AUTHORIZING APPROPRIATION, FISCAL YEAR 1974, FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, ACTIVE-DUTY AND RESERVE STRENGTH, MILITARY TRAINING STUDENT LOADS, AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES

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July 18, 1973
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Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 93D CONGRESS HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 1st .Cession C AUTHORIZING APPROPRIATIONS, FISCAL YEAR 1974, FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, ACTIVE-DUTY AND RESERVE STRENGTH, MILITARY TRAINING STUDENT LOADS, AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES JULY 18,19-73.-Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed Mr. HEBERT, from the Committee on Armed Services, submitted the following REPORT together with ADDITIONAL VIEWS [To accompany H.R. 9286] The Committee on Armed Services, to whom was referred the bill (H.R. 9286) to authorize appropriations during the fiscal year 1974 for procurement of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, tracked combat vehicles, torpedoes, and other weapons, and research, development, test and evaluation for the Armed Forces, and to prescribe the authorized personnel strength for each active duty component and of the Selected Reserve of each reserve component of the Armed Forces and the mili- tary training student loads, and for other purposes, having considered the same, report favorably thereon without amendment and recom- mend that the bill do pass. PURPOSE This bill would : (1) Authorize appropriations during fiscal year 1974 for (a) major procurement and (b) research, development, test and evahi- ation by the Department of Defense; (2) Authorize the personnel strength for each of the active- duty components of the Armed Forces for fiscal year 1974; (3) Authorize the personnel strength for the selected reserve of each of the reserve components of the Armed Forces for fiscal year 1974; (4) Authorize the annual average military training student load for each of the active and reserve components of the Armed Forces for fiscal year 1974; Referral To CONG Not Required Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 2 (5) Continue the autho rit,3- for merging military assistance and financing for South Vietnam, and local forces in Laos, with the funding of the Department cd Defense, subject to a dollar limita- tion and other restrictions ; (6) Prohibit the obligation or expenditure of funds authorized by this or any other act for crrryrno- out directly or indirecty any econorrric. or military r isistance for \Tortli Vietnam in fiscal year 11074, and (7; Impose certain limitations with respect to procurement a,-,- t ions, and for other purposes The bill authorizes appropriations totaling $21,394,997,000. This includes ~~13,073.200,000 for p ociirement of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, tracked combat vehicles. torpedoes and other weapons, and $8,321,797,000 for research, de-Telopment, test and evaluation. II.R. 928i~__;1 CLEAN Rrra. I1.R. 928U is a clean bill sir e.r,vding H.R. 6722 on which hearings were held.. Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 CONTENTS Page 1 H.R.9286 a clean bill------------------------------------ 2 Summary of committee revisions-------------------------- 7 Cost totals--------------------------------------------- 9 Relationship of authorization to total appropriation--------- 10 General discussion: Cost escalation and military procurement- - - - - - - - - - - - - - 10 Cost growth in major weapon systems report ----------- 11 (Summary of a report by the Comptroller General) The development process---------------------- 11 Cost growth resulting from greater capability being demanded of replacement systems------ 13 Cost growth due to acquisition management- - _ _ 14 Estimating errors---------------------------- 15 Solutions to weapon-systems acquisition problems proposed by various authorities- - - - - - - - - - - - - 15 Reforms which should be emphasized---------- 15 Cost escalation-------------------------------------- 17 (Summary of a study by the Department of Defense) Investment spending has been stable----------- 19 Weaknesses in predicting and controlling costs - - 21 Corrective efforts---------------------------- 23 Conclusions--------------------------------- 24 Committee comment on cost-escalation studies---------- 25 Discussion of major procurement programs- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 27 A-10---------------------------------------------- 27 F-15----------------------------------------------- 28 F-14A--------------------------------------------- 28 Attache service aircraft------------------------------ 31 F-111---------------------------------------------- 32 C-5A---------------------------------------------- 33 Safeguard------------------------------------------ 34 Lance----------------------------------------------- 35 DLGN--------------------------------------------- 35 Nuclear aircraft carrier------------------------------- 36 Trident-------------------------------------------- 38 Nuclear attack submarine-SSN-688------------------ 39 DD-963--------------------------------------------- 40 LHA---------------------------------------------- 41 SSBN conversions ----------------------------------- 41 The M60A1 tank------------------------------------ 42 The XM198 towed Howitzer-------------------------- 42 M-16 rifle------------------------------------------ 43 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 PagE Research and development programs ----------------------- 43 Technological base--------------------.------------. __ 43 Accomplishments from techno ogy base- - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - 44 Support for military personnel _-___---------------------- 45 Mobility---------------------------------------------- 46 Weapons technology ------------------------------------ Comman(l, control and target acquisition_______________ 47 Supporting science and technology- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 48 Civilian spin-off from DOD and R & D----------------- 48 Aeronautics------------------------------------- 49 Electronics--------------------------------------- 49 /Iaterials ----------------------------------------- 49 Medicine and biotechn:)logy----------------------- 50 Budget activities--------- --------------------------- 51 1. Military sciences ------------------------------- 52 _'. Aircraft and related eciuiipment_.-__------___-__- 54 Committee change: Army ---------- ------- 54 Utility Tai,tical Transport Aircraft Sys- tem (UTT,AS)---------------------- 54 Corn rnittee change;: Air Force------------ _ _ 56 Subsonic Crui,e Armed Decoy (SCAD) _ 56 Lightweight fi:,hter prototype 56 :~. Missiles and related equipment_____ --__- 57 Committee ch ange u : Army3 -------------------- 57 Safeguard defc,nse system______________ 57 Site defenso.._ _ __ ------------------- 57 4. Military astronautic; and related equipment-_ 59 5. Ships small craft and related equipment- - _ 60 ti. Ordnance combat vehic es and related equipment- 60 Committee change,: Army----------------- 61 Howitzer n edinm 155mm .XM198 _ _ _ _ _ _ 61 .Nuclear mL.nitions -------------------- 61 .. Other equipment- ------------------------- 62 Committee change,: Air Force_____________ 63 Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS)__ 63 1-luman Re;ources Laboratory-___ 63 8. Programwide managenu,nt and support---------- 65 Active-forces strength authorization 66 The nature of the threat to Western Europe------------ 68 NATO strategy ---------------------- 70 Committee support of NATO Common Fund proposal-- 70 The all--volunteer force ------------ __________________ 71 Committee reductions--------- --------------------------------- 73 Enlisted aides ------------------------------------- 73 Graduate-education studerts ----------------------- 74 Additional Army reduction------------------------- 74 Reserve-forces strength authorization------------------------- --- 74 Military training student loads ------------------------------ 77 Officer graduate education-------------------------------- 80 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 5 Page General provisions--------------------------------------- 81 Section 601-Southeast Asia support------------------- 81 Section 602-Prohibition against aid to North Vietnam- - 86 Section 603-Limitation on multi-year procurement con- tracts -------------------------------------------- 86 Section 604-Codification of statutes requiring annual au- thorization for Department of Defense appropriations-- 86 Review of weapons procurement authorized by service------- 86 86 Navy ---------------------------------------------- Force-------------------------------------------- 96 Committee position-------------------------------------- 99 Fiscal data--------------------------------------------- 99 Annual cost ---------- ------------------------------ 99 Five-year cost projection----------------------------- 100 Departmental data-------------------------------------- 100 Additional views: Dissenting and additional views -of: Dellums, Hon. Ronald V--------------------------- 107 Leggett, Hon. Robert L---------------------------- 107 Schroeder, Hon. Patricia------------------------- 107 Dissenting views of Hon. Les Aspin--------------------- 121 Additional views of Hon. Ronald'V. Dellums------------- 123 Minority views of Hon. Patricia Schroeder-------------- 125 Additional views of Hon. Patricia Schroeder ------------- 128 Changes in existing law----------------- --- 131 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 SUMMARY OF MAJOR COMMITTEE REVISIONS The changes made in the authorizations requested by the Depart- ment of Defense are discussed in detail throughout this report. Follow- ing is a summary of major revisions made by the Committee: 1. The authorization for the F-15 is reduced from the $918.5 million requested to $587.6 million, a net reduction of $330.9 mil- lion. This reduces the buy of aircraft authorized from 77 to 39. 2. Safeguard antiballistic. missile funds are reduced by $50.7 million. This includes a $25.7 million reduction in procurement authorization and a $25 million reduction in the RDT&E author- ization, leaving a net authorization of $350.3 million. 3. The authorization for conversion of ballistic missile sub- marines is reduced from $229.8 million, the amount requested, to $79.9 million, a reduction of $149.9 million. 4. The funds for the M60A1 tank are reduced from the $26.6 million requested to $18.2 million, a reduction of $8.4 million. 5. The Air Force request for $9.6 million to procure 16 attache aircraft is denied. ' 6. The authorization requested to complete funding of the C-5A program, $43.1 million, is reduced to $37.2 million, a re- duction of $5.9 million. 7. The request for $9,476,000 for development of the XM198 Howitzer is denied. 8. The request for $3.1 million for procurement of 31,000 M-16 rifles is denied. 9. Navy shipbuilding and conversion authorizations are in- creased by $79 million to provide long-leadtime procurement for two nuclear frigates, DLGN-41 and -42. Language is added to the bill providing that contracts for this advance procurement for the DLGN-41 and -42 shall be entered into as soon as practicable unless the President advises the Congress that their construction is not in the national interest. 10. Authorization requested to cover cost growth of prior-year programs for the Navy is reduced from $196.7 million to $174 million to reflect a reduction of $22.7 million in funds requested for the LHA program. The authorization requested for conver- sion of conventionally-powered frigates is reduced by $20 mil- lion, from $93.7 million to $73.7 million. 11. The authorization re uested for the Subsonic Cruise Armed Decoy is reduced by $$50.2 million. A $22 million RDT&E authorization remains in this program category to allow com- mencement of a new technology program looking toward a sys- tem to replace SCAD. 12. The Air Force's proposed lightweight fighter prototype program is reduced by $6.5 million, from the $46.5 million re- quested, to $40 million. Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 8 13. The $1.08,825,000 requested for the Utility Tactical Trans- port Aircraft System (IITTAS) is reduced by $6.2 million to reflect a reduction of 6 in the number of prototypes. 14. Authorization for the Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) is reduced by $42 million, leaving a net authorization of $155.8 million. 15. The Army's request fo:,- $14,498,000 for the development of nuclear munitions for shout-range tactical weapons is denied. 16. The request for $170, million for the site defense program is reduced by in25 million. 17. A general reduction of $30,400,000 is made in the RDT&E authorization for the Navy and Marine Corps, the reduction to b3 applied on the, basis of priorities established by the Depart- ment of Defense. 18. A general reduction of'~E;1 million is made in the RDT&E authorization for defense agencies, the reduction to be applied on the basis of priorities ~ostablished by the Department of Defense. 19. The authorization requested for the Air Force Human Resources Laboratory, $8,200,000, is reduced by $2,989,000. 20. There is added to the bill $172.2 million for the procure- ment of 12 F-111 aircraft. Language, is inserted in the bill pro- viding that these funds shall be available only for procurement, of the F-ill. This anthorizatioi was not requested by the Depart- ment of Defense. 21. At the request of the D ~,,partment of Defense an authoriza- tion for procurement of 10 F?-4J aircraft for the Navy is deleted and the funding authorizatio i therefor, $130.7 million, continues in the bill for the procurement of F-14A aircraft, increasing the buyofF-14'sfrom48to50. 22. The requested active duty authorized end-year strength of the Armed Forces is reduced by 13,037, including a reduction of 11,900 from the Army, reflecting a further reduction possible as a result of the withdrawal from south Vietnam; and reductions reflecting the committee inte ition to curtail the use of enlisted aides and reduce graduate education programs for officers. 23. The allowance of enlisted aides for senior officers in the military services is reduced by 3.55 per cent. 24. Each service is reduced by 10 per cent in the number of officers who may participate in full-tune graduate education programs. 25. The authorization for reserve strength for the Coast Guard is increased by 500 to a new total. of 11,800 for Fiscal Year 1974. 26. The ceiling on author zat ion for expenditures in Fiscal Year 1974 for the MASF program in support of the military forces of South Vietnam and-Laos is reduced from $2.1 billion to $1.3 billion, a reduction of $800 million from the amount originally requested by the Lepa:rtment of Defense. Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 9 The total dollar authorization recommended by the committee in the bill, $21,394,997,000, is $625,391,000 below the amount requested by the Department of Defense. The following tabulation compares the amounts authorized for fiscal year 1973 with the amounts requested by the Department of Defense for fiscal year 1974 and the amounts recommended by the committee for fiscal year 1974 in the present bill. COMPARISON OF AUTHORIZATIONS REQUESTED BY DOD FOR FISCAL YEAR 1974 WITH CONGRESSIONAL ACTION IN FISCAL YEAR 1973 AND COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1974 [In thousands] Requested fiscal year 1973 Authorized fiscal year 1973 Appro- priated fiscal year 1973 Requested fiscal year Committee 1974 recommends Procurement: Aircraft: Army___________ __ - ----- - $162,900 $133,800 $33,500 $181,000 $181,000 s_ Navy and Marine Corp 3,276,200 2,073,400 2,822,100 2,958,300 2,958,300 Air Force_____________________________ 3,255,700 2,283,900 2,239,300 2,912,800 2,739,100 Missiles: Army-------------------------------- 896,700 700,400 668,200 599,900 574,200 Navy-------------------------------- 842,400 769,600 719,240 680,200 680,200 Marine Corps_________________________ 22,100 22,100 22,100 32,300 32,300 Air Force----------------------------- 1,816,800 1,745,300 1,670,000 1,573,200 1,573,200 Total, missiles -------- _------------- 3,578,000 3,237,400 3,079,540 2,885,600 2,859,900 Naval vessels ----------------------------- 3,564,300 3,179,200 2,970,600 3,901,800 3,788,200 Tracked combat vehicles: Army-------------------------------- 260,700 186,500 130,500 201,700 193,300 Marine Corps_________________________ 62,200 54, 500 54, 500 46, 200 46, 200 Total, tracked combat vehicles-------- 322,900 241,000 185,000 247,900 239,500 Torp edoes: Navy_________________________ 194,200 194,200 192,400 219,900 219,900 Othe r weapons: Army________________________________ 114,400 57,800 56,300 51,300 44,700 Navy________________________________ 25,700 25,700 25,700 41,900 41,900 Marine Corps_________________________ 900 900 900 700 700 Total, other weapons---------------- 141,000 84,400 82,900 93,900 87,300 Total, procurement__________________ 14,495,200 12,427,300 11,605,340 13,401,200 13,073,200 Research, development, test, and evaluation: 31 686 Arm Nav y___________________ _______________ y (and Marine Corps)__________________ 2,122,716 2,816,787 1,978,966 2,708,817 1, 829, 032 1,829,032 2,545,213 2,108, 700 2,0 , r 2,711,700 12 , 675, 300 Air ________ Force 3,262,177 3,272,777 3,122,940 3,212,500 3,110,811 Defe ________________________ nse agencies_________________________ 520,087 505,987 435,313 2525,000 2504,000 Dire ctor of Test and Evaluation Defense______ ___________ ___________ 27,000 ----------- ------------ Eme rgencyfund__________________________ 50,000 50,000 p p Total, R.D.T. & E________________________ 8,771,767 8,516,547 7,959,498 8,557,900 8,321,797 Total, procurement and R.D.T. & E________ 23, 266, 967 20, 943, 847 19,564,838 21,959,100 21,394,997 Safeguard construction and family housing (mili- tary construction, Army; family housing, Defense)----------------------------------- ----------------- I Includes $2,600,000 for special foreign currency program for Navy under R.D.T. & E. authorization. 2 Includes $24,600,000 for the activities of the Director of Test and Evaluation, Defense. 3 The total request figure includes $61,288,000 for the civilian pay raise, effective Jan. 1, 1973, for in-house laboratory employees. This adjustment was identified subsequent to the initial submission of the authorization request. The actual total of the R.D.T. & E. request supported by the backup justification supp!n' by the services including the civilian pay raise, was therefore $8,619,188,000. Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 1C RELATIONSHIP OF ATTTHoRIza'rI.oN TO TOTAL APPROPRIATION The $21,394,997,000 authorized for appropriation in the present bill is only part of the $85,165,000,000 in new obligational authority re- grlested by the President for the Department of Defense in fiscal year 1974. The appropriation categories covered by authorization in the present bill are those for major procurement and research, development, test and evaluation. Appropriations for the categories of personnel, opera- tion and maintenance, and a part of procurement are made on the basis of continuing appropriations. M[ilii ary construction is authorized in separate legislation. The strength levels of the active-duty components and the selected reserve for each of the reserve components are, however, authorized by the present legislation and the leglsat.ion, therefore, has a substantial impact on the appropriations wiic]i may eventually be provided for personnel and operation and maintenance. GENERAL DISCUSSION : COST ESCALATION AND MILITARY PROCUREMENT The Committee on Armed Servic=~s reported to the House last year its deep concern with the continuing problem of unforeseen cost escala- tion in military procurement and with the manner in which escalation factors are taken into account in the letting of contracts by the Depart- ment of Defense. Hearings by ti.e committee at that time determined that insufficient data were available to clearly identify the elements which contribute most to cost escalation. The committee was, for ex- ample, unable to obtain a breakdown as to the percentage of cost in- creases in a given contract which were due to inflation as compared to the percentage due to technical changes. The committee at the time, therefore, directed two separate studies of cost escalation, one to be made by the. Comptroller General of the United States centering on the basis of cost escalation in procurement contracts and one ordered from the Department of Defense to provide such analysis of cost escalation as is necessary to develop a capacity to provide for accurate cost- accounting data to the committee. The studies were performed independently as requested and the re- ports were fled in March of this year according to the deadline set by the committee. The full text of both studies arc in the record of the committee's hearings, and the committee wo-zld urge all Members of Congress to read them. It is estimated that it will cost more than $153 billion to acquire the 116 weapons systems now under development. Some $89 billion of that amount is yet. to be approp -iat ed. The heavy impact of weapons spending on the allocation of the Nn.tion's resources is self-evident. At the same time, as the Defense Department study shows, it is possible to misread and overemphasize the plate of weapons procurement in de- termining the impact, of defense, spending on the national economy. Therefore, because of the enormous sums involved and the crucial im- portance of improved congressional and public understanding of this issue and because they will be oil great benefit to the committee in its follow-on work to better control future Defense expenditures, the com- Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 11 mittee has had a synopsis of both studies prepared and presents them here for the edification of Members of the House : COST GROWTII IN MAJOR WEAPON SYSTEMS REPORT (Summary of a report by the Comptroller General) The report analyzes the two principal causes of cost growth : (1) increases resulting from the greater capability (performance) de- manded of the replacement system; and (2) increases resulting from the way an acquisition program once started, is managed. Although it is not possible to measure precisely the cost growth contributions of these two factors, many knowledgeable people believe that the great- est cost growth comes from the continuously expanding performance requirements. The development process The development process for a major weapon system is a highly structured, complex enterprise involving interaction among users, de- velopers, and contractors often in many tiers; weapon system acquisi- tion thus involves considerable interaction between the public sector and private sector. Common understanding between the Congress and DOD of the bases for initiating and supporting the development of new weapons and of their relation to weapons in being in the total military posture must be sought so that needed stability in acquisition programs can be achieved. Candor with the Congress about such things as the uncertainties associated with cost estimates, technical-risk as- sessment, and the status of development must be practiced lest sur- prises undermine the confidence of the Congress and the congressional support for programs. An oversimplified representation of the manner in which weapon systems evolve from an idea to production is shown below : THE DEVELOPMENT PROCESS FOR A MAJOR WEAPON ,SYSTEM Appro m t ? o ,n eptual I Validation on i Full-Scale se i I Phase I Development ry --- D '_ fl1Tfl cI For,, 60002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 11 In the conceptual phase of development, the need for new military capability is drawn up, a concept to provide this capability is formed, and its technical feasibility is explored. As a rule, the conceptual phase is the least costly of the four phases shown above. In this phase, how- ever, the services commitment fo: its system hardens but at this early stage the involvement of the Sec?etr~ryof Defense is generally small. Ia-c the validation phase the preliminary designs and engineering for the weapon system are verified or accomplished, management plans are made, proposals for engineering development are solicited and evalu- ated, and the development contractor is selected. In the full-scale (engineering; development phase the design and the detailed engineering is completed by the contractor. The develop- ment contract is negotiated and awarded to start full-scale develop- ment. Pre-production prototypes, are built and tested in this phase to verify final design or producib:lity. It is in full-scare development that massive financial commitments begin. Most of the research and development outlay is spent here and the system acquires sometimes irreversible momentum toward produc- tion and still larger allocation of funds. The production phase begins when the production contract is negoti- ated and awarded. Here the funds commitment is the greatest. When production gets underway-, DOD'3 commitment to the program is fully public. Larger resources are committed. Cancellation then or later creates a. public confrontation, widespread publicity, angry reaction of interest groups, and hazards to cvxecrs. These effects build up a strong bureaucratic reluctance to halt or cancel a development program. The pattern of deeper involvement and decreasing options is shown bel?w. Although the greatest opportunity for far-reaching decisions occurs during the earliest phases of acquisition, the involvement of the Secretary of Defense, is insubstantial until called upon to approve a military services specific weapon proposal at the end of the conceptual ACQUISITION CYCLE CONCEPTUAL VALIDATION PHASE PHASE Co IMITHEUT - - DECISION! FLEXIBILITY TIME Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 13 phase. By this time the service is solidly behind its weapon selection and alternatives have been effectively eliminated. Thus his attention is drawn to discuss one weapon system at a time. Inadequate attention is believed to be paid to root questions bearing on the entire mission force and its weakness or its usefulness. Cost growth resulting from greater capability being demanded of replacement systems Most resources are invested in weapon systems to replace systems to perform the same types of missions. The successive generation of sys- tems which follow this pattern push state-of-the-art frontiers and, of course, costs increase with each increment of improvement. This tech- nological momentum can be expected to drive costs up no matter how well the programs are managed. The cumulative effort of the rising costs of military bombers and transport aircraft is illustrated below. Between 1945 and 1955 the cost of one complete Air Force aircraft system unit with its supporting equipment jumped by a factor of seven. Between 1955 and 1970 the cost of a system unit doubled. Fighter aircraft, tanks, heavy ordnance, and ships have followed a similar trend. How serious the situation is can be illustrated by a simple compari- son. The money that bought 100,000 fighter aircraft during World War II, when adjusted for inflation would buy less than 1,000 F-14 fighters today. The money that bought 57,000 tanks during World War II would now buy fewer than 2,000 main battle tanks. Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 COST CHANGE +20% Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 14 The tendency ro constantly seek higher performance systems might be described as "performance co 3t growth." This is one of the most serious aspects of cost growth since under realistic budget constraints the rising cost of systems can be nut only with reduced force levels. The, following table shows weapons programs where costs have forced reductions in the number of units to > be bought. System Original quantity Cost (millions) Current quantity Cost (millions) C-5a------------------------------------------------ 120 $3,423.0 81 $4,526.0 DLGN-38-------------------- .----------------------- 23 3.980.0 5 820.0 F-14 ----------------------------------------------- 710 6,166.0 313 5,272.0 LHA-------------------------------------------- 9 1,380.3 5 970.0 In addition, entire programs, suc`A as the MBT-70 tank program, have been canceled because they were too expensive. Coxt growth due to acquisition management Cost histories of 45 systems under development at June 30, 1972, show that current estimates of cost to acquire systems increased by some $31.5 billion--39 percent-over the planning estimates and $19.1 billion-20 percent-over the development estimate. It is these widely publicized overruns that have shake _1 public confidence in the ability and credibility of both Government and industry management. Cost growth in development programs is not a new phenomenon. Studies of development programs in the 195 )'s show cost growth of 200-300 per- cent. There are at least three different reasons for cost growth. These reasons are displayed below. ANALYSIS OF PROGRAM COST HISTORIES ON 45 WEAPON SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT CURRENT ESTIMATE ESTIMATE ESTIMATING ERRORS 25% INFLATION 30% ' CHANGES IN REQUIREMENT (QUANTITY, SCHEDULE, SPECIFICATIONS 45% 1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 15 Estimating errors Both the competing contractors and service representatives are strongly motivated-the one to propose and the other to accept low cost estimates-to win the contract and to gain approval against competing systems within the same service or similar systems proposed by another service. These strong competitive forces show up as: Unrealistically high performance requirements. Sheer difficulty of guessing the unknowns or predicting tech- nology. Overoptimism on the part of the bidders and the buyers or even "buying in" in the hope of recovering possible losses through engineering change orders. Cost-estimating changes, however, accounted for about 25 percent of the growth instead of 100 percent, as many people are prone to assume. A second cause is in flation-accounting for about 30 percent of the growth. The third cause deals with revisions to the specifications-time schedules, quantities, or engineering changes. Much of this type of cost growth results from unrealistic performance targets at the outset, including : Trying to do too much-challenging the state-of-the-art frontier. Trying to develop and produce the system too fast. One of the most prominent attempts has been concurrency ; that is, beginning production before full-scale development and testing have been completed. Solutions to weapon systems acquisition problems proposed by various authorities No aspect of Federal procurement has received more attention by the Congress, the executive branch, and the press during the past several years than the subject of the acquisition of major weapons. There has been a steady stream of critiques, hearings, and recom- mendations-and a high degree of consensus among various experts- about causes and solutions. Among those who have made contribu- tions : Blue Ribbon Defense Panel. National Security Industrial Association. Congressional Hearings and Reports. Rand Corporation. DOD, Especially Deputy Secretary David Packard. Commission on Government Procurement. Reforms which should be emphasized The past four years have been a period of vigorous activity devoted to solving the problems in weapon systems acquisition and to initiat- ing new policies, philosophies, and management techniques. The variety of actions proposed and being implemented are aimed at three key objectives. (Detailed explanations of each proposed action Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 ii may be found in Chapter,,-), "Re forms Which Should Be Emphasized" of the full report, which is in the committee hearing.) A. MAKING THE RIGHT DECISION AT THE OUTSET ON WTTAT TO DFVFLOP AND FOR WHAT PURPOSE 1. Obtain 0ST), service, and 2ongressional agreement on the basic operation need, the fundamental rceapon, system characteristics, and the expected level of resources to be allocated to that need. 2. Strengthen the staff support to provide the Secretary of Defense with comprehensive and objective ulalyses of missions and weapons requirements. 1. L'rtend the spare of congressional authorizations--at least one year in advance of the upcoming budget year. 4. 81remjthencongressional reviews of weapons budgets by first considering and approving budt-et =_otals for major missions. This re- view will be based on consideration of the overall needs of the various military missions. R. APPLYCNG LESSONS LEARSEL AT;OUT SLIPPAGES AND OVERRUNS :~. Avoid concurrent development and production and adhere to or- derly and sequential design, test, an_l evaluation. f,.. Stress austerity in ceveloplnert, small design teams, freedom to innovate, and maximum competitic n in the design phase with clear separation of development and production. Encourage continuous de- velopment of subsystems. 7. Adopt contractinq practices and Government-contractor relation- ships Which will encourage the mot effective team, performance. u. Continue to improve the Government's capability to develop cost estimates covering the development phase, as well as the production phase, of new systems. 9. Emphasize 7,r'fe-cycle costin,7 to gain better perspectives on pro- posed new systems and to strenrthcn cost-effectiveness analysis. C. STRENGTTIFN7NG THE OVERAT.I. MANAGEMENT OF THE. SYSTEM ACQUISI7'IO:, PROCESS 10. Continue the current, stroTg emphasis on upgrading the com- petence, stature, and tenure of program managers and procurement specialists. 11. Continue to emphasize the operational test and evaluation, by es- tablishing in each military department an organization independent of the developer and the user. Tl(e smior 051) official in this activity should report to the Secretary of Defense or to his deputy. 12. One of the deputy secretaries of Defense should assume the re- sponsibility for mission analysis an 7 sr~sfem acquisition. 13. Improve the planning for maintaining the development and production base, Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 17 COST ESCALATION (Summary of a study by the Department of Defense) It is necessary to emphasize that the weapons acquisition area has not been a major area of long-term growth in the Defense budget. Egon 1. OUTLAYS, DOD/MAP CURRENT PRICES PAY AND OPERATING COST I A; I- I I I 1 I I I I I I . I l...I.~.I I . ..~..I J_ r0 61 52 63 S4 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 E3 64 66 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 FY Figure 1 shows a two-way break of total Defense spending since FY 1950. The top line shows pay and operating costs. This includes all mil- itary personnel costs, active, reserve, and retired; the entire civil service payroll; and all non-pay operating costs financed in the O&M appropriations. The lower line is primarily procurement, RDT&E and construction-the investment area of our budget.. Note that in the 1950's, after Korea, on up into the early 1960's, these two lines were reasonably close, together. In the past 10 years espe- cially, pay and operating' costs have surged up. From 1964 to 1974- the past 10 years-Defense spending has risen $28.2 billion. Of that increase, $27.2 billion has gone into pay and operating cost, and $1 billion into the investment area. Measuring from 1954-20 years ago- investment spending is up $2.5 billion while pay and operating costs rose $32.9 billion, for a total increase of $35.4 billion. Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 These figures have not been adjusted for inflation. If we allow only for normal, economy-wide purchase inflation, we find that-in dollars of constant buying power--i;he investment area is sharply down over this period. Over the past 20 years, there is a real drop of 36 percent; over the last 10 years, the drop is 26 percent. Investment programs, then, have not caused major increases in the Defense budget over there }ears. Nor has the investment area been particularly prone to inflation, or escalation, as these terms are de- fined-an increase in the number of dollars required to buy the same thing. The report presents a great deal of data with respect to the impact of inflation upon Defense ar,d other economic sectors. Some of the key findings are : According to the Department of Commerce, state and local gov- ernments have been hit much harder by inflation than has the Federal Government, including Defense. The same calculations make it plain that inflation is much greater in the area of pay and operating costs than in investment. In considering the imps:-t of inflation among various sectors of industry, it is apparent that inflation is lowest where Defense does most, of its buying, and highest in those sectors (such as con- struction) where Defense accounts for a small share of the business. A series of spectacular charges have been made regarding "cost overruns," and it is alleged that these have amounted to $35 billion. Such charges, though, use planning estimates as a starting point, and this is inappropriate. Starting from the development estimate-the point at which a significant portion of the total cost is committed- cost growth is $16 billion, not $"*,5 billion. This represents an increase of about 1.7 percent, on the a,Terage, for all the systems involved. The cost growth is the n>t of all factors---changes in quantity, design, schedule, inflation rates, and others. Some of these increases resulted from design or other changes, deliberately chosen. Others arose from failure to anticip?,te the extent of inflation, an especially easy mistake to make in preparing estimates in the 1960's. Many other developments are subsumed i t tr?ese overall figures-the turbulence brought by the war, and the sharper cutbacks that have followed. Current all-time cost estimates ire 17 percent higher on the average than the development estimates for time systems, made at various points since the early 1960'.s, f gr programs extending into the 1980's. About, half of the all-time estirnases involved amounts that have not even been requested of the Concre,,s, and some of these costs will never he incurred. To sum it up, the investment area is not particularly prone to im.flation, as that term is define? and measured, nor is it an area of rampant spending growths. The "cost overrun" charges are distorted Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 and misleading. It is necessary to set aside these mistaken impressions in order to focus more clearly on the real problems. Investment spending has been stable There are immense problems. The underlying problem is that tech- nology, over the years, has multiplied the unit costs of weapons sys- tems. Both the GAO and DoD reports contain numerous examples of this point. Clearly, unit cost growth of this kind has little to do with general inflation. The main reason for these long-run increases in unit costs are, first, higher performance brought on by advanced technology and, second, a sharp reduction in quantities procured. Technology has involved several quantum leaps in electronics and powerplants, especially, as well as in airframes, ordnance, and metals and materials generally. Whatever the reasons, weapons unit costs have been increasing fair beyond anything that could be attributed to general inflation. DILLIONS (PT 74,$) STRATEGIC FORCES .? .. ' ALL OTHER BASELIBE INVESTMENT . INVESTMENT OUTLAYS CONSTANT PY 74 PRICES (BILLIONS) 57 58 ' 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 FISCAL YEARS / / WAS COSTS - ~` Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Figure 2 shows the tre=ad of our spending in the investment area, in constant prices-that is, setting aside general Inflation. Note that FY 1974 outlays are significantly lower than those of the 1950's and early 1960's. War spending largely involved munitions, weapons attrition, and items procured for Free World Forces-items that do not add to our long-run baseline force. For the baseline force alone, excluding war costs, the downward trend is even sharper. ,The, late 1.950's and early 1960's saw very heavy investment in stra- tegic forces---several tinressthe level of more recent years. Setting aside strategic force investment, remaining baseline investment (the dotted line) compares much more favorably with the levels of earlier years-- sonaewhat higher than tare late 1950's, and lower than the early 1960's. As noted earlier, technology has multiplied the unit costs of weapons dramatically over this period. And, as shown in Figure 2, total base- line investment has actually trended down, sharply, in real terms? Pe f Defense programs have ieei' accommodated to this surge in weapons unit costs within a declining dollar total in two ways: a sham drop in strategic force investment; sharp reductions in the quantities of 'weapons procured. (In the decade 1956-65, for example, an average of more than 1,800 fixed wing aircraft were procured per year. Recent annual buys have been about 500.) These expedients are new exhausted: In the earlier years shown in Figure 2, 1956-59, strategic force investment was about $1:3 billion per year, falling to less than $4 billion per year in FAT 1973 and FY 1974. Cutbacks in strategic forces will not provide the cushion they have in the past. Quantify cutbacks cannot go on indefinitely. Having cut annual aircraft: procurement quantities from 1,800 to 500 over roughly the past decade, the, string has been substantially run out. It Would be unwise in the extreme to count on further large cuts in weapons quantities, from a base that has already been sharply depleted. Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 It is important. to have a clear understanding of what the problems are, and what they are not. The weapons investment area is not pe- culiarly prone to inflation, as that term is generally defined and meas- ured, nor has investment spending grown rapidly over the past 20 years, nor do the spectacular charges of "cost over-runs" provide a meaningful measure of the problem. The underlying problem has been the increase in weapons unit costs clue to advancing technology. This problem now assumes critical proportions for two reasons : 1. The ex- pedients by which programs have been accommodated to the surge in unit costs-that is, the diversion of the falloff in strategic force invest- ment and the cutback in quantities procured-have been exhausted. 2. There is now a much higher threshold of unit costs. If technology is to continue to drive unit costs upward, starting from the high unit costs of today, the problem becomes several orders-of-magnitude greater than those of the past. Weaknesses in predicting and controlling costs In addition to the long-range problem caused by advancing tech- nology, a number of serious weaknesses have been identified in the Defense Department's system for predicting and controlling costs. A number of factors made the problems more acute. There were several reasons for bad estimates, the most important being advocacy. The people presenting estimates had every reason to be optimistic as to costs and technical aspects-they themselves believe deeply in the program, and they were out to sell it. There was thus a strong tendency to be optimistic regarding critical variables, leading to a compounding of the ultimate error. Top-level concern. was quite often directed heavily to technical and performance factors, with much less attention paid to costs. Costly design and schedule changes were inevitable under conditions of con- currency. Cost estimating was not systematic. In some cases the original esti- mates included an allowance for change orders, special tooling, sup- port equipment, specialized training equipment and spares, for ex- ample. In other cases, these items were routinely regarded as additives to the bare-bones initial estimates. To this situation, we must add the developments of the latter 1960's. DOD peacetime experience with procurement of major weapons was largely confined to the post-Korea period. That, as it happened, was a period of very stable prices. Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 22 Fig- 3 WHOLESALE PRICE INDEX (CM 1967100.0) Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 23 As Figure 3 shows, the wholesale price index hardly budged. Then in 1966 and thereafter prices began to shoot up. At the same time, schedules had to be rearranged because of the war; the labor market tightened ; and defense demands on industry grew. These factors in themselves caused major increases in costs measured from estimates prepared during this period. Inflation alone was a major factor. DOD did not foresee its magnitude and duration and usually did not allow for it in systems estimates. DOD had been allowing for escalation in one area : shipbuilding. In this area DOD sharply reduced escalation allowances in 1965, just before prices began to skyrocket and just as DOD was introducing other complex changes into the shipbuilding program. There was a great deal of turbulence in Defense budgets and pro- grams over this period. Investment spending grew 71 percent in three years-1965-68-then fell almost by half in the next five years- 1968-73. Service requests were reduced by the Office of the Secretary by large amounts-$20 billion or more-each fall, and congressional action came to be increasingly delayed. All of these developments added up to turbulence and uncertainty. Corrective efforts Thus the spectacular instances of cost growth arise from a com- bination of the long-run cost thrust of technology, the weaknesses in the DOD management systems and the turbulent economic conditions of the late 1960's. The corrective steps being taken may be summarized in seven major headings. The Defense Department has : 1. Put increased stress on careful evaluation of weapons pro- posals in terms of military needs, alternatives, cost, technical risk, timing and other factors. 2. Placed major emphasis upon improving and standardizing cost estimates and the means for keeping costs within bounds. 3. Developed means for monitoring progress against technical objectives and highlighting technical problems promptly. 4. Strengthened the weapons system manager. 5. Moved to eliminate concurrency of development and produc- tionand generally slowed the pace. 6. Emphasized hardware, rather than paper, testing, attempt- . ing to follow a philosophy of fly before buy. The basis for decision-making at the top levels in the Department of Defense is provided by the Development Concept Paper (DCP) and the Defense Systems Acquisition Review Council (DSARC) process. The DCP is a summary document that provides a broad overview of a major defense system. The Secretary's decision recorded in the DCP establishes the limit of authority delegated to the service for manage- 7. Begun to apply a design-to-cost approach. Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 meat of the program. It represents a contract between the Secretary of Defense and the military department involved. The DS ARC serves as an. advisory body to the Secretary of Defense. Cost considerations have co we to be emphasized increasingly, espe- cially o~ner the past year, tc t7r? point where they now share ebill- ing with per forinance and schedule goals in the work of the MARC. DSIn some r.~ stances, cost ranks as the primary consideration. A cumber of steps have been taken to improve cost estimating and control. DOD has established un-_ form criteria as to what is to be included in system cost. estimates, delining such items as fly-away costs, weapon system costs. procurement cosh and program acquisition costs. DOI) requires that independent cost estimates be prepared, in a.ddi- tion to that developed in the program manager channel. Working with contractors, 1)OD has developed and applied- Cost/ Schedule Control Systems Critria, with an associated Cost/Perform- ance Report. With the approval of tlra Office of Management and Budget, ex- pected impact of inflation is incorporated in all systems cost estimates. The Selected Acquisitior Reports (SAR) reflecting the project manager's current "best, estmate' of key performance, schedule and cost indicators, are prepared on 45 systems with a cumulative acquisi- tion cost of over $100 million. The design-to-cost approach. deserves particular emphasis. In the last 10 years pay and operating costs have grown $27.2 billion--in spite of a cutback of 474,000 jr. military and civil service personnel. Investment spending is $1 billion liiu-her than 10 years ago, and 112.5 billion higher than 20 years ago-not enough, by a wide margin, to cover even general inflation. f technology continues to drive unit costs constantly upward, the result can only be a falloff in weapons quali- ties. 1)01) believes that the deign-to-cost approach will have to be increasingly emphasized-designing a.n adequate quantity of weapons within a given amount of mcmey. In large parts of the Defense pro- gram, I)OD will have to forego technological gains otherwise achiev-able to stay within this financial constraint. Quite often, the last few points of performance add immensely to the unit cost; it. is these that we must.. in some instances, forego. Everyone who is involved in the formulation and execution of na- tional-security policy must recognize that we are dealing with a finite level of resources and that the national interest will not always be well served if every system is pushed to the ultimate level of attainable technology. (`one7nsJons The Department of Defense believes it is making substantial prog- ress particularly in improving' co-it estimates and in the application of Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 the design-to-cost approach. Escalation should not be over-emphasized since the weapons procurement area has not been particularly prone to inflation. The key factor is the cost-thrust of technology. There must continue to be flexibility as to the means of providing for escalation in individual contracts, using explicit escalation clauses in some cases. Such escalation clauses should be pegged to indices not to cost experience of individual contractors. The critical point to re- member is that there is interaction between escalation provision and the basic estimate itself. The Defense study has uncovered no areas where legislative changes or extensive changes in contractor accounting systems are required. Areas were found where the guidance from the Office of the Secre- tary of Defense isn't adequate. There are problems with incorporating escalation in certain parts of particular cost estimates, and guidance is not specific enough for categorizing cost changes under the SAR system. The Department of Defense is continuing to work to improve these areas. The Committee believes these studies are important steps in the continuing effort that must be made to improve control over defense costs. The Committee believes that one of the most salutary effects is aiding those who made the studies to better identify the areas where greater effort is needed. The report by the Comptroller General will be ex- tremely helpful to the GAO in sharpening the work it is doing for the Congress on defense programs. Similarly, the Defense Department study should aid the Department's administrators in identifying prob- lems to which they .must give particular attention. The Committee would call attention to the recommendation in the report of the Comptroller General that the Congress get involved in weapons decisions at an earlier point in the decision-making process, before executive branch positions have solidified. The Committee be- Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 lieves that this is central to mffective control by the Congress and will continue to explore means b which this can be accomplished. The. Committee calls to the attention of Defense Department offi- cials, military and civilian the part of the Comptroller General report stressing the need for candor with the Congress about uncertainties in programs and the importnncce that such candor will have in developing the necessary confidence in the Congress for support of defense programs. The Committee believes; it is significant that the Comptroller Gen- eral's report was able to pros ide a rough percentage break-down as to the impact on cost escalation of such factors as inflation, cost-estimat- ing errors, and changes in requirements. Such a breakdown was not available in the past. The Committee would partcularly call to the attention of the House the point made in the Defense Department's study that absorbing in- creases in investment costs, or weapons procurement costs, by decreas- ing the quantities purchased cannot go on indefinitely. The Congress cannot allow obsession with unit cost to result in inadequately equipped forces. The Committee thinks it is important to stress the point made in the Defense report that total weapons procurement spending has been surprisingly stable over the years and major weap- ons procurement per se has not been the driving force in the growth of the Defense. budget. The Committee would I articularly emphasize for the Members of Congress two other points : First, as both reports makc clear, there are no easy panaceas, but rather a. requirement for a lot of hard work at all levels in the defense business. Second, that providing an adequate national defense is a continu- ing business and we cannot halt the development and procurement of weapons systems while the process is being improved. Finally, the Committee would say that it recognizes its own need for independent analysis of defense programs and with these reports as a base will continue to l urs.ue avenues of more effective review of military authorization requ?st,,. Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/1727 CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 DISCUSSION OF MAJOR PROCUREMENT PROGRAMS A-10 The Air Force request in the procurement account for the A-10 Close Air Support Aircraft was $30 million in advance procurement authorization. The committee spent a considerable amount of time dur- ing the hearings on this program. The particular point which caused the most concern was the Air Force schedule for the various milestones in their contract with the aircraft manufacturer. The program presented to the committee calls for 10 RDT&E air- craft to be produced for flight testing and demonstration of the opera- tional capability of the weapons system. The contract for the 10 RDT&E aircraft was entered into on March 1, 1973 and was a cost-plus incentive fee contract in the amount of $159,279,888 (target cost plus target fee) to Fairchild Industries, Inc., for the development of the'10 RDT&E aircraft. The contract provides for a cost sharing arrange- ment whereby the cost above target is shared by the Government and the contractor on a 70/30 ratio, respectively. If the cost reaches $186,810,083, the contractor will have lost all his fee. The Government assumes all additional cost over this amount. A contract was also awarded on March 1, 1973 to the General Elec- tric Company for the delivery of 32 TF-34-100 engines with options for additional production engines included in the contract. The committee learned that the Air Force schedule calls for exercis- ing the first production option in May 1974, seven months prior to the delivery of the first RDT&E aircraft. When the committee questioned the Air Force about this apparent discrepancy in the "fly before buy" concept, it was advised that the Air Force had 180 days from May 1974 in which to exercise the first pro- duction option, which would expire on 1 November 1974. This is still over a month before the delivery of the first RDT&E airplane. Ilow- ever, the committee further learned from the Air Force that if it de- layed exercising the option for the 180 days provided in the contract, the production costs for the first 48 aircraft would increase aproxi- mately $12 million. Therefore, the committee is very distressed about the situation in which the Air Force's A-10 contract has put the Congress. Because of the many assurances given the committee about the mini- mum risk involved in a production decision on this close air support aircraft and the strict adherence to the contractual milestones, the com- mittee recommends the approval of the $30 million request for advance procurement. F-15 The FY 1974 Air Force request, as originally submitted, contained an authorization for 77 F-15 aircraft in the amount of $801.9 million. Also requested was $116.6 million for initial spares. This request, to- gether with the FY 1973 procurement (30 aircraft) would have com- pleted the procurement of aircraft for the first wing, a total of 107. The contract for the engine development program for the F-15 was awarded to Pratt and Whitney and development was started on 1 March 1970. It was to be a joint development program for the Air Force and the Navy. The Air Force engine is called the F-100, and Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 28 the Navy engine is called the F-401. The program has continued to the present point in time, with the Air Force completing what they call "preliminarv flight rating test" in February 1972. Since that time, they have been flying the engine at Edwards Air Force Base in F-15s and the engine has over 800 flight hours to date with no significant deficiencies in actual flight not d. However, the ground tests of the F--100 engine have been plagued with difficulties and failures on the test stand and in wind tunnel testing. The most recent controversial point was the test which is called the Military Qualification Test (MQT), a 150-hour durability test which become:; the base line for a production configuration. The con- tract milestone called for the MQT to be completed in February. There was a failure to meet the test requirement on schedule, which will be an added cost of "a iew tens of millions of dollars." Because the contracts that the Government has with industry are two separate contracts, one w_th. McDonnell-Douglas for the airframe and one with Pratt and Whitney for the F-100 engine, the Air Force found itself in a position where McDonnell-Douglas had satisfied all of their required milestones either on or ahead of schedule, but the engine contractor had not. The Air Force Program Manager testified before the committee that he felt that because the test experience to date showed that he had a minimum risk program, and that it was within his prerogatives as the Program Manager to make certain trade-offs regarding the test 'ioro{`rain for the engine, he should exer- cise those prerogatives, and he (lid. This is where the present contro- versy concerning the engine prcgram arose. The Program Manager modified the MQT, 150-hour diurability test run in two particular points, altitude and mach number. The F-100 engine snccesslulIv passed the modified MQT, which legally bound the Air Force to exercise its production option with the engine contractor. However., the Air Force testified that it would rerun the 150-hour durability test at the ariginal .speeiftcation?s and hopefully have it, completed by September 30, 1973. After very detailed Air Forco testimony, the committee members determined that because of the t.pparent engine deficiencies, that the program should be slowed down at least until the MQT was success- fully performed, and therefore, voted to reduce the Air Force F-15 request by 50 percent. Accordingly, the committee recommends that the Air Force pro- gram for the F-15 for FY 1974 b reduced from a buy of 77 to a buy of 39 aircraft, and the procurement and the initial spares authorization be reduced from $918.5 million to $587.6 million, a, net reduction of $330.9 million. F-14A Again. as last year, the F-14 aircraft request was a cause of major concern to the committee. Navy', original FY 1974 budget request of $572 million for 48 aircraft included flyaway hardware, support, spares said advance procurement. The airframe portion of the $572 million: budget reflected Grumman's original F--14 contract ceiling price as adjusted for application of the ab:iormal escalation clause. This request was submitted prior to completion of negotiations between the Navy Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/1279: CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 and Grumman regarding the FY 1973 buy of 48 F-14As (Lot V). The committee began hearings on the FY 1974 Procurement Author- ization Bill on April 10, 1973 knowing that on December 11, 1972 Grumman "rejected" the option exercised by the Navy on December 8 for its Lot V procurement of 48 F-14 aircraft. The committee was advised that in order to get Grumman to agree to produce Lot V at the original contract price, Navy agreed to cancel all future contract options and negotiate any future F-14 buys on an annual basis. Therefore, the committee was in a quandry in connection with the F-14 program until the receipt of a letter on June 11 from Deputy Secretary of Defense Clements outlining the proposed F-14 program for FY 1974. The committee was pleased to receive testimony from Deputy Sec- retary Clements on June 14, 1973 outlining the Navy's current position regarding the F-14 program. Secretary Clements pointed out that he had determined that the Department's current position was to