1) complete a study of the feasibility and desirability of
potential transitional justice mechanisms for Syria,
including a hybrid tribunal, to address war crimes, crimes
against humanity, and genocide perpetrated in Syria beginning
in March 2011; and
(2) submit a detailed report of the results of the study
conducted under paragraph (1), including recommendations on
which transitional justice mechanisms the United States
Government should support, why such mechanisms should be
supported, and what type of support should be offered, to--
(A) the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate;
(B) the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of
Representatives;
(C) the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate; and
(D) the Committee on Appropriations of the House of
Representatives.
(e) Technical Assistance Authorized.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of State (acting through
appropriate officials and offices, which may include the
Office of Global Criminal Justice), after consultation with
the Department of Justice and other appropriate Federal
agencies, is authorized to provide appropriate assistance to
support entities that, with respect to war crimes, crimes
against humanity, and genocide perpetrated by the regime of
President Bashar al-Assad, all forces fighting on its behalf,
and all non-state armed groups fighting in the country,
including violent extremist groups in Syria beginning in
March 2011--
(A) identify suspected perpetrators of war crimes, crimes
against humanity, and genocide;
[[Page S3589]]
(B) collect, document, and protect evidence of crimes and
preserve the chain of custody for such evidence;
(C) conduct criminal investigations;
(D) build Syria's investigative and judicial capacities and
support prosecutions in the domestic courts of Syria,
provided that President Bashar al-Assad is no longer in
power;
(E) support investigations by third-party states, as
appropriate; or
(F) protect witnesses that may be helpful to prosecutions
or other transitional justice mechanisms.
(2) Additional assistance.--The Secretary of State, after
consultation with appropriate Federal agencies and the
appropriate congressional committees, and taking into account
the findings of the transitional justice study required under
subsection (e), is authorized to provide assistance to
support the creation and operation of transitional justice
mechanisms, including a potential hybrid tribunal, to
prosecute individuals suspected of committing war crimes,
crimes against humanity, or genocide in Syria beginning in
March 2011.
(3) Briefing.--The Secretary of State shall provide
detailed, biannual briefings to the appropriate congressional
committees describing the assistance provided to entities
described in paragraph (1).
(f) State Department Rewards for Justice Program.--Section
36(b)(10) of the State Department Basic Authorities Act of
1956 (22 U.S.C. 2708(b)(10)) is amended by inserting
``(including war crimes, crimes against humanity, or genocide
committed in Syria beginning in March 2011)'' after
``genocide''.
(g) Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the
Syrian Arab Republic.--The Secretary of State, acting through
the United States Permanent Representative to the United
Nations, should use the voice, vote, and influence of the
United States at the United Nations to advocate that the
United Nations Human Rights Council, while the United States
remains a member, annually extend the mandate of the
Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian
Arab Republic until the Commission has completed its
investigation of all alleged violations of international
human rights laws beginning in March 2011 in the Syrian Arab
Republic.
(h) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Appropriate congressional committees.--The term
``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
(A) the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate;
(B) the Committee on Armed Services of the Senate;
(C) the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of
Representatives; and
(D) the Committee on Armed Services of the House of
Representatives.
(2) Genocide.--The term ``genocide'' means any offense
described in section 1091(a) of title 18, United States Code.
(3) Hybrid tribunal.--The term ``hybrid tribunal'' means a
temporary criminal tribunal that involves a combination of
domestic and international lawyers, judges, and other
professionals to prosecute individuals suspected of
committing war crimes, crimes against humanity, or genocide.
(4) Transitional justice.--The term ``transitional
justice'' means the range of judicial, nonjudicial, formal,
informal, retributive, and restorative measures employed by
countries transitioning out of armed conflict or repressive
regimes--
(A) to redress legacies of atrocities; and
(B) to promote long-term, sustainable peace.
(5) War crime.--The term ``war crime'' has the meaning
given the term in section 2441(c) of title 18, United States
Code.
SEC. 6204. CLARIFICATION OF LIMITATION ON THE TRANSFER OF THE
F-35 TO TURKEY.
The limitation on the transfer of the F-35 to Turkey in
section 1269(c) shall apply to the transfer or delivery of
that aircraft to Turkey rather than to the transfer of title
for that aircraft to Turkey.
SEC. 6205. REPORT ON HONDURAS, GUATEMALA, AND EL SALVADOR.
(a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in
coordination with the Director of National Intelligence,
shall submit to the congressional defense committees, the
Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate, and the
Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives
a report regarding narcotics trafficking corruption and
illicit campaign finance in Honduras, Guatemala, and El
Salvador.
(b) Matters to Be Included.--The report required under
subsection (a) shall include--
(1) the names of senior government officials in Honduras,
Guatemala, and El Salvador who are known to have committed or
facilitated acts of grand corruption or narcotics
trafficking;
(2) the names of elected officials in Honduras, Guatemala,
and El Salvador who are known to have received campaign funds
that are the proceeds of narco-trafficking or other illicit
activities in the last 2 years; and
(3) the names of individuals in Honduras, Guatemala, and El
Salvador who are known to have facilitated the financing of
political campaigns in any of the Northern Triangle countries
with the proceeds of narco-trafficking or other illicit
activities in the last 2 years.
(c) Form.--The report submitted under subsection (a) shall
be submitted in unclassified form, but may include a
classified annex.
SEC. 6206. REPORT ON ARMS EMBARGO ON CYPRUS.
(a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense and the
Secretary of State shall jointly submit to the appropriate
congressional committees a report on the current impact of
the United States arms embargo on the Republic of Cyprus.
(b) Matters to Be Included.--The report required under
subsection (a) shall include the following:
(1) A list of items that have been requested by Cyprus from
the United States, but have been denied under the arms
embargo referred to in such subsection.
(2) An analysis of the impact that lifting the arms embargo
would have on United States interests related to the island
of Cyprus and the Eastern Mediterranean region.
(3) An analysis of how the arms embargo is being complied
with in areas controlled by Cyprus, and in occupied northern
Cyprus, and whether any party has violated the letter or
spirit of the arms embargo.
(4) An analysis of how the arms embargo against Cyprus
impacts the ability of the United States and its partners to
combat threats in the Mediterranean region.
(c) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this
section, the term ``appropriate congressional committees''
means--
(1) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on
Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives; and
(2) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on
Foreign Relations of the Senate.
TITLE LXVI--STRATEGIC PROGRAMS, CYBER, AND INTELLIGENCE MATTERS
SEC. 6601. TECHNICAL CORRECTIONS TO CERTAIN CYBERSPACE
MATTERS.
(a) Scope of Policy of the United States on Cyberspace,
Cybersecurity, Cyber Warfare, and Cyber Deterrence.--The
policy of the United States on cyberspace, cybersecurity,
cyber warfare, and cyber deterrence under section 1621(a)
shall apply to cyber attacks and malicious cyber activities
described in that section by a foreign power rather than to
any cyber attacks and malicious cyber activities described in
that section.
(b) Scope of Authority to Disrupt, Defeat, and Deter Cyber
Attacks of the Russian Federation.--The authority to disrupt,
defeat, and deter cyber attacks of the Russian Federation in
section 1623(a)(1) shall apply to authority to take
appropriate and proportional action described in that section
in foreign cyberspace rather than in any cyberspace.
SEC. 6602. TIER 1 EXERCISE OF SUPPORT TO CIVIL AUTHORITIES
FOR A CYBER INCIDENT.
