NOT FOR PUBLICATION UNTIL
RELEASED BY THE
SENATE ARMED SERVICES COMMITTEE
STATEMENT OF
ADMIRAL GARY ROUGHEADCHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS
BEFORE THE
SENATE ARMED SERVICES COMMITTEE
ON
FY10 DEPARTMENT OF NAVY POSTURE
4 JUNE 2009NOT FOR PUBLICATION
UNTIL RELEASED BY THE
SENATE ARMED SERVICES COMMITTEE
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Navy FY 2010 Posture StatementChairman Levin, Senator McCain, and members of the Committee, it is an honor to
appear before you today representing the more than 600,000 Sailors and civilians of the United
States Navy. We are making a difference around the world. We are globally deployed,
persistently forward, and actively engaged. I greatly appreciate your continued support as our
Navy defends our nation and our national interests.
Last year, I came before you to lay out my priorities for our Navy, which were to build
tomorrow’s Navy, remain ready to fight today, and develop and support our Sailors, Navy
civilians, and families. We made great progress on those priorities this past year. Sustaining our
Navy’s maritime dominance requires the right balance of capability and capacity for the
challenges of today and those we are likely to face in the future. It demands our Navy remain
agile and ready.
Our Maritime Strategy, issued by the Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard over a year
ago, continues to guide our efforts. The strategy recognizes the importance of naval partnerships,
elevates the importance of preventing war to the ability to fight and win, and identifies six core
capabilities: forward presence, deterrence, sea control, power projection, maritime security, and
humanitarian assistance and disaster response (HA/DR). We have increased the breadth and
depth of our global maritime partnerships. We have engaged, more than ever, in stability
operations and theater security cooperation. Moreover, we are performing each of our six core
capabilities as part of the joint force in Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) and Operation Iraqi
Freedom (OIF), and across the globe.
We continue to build tomorrow’s Navy. As I articulated last year, our Navy needs a
stable shipbuilding program that provides the right capability and capacity for our Fleet while
preserving our nation’s industrial base. Since I came before you last year, ten new ships have
joined our Fleet. Among them, is USS FREEDOM (LCS 1), an important addition that addresses
critical warfighting gaps. We have increased oversight and are working closely with industry to
lower LCS costs and meet program milestones. I am pleased to announce we have awarded fixed
price, incentive fee contracts for the third and fourth LCS ship. We are aggressively working to
ensure LCS is a successful and affordable program. The introduction of USS GEORGE W.
BUSH (CVN 77) earlier this year also re-affirmed the strength and power of the American
shipbuilder and our industrial base. I remain committed to a carrier force of 11 for the next three
decades. In our drive to build the future Fleet, I continue to demand that we accurately articulate
requirements and remain disciplined in our processes. As I testified last year, effective
procurement requires affordable and realistic programs to deliver a balanced future Fleet.
We reached several key milestones in Navy aviation over the last year. Recently, the first
P-8A Poseidon aircraft successfully completed its first flight. The P-8A will replace our aging P-
3 Orion maritime patrol aircraft, which we have adapted to the fight we are in by providing
critical Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance capabilities to current operations in Iraq
and Afghanistan. We also issued our first contract for the Broad Area Maritime Surveillance
aircraft, which will provide capability to meet the challenges we are likely to face in the future.
As I identified last year, we continue to expect a decrease in the number of our strike fighters
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between 2016 and 2020 which will affect the capacity and effectiveness of our carrier air wings.
The timely delivery of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter is critical to meeting our strike fighter needs.
While we have been building our Navy for tomorrow, we have also been focused
intensely on today’s fight. Our Sailors are fully engaged on the ground, in the air, and at sea in
support of operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. On the ground, our Navy has more than 13,000
active and reserve Sailors in Central Command supporting Navy, Joint Force, and Combatant
Commander requirements. Navy Commanders are leading six of the 12 U.S.-led Provincial
Reconstruction Teams in Afghanistan. Our elite teams of Navy SEALs are heavily engaged in
combat operations. Navy Explosive Ordnance Disposal platoons are defusing Improvised
Explosive Devices (IEDs) and landmines. Our SEABEE construction battalions are rebuilding
schools and restoring critical infrastructure. Navy sealift is delivering the majority of heavy war
equipment to Iraq, while Navy logisticians are ensuring materiel arrives on time. Our Navy
doctors are providing medical assistance in the field and at forward operating bases. In addition,
I am thankful for the support of Congress for Navy Individual Augmentees who are providing
combat support and combat service support for Army and Marine Corps personnel in Iraq and
Afghanistan. On the water, Navy Expeditionary Combat Command Riverine forces are working
closely with the Iraqi Navy to safeguard Iraqi infrastructure and provide maritime security in key
waterways. Navy forces are also intercepting smugglers and insurgents and protecting Iraqi and
partner nation oil and gas infrastructure. We know the sea lanes must remain open for the transit
of oil, the lifeblood of the Iraqi economy, and our ships and Sailors are making that happen.
Beyond the fight in Iraq and Afghanistan, however, we remain an expeditionary force,
engaged around the world. As the dramatic capture of Maersk Alabama and subsequent rescue of
Captain Richard Phillips demonstrated, we do not have the luxury to be otherwise. We are
engaged in missions from the Horn of Africa, to the Caribbean and the Philippines. Our
operations range from tracking attempted ballistic missile launches from North Korea, to
interacting with international partners at sea, to providing medical and humanitarian assistance
from the sea. Our Sailors continue to be ambassadors for our nation. This past October marked
the first visit ever of a U.S. nuclear-powered ship, USS THEODORE ROOSEVELT, to South
Africa, the first year Navy ships were engaged in operations on both the East and West Coasts of
Africa, and the first visit ever of a U.S. CNO to South Africa. Additionally, my recent visit to
China continued a dialogue with the PLA(N) that will enhance our military-to-military
relationships. In total, we have more than 50,000 Sailors deployed and more than 10,500 in
direct support of global Requests for Forces and Joint manning requirements.