request 50 F-14's in FY 1974 in the approximate amount of $703 million, which is a summation of the $572 million originally requested by the Navy for 48 F-14's and $131 million originally requested by the Marine Corps for 10 F-4J's. Further, subsequent buys, in incre- ments of 50, 50 and 29, to bring the F-14 inventory to a total of 313 would cost an estimated $2.823 billion. The desired inventory of 313 F-14s was determined by Secretary Clements as the total requirement for the Phoenix-equipped weapons system. Secretary Clements further testified, in support of his recommenda- tion to the committee, that (once 313 Phoenix _equipped F-14 's are procured) the fighter modernization program for the Navy and Marine Corps required a less expensive prototype flyoff between the Navy F-14 and the Air Force F-15 aircraft. Ile stated that he had decided to not authorize the Navy, nor recommend to the committee, the initiation of any new aircraft development program, but rather, draw upon developments underway or completed. He further stated : Within this general approach, I have directed the Navy to take the following action and to seek your committee's approval. First, two different types of aircraft will be developed and tested to determine their cost and effectiveness as replacements for part of the F-4 inventory in the Marine Corps and the Navy. Two aircraft of each type will be procured for the testing program. The first aircraft will be a modification of the F-14. It will not have a. Phoenix missile capability, though it is pos- sible its avionics can be based upon the existing weapons sys- tem, such as the F-14's APG63, rather than an entirely new avionics development. I will. look to the Navy and to the contractor to take aggres- sive, innovative measures to substantially reduce the cost to the F-14 airframe so that it can be a credible competitor. The second airframe will be a modification of the Air Force F-15. The weapons systems capability for this competitor will be the same as the Air Force aircraft. The principal difference will be in changes to make the air- craft carrier-compatible on a structural basis, including the Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 inc:,orporation of lift devices to reduce the approach speed of the aircraft. I considered the possibility of including an improved F-4 prototype in this program and determined that status of the development and testing of the improved F-4J is such that further investment in r; as a prototype is not necessary. We know enough about the airplane and its avionics to make an adequate appraisal of its capabilities, and would not learn enough more than we already know to justify the addi- tional expense. The second action that l directed is that these prototype aircraft be available fe - flight testing by late 1973. We will make every effort to assure that this timeframe is met. In no case will wet accept initiation of flight tests later than Decem- ber, 1975. The flight test program will be conducted by the Navy and closely monitored by th e. Deputy Director of Defense, Re- search and Engineering for Operational Test and Evaluation. The third step that I have directed is that a decision will be made by the Navy-Marine Corps of F-4 replacement aircraft by July `76. This decision will be based upon a minimum of six months competitive Navy flight testing after any neces- sary contractor flight tes;. A considerable amount of work remains to be done to es- tablish exactly how much this program will cost, and I am not prepared to state specific totals at this time. However, to initiate the program I estimate that $150 mil- lion will be, needed in RET&E in FY'74. I will be able to pro- vide the committee with specific details regarding costs after we have gone to the contractors and obtained their proposals. I would estimate we can do his within 30 days. After studying the proposals, I will present the necessary details to you. At this time, I request the committee's approval and support of the plan and, your assistance in getting off to a good start. Subsequent to the appearan^e of Deputy Secretary of Defense Clem- ents, the Committee received testimony from Mr. George Spangenberg, recently retired as Director of Evaluation in Naval Air Systems Com- mand, relative to the propo,-,al on the prototype program for the F-14/15. Among other thing, Mr. Spangenberg provided the Com- mittee with cost estimates developed by the Department of the Navy which indicated that no money would be saved in following the pro- posed prototype programs. The study indicated, as a matter of fact, that the Department of Defense would be more prudent to go forward with its established program rather than attempting to develop a stripped down economy version of a less capable F-14 or F-15. In view of this testimony and :in the absence of any persuasive re- buttal from the Department of Defense, the Committee rejected the proposal advanced by the Deputy Secretary of Defense. The Committee therefore recommends approval of the revised re- quest to delete ten F-4Js and increase the F-14A buy from 48 to 50. There will be no change in the amount of authorization requested. Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/1731CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 Attache Service Aircraft Last year, this committee approved the Army's request for the pur- chase of 20 U-21F aircraft at a cost of $12.7 million. The committee also approved the purchase of 14 aircraft in the Air Force request designated CX-X at an estimated cost of $8.4 million. The Air Force specifications called for an FAA certified, off-the-shelf, medium- weight, executive transport to serve the needs of the Defense Attache Service. In our report, we stated: The (Air Force) specifications described to the committee appear to be identical with the U-21F type aircraft requested in the Army program. Therefore, the committee feels that it would be feasible for the Air Force to designate the Army as its procurement agent and that a. common buy be made. The committee is advised that an approximately 10-percent savings on each aircraft could be realized in a single buy of 34 aircraft rather than a separate buy of 20 for the Army and a separate buy of 14 for the Air Force. The Senate deleted both of these aircraft in their deliberations. In conference, the Senate receded after the conferees received assurance from the military departments that the buy for the Army and Air Force would be a common procurement of a single aircraft and that there be a competitive joint procurement of off-the-shelf aircraft with- out unnecessary military modifications. Accordingly, a Request for Proposals was issued on October 6, 1972 with specifications incorporating "minimum" and "desired" levels of performance. Subsequent to receipt and evaluation of proposals, Secre- tary Froehlke, on January 20, 1973, canceled the procurement when it generally became known that the Source Selection Board had ap- parently picked a jet aircraft rather than a turboprop aircraft. Since cancellation of this negotiated procurement, the Army and the Air Force have been meeting to reach agreement on the specifica- tions to be utilized in resoliciting for the procurement of the aircraft. The committee is advised that Army's minimum requirements have not changed since its testimony before the Congress during the FY 1973 hearings, i.e., a U-21F type aircraft would comply with and satisfy its operational requirements. The Air Force, on the other hand, has determined that its requirements are higher than the U-21F in two areas. These are single engine rate of climb and single engine service ceiling. To resolve this dilemma and to permit the expeditious replacement of the deteriorating fleet of utility aircraft, discussions have continued between the services. The attempted single service consolidated pro- curement did not produce the desired result since requirements for the Army and Air Force aircraft are said to be somewhat different. Per- formance requirements representative of the turboprop type aircraft satisfy the Army's minimum operational requirements. However, the Air Force has taken the position that an increased capability is needed for the CX-X to assure that minimum safety of flight performance requirements can be satisfied. Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 32 As a result. the. committee received a request front the Army asking permission to procure aircraft that met its minimum requirements separate and apart from the Jr Force. During the hearings, the Arr iy, in their FY 1974 request for 20 additional aircraft., at a cost of Ii12.2 million, again justified it turbo- prop-type aircraft to the satisfaction of the cornrrrittee, and the com- mittee recommends approval of the Army request. Ilowever, the committee was not convinced that the Air Force justified a higher specification than the Army for the uses to which these aircraft are to be put. Therefore, the committee recommends that the Air Fo:-ce request. for 16 CX-X attache aircraft,, in the amount of $9.6 million, be disapproved. fi'--111 Members of this committee have expressed concern over the fact that the Department of Defense did not submit a request for further pro- duction of the F--111 type aircraft in the FY 1974 budget. Many members expressed amazement that, the administration's budget would let the F-111. production line die while continuing other lines such as the A-4. which is 1948 technology; the A-6, subsonic 1950 technology; the A-7, 19,50 technology; and the F-4, of which the U.S. already has more than 1,000. The committee discussed at. length this particular program and re- ceived testimony in connection ihere.with. The majority of the com- mittee arrived at the conclusion that w e might be creating an unneces- sary problem for ourselves b:7 blindly accepting the strategic bomber schedule of the Department of Defense. It seemed that a simple solu- tion to the whole problem would be to preserve the alternative that is found in the F-111. That production line is the only existing bomber source in the free world toda,7. The F--111 is the only tactical aircraft we have which can be converted to a strategic aircraft, the FB-111, with minor modifications. In response to discussions and inquires, the committee requested and received a letter from the Genera I Dynamics Corp. dated ,June 14, 1973 submitting an estimate for continuing the production of the F-1.11 weapon system beyond the ctrrent program which ends in December 1974. The committee had beer. advised that the Air Force and Gene:ral Dynamics some time ago negotiated a program for 12 F--111 aircraft in FY 1974. These negotiations contemplated authorization to proceed on 1 January 1973 and the target pri-e established for a fixed price incen- f ive fee contract was $136.3 million. At that time, it was estimated that $30 million in long lead items should be added for the required engines and other (WE for purposes of determining the total program cost. Since the FY 1974 program has not been authorized and the $30 mil- lion long lead procurement fund:: have not been released, some changes to the negotiated program, d--scribed above, are necessary. Assuming a release of long lead funds (830 million) not later than 1 August 1973, General Dynamics is able to make a firm commitment for a 12 F--111 program at a target pr' We of $1.48 million. The target price excludes the prices for engines mud other GFE as well as spares and other initial support items. With that background, the General Dy- Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 33 namics proposal of the total program cost for a 12 F-111 program follows : 12 F-111 airplanes : Millions Airframe and avionics------------------------------------- - $148.0 GFAE _ 32.2 -----------------------_------------------------- Spares and support (8 percent) ---------------------------------- 14.4 Program total------------------------------------------------ 194.6 NOTE.--These figures include (1) the additional cost caused by delay in release of long lead funds, and (2) the $30 million long lead funds provided in the FY 1973 budget. The above information was transmitted to the Air Force and their comments were requested. The reply received from the Air Force indi- cated that they agreed, in general, with the General Dynamics figures. However, the Air Force's estimate for spares and support equipment is $23.5 million as compared with $14.4 million shown above estimated by General Dynamics, a difference of $9.1 million. Further, there is an apparent discrepancy of $19.1 million between the General Dynamics' letter to the committee and the Air Force letter in the estimated cost of a 12 aircraft buy of the F-111. The difference involved their respective estimates of initial spares and support equip- ment ($9.1 million) plus the Air Force claimed requirement for an additional flight simulator ($10 million). As far as the simulator is concerned, the Air Force stated that it would be possible to defer the $10 million, and it should be deferred until a later year program. Regarding the difference of $9.1 million for the initial spares and support equipment, the contractor's estimate was based on a straight actuarial calculation using 8% of the basic cost, or $14.4 million. The Air Force estimate of $23.5 million ($15.3 million support equipment plus $8.2 million initial spares) was presumably arrived at by a more detailed item by item analysis. The reason that this figure is higher than the more usually accepted 8% is, quite frankly, that during the last several years' buys of the F-111s, the Air Force has scrimped on these items in order to hold down the total cost. In other words, the extra $9.1. million that the Air Force estimates is needed for initial spares and support equipment is as much to support these previous aircraft as it is for this year's buy. However, $1 million of the $9.1 million difference was added by the Air Force for FY 1975 initial spares. The committee believes this $1 million can be deferred until next year. The committee, therefore, recommends the authorization of $172.7 million for a 12 F-111 aircraft buy. C-5A As the committee reported last year, the C-5A continued to provide the Military Airlift Command with the unique capability to move combat and combat support units, including "outsized" equipment and logistical supplies, rapidly and efficiently under wartime or emergency conditions. It continues to assure the balanced and effective deploy- ment of manpower and materiel. As of the end of May 1973, when the last C -5A was delivered to the Air Force, this aircraft had logged over 100,000 hours in test, training and airlift missions. Operational units have flown over 2800 scheduled Approved Foor Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 34 airlift missions transporting over 150,000 tons of cargo for the Depart ment of Defense. In addition, the f"-5A has flown over 600 Special Assignment Airlift Missions (SRAM) carrying over 29,000 tons of cargo predominantly outsized to an)' other Air Force airlift aircraft. Our Strategic Airlift Force, consisting of C-5s and C-1.41s, is now fully equipped. These aircraft, i-i concert, with the Civil Reserve Air Fleet, have the capability to air' ift armored divisions with virtually all of their heavy equipment-worldwide. In FY 1973 the Air Force reluested funds to complete the C-5A program. Congress reduced the reiuest, leaving funding to be ap- proved incrementally. For FY 1S" N the Air Force requested $43.1 mil- lion to cover the: C-5A requirements. however, the committee has learned that X37.2 million will sati:dfy the FY 1974 requirements. Air Force Secretary Seamans advised Congress that the fatigue life of the C-5 A. continues to be a subject of concern. Further, an independ- ent structural review team formed i n late 1971 has outlined a number of alternative methods for increasing fatigue life of the aircraft. As a result of this review, the Air Force is implementing flight and fuel management techniques, and is going ahead with an active lift dis- tribution control system, to reduce stress on critical wing areas during flight operations. Other tests, refurbishment, and depot AGE can all be accommodated with the funds r,commended by the committee. The committee recommends the approval of $37.2 million for the (t-5A program. AS'rr. f egiurrd The bill contains $350.3 million for the Safeguard Anti-Ballistic Missile System, including $159.3 million for procurement and $191 million fair research, development, test and evaluation. The total au- thorized, $350.3 million, represents Li $50.7 million reduction below the amount requested. The funds authorized provide for the continuation of Safeguard deployment at one site at Grand Forks, North Dakota, consistent with the Treaty on the Limitation c,f ABM Systems entered into by the U.S. and the Soviet Union in 197-?. Tinder the terms of the Treaty. each nation is limited to two ABM[ sites, one for the defense of ICBM fields and one for the defense of the nation's Capital. Congress last year made the determination not ta field the system in the Washing- ton, D.C. area. Consistent with that determination by the Congress., this year's request included only finds necessary for the deployment at the Grand Forks site. The system i~; due to become operational at Grand Forks during fis- c:il 1974 and this year's authorization represents the last significantly large funding request for the Grand Forks site. During the Committee's initial review of the Safeguard procure.. ment the. Committee questioned Army witnesses closely concerning the level of funding required for the. program. Following that review the Armv reanalyzed its request and indicated to the Committee that it could take a reduction of $255.7 million in the procurement account, for Safeguard, the major portion representing reduction in the amonm; requested for ground equipment. The procurement authorization was accordingly reduced by that am curt. In addition, the Committee determined that the level of R. & D. funding was extraordinarily high for a system which is close to com- Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 35 pletion. The Committee, therefore, while recognizing that most of the R.D.T. & E. funds were for testing and advance software for the sys- tem, nevertheless concluded that a reduction of $25 million could safely be made in R.D.T. & E. funds for Safeguard. The combined effect of the procurement and R.D.T. & E. reduc- tions, therefore, is a net decrease in the Safeguard authorization of $50.7 million below the amount initially requested. Lance The bill provides $83.7 million, the amount requested for procure- ment of the Lance (MGM-52C missile). In addition, the bill provides $1.5 million for initial spares for a net total authorization of $85.2 million for the system. R. & D. has been completed on the Lance and no R.D.T. & E. funds are included for the system in the present bill or planned in the future. The Lance is a mobile surface to surface ballistic missile system to provide general fire support at the corps and division level. The pres- ent authorization continues the level of procurement initiated last year looking towards the gradual introduction of the Lance into the Army system replacing the Honest John and the Sergeant missile battalions. The authorization provided in the bill provides for a nuclear-only capability for the system. The Armed Services Committee has in the past indicated its support for a non-nuclear as well as a nuclear_ war- head for Lance. The Army is, however, pursuing a R & D program looking toward an eventual non-nuclear capability for the system. A study presently being conducted with the cooperation of the Institute for Defense Analysis is examining the cost effectiveness of the non- nuclear warhead. The results of the study are expected to be available in April. of 1974. The Committee will expect the results of the study to be available to it in time for consideration of the fiscal 1975 missile procurement program so that funding for a non-nuclear capability can be included in next year's authorization bill if the study indicates that such would be cost-effective. The Committee notes that the Army con- tinues to support a non-nuclear capability for Lance. DLGN The House Armed Services Committee in acting on the recom- mendation of its Seapower Subcommittee added to the authorization this year the sum of $79 million to cover additional long-leadtime funding for two nuclear frigates DLGN-41 