(a) In General.--The Commander of the United States Cyber
Command, the Commander of United States Northern Command, and
such other commands or components of the Department of
Defense as the Secretary of Defense considers appropriate,
shall, consistent with the recommendations made by the
Comptroller General of the United States in the Government
Accountability Office report GAO-16-574, conduct a tier 1
exercise of support to civil authorities for a cyber
incident.
(b) Elements.--The exercise required by subsection (a)
shall include the following:
(1) Department level leadership and decision-making for
providing cyber support to civil authorities.
(2) Testing of the policy, guidance, doctrine and other
elements in the Department of Defense Cyber Incident
Coordinating Procedure.
(3) Operational planning and execution by the Joint Staff
and supported and supporting combatant commands.
(4) Coordination with, and incorporation of, as
appropriate, the Department of Homeland Security, the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, and elements across Federal and
State governments and the private sector.
SEC. 6603. REPORT ON STRENGTHENING NATO CYBER DEFENSE.
(a) Sense of Senate.--It is the sense of the Senate that
the Department of Defense should continue to cooperate with
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and key
Organization allies in order to promote the common defense in
the cyberspace domain as well as to deter cyberattacks.
(b) Report Required.--
(1) In general.--Not later than March 31, 2019, the
Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a report detailing the Department's
efforts to enhance the United States' leadership and
collaboration with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
with respect to the development of a comprehensive, cross-
domain strategy to build cyber-defense capacity and deter
cyber attacks among Organization member countries.
(2) Contents.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall
address the following:
(A) Improving cyber situational awareness among
Organization member countries.
(B) Implementation of the cyber operational-domain roadmap
of the Organization with respect to doctrine, political
oversight and governance, planning, rules of engagement, and
integration across member countries.
[[Page S3590]]
(C) Planned cooperative efforts to combat information
warfare across Organization member countries.
(D) The development of cyber capabilities, including
cooperative development efforts and technology transfer.
(E) Supporting stronger cyber partnerships with non-
Organization member countries as appropriate.
SEC. 6604. BRIEFING ON CYBER EDUCATION AND TRAINING.
(a) Sense of the Senate.--It is the sense of the Senate
that--
(1) traditional approaches to cyber training focused solely
on tactics, techniques, and procedures that hackers have used
in the past may be inadequate for the challenges facing the
cyber workforce of the Department of Defense because they
fail to focus on future threats;
(2) such workforce encounters an information gap when
conducting training derived from events that have already
occurred rather than training developed for the evolving
nature of cyber threats in real time, and cyber
certifications such as Security + and CISSP are based on
preventing vulnerabilities, exploits, and gaps identified in
the past and lose relevance depending on when the courseware
was updated;
(3) bridging the gap in cyber training between curriculum
that has been built on legacy data versus training built on
current real world cyberattacks is a meaningful area of cyber
training research, curriculum development, and instruction
delivery that should be addressed; and
(4) universities and private industry are, and will
continue to be, critical partners in the education and
training of our future cyber force, and developing
partnerships with such universities and industry will be
crucial in staying informed of the latest best practices in
the cyber domain.
(b) Briefing Required.--Not later than 180 days after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense
shall brief the Committee on Armed Services of the Senate and
the Committee on Armed Services of the House of
Representatives on how the Department of Defense can leverage
and partner with universities and industry on cyber education
and training.
(c) Elements.--The briefing required by subsection (a)
shall include discussion of the following:
(1) Current partnerships and ability to expand and leverage
such partnerships to improve cyber education and training.
(2) Existing curriculum relating to cyber education and
training and recommendations for changes to ensure relevance
of such education and training to future threats.
(3) Joint development of curriculum, courseware, and
research projects.
(4) Joint use of instructors and of facilities.
(5) Recommendations for legislative or administrative
action to improve cyber education and training partnerships.
SEC. 6605. REPORT ON DEVELOPMENT OF LONG-RANGE STAND-OFF
WEAPON.
(a) Report Required.--Not later than 90 days after the date
of the enactment of this Act, and every 180 days thereafter
until December 31, 2024, the Secretary of the Air Force
shall, in coordination with the Administrator for Nuclear
Security, submit to the congressional defense committees a
report describing the joint development of the long-range
stand-off weapon, including the missile developed by the Air
Force and the W80-4 warhead life extension program conducted
by the National Nuclear Security Administration.
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall
include the following:
(1) An estimate of the date on which the long-range stand-
off weapon will reach initial operating capability.
(2) A description of any development milestones for the
missile developed by the Air Force or the warhead developed
by the National Nuclear Security Administration that depend
on corresponding progress at the other agency.
(3) A description of coordination efforts between the Air
Force and the National Nuclear Security Administration during
the 180 days preceding submission of the report.
(4) A description of any schedule delays projected by the
Air Force or the National Nuclear Security Administration and
the anticipated effect such delays would have on the other
agency's schedule of work.
(5) Plans to mitigate the effects of any delays described
in paragraph (4).
(6) A description of any ways, including through the
availability of additional funding or authorities, in which
the development milestones described in paragraph (2) or the
estimated date of initial operating capability referred to in
paragraph (1), could be achieved more quickly.
(c) Form.--The report required by subsection (a) shall be
submitted in unclassified form but may include a classified
annex.
TITLE LXVII--COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN INVESTMENT IN THE UNITED STATES
SEC. 6701. INEFFECTIVENESS OF SECTION 1727.
Section 1727, relating to a prohibition on modification of
civil penalties under export control and sanctions laws,
shall have no force or effect.
SEC. 6702. PROHIBITION ON MODIFICATION OF CIVIL PENALTIES
UNDER EXPORT CONTROL AND SANCTIONS LAWS AND
PROHIBITION ON CERTAIN TELECOMMUNICATIONS
EQUIPMENT.
(a) Prohibition on Modification of Penalties.--
(1) In general.--Notwithstanding any other provision of
law, no Federal official may modify any penalty, including a
penalty imposed pursuant to a denial order, implemented by
the Government of the United States with respect to a Chinese
telecommunications company pursuant to a determination that
the company has violated an export control or sanctions law
of the United States until the date that is 30 days after the
President certifies to the appropriate congressional
committees that the company--
(A) has not, for a period of one year, conducted activities
in violation of the laws of the United States; and
(B) is fully cooperating with investigations into the
activities of the company conducted by the Government of the
United States, if any.
(2) Reinstatement of penalties or suspended order.--
(A) In general.--If, before the date of the enactment of
this Act, any penalty imposed pursuant to the order of the
Acting Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Export Enforcement
entitled ``Order Activating Suspended Denial Order Relating
to Zhongxing Telecommunications Equipment Corporation and ZTE
Kangxun Telecommunications Ltd.'' (83 Fed. Reg. 17644), and
dated April 15, 2018, is reduced or eliminated, or that order
is suspended, on such date of enactment, that penalty shall
be reinstated to the penalty in place before such reduction
or elimination, or that order shall be reinstated, as the
case may be.
(B) Additional modifications.--Any modification to a
penalty imposed pursuant to the order described in
subparagraph (A) on or after the date of the enactment of
this Act shall be subject to the requirements of paragraph
(1).
(b) Prohibition on Use or Procurement.--The head of an
executive agency may not--
(1) procure or obtain or extend or renew a contract to
procure or obtain any equipment, system, or service that uses
covered telecommunications equipment or services as a
substantial or essential component of any system, or as
critical technology as part of any system; or
(2) enter into a contract (or extend or renew a contract)
with an entity that uses any equipment, system, or service
that uses covered telecommunications equipment or services as
a substantial or essential component of any system, or as
critical technology as part of any system.
