For other versions of this document, see http://wikileaks.org/wiki/CRS-RL33405 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Order Code RL33405 CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web Defense: FY2007 Authorization and Appropriations Updated October 19, 2006 Stephen Daggett Specialist in National Defense Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division Congressional Research Service ~ The Library of Congress Defense: FY2007 Authorization and Appropriations Summary In the week before Congress adjourned for recess on September 30, the House and Senate passed conference agreements on both the FY2007 national defense authorization bill, H.R. 5122, and the FY2007 defense appropriations bill, H.R. 5631. The President signed the appropriations bill into law, P.L. 109-289, on September 29, and he signed the authorization bill into law, P.L. 109-364, on October 17. The conference agreement on the appropriations bill provides $436.6 billion for defense, including $366.6 billion in regular appropriations and $70 billion in additional appropriations, mainly as a "bridge fund" for operations abroad. The total of regular appropriations is $4 billion below the Administration request. The Senate- passed bill provided $9 billion less than the request, which freed that much to add to non-defense appropriations bills. The White House , however, threatened to veto the defense bill if reduced defense by more than $4 billion. In action on other key issues, the appropriations bill ­ ! rejected the Administration proposal to terminate C-17 cargo aircraft production after FY2007 and provided funds for 22 aircraft; ! approved a Navy proposal to provide partial funding for 2 DDG- 1000 destroyers ­ formerly the DD(X) ­ rather than providing full funding for just one ship as in the House bill; ! included funds as requested for one T-AKE cargo ship and for 2 Littoral Combat Ships (LCS), rather than eliminating T-AKE funds and procuring only one LCS, as in the Senate bill; and ! slowed F-35 Joint Strike Fighter procurement, with funds to buy 2 rather than the requested 5 aircraft, but did not eliminate FY2007 aircraft procurement funds as had the Senate bill. On key defense policy issues, the authorization bill ! provided a 2.2% pay raise, as requested, rather than or a 2.7% raise as in the House bill; ! approved access for all reservists, except Federal employees with Federal health insurance, to the DOD TRICARE medical insurance program with a premium of 28% of the cost of the program; ! rejected House language permitting chaplains to use denominational prayers according to each chaplain's conscience, but, instead, in report language, required the Army and Navy to rescind recent directives on prayer and return to earlier policies; ! agreed to a substantially amended Senate change in the Buy American Act to allow use of foreign-supplied specialty metals in U.S.-built systems; and ! did not agree to a Senate provision giving the head of the National Guard four-star rank and the authority to make independent budget requests, but assigned these issues to a commission on the reserves. Key Policy Staff Area of Expertise Name Telephone E-Mail Acquisition Valerie Grasso 7-7617 vgrasso@crs.loc.gov Aviation Forces Christopher Bolkcom 7-2577 cbolkcom@crs.loc.gov Arms Control Amy Woolf 7-2379 awoolf@crs.loc.gov Arms Sales Richard Grimmett 7-7675 rgrimmett@crs.loc.gov David Lockwood 7-7621 dlockwood@crs.loc.gov Base Closure Daniel Else 7-4996 delse@crs.loc.gov Stephen Daggett 7-7642 sdaggett@crs.loc.gov Defense Budget Amy Belasco 7-7627 abelasco@crs.loc.gov Gary Pagliano 7-1750 gpagliano@crs.loc.gov Defense Industry Daniel Else 7-4996 delse@crs.loc.gov Michael Davey 7-7074 mdavey@crs.loc.gov Defense R&D John Moteff 7-1435 jmoteff@crs.loc.gov Edward Bruner 7-2775 ebruner@crs.loc.gov Ground Forces Steven Bowman 7-7613 sbowman@crs.loc.gov Andrew Feickert 7-7673 afeickert@crs.loc.gov Health Care; Military Richard Best 7-7607 rbest@crs.loc.gov Richard Best 7-7607 rbest@crs.loc.gov Intelligence Al Cumming 7-7739 acumming@crs.loc.gov Military Construction Daniel Else 7-4996 delse@crs.loc.gov Military Personnel David Burrelli 7-8033 dburrelli@crs.loc.gov Military Personnel; Lawrence Kapp 7-7609 lkapp@crs.loc.gov Reserves Steven Hildreth 7-7635 shildreth@crs.loc.gov Missile Defense Andrew Feickert 7-7673 afeickert@crs.loc.gov Naval Forces Ronald O'Rourke 7-7610 rorourke@crs.loc.gov Nuclear Weapons Jonathan Medalia 7-7632 jmedalia@crs.loc.gov Peace Operations Nina Serafino 7-7667 nserafino@crs.loc.gov Readiness Amy Belasco 7-7627 abelasco@crs.loc.gov Space, Military Patricia Figliola 7-2508 pfigliola@crs.loc.gov War Powers Richard Grimmett 7-7675 rgrimmett@crs.loc.gov Contents Most Recent Developments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Status of Legislation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Facts and Figures: Congressional Action on the FY2007 Defense Budget Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Overview of the Administration Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Highlights of the FY2007 Defense Budget Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Key Issues in Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Congressional Action on Major Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Bill-by-Bill Synopsis of Congressional Action to Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Congressional Budget Resolution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 FY2007 National Defense Authorization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 FY2007 Defense Appropriations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 FY2007 Defense Authorization -- Highlights of the House Armed Services Committee Bill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 FY2007 Defense Authorization -- Highlights of House Floor Action . . . . 27 FY2007 Defense Authorization -- Highlights of the Senate Armed Services Committee Bill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 FY2007 Defense Authorization -- Highlights of Senate Floor Action . . . . 33 House Appropriations Committee 302(b) Allocations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 FY2007 Defense Appropriations ­ Highlights of the House Appropriations Committee Bill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 FY2007 Defense Appropriations -- Highlights of House Floor Action . . . 42 Senate Appropriations Committee 302(b) Allocations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 FY2007 Defense Appropriations -- Highlights of the Senate Appropriations Committee Bill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Funding Cuts and Caps on Discretionary Spending and on Emergency Spending . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Other Issues in the Senate Defense Appropriations Bill . . . . . . . . . . . 46 FY2007 Defense Appropriations -- Highlights of Senate Floor Action . . . 48 FY2007 Defense Appropriations -- Highlights of the Conference Agreement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 FY2007 Defense Authorization -- Highlights of the Conference Agreement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 Appendix A: Additional Tables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70 For Additional Reading . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92 List of Figures Figure 1. DOD Discretionary Budget Authority, FY2000-FY2011, Excluding Supplementals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 List of Tables Table 1A. Status of FY2007 Defense Authorization, H.R. 5122, S. 2766 . . . . . . 2 Table 1B. Status of FY2007 Defense Appropriations, H.R. 5631 . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Table 2. FY2007 Department of Defense Appropriations, House and Senate Action by Bill and Title . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Table 3. FY2007 National Defense Authorization, House and Senate Action by Title, H.R. 5122, S. 2766 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Table 4. Congressional Budget Resolution, Recommended National Defense Budget Function Totals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Table 5. Administration Request for National Defense for FY2007, Budget Authority, Discretionary and Mandatory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Table 6: House Floor Action on Selected Amendments: Defense Authorization Bill, H.R. 5122 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Table 7: Senate Floor Action on Selected Amendments: Defense Authorization Bill, S. 2766 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Table 8. Initial House 302(b) Subcommittee Allocations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Table 9. Initial vs. Latest Senate 302(b)Subcommittee Allocations . . . . . . . . . . 44 Table 10: Senate Floor Action on Selected Amendments: Defense Appropriations Bill, H.R. 5631 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 Table 11: Side-by-Side Comparison of House, Senate, and Conference Action on Major Policy Issues in the FY2007 Defense Authorization Bill, H.R. 1522/S. 2766 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 Table A1. Administration Projection of National Defense Funding, FY2007-FY2011 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70 Table A2. Proposed Missile Defense Funding, FY2007-FY2011 . . . . . . . . . . . 71 Table A3. Authorized and Actual Active Duty End-Strength, FY2004-FY2007 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72 Table A4. House and Senate Action on Selected Weapon Programs: Authorization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73 Table A5. House and Senate Action on Selected Weapon Programs: Appropriations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 Table A6. Emergency Funding, Authorization and Appropriations . . . . . . . . . . 