My commitment to developing and supporting our Sailors and Navy civilians in their
global operations endures. We have met overall officer and enlisted (active and reserve)
recruiting goals for 2008 and are on track for success in 2009. We are also improving the
diversity of our Navy through significant outreach and mentorship. We continue to provide,
support, and encourage training and education for our warfighters in the form of Joint
Professional Military Education, Language Regional Expertise and Cultural programs, and topnotch
technical schoolhouses. In addition, to help our Sailors balance between their service to the
nation and their lives at home and with their families, we have expanded access to childcare, and
improved housing for families and bachelors through Public Private Ventures (PPV). We also
continue to address the physical and mental needs of our Wounded and Returning Warriors and
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their families, as well as the needs of all our Sailors who deploy. I appreciate the support of
Congress for these incredible men and women.
My focus as CNO is to ensure we are properly balanced to answer the call now and in the
decades to come. As I indicated last year, the balance among capability, capacity, affordability,
and executability in our procurement plans is not optimal. This imbalance has increased our
warfighting, personnel, and force structure risk in the future. Our risk is moderate today trending
toward significant in the future because of challenges associated with Fleet capacity, increasing
operational requirements, and growing manpower, maintenance, and infrastructure costs.
We remain a ready and capable Navy today, but the stress on our platforms and
equipment is increasing. We can meet operational demands today but we are stretched in our
ability to meet additional operational demands while taking care of our people, conducting
essential platform maintenance to ensure our Fleet reaches its full service life, and modernizing
and procuring the Navy for tomorrow. Our FY 2010 budget aligns with the path our Maritime
Strategy has set; however, we are progressing at an adjusted pace. Our budget increases our
baseline funding, yet our Navy continues to rely on contingency funding to meet current
operational requirements and remain the nation’s strategic reserve across the entire spectrum of
conflict.
Achieving the right balance within and across my priorities will be critical as we meet the
challenges of today and prepare for those of tomorrow. I request your full support of our FY
2010 budget request and its associated capabilities, readiness, and personnel initiatives
highlighted below.
Build Tomorrow’s Navy
To support our nation’s global interests and responsibilities, our Navy must have the right
balance of capability and capacity, across multiple regions of the world, to prevent and win in
conflict today while providing a hedge against the challenges we are most likely to face
tomorrow. You have provided us with a Fleet that possesses the capabilities Combatant
Commanders demand. Our budget request for FY2010 increases the capacity of our Fleet to
respond to those demands.
We are addressing our aviation capability and capacity by investing in both new and
proven technologies. Our E/A-18 G aircraft utilize the same airframe as the F/A-18 F, which
improves construction costs and efficiencies, but it is equipped for airborne electronic attack,
rather than strike missions. The E/A-18G will complete operational testing this year and
eventually replace our existing EA-6B Fleet. Our budget includes procurement and RDT&E
funding for this aircraft and for our P-8A Multi-mission Maritime Aircraft, which will replace
our aging P-3 Orion Fleet. In addition to manned aviation, our Navy is investing in unmanned
aircraft, such as Firescout, which is more affordable, can be built in larger numbers, and can do
the missions needed in the small wars and counterinsurgencies we are likely to face in the near to
mid-term. We are also investing in the Broad Area Maritime Surveillance System (BAMS),
which is the only unmanned aircraft that can provide long-range intelligence, surveillance, and
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reconnaissance in the maritime environment. Our aviation programs increased by more than
$4.2B from FY 2009 to FY 2010 to achieve the right balance of capability and capacity.
Our Navy’s operational tempo over the past year reaffirms our need for a minimum of
313 ships. The mix of those ships has evolved in response to the changing security environment
and our investments in FY 2010 support growing Combatant Commander demands for ballistic
missile defense, irregular warfare, and open ocean anti-submarine warfare. We are also
addressing demands for high speed and intra-theater lift, as well as a variety of missions in the
littoral. Specifically, our FY 2010 budget funds eight ships: the 12th Virginia class submarine,
three Littoral Combat Ships (LCS), two T-AKE Dry Cargo and Ammunition Ships, a second
Joint High Speed Vessel (JHSV) for the Navy, and an advanced Arleigh Burke Class Destroyer
that will restart the DDG 51 program. The budget also funds the balance of LPD 26 and DDG
1002 construction, and provides third-year funding for CVN 78.
American shipbuilding is not broken, but improvements are needed. Since becoming
CNO, I have focused on our need to address and control procurement and total ownership costs.
Shipbuilding costs have been increasing as a result of reductions in number of ships procured,
overtime costs, and challenges associated with the introduction of new technologies and
sophisticated systems. We are addressing these costs by maturing new ship designs to adequate
levels before commencing production, and by pursuing common hull forms, common
components, proven designs, and repeat builds of ships and aircraft to permit longer production
runs and lower construction costs. Additionally, our shipbuilding plans incorporate open
architecture for hardware and software systems and increasingly use system modularity. These
initiatives reduce costs from inception to decommissioning and allow ease of modernization in
response to evolving threats.
In 2008, we introduced a more comprehensive acquisition governance process to better
link requirements and costs throughout the procurement process. I will work closely with the
Secretary of the Navy to grow our acquisition workforce and enhance our ability to properly staff
and manage our acquisition programs. I also enthusiastically support reviewing the overall
acquisition and procurement processes to determine how the Services can best address costs and
accountability.
A solid and viable industrial base is essential to national security and our future Navy,
and is a significant contributor to economic prosperity. Shipbuilding alone is a capital investment
that directly supports more than 97,000 American jobs and indirectly supports thousands more in
almost every U.S. state. Similarly, aircraft manufacturing provides extraordinary and unique
employment opportunities for American workers. Like the manufacturing base in other sectors of
our economy, the shipbuilding and aircraft industries depend upon stable and predictable
workloads to stabilize their workforce and maximize efficiencies. Level loading of ship and
aircraft procurements helps retain critical skills and promotes a healthy U.S. shipbuilding and
aircraft industrial base.
I seek your support for the following initiatives and programs:
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Aircraft Carrier Force Structure
The Navy remains committed to a force of 11 carriers for the next three decades that can
respond to national crises and provide options when access is not assured. Our carrier force
provides the nation the unique ability to overcome political and geographic barriers to access
critical areas and project power ashore without the need for host nation ports or airfields.