and -42. The Navy presently has only two nuclear frigates in commission- the BAINBRIDGE (DLGN-25) and the TRUXTUN (DLGN-35). Despite the initial objections of the Department of Defense, the Com- mittee on Armed Services and the Congress gave the Department of the Navy authority, which it utilized, to initiate construction on two additional nuclear frigates, the CALIFORNIA (DLGN-36) and the SOUTH CAROLINA (DLGN-37). These nuclear frigates will enter the fleet in calendar year 1974 and 1975 respectively. Subsequent to that action, the Department of the Navy recom- mended the initiation of a new class of nuclear frigates, the so-called DLGN-38 class. At the time Congress was requested to approve this program, the Department advised that this class would consist of at least four nuclear frigates. Congress approved this program but the Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 Department has seen fit to limit construction on this new class of nu- clear frigates to three ships-the DLGN-38, -39, and -40. Un- fortunatety, the Department has. no provision in its 5-year plan for initiating construction of any additional nuclear frigates of this class. In view of these circumstances, and because of the obvious require- ment for additional nuclear-powc;red frigates to accompany our nu- clear-powered aircraft carriem, the Committee is providing for long lead time items in this bill for the DLGN-41 and -42. Aside from the military and strategic considerations that prompt this decision, the Committee wishes to point out that the decision to go forward with these additional nuclear-powered frigates of the DLGN-38 class will offer the opportunity for economies in ship construction costs that wi71 not be available in the event the Navy fails to exercise its option for future construction under the, existing DLGN-38 contract. As the escorts for each nuclear-powered aircraft carrier are con- verted to nuclear power, the ca rric r achieves far more of its potential capability. With four nuclear-powered carriers planned for the Fleet, a minimum of 16 escorts is neede .. The escorts have proven to be ex- trenmely valuable for independent work as well. Because of their nuclear powerplant they can move without waiting for black oil in order to meet an emergency ar.d f,,rrive at their destination ready to fulfill their mission. Neither th ~ commanding officer of a ship nor the commanding officer of any group utilizing nuclear power ever has to concern himself about, fuel levels dropping to such a point as to make it necessary to curtail any mission. In order to provide the funds for the DLGNs the committee took $22.7 mill=ion from the item Cost (growth of Prior-Year Programs, it sum Navy had earlier advised th(. committee it did not need for the LIIA program. However, the -''rrn:ls were still included in the Presi- dent's budget. The committee took $36.3 million from the program for the conversion of Polaris to Poseidon. This program has his- torically had a large amount of funds available for reprogramming because of superior management. The committee also took $20 million from the conversion of conventionally-powered frigates since these were going to be sent to private yards instead of public yards which the Navy informed the committee would involve a saving and also would involve it time delay. Because the Congress has had great difficulty persuading the execu- tive. branch to build nuclear frigates. the committee added language to the bill requiring that the $79 million be used on.lz/ for the purchase of the long-leadlime items for DL(xN-41 and -42. The committee also incorporated language (such as used by the Congress in 1966 and later years) requiring that the contract `or the long-leadtime items be let as soon as practicable unless the President fully advises the Congress that. the construction of the nuclear frigates is not in the interest of national defense. This approach by the Congress forced the construe tion of DLGNs- -36 to -40 and the committee believes it, is necessary again in order to get the program back underway. ?4%uolear aircraft carrier The President's budget requests $657 million to complete the fund- ing of the new unclear aircraft carrier CVN-70. Other items of the Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 37 budget request $52.7 million for escalation and $11.4 million for out- fitting of the Nimitz and Eisenhower, CVN-68 and -69. The nuclear aircraft carrier is it fast mobile base for the support of sea-based tactical airpower. The carrier gives the United States the capability to fly ship-based airplanes against some of the strongest land-based airplanes of the Soviets. Circumstances might be such- as they have been in the past-that there would be little or no sup- port from friendly nations or we would be denied the ability to use land-based airfields. At that time it would be necessary to have in the air our strongest naval fighters, the F-14, and the only naval plane able to keep track of and direct an air battle, the E-2C. Modern nuclear-powered carriers have been designed for these mod- ern aircraft. The deck length, the catapult strength and the arresting gear configuration are all designed together to enable these planes to fly from the deck. In turn, the spaces below deck are designed to provide for the maintenance and supplies of the new aircraft. The following table is an illustrative example of the relative capa- bilities of old and modern attack carriers, by class, reflecting single strike capabilities and air ordnance, jet fuel, and steaming endurances without replenishment : Commissioning periods______________________________ 1944-50 1945-47 1957-68 1972- 2 0 Single strike capability_______________________________ 1.0 1.3 1.6 . 8 3 Ordnance endurance_________________________________ 1.0 1.4 2.5 . 5 Jet fuel endurance__________________________________ 1.0 1.8 2.6 .2 1 Steaming endurance_________________________________ 1.0 1.0 1.0 ( ) I Virtually unlimited. The carriers are also needed to defend against a heavy attack on our naval forces from cruise missiles that could be launched by the Soviets from the air, surface ships or undersea craft. The funds sought this year will allow the completion of the fourth nuclear-powered aircraft carrier. This will permit us to station two carriers in the Atlantic and two in the Pacific ready to respond to emergencies in either area. Some have suggested that we can rely upon land base airfields in times of difficulty. However, the number of bases around the world has dropped from 500, which we had just after World War II, to 37. Many of these remaining bases might be denied to us for political reasons in times of crisis. The possible denial. of these rights makes it imperative that we keep up our carrier forces as one of our most effective weapons. As the number of carriers in the fleet de- creases, it is all the more important that we provide the strongest carrier fleet possible within the numbers permitted to the Navy. The committee has frequently stressed the importance it attaches to having first-line ships of the Navy nuclear powered instead of con- ventionally powered. The two nuclear cores in the Nimitz deliver energy the equivalent of 11 million barrels of fuel oil.. That is the equivalent of a line of tank cars extending from Washington to Boston, close to 500 miles. The two nuclear cores in the new frigates each will deliver the equivalent energy of two million barrels of fuel oil. These are over a life of more than 10 years. This means that the nuclear- Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 38 powered ships will be able to operate effectively without any need for fuel for its own propulsion and with only the need for airplane fuel for the planes on the carrier. This releases what would otherwise be a heavy demand for fuel oil on the civi liar n economy. Trident Included in the bill is $1,527,400,000, the amount requested, for Tri- dent. The Shipbuilding and Conversion portion of Title I includes $86 7.8 million ; of this amount., $536.8 million is to complete funding of the first Trident submarine. The balance is for long-leadtime items for three submarines. This request follows the authorization and apps priation last year of $194 mill ion which was used to buy the long-lead nuclear propulsion items for the first, Trident submarine and long-lead- time items for three additional submarines. The Trident submarine is be.inff planned for introduction into the fleet about 1978. It is planned to be equipped with the Trident I mis- sile which will have a range of over twice the present Poseidon missile. This will enable the Trident :;ubnarine to operate in over 41/2 times the ocean areas that the Polaris submarines can operate in. This greater area is desirable in order to make it much more difficult to find and destroy our submarine-based ballistic missiles. The Trident submarine with the Trident I missile system, when it enters the fleet in 1978, will th,m give the United States equivalent of what the Soviets presently have;; a deployed 4,000-mile sea-launched ballistic missile. This capability allows the Soviets to target locations in the United States from area,; where the U.S. Navy has a diminished ability to detect and track their submarines. In addition, the new submarine is being designed to operate much more quietly than our present ballistic-missile submarines, to operate faster and to last longer. Our present ballistic missile submarines were basically designed out of one class; Of attack submarine with the hull literally being cut in two and stret'hed to take care of the missile silos. When they were built the suhrrarines were not expected to have a life longer than 20 years. No ship ?n the fleet has been worked as hard as the. Polaris/Poseidon with its 131u and Gold Crews. Each submarine has generally come in from a mission, replenished its supplies and gone right back out on a new mission, leaving the old crew on shore. The result has been that these submarines have been subjected to more missions and have been longer )n ,tation than any other class of ship iii the fleet. When the Trident submarines enter the fleet, most of the Polaris submarines they replace will have served 1.8 or more years. The. Trident submarines are being designed to last 30 years despite the increased activity involved in their operation. Extensive efforts in quieting the submarine are incorporated in the ship. new reactor design is an important factor in this quieting, as the incorporation of other new modern quieting techniques that have been developed over the years. Thk size of the ship itself permits the, use of many quieting techniques that could not be incorporated in a. smaller ship. The increased speed of the Tride~it submarine has been incorporated to allow the submarine to break arv trail that may be on it. It is also an important factor in helping the submarine to maneuver when nec- cssa.ry for the safety of the ship. Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 39 The $654.6 million in the budget for RDT&E this year is divided between research for the missile and research for the submarine sys- tems. In both cases the development is that necessary to achieve a fleet operating capability in late 1978. $529 million allows the continuing development of a new long- range strategic ballistic-missile weapon system which will be capable of being carried by older submarines as well as the new Trident sub- marines. $125.6 million provides for development effort in support of a new, quiet, highly reliable submarine incorporating an advanced nuclear- propulsion plant, an integrated command and control system and ma- jor improvements in underwater acoustic systems. Admiral Rickover informed the committee that if the submarines are not funded this year as requested, the cost of the first Trident sub- marine will increase by $100 million and the cost of the others will increase by comparable amounts. The nuclear components, consisting of huge masses of metal being shaped and formed to meticulous reactor requirements are coming off the production line as planned. Any halt in the production line will not only delay the long-leadtime items for the other submarines, but will increase the cost. In the event this program is not funded, it is not unlikely that the manufacturers of these very complex components will then find it better business to concentrate on the reactor program for private industry than to deal with on-again, off-again programs of the Navy-a matter of signifi- cant concern to Navy managers and to the Congress. Trident Millions Procurement: $867 8 Naval vessels-------------------------------------------------- 5.0 Missiles Total ------------------------ 872.8 R.D.T. & E.: 125. 6 Naval vessels-------------------------------------------------- 529.0 Missiles ----------------------------------------------------- Total ---------------------- 654.6 Grand total-------------------------------------------------- 1,527.4 Nuclear Attack Submarine-SSN--688 The President's budget requested $783.2 million to complete five nuclear attack submarines for which the. nuclear long-leadtime items were requested last year. In addition, there was a request for $130 million for advanced procurement for long-leadtime items for an- other set of five nuclear attack submarines included in next year's program. This is a total of $913.2 million. There was also a request for $36.5 million for escalation and $8.4 million for outfitting for sub- marines involved in prior-year programs. The full authorization re- quest -is recommended by the Committee. The nuclear attack submarine has been proven to be one of our most effective weapons. It not only can be used against surface ships but also against enemy ballistic-missile submarines. We are moving to convert all our submarine forces as rapidly as possible to nuclear sub- Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 40 marines. 'T'hose eonventionally-.powered submarines remaining in our -C'leet were built during or just a.ftor World War II. The ccatstrnction of nuclear attack submarines would have been halted in the late 1960s if t1e Armed Services Committee had not f-hallenged the construction limitations imposed by the Department of Defense. To counter the 3.,0 Soviet submarines, Defense had set fled on an allowance of 69 nuclear attaek submarines. Since that time the Soviets have built more nuclear submarines; their total number of nuclear attack submarines in (commission or under construction is larger than our total number o'' nuclear attack submarines. Ballistic missile----- -- _. _ 6f1 41 Attack missile -------------------_ 65 0 - ----------- Attack 44 atal ------ --- --------------- 340 1,?5 Total nucfoar__.--------___ ---------------- ll0 101. Includes 30 modern Y lass submarines, An iddmal 12 or more listic e are be under construction with aak new Delta class in prod ci ion.tThe Yankee class carries 16iSS IN-6bm ssiles having arrange of 1,300 nautical miles and the Delta class is expected to carry 12 SS-NX-8 missiles having a range of about 4,000 nautical miles. Soviets are estimated to have facilities for building 1:' nuclear-lowered balistic missile submarines a year. A con- s(ruction rate of 8 a year will enable them to achieve a force level of 62 Yankee and Delta class submarines by expirati(n of the initial SALT agreement in May 1977. 1)D-?91)1,3 This year they e is a total of $612,.1 million in the bill for the DD-W. Of this sum *387.5 million is to complete the construction of the seven ships for which long-leadtime terns were authorized last year. There is also :h1148.3 million for advlnred procurement for long-leadtime items for the final seven destroyers required for which full authoriza- tions will be requested next year. -there. are also provisions for $21.2 nlilliou for escalation and $5.1 million for outfitting for a total o:i $612.1 million for D1)-963. Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 41 Litton Industries has advanced its program for the construction of the DD-963 destroyers by half a year. There has been some small delay from this advanced schedule. However, all of the contractural milestones are being met on or ahead of schedule and the construction of the first DI)-963 hulls is proceeding apace. The Navy told the committee that it had to have all of these funds for the DI)-963 this year in order to meet the contract requirements for funding. Otherwise Litton Industries would be able to say that Navy had breached the contract and it could ask for additional funds to complete the pro- gram. While the committee would like to have had another year in which to see whether Litton will be able to complete the DD-963s on time, within cost and to specifications, it did not want to force Navy to break the contract. Hence, the committee approved all of the funds requested this year. LHA The LHA program continues to be beset by problems. The com- mittee was informed that there would be additional delays in the delivery of the LHA ships. The two items in this year's shipbuilding program involving LHA are cost growth (going from target to ceil- ing), $103.8 million, and escalation, $65.4 million, for a total of $169.2 million. The committee was informed that these are contract obliga- tions which need to be paid in order to force Litton Industries, the builder, to complete the five ships within the terms of the contract. The amount of escalation was reduced on March 1, 1973 by $22.7 million by the contracting officer's decision, and the committee accepted this reduction. SSBN conversions Originally the President's budget required $351.5 million for the conversion of five ballistic-missile submarines from Polaris to Posei- don missiles. Since there had been advance procurement of $121.7 mil- lion, this left a total of $229.8 million requested this year. The com- mittee noted the large number of reprogrammings by which the Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 4.. Navy had taken out 15 percent of the funds of this program and ap- plied them to other programs over a period of years. Bence, it con- cluded that. the program had been amply financed in the beginning and was also well managed. Wit a this background the Committee was prepared to make reductions in this oiccount. Subsequently, it was brought to the committee's attention that Mr. Clements, the Deputy Secretary of Defense, had decided that it would be possible to remove $113.6 milt on from this program in order to pro- vide a major part of the funds of the $150 million for the prototype flyoff for the stripped down F-L= and F-15 airplanes. Since Mr. Clem- ents' action indicated the $113.6 million was not absolutely necessary for the SSBN program, and since the committee had rejected the F--14/F-15 prototype proposal, the committee deleted. the $113.6 mil- lion which together with the $36.3 million reduction previously men- tioned under discussion of the DII-IGN's, leaves $79.9 million in the con- version program. The .1160AI Tank The bill contains $18.2 million for advanced procurement of long- leadtime components for the M?OA1 tank. Approximately half of the tanks will be an improved versicn of M60A1 to be designated M60A3. Technical problems have arisen in the fire-control components of the improved version; and while correotive action has been initiated, the result will be a slippage of approximately 6 months in the fielding of the, product improved tank. Be-!air e of the slippage and consequent delay in the introduction of the T46(4A3 version, the full advanced-pro- curement funding initially requested will not be required in fiscal 1974. At the same time requirements for other portions of the program were determined to be somewhat understated. The changes, however, allowed for a. net reduction of $8.4 million below the $26.6 million initially requested by the Army. The committee, therefore, approved the level of authorization at $1.8.2 million. The M198 Towed Howitzer The bill contained a request for S3.5 million for long-leadtime pro- curement for the XM198 towed Howitzer. In addition, $5,976,000 was requested in RDT&E funds for this weapons system for a total of $9,476 million. During the course of the heaiinvs it was determined that technical problems had developed in a number of items in the R&D prototypes of the weapon. It was determined that these problems would delay the system to such an extent that long-leadtime items would not be required M. fiscal year 1974 and, therefore, could be eliminated from tlio bill. Further review by the committee determined that the committee could not with confidence continue the funding for the proposed system. The purpose of the program is to extend the range of the weapons system. The committee learned that ammunition has been developed that achieves the desired range using existing weapons. The committee has, therefore? deleted all of the R&I), as well as all of the procurement funds for the XM198. Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 43 M-16 Rift The bill contained a request for $3.1 million for procurement of 31,000 M-16A1 rifles for the Army. The analysis by the Committee determined that the procurement request was based on a desire to maintain a warm production base and did not reflect a valid require- ment for the Army. The Committee also determined that the initial request had incorrectly stated the projected unit cost of these rifles, and that, therefore, the authorization would have had to be increased to procure the number of rifles requested. In the view of the Committee the Army presently has an adequate inventory of M-16 rifles. The Committee, therefore, denied the $3.1 million authorization request. TITLE II-RESEARCII, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION The following tabulation compares the amounts authorized and appropriated for research, development, test, and evaluation in fiscal year 1973 with the amounts requested and recommended by the Com- mittee for fiscal year 1974. Appro- Requested Authorized priated Requested Committee fiscal year fiscal year fiscal year fiscal year recom- Research, development, test, and evaluation 1973 1973 1973 1974 mends Army------------------------------------------ 2,122,716 1,978,966 1,829,032 2,108,700 2,031,686 Navy (and Marine Corps) ------------------------ 2,816,787 2,708,817 2,545,213 2,711,700 12,675,300 Air Force______________________________________ 3,262,177 3,272,777 3,122,940 3,212,500 3,110,811 Defense agencies____________________520,087 505,987 435,313 525,000 , 2504,000 Director of test and evaluation, Defense___________________27,000 ________________________ Emergency fund________________________________ 50,D00 50,000 0 0 0 Total, R.D.T.&E-------------------------- 8,771,767 8,516,547 7,959,498 8,557,900 8,321,797 1 Includes $2,600,000 for special foreign currency program for Navy under R.D.T. & E. authorization. 2 Includes $24,600,000 for the activities of the Director of test and evaluation, Defense. The fiscal year 1974 budget request for research, development, test, and evaluation of $8,557,900,000 is $41,353,000 more than was author- ized by the Congress for fiscal year 1973. The amount recommended by the Committee, $8,321,797,000, is $236,103,000 less than was re- quested by the Department of Defense for fiscal year 1974 and is $194,750,000 less than was authorized by the Congress for fiscal year 1973. The reductions of $77,014,000 recommended in the Army and $101,- 689,000 in the Air Force budget requests are made on a specific pro- gram basis whereas the $36.4 million reduction for the Navy and the $21 million reduction for Defense Agencies should be taken on the basis of defense priorities. The Committee agrees with the position taken by the Secretary of Defense and the Director of Defense Research and Engineering that it is essential for the United States to maintain a technological base Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 which is superior to that of potential adversaries. Testimony was re- ceived by the Committee that the Soviet Union is making a determined effort to surpass the United Stites in technological achievement. The Soviets can take obvious advantage, of open Western societies, while the United States and our allies can have only incomplete knowledge o1' Soviet progress. Defense w.tn_ esses indicated that because of this closed versus open society, the United States needs an adequate, long- term level of research and development funding if we are to avoid technological surprises and maintain a reasonable margin of techno- logical superiority in key areas important to the over-all military balance. Our technology base is comp-ised of research, exploratory develop- anent, and portions of advanced development in the researeh, develop- ment, test, and evaluation budget. It includes the exploration of science and engineering to find applications of military worth. Defense wit- nesses testified ghat this technology base is needed to open up new avenues of technology that make lr ossible significant, improvements in current weapons systems or in entirely new kinds of systems. It is needed to reduce the cost of current military equipment and to help make effective use of military personnel. Because of the importance ard the necessity of maintaining an ade- quate technology base, the Committee recommends authorizing the full amount requested for this area.. Often 1Vlenibe:rs of the Committee are questioned about accomplish- ments from the defense techno_ogv base as well as the balance of the Defense research and development expenditures over the years. At the Committee's request, the Office of the Director of Defense Research and EnLri-leering submitted information on accomplishments from the defense technology base along? with examples of civilian spin-off from defense research and development programs. The information submitted follows : DIRECTOR OF 1RESEARCII AND ENGINEERING, Washington, D.C,., March 23.1973. lion. MELVIN PRICE, Chairman., AS'uzhcommittee No. 1, Committee on Armed 8ervices, U.S. 'house of Representatives, -W ' shington, D.C. DEAR MR. CILIIRMAN : Severn weeks ago you mentioned to me that examples of accomplishments from the defense technology base, writ- ten in non-technical terms, would be of use to your committee. We have compiled such a list, and enclose it herewith. A number of these achievements undoubtedly will find application in the civilian sector. Basic and applied research, by its very nature, is carried out by small teams or project groups. As a result, there are some 20,000 prot- ects comprising the defense technology base. Describing the technology base in terms of a few dozen of these projects--for example, in terms of the project examples enclosed---is a little like trying to describe a supermarket by displaying a few of the items "on special' : A can of peas, a jar of peanut butter, a box of soap. "That's a supermarket?" The answer is, of course, "No, that is not a supermarket. The `specials' Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 45 are only representative, and don't give a perspective of the scope and magnitude of the store as a whole, or of the many quality products on its shelves." In a similar fashion, it is difficult for the attached exam- ples, even though they represent significant achievements, to portray the scope and magnitude of the base, or to give an indication of the large accumulative value which accrues from many small research ef- forts over a period of time. Let me illustrate the latter by an accumu- lative example from the medical field : VIETNAM CASUALTY RATES COM- INCREASED VIETNAM COSTS IF KO- PARED TO KOREAN EXPERIENCE REAN RATES HAD PREVAILED 44 percent lower battle death rate 28 days shorter average hospitali- zation of wounded 25 percent reduction in wound dis- ability separations 15 day reduction in hospital stay for malaria 50 percent reduction in wounded having amputations 22,000 deaths, $385M death bene- fits 12,000 man-years, $210M hospital costs 3800 men 2,500 man-years, $115M in hospi- tal costs 3000 limbs In addition, within the span of the Vietnam War itself, both the incidence of malaria and the mortality from burns were reduced by 50%Jo. These changes, brought about solely by technology base effort carried out over a period of years, are dramatic, representing a saving in lives, hardship, and funds of great value. Yet, examples taken from any one year might not seem very startling because the accumulative value is not portrayed by the example. This accumulative value runs through all of the technological and scientific fields comprising the technology base. Citing just two examples: the 1970 jet engine has triple the thrust to weight ratio of its 1950 counterpart (with a re- sultant very large impact on aircraft-capability), and the 1970 large number-crunching computer provides more versatility and capability than one could even imagine from a consideration of its 1960 counterpart. I hope the comments above on how examples from the technology base fit into the. overall picture, and the examples, themselves, will be of value, to you. The examples have been categorized in 5 main areas of support for the Armed Forces. Sincerely, Gus D. DOROUGH, Deputy Director (Reseeveh. and Advanced Technology), (For John S. Foster, Jr., Director of Defense Research and Engineering). SUPPORT FOR MILITARY PERSONNEL Military dogs are an essential element of DOD security police activi- ties. Common canine diseases such as hook worm and heart worm result in costs to the government in both non-availability for the dogs for ditty and veterinary medical care. New treatments for these infec- tions have decreased their occurrence in DOD dogs by about 50 percent and cut the cost of treating infected dogs from $40 to $5.85 per dog. Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 Severe burns are Common is combat and in training accidents, re- sulting in many deaths. The I)oI) burn research program has led the world in producing new treatrients for burns. One development was a new antibiotic ointment to cover burns. The cumulative, result of this research program is that deatls f,-om burns in the Armed Forces have been cut by 50 percent since 19?5. Induction of poorly suited recruits into the military services is very costly in terms of wasted training time, disciplinary problems and ineffectiveness in assigned duties A 10-year Navy research program on psychiatric screening developed some simple guidelines by which recruiters can forecast success in first enlistments, thereby screening out poor risk recruits. The Navy estimates costs of about $B million per year, that would be incurred f these men were. inducted and then prematurely separated, that ar,e avoided. Better methods for collecting, quantifying, organizing and report- ing data about the properties of Air Force enlisted jobs were devel- oped. These new methods have been used to restructure military training courses, yielding a $4.31 cost avoidance in FY 73. A new Army helicopter synthetic flight training system device, con- ceived and developed as a technology base effort, has now been sub- jected to operational suitability testing. Students participating required 37 hours less than the custonrary training required to qualify for an instrument rating, result.irg in it cost avoidance of $4,500 per trainee. LWoalr.r Ty The first advanced aircraft auxiliary power unit, development in more than a. decade was recently completed. The program demon- strated a. new unit capable w' producing 150 horsepower per cubic foot-over twice that of the moss advanced operational unit at it, 20 percent lower specific fuel corsurnption. These power units are used for starting aircraft and other ground operations where external power is required. New chassis suspension svstmis for tracked vehicles were recently demonstrated which will make it possible to increase the average cross country speed of these vehicles fom the present 10-12 mph to a re- rnarkable 30 mph. A computer simulation technique has been developed by the Army which predicts Cross country spee'I of any wheeled or tracked vehicle, in any terrain. This capability. Irot previously available, will perm9t. a more precise assessment of military L round vehicle needs. As much .~ a 25 percent reduction in the A rmy's, fleet of wheeled vehicles may be realized without it significant '!')Ss of Capability. A large savings in acquisition and maintenance costs would result. The engine selected for the A rmy TITTAS helicopter is a direct out- -rowth of the Army technology base's demonstrator cugine. program. This research technology program is also an example of the fly-before- Yon-buy concept. A new fire extinmuishing svutern was. demonstrated for use in air- craft that is two to three times more effective than standard equipment now in use. This new fir(, exti ugnisher will significantly shorten the time to extinguish a flame. Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 47 A joint Air Force-Navy program developed a solid state power system and incorporated it in a full-scale aircraft electrical system simulator. Successful operation resulted in the system being selected for the 13-1, at a saving of some 40 miles of wiring per airplane. The Army has developed a technique for sealing the soil under roads against moisture. Native soil can be substituted for crushed rock and cement in constructing roads and air strips. The technique is already saving millions of dollars in construction of B-52 bomber dispersal runways. It will double the road construction rate of an engineer battalion. An aimable warhead for air-to-air and surface-to-air missiles has been demonstrated using selective guidance controlled techniques. This warhead, which can project its lethal effects in a preferred direction, should provide a 30 percent greater effectiveness of these weapons. One of the major limiting factors to the range of smaller caliber ammunition is atmospheric drag. The Army has demonstrated a new design incorporating a "gas generator" on the base of the projectile which reduces the drag by CO percent. This concept will provide in- creased range for small caliber ammunition. A new solid missile propellant binder has been developed which can lead to savings of thirty cents per lb. in propellant costs-$3 million can be saved in the purchase of SAM-D motors alone. This solid pro- pellant has more propulsive energy per pound and has better storage capabilities than current propellants. Improved thrust control methods for solid rockets have been dem- onstrated. This new technology can increase several-fold the target intercept capability of future long-range surface-to-air missiles. COMMAND, CONTROL AND TARGET AcQuisiTION An inexpensive radar power tube has been developed for use in an advanced ballistic missile defense radar. The new tube can be produced for less than $100 vs. at least $350 for its nearest competitor, and would reduce costs of an ultra reliable ballistic missile device radar system by at least $11 million. A serious deficiency in our ground forces is the lack of secure voice capability in field radios. Current radios, without secure voice, weigh 25 lbs. If the. secure voice capability were. to be added to these radios, using conventional integrated circuit technology, the weight of the radio would approach 50 lhs, making it unsuitable for carrying by the infantryman. Introduction of a new type of integrated circuit, which significantly reduces power consumption, will now permit the design of a radio with voice security that will weigh only 12 or 13 lbs. A new solid state electronic component, known as an acoustic surface wave device, is currently being demonstrated in several defense appli- cations. One such device, the size of a tiny chip and costing $300, can replace a radar component currently in use that occupies a volume of 72 cu. in. and costs approximately $3,000. Each Air Force AWACS radar will use 26 of these devices. The use of fiber optics in aircraft to replace electric wiring will be demonstrated by the Navy in an A-7 aircraft. In this program, 4,832 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 i8 feet of wire weighing 82 pounds and costing $7,900 per aircraft 1`1o install, will be replaced with 832 Feet of fiber optic cables weighing 13 pounds and costing $2,100 per airplane. In addition to the savings which result, the fiber optics ire immune from interference problems encountered in conventional w:.rec1. systems. Low light level television cameras are used in several defense appli- ?ations. such as guidance for electro-optical bombs and night vision _,ystems. -Recent advances in defense research in solid state electronics technology indicate that size aid cost of these cameras can be reduced io 10 percent of their current values. In addition, these new systems will be far less fragile and therefore more reliable. `A new steed armor material has been developed which promises to provide the same protection at one-eighth the cost as the armor mate- rial now tinder consideration for use in helicopters and land vehicles. The Armv has developed a technique for testing the fatigue life of Cannons which eliminates most of the live firings previously required. he technioue, which uses preasur?ized hydraulic fluid, cost $3 million to develop. It is estimated that X426 million can be saved during the development of four new cannon tubes. Exploratory Development has brought along new materials devel- 2ipments with excellent strength I:o weight and other properties. For instance, the use of metals and plastics containing ceramic or graphite fibers (so-called composites) I,erniits weight savings of about 40 per- eeent and at the same time result: in improved fatigue and corrosion resistance. The F-14 and the F-15 use one of these materials in the tail surfaces which will result in greatly improved performance. The Dr.fense Department conducts an extensive R. & I). program in support of the national defense. Although meeting defense require- ments is the sole objective of this endeavor, products of this work have, over the years, made significant contributions to the civilian see- tor of our economy. These contributions range. from the concept of chlorination of wa- ter supplles to the wide body airframe and engine technology of com- mercial jumbo jets. They incLtde such ingredients of modern life as the transistor. German measles vaccine, and the jet engine. DoD spon- cored scientists did not "invent" all of these items, but the presence in the civilian world of these inventions is nevertheless directly traceable ]rack to R&1) efforts sponsored by the Dol. hhere are two separate processes by which DoD makes technology- i.ntense products available to the civilian market. The first process is simply tlrat of invention. Radar, a military invention now an essen- I ial part of civilian traffic control., is a single example. The second proc- ess may he termed "Industrialization." In. terns of total economic im- I)act, this process is probably much more important. For example, l)ol) did not discover aluminum. but its need for aluminum for air- 'raft led I)oD to undertake work which made possible the production :end fabrication of the material, uid which provided much basic en- Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 49 gineering design data for its use. DoD also supplied an original mar- ket large enough so that production economies developed by the indus- try could in time make aluminum competitive in countless consumer products. The same situation seems to be developing for titanium and composite materials. In electronics, DoD invented neither the tran- sistor nor micro-integrated circuits, but DoD demand for the products, and Dol) support of production technology, soon reduced unit cost to the point that they could be profitably used in the civilian market. Similar examples can be given in every discipline of technology. By way of example, consider briefly the areas of aeronautics, electronics, materials and medicine. Aeronautics Over the years most of the aviation developments first achieved in military programs have been utilized by the civil sector. The list of these achievements is quite lengthy and includes weather analysis and forecasting and aviation medicine, as well as conceptional and hard- ware contributions exemplified by swept wings, cabin pressurization, aviation fuels, and turbine engines. The most recent major transfer to the civil sector is the wide body airframe and engine technology stem- ming from the C-5A program, and now being used in the Boeing 747, McDonnell Douglas DC-10 and Lockheed L-1011 transports. Another major spin-off from the military is the inertial navigation system de- rived directly from military programs which provides simpler, more reliable and adequately accurate navigation for the civil airlines. Military R. &, D. programs currently underway which are expected to find significant civil application include "fly-by-wire" control sys- teams which will result in lighter, less expensive, and more easily maintained civilian