85 Table A7. Appropriation of Emergency Funds for Procurement: Line Item Detail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87 Defense: FY2007 Authorization and Appropriations Most Recent Developments On September 26, 2006, by a vote of 394-22, the House approved a conference agreement on the FY2007 defense appropriations bill, H.R. 5631. The Senate approved the agreement on September 29 by a vote of 100-0, and the President signed the bill into law, P.L. 109-289, on the same day. The bill includes a continuing resolution to run the rest of the government through November 17, after Congress returns from its election recess. Also on September 29, the House approved a conference agreement on the FY2007 national defense authorization bill, H.R. 5122 by a vote of 398-23. The Senate approved the agreement on September 30 by unanimous consent. The President signed the authorization bill into law, P.L. 109-364, on October 17. The conference agreement on the appropriations bill provides $436.6 billion in new appropriations for defense, including $366.6 billion1 in regular appropriations and $70 billion in additional appropriations as a "bridge fund" for operations abroad and for some other purposes. The total of regular appropriations is $4 billion below the Administration request. The total amount in the bill was a key issue. The Senate- passed bill provided $9 billion less than the request, which, in turn, allowed increases above the Administration request in non-defense appropriations while remaining within the budget resolution cap on total discretionary spending. But the White House threatened to veto the bill if it trimmed defense by more than $4 billion as a means of providing additional funds for non-security-related programs. The $70 billion in additional funds approved in the conference agreement is $20 billion higher than the $50 billion that each appropriations committee originally provided. In floor action, the Senate had added $16.2 billion in emergency funding. Of that amount, $13.1 billion was added by a Stevens-Inouye amendment to provide funds for the Army and Marine Corps to repair, upgrade, and replace equipment used in overseas operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. The Senate also added $1.8 billion for border security, $700 million for counter drug operations in Afghanistan, $200 million for enhanced intelligence to track down Osama bin Laden, $65 million for Predator UAVs, $20 million for peacekeepers in Sudan, and $175 million for wildfire 1 An additional $11.2 billion is counted as part of the bill under budgetary rules agreed to by the House and Senate Budget Committees, the Congressional Budget Office, and the Office of Management and Budget. This is the cost of contributions DOD must make to the military retirement fund to cover the actuarially determined cost of future 65-and-over retiree medical benefits for current uniformed personnel. These contributions are considered to be permanent appropriations which count against caps on discretionary spending. CRS-2 suppression. In the conference agreement, the $20 billion added to the original $50 billion, is mainly to reset Army and Marine units. In all, according to the House Appropriations Committee, the bill provides over $17.1 billion to fully fund Army and $5.8 billion to fully fund Marine Corps reset costs. The agreement also provides $100 million for Afghan counter-drug operations and $200 million for wildfire suppression, but does not include the other Senate additions. Key issues resolved in the authorization conference agreement included whether, as in the House bill, to alter DOD provisions that require non- denominational prayer, whether, as in the Senate bill, to promote the head of the National Guard to four-star rank, and whether to approve multiyear procurement of the F-22 fighter aircraft. The authorization bill also approves Senate amendments to the Insurrection Act to allow the President substantially expanded authority to used the armed forces in response to domestic emergencies, allows all off-duty reservists, except Federal employees with Federal health insurance, to enroll in the TRICARE health insurance program with a premium or 28% of the program's cost, and provides expanded authority for the Defense Department to use its funds for security assistance to foreign governments. Status of Legislation The House and Senate have reached final agreements on the FY2007 defense appropriations bill, and on the FY2007 national defense authorization bill. Tables 1A and 1B track congressional action on those measures. Table 1A. Status of FY2007 Defense Authorization, H.R. 5122, S. 2766 Full Committee Conference Markup Report Approval House House Senate Senate Conf. Public House Senate Report Passage Report Passage Report House Senate Law H.Rept. S.Rept. H.Rept. P.L. 109- 5/11/06 6/22/06 9/29/06 9/30/06 5/3/06 5/4/06 109-452 109-254 109-702 364 396-31 96-0 398-23 U.C. 5/5/06 5/9/06 9/29/06 10/17/06 Table 1B. Status of FY2007 Defense Appropriations, H.R. 5631 Subcommittee Conference Report Markup Approval House House Senate Senate Conf. Public House Senate Report Passage Report Passage Report House Senate Law H.Rept. S.Rept. H.Rept. P.L. 109- 6/20/06 9/7/06 9/26/06 9/29/06 6/7/06 7/13/06 109-504 109-292 109-676 289 407-19 98-0 394-22 100-0 6/16/06 7/25/06 9/25/06 9/29/06 CRS-3 Earlier in the year Congress began, but never completed, action on the annual congressional budget resolution. The Senate passed its version of the resolution, S.Con.Res. 83, on March 16. The House Budget Committee reported its version of the resolution, H.Con.Res. 376, on March 31, and floor action began on April 6. But the leadership halted debate in the face of internal Republican opposition to the measure. On May 18, a compromise was announced, and the House approved the measure by a vote of 218-210. There has been no conference agreement on the budget resolution, however. In the absence of an agreement, on May 18, the House also approved a measure "deeming" the provisions of its version of the budget resolution, including a cap of $872.8 billion on total discretionary spending, to be in effect for purposes of subsequent House action. The "deeming" resolution was included in the rule (H.Res. 818) governing debate on the FY2007 Interior and Environment appropriations bill (H.R. 5386). The Senate attached a "deeming" measure to the FY2006 supplemental appropriations bill (H.R. 4939). In action on related legislation, the House passed the Military Quality of Life/Veterans Affairs appropriations bill, H.R. 5385, on May 19. The bill provides $58 billion for the Department of Defense, including funds for military construction and family housing, for some military personnel accounts, for some military operation and maintenance accounts, and for the defense health program. In the Senate, the military personnel, O&M, and defense health funds are provided in the regular defense appropriations bill, and the military construction and family housing funds are provided in the Military Construction/Veterans Affairs appropriations bill. That bill, also H.R. 5385, was reported by the Senate Appropriations Committee on July 20, but has not been taken up on the Senate floor. As reported, it provides $16.3 billion for Department of Defense military construction and family housing. Facts and Figures: Congressional Action on the FY2007 Defense Budget Request The following series of tables show congressional action on defense budget. Additional details will be added as congressional action proceeds. Table 2 shows congressional action on the FY2007 appropriations bills that provide funding for the Department of Defense. These are (1) the defense appropriations bills in the House and the Senate (H.R. 5631) and (2) the military quality of life/Veterans Affairs appropriations bill in the House and the military construction/VA bill in the Senate (both H.R. 5385). The House military quality of life/VA appropriations bill includes about $42 billion for Military Personnel and for Operation and Maintenance accounts that are provided in the defense appropriations bill in the Senate. Table 2 shows the total in these accounts by bill. The conference agreement on the defense appropriation bill this year follows the organization of the House-passed bill ­ last year, the conference followed the Senate. So the totals shown in Table 2 for the conference agreement do not include amounts for military personnel, for operation and maintenance, and for defense health that will CRS-4 be provided in the military quality of live/VA appropriations bill, when it is completed. Please note that while this table shows all appropriations for the Department of Defense, it does not show funding provided in other appropriations bills for defense- related activities of other agencies. The largest amount of non-DOD defense-related funding is for Department of Energy nuclear weapons programs, for which the Administration has requested about $17 billion in FY2007. Funding for DOE defense programs is provided in the annual energy and water appropriations bill (H.R. 5427). Other amounts for national defense not show here include FBI counterintelligence activities financed in appropriations for the Department of Justice and smaller amounts in other bills. CRS-5 Table 2. FY2007 Department of Defense Appropriations, House and Senate Action by Bill and Title (budget authority in billions of dollars) House Senate Conf FY2006 House House Versus Senate Senate Versus Versus Enacted Request Passed Request Request Passed Request Conf. Request Department of Defense Appropriations Bill, H.R. 5631 Military Personnel 96.0 86.1 84.9 -1.2 99.6 99.0 -0.6 86.4 +0.3 Operation and Maintenance 122.4 122.4 120.5 -1.9 130.1 126.3 -3.8 119.8 -2.7 Procurement 75.8 82.9 81.8 -1.1 82.9 81.0 -1.9 80.9 -2.0 RDT&E 71.4 73.2 75.3 +2.2 73.2 73.0 -0.2 75.7 +2.6 Revolving and Management Funds 2.2 2.4 2.4 -- 2.4 2.0 -0.4 2.4 -- Other Defense Programs* 22.5 2.4 2.4 -- 23.4 23.9 0.4 2.5 +0.1 Related Agencies 0.7 0.9 0.9 -- 0.9 0.9 -- 0.9 -- General Provisions -2.2 0.1 -1.9 -2.0 0.1 -2.5 -2.6 -2.2 -2.2 Total Regular Appropriations 388.9 370.4 366.3 -4.1 412.6 403.6 -9.0 366.4 -4.0 Additional Appropriations for War 50.0 50.0 50.0 -- 50.0 66.2 16.2 70.0 +20.0 Total with Additional for War 438.9 420.4 416.3 -4.1 462.6 469.8 7.2 436.4 +16.0 65+ Retiree Medical Accrual** 10.7 11.2 11.2 -- 11.2 11.2 -- 11.2 +0.1 Total Regular w/ Accrual 399.6 381.6 377.5 -4.1 423.8 414.8 -9.0 377.6 -4.0 Total w/ War and Accrual 449.6 431.6 427.5 -4.1 473.8 481.0 7.2 447.6 +16.0 DOD Programs in Military Quality of Life/VA and Military Construction/VA