The 11-carrier requirement is based on a combined need for world-wide presence
requirements, surge availability, training and exercises, and maintenance. During the period
between the planned 2012 inactivation of USS ENTERPRISE (CVN 65) and the 2015 delivery
of GERALD R. FORD (CVN 78), however, legislative relief is needed to temporarily reduce the
operational carrier force to 10. Extending ENTERPRISE beyond 2012 involves significant
technical risk, challenges manpower and the industrial base, and requires expenditures in excess
of $2.8B with a minimal operational return on this significant investment. Extending
ENTERPRISE would result in only a minor gain in carrier operational availability and adversely
impact carrier maintenance periods and operational availability of the force in the future. The
temporary reduction to 10 carriers can be mitigated by adjustments to deployments and
maintenance availabilities. I request your approval of this legislative proposal.
F/A-18 and Joint Strike Fighter (JSF)
Navy and Marine Corps carrier-based F/A-18 aircraft are providing precision strike in
support of forces on the ground in Iraq and Afghanistan. The F/A-18 E/F is the aviation
backbone of our Navy’s ability to project power ashore without bases that infringe on a foreign
nation’s sovereign territory. At the rate we are operating these aircraft, the number of our carriercapable
strike fighters will decrease between 2016 and 2020, which will affect our air wing
capacity and effectiveness. The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) is essential to addressing the
Navy’s strike fighter needs. Stable funding of JSF will facilitate the on-time and within budget
delivery of the aircraft to our Fleet. I also appreciate the support of Congress for our FY 10
request that continues to fund F/A-18 E/F production while transitioning to JSF.
Littoral Combat Ship (LCS)
LCS is a fast, agile, and networked surface combatant with capabilities optimized to
support naval and joint force operations in littoral regions. LCS fills warfighting gaps in support
of maintaining dominance in the littorals and strategic choke points around the world. It will
operate with focused-mission packages, which will include manned and unmanned vehicles, to
execute a variety of missions, primarily anti-submarine warfare (ASW), anti-surface warfare
(SUW), and mine countermeasures (MCM).
LCS' inherent characteristics of speed, agility, shallow draft, payload capacity,
reconfigurable mission spaces, and air/water craft capabilities, combined with its core Command,
Control, Communications, Computers and Intelligence, sensors, and weapons systems, make it
an ideal platform for engaging in irregular warfare and maritime security operations, to include
counter-piracy missions.
I am pleased to report that USS FREEDOM (LCS 1) is at sea and INDEPENDENCE
(LCS 2) will deliver later this year. We have issued fixed-price incentive fee contracts for
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construction of the next two LCS ships based on a limited competition between the current LCS
seaframe prime contractors.
The Navy is aggressively pursuing cost reduction measures to ensure delivery of future
ships on a schedule that affordably paces evolving threats. We are applying lessons learned from
the construction and test and evaluation periods of the current ships, and we are matching
required capabilities to a review of warfighting requirements. I am committed to procuring 55
LCS, however legislative relief may be required regarding the LCS cost-cap until manufacturing
efficiencies can be achieved. Our FY 2010 budget includes funding for three additional LCS
seaframes.
DDG-1000 / DDG-51
Ballistic missile capability is rapidly proliferating and, since 1990, the pace of that
proliferation has increased markedly. Non-state actors are also acquiring advanced weapons, as
demonstrated in 2006 when Hezbollah launched a sophisticated anti-ship missile against an
Israeli ship. In addition, while DDG 1000 has been optimized for littoral anti-submarine warfare,
the number of capable submarines worldwide does not allow us to diminish our deep-water
capabilities. The world has changed significantly since we began the march to DDG 1000 in the
early 1990's and, today, Combatant Commander demands are for Ballistic Missile Defense,
Integrated Air and Missile Defense, and Anti-Submarine Warfare.
To align our surface combatant investment strategy to meet these demands, we are
truncating the DDG 1000 program at three ships and appropriately restarting the DDG 51
production line. The technologies resident in the DDG 51 provide extended range air defense
now, and when coupled with open architecture initiatives, will best bridge the transition to the
enhanced ballistic missile defense and integrated air and missile defense capability envisioned in
the next generation cruiser. In our revised plan, we are addressing the changing security
environment and the dynamic capability requirements of the Fleet, while providing maximum
stability for the industrial base.
Our FY 2010 budget requests $1.084 billion to provide the balance of incremental
funding for the third ship of the DDG 1000 class authorized in 2009. In addition, $2.241 billion
is requested to re-start the DDG 51 program. The SWAP II Memorandum of Agreement (MOA)
will align construction responsibilities to ensure shipyard workload stability, stabilize and
minimize cost risk for the DDG 1000 program, and efficiently re-start DDG 51 construction.
Research, development, test and evaluation efforts for the DDG 1000 program, will continue in
order to deliver the necessary technology to complete the DDG 1000 class ships and support the
CVN 78 Class.
Ballistic Missile Defense
The increasing development and proliferation of ballistic missiles threatens our
homeland, our allies, and our military operations. Current trends indicate adversary ballistic
missile systems are becoming more flexible, mobile, survivable, reliable, accurate, and possess
greater range. Threats posed by ballistic missile delivery are likely to increase and become more
complex over the next decade.
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Our Navy is on station today performing ballistic missile defense (BMD) as a core
mission. Maritime BMD is a joint warfighting enabler. Aegis BMD contributes to homeland
defense through long range surveillance and tracking and Aegis BMD ships can conduct organic
midcourse engagements of short and medium range ballistic missiles in support of regional and
theater defense. Our Navy and partner nation Aegis BMD capability, proven and deployed
around the world, has an impressive record of success: 18 of 22 direct hits on target, of which 3
of 3 were successful engagements within the earth’s endo-atmosphere.
Today, Navy Aegis BMD capability is currently installed on 18 ships: three guided
missile cruisers and 15 guided missile destroyers. In response to an urgent Combatant
Commander demand, the Defense Department budget requests $200 million to fund conversion
of six additional Aegis ships to provide BMD capability. Ultimately, our plan is to equip the
entire Aegis fleet with BMD capability, to provide Joint Commanders an in-stride BMD
capability with regularly deploying surface combatants. While development and procurement
funding is covered under the Missile Defense Agency budget, Navy has committed $14.5 million
in FY 2010 for operations and sustainment of Aegis BMD systems and missiles that have
transferred to the Navy.