(c) Prohibition on Loan and Grant Funds.--The head of an
executive agency may not obligate or expend loan or grant
funds to procure or obtain, extend or renew a contract to
procure or obtain, or enter into a contract (or extend or
renew a contract) to procure or obtain the equipment,
services, or systems described in subsection (b).
(d) Effective Dates.--The prohibitions under subsection
(b)(1) and subsection (c) shall take effect 180 days after
the date of the enactment of this Act and the prohibition
under subsection (b)(2) shall take effect three years after
the date of the enactment of this Act.
(e) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in subsection (b) or (c)
shall be construed to--
(1) prohibit the head of an executive agency from procuring
with an entity to provide a service that connects to the
facilities of a third-party, such as backhaul, roaming, or
interconnection arrangements; or
(2) cover telecommunications equipment that cannot route or
redirect user data traffic or permit visibility into any user
data or packets that such equipment transmits or otherwise
handles.
(f) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Appropriate congressional committees.--The term
``appropriate congressional committees' '' means--
(A) the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
and the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate; and
(B) the Committee on Financial Services and the Committee
on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives.
(2) Covered foreign country.--The term ``covered foreign
country'' means the People's Republic of China.
(3) Covered telecommunications equipment or services.--The
term ``covered telecommunications equipment or services''
means any of the following:
(A) Telecommunications equipment produced by Huawei
Technologies Company or ZTE Corporation (or any subsidiary or
affiliate of such entities).
(B) Telecommunications services provided by such entities
or using such equipment.
(C) Telecommunications equipment or services produced or
provided by an entity that the Secretary of Defense, in
consultation with the Director of the National Intelligence
or the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
reasonably believes to be an entity owned or controlled by,
or otherwise connected to, the government of a covered
foreign country.
(4) Executive agency.--The term ``executive agency'' has
the meaning given the term in section 133 of title 41, United
States Code.
(g) Treatment of Provision Relating to Prohibition on
Certain Telecommunications Equipment.--Section 891, relating
to a prohibition on certain telecommunications equipment,
shall have no force or effect.
[[Page S3591]]
TITLE LXXVIII--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION AND GENERAL PROVISIONS
SEC. 6801. CLARIFICATION TO INCLUDE NATIONAL GUARD
INSTALLATIONS IN READINESS AND ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION INTEGRATION PROGRAM.
(a) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
(1) State-owned National Guard installations have always
qualified as military installations under section 2684a of
title 10, United States Code; and
(2) State-owned National Guard installations should
continue to qualify as military installations under section
2684a of that section.
(b) Clarification.--
(1) In general.--Section 2684a(a) of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by inserting ``, as well as a State-
owned National Guard installation,'' after ``military
installation''.
(2) Retroactive effect.--The amendment made by paragraph
(1) shall take effect as of December 2, 2002.
SEC. 6802. RELEASE OF RESTRICTIONS, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA,
SAN DIEGO.
(a) Release.--The Secretary of the Navy may, upon receipt
of full consideration as provided in subsection (b), release
to the Regents of the University of California (in this
section referred to as the ``University of California'') all
remaining right, title, and interest of the United States,
including restrictions on use imposed by deed or otherwise
and reversionary rights, in and to a parcel of real property
consisting of approximately 495 acres that comprises part of
the San Diego campus of the University of California.
(b) Consideration.--
(1) Consideration required.--As consideration for the
release under subsection (a), the University of California
shall provide an amount that is acceptable to the Secretary
of the Navy, whether by cash payment, in-kind consideration
as described under paragraph (2), or a combination thereof,
at such time as the Secretary may require. The consideration
under this paragraph shall be based on an appraisal approved
by the Secretary of the value to the Department of the Navy
of the restrictions released under subsection (a), except
that in determining the value of such restrictions, there
shall be excluded the value of any existing improvements to
the property made by or on behalf of the University of
California and the value of the University of California's
existing rights to the property.
(2) In-kind consideration.--In-kind consideration provided
by the University of California under paragraph (1) may
include goods or services that benefit the Department of the
Navy and may take into consideration the value which has
accrued to the Department of the Navy from the San Diego
campus of the University of California's research, education,
and clinical care activities, as well as the contracts,
grants, and other collaborations between the Department of
the Navy and the San Diego campus of the University of
California.
(3) Treatment of consideration received.--Consideration in
the form of cash payment received by the Secretary under
paragraph (1) shall be deposited in the separate fund in the
Treasury described in section 572(a)(1) of title 40, United
States Code.
(c) Payment of Costs of Release.--
(1) Payment required.--The Secretary of the Navy shall
require the University of California to cover costs to be
incurred by the Secretary, or to reimburse the Secretary for
such costs incurred by the Secretary, to carry out the
release under subsection (a), including survey costs, costs
for environmental documentation related to the release, and
any other administrative costs related to the release. If
amounts are collected from the University of California in
advance of the Secretary incurring the actual costs, and the
amount collected exceeds the costs actually incurred by the
Secretary to carry out the release, the Secretary shall
refund the excess amount to the University of California.
(2) Treatment of amounts received.--Amounts received as
reimbursement under paragraph (1) shall be credited to the
fund or account that was used to cover the costs incurred by
the Secretary in carrying out the release under subsection
(a) or, if the period of availability of obligations for that
appropriation has expired, to the appropriations of a fund
that is currently available to the Secretary for the same
purpose. Amounts so credited shall be merged with amounts in
such fund or account and shall be available for the same
purposes, and subject to the same conditions and limitations,
as amounts in such fund or account.
(d) Description of Property.--The exact acreage and legal
description of the real property that is the subject of the
release under subsection (a) shall be determined by a survey
or other documentation satisfactory to both the Secretary of
the Navy and the University of California.
(e) Reversionary Interest.--The Secretary may amend the
conveyance instrument to establish a period of applicability
of a reversionary interest consistent with conveyances for
educational purposes with the period commencing with the date
of the original conveyance.
(f) Additional Terms and Conditions.--The Secretary of the
Navy may require such additional terms and conditions in
connection with the release under subsection (a) as the
Secretary considers appropriate to protect the interests of
the United States.
SEC. 6803. PLAN TO ALLOW INCREASED PUBLIC ACCESS TO THE
NATIONAL NAVAL AVIATION MUSEUM AND BARRANCAS
NATIONAL CEMETERY, NAVAL AIR STATION PENSACOLA.
Not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment of
this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a plan to allow increased
public access to the National Naval Aviation Museum and
Barrancas National Cemetery at Naval Air Station Pensacola.
TITLE LXXXI--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY PROGRAMS
SEC. 7101. ADDITIONAL AMOUNTS FOR INERTIAL CONFINEMENT FUSION
AND HIGH YIELD PROGRAM.
(a) In General.--Notwithstanding the amounts specified in
the funding table in section 4701, the total amount
authorized to be appropriated to the Department of Energy for
fiscal year 2019 for research, development, test and
evaluation and available for the inertial confinement fusion
and high yield program shall be $518,927,000, to be allocated
as follows:
(1) Ignition, $69,575,000.
(2) Support of other stockpile programs, $22,565,000.
(3) Diagnostics, cryogenics, and experimental support,
$74,194,000.
(4) Pulsed power inertial confinement fusion, $8,310,000.
(5) Joint program in high energy density laboratory
plasmas, $9,492,000.
(6) Facility operations and target production,
$334,791,000.
(b) Offset.--The amount authorized to be appropriated to
the Department of Energy for fiscal year 2019 by section 3102
and available as specified in the funding table in section
4701 for defense environmental cleanup for excess facilities
is hereby reduced by $100,000,000.