Appropriations Bills, H.R. 5385 Military Construction 9.6 12.6 11.9 -0.7 12.6 12.3 -0.3 -- -- Family Housing 4.5 4.1 4.0 -0.1 4.1 4.0 -0.1 -- -- Basic Allowance for Housing -- 13.5 13.5 -- -- -- -- -- -- Facilities Sustainment -- 6.2 6.2 -- -- -- -- -- -- Environmental Restoration -- 1.4 1.4 -- -- -- -- -- -- Defense Health Program -- 21.0 21.0 -- -- -- -- -- -- Total Department of Defense 14.0 58.9 58.1 -0.8 16.7 16.3 -0.4 -- -- Grand Total in Defense and Military Construction Appropriations Bills Total Regular Appropriations 413.6 440.5 435.6 -4.9 440.5 431.1 -9.4 -- -- Total With Additional for War 463.6 490.5 485.6 -4.9 490.5 497.3 7.2 -- -- FY2006 Supplemental, June 2006 67.7 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- Total With Supplemental 531.3 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- Totals may not add due to rounding. Sources: Office of Management and Budget, House and Senate reports on respective bills, CRS and CBO for Senate floor action; conference report on the defense appropriations bill, H.Rept. 109-676. Notes: *Other Defense Programs include Defense Health, Drug Interdiction, Chemical Weapons Demilitarization, and DOD Inspector General in the Senate bill and all but Defense Health in the House bill. In DOD briefing charts, Chemical Weapons Demilitarization is shown in Procurement and the other accounts are shown in Operation and Maintenance. **Annual funding for accrual payments by DOD for age-65-and-over Medicare-eligible military retirees is considered a permanent appropriation. The amounts to be contributed to military retirement funds for the cost of these benefits are not technically subject to annual appropriations, but they are scored as DOD discretionary funds. As such, they count against the defense subcommittee's 302(b) allocation and against the total amount of discretionary funds available for appropriation. CRS-6 Table 3 shows congressional action on the House and Senate versions of the FY2007 defense authorization bill by title. It is important to note that the authorization bill does not directly provide funds for most defense programs (the exception being some mandatory programs). Rather, it authorizes the appropriation of funds. In the appropriations bills, Congress may provide more than, less than, or the same as the amounts authorized to be appropriated, and it may provide funds for programs never specifically mentioned in authorization bills or associated report language. Table 3. FY2007 National Defense Authorization, House and Senate Action by Title, H.R. 5122, S. 2766 (budget authority in billions of dollars) House Senate Conf. House- Versus Senate Versus Versus Request Passed Request Passed Request Conf. Request Military Personnel 110.8 109.8 -1.0 111.9 +1.1 110.1 -0.7 Operation & Maintenance 130.1 129.8 -0.3 129.5 -0.6 129.0 -1.1 Procurement 82.9 84.6 +1.7 85.7 +2.8 84.2 +1.3 RDT&E 73.2 74.1 +0.9 74.3 +1.1 73.6 +0.5 Military Construction 12.6 12.8 +0.2 13.2 +0.6 13.0 +0.4 Family Housing 4.1 4.1 -0.0 4.1 -0.0 4.1 -0.0 Revolving & Management 2.4 2.5 +0.1 2.4 0.0 2.4 0.0 Other Defense Programs* 23.4 23.6 +0.2 23.4 -0.1 23.8 +0.4 Other Military Discretionary 0.0 0.1 +0.1 0.1 +0.1 0.1 +0.1 Mandatory Programs 1.9 1.9 -0.0 4.7 +2.7 1.9 -0.0 Rescissions/Inflation Savings 0.0 -1.6 -1.6 -1.0 -1.0 -0.8 -0.8 Total Department of Defense 441.5 441.7 +0.2 448.3 +6.8 441.5 +0.0 Atomic Energy Defense Activities 17.0 16.5 -0.5 16.4 -0.6 16.5 -0.5 Other Defense-Related Activities 4.8 4.7 -0.0 4.7 -0.0 4.7 -0.0 Total National Defense 463.3 462.9 -0.4 469.4 +6.2 462.8 -0.5 Emergency Authorization 50.0 50.0 0.0 50.0 0.0 70.0 +20.0 Total Including Emergency 513.3 512.9 -0.4 519.4 +6.2 532.8 +19.5 Totals may not add due to rounding. Source: Office of Management and Budget; H.Rept. 109-452, S.Rept. 109-254; H.Rept. 109-702. *Note: Other Defense Programs include Defense Health Program; Drug Interdiction; Chemical Weapons Demilitarization; and Office of the Inspector General. CRS-7 Table 4 shows congressional recommendations for defense budget authority and outlays in versions of the annual budget resolution -- S.Con.Res. 83 as passed by the Senate and H.Con.Res 376 as passed by the House. These amounts are not binding on the appropriations committees, however. Table 4. Congressional Budget Resolution, Recommended National Defense Budget Function Totals (billions of dollars) FY2007* FY2008 FY2009 FY2010 FY2011 Administration Request Budget Authority 513.0 485.2 505.3 515.3 526.1 Outlays 527.4 494.4 494.3 507.4 522.7 Senate Budget Committee Reported Budget Authority 545.4 481.7 501.8 511.9 522.8 Outlays 550.5 514.8 508.1 511.2 521.9 Senate Passed Budget Authority 549.4 483.0 502.8 512.9 523.9 Outlays 554.5 516.0 509.1 512.2 523.0 House Budget Committee Reported Budget Authority 512.9 484.7 504.8 514.9 525.8 Outlays 534.9 505.5 505.9 512.6 524.9 Sources: Office of Management and Budget; S.Con.Res. 83; H.Con.Res. 376. *Note: For FY2007, the Administration request includes $50 billion for a planned budget amendment for overseas operations. The Senate recommended levels for FY2007 assume $82 billion for overseas operations. The House committee-reported level assumes $50 billion, as in the request. Table 5 shows the Administration's FY2007 national defense request, by appropriations title, separating discretionary and mandatory amounts. The total for FY2006 includes a $70 billion placeholder for supplemental appropriations. The final FY2006 supplemental appropriations bill, however, H.R. 4239, which was signed into law on June 15, P.L. 109-234, provides $67.7 billion for national defense programs, $2.3 billion less. The total for FY2007 includes a $50 billion placeholder for a budget amendment for overseas operations. If the $50 billion placeholder is removed, the total discretionary request for the Department of Defense is $439.3 billion. This was the amount most often referred to in DOD press releases as the FY2007 Department of Defense request when the budget was released in February. CRS-8 Table 5. Administration Request for National Defense for FY2007, Budget Authority, Discretionary and Mandatory (billions of dollars) 2005 2006 2007 Actual Estimate Request National Defense Discretionary (Function 050) Department of Defense -- Military Discretionary (Subfunction 051) Military personnel 119.7 113.5 110.8 Operation and maintenance 178.6 177.7 152.0 Procurement 96.6 86.2 84.2 Anticipated funding for the Global War on Terror* -- 70.0 50.0 Research, development, test and evaluation 68.8 71.0 73.2 Military construction 7.3 8.9 12.6 Family housing 4.1 4.4 4.1 Revolving, management, and trust funds and other 3.8 4.8 2.4 Total, Department of Defense -- Military 478.9 536.6 489.3 Discretionary Atomic Energy Defense Activities (Subfunction 053) Department of Energy defense-related activities 17.0 16.2 15.8 Formerly utilized sites remedial action 0.2 0.1 0.1 Defense nuclear facilities safety board 0.0 0.0 0.0 Total, Atomic Energy Defense Activities Discretionary 17.2 16.4 16.0 Defense-Related Activities (Subfunction 054) Federal Bureau of Investigation 1.2 2.3 2.3 Other discretionary programs 2.4 3.0 2.2 Total, Defense-Related Activities Discretionary 3.7 5.3 4.5 Total, National Defense Discretionary 499.8 558.3 509.7 National Defense Mandatory (Function 050) Department of Defense -- Military Mandatory (Subfunction 051) Concurrent receipt accrual payments 1.5 2.3 2.4 Research, development, test, and evaluation -- -- 0.3 Revolving, trust and other DoD mandatory 5.0 0.8 0.8 Offsetting receipts -1.5 -1.6 -1.5 Total, Department of Defense -- Military Mandatory 5.0 1.5 1.9 Atomic Energy Defense Activities Mandatory (Subfunction 053) Energy employees occupational illness compensation 0.7 1.7 1.0 program and other Defense-Related Activities Mandatory (Subfunction 054) Radiation exposure compensation trust fund 0.1 0.1 0.0 Other mandatory programs 0.2 0.2 0.3 Total, Defense-Related Activities Mandatory 0.3 0.3 0.3 Total, National Defense Mandatory 6.0 3.6 3.3 Total, National Defense (Function 050) 505.8 561.8 513.0 Source: Office of Management and Budget, Analytical Perspectives: Budget of the U.S. Government, FY2007, Table 27-1. *Note: These are placeholder amounts for a request for supplemental appropriations for FY2006 and for a budget amendment for FY2007, not yet submitted. The final FY2006 supplemental provided $67.7 billion for national defense programs. CRS-9 Overview of the Administration Request On February 6, 2006, the White House formally released its FY2007 federal budget request to Congress. The request included $513.0 billion in new budget authority for national defense in FY2007, of which $50 billion was a placeholder for a later budget amendment to cover costs of overseas military operations, $441.2 billion was for regular operations of the Department of Defense (DOD), $17.0 billion was for Department of Energy (DOE) nuclear weapons programs, and $4.8 billion was for defense-related activities of other agencies (see Table 5 above). The $50 billion placeholder is not intended to cover the full costs of military operations in Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere in FY2007. Rather, it is a "bridge fund" to cover costs in the initial months of FY2007. Remaining costs for the rest of the year will, if Congress agrees, be covered by a later supplemental appropriations bill.2 Along with the FY2007 budget request, the Pentagon released the results of the congressionally-mandated Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR) of defense policy. The year-long QDR was not a budget exercise, but it identified the kinds of military capabilities that senior DOD officials believe should be emphasized in years to come, and it endorsed a few budget decisions that were reflected in the FY2007 DOD request to Congress. Highlights of the FY2007 Defense Budget Request Aspects of the Defense Department's FY2007 request that appear to be of most immediate concern to Congress include: (1) The Administration continues to request large amounts for Iraq and Afghanistan through "additional" or "emergency supplemental" appropriations not subject to limits on total discretionary federal spending and not subject to the full congressional authorization and appropriations review process. In the FY2007 budget, the Administration has, for the first time, requested part of the funding to carry on military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan before the start of the fiscal year in the form of a $50 billion budget amendment to the FY2007 request. In this, the Administration has followed Congress's lead -- Congress provided a "bridge fund" of $25 billion for Iraq and Afghanistan in the FY2005 defense appropriations bill and of $50 billion in FY2006. 