airliners; and VTOL technology which may dra- matically advance the state-of-the-art in inter-urban transportation. Electr mice The DoD technology program in electron devices has resulted in contributions which have had significant impact on the civil sector. As in example, growth in semiconductor technology has been paced by I)oD sponsorship. Defense needs fueled the development of the tran- sistor and integrated circuits to the point where these devices became cost-effective for such commercial applications as radios, TV's, phono- graphs, automobiles and digital computers. Solid state devices and integrated circuits have been responsible for improving the capability and lowering the cost of computers which impact daily in busness, scientific research and industrial processes. Support is continuing in this area to improve performance, reliability and to lower costs. Current programs underway in the areas of night vision, informa- tion storage. microwave devices, information display and sensors may have potential impact and importance in such non-defense areas as crop damage detection, medical diagnosis, computer-aided instruction, public safety, and traffic management. Materials Materials technology is another area wherein the DOD has made major impact on the civil sector. The new titanium industry is a direct consequence of DOD-sponsored materials research and development. Starting about 1948, the Army, Navy and Air Force each sponsored a Approv cJJFpr7,Rclease 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 substantial research, development and experimental application effort on. this metal. The impetus for this work was the potential of titanium alloys to become the strongest structural alloys known in proportion to their weight, with the added bonus of high corrosion resistance. The expectations were fulfilled. Today, titanium alloys are used in both military and civilian aircraift, in both the air frame and in engine compressor stages. Its corrosion resistance has put it into such civilian applications as food and chemical processing. Uses in the near future. wv'd.l include desalination plants and steam power generating equip- ment as well as equipment for the transportation industry. An addi- tional payoff of the titanium program has been the. development of vacuum melting, a process which leas advanced the technology of ma- terials processing in general. Another example in the field of materials is the development of glass reinforced plastics (GRP)-the first important milestone in the field of composites for military use.. -[Pocket cases of both stages of the Polaris missile, as well as the thirdt stage of the Minuteman, now con - t;rin this material. In addition, a number of pressure vessels, small missile cases, gun tubes and small secrface craft are manufactured from (RP. Thc:se military developments have spurred the use of GRP in boats, truck cabs, trailer bodies, geodesic structures, and fishing poles. Filament winding of glass-reinforced plastics, initiated strictly for military use. is now used for shotgun barrels, pipe, battery cases, stor- age tanks, and aerial booms for uddlity trucks. Glass-flake reinforced plastics are found in electrical insulo-ation and polyethylene laminates iu waterproof Liners and containers It is estimated that in the next five years there will be a growth of over 300% in the commercial use of glass-reinforced plastics. :liedieine and biotechnology Passengers in an airliner with a pressurized cabin making an instru- nient flight-a young woman receiving German measles vaccine-a camper spraying mosquitoes iii his tent--the man who unbuckles his seat belt and walks away from an auto accident, are probably unaware of their debt to military medicine. Likewise, medical professionals usually are unaware of any military medical origin of such diverse matters as the Weather Bureau, the - ational Library of Medicine, routine physical examinations, mass immunizations, and community Fsyclriatr'y. Some lines of military medical research are easily translated into the Civil sector--knowledge related to infectious disease or trauma moves =ai.rly easily. A greater lag occurs in preventive, occupational and en ronmental medicine. For example, the shoulder harness was routine ;ii military aircraft for many years before it became available in an :rutomobi le. Several main lines of biomedical research which have been produc- tive of useful civil application. are as follows: Service infectious dis- ease research began with mass vaccination for smallpox in 1777, and was followed by work leading to the control of typhoid, hookworm, and yellow fever. World Wai Ir saw the formulation of a malaria program which discovered much of the biology of malaria, developed zd cure for two types of malaria, h,rought synthetic antimalarial drugs into use, and provided a management model for post-war civil research Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 51 in cancer chemotherapy and antibiotic research. DDT and other insec- ticides added to chemoprotection and brought about major world health improvement. Military research with one of the WWII developed antibiotics (penicillin) showed a way of preventing rheumatic fever and showed broad spectrum antibiotics worked against typhoid, typhus and scrub typhus. More recently, new drugs to control chloroquine-resistant ma- laria have been developed and effective vaccines for typhus, Venezue- lan Equine Encephalitis, adeno-viruses and meningococcus have been produced. A modern fluid therapy for cholera has been introduced, lowering the death rate from 50% to about 1%. Military research in the management of severe burns is world-famous and has resulted in wide acceptance of a rational fluid therapy, grafting, sulfamylon and other techniques to control infection. The military benefits of all this research are dwarfed by the impact on world health in general, with literally millions of lives saved annually. The military concern with heat injury and cold injury has pro- duced important understandings of human physiology under these stresses, and practical heat load and cold chill guides for industrial and public health applications. Much cold weather gear, e.g., thermal boots, is an outgrowth of this work. Recognition of undersea medical research will grow as civil explora- tion of the sea bottom increases. Already DoD research has provided improved diving and decompression tables, better scuba and diving equipment, and has evolved treatments for decompression sickness. Military aviation medicine had its beginning in WWI, and has been a cornerstone of civil aviation and space programs since. Research in physical standards, cockpit design, hypoxia, vision, pressurized cab- ins, flight illusions acceleration and instrument flying have fed di- rectly into civil aviation. The early work in weightlessness pressure suits, remote telemetering, artificial atmospheres, greatly supported the civil space programs, and have been applied to civil medical practice (monitoring units, remote diagnosis, physiology of bed rest). SUMMARY OF ADJUSTMENTS TO FISCAL YEAR 1974 R.D.T. & E. AUTHORIZATION REQUEST RECOMMENDED BY THE COMMITTEE Fiscal year 1974 request Committee changes Committee recommendations Army_____________ _ $2, 108, 700, 000 -$77, 014, 000 $2,031,686 000 Navy (including the Marine Corps) _ ____________________ 2,711,700,000 -36,400,000 , 12,675,300 000 Air Force____________________________________________ 3,212,500,000 -101, 689,000 , 3,110,811,000 Defense agencies______________________________________ 525,000,000 -21000,000 2 504, 000, 000 ------------------------ Total. R.D.T.&E-------------------------------- 8,557,900,000 -236, 103, 000 8,321,797,000 1 Includes $2,600,000 for special foreign currency program for Navy under R.D.T, & E. authorization. ncludes $24,600,000 for the activities of the Director of test and evaluation, Defense. BUDGET ACTIVITIES The research, development, test, and evaluation budget is presented in eight budget activities. The amounts indicated under each activity by departments reflect the funds requested by the Department of De- fense. The breakdown by budget activities follows : Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 i. Military sciences: Thousands Army ---------------------- ----------------------------- $187,400 Navy (including the Marine Corps)---------------------------- 141,2(10 Air Force---------------------..------------------------------ 134,60^0 - , 339 57, agencies------------------------------------------ included in this amount is $2,600,00) fox Navy research which is a portion of the tiscil ;ear 1974 special foreign currency program. Arnuj This budget activity covers the functional areas of research and exploratory development relevant to meeting the technological needs of the Army. It includes efforts ranging across all major scienti- lic disciplines-physical, environmental, mathematical, psychological, social, biological, and medical, Technological investigations are alE.o included in areas such as materias, warheads, nuclear effects, combat support, and military engineering technology. Major program coin- ponents of this activity which arxt separately identified by the Army are the Defense Research Sciences and the In-House Laboratory Inde- pendent Research Programs. Overall, the Military Sciences budget activity supports about two-thirds of the Army's technology base. GVork is carried on by in-house Laboratories, other federal agencies, universities, and industry. This work is done under nurlerous research projects and tasks. Navy (including the Manse Corps) : For the Navy, this budget activity consists of two area,; o efforts, research and studies and analyses. In-house laboratory independent research provides a principal means to stiinuLate original work in science and technology related to their missions and the interests cf the Navy. Objectives are to initi- ate challenging research, capitalize on ideas germinating out of phase with budget cycles, enhance the competence of in-house laboratories, ,and attract and retain talented acid creative scientists. The Defense Research Sciences Element provides funds to govern- ment and non-government resmr ;h activities for the performance of scientific study and experimentation directed toward increasing knowledge and understanding in those fields of the physical, engi- neering, environmental and 11'e sciences directly related to long-term naval needs. Effort is divided into fourteen subelements identified with specific scientific disciplines such as General Physics, Nuclear Physics, Chemistry and Mathematical Sciences. In addition to Research, various studies are conducted for both Navy and Nlarine Corps under this budget activity. Studies and Anal- .vses Support and Center for Naval Analyses provide technical and operational analyses to determine requirements for weapons sys- tenls, tactics and the basis for decisions with respect to new concepts, potential threats, military effectiveness, and problems in personnel. Air 1i'cerce: This budget activity provides funds primarily for de- 'cnse research sciences, environmental and materials research which are relevant to the mission of the Air Force. Funds are used to obtain basic scientific knowledge and provide technical investigations for potential application to the solution of known or anticipated Air Force c?equi rements. The defense research sciences program is a continuing program to achieve l..nowledre and understanding of scientific phenomena which Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 53 may solve the many problems involved in the development and main- tenance of a superior Air Force. This program also includes funding for operation of the Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratories, the Aerospace Research Laboratory, the Frank L. Seiler Laboratory and the Air Force Office of Scientific Research. The Environment Program covers the acquisition of geophysical and astrophysical information and the development of related tech- niques for the application of this information to Air Force engineer- ing and operational problems of Aerospace Systems. The objective of the Materials Program is to develop new or im- proved aerospace materials and to discover new ways to use materials to a better advantage. This program also provides for the operation of the Materials Laboratory, a central Air Force agency knowledge- able in all materials which can provide a quick reaction capability to solve operational problems involving materials technology application. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.-In the past year, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) was estab- lished as a separate Defense Agency. Heretofore, DARPA functioned as an integral part of the Office of the Director of Defense Research and Engineering. The change in organizational structure permits a clearer delineation of its functions and responsibilities. The Depart- ment of Defense has restored the full focus of DARPA's work to basic research and exploratory development and has put applied research and program management back into the Services. DARPA has the flexiblity and capability to react quickly on items of new interest. Long-term commitments are not the rule in DARPA programs; rather, its function is to act as a leader and catalyst, demon- strating military potential as fast as possible. If a program undertaken by DARPA is successful, the findings are transferred to the Military Departments. In general, DARPA's programs emphasize research in areas that reach farther into the future than those normally under- taken by the Services and explore areas in which the technology is not well in hand. These areas need innovative approaches to technology. DARPA's fiscal year 1974 programs in this budget activity approxi- mates $41 million with emphasis in the areas of materials sciences, human resources research, and information-processing techniques. Technical Support to Secretary of Defense and Joint Chiefs of Staff.-Funds in this budget activity support the Weapons Systems Evaluation Group (WSEG) which conducts operational research analyses and evaluations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, for the Office of the Director Defense Research and Engineering and for other ele- ments of the Office of the Secretary of Defense as authorized by the Secretary of Defense. The funds will support the WSEG study pro- gram in two ways : (1) to pay for contractual services in the In- stitute for Defense Analysis (IDA), and (2) to pay for contractual services in private companies. WSEG provides the funds for all out- side operations research for the Joint Chiefs of Staff. This budget activity also supports studies on those political-mili- tary, arms control, and economic matters which have a direct rele- vance to the charter and responsibilities of the Office, Assistant Secre- tary of Defense (International Security Affairs). Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 2. Aircraft and related equip>ncnt: Thousands Army $301,400 Navy including the Marino Cc rps) -------------------------- 252, t00 Air Foroe--------------------------------------------------- 1,226,000 Army. ? The Army budget activity for aircraft and related equip- m:nent includes research, develbprnent, test and evaluation of aircraft systems. subsystems, component and supporting developments to improve the, combat effect ivener?,s of Army aviation operations in support of t he ground forces. Major aircraft systems developments and improvements include: development or a new Advanced Attack Helicopter (AAH), the de- sign of -Al-filch ',vill stress flight handling qualities and hover perform- ance, two characteristics that wll form a sound foundation for the integration of a Cannon, an Anti-tank Missile, Night Vision equip- ment, and other mission essential items; component development for a future heavy lift helicopter and fabrication of a prototype aircraft to demonstrate technical feasibility; and development of the Utility Tactical Transmort. Aircraft System that will be able to lift an infan- try squad over 85 percent of the earth's land mass giving our infantry- man tremendous battlefield mobility. Supporting developments and application of new and improved techniques are conducted in the areas of:: engines and propulsion com- ponents: weapons. night vision and fire control; avionics; surviv- ability: reliability and mainrair.ability and air drop/aerial delivery equipment. A particularly significant achievement has been the de- velopnient. of crashworthy fuel cells which have been so successful in reducinse host crash fires that this majority of the fleet has been retro- fitted with these cells; they will be included in all future aircraft development. Comn??,ittee changes: Army Utility Tactical Transport Aircraft System (UTTAS) The Com- mittee recommends a reduction of $6.2 million from the $108,825.000 requested for the Utility Tactical Transport Aircraft System (TTTTAS). This reduction can b~ made because of a reduction of six in the number of prototypes. The decrease was directed by the Congress in the fiscal year 1973 author:.zation Act. The Army's efforts to justify restoration of these prototypes in the fiscal year 1974 budget failed to convince the Committee and the additional funds are denied. Navy (including the Marne Corps) : For the Navy, this activity finances research, development, test, and evaluation related to air- frames, engines, airborne detection, fire control equipment and e.'.ec- tronic warfare equipment. ae_lial targets and additional related systems and equipment. The major efforts in FY 174 are related to sea control with the V/STOL aircraft and the LAMPS helicopter and to the high per- formance tiatiter aircraft F-14. - The 17/STOL for Sea Coatr=:r1 Ship prototype effort will validate new V/STOL technology by the design, development, construction and flight test of the Augmented Wing Fighter-Attack prototype aircraft. This vehicle will provide su:'"face surveillance and a strike capability when operating from the Sea Control Ship. In FY 1974 design and Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 55 fabrication of the first two flight aircraft will continue. The related sea control effort Light Airborne Multi-Purpose System (LAMPS) using a helicopter equipped with electronic detection equipment will be able to detect and identify missile firing surface platforms beyond the surface detection capability of the parent ship, and will provide re- detection, classification and ASW weapon delivery out to the maxi- mum destroyer sonar detection ranges. In FY 1974 component Techni- cal Evaluation will be conducted by test flying airborne systems in a H-2 helicopter and evaluating ship equipment in specially configured vans. The F14A aircraft will operate as an airborne combat air patrol or deck launched interceptor. It will be equipped with Phoenix, Sparrow and Sidewinder missiles with a gun. In FY 1974 Navy will support Technical and Operational Evaluation and Board of Inspection and Survey tests. Efforts will continue on the advanced technology engine for the F14B aircraft with flight tests in FY 1974. The S3A carrier ASW aircraft will replace the S-2 which will have been in service in excess of 20 years at the time of S3A deployment. Two high by-pass ratio turbofan engines give the S3A speed and alti- tude capability plus economical operations at the low altitudes re- quired by ASW. This coupled with the latest ASW sensors will permit the S3A to counter the advancing Soviet submarine threat. Another important effort, the CH-53E program, will develop a shipboard compatable helicopter intended for the lift and movement of cargo and troops/passengers internally, the tactical recovery of downed aircraft, the lift of heavy bulky equipment and other heavy lift duties. The CII-53E lift will increase to 16 tons by the incorpora- tion of three engines, a canted tail and horizontal stabilizer and a large rotor with an additional blade. Two development protoytpe aircraft will be completed in FY 1974. Work is also conducted, in addition to these programs, in the areas of Air ASW and Electronics Warf are equipments, aerial targets and propulsion systems. Air Force : This budget activity provides for the research, develop- ment and certain costs associated with the test of aircraft and their related equipment. Included are costs for A-10 aircraft which is de- signed to provide accurate and timely fire support for ground troops. In fiscal year 1974, drag reduction studies and mating of the GAU-8 30mm gun with the A-10 airframe are two primary goals. Funds are also requested to cover the F-15 which is ,an all weather air superiority fighter capable of engaging and destroying any known aircraft. During fiscal year 1974, F-15 test aircraft are planned for delivery with primary emphasis on Air Force flight evaluation. The B-1, a long-range strategic bomber to replace the present B-52 aircraft, will include the latest technology to permit it to penetrate all known or contemplated defenses. It is scheduled for first flight during the middle of calendar year 1974. The Advanced Medium STOL Transport (AMAS'T) prototype which will demonstrate applicable new technology and offer additional engineering development could provide a low cost development option for the modernization of the tactical airlift force in the early eighties. While the AMST is being developed to satisfy tactical transport re- Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 quirements, technology front ft, is program is expected to have direct carryover into civilian STOI, as plications. The conceptual and preliminary design of the Advanced STOL pro- totypes will be completed. These efforts, through future flight tests, will lessen the technology risks a Ord provide decision makers with possible production options based on demonstrated hardware. Also included are. developments involving airframes, avionics, ECM (EF- l 11 A), power plants and other aircraft related equipment. This activity also provides funding for the Aerospace Flight Dynamics, Ihotechnolot?'y, Propulsion, and Avionics Exploratory Development La born tors es. Committee Air Frrc6 ,ti'abROV.