Modernizing Cruisers and Destroyers
Our Cruiser and Destroyer modernization programs provide vital mid-life upgrades to the
combat systems and hull, mechanical, and engineering systems. These upgrades complement our
engineered ship life-cycle maintenance efforts, which are necessary to ensure our ships maintain
their full service life. Combat systems upgrades, in particular, reduce technology risk for future
surface combatants and provide a rapid and affordable capability insertion process. Maintaining
the stability of the Cruiser and Destroyer modernization programs will be critical to our future
Navy capability and capacity. Our FY 2010 budget includes funds to modernize two Cruisers
and two Destroyers.
Joint High Speed Vessel (JHSV)
Intra-theater lift is key to enabling the United States to rapidly project, maneuver, and
sustain military forces in distant, anti-access or area-denial environments. The Joint High Speed
Vessel (JHSV) program is an Army and Navy joint program to deliver a high-speed, shallow
draft surface ship capable of rapid transport of medium payloads of cargo and personnel within a
theater to austere ports without reliance on port infrastructure for load/offload. The detail design
and lead ship construction contract was awarded to Austal USA on November 13, 2008, and
includes contract options for nine additional ships for the Army and Navy. Delivery of the first
vessel will be to the Army and is expected in 2011. Our FY 2010 budget includes $178 million
for the construction of the Navy’s second JHSV. Navy will oversee procurement of the second
Army funded vessel.
LPD 17 Class Amphibious Warfare Ship
The LPD 17 Class of amphibious warfare ships represents the Navy's commitment to a
modern expeditionary power projection Fleet that will enable our naval force to operate across
the spectrum of warfare. The class will have a 40-year expected service life and serve as the
replacement for four classes of older ships: the LKA, LST, LSD 36, and the LPD 4. SAN
ANTONIO Class ships will play a key role in supporting ongoing overseas operations by
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forwardly deploying Marines and their equipment to respond to global crises. USS GREEN BAY
(LPD 20) was commissioned in January 2009 and USS NEW ORLEANS (LPD 18) deployed the
same month. New York (LPD 21) is planned to deliver this fall. LPDs 22-25 are in various
stages of construction. Our FY 2010 budget requests $872 million for the balance of the funding
for LPD 26, which was authorized in 2009. Further, we request $185 million of advance
procurement for LPD 27 to leverage production efficiencies of the existing LPD 17 class
production line. Amphibious lift will have my highest attention as we address it in the ongoing
Quadrennial Defense Review.
P-3 Orion and P-8 Multi-mission Maritime Aircraft
Your continued support of the P-3 and P-8A force remains essential. The legacy P-3
Orion, is providing critical intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) to the current
fight and it is a key enabler in the execution of our Maritime Strategy. An airframe in very high
demand, the P-3 supports the joint warfighter with time-critical ISR, contributes directly to our
maritime domain awareness across the globe, and is our nation's pre-eminent airborne deterrent
to an increasing submarine threat. Thirty-nine P-3s were grounded in December 2007 due to
airframe fatigue. I thank Congress for providing $289.3 million to our Navy in the FY 2008
Supplemental to fund the initial phase of the recovery program.
Boeing has resolved labor issues with their workforce and is implementing a recovery
plan for the P-8A within fiscal resources that will restore the program schedule from delays
caused by last year’s strike.
The P-8A Poseidon will start to fill the P-3 capability in 2013. I am pleased to report the
program reached a critical milestone this April when the first P-8A test aircraft successfully
completed its first flight. I request your support of our FY10 budget request for six P-8A aircraft.
E-2D Advanced Hawkeye
The E-2D Advanced Hawkeye aircraft replaces the E-2C Hawkeye aircraft. The aircraft’s
APY-9 radar is a two-generation leap in airborne surveillance radar capability, significantly
improving detection and tracking of small targets in the overland and littoral environment when
compared to the E-2C. The E-2D improves nearly every facet of tactical air operations, maintains
open ocean capability, and adds overland and littoral surveillance to support Theater Air and
Missile Defense capabilities against air threats in high clutter, electro-magnetic interference, and
jamming environments. I ask Congress to support our FY 2010 budget request for two E-2D
Hawkeye aircraft.
Unmanned Aerial Systems
We are investing in unmanned systems to enhance our capacity to meet increasing global
demands for Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) capability. The Broad Area
Maritime Surveillance (BAMS) UAS enhances situational awareness of the operational
environment and shortens the sensor-to-shooter kill chain by providing persistent, multiplesensor
ISR to Fleet Commanders and coalition and joint forces. Our FY 2010 budget requests
funding for continued research and development of BAMS. We are also requesting funding for
the procurement of five MQ-8 Vertical Takeoff and Landing Tactical UAVs (VTUAV). The
MQ-8 supports LCS core mission areas of ASW, Mine Warfare, and SUW. It can operate from
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all air-capable ships and carry modular mission payloads to provide day and night real time
reconnaissance, surveillance and target acquisition capabilities. VTUAV began operational
testing this March aboard USS MCINERNY (FFG

.
MH-60R/S Multi-Mission Helicopter
The MH-60R multi-mission helicopter program will replace the surface combatant-based
SH-60B and carrier-based SH-60F with a newly manufactured airframe and enhanced mission
systems. The MH-60R provides forward-deployed capabilities, including Surface Warfare, and
Anti-Submarine Warfare, to defeat area-denial strategies, which will enhance the ability of the
joint force to project and sustain power. MH-60R deployed for the first time in January 2009
with the USS JOHN C. STENNIS. Our FY 2010 budget requests funding to procure 24 MH-60R
helicopters.
The MH-60S will support deployed forces with combat logistics, search and rescue, air
ambulance, vertical replenishment, anti-surface warfare, airborne mine counter-measures, and
naval special warfare mission areas. Our FY 2010 budget requests funding to procure 18 MH-
60S helicopters.
Virginia Class SSN
The VIRGINIA Class submarine is a multi-mission submarine that dominates in the
littorals and open oceans. Now in its 10th year of construction, the VIRGINIA program is
demonstrating that this critical undersea capability can be delivered affordably and on time. We
have aggressively reduced construction costs of the VIRGINIA Class to $2 billion per
submarine, as measured in FY 2005 dollars, through construction performance improvements,
redesign for affordability, and a multi-year procurement contract, which provides an assured
build rate for shipyards and vendors and offers incentives for cost, schedule, and capital
expenditure for facility improvements. Not only are these submarines coming in within budget
and ahead of schedule, their performance is exceeding expectations and continues to improve
with each ship delivered. I consider Virginia Class cost reduction efforts a model for all our
ships, submarines, and aircraft.