2 On its own initiative, Congress provided a $25 billion bridge fund in the FY2005 defense appropriations act and a $50 billion bridge fund in FY2006. In each year, the White House later requested additional supplemental funds. In February 2006, the Defense Department requested $67 billion for overseas military operations in FY2006 in addition to the $50 billion appropriated last fall and $5 billion for DOD for domestic disaster costs. In the FY2006 supplemental appropriations act, H.R. 4939, P.L. 109-234, Congress provided $66.0 billion for overseas operations and $1.7 billion for DOD domestic disaster relief and repair. For a full discussion of the FY2006 supplemental, see CRS Report RL33298, FY2006 Supplemental Appropriations: Iraq and Other International Activities; Additional Katrina Hurricane Relief, Paul M. Irwin and Larry Nowels, coordinators. CRS-10 By submitting a budget amendment, the Administration gains a more direct and formal voice in proposing how to allocate the additional funds. The Administration will continue, however, to request more additional funding in an emergency supplemental appropriations bill to be submitted next year. Both the "bridge fund" and later supplemental appropriations will be requested over and above proposed limits on overall discretionary spending. The key point remains this: Either in the form of a bridge fund or of emergency supplemental appropriations, the Administration is requesting that additional war funding not count against restrictive caps on regular annual defense and non-defense appropriations. War expenditures, however, have become a very large part of total annual defense spending, and, for that matter, of total defense and non-defense appropriations. For FY2006, Congress approved a $50 billion bridge fund for war costs last fall, and, in June of 2006, it approved additional supplemental appropriations of $66 billion, for a total of $116 billion. A few comparisons may help put this amount into perspective. ! Regular DOD appropriations for FY2006 were $411 billion, so the $116 billion for war increases defense funding by 28%. ! In last year's budget resolution, the FY2006 cap on total "non- emergency" appropriations, both for defense and for non-defense programs, was $843 billion, which was subsequently trimmed by 1% to $835 billion. The $116 billion for war adds 14% to federal discretionary funding. ! At the end of last year's budget cycle, Congress imposed an across- the-board cut of 1% in all appropriations bills, which trimmed federal spending by $8.4 billion, 7% of the amount it is providing for war costs. An equally important point is that DOD requests for "additional" or "emergency" war appropriations are not subject to nearly the extent of review that Congress exercises over regular defense spending. The Administration decision to submit a budget amendment for a bridge fund is, at most, only a limited step in the direction of greater oversight. The amendment has not been submitted in advance of House action on the FY2007 defense authorization bill. Moreover, neither supplemental appropriations requests nor budget amendments are supported by the kind of detailed budget justification material that Congress expects to be provided with regular DOD funding requests. In part because of that, there appears to be a growing sentiment in Congress to the effect that full funding for ongoing military operations should be considered through the regular, annual defense authorization and appropriations process. CRS-11 Figure 1. DOD Discretionary Budget Authority, FY2000-FY2011, Excluding Supplementals (2) The regular DOD appropriations request for FY2007 is for $439.3 billion, $28.5 billion above the FY2006 enacted amount, an increase of 7%. Viewed in this way, the FY2007 budget appears to carry on the substantial defense buildup that has been underway for the past several years. But the story is a bit more complicated than that. The increase appears so large in part because Congress cut the FY2006 request by $8.5 billion -- a $4.4 billion cut in the regular process and an additional across-the-board reduction of $4.1 billion at the end of the appropriations process.3 Moreover, in an effort to stay within tight limits on overall appropriations for FY2007, the Office of Management and Budget trimmed DOD's FY2007 budget by $3.8 billion compared to the amount that was planned last year for FY2007. Out-year budget projections for the regular defense budget show spending leveling off to very modest rates of growth. The average increase between FY2005 and FY2011 is 1.7% per year above inflation, far below the 5% per year growth between FY2001 and FY2005 (see Figure 1). That said, when additional and supplemental appropriations for war are included, total defense spending is continuing to grow. The total increase in defense between FY2005 and FY2006 will be about $56 billion if Congress approves the pending FY2006 supplemental. The increase between FY2006 and FY2007 could be as great. 3 For a full discussion, see CRS Report RL32924, Defense: FY2006 Authorization and Appropriations, by Stephen Daggett. CRS-12 So, the summary story line might be termed the "tale of two budgets." The budget is getting very tight for programs that are funded strictly within the regular defense budget -- military service officials have testified that the congressional cuts in the FY2006 defense budget are requiring substantial reductions in some operations. At the same time, supplemental appropriations are soaring, and money is readily available for programs that are tied to the war effort. (3) The Administration's FY2007 request rejects congressional proposals to increase Army and Marine Corps end-strength and cuts Air Force and Navy personnel levels. For FY2006 Congress authorized active duty end-strength of 512,400 for the Army of 179,000 for the Marine Corps. By the end of FY2007, however, the Defense Department plans to restore Army and Marine Corps end-strength to the pre-FY2004, pre-Iraq, "base-line" level -- 482,400 for the Army, which is 30,000 troops lower than the current authorization, and 175,000 for the Marine Corps, which is 4,000 lower. Many Members of Congress have urged that the current authorized levels be made permanent in order to ease the pace of operations on ground forces. The Administration vigorously opposes a permanent increase, however, arguing that costs are high and that forces can be organized more efficiently to provide required combat troops. Meanwhile, the Air Force plans to eliminate at least 40,000 full-time equivalent positions over the next five years through a mixture of reductions in active duty, reserve, and civilian personnel. And the Navy is cutting 12,000 active duty personnel between FY2006 and FY2007. Though no additional Navy cuts have been announced formally, it is widely expected that the Defense Department will trim an additional 20,000 or so positions from the Navy over the next few years. (4) The Administration's FY2007 request provides funds for 333,000 Army National Guard (ARNG) troops rather than the 350,000 authorized and reflects a decision to reduce the number of combat brigades in the ARNG from 34 to 28. The Army has been unable to recruit and retain enough troops in the National Guard to reach its authorized end-strength. In the FY2007 request, the Army has requested funding only for 333,000 troops, though, after the budget was released, Army officials said that they would shift money into personnel and other related accounts if recruitment and retention improves. In its future plans, however, the Army projects ARNG end-strength of 333,000. A more controversial issue is the Army plan to reduce the number of new, modularized ARNG combat brigades. As Army officials explain, the purpose of the change is to fully man the new brigades within authorized ARNG end-strength and to fully equip the combat units within available budget constraints. The change will likely mean that ARNG units in some states that will not, as had been planned, be outfitted as new, more capable combat brigades, will lose personnel. The units that remain, therefore, will also likely have less ability to carry out state disaster response and homeland defense missions. As a result, state governors and some National Guard leaders have been very critical of the plan. (5) The FY2007 request includes only a modest 2.2% pay raise for troops and proposes increases in medical care fees and co-pays for under-age-65 military retirees. Since 1999, Congress has approved substantial CRS-13 increases in military pay and benefits. Compared to economy-wide indices, uniformed military personnel now cost as much as 33% more, above inflation, than in the late 1990s.4 In the FY2007 budget, the Administration is proposing measures to rein in the growth of pay and benefits. The proposed 2.2% military pay raise is the lowest since 1994. And the Administration has proposed increasing fees and co-pays for under-age-65 military retirees who are eligible for medical care through the military Tricare program. This is the first proposed increase in medical co-pays since the current Tricare medical care system for retirees and dependents was established in 1995. (6) The FY2007 request proposes a few reductions in major weapons programs, some of which have been controversial in Congress. With the Defense Department carrying out its Quadrennial Defense Review in 2005, many expected some substantial changes in long-term budget priorities, including some cuts in major weapons programs. The QDR did not, however, make many far-reaching changes in on-going programs, and only a few reductions in weapons plans are reflected in the FY2007 budget request. Two have so far been controversial in Congress -- ! A decision to halt procurement of