TITLE LXXXV--MARITIME ADMINISTRATION
SEC. 7501. INEFFECTIVENESS OF TITLE XXXV.
Title XXXV shall have no force or effect.
SEC. 7502. AUTHORIZATION OF THE MARITIME ADMINISTRATION.
(a) Authorization of Appropriations.--There are authorized
to be appropriated to the Department of Transportation for
fiscal year 2019, to be available without fiscal year
limitation if so provided in appropriations Acts, the
following amounts for programs associated with maintaining
the United States merchant marine:
(1) For expenses necessary for operations of the United
States Merchant Marine Academy, $69,000,000 for Academy
operations.
(2) For expenses necessary to support the State maritime
academies, $32,200,000, of which--
(A) $2,400,000 shall remain available until September 30,
2020, for the Student Incentive Program;
(B) $6,000,000 shall remain available until expended for
direct payments to such academies;
(C) $22,000,000 shall remain available until expended for
maintenance and repair of State maritime academy training
vessels; and
(D) $1,800,000 shall remain available until expended for
training ship fuel assistance.
(3) For expenses necessary to support the National Security
Multi-Mission Vessel Program, $300,000,000, which shall
remain available until expended.
(4) For expenses necessary to support Maritime
Administration operations and programs, $60,442,000, of which
$5,000,000 shall remain available until expended for port
infrastructure development under section 50302 of title 46,
United States Code.
(5) For expenses necessary to dispose of vessels in the
National Defense Reserve Fleet, $6,000,000, which shall
remain available until expended.
(6) For expenses necessary to maintain and preserve a
United States flag merchant marine to serve the national
security needs of the United States under chapter 531 of
title 46, United States Code, $300,000,000.
(7) For expenses necessary for the loan guarantee program
authorized under chapter 537 of title 46, United States Code,
$33,000,000, of which--
(A) $30,000,000 may be used for the cost (as defined in
section 502(5) of the Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990 (2
U.S.C. 661a(5))) of loan guarantees under the program; and
(B) $3,000,000 may be used for administrative expenses
relating to loan guarantee commitments under the program.
(b) Capital Asset Management Program Report.--Not later
than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act,
the Maritime Administrator shall submit to the Committee on
Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate and the
Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on
Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of
Representatives a report on the status of unexpended
appropriations for capital asset management at the United
States Merchant Marine Academy, and the plan for expending
such appropriations.
SEC. 7503. CONCURRENT JURISDICTION.
Notwithstanding any other law, the Secretary of
Transportation may relinquish, at the Secretary's discretion,
to the State of New York, such measure of legislative
jurisdiction over the lands constituting the United States
Merchant Marine Academy in King's Point, New York, as is
necessary to establish concurrent jurisdiction between the
Federal Government and the State of New York. Such partial
relinquishment of legislative jurisdiction shall be
accomplished--
[[Page S3592]]
(1) by filing with the Governor of New York a notice of
relinquishment to take effect upon acceptance thereof; or
(2) as the laws of that State may provide.
SEC. 7504. UNITED STATES MERCHANT MARINE ACADEMY POLICY ON
SEXUAL HARASSMENT, DATING VIOLENCE, DOMESTIC
VIOLENCE, SEXUAL ASSAULT, AND STALKING.
(a) Policy on Sexual Harassment, Dating Violence, Domestic
Violence, Sexual Assault, and Stalking.--Section 51318 of
title 46, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (a)(2)--
(A) in subparagraph (A), by inserting ``and prevention''
after ``awareness'';
(B) by redesignating subparagraph (B) as subparagraph (C),
and subparagraphs (C) through (F) as subparagraphs (E)
through (H), respectively;
(C) by inserting after subparagraph (A) the following:
``(B) procedures for documenting, tracking, and maintaining
the data required to conduct the annual assessments to
determine the effectiveness of the policies, procedures, and
training program of the Academy with respect to sexual
harassment, dating violence, domestic violence, sexual
assault, and stalking involving cadets or other Academy
personnel, as required by subsection (c);''; and
(D) by inserting after subparagraph (C), as redesignated by
subparagraph (B), the following:
``(D) procedures for investigating sexual harassment,
dating violence, domestic violence, sexual assault, or
stalking involving a cadet or other Academy personnel to
determine whether disciplinary action is necessary;'';
(2) in subsection (b)(2)(A), by inserting ``and other
Academy personnel'' after ``cadets at the Academy''; and
(3) in subsection (d)--
(A) in paragraph (2)(A) by inserting ``, including sexual
harassment,'' after ``sexual assaults, rapes, and other
sexual offenses''; and
(B) in paragraph (4)(B), by striking ``The Secretary'' and
inserting ``Not later than January 15 of each year, the
Secretary''.
(b) Implementation.--The Superintendent of the United
States Merchant Marine Academy may implement the amendment to
subsection (b)(2)(A) of section 51318 of title 46, United
States Code, made by subsection (a)(2), by updating an
existing plan issued pursuant to the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91).
SEC. 7505. REPORT ON IMPLEMENTATION OF RECOMMENDATIONS FOR
THE UNITED STATES MERCHANT MARINE ACADEMY
SEXUAL ASSAULT PREVENTION AND RESPONSE PROGRAM.
Not later than April 1, 2019, the Maritime Administrator
shall submit to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and
Transportation of the Senate and the Committee on Armed
Services and the Committee on Transportation and
Infrastructure of the House of Representatives a report
describing the progress of the Maritime Administration in
implementing and closing each of the recommendations made in
the Office of Inspector General's Report issued March 28,
2018 (ST-2018-039) identifying gaps in the United States
Merchant Marine Academy's Sexual Assault Prevention and
Response Program.
SEC. 7506. REPORT ON THE APPLICATION OF THE UNIFORM CODE OF
MILITARY JUSTICE TO THE UNITED STATES MERCHANT
MARINE ACADEMY.
(a) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Maritime Administrator shall
submit a report to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and
Transportation of the Senate and the Committee on Armed
Services and the Committee on Transportation and
Infrastructure of the House of Representatives on the
impediments to the application of the Uniform Code of
Military Justice at the United States Merchant Marine
Academy.
(b) Consultation.--The Maritime Administrator may, in
preparing the report under subsection (a), consult with the
Department of Defense, other Federal agencies, and non-
Federal entities, as appropriate.
SEC. 7507. ELECTRONIC RECORDS ON MARINER AVAILABILITY TO MEET
NATIONAL SECURITY NEEDS.
Section 7502 of title 46, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (d); and
(2) by inserting after subsection (b) the following:
``(c) The Secretary shall coordinate with the Secretary of
Transportation to ensure that, to the extent feasible,
electronic records provide information on mariner
availability and respective credentials to meet national
security needs for credentialed mariners crewing strategic
sealift vessels.''.
SEC. 7508. SMALL SHIPYARD GRANTS.
Section 54101(b) of title 46, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraphs (2) and (3) as paragraphs
(3) and (4), respectively;
(2) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following:
``(2) Timing of grant notice.--The Administrator shall post
a Notice of Funding Opportunity regarding grants awarded
under this section not more than 15 days after the date of
enactment of the appropriations Act for the fiscal year
concerned.''; and
(3) in paragraph (4), as redesignated by paragraph (1), by
striking ``paragraph (2)'' and inserting ``paragraph (3)''.
SEC. 7509. DOMESTIC SHIP RECYCLING FACILITIES.