SSBN
Our Navy supports the nation’s nuclear deterrence capability with a credible and
survivable fleet of 14 Ohio Class ballistic missile submarines (SSBN). Originally designed for a
30-year service life, this class will start retiring in 2027 after over 40 years of service life.
As long as we live in a world with nuclear weapons, the United States will need a reliable
and survivable sea-based strategic deterrent. Our FY 2010 budget requests research and
development funds for the Ohio Class Replacement, to enable the start of construction of the first
ship in FY 2019. The United States will achieve significant program benefits by aligning our
efforts with those of the United Kingdom’s Vanguard SSBN replacement program. The US and
UK are finalizing a cost sharing agreement.
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Foreign Military Sales
Our Navy also supports the development of partner capability and capacity through a
robust Foreign Military Sales (FMS) program. FMS is an important aspect of security
cooperation programs designed to improve interoperability, military-to-military relations, and
global security. Navy uses the FMS program to help build partner nation maritime security
capabilities through transfers of ships, weapon systems, communication equipment, and a variety
of training programs. Sales and follow-on support opportunities may also result in production
line efficiencies and economies of scale to help reduce USN costs. In the past year, Navy FMS
has worked with over 147 nations and international organizations, coordinating 2 ship transfers
and twenty five ship transfer requests, providing military training to over 12,000 international
military members, with total foreign military sales of roughly $6.8 billion. Congressional support
is key to the successful transfer of U.S. equipment to our partners. I thank you for your continued
support in this area.
Next Generation Enterprise Network (NGEN)
To pace the complex and adaptive techniques of potential adversaries, we need
survivable and persistent network communications that enable secure and robust means to
command and control our assets, and to use, manage, and exploit the information they provide.
These functions come together in cyberspace, a communication and warfighting domain that
includes fiber optic cables on the ocean floor, wireless networks, satellite communications,
computer systems, databases, Internet, and most importantly, properly trained cyber personnel to
execute cyberspace effects. Cyberspace presents enormous challenges and unprecedented
opportunities to shape and control the battlespace. Recent activities, such as the cyber attacks on
Georgia and Estonia last year, highlight the complex and dynamic nature of cyber threats.
Our Navy has provided cyber capabilities to the joint force for more than 11 years and we
continue to make security and operations in the cyberspace domain a warfighting priority. The
challenge we face today is balancing our need to collect and share information with our need to
protect against 21st century cyber threats. We are taking steps to effectively organize, man, train,
and equip our Navy for cyber warfare, network operations, and information assurance. We are
also working closely with Joint and interagency partners to develop offensive and defensive
cyberspace capabilities, infrastructure, experience, and access, rather than developing
independent, Navy-only capabilities.
As we move from the Navy-Marine Corps Intranet (NMCI) to the Next Generation
Enterprise Network (NGEN), the sophistication, speed, and persistence of cyber threats we
observe today makes it imperative that we continually improve our network capabilities, improve
our flexibility to adapt to changing environment, and maintain complete operational control of
the network. NGEN Block 1 is the follow-on to the existing NMCI contract that expires 30
September 2010. It replaces the services currently provided by NMCI and takes advantage of
lessons learned from that network. Future NGEN Blocks will upgrade services provided by
NMCI and the OCONUS Navy Enterprise Network. NGEN will also integrate with shipboard
and Marine Corps networks to form a globally integrated, Naval Network Environment to
support network operations. NGEN will leverage the Global Information Grid (GIG) and, where
possible, utilize DoD enterprise services. A comprehensive transition strategy is currently being
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developed to detail the approach for transition from NMCI to NGEN. I appreciate the support of
Congress as we execute a Continuity of Services Contract to assist in this transition.
Remain Ready to Fight Today
Our Navy is operating at its highest levels in recent years. As I testified last year, even as
our nation shifts its focus from Iraq to Afghanistan, our Navy’s posture, positioning, and
frequency of deployment remain high. Combatant Commanders recognize the value of Navy
forces to the current fight and to operations world-wide. We are meeting new needs for ballistic
missile defense in Europe and the Pacific, counter-piracy and maritime security in Africa and
South America, and humanitarian assistance in the Caribbean and Southeast Asia. Many of these
demands started as one-time sourcing requests and have evolved into enduring requirements for
Navy forces. As a result, we have experienced a significant difference between our budgeted and
actual Fleet operations from year to year, as well as an increase in maintenance requirements for
our Fleet as a result of its increased operational tempo.
We have been able to meet these requirements by relying on a combination of base
budget and contingency funding and the continuous readiness of our force generated by the Fleet
Response Plan (FRP). FRP allows us to provide continuous availability of Navy forces that are
physically well-maintained, properly manned, and appropriately trained to deploy for ongoing
and surge missions. Any future funding reductions or increased restrictions limit our Navy’s
ability to respond with as much flexibility to increased Combatant Commander demands worldwide.
Our bases and infrastructure enable our operational and combat readiness and are
essential to the quality of life of our Sailors, Navy civilians, and their families. I appreciate
greatly your enthusiastic support and confidence in the Navy through the inclusion of Navy
projects in the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act. The funding provided through the
Recovery Act addresses some of our most pressing needs for Child Development Centers,
barracks, and energy improvements. Our projects are prioritized to make the greatest impact on
mission requirements and quality of life. All of our Recovery Act projects meet Congress’ intent
to create jobs in the local economy and address critical requirements. These projects are being
quickly and prudently executed to inject capital into local communities while improving mission
readiness and quality of work and life for our Sailors and families.
I appreciate your support for the following initiatives:
Training Readiness
The proliferation of advanced, stealthy, nuclear and non-nuclear submarines, equipped
with anti-ship weapons of increasing range and lethality, challenge our Navy's ability to
guarantee the access and safety of joint forces. Effective Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW)
remains a remarkably and increasingly complex, high-risk warfare area that will require
continued investment in research and development to counter the capabilities of current and
future adversaries.