the C-17 cargo plane in FY2007 after buying 180 of the aircraft since the program began in the mid- 1980s; and ! A decision to drop plans to develop and buy engines for the F-35 joint strike fighter from two manufacturers and, instead, just to buy engines from one company. (7) The Quadrennial Defense Review did not result in decisions on major, ongoing defense budget and program-related issues. The official Department of Defense report on the 2005-2006 Quadrennial Defense Review,5 which was released along with the Administration's budget request in February, stated plainly that the year-long QDR exercise was not intended to be a systematic assessment of major defense programs. Instead, it was designed to provide a vision of the national security challenges facing the nation and to identify the kinds of military capabilities that are needed. True to its word, the QDR report announced very few major program decisions, though it did mention some. Perhaps the most significant is to add 15,000 special operations troops, though without increasing overall military end-strength. For the most part, the QDR report simply endorsed ongoing initiatives, though often with wording carefully designed to keep options for policy-makers open. The result is to leave undecided some very far-reaching defense policy issues. ! For the Navy, the QDR report endorsed increasing "green" and "brown" water capabilities, construction of new prepositioning 4 For a discussion, see CRS Report RL32877, Defense Budget: Long-Term Challenges for FY2006 and Beyond, by Stephen Daggett. 5 Department of Defense, Quadrennial Defense Review Report, February, 2006. Available at [http://www.defenselink.mil/qdr/report/Report20060203.pdf]. CRS-14 ships, 11 rather than 12 deployable aircraft carriers, construction of two attack submarines per year at lower than current prices, and the conversion of a number of Trident II submarine-launched missiles to carry conventional (non-nuclear) warheads. But the report said nothing about other naval force issues. Notably, it did not mention the recently-released Navy shipbuilding plan for a combat fleet of 313 ships. Many question whether that plan is affordable. ! Regarding fighter aircraft acquisition plans in the Air Force, Navy, and Marine Corps, the QDR report endorsed a revised Air Force plan to stretch out F-22 procurement, but otherwise did not mention the number of short-range fighter and ground attack aircraft needed in the long term. The report put a great deal of emphasis on the need for long-range, prompt, global strike capabilities. This may appear to be at odds with plans to continue large investments in shorter- range strike aircraft that may have limited access to areas of combat in future conflicts, but the report did not address the issue. ! The report endorsed the Army's plan to reorganize into more deployable, modular combat brigades, but notably did not make an explicit commitment to provide the full funding needed to modularize all active and reserve combat units as the Army has planned6. The report also endorsed the capabilities being developed in the Army's Future Combat System development program, but, notably, did not explicitly endorse the program as a whole. ! The report said very little at all about satellites and other space programs. The only mention of a space program was to endorse an Air Force plan to restructure the Transformational Communications Satellite (TSAT) program to incorporate less risky technology. Other space programs have experienced problems like those in the TSAT program, but these are not mentioned. Space programs overall have grown dramatically as a share of the defense budget, and cost growth in major programs has been pandemic. And a major policy issue is how to protect space based systems from future threats and whether the U.S. security will be advanced by developing offensive space capabilities. The QDR discusses none of these issues. Key Issues in Congress Last year, congressional action on the annual defense authorization and appropriations bills featured extensive debates, first, over policy toward treatment of military detainees, and, toward the end of the year, over the pace of troop withdrawals from Iraq. This year, a continued debate over Iraq policy reemerged in congressional consideration of the FY2006 supplemental appropriations bill (H.R. 6 For an overview of Army modularization, see CRS Report RL32476, U.S. Army's Modular Redesign: Issues for Congress, by Andrew Feickert. CRS-15 4939). That debate was renewed first in the House on June 15-16, when the leadership brought up a resolution (H.J.Res. 861) declaring "that it is not in the national security interest of the United States to set an arbitrary date for the withdrawal or redeployment of United States Armed Forces from Iraq." The House approved the resolution by a vote of 256-153. The following week the Senate debated Iraq policy in floor action on the FY2007 defense authorization bill. On June 22, the Senate rejected two amendments on Iraq policy, one by Senator Levin calling for a phased reduction of troops to begin this year (rejected by a vote of 39-60) and another by Senator Kerry calling for withdrawal of most forces by July 1, 2007 (rejected by a vote of 13-86). In addition to Iraq policy, other issues have emerged. What follows is a list of selected issues that have come up as debate about the FY2007 defense budget has progressed. ! Funding cuts in the regular FY2007 defense appropriations bill: Last year, Congress trimmed $4.4 billion from the regular FY2006 defense appropriations bill and applied the money to non-defense appropriations. Later, at the end of the process, Congress trimmed defense appropriations by an additional $4.1 billion as part of an across-the-board 1% cut in all appropriations, as an offset for Katrina-related funding. This year, the Senate took a step to avoid similar guns versus butter trade-offs in the FY2007 budget by adding $3.7 billion to the budget resolution (S.Con.Res. 83) cap on total discretionary spending. As last year, there appears to a considerable amount of opposition in Congress to proposed cuts in non-defense appropriations, and the defense bill may be seen as a source of offsetting funds because of the amount of money available for defense in emergency funding for overseas operations. ! Limits on emergency funding: The Senate-passed FY2007 budget resolution (S.Con.Res. 83) puts a cap of $90 billion on total emergency funding. War costs, including $50 billion that the Administration plans to request as an attachment to the regular FY2007 defense appropriations bill, plus a later emergency FY2007 supplemental request expected next February, together with requests for funds for Katrina-recovery, bird flu, border security, agricultural disaster relief, and other purposes, will almost surely exceed the cap by a substantial amount. If Congress ultimately approves such a cap, anything above $90 billion would require offsetting rescissions, including, quite likely, cuts in regular defense funding. ! Providing full funding for overseas operations in regular defense funding bills: Both last year and the year before, the Senate added "Sense of the Senate" language to the defense appropriations bill urging the Administration to request full funding for ongoing military operations in the regular authorization and appropriations bills. The Administration did not concur. But there appears to be more support in Congress for that approach now. On June 14, the CRS-16 Senate approved by 98-0 an amendment by Senator McCain to require the President to request funding for Iraq in its regular, annual budget submission. ! Army and Marine Corps end-strength: The Administration is proposing ground force active duty end-strengths at the pre-2004 baseline level. Congress added 30,000 to Army and 4,000 to Marine Corps end-strength in FY2006, and there appears to be a great deal of support in Congress, particularly, but not only, among Democrats, for a permanent end-strength increase. ! Funding for Army National Guard end-strength: The FY2007 Army request trims about $500 million from Army personnel accounts and additional amounts from operation and maintenance accounts to reflect a troop level of 333,000 in the Army National Guard rather than the 350,000 authorized. Congress may mandate a higher force level. ! 2.2% pay raise: Every year between 2001 and 2006, Congress approved an increase in basic pay of ½% above the employment cost index (ECI), a measure of the average growth of nationwide pay and benefits. An increase of ECI + ½% was mandated for 2004, 2005, and 2006 in the FY2004 national defense authorization act (P.L. 108-136). Now that provision has expired, and the normal pay raise, established in Section 1009 of Title 37, U.S.C., is equal to the ECI. The Administration, accordingly, has requested a pay raise equal to the ECI, which, for calendar year 2007, is 2.2%. If approved, that would be the lowest pay raise since 1994. There is considerable sentiment in Congress to provide more. ! Increased TRICARE fees and co-pays for under-65 retirees: There is also considerable sentiment in Congress against the Administration's proposed increases in fees and co-pays for TRICARE for retirees. The Administration argues, however, that rising medical benefits threaten to drive up military personnel costs substantially, and that concern has gained some traction in Congress.7 ! Flexibility for the Defense Department to provide support to foreign nations: The Defense Department made a number of legislative proposals to expand its flexibility to provide various kinds of support to foreign nations that, in the past, have generally been provided through foreign assistance programs. Several of these proposals expand or make permanent temporary measures that Congress has approved in bills providing funds for operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. The most expansive DOD proposal is to permit the Secretary of Defense, with the approval of the Secretary of State, 7 For a full discussion, see CRS Report RS22402, Increases in Tricare Fees: Background and Options for Congress, by Richard Best. CRS-17 to use up to $750 million of defense funds per year to build the capacities of