Section 3502 of the Floyd D. Spence National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2001 (Public Law 106-398;
54 U.S.C. 308704 note) is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (c) through (f) as
subsections (d) through (g), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after subsection (b) the following:
``(c) Scrapping of Imported Vessels.--
``(1) In general.--Notwithstanding any other provision of
law, domestic ship scrapping facilities selected by the
Secretary of Transportation in accordance with subsection (b)
may import into the United States, for the purpose of
dismantling, marine vessels that contain regulated levels of
polychlorinated biphenyls that are integral to a vessel's
structure, equipment, or systems necessary for its operation.
``(2) No tsca prior authorization required.--In lieu of
rulemaking by the Administrator of the Environmental
Protection Agency under section 6(e) of the Toxic Substances
Control Act (15 U.S.C. 2605(e)), imports of vessels
containing regulated levels of polychlorinated biphenyls
shall be subject to prior notification and consent in
accordance with this subsection.
``(3) Notification.--
``(A) Contents.--An importer of 1 or more vessels
containing regulated levels of polychlorinated biphenyls
shall submit a notification to the Environmental Protection
Agency not less than 75 days before a vessel is imported into
the United States under this subsection. The import
notification may cover up to one year of shipments of vessels
containing regulated levels of polychlorinated biphenyls
being sent to the same ship scrapping facility, and shall
contain, at a minimum, the following items:
``(i) The name, contact name, address, telephone number,
email address, and EPA Identification Number (if applicable)
of the ship scrapping facility and the recognized trader, if
the ship scrapping facility is not the importer.
``(ii) The name, contact name, address, telephone number,
email address, and EPA Identification Number (if applicable)
of each facility where polychlorinated biphenyls or hazardous
materials contained on a vessel will be stored and disposed
of, including any polychlorinated biphenyls storage or
disposal facility approved under the Toxic Substances Control
Act (15 U.S.C. 2601 et seq.).
``(iii) The types of polychlorinated biphenyls or
polychlorinated biphenyls items expected to be removed from
the vessels.
``(iv) The number of vessels proposed for import and
maximum tonnage.
``(v) The period of time covered by the import notice (not
to exceed one year) and the start and end dates of shipment.
``(B) Form.--Each notice under this paragraph shall be
clearly marked `PCB Waste Import Notice' and shall be
submitted to the Environmental Protection Agency in such form
and manner as the Environmental Protection Agency may
require.
``(C) Revised notification.--If an importer wishes to
change any of the information specified on the original
notification, the importer must submit a revised
notification, containing notification of the changes, to the
Environmental Protection Agency.
``(4) Consent.--
``(A) In general.--An importer shall not import vessels
containing regulated levels of polychlorinated biphenyls
until the importer has received consent from the
Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency.
``(B) Terms.--Importers shall only import vessels under the
terms of the consent issued by the Administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency under this paragraph and
subject to the condition that the facility shall establish a
valid written contract, chain of contracts, or equivalent
arrangements with other United States facilities, where
applicable, to manage the polychlorinated biphenyls and
hazardous waste expected to be removed from the vessel or
vessels.
``(5) Report to the environmental protection agency.--Any
ship scrapping facility authorized by this subsection to
import vessels containing regulated levels of polychlorinated
biphenyls shall file with the Administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency, not later than April 1 of
each year, a report providing, for each vessel imported in
accordance with this subsection, the following information:
``(A) The vessel name and approximated tonnage.
``(B) Registration number and flag of the vessel.
``(C) The date of import.
``(D) The types, quantities, and final destination of all
polychlorinated biphenyls and hazardous waste removed.
``(E) The EPA-issued consent number under which the vessel
was imported.
``(6) Applicable laws.--Once a vessel has been imported
pursuant to this subsection, the manufacturing, processing,
distribution in commerce, use, and disposal of any
polychlorinated biphenyls and hazardous waste contained on
the vessel shall be carried out in accordance with applicable
Federal, State, and local laws and regulations.
``(7) Authority.--The Administrator of the Environmental
Protection Agency may promulgate additional standards or
procedures for the import of ships that contain regulated
levels of polychlorinated biphenyls and
[[Page S3593]]
hazardous waste, for the purpose of recycling, under this
subsection, if--
``(A) the benefits of such additional standards or
procedures exceed the costs of those standards or procedures;
``(B) not later than 180 days prior to promulgating such
additional standards or procedures, the Administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency submits a report to the
Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the
Senate and the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure
of the House of Representatives demonstrating compliance with
subparagraph (A) and the reasons such standards or procedures
are necessary; and
``(C) the Administrator of the Environmental Protection
Agency receives the concurrence of the Maritime Administrator
on any such additional standards or procedures.''.
SEC. 7510. SEA YEAR ON CONTRACTED VESSELS.
Section 51307 of title 46, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking ``The Secretary'' and inserting the
following:
``(a) In General.--The Secretary'';
(2) in paragraph (1) of subsection (a), by striking ``owned
or subsidized by'' and inserting ``owned, subsidized by, or
contracted with''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following:
``(b) Maritime Security Program Vessels.--The Secretary
shall require an operator of a vessel participating in the
Maritime Security Program under chapter 531 of this title to
carry on each Maritime Security Program vessel 2 United
States Merchant Marine Academy cadets, if available, on each
voyage.
``(c) Military Sealift Command Vessels.--
``(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), the
Commander of the Military Sealift Command shall require an
operator of a vessel in the United States Navy's Military
Sealift Command to carry on each such vessel 2 United States
Merchant Marine Academy cadets, if available, on each voyage,
if the vessel--
``(A) is flagged in the United States; and
``(B) is rated at 10,000 gross tons or higher.
``(2) Waiver.--The Commander of the Military Sealift
Command may waive the requirement under paragraph (1) at any
time if the Commander determines that carrying a cadet from
the United States Merchant Marine Academy would place an
undue burden on the vessel or the operator of the vessel.
``(d) Definition of Operator.--In this section, the term
`operator' includes a government operator and a non-
government operator.
``(e) Savings Clause.--Nothing in this section may be
construed as affecting--
``(1) the discretion of the Secretary to determine whether
to place a United States Merchant Marine Academy cadet on a
vessel;
``(2) the authority of the Coast Guard regarding a vessel
security plan approved under section 70103; or
``(3) the discretion of the master of the vessel to ensure
the safety of all crew members.''.
SEC. 7511. GAO REPORT ON NATIONAL MARITIME STRATEGY.
The Comptroller General of the United States shall complete
a study and submit to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and
Transportation of the Senate, the Committee on Armed Services
of the House of Representatives, and the Committee on
Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of
Representatives, a report on--
(1) the key challenges, if any, to ensuring that the United
States marine transportation system and merchant marine are
sufficient to support United States economic and defense
needs, as articulated by the Maritime Administration, the
Committee on the Marine Transportation System, and other
stakeholders;
(2) the extent to which a national maritime strategy
incorporates desirable characteristics of successful national
strategies as identified by the Comptroller General, and any
key obstacles (as identified by stakeholders) to successfully
implementing such strategies; and
(3) the extent to which Federal efforts to establish
national maritime strategy are duplicative or fragmented, and
if so, the impact on United States maritime policy for the
future.
SEC. 7512. DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION INSPECTOR GENERAL
REPORT ON TITLE XI PROGRAM.
Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this
Act, the Department of Transportation Office of Inspector
General shall--
(1) initiate an audit of the financial controls and
protections included in the policies and procedures of the
Department of Transportation for approving loan applications
for the loan guarantee program authorized under chapter 537
of title 46, United States Code; and
(2) submit to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and
Transportation of the Senate and the Committee on Armed
Services and the Committee on Transportation and
Infrastructure of the House of Representatives a report
containing the results of that audit once the audit is
completed.