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Active sonar systems, particularly medium frequency active (MFA) sonar, are key
enablers of our ability to conduct effective ASW. MFA sonar is the Navy’s most effective tool
for locating and tracking submarines at distances that preclude effective attack on our ships. We
must conduct extensive integrated training, to include the use of active sonar, which mirrors the
intricate operating environment present in hostile waters, particularly the littorals. This is of the
highest importance to our national security and the safety of our Sailors and Marines.
Over the past five years, Navy has expended significant effort and resources preparing
comprehensive environmental planning documentation for our at sea training and combat
certification activities. The Navy remains a world leader in marine mammal research, and we
will continue our robust investment in this research in FY 2010 and beyond. Through such
efforts, and in full consultation and cooperation with our sister federal agencies, Navy has
developed effective measures that safely protect marine mammals and the ocean environment
from adverse impacts of MFA sonar while not impeding vital naval training.
In overruling attempts to unduly restrain Navy’s use of MFA sonar in Southern
California training ranges, the Supreme Court cited President Teddy Roosevelt’s quote “the only
way in which a navy can ever be made efficient is by practice at sea, under all conditions which
would have to be met if war existed.” We can and do balance our responsibility to prepare naval
forces for deployment and combat operations with our responsibility to be good stewards of the
marine environment.
Depot Level Maintenance
Optimum employment of our depot level maintenance capability and capacity is essential
to our ships and aircraft reaching their expected service life. Depot maintenance is critical to the
safety of our Sailors and it reduces risk caused by extension of ships and aircraft past their
engineered maintenance periodicity. Effective and timely depot level maintenance allows each
ship and aircraft to reach its Expected Service Life, preserving our existing force structure and
enabling us to achieve our required capacity.
I have taken steps to enhance the state of maintenance of our surface combatants. In
addition to our rigorous self-assessment processes that identify maintenance and readiness issues
before our ships and aircraft deploy, I directed the Commander, Naval Sea Systems Command to
reinstate an engineered approach to surface combatant maintenance strategies and class
maintenance plans with the goal of improving the overall condition of these ships. Our Surface
Ship Life Cycle Maintenance Activity will provide the same type of planning to address surface
ship maintenance as we currently have for carriers and submarines.
Consistent, long term agreements and stable workload in both the public and private
sector are necessary for the efficient utilization of depots, and it is the most cost effective way to
keep our ships and aircraft at the highest possible state of readiness. Consistent with my intent to
drive our Navy to better articulate requirements and costs in all we do, we have rigorously
updated the quantitative models we use to develop our maintenance budgets, increasing their
overall fidelity. These initial editions of the revised maintenance plans have resulted in increased
maintenance requirements and additional costs. Our combined FY10 budget funds 96 percent of
the projected depot ship maintenance requirements necessary to sustain our Navy’s global
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presence. Our budget funds aviation depot maintenance at 100 percent for deployed squadrons
and at 87 percent for aviation maintenance requirements overall. I request the support of
Congress to fully support our baseline and contingency funding requests for our operations and
maintenance to ensure the safety of our Sailors and the longevity of our existing ships and
aircraft.
Shore Readiness
Our shore infrastructure enables our operational and combat readiness and is essential to
the quality of life and quality of work for our Sailors, Navy civilians, and their families. For
years, increased operational demand, rising manpower costs, and an aging Fleet have led our
Navy to underfund shore readiness and, instead, invest in our people, afloat readiness, and future
force structure. As a result, maintenance and recapitalization requirements have grown and the
cost of ownership for our shore infrastructure has increased. At current investment levels, our
future shore readiness, particularly recapitalization of our facilities infrastructure, is at risk.
In an effort to mitigate this risk in a constrained fiscal environment, we are executing a
Shore Investment Strategy that uses informed, capabilities-based investment decisions to target
our shore investments where they will have the greatest impact to our strategic and operational
objectives. I appreciate the enthusiastic support and confidence of Congress in the Navy through
the inclusion of Navy projects in the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act. Through the
Recovery Act, you allowed our Navy to address some of our most pressing needs for Child
Development Centers, barracks, dry dock repairs, and energy improvements. These Navy
projects are located in 22 states and territories and fully support the President’s objectives of
rapid and pervasive stimulus efforts in local economies. I am committed to further improvements
in our shore infrastructure but our Navy must balance this need against our priorities of
sustaining force structure and manpower levels.
Energy
Our Navy is actively pursuing ways to reduce our energy consumption and improve
energy efficiency in our operations and at our shore installations. Our emerging Navy Energy
Strategy spans three key areas, afloat and on shore: 1) an energy security strategy to make certain
of an adequate, reliable and sustainable supply; 2) a robust investment strategy in alternative
renewable sources of energy and energy conservation technologies; and 3) policy and doctrine
changes that are aimed at changing behavior to reduce consumption.
I will be proposing goals to the Secretary of the Navy to increase energy independence in
our shore installations, increase use of alternative fuels afloat and reduce tactical petroleum
consumption, and to reduce our carbon footprint and green house gas emissions. We are
leveraging available investment dollars and current technological advances to employ technology
that reduces energy demand and increases our ability to use alternative and renewable forms of
energy for shore facilities and in our logistics processes. This technology improves energy
options for our Navy today and in the future. Our initial interactions with industry and academic
institutions in public symposia over the past few months have generated an enthusiastic response
to our emerging strategy.
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United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea
The Law of the Sea Convention codifies navigation and overflight rights and high seas
freedoms that are essential for the global mobility of our armed forces. It directly supports our
National Security interests. Our current non-party status constrains efforts to develop enduring
maritime partnerships, inhibits efforts to expand the Proliferation Security Initiative, and elevates
the level of risk for our Sailors as they undertake operations to preserve navigation rights and
freedoms, particularly in areas such as the Strait of Hormuz and Arabian Gulf, and the East and
South China Seas. Accession to the Law of the Sea Convention remains a priority for our Navy.
Develop and Support Our Sailors and Navy Civilians
Our talented and dedicated Sailors and Navy civilians are the critical component to the
Navy’s Maritime Strategy. I am committed to providing the necessary resources and shaping our
personnel policies to ensure our people are personally and professionally supported in their
service to our nation.