foreign militaries to engage in counterterrorist operations or to participate in or support stability operations in which the United States is engaged.8 ! Funding for National Guard and reserve equipment: Funding for Guard and reserve units has become a more contentious issue in recent years, particularly as states look to National Guard units as the front line in possible homeland defense missions. ! Adding a representative of the Guard and reserve components to the Joint Chiefs of Staff: Several Senators have sponsored a bill to establish a 4-star rank reserve officer to serve on the JCS. The services have opposed such a measure. ! Retiring an aircraft carrier: The Defense Department wants to reduce the number of deployable aircraft carriers from 12 to 11. Last year, Congress included a provision in the FY2006 defense authorization act to prohibit such a reduction. Senator Warner, the Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, now supports retiring a carrier, but there is still some opposition. The issue was initially addressed in action on the FY2006 supplemental appropriations bill, H.R. 4939, when Senator Warner proposed an amendment to permit retirement of the U.S.S. Kennedy aircraft carrier. That measure was not approved in the conference agreement on the bill, however. As a result, the Senate addressed the issue in the FY2007 appropriation authorization -- see below. ! Halting C-17 production: The Defense Department did not request funds for new C-17 cargo aircraft in FY2007, and instead asked for funding only to terminate production after 180 aircraft have been produced. The Air Force, however, included in its FY2007 unfunded priorities list (UPL) a proposal for 7 C-17s as replacements for aircraft that may be worn out due to excessive wartime use. Some legislators want to keep production lines open for the foreseeable future. 8 DOD's legislative proposals for inclusion in annual defense authorization bills are formally sent to Congress by the DOD Office of Legislative Counsel. The FY2007 proposals are posted on the internet at [http://www.defenselink.mil/dodgc/olc/legispro.html]. The proposal for authority to build the capacity of foreign military forces is in the third package of proposals, dated April 13, 2006. In the FY2007 National Defense Authorization Act, P.L. 109-163, Congress provided one-year authority for DOD to spend up to $200 million to build the capacity of foreign militaries. DOD's FY2007 legislative proposal would change the FY2006 provision in some ways. It would make the authority permanent, it would increase the maximum funding to $750 million, it would require concurrence of the Secretary of State rather than of the President, and it would allow the waiver of provisions in other laws that would otherwise prohibit assistance to specific countries or for specific purposes. CRS-18 ! B-52, F-117, and U-2 retirements: The Air Force has proposed cutting the number of active B-52s from 94 to 56 and retiring F-117 stealth attack aircraft and U-2 reconnaissance planes. In the past, Congress has repeatedly rejected Air Force proposals to retire B-52s. ! Stretching out F-22 procurement: The Air Force has requested stretching out F-22 production almost until F-35 procurement begins. The financing mechanism that it has proposed, however, violates long-standing DOD and Office of Management and Budget policy that requires full funding of complete end-items of equipment in annual appropriations for procurement programs. The stretch-out will increase total procurement costs, even though the Air Force wants to negotiate a multi-year contract for the remaining production. In the past, Congress has rejected Air Force proposals that violate the full funding policy, though it has supported incremental funding for more costly Navy ships.9 ! Eliminating funds to develop a second engine supplier for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter: DOD has proposed eliminating development of an alternate engine for the F-35. This would save about $1.7 billion in development costs through FY2011, according to the Air Force,10 but it would also eliminate the benefits of ongoing competition between engine producers. Congress has held several hearings on the issue. Even senior DOD officials testifying on the matter have acknowledged being unenthusiastic about the proposal. ! A new refueling aircraft for the Air Force: While studies have found that current KC-135 refueling aircraft remain reliable, the Air Force wants a new tanker, arguing that possible corrosion of KC-135 air frames is a danger. Most recently, DOD has approved an initial request for information from industry about tanker options, the first step in acquiring a new aircraft.11 ! Converting Trident II missiles to carry non-nuclear warheads: The Quadrennial Defense Review placed a new, high priority on capabilities to strike targets promptly at long range. In the short term, DOD is proposing to convert several Trident II missiles to carry non-nuclear warheads for rapid strike missions.12 Congress 9 For a full discussion, see CRS Report RL31404, Defense Procurement: Full Funding Policy -- Background, Issues, and Options for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke and Stephen Daggett. 10 Jon Steinman and Tony Capaccio, "Pentagon Plans To Scrap F-35 Backup Engine, Cut Costs," Bloomberg.com, Dec. 29, 2005. 11 Megan Scully, "Air Force Launches Latest Effort To Replace Aging Tankers," National Journal Congress Daily PM, Apr. 25, 2006 12 For a thorough discussion and extensive background on the program, see CRS Report (continued...) CRS-19 has balked at providing the funds requested for the program until it can address key questions. In addition, beginning some time after 2015, DOD is proposing to build a new, long-range strike system, which could be a manned or unmanned bomber. ! Satellite and other space program acquisition: For the past several years, Congress has expressed its displeasure with large cost growth and extensive schedule delays in a number of DOD space programs. Congress has cut funds substantially and mandated restructuring of some programs, including the Transformational Communications Satellite (TSAT) and Space Radar programs. Press accounts have also reported large changes in the highly classified Future Imagery Architecture program.13 The Administration has announced a plan to restructure the TSAT program to rely on less risky technology.14 The continuing issue for Congress is whether recent changes in space programs have reduced risk sufficiently and how fast new programs should proceed. ! Missile defense funding and testing: Missile defense remains the largest acquisition program in the defense budget. Congress has been reluctant to cut funding in the past, though it has trimmed some programs and defense committees have expressed concern about the testing program. The Missile Defense Agency now deploying ground-based interceptors in Alaska though the deployed system has not been tested as an integrated whole. One issue for Congress may be whether to tie funding to the test program. ! Acquisition reform: Last year, Congress approved a measure intended to improve tracking of cost growth in weapons programs by requiring that the Defense Department report changes compared to original estimates of the costs rather compared to periodically rebaselined program estimates. The result has been to show a substantial number of acquisition programs with cost growth exceeding or approaching levels that would trigger a program review under the requirements of the Nunn-McCurdy amendment. Last 12 (...continued) RL33067, Conventional Warheads For Long-Range Ballistic Missiles: Background and Issues for Congress, by Amy F. Woolf. Also see Michael R. Gordon, "Pentagon Seeks Nonnuclear Tip For Sub Missiles," New York Times, May 29, 2006, pg. 1. 13 Andy Pasztor, "U.S.'s Lofty Plans For Smart Satellites Fall Back To Earth: Big Delays and Cost Overruns Give Washington Pause; Technical Setbacks Loom; Reconsidering 1970s Designs," Wall Street Journal, Feb. 11, 2006, pg. 1. 14 The Government Accountability Office raised some questions about the restructured program -- Government Accountability Office, Space Acquisitions: DOD Needs Additional Knowledge as it Embarks on a New Approach for Transformational Satellite Communications System, GAO-06-537, May 24, 2006, available on line at [http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-06-537]. CRS-20 year Congress rejected, however, a requirement that programs with excessive cost growth be reevaluated compared to alternatives. Congressional Action on Major Issues Bill-by-Bill Synopsis of Congressional Action to Date Congressional Budget Resolution. In March, Congress began action on the annual congressional budget resolution, but did not reach a conference agreement. In its place both the House and the Senate approved measures "deeming" a cap of $827.8 billion on total discretionary funds to be in place. For amounts recommended for national defense in the House and Senate resolutions, see Table 4 above. The Senate Budget Committee reported its version of the budget resolution on March 10, and the full Senate approved the measure, S.Con.Res. 83, with amendments, on March 16. The committee recommended a level of defense spending about $3.7 billion below the Administration request. In floor action, the Senate adopted amendments that added $4 billion to the recommended defense total. The Senate also approved an amendment by Senator Lott to add $3.7 billion to the enforceable cap on total discretionary funding. This was intended to avoid cuts in defense appropriations as offsets for higher levels of non-defense spending. The Senate measure also put a limit of $90 billion on total emergency funding in FY2007, which is substantially below the amount that appears likely to be requested to finance ongoing military operations and domestic disaster-response commitments. This effort in the Senate to place constraints on emergency spending may become a major issue when Congress takes up an expected FY2007 supplemental appropriations request early in calendar year 2007. The House Budget Committee reported its version of the budget resolution, H.Con.Res. 376, on March 31. The committee