SEC. 7513. MULTI-YEAR CONTRACTS.
Nothing in section 3505 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328)
may be construed to prohibit the Maritime Administration from
entering into a multi-year contract for the procurement of up
to 5 new vessels within the National Security Multi-Mission
Vessel Program and associated government-furnished equipment,
subject to the availability of appropriations.
SEC. 7514. USE OF STATE MARITIME ACADEMY TRAINING VESSELS.
Section 51504(g) of title 46, United States Code, is
amended to read as follows:
``(g) Vessel Capacity Sharing.--
``(1) In general.--Not later than 90 days after the date of
enactment of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2019, the Secretary, acting through the Maritime
Administrator, shall upon consultation with the maritime
academies, and to the extent feasible with the consent of the
maritime academies, implement a program of training vessel
capacity sharing, requiring maritime academies to share
training vessel capacity provided by the Secretary among
maritime academies, as necessary to ensure that training
needs of each academy are met.
``(2) Program of vessel capacity sharing.--For purposes of
this subsection, a program of vessel capacity sharing shall
include--
``(A) ways to maximize the available underway training
capacity available in the fleet of training vessels;
``(B) coordinating the dates and duration of training
cruises with the academic calendars of maritime academies;
``(C) coordinating academic programs designed to be
implemented aboard training vessels among maritime academies;
and
``(D) identifying ways to minimize costs.
``(3) Evaluation.--Not later than 30 days after the
beginning of each fiscal year, the Secretary, acting through
the Maritime Administrator, shall evaluate the vessel
capacity sharing program under this subsection to determine
the optimal utilization of State maritime training vessels,
and modify the program as necessary to improve
utilization.''.
SEC. 7515. PERMANENT AUTHORITY OF SECRETARY OF TRANSPORTATION
TO ISSUE VESSEL WAR RISK INSURANCE.
(a) In General.--Section 53912 of title 46, United States
Code, is repealed.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 539 of title 46, United States Code, is
amended by striking the item relating to section 53912.
SEC. 7516. NAVIGATION SYSTEM STUDY AND REPORT.
(a) Study of the Great Lakes System.--
(1) In general.--The Comptroller General of the United
States shall conduct a comprehensive study of the Great Lakes
- Saint Lawrence Seaway navigation system (referred to in
this section as the ``Great Lakes System'') that examines the
current state of the system and makes recommendations for
improvements.
(2) Contents.--The study--
(A) shall examine, with respect to the Great Lakes System--
(i) typical cargo routing options;
(ii) the cost profile of each route and alternative routes;
(iii) port infrastructure quality;
(iv) intermodal connections;
(v) competing transportation options, including air, rail,
and ground transportation and their relative market position;
(vi) taxes and fees imposed on vessels;
(vii) marketing efforts to increase shipments;
(viii) subsidies provided to the Great Lakes System and to
competing cargo transportation systems;
(ix) the condition of the docks at each port;
(x) United States and Canadian Government icebreaking
capabilities to facilitate commercial shipping;
(xi) the maritime safety and marine casualty statistics for
commercial vessels transiting the Great Lakes System; and
(xii) the condition of vessel navigation infrastructure
(such as channels, locks, jetties, and breakwaters) and
efforts to maintain, upgrade, or replace that infrastructure;
and
(B) shall make recommendations on--
(i) the level of additional investment needed to improve
the Great Lakes System;
(ii) any benefits of increased Federal or State investment
in the Great Lakes System; and
(iii) any regulatory or competitive burdens impeding growth
of the Great Lakes System.
(b) Report.--Not later than 1 year after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Comptroller General shall submit
to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of
the Senate, the Committee on Transportation and
Infrastructure of the House of Representatives, and the Co-
Chairs of the Great Lakes Task Force of the Senate and of the
House of Representatives a report containing the results of
the study conducted under this section.
SEC. 7517. MISCELLANEOUS.
(a) Noncommercial Vessels.--Section 3514(a) of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law
114-328; 46 U.S.C. 51318 note) is amended--
(1) by striking ``Not later than'' and inserting the
following:
``(1) In general.--Not later than''; and
(2) by redesignating paragraphs (1) and (2) as
subparagraphs (A) and (B), respectively, and adjusting the
margins accordingly; and
(3) by adding at the end the following:
``(2) Noncommercial vessels.--For the purposes of this
section, vessels operated by any of the following entities
shall not be considered commercial vessels:
[[Page S3594]]
``(A) Any entity or agency of the United States.
``(B) The government of a State or territory.
``(C) Any political subdivision of a State or territory.
``(D) Any other municipal organization.''.
(b) Passenger Records.--Section 51322(c) of title 46,
United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
``(c) Maintenance of Sexual Assault Training Records.--The
Maritime Administrator shall require the owner or operator of
a commercial vessel, or the seafarer union for a commercial
vessel, to maintain records of sexual assault training for
any person required to have such training.''.
(c) National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.--
Section 3134 of title 40, United States Code, is amended by
adding at the end the following:
``(c) National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.--The
Secretary of Commerce may waive this subchapter with respect
to contracts for the construction, alteration, or repair of
vessels, regardless of the terms of the contracts as to
payment or title, when the contract is made under the Act
entitled `An Act to define the functions and duties of the
Coast and Geodetic Survey, and for other purposes', approved
August 6, 1947 (33 U.S.C. 883a et seq.).''.
(d) Annual Payments for Maintenance and Support.--Section
51505(b)(2) of title 46 is amended to read as follows:
``(2) Maximum.--The amount under paragraph (1) may not be
more than $25,000, unless the academy satisfies section
51506(b) of this title.''.
SEC. 10__. SUPERIOR NATIONAL FOREST LAND EXCHANGE.
(a) Purpose and Need for NorthMet Land Exchange.--
(1) Purpose.--It is the purpose of this section to further
the public interest by consummating the NorthMet Land
Exchange as specifically set forth in this section.
(2) Need.--According to the Final Record of Decision, the
NorthMet Land Exchange is advisable and needed because the
NorthMet Land Exchange will--
(A) result in a 40-acre net gain in National Forest System
lands;
(B) improve the spatial arrangement of National Forest
System lands by reducing the amount of ownership boundaries
to be managed by 33 miles;
(C) improve management effectiveness by exchanging isolated
Federal lands with no public overland access for non-Federal
lands that will have public overland access and be accessible
and open to public use and enjoyment;
(D) result in Federal cost savings by eliminating certain
easements and their associated administration costs;
(E) meet several of the priorities identified in the land
and resource management plan for Superior National Forest to
protect and manage administratively or congressionally
designated, unique, proposed, or recommended areas, including
acquisition of 307 acres of land to the administratively
proposed candidate Research Natural Areas, which are managed
by preserving and maintaining areas for ecological research,
observation, genetic conservation, monitoring, and
educational activities;
(F) promote more effective land management that would meet
specific National Forest needs for management, including
acquisition of over 6,500 acres of land for new public
access, watershed protection, ecologically rare habitats,
wetlands, water frontage, and improved ownership patterns;
(G) convey Federal land generally not needed for other
Forest resource management objectives, because such land is
adjacent to intensively developed private land including
ferrous mining areas, where abundant mining infrastructure
and transportation are already in place, including--
(i) a large, intensively developed open pit mine lying
directly to the north of the Federal land;
(ii) a private mine railroad, powerlines, and roads lying
directly to the south of the Federal land; and
(iii) already existing ore processing, milling, and
tailings facilities located approximately 5 miles to the west
of the Federal land; and
(H) provide a practical resolution to complex issues
pertaining to the development of private mineral rights
underlying the Federal land surface, and thereby avoid
potential litigation which could adversely impact the status
and management of the Federal land and other National Forest
System land acquired under the authority of section 6 of the
Act of March 1, 1911 (commonly known as the Weeks Law; 16
U.S.C. 515).