Since 2003, the Navy’s end strength has declined by approximately 10,000 per year
aiming for a target of 322,000 Active Component (AC) and 66,700 Reserve Component (RC)
Sailors. While end strength declined, we have increased operational availability through the Fleet
Response Plan, supported new missions for the joint force, and introduced the Maritime Strategy.
This increased demand includes maritime interdiction, riverine warfare, irregular and cyber
warfare, humanitarian and disaster relief, an extended individual augmentee requirement in
support of the joint force, and now, counter-piracy.
To meet increased demands, maintain required Fleet manning levels with minimal risk,
and minimize stress on the force, we have transitioned from a posture of reducing end strength to
one of stabilizing the force. We anticipate that we will finish this fiscal year within two percent
above our authorized level.
The FY10 budget request supports an active component end strength of 328,800. This
includes 324,400 in the baseline budget to support Fleet requirements, as well as increased
capacity to support the individual augmentee missions. The budget also supports the reversal of
the Defense Health Program military-to-civilian conversions as directed by the Congress. The
FY 2010 budget also requests contingency funding for individual augmentees supporting the
joint force in non-traditional Navy missions. To maintain Fleet readiness, support Combatant
Commanders, and to minimize the stress on the force, our Navy must be appropriately resourced
to support this operational demand.
I urge Congress to support the following manpower and personnel initiatives:
Recruiting and Retention
Navy has been successful in attracting, recruiting, and retaining a highly-skilled
workforce this fiscal year. The FY10 budget positions us to continue that success through FY10.
We expect to meet our overall officer and enlisted recruiting and retention goals, though we
remain focused on critical skills sets, such as health professionals and nuclear operators.
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As demand for a professional and technically-trained workforce increases in the private
sector, Navy must remain competitive in the marketplace through monetary and non-monetary
incentives. Within the health professions, Navy increased several special and incentives pays,
and implemented others, targeting critical specialties, including clinical psychology, social work,
physician assistant, and mental health nurse practitioners. We are also offering mobilization
deferments for officers who immediately transition from active to reserve status. We have
increased bonuses and other incentives for nuclear trained personnel to address an increasing
demand for these highly-trained and specialized professionals in the private sector.
We continually assess our recruiting and retention initiatives, taking a targeted
investment approach, to attract and retain high-performing Sailors. We appreciate Congressional
support for the Post-9/11 GI Bill. Navy’s goal is to maintain a balanced force, in which seniority,
experience, and skills are matched to requirements.
Total Force Integration
Navy continues to invest in Navy Reserve recruiting, retention and training while
achieving Total Force integration between active and reserve components. The Navy Reserve
Force provides mission capable units and individuals to the Navy and Marine Corps team
through a full range of operations. Navy’s goal is to become a better aligned Total Force in
keeping with Department of Defense and Department of the Navy strategic guidance, while
providing fully integrated operational support to the Fleet. Navy continues to validate new
mission requirements and an associated Reserve Force billet structure to meet future capability
requirements. Navy has leveraged incentives to best recruit Sailors within the Total Force and is
developing and improving programs and policies that promote a continuum of service through
Navy Reserve affiliation upon separating from the active component. Navy is removing barriers
to ease transition between active and reserve components and is developing flexible service
options and levels of participation to meet individual Sailor ability to serve the Navy throughout
a lifetime of service.
Sailor and Family Continuum of Care
Navy continues to provide support to Sailors and their families, through a "continuum of
care" that covers all aspects of individual medical, physical, psychological, and family readiness.
Through an integrated effort between Navy Medicine and Personnel headquarters activities and
through the chain of command, our goal is reintegrating the individual Sailor with his or her
command, family, and community.
Our Navy and Coast Guard recently signed a memorandum of agreement for the Coast
Guard to share the services provided by the Navy Safe Harbor Program. The program is
currently comprised of approximately 375 lifetime enrollees and 217 individuals receiving
personally-tailored care management. It provides recovery coordination and advocacy for
seriously wounded, ill, and injured Sailors and Coast Guardsmen, as well as a support network
for their families. We have established a headquarters support element comprised of subject
matter expert teams of non-medical care managers and recovery care coordinators, and Reserve
surge support to supplement field teams in mass casualty situations.
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We have also developed the Anchor Program, which leverages the volunteer services of
Navy Reserve members and retirees who assist Sailors in reintegrating with family and
community. Navy recently institutionalized our Operational Stress Control (OSC) Program
which provides an array of initiatives designed to proactively promote psychological resilience
and sustain a culture of psychological health among Sailors and their families. We are
developing a formal curriculum which will be integrated into the career training continuum for
all Sailors throughout their Navy careers.
Active and Reserve Wounded, Ill and Injured
Navy Medicine continues to assess the needs of wounded, ill and injured service
members and their families. In 2008, Navy Medicine consolidated all wounded, ill and injured
warrior healthcare support with the goal of offering comprehensive implementation guidance, the
highest quality and most compassionate care to service members and their families. As of
October 2008, 170 additional clinical care managers were assigned to military treatment facilities
(MTFs) and ambulatory care clinics caring for approximately 1800 OIF/OEF casualties. Over
150 clinical medical case managers at Navy MTFs advocate on behalf of wounded warriors and
their family members by working directly with the multi-disciplinary medical team caring for the
patient.
The Navy recognizes the unique medical and administrative challenges faced by our
Reserve Wounded Sailors when they return from deployment, and we know their care cannot
end at the Military Treatment Facility (MTF). In 2008, we established two Medical Hold Units
responsible for managing all aspects of care for Reserve Sailors in a Medical Hold (MEDHOLD)
status. Co-located with MTFs in Norfolk and San Diego, these units are led by Line Officers
with Senior Medical Officers supporting for medical issues. Under their leadership, case
managers serve as advocates who proactively handle each Sailor's individualized plan of care
until all medical and non-medical issues are resolved. We have reduced the numbers of Sailors in
the MEDHOLD process and the length of time required to resolve their cases. The RC
MEDHOLD program has become the single, overarching program for providing prompt,
appropriate care for our Reserve Wounded Sailors.
