NOTICE: The project that is the subject of this report was approved by the Governing Board of the National Research Council, whose members are drawn from the councils of the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine. The members of the committee responsible for the report were chosen for their special competences and with regard for appropriate balance.
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Committee on Naval Expeditionary Logistics
NORMAN E. BETAQUE,
Logistics Management Institute,
Chair
NORVAL L. BROOME,
Mitre Corporation
ROY R. BUEHLER,
Lockheed Martin Aeronautical Systems
CHRYSSOSTOMOS CHRYSSOSTOMIDIS,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
WILLIAM FEDOROCHKO, JR.,
Logistics Management Institute
LYNN G. GREF,
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
WILLIS M. HAWKINS,
Woodland Hills, California
LEE D. HIEB,
Yuma, Arizona
MICHAEL R. HILLIARD,
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
ERWIN F. HIRSCH,
Boston Medical Center
DAVID B. KASSING,
RAND
JOHN B. LaPLANTE,
Alexandria, Virginia
PETER J. MANTLE,
Science Applications International Corporation
HENRY S. MARCUS,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
IRWIN MENDELSON,
Singer Island, Florida
PHILIP D. SHUTLER,
Center for Naval Analyses
ROBERT A. WILSON,
Edgewater, Maryland
Navy Liaison Representatives
MajGen Edward Hanlon, Jr.,
USMC, Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, N85 (through July 29, 1998)
MajGen Dennis T. Krupp,
USMC, Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, N85 (as of July 27, 1998)
Col James N. Strock,
USMC, Marine Corps Combat Development Command
LCDR Frank Valente,
USN, Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, N85
Consultants
Sidney G. Reed, Jr.
James G. Wilson
Staff
Charles F. Draper, Program Officer
Naval Studies Board
DAVID R. HEEBNER,
Science Applications International Corporation (retired),
Chair
VINCENT VITTO,
Charles S. Draper Laboratory, Inc.,
Vice Chair
ALBERT J. BACIOCCO, JR.,
The Baciocco Group, Inc.
ALAN BERMAN,
Applied Research Laboratory, Pennsylvania State University
NORMAN E. BETAQUE,
Logistics Management Institute
NORVAL L. BROOME,
Mitre Corporation
GERALD A. CANN,
Rockville, Maryland
PAUL K. DAVIS,
RAND and RAND Graduate School of Policy Studies
SEYMOUR J. DEITCHMAN,
Chevy Chase, Maryland,
Special Advisor
ANTHONY J. DeMARIA,
DeMaria ElectroOptics Systems, Inc.
JOHN F. EGAN,
Nashua, New Hampshire
RICHARD J. IVANETICH,
Institute for Defense Analyses
DAVID W. McCALL,
Far Hills, New Jersey
ROBERT B. OAKLEY,
National Defense University
WILLIAM J. PHILLIPS,
Northstar Associates, Inc.
HERBERT RABIN,
University of Maryland
JOSEPH B. REAGAN,
Saratoga, California
HARRISON SHULL,
Monterey, California
JAMES M. SINNETT,
Boeing Company
KEITH A. SMITH,
Vienna, Virginia
ROBERT C. SPINDEL,
Applied Physics Laboratory, University of Washington
DAVID L. STANFORD,
Science Applications International Corporation
H. GREGORY TORNATORE,
Applied Physics Laboratory, Johns Hopkins University
J. PACE VANDEVENDER,
Sandia National Laboratories
PAUL K. VAN RIPER,
Williamsburg, Virginia
VERENA S. VOMASTIC,
Institute for Defense Analyses
BRUCE WALD,
Arlington Education Consultants
MITZI WERTHEIM,
Center for Naval Analyses
Navy Liaison Representatives
RADM John W. Craine, Jr.,
USN, Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, N81
RADM Richard A. Riddell,
USN, Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, N91 (through May 29, 1998)
RADM Paul G. Gaffney II,
USN, Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, N91 (as of May 29, 1998)
Marine Corps Liaison Representative
LtGen John E. Rhodes,
USMC,
Commanding General,
Marine Corps Combat Development Command
Ronald D. Taylor, Director
Charles F. Draper, Program Officer
Susan G. Campbell, Administrative Assistant
Mary G. Gordon, Information Officer
Larissa M. Markarian, Senior Project Assistant (through October 16, 1998)
Commission on Physical Sciences, Mathematics, and Applications
PETER M. BANKS,
Environmental Research Institute of Michigan,
Co-Chair
W. CARL LINEBERGER,
University of Colorado,
Co-Chair
WILLIAM BROWDER,
Princeton University
LAWRENCE D. BROWN,
University of Pennsylvania
MARSHALL H. COHEN,
California Institute of Technology
RONALD G. DOUGLAS,
Texas A&M University
JOHN E. ESTES,
University of California at Santa Barbara
JERRY P. GOLLUB,
Haverford College
MARTHA P. HAYNES,
Cornell University
JOHN L. HENNESSY,
Stanford University
CAROL M. JANTZEN,
Westinghouse Savannah River Company
PAUL G. KAMINSKI,
Technovation, Inc.
