Senate Armed Services Committee
Shelton: "Projected procurement in Fiscal
Year 2000 and beyond ... remains at $60 billion per year
across the five-year defense plan. ... I do not have the
specific dollar figure today, ... but one
thing I think is obvious, and that is that $60 billion
will not be enough to get the job done, given our current
strategy and force structure."
Shelton: "There is no doubt in my mind
that they can meet that challenge to fight the two
Major Theater Wars in close succession. However,
as I have testified before-in fact, consistently during
my tenure-the risks are up. The risk in the first one
is now moderate; and when we try to swing forces and
carry out the second one, it goes to high."
Shelton: "Our front-line, first-to-deploy
units ... are trained and ready to go. ... However,
when you go below that, when you get down to the
second- and third-level units, so to speak, if you
look at combat service support, combat support, when
you look at some of the other things that contribute
to our overall state of readiness, such as en route
infrastructure or our strategic lift, there are concerns
in many of these areas."
Ryan: "The average age of our forces is
accelerating. ... If we had the increases, we could
start looking at recapitalizing things like our tanker
fleet, which is today 38 years old. ... For us, trying
to shore up the near-term readiness has not allowed
us to invest in those types of systems for the future."
Ryan: "There are lots of demands for
the kinds of things that we've done over the past 10
years. ... But there are also the occasions when a
major conflict occurs, ... and we have to make sure
that our first-to-engage forces, the kick-down-the-door-forces
kinds of folks, are absolutely on the top of their
game. That requires an investment in that kick-down-the-door
force."
Clark: "We are in a Catch-22 situation.
If we spend more money on readiness, it takes away
from modernization. And so now, when you look at the
procurement bow wave and what gets pushed out there,
it is very, very sobering."
Shinseki: "We do have an end strength
problem, and as I indicated in my opening statement,
we're in the final stages of analyzing exactly what
the numbers are."
Jones: "Earlier this year, ... I identified
an approximately $1.5 billion requirement for unfunded
priorities for your Marine Corps. ... I believe that
$1.5 billion still accurately portrays our highest
priority unfunded requirements."
Shelton: "I would not recommend that we
change that US national security strategy standard.
... I think the twoMTW capability-to be able
to go in two different directions at one time, is
one of the things that defines us as a global power."
House Armed Services Committee
Shelton: "Our airborne tanker fleet,
our strategic airlift fleet, our intelligence, surveillance,
and reconnaissance aircraft ... provide critical capabilities
to our warfighting forces, as do the training bases
... and combat service support units. These are not
as ready and are, in some cases, suffering the consequences
of resources that had been redirected to sustain the
near-term readiness of the first-to-fight forces."
Shelton: "Since the 1997 Quadrennial
Defense Review, ... $153 billion in real dollars has
been added to the QDR baseline. ... Most of the increase,
you'll note, went toward our manpower and our operations
and maintenance accounts, which directly impact current
readiness."
Shelton: "We collectively are ... robbing
Peter to pay Paul, or in this case, robbing modernization
or long-term readiness to pay for current readiness."
Shelton: "My message to you today is that
we must accelerate the pace of replacing our rapidly
deteriorating ships, aircraft, weapons, and other essential
military equipment."
Shinseki: "Indications are we have an
end strength problem. We need more people. Our soldiers
believe that the Army is too small for the missions
it's asked to perform and under-resourced for the operational
tempo it executes."
Clark: "Our shipbuilding rate is inadequate
to recapitalize the fleet and to sustain ... a 300-ship
Navy. We are procuring desperately needed new combat
aircraft but not at the rate that is required to sustain
the force required for the future."
Ryan: "I must tell you that the near-term
readiness of the United States Air Force has not turned
around. At best, it has leveled off. Combat unit readiness
has dropped well below 20 percent, and our mission
capability rates on our aircraft are down more than
10 percentage points over the last decade."
Ryan: "The average ... United States Air
Force aircraft is 22 years old today, and in 15 years
it will be nearly 30 years old, even if we execute
every modernization program we currently have on the
books. We have never dealt with a force this old, and
it is taking inordinate time and work and money to
keep the force airworthy and ready."
Ryan: "We're buying about one-third of
the aircraft needed to stop the force aging, and we
are on a 250-year replacement cycle for our infrastructure,
where our people work and live."
Shelton: "Obviously, it military procurement
is going to take a lot more than $60 billion per year
in the future."
Ryan: "The kind of air and space recapitalization
[increase] that we need ... to keep the current force
structure at an average age that allows it to be viable
[is] somewhere between $10 billion and $11 billion
[per year]. But that doesn't count what we need to
do with our physical plant, and reinvestment in our
people, and some of our near-term readiness."
Jones: "Sir, the Marine Corps share of the DoD procurement budget in '01-'02 will not modernize
the Marine Corps. To modernize we need $1.5 billion
per year above current plans, for about seven to nine
years."
Ryan: "Clearly, ... the lift requirements
for the future will be greater than they are today.
... The question is just how much bigger should it
be? Once that decision of the requirement is made,
then we're going to have to look at our different systems
and see how they meet that requirement, and what can
be done to make sure that we have the lift we need
to execute this two Major Theater War strategy. ...
What we cannot reach ... will be added risk to our
capability to execute these war plans."
Jones: "Many of our aircraft are approaching
block obsolescence. In fact, the majority of our primary
rotary wing airframes are over 25 years old. When our
first Marine KC-130F rolled off the assembly line,
President Kennedy was beginning his first year as the
Commander in Chief."
Ryan: "There is no Title 10 authority
that says the United States Air Force is in charge
of space programs, but we have stepped up to it because
we think it's the important thing to do. There is some
funding of those kinds of systems that we need to look
at in the future because of the cost of them. When
we're providing a utility, ... those who use it should
pay."