%c t cruise .4 rip ed Deenn (S(A.D).-The committee was c,an- cerned that the unit cost of aSC'AD had grown to the point that the cost elfe.ctiveness of the. decoy was seriously questioned. The decoy was planned to be deployed on less than half of the B-5 2G/H aircraft force. anal is not, programmed for the F13-111. the B-52D's or he 1~ -S aircraft . In addition.' there was lack of decision on the part of the Defense Department to arm the decoy. For these reasons, the Com- enittee. on the advice of its R & 1) Subcommittee, was prepared to rec- omrnend deletion of the entire million requested and termination ~-if the, }rogra-m. During full Committee markup of the bill, a letter was received from thc+ I)epnty Secretary o' Defense. announcing his decision to ter- oiina.te cnmineering development of the SCAD program "inasmuch as As pro iccted cost is ineommeus` t -aite with its currently perceived ben- The Deputy Secretary further announced that the SCAD "will be replaced with a vigorous technology program which will not only keen alive an option to and rta.ke development of SCAD or other appropriate penetration systems with a minimum of lead time should the, threat to bomber penetration develop more rapidly or more acutely than anticipated. but will a]s,) provide for a subsonic cruise missile." Secretary Clements requested S22 million to support the technology t)ronrain proposed. The Committee reduced the SCAD budget request by $50.2 million and recommends; authorization of the $22 million re- ~;uested for the new teehnolo f-y program. 1,; uh t- weight Fighter Prot ot?rire.-The Committee recommends a reductiori of million from the 046,500,000 requested for this pro- t ra.m. One of the prototype fighters plans to utilize the F104-PZW-100 turbofan engine being-developed for the F-15 aircraft. This engine program foiled. to meet the military qualification test milestone and continues to experience failures in ground tests. Because of these fail- ores it is believed that. the engine program will be delayed. Any delay in the en;rine development program could have an adverse impact on lie nrototvpe aircraft program. Therefore, the Committee recom- t lends t more conservative approach with a slight stretchout in this development program. However. should the engine development pro- .,rams he satisfactorily resolved in the near future. the Committee would consider reprogramming funds to restore the program to ii's original schedule. Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 57 3. Missiles and related equipment: Thousands Army ----------------------------------------------------- $967,200 Navy (including the Marine Corps) -------------------------- 921, 900 Air Force------------- - 292,400 -------------------------------- efense agencies------------------------------------------- 72,500 Army: Included in this activity is $336,000,000 for SAFEGUARD ABM System and Site Defense. In addition, $100.0 million is for the Advance Ballistic Missile Defense development program. The purpose of this program is to provide qualitative improvement in ballistic mis- sile defense technology and components to cope with the growing spec- trum of threats. Also included in this budget activity are the funds needed to support the test and evaluation of weapons systems con- ducted at Kwajalein and White Sands Missile Ranges. These Army managed national ranges support test programs of all services includ- ing the Army's SAFEGUARD, Air Force's MINUTEMAN, the Navy's POLARIS at Kwajalein, and the Air Force's SRAM and ATHENA, NASA programs, and several Navy tactical missiles at White Sands. Other Army weapons programs for which significant development funding was requested include: the surface to air missile, SAM-D, which will replace the NIKE HERCULES and HAWK Air Defense Systems; development of a manportable air defense system, STINGER, to replace REDEYE; continued development of the terminal homing concept which is directed toward defeating tanks, armored personnel carriers, field fortification, air defense sites and other point targets; the laser guided heliborne fire and forget missile (HELLFIRE) which has been impressive in tests conducted during the year and promises to be an excellent contender as the anti-tank missile of future attack helicopters; and continued exploratory and advanced development work in the missile field. Committee changes : Army Safeguard Defense System.-The Committee recommends a reduc- tion of $25 million from the $216 million requested for the Safe- guard program. The ABM Treaty and previous congressional action limits the deployment of Safeguard to one site, Grand Forks, North Dakota. The Equipment Readiness Date for that site is October 1974 and the development and deployment for that site is in its final stages. In view of this early readiness date and the lack of approved plans to deploy the system to protect the National Command Authority, the Committee seriously questions the need for the full $216 million requested for research and development by the Army for fiscal year 1974. The amount recommended, $191 million, should adequately support the limited development effort remaining along with adequate test and evaluation support needed in the coming year. Site Defense.-The Committee recommends a reduction of $25 mil- lion from the amount requested, $170,000,000, for the Site Defense program. The amount requested by the Army for fiscal year 1974 reflects an increase of 112 percent over the funds appropriated last year. The ABM Treaty of last year permits very limited deployment of Site Defense components to augment the Safeguard defense of Minute- man near Grand Forks and permits possible use in an ABM defense Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 58 of the National Command Authority. Since no decision has been made to deploy such a system in defense of the National Command Au- thority, the Committee believes that a program of $145,000,000 is suf- ficient for an orderly research and development program in fiscal year 1974. The Committee is of the opinion that the increase requested over fast year was not adequately justified. Yarn/ (including the Marine Corps') . The Navy missile program oxmsists of three aspects, submarine launched (strategic), surface launched and air launched missiles. The maior effort in the FY 1974 Arategir area is the submarine launched Trident missile. Beginning .his Year the Trident submarine has been separated and carried out under another budget activity R. R P. effort will continue engineering development of the Trident I ((--4) missile with the missile propul- -ion minor liri.ngs. Related strategic effort for V BM system, FBM Command and Con- trol and F'BM Defense will also be carried out. The princimd effort in surface launched missiles is the Aegis, a ship- board anti-air warfare system n oaring the end of development. with _i capability for improved area defense. It is of modular design pro- viding a family of systems each compatible with a specific hull and consisting of a common set cf modules. In FY 1974 an engineering development model, having mompleted land based tests will be in- stalled In ITSS Norton A,~;oun.d -for tests at sea. The surface launched efforts include also the Standard family of Interim Surface to Surface Missiles in the Semi-Active, Active and Anti-Radiation versions. ThEse missiles are intended for use on de- stroyer types and gunboats. The Harpoon program will provide a versatile air launched/surf?rce launche(i and now submarine launched missile utilizing minor varia- tions of a basic missile. The surface missile can be launched from ex- isting missile launchers and tit'ilizes a rocket booster and a turbojet engine. For submarine launca, a slightly modified surface missile is encapsulated and ejected from the submerged submarine's torpedo tube. The air launched version `i ill be carried on P3 and S3A aircraft and is launched without a booster. The Navy's Strategic and Tactical Cruise Missile programs have been combined for FY 1974 into a single technical program under which the testimr of system components such as navigation subsystems will be conducted and various airframe and propulsion approaches will be examined. It is the Navy intent to develop both a strategic and a tactical version of the mtssile with initial efforts in FY 1974 slanted toward the strategic missile. The prime contractor for missile system and system integratior. will be selected in FY 1974. There are several important, efforts in the air launched missile area namely the Phoenix missile slstern for use with the F14, improvement programs for the Sparrow 111 and Sidewinder missiles and develop- ment of the short range Agile missile. The Phoenix is completing; final phases of evaluation prior to fleet introduction. A recent significant accomplishment was the successful attack with four Phoenix missiles on four targets. The Agile program is intended to provide a greatly improved very short range-dogfight missile system for future air combat. In the interim, the present short rsnge Sidewinder is undergoing improve- Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 59 ments to increase its capability in the dogfight mode. Similarly the medium range Sparrow is being improved in the areas of launch range, guidance and fuzing. Also supported under this activity is the operation of the Pacific Missile Range. Air Force : This budget activity provides for the development and test of ballistic and other missiles and related equipment as well as op- eration of the Western Test Range. Included in this budget activity are funds for Minuteman, and ABRES (Advanced Ballistic Re-entry System). The principal efforts in the Minuteman program are the improvement of prelaunch survival through the Upgrade Silo pro- gram, and improvement in the capability to management the force through the Command Data Buffer program. Design and development will continue on the Minuteman Missile Performance Measurement System, and in-flight hardness assessment, and ground testing. The ABRES program provides for the development and test of new tech- niques in re-entry systems and penetration aids for all Department of Defense ballistic missiles. Defense agencies The Strategic Technology project for Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is responsible for a broad program of research and development designed to identify, explore and demonstrate advance concepts and technology which could have major technical impact on the offense/defense balance and hence on the U.S. national strategic capability. 4. Military astronautics and related equipment: Thousands Army ------------------------------------ $17,900 -------------------- Navy (including the Marine Corps)----------------------------- 55,500 Air Force----------------------------------------------------- 529,100 Army: The Army funds under this budget activity are for: develop- ment of new ground terminals and subsystems to increase the efficiency and reliability of the world-wide defense satellite communications system; development of small terminals for tactical application in the field army, which are also compatible with the defense satellite system; investigations of navigation by satellite; and for Defense Communica- tions Systems digital communications system development. Navy (including the Marine Corps) : Effort in FY 1974 is in two major fields-Satellite Communications and Satellite Navigation. The Fleet Satellite Communication System (FLEET-SATCOM) is currently under contract. It will partially satisfy the most urgent needs of the Navy in this field and at the same time provide service to US Air Force users. In the field of Satellite Navigation, programs will transition into the demonstration of hardware. One effort is devoted to the develop- ment/testing of modifications to existing TRANSIT satellites and user equipment. In addition the Navy will complete development, fab- rication launch and test of a Navy technology satellite applicable to a future Defense Navigation Satellite System. Air Force: This budget activity provides for the research, develop- ment and test of military space programs and certain associated costs for flight tests. Included are costs for the continuing development of space programs such as Defense Support, Military Satellite C'ommu- Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 60 nications Systems, Satellite Data, System, and Space Defense System. Warning satellites have been deployed to provide early warning of land and sea launched missila attacks. This surveillance system pro- vides near global coverage and reportS information almost instantane- ously. Also, significant progress Les been made which provides reliable and secure global communications. Both of these projects are in con- tinued development. 1,. A5`fzdxs, sm, ll craft and re'atcd equipnnent: Thousands ;ivy ------------------------------------------------------- $620.100 This activity provides for development, test and evaluation of ship structures and equipment incl idiag propulsion, communications, navi- gation and surveillance systems directly affecting ship operations. It supports the design, prototype fabrication and performance evalua- tion of new types of ships, sorart. countermeasures devices, marine gas turbines and nuclear propulsion plants. The Navy will complete teatir g and evaluation of the two 100 ton Surface Effect Ship testeraf and proceed with preliminary design efforts on the 200() ton testcraft. The air cushion vehicle A.nl-iribiou.s Assault Craft Program will proceed with construction of two prototypes. This fully amphibious craft with a planned speed in excess of 50 knots will be capable of carrving 60 tons of personnel. equipment and cargo ashore. The prime effort in hvdrol'oil development in the Navv is a joint effort with our NATO allies, the NATO PHUT. This nominal 215-ton ship will have waterjet propulsion and a formidable weapons suite consisting of the IIARPOOY surface.-to-surface missile and a 76mm gun. Navy development in the feld of advanced propulsion will consist of programs in Nuclear propulsion, as turbine power plants and super conducting electrical machinery. This last system, through the use of greatly refrigerated components, could reduce the size and weight of l)ropnlsion machinerv by as much as 50%. In addition to a program -,chrre a High Energy Laser will be : n- stalled in a converted cargo ship for test, of this exciting new weapon concept in the at sea environment, the Navy will also continue nr?o- gVrams for develonnient of sys-,errs and improvements in surface ASW and Electronic Warfare. G. Ordnance. eombat vehicle,? and related equipment: Thousands ;% rmv -------------------------------------------------------- $240,300 1 avv (including the Marine Corps) ._------------------------ 50,100 Air Force--------------------------------------------------- :123, 2200 -1 in ia: This hiidnet activity nr'ovides for research and development of weapons and vehicles. Included are field artillery weapons and am- munition, air to surface wearons except missiles, infantry small arms and ammunition. combat vehi?les inclndinmtheirintegral v-eannns and ammunition, and nuclear am non-nuclear munitions required for in- creased combat efl'ectivenes, Additionally tactics I vehicles both wheeled and tracked, and amphbious and ground effects vehicles ror conducting warfare in all co,id;i ions of terrain, weather and climate are developed under this budget,,-ctivity. Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 61 The principal programs in this budget activity are the new main battle Tank (the XM1), the Mechanized Infantry Combat Vehicle, the Armored Reconnaissance Scout Vehicle, the XM204 Towed 105MM Howitzer, the Bushmaster, and Scatterable Mines. The XM1 will have better armor to reduce its vulnerability and a better track, suspension and power plant will increase its cross-country mobility, speed and agility, thus providing the Army with a superior tank. The Mechanized Infantry Combat Vehicle, which will replace the M113 in selected units, will have increased effectiveness in cross-country mobility, ballistic protection, and improved stabilized weaponization. The Armored Reconnaissance Scout Vehicle, designed to replace the M114, will provide significant improvements in mobility, maneuver- ability, armor protection, and reliability. The Bushmaster, designed as the primary armament for the Mechanized Infantry Combat Vehi- cle, will have a variable high rate of fire and a selective dual ammuni- tion feed system for a family of ammunition. In the area of mines, the primary effort is developing delivery systems for a variety of mines. Committee changes : Army Howitzer Medium 155mm XM198.-The Army budget request in- cluded $5,976,000 for the development of a new 155mm howitzer to achieve extended range. During review of the Defense R&D budget requests, testimony was received indicating that the Navy has pre- viously tested an ammunition which achieves the desired range using existing weapons. In view of this approach to solving the range prob- lem by improving or modifying ammunition which can be fired from existing weapons, the Committee believes that the Army and the Navy should exert greater efforts in this less expensive approach before pro- ceeding with a costly weapons development program. For this reason, the Committee recommends deletion of the entire $5,976,000 requested. Nuclear Munitions.-The Army budget request included $14,498,000 for the development of nuclear munitions for certain short-range tac- tical weapons. The Committee is greatly concerned that the use of these short-range tactical nuclear weapons could create serious problems for our allies as well as U.S. forces. The radioactive fallout which could result from the use of short-range nuclear weapons could endanger the lives of friendly allies as well as our own troops. The Committee is not convinced that the problems have been ade- quately resolved. The use of this type weapon in time of emergency is seriously questioned, therefore the Committee recommends deletion of these funds until the various problems are resolved to the satisfac- tion of the Congress. Navy (including the Marine Corps) : In FY 1,974, the Navy will emphasize completion of the engineering development models of the CAPTOR ASW mine which can be delivered by air, surface and sub- marine and utilizes a MK-46 homing torpedo in lieu of a conventional warhead. As the MK-48 torpedo is now entering the fleet, the FY 1974 effort will be a modest one devoted to development of improvements. Marine Corps programs will fund efforts in the development of homing ordnance, a Multi-Shot Portable Assault Weapon and a Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B00380R000600160002-1 Approved For Release 2002/05/17 : CIA-RDP75B0038OR000600160002-1 Lightweight, Air Defense