measure recommended the Administration-requested level of defense spending. The leadership did not bring the measure to the floor in April in the face of internal Republican opposition. In May, however, Republicans agreed on a measure that may provide room for a substantial increase in funding for some domestic discretionary programs while officially still adhering to the Administration's proposed cap on total discretionary spending. The House passed the revised measure on May 18 after rejecting several alternative budget resolutions. The House resolution includes a cap only on non- defense emergency funding. In the end, the House and Senate did not reach a conference agreement on the budget resolution. In its place, both the House and the Senate passed measures "deeming" all or parts of their different resolutions to be in effect for purposes of subsequent action on appropriations bills. The House deeming measure was attached to House Resolution 818, approved on May 18, which was the rule for floor consideration of the Department of the Interior appropriations bill. The House deeming language adopted the House-passed budget resolution in its entirety. The Senate deeming measure was attached to the FY2006 emergency supplemental CRS-21 appropriations bill, H.R. 4939, P.L. 109-234, which was signed into law on June 15, 2006. The Senate deeming language adopted only Sections 401 and 402 of the Senate-passed budget resolution. Section 401 established caps on regular appropriations and Section 402 permitted additional emergency appropriations for specified circumstances and within specified limits. FY2007 National Defense Authorization. The House Armed Services Committee marked up its version of the FY2007 defense authorization bill, H.R. 5122, on May 3, and the House passed the measure on May 11. Highlights of the committee's bill and of floor action follow. The Senate Armed Services Committee marked up its version of the bill, S. 2766, on May 4 and reported it on May 9. Floor action in the Senate began on June 12, and the Senate passed by measure on June 22. Highlights of the committee's bill and of floor action are discussed below. Also Table 3, above, shows the amounts authorized in each version of the defense authorization bill by title. Table A4 in the Appendix to this report compares House and Senate authorized funding for selected major weapons programs. The House approved a conference agreement on the bill on September 29, and the Senate approved it on September 30. It is important to note that the defense authorization act does not provide funding for most defense programs, only the appropriations acts do. The appropriations acts may provide more than, less than, or the same as the amounts authorized for various programs; may provide money for programs not authorized, including new starts of programs; and may put restrictions on the use of funds that are not in the authorization or that are at odds with provisions in the authorization. FY2007 Defense Appropriations. The House Appropriations Committee marked up its version of the FY2007 defense appropriations bill, H.R. 5631, on June 13, and the full House debated and approved the measure on June 20. The Senate Appropriations Committee marked up its version of the bill on July 20, and the full Senate began debate on the bill on August 1 and finally approved the bill on September 7. A conference agreement on the bill was announced on September 21, reported on September 25, and approved in the House on September 26 and in the Senate on September 29. Table 2, above, shows funding provided in the bill and in the Military Quality of Life/VA appropriations bill in the House and in the Military Construction/VA bill in the Senate. FY2007 Defense Authorization -- Highlights of the House Armed Services Committee Bill Among the very broad range of issues that the House authorization bill addressed a few major points stand out. One is that the House Armed Services Committee appeared to have put somewhat more emphasis than DOD on maintaining current military capabilities than on pursuing long-term defense transformation. This was particularly true for some programs in which the risk of delays and cost growth in weapons development appears high. CRS-22 The committee seemed more inclined to support the current Army modularization program, for example, than to continue investing increasing amounts in the Future Combat System. Similarly, the committee slightly trimmed higher risk missile defense technologies in favor of more immediately deployable systems. And the committee continued, as it did in past years, to cut funding for satellite programs that may be seen as reaching too far ahead with technologically risky approaches, though cuts in the Transformational Communications Satellite (TSAT) and the Space Radar were not nearly as large as congressional cuts in the past two years. Another key point is that the committee supported larger Army, Marine Corps, and Army National Guard end-strength than the Administration wants. This may have very large long-term budget implications. Also, as in the past, the committee was reluctant to support proposed cuts in weapons programs. It did not agree to halt production of the C-17 cargo aircraft, for example, and it restored funds to develop an alternative, second engine supplier for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. The committee also did not fully support Administration proposals to rein in the cost of personnel pay and benefits, and it added a substantial new health benefit for reservists. The committee increased the proposed military pay raise from 2.2% to 2.7%, it rejected the DOD proposal to reduce health care costs by increasing under- 65 retiree medical fees and co-pays, and it made all reservists, except federal employees covered by the government health insurance program, eligible to enroll in the TRICARE medical insurance program with a fee of 28% of the cost. The committee did approve one measure to increase co-pays for some prescription drug purchases. Significantly, the Committee did not approve a number of Administration proposals to give regional combatant commanders greater authority and resources to build the capabilities of foreign military forces. The Senate Armed Services Committee, in contrast, approved most of the Administration's proposals, although with some restrictions. Finally, the committee slowed down two programs that might be seen to have negative international diplomatic consequences -- one to develop a laser that might be used as an anti-satellite weapon and the other a high-profile Administration proposal to convert some Trident II missiles to carry conventional (non-nuclear) warheads. Highlights of committee action include: ! $50 billion bridge fund for overseas operations: The committee approved $50 billion in emergency funding for costs of military operations in Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere in FY2007. In FY2006, total costs of overseas operations were almost $120 billion, so average monthly $12 billion. If that rate continues, the bridge fund will cover costs for the first five months of FY2006 -- that is, through January, 2007. Additional funds will then be needed to cover costs for the remaining seven months of the year. CRS-23 ! Ground force end-strength: The committee bill increased Army end-strength by 30,000 (to 512,400), and Marine Corps end-strength by 5,000 (to 180,000). The bill also authorizes funding for an end- strength of 350,000 for the Army National Guard, 17,000 above the request. End-strength may be a major dispute between Congress and the Administration this year. ! Pay raise: The bill provided a pay raise of 2.7% for uniformed personnel, rather than the 2.2% requested. ! Tricare fees and co-pays for under-65 retirees: The bill rejected increases in retiree fees and co-pays through December 31, 2007 and established a task force to consider ways to control DOD medical costs. ! Tricare for reservists: The committee added an amendment in full committee markup to allow all reservists -- except federal employees eligible for the government health insurance system -- to enroll in Tricare by paying 28% of the cost of the program (the same cost share as federal employees pay). Last year, in the conference on the FY2006 authorization bill, Congress rejected a similar Senate amendment. Instead, Congress made Tricare available, with a fee of 50% of the cost, to reservists who were unemployed or who did not have access to employer-provided health insurance. The committee action is especially significant because the House, for the first time, approved Tricare for reservists in its version of the defense authorization -- the Senate approved it for the past two years. ! Budget scoring of TRICARE-for-Life costs: In the FY2001 national defense authorization act, P.L. 106-398,Congress made over-65 military retirees eligible to receive medical care through the DOD TRICARE program as a supplement to Medicare. This has proved to be an expensive increase in benefits. In FY2007, the DOD budget includes more than $11 billion for contributions to the Medicare Eligible Retiree Health Care Fund to cover the actuarially determined cost of future benefits for current uniformed personnel. In the FY2005 defense authorization, P.L. 108-375, Congress approved a measure intended to count those costs not as expenses of the Defense Department, but as costs to the general treasury. The provision expressed the sense of Congress that the shift in costs should not reduce the defense budget, but should, instead, permit an increase in funding for weapons programs and other defense priorities. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB), however, continued to score the contributions as discretionary funds in the Department of Defense budget, though as permanent rather than as CRS-24 annual appropriations.15 OMB also urged the chairmen of the House and Senate Budget Committees to direct the Congressional Budget Office to score the contributions in the same way, and both chairmen agreed. In its version of the FY2007 authorization, the House Armed Services Committee included a provision directly mandating that the costs of TRICARE-for-Life contributions not be scored as part of the DOD budget after FY2007. ! Death gratuity for federal civilian personnel: The bill provided the same death gratuity for civilian personnel killed in support of a military operation as for uniformed personnel. The FY2006 National Defense Authorization Act (P.L. 109-163) increased the military death gratuity from $12,000 to $100,000. ! Funding for readiness: The committee objected to cuts in ship steaming days, flying hours, and depot maintenance and shifted $856 million from other programs in service operation and maintenance accounts to finance increases in these readiness-related activities. ! Army Future Combat System development: The committee expressed concern about cost growth, schedule delays, and the long- term affordability of the FCS program, cut $326 million from the $3.7 billion requested, and mandated a formal DOD review of program with a go/no go decision to be made by the end of 2008. ! Army modularization: The committee expressed concern about the affordability of the Army's program to build a new modular brigade- centered force structure in view of potentially competing costs of the FCS and of resetting the force after Iraq. The committee added funds for M-1 tank and Bradley Fighting Vehicle upgrades, saying that these programs were required to support modularization. It also required the Army to provide a long-term funding profile. ! Guard and reserve equipment: The committee added $318 million for Army National Guard (ARNG) equipment to support its addition of 17,000 to ARNG end-strength. ! Navy shipbuilding: The committee added $400 million in advance procurement to support building two Virginia-class submarines in FY2009, rather than the one now planned. The Navy has objected on the grounds that it will require too much money in FY2009 for submarines at the expense of other programs. The committee also mandated a submarine fleet of 48 boats, which is what the Navy currently plans. The committee approved the same amount of funding that the Navy requested for DD(X)/DDG-1000 destroyer 15 For OMB's rationale, see Office of Management and Budget, Analytical Perspectives: Budget of the U.S. Government, FY2006, Chapter 6, pp. 422-425, on line at [http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/fy2006/pdf/spec.pdf]. CRS-25 procurement, but allocated all the funds to buy one ship rather than split the funding between two ships. This is of concern to some shipyard proponents, who want to begin providing funding to two shipyards. Last year, the committee had proposed eliminating the DD(X). Notably, the committee rejected an amendment in the full committee markup by Representative JoAnne Davis to provide advance funding for common long-lead items for three new aircraft carriers. Though the committee appears to support the Navy's 313 ship plan, it does not seem ready to lock in funding for some aspects of the Navy program. ! F-22 procurement profile: The committee rejected the Air Force plan for incremental procurement of the F-22 and added $1.4 billion in FY2007 ($2 billion was requested) to cover the full cost of buying 20 complete aircraft. ! F-35 alternate engine and development concurrency: The committee rejected the Air Force proposal to halt development of an alternate engine for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter and added $408 million for second engine R&D. The committee also trimmed $241 million from long-lead funding for aircraft to be procured in FY2008, citing excessively concurrent development and procurement in the program. ! C-17 procurement: The committee added $300 million for three C- 17s in Title IX of the bill, which authorizes emergency funding for overseas operations. The committee also required the Air Force to operate at least 299 heavy-lift cargo aircraft. So the committee would mandate at least seven more C-17s, rejecting the Administration's plan to terminate C-17 production after FY2007. ! B-52 and U-2 retirements: The committee prohibited any B-52 retirements until a replacement capability is available (which is not planned until some time after 2015) and prohibited retirement of any U-2s unless DOD certifies that the aircraft are not needed to mitigate any reconnaissance gaps identified in the Quadrennial Defense Review. ! Missile defense: The committee cut a net total of $185 million from missile defense R&D. It added $20 million for ground-based mid- course defense (GMD) testing and $40 million for Navy ship-based interceptor systems. It cut $100 million from the boost-phase Kinetic Energy Interceptor (KEI) program, $56 million for activating a third GMD site in Europe since no site has been agreed to, $65 million from the multiple kill vehicle program, and $41 million for a high-altitude airship sensor program. The committee also prohibited expenditure of $200 million for the GMD program until the system has completed two successful intercept tests. The committee also included a policy provision requiring a report on the CRS-26 purpose, costs, vulnerability, and international diplomatic implications of space-based interceptors. ! Space systems: The committee cut $80 million from the Transformational Communications Satellite (TSAT) program and $30 million from the Space Radar, reflecting continued congressional concern about technical risks in both programs. The committee provided $20 million and established a new office to promote development of new, low-cost, rapidly deployable satellites. ! Anti-satellite weapons: The committee included a policy provision that prohibits the use of funds to develop laser space technologies for anti-satellite weapons. This provision may be a response to Air Force development of such capabilities at a laser and optics test facility in New Mexico.16 ! Trident II missile conversion: The committee included a policy provision requiring consultations with allies about the Quadrennial Defense Review decision to convert Trident II missiles to carry conventional warheads. ! Information technology funding cut: The committee cut $341 million from DOD information technology programs, which total $31 billion, as one means of offsetting increases in other programs. ! VH-71 Presidential helicopter funding cut: The committee trimmed $39 million from the program due to development delays. ! Department of Energy nuclear weapons programs: The committee required the Energy Department to submit a report on plans to transform the nuclear weapons production complex and specified a number of policy objectives. ! Cooperative threat reduction with the former Soviet Union: The committee cut $35 million for a U.S. supported Russian system to convert plutonium to non-weapons-grade fuel because of concerns that the system could, in fact, produce more plutonium. And the committee cut another $115 million from $290 million requested for another plutonium conversion technology. ! Acquisition of programs with large cost growth: The committee approved an amendment in full committee markup that would require DOD to allow competing contractors to make challenge bids for work on programs that exceed critical cost growth ceilings -- currently 25% growth over original estimates. 16 William J. Broad, "Administration Conducting Research Into Laser Weapon," New York Times, May 3, 2006. CRS-27 ! DOD support for foreign nations: The committee included in the bill a DOD proposal to allow up to $200 million a year to be used for logistical support of foreign nations engaged in combined military operations with the United States and to permit DOD to provide equipment temporarily to foreign military forces in combined operations. It did not include the DOD proposal to use defense funds to build the capacity of foreign militaries for counterterrorism or stability operations, as the Senate Armed Services Committee did (see below for a discussion), nor did it approve other, related Administration proposals. ! Provisions restricting acquisition of foreign-made items in defense acquisition: As it has in the past, the House Armed Services Committee included a number of provisions in its version of the authorization bill to limit defense acquisition of foreign-made goods. One provision, Section 812, would prohibit defense contracts with a foreign company that has received government subsidies. Another, Section 831, would prohibit procurement of a specialty metal or item critical to national security unless it is reprocessed, reused, or produced n the United States. Section 832 would establish a board to identify items critical to national security. ! Prohibition on procurement of items from companies that provide defense goods to China: The House committee also included a provision, Section 1211, that would prohibit defense purchases from any company that provides material on the U.S. Munitions List to China. FY2007 Defense Authorization -- Highlights of House Floor Action On May 9, the House Rules Committee considered almost 100 proposed floor amendments to the authorization bill. In an initial rule on the bill, it permitted just eight of them, and in a second rule, permitted 27 more -- 12 as part of three en bloc amendments and another 15 amendments that were debated separately. Democrats objected to the Rules Committee's refusal to permit several amendments, including an amendment by Representative Skelton, the ranking Democrat on the Armed Services Committee, that would have reversed a measure in the committee bill that increased co-pays for some prescription drug purchases. Perhaps the most high profile amendment to pass (by a vote of 252-171) was a proposal by Representative Goode to permit the Secretary of Defense to assign military personnel to support the Department of Homeland Security in border protection. Mr. Goode has offered a similar amendment for the past several years, and before that, Representative Traficante perennially offered a similar measure. The amendment has often passed in the House but has never been accepted in the final conference agreement. This year, there was an extensive floor debate. And after its approval, the President proposed a program to deploy 6,000 National Guard troops to support border operations. CRS-28 The House repeated another perennial debate over an amendment by Representatives Andrews, Davis (CA), Sanchez (CA