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)
TBI represents the defining wound of OIF/OEF due to the proliferation of improvised
explosive devices (IED). The Department of the Navy has implemented a three-pronged strategy
to increase detection of TBI throughout the deployment span, which includes mental health
stigma reduction efforts, lowering the index of suspicion for TBI symptoms and improving
seamless coordination of screening, detection and treatment among line and medical leaders.
Navy Medicine continues to expand its efforts to identify, diagnosis and treat TBI. The traumatic
stress and brain injury programs at National Naval Medical Center (NNMC) Bethesda, Naval
Medical Center San Diego (NMCSD), Naval Hospital (NH) Camp Pendleton, and NH Camp
Lejeune are collaborating to identify and treat service members who have had blast exposure.
Furthermore, Navy Medicine has partnered with the Line community to identify specific
populations at risk for brain injury such as front line units, SEALS, and Navy Explosive
Ordinance disposal units.
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Psychological Health
The number of new cases of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) in the Navy has
increased in the last year, from 1,618 in FY 2007 to 1,788 in FY 2008 and we have expanded our
efforts to reach out to service members. We continue to move mental health providers closer to
the battlefield and remain supportive of the Psychologist-at Sea program. Incentives for military
mental health providers have also increased to ensure the right providers are available. We are
actively working to reduce the stigma associated with seeking help for mental health. Our
recently established Operational Stress Control (OSC) program implements training and tools
that line leadership can use to address stigma. Since inception, OSC Awareness Training, which
included mental health stigma reduction, has been provided to over 900 non-mental health care
givers and 16,000 Sailors including over 1,395 at Navy's Command Leadership School and
Senior Enlisted Academy.
Diversity
We have had great success in increasing our diversity outreach and improving diversity
accessions in our ranks. We are committed to a Navy that reflects the diversity of the nation in
all specialties and ranks by 2037. Through our outreach efforts, we have observed an increase in
NROTC applications and have increased diverse NROTC scholarship offers by 28 percent. The
NROTC class of 2012 is the most diverse class in history and, with your help through
nominations, the U.S. Naval Academy class of 2012 is the Academy’s most diverse class in
history. Our Navy is engaging diversity affinity groups such as the National Society of Black
Engineers, Thurgood Marshall College Fund, Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers,
American Indian Science and Engineering Society, Mexican American Engineering Society, and
the Asian Pacific Islander American Scholarship Fund to increase awareness of the opportunities
for service in the Navy. Our engagement includes Flag attendance, junior officer participation,
recruiting assets such as the Blue Angels, direct Fleet interaction. We have also established
Regional Outreach Coordinators in Atlanta, Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles, and Miami to build
Navy awareness in diverse markets.
As we continue to meet the challenges of a new generation, the Navy is already being
recognized for our efforts through receipt of the Work Life Legacy Award (Families and Work
Institute), the Work Life Excellence Award (Working Mother Media), Most Admired Employer
(U.S. Black Engineer and Hispanic Engineer Magazine), and Best Diversity Company
(Diversity/Careers in Engineering and IT).
Life-Work Integration
Thank you for your support of our Navy’s efforts to balance work and life for our Sailors
and their families. You included two important life-work integration initiatives in the FY 2009
National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) in which our Sailors have consistently expressed
strong interest. The NDAA authorized 10 days of paternity leave for a married, active duty Sailor
whose wife gives birth to a child, establishing a benefit similar to that available for mothers who
receive maternity leave and for parents who adopt a child. The NDAA also included a career
intermission pilot program, allowing participating Sailors to leave active duty for up to three
years to pursue personal and professional needs, while maintaining eligibility for certain medical,
dental, commissary, travel and transportation benefits and a portion of basic pay. In addition to
these new authorities, Navy is also exploring other life-work integration initiatives, such as
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flexible work schedules and telework in non-operational billets through use of available
technologies such as Outlook Web Access for e-mail, Defense Connect Online, and Defense
Knowledge Online for document storage and virtual meetings. The Virtual Command Pilot,
implemented within the Total Force Domain for an initial group of officers, will allow
individuals to remain in their current geographic locations while working for parent commands
located elsewhere within the U.S.
Education
We recognize the importance both to the individual and to our mission of providing a
life-long continuum of learning and development. Education remains a critical component of this
continuum. The Navy’s Professional Military Education Continuum, with an embedded Joint
Professional Military Education (JPME) component, produces leaders skilled in maritime and
joint planning. Additionally, we offer several college-focused incentives. Tuition assistance
provides funds to individuals to pay for college while serving. The Navy College Fund provides
money for college whenever the Sailor decides to end his or her Navy career. The Navy College
Program Afloat College Education (NCPACE) provides educational opportunities for Sailors
while deployed. Furthermore, officers are afforded the opportunity to pursue advanced education
through the Naval Postgraduate School (NPS), NPS distance learning programs, the Naval War
College, and several Navy fellowship programs. In addition, our Loan Repayment Program
allows us to offer debt relief up to $65,000 to recruits who enlist after already earning an
advanced degree. The Advanced Education Voucher (AEV) program provides undergraduate
and graduate off-duty education opportunities to selected senior enlisted personnel as they pursue
Navy-relevant degrees. The Accelerate to Excellence (A2E) program, currently in the second
year of a three-year pilot, combines two semesters of education completed while in the Delayed
Entry Program, one semester of full-time education taken after boot camp, and college credit
earned upon completion of “A” school to complete an Associates Degree. The Navy
Credentialing Opportunities Online (COOL) program matches rate training and experience with
civilian credentials, and funds the costs of credentialing and licensing exams. As of the end of
March 2009, there have been more than 35 million visits to the COOL web site, with more than
13,000 certification exams funded and approximately 8,500 civilian certifications attained.
Conclusion
Despite the challenges we face, I remain optimistic about the future. The men and
women, active and reserve, Sailor and civilian, of our Navy are extraordinarily capable,
motivated, and dedicated to preserving our national security and prosperity. We are fully
committed to the current fight and to ensuring continued US global leadership in a cooperative
world. We look forward to the upcoming Quadrennial Defense Review, which will address how
we can best use our military forces to meet the complex and dynamic challenges our nation faces
today and will face in the future. We have seen more challenging times and emerged prosperous,
secure, and free. I ask Congress to fully support our FY 2010 budget and identified priorities.
Thank you for your continued support and commitment to our Navy, and for all you do to make
the United States Navy a force for good today and in the future.