(b) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Collection agreements.--The term ``Collection
Agreements'' means the following agreements between the
Secretary and Poly Met pertaining to the NorthMet Land
Exchange:
(A) The agreement dated August 25, 2015.
(B) The agreement dated January 15, 2016.
(2) Federal land parcel.--The term ``Federal land parcel''
means all right, title, and interest of the United States in
and to approximately 6,650 acres of National Forest System
land, as identified in the Final Record of Decision, within
the Superior National Forest in St. Louis County, Minnesota,
as generally depicted on the map entitled ``Federal Land
Parcel-NorthMet Land Exchange'', and dated June 2017.
(3) Non-federal land.--The term ``non-Federal land'' means
all right, title, and interest of Poly Met in and to
approximately 6,690 acres of land in four separate tracts
(comprising 10 separate land parcels in total) within the
Superior National Forest to be conveyed to the United States
by Poly Met in the land exchange as generally depicted on an
overview map entitled ``Non-Federal Land Parcels-NorthMet
Land Exchange'' and dated June 2017, and further depicted on
separate tract maps as follows:
(A) Tract 1.--Approximately 4,650 acres of land in St.
Louis County, Minnesota, generally depicted on the map
entitled ``Non-Federal Land Parcels-NorthMet Land Exchange-
Hay Lake Tract'', and dated June 2017.
(B) Tract 2.--Approximately 320 acres of land in 4 separate
parcels in Lake County, Minnesota, generally depicted on the
map entitled ``Non-Federal Land Parcels-NorthMet Land
Exchange-Lake County Lands'', and dated June 2017.
(C) Tract 3.--Approximately 1,560 acres of land in 4
separate parcels in Lake County, Minnesota, generally
depicted on the map entitled ``Non-Federal Land Parcels-
NorthMet Land Exchange-Wolf Lands'', and dated June 2017.
(D) Tract 4.--Approximately 160 acres of land in St. Louis
County, Minnesota, generally depicted on the map entitled
``Non-Federal Land Parcel-NorthMet Land Exchange-Hunting Club
Lands'', dated June 2017.
(4) Northmet land exchange.--The term ``NorthMet Land
Exchange'' means the land exchange specifically authorized
and directed by subsection (c).
(5) Poly met.--The term ``Poly Met'' means Poly Met Mining
Corporation, Inc., a Minnesota Corporation with executive
offices in St. Paul, Minnesota, and headquarters in Hoyt
Lakes, Minnesota.
(6) Record of decision.--The term ``Record of Decision''
means the Final Record of Decision of the Forest Service
issued on January 9, 2017, approving the NorthMet Land
exchange between the United States and PolyMet Mining, Inc.,
a Minnesota Corporation, involving National Forest System
land in the Superior National Forest in Minnesota.
(7) Secretary.--The term ``Secretary'' means the Secretary
of Agriculture.
(8) State.--The term ``State'' means the State of
Minnesota.
(c) NorthMet Land Exchange.--
(1) Exchange authorized and directed.--
(A) In general.--Subject to subsection (d)(3)(A) and other
conditions imposed by this section, if Poly Met offers to
convey to the United States all right, title, and interest of
Poly Met in and to the non-Federal land, the Secretary shall
accept the offer and convey to Poly Met all right, title, and
interest of the United States in and to the Federal land
parcel.
(B) Land exchange expedited.--Subject to the conditions
imposed by this section, the NorthMet Land Exchange directed
by this section shall be consummated not later than 90 days
after the date of enactment of this Act.
(2) Form of conveyance.--
(A) Non-federal land.--Title to the non-Federal land
conveyed by Poly Met to the United States shall be by general
warranty deed subject to existing rights of record, and
otherwise conform to the title approval regulations of the
Attorney General of the United States.
(B) Federal land parcel.--The Federal land parcel shall be
quitclaimed by the Secretary to Poly Met by an exchange deed.
(3) Exchange costs.--
(A) Reimbursement required.--Poly Met shall pay or
reimburse the Secretary, either directly or through the
Collection Agreements, for all land survey, appraisal, land
title, deed preparation, and other costs incurred by the
Secretary in processing and consummating the NorthMet Land
Exchange. The Collection Agreements, as in effect on the date
of the enactment of this Act, may be modified through the
mutual consent of the parties.
(B) Deposit of funds.--All funds paid or reimbursed to the
Secretary under subparagraph (A)--
(i) shall be deposited and credited to the accounts in
accordance with the Collection Agreements;
(ii) shall be used for the purposes specified for the
accounts; and
(iii) shall remain available to the Secretary until
expended without further appropriation.
(4) Conditions on land exchange.--
(A) Reservation of certain mineral rights.--Notwithstanding
paragraph (1), the United States shall reserve the mineral
rights on approximately 181 acres of the Federal land parcel
as generally identified on the map entitled ``Federal Land
Parcel-NorthMet Land Exchange'', and dated June 2017.
(B) Third-party authorizations.--As set forth in the Final
Record of Decision, Poly Met shall honor existing road and
transmission line authorizations on the Federal land parcel.
Upon relinquishment of the authorizations by the holders or
upon revocation of the authorizations by the Forest Service,
Poly Met shall offer replacement authorizations to the
holders on at least equivalent terms.
(d) Valuation of NorthMet Land Exchange.--
(1) Appraisals.--The Congress makes the following new
findings:
[[Page S3595]]
(A) Appraisals of the Federal and non-Federal lands to be
exchanged in the NorthMet Land Exchange were formally
prepared in accordance with the Uniform Appraisal Standards
for Federal Land Acquisitions, and were approved by the
Secretary in conjunction with preparation of the November
2015 Draft Record of Decision on the NorthMet Land Exchange.
(B) The appraisals referred to in subparagraph (A)
determined that the value of the non-Federal lands exceeded
the value of the Federal land parcel by approximately
$425,000.
(C) Based on the appraisals referred to in subparagraph
(A), the United States would ordinarily be required to make a
$425,000 cash equalization payment to Poly Met to equalize
exchange values under the Federal Land Policy and Management
Act of 1976 (43 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.), unless such an
equalization payment is waived by Poly Met.
(2) Values for consummation of land exchange.--The
appraised values of the Federal and non-Federal land
determined and approved by the Secretary in November 2015,
and referenced in paragraph (1)--
(A) shall be the values utilized to consummate the NorthMet
Land Exchange; and
(B) shall not be subject to reappraisal.
(3) Waiver of equalization payment.--
(A) Condition on land exchange.--Notwithstanding section
206(b) of the Federal Land Policy and Management Act (43
U.S.C. 1716(b)), and as part of its offer to exchange the
non-Federal lands as provided in subsection (c)(1)(A), Poly
Met shall waive any payment to it of any monies owed by the
United States to equalize land values.
(B) Treatment of waiver.--A waiver of the equalization
payment under subparagraph (A) shall be considered as a
voluntary donation to the United States by Poly Met for all
purposes of law.
(e) Maps and Legal Descriptions.--
(1) Minor adjustments.--By mutual agreement, the Secretary
and Poly Met may correct minor or typographical errors in any
map, acreage estimate, or description of the Federal land
parcel or non-Federal land to be exchanged in the NorthMet
Land Exchange.