KENNETH H. KELLER,
University of Minnesota
MARGARET G. KIVELSON,
University of California at Los Angeles
DANIEL KLEPPNER,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
JOHN KREICK,
Sanders, a Lockheed Martin Company
MARSHA I. LESTER,
University of Pennsylvania
M. ELISABETH PATÉ-CORNELL,
Stanford University
NICHOLAS P. SAMIOS,
Brookhaven National Laboratory
CHANG-LIN TIEN,
University of California at Berkeley
NORMAN METZGER, Executive Director
Preface
One of the core objectives of the President's national security strategy is to "enhance our [the nation's] security with effective diplomacy and with military forces that are ready to fight and win."1 The Navy and Marine Corps play an essential role in the implementation of the strategy, which requires that U.S. interests be both promoted and protected worldwide. The challenge for the Navy and Marine Corps is not only to maintain the ready capability to support the national security strategy through deterrence, crisis management, and conflict resolution, but also to do so in a constrained budgetary environment in concert with the other military services.
Through their evolving strategies of Forward From the Sea2 and Operational Maneuver From the Sea,3 the Navy and Marine Corps have recognized that in any future conflict the team will likely be the first on the scene, that the situation must be contained until heavier forces and other military services arrive, that their mission calls for projecting forces inland from the littoral, that the conflict must be resolved rapidly with minimum casualties, and that forces withdrawn should be reconstituted for redeployment. As described, the mission calls for
1 |
The White House. 1997. A National Security Strategy for a New Century, U.S. Government Printing Office, May. Available online at <http://www.whitehouse.gov/WH/EOP/NSC/Strategy/>. |
2 |
Department of the Navy. 1994. "Forward . . . From the Sea, Continuing the Preparation of the Naval Services for the 21st Century," U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., September 19. |
3 |
Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps. 1996. "Operational Maneuver From the Sea," U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., January 4. |
those units making the transition from sea to land to be lighter, more maneuverable, and more widely dispersed, and that, in addition to fire support, the sea based forces be prepared to provide logistical support to rapidly moving inland forces on an efficient "on call" basis. Always recognized as the critical element in any military campaign (tacticians worry about battles; strategists worry about logistics), although often neglected, logistics must now evolve to accommodate the new strategy of the Navy and Marine Corps operating within a joint environment.
At the request of the Chief of Naval Operations (see Appendix A for a copy of the letter from Admiral Jay L. Johnson, USN), the National Research Council (NRC) conducted a study to determine the technological requirements, operational changes, and combat service support structure necessary to land and support forces ashore under the newly evolving Navy and Marine Corps doctrine. The Committee on Naval Expeditionary Logistics, operating under the auspices of the NRC's Naval Studies Board, was appointed to (1) evaluate the packaging, sealift, and distribution network and identify critical nodes and operations that affect timely insertion of fuels, ammunition, water, medical supplies, food, vehicles, and maintenance parts and tool blocks; (2) determine specific changes required to relieve these critical nodes and support forces ashore, from assault through follow-on echelonment; and (3) present implementable changes to existing support systems, and suggest the development of innovative new systems and technologies to land and sustain dispersed units from the shoreline to 200 miles inland.4
In the course of its study, the committee soon learned that development of OMFTS is not yet at a stage to allow, directly, detailed answers to many of these questions. As a result, the committee addressed the questions in terms of the major logistics functions of force deployment, force sustainment, and force medical support, and the fundamental logistics issues related to each of these functions.
The study began in late 1997 and lasted for approximately 8 months. During that time, the committee held the following meetings and visited the following military bases:
- December 10–11, 1997, in Washington, D.C. Organizational meeting. Navy and Marine Corps briefings.
- January 21–22, 1998, in Washington, D.C. Navy and Marine Corps briefings.
- March 11–12, 1998, in Oceanside, California. Site visit to learn more about logistics initiatives underway at Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton.
4 |
Points (1), (2), and (3) are addressed in the report, although not necessarily in the order stated. |
- March 13, 1998, in Port Hueneme, California. Subcommittee site visit to Naval Surface Warfare Center for tour and demonstration of underway replenishment.
- April 15–16, 1998, in Washington, D.C.
- April 22–23, 1998, in Jacksonville, North Carolina. Subcommittee site visit to observe medical field exercises at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune.
- May 13–14, 1998, in Washington, D.C. Army, Navy, Marine Corps briefings.
- June 17–18, 1998, in Washington, D.C.
- August 5, 1998, in Washington, D.C.
The resulting report represents the committee's consensus view on the issues posed in the charge.
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Acknowledgment of Reviewers
This report has been reviewed by individuals chosen for their diverse perspectives and technical expertise, in accordance with procedures approved by the National Research Council's (NRC's) Report Review Committee. The purpose of this independent review is to provide candid and critical comments that will assist the authors and the NRC in making the published report as sound as possible and to ensure that the report meets institutional standards for objectivity, evidence, and responsiveness to the study charge. The contents of the review comments and draft manuscript remain confidential to protect the integrity of the deliberative process. We wish to thank the following individuals for their participation in the review of this report:
LtGen James A. Brabham, USMC (retired), Riverview, Florida,
Carol M. Jantzen, Westinghouse Savannah River Company,
John Neerhout, Jr., Union Railways Limited,
Daniel Savitsky, Stevens Institute of Technology (retired),
James G. Wenzel, Marine Development Associates, Incorporated, and
Richard S. Wilbur, Institute for Clinical Information.
Although the individuals listed above provided many constructive comments and suggestions, responsibility for the final content of this report rests solely with the authoring committee and the NRC.
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D Logistics Productivity of Aircraft |
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