(2) Conflict.--If there is a conflict between a map, an
acreage estimate, or a description of land under this
section, the map shall control unless the Secretary and Poly
Met mutually agree otherwise.
(3) Exchange maps.--The maps referred to in subsection (b)
depicting the Federal and non-Federal lands to be exchanged
in the NorthMet Land Exchange, and dated June 2017, depict
the identical lands identified in the Final Record of
Decision, which are on file in the Office of the Supervisor,
Superior National Forest.
(f) Post-exchange Land Management.--
(1) Non-federal land.--Upon conveyance of the non-Federal
land to the United States in the NorthMet Land Exchange, the
non-Federal land shall become part of the Superior National
Forest and be managed in accordance with--
(A) the Act of March 1, 1911 (commonly known as the Weeks
Law; 16 U.S.C. 500 et seq.); and
(B) the laws and regulations applicable to the Superior
National Forest and the National Forest System.
(2) Planning.--Upon acquisition by the United States in the
NorthMet Land Exchange, the non-Federal lands shall be
managed in a manner consistent with the land and resource
management plan applicable to adjacent federally owned lands
in the Superior National Forest. An amendment or supplement
to the land and resource management plan shall not be
required solely because of the acquisition of the non-Federal
lands.
(3) Federal land.--Upon conveyance of the Federal land
parcel to Poly Met in the NorthMet Land Exchange, the Federal
land parcel shall become private land and available for any
lawful use in accordance with applicable Federal, State, and
local laws and regulations pertaining to mining and other
uses of land in private ownership.
(g) Miscellaneous Provisions.--
(1) Withdrawal of acquired non-federal land.--The non-
Federal lands acquired by the United States in the NorthMet
Land Exchange shall be withdrawn, without further action by
the Secretary, from appropriation and disposal under public
land laws and under laws relating to mineral and geothermal
leasing.
(2) Withdrawal revocation.--Any public land order that
withdraws the Federal land parcel from appropriation or
disposal under a public land law shall be revoked without
further action by the Secretary to the extent necessary to
permit conveyance of the Federal land parcel to Poly Met.
(3) Withdrawal of federal land pending conveyance.--The
Federal land parcel to be conveyed to Poly Met in the
NorthMet Land Exchange, if not already withdrawn or
segregated from appropriation or disposal under the mineral
leasing and geothermal or other public land laws upon
enactment of this Act, is hereby so withdrawn, subject to
valid existing rights, until the date of conveyance of the
Federal land parcel to Poly Met.
(4) Act controls.--In the event any provision of the Record
of Decision conflicts with a provision of this section, the
provision of this section shall control.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority leader.
Amendment No. 2700 to Amendment No. 2282, as Modified
(Purpose: To require congressional review of certain
regulations issued by the Committee on Foreign Investment in
the United States.)
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I call up amendment No. 2700 on behalf
of Senator Toomey.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
The senior assistant legislative clerk read as follows:
The Senator from Kentucky [Mr. McConnell], for Mr. Toomey,
proposes an amendment numbered 2700 to amendment No. 2282, as
modified.
Mr. McCONNELL. I ask unanimous consent that the reading of the
amendment be dispensed with.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
(The amendment is printed in today's Record under ``Text of
Amendments.'')
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Rhode Island.
Amendment No. 2756 to Amendment No. 2700
Mr. REED. I call up amendment No. 2756 to amendment No. 2700.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
The senior assistant legislative clerk read as follows:
The Senator from Rhode Island [Mr. Reed] proposes an
amendment numbered 2756 to amendment No. 2700.
Mr. REED. I ask unanimous consent that the reading of the amendment
be dispensed with.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
The amendment is as follows:
(Purpose: To require the authorization of appropriation of amounts for
the development of new or modified nuclear weapons.)
At the end, add the following:
Sec. __ Authorization by Congress.--Section 4209(a)(1) of
the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2529(a)(1)) is
amended--
(1) by striking ``the Secretary shall'' and inserting the
following: ``the Secretary--
``(A) shall''; and
(2) by striking the period at the end and inserting ``;
and''; and
``(B) may carry out such activities only if amounts are
authorized to be appropriated for such activities by an Act
of Congress consistent with section 660 of the Department of
Energy Organization Act (50 U.S.C. 7270).''.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Utah.
Amendment No. 2366
Mr. LEE. Mr. President, I call up amendment No. 2366 to the
underlying bill.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
The senior assistant legislative clerk read as follows:
The Senator from Utah [Mr. Lee] proposes an amendment
numbered 2366 to the language proposed to be stricken by
amendment No. 2282, as modified.
Mr. LEE. I ask unanimous consent that the reading of the amendment be
dispensed with.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
The amendment is as follows:
(Purpose: To clarify that an authorization to use military force, a
declaration of war, or any similar authority does not authorize the
detention without charge or trial of a citizen or lawful permanent
resident of the United States.)
At the appropriate place, insert the following:
SEC. __. PROHIBITION ON THE INDEFINITE DETENTION OF CITIZENS
AND LAWFUL PERMANENT RESIDENTS.
(a) In General.--Section 4001(a) of title 18, United States
Code, is amended to read as follows:
``(a) No citizen or lawful permanent resident of the United
States may be imprisoned or otherwise detained by the United
States unless such imprisonment or detention is consistent
with the Constitution and is carried out pursuant to an Act
of Congress that expressly authorizes such imprisonment or
detention.''.
(b) Relationship to an Authorization To Use Military Force,
Declaration of War, or Similar Authority.--Section 4001 of
title 18, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (b) as subsection (c); and
(2) by inserting after subsection (a) the following:
``(b)(1) A general authorization to use military force, a
declaration of war, or any similar authority, on its own, may
not be construed to authorize the imprisonment or detention
without charge or trial of a citizen or lawful permanent
resident of the United States apprehended in the United
States.
``(2) Paragraph (1) shall apply to an authorization to use
military force, a declaration of war, or any similar
authority enacted before, on, or after the date of the
enactment of this subsection.
``(3) This section may not be construed to authorize the
imprisonment or detention of a citizen of the United States,
a lawful permanent resident of the United States, or any
other person who is apprehended in the United States.''.
[[Page S3596]]
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oklahoma.
Mr. INHOFE. Mr. President, for the information of all Senators, we
have just worked out a managers' package with Ranking Member Reed and
the majority and minority leaders that includes the text of 44
bipartisan amendments in the modified substitute amendment.
Those 44 bipartisan amendments are as follows: Rounds No. 2273;
Rounds No. 2275; Inhofe No. 2278; Reed No. 2283; Warner No. 2285;
Fischer No. 2286; Shaheen No. 2291; Feinstein No. 2293; Peters No.
2313; Gillibrand No. 2335, as modified; Heitkamp No. 2338; Smith No.
2340; Cardin No. 2347; Wicker No. 2351; Inhofe No. 2353; Menendez No.
2360; Cortez Masto No. 2367; Hoeven No. 2368; Perdue No. 2380; Heller
No. 2392; Inhofe No. 2402; Sullivan No. 2408; Nelson No. 2424; Van
Hollen No. 2426; Inhofe No. 2429; Gardner No. 2430; Collins No. 2436;
Young No. 2463; Cruz No. 2469; Nelson No. 2489; Wicker No. 2503;
Manchin No. 2508; Roberts No. 2513; Cotton No. 2514; Udall No. 2527;
Stabenow No. 2537; Donnelly No. 2542; Lankford No. 2553; Fischer No.
2554; Cardin No. 2562; Rubio No. 2564; Reed No. 2636; Schumer No. 2757;
Menendez No. 2683; and Smith No. 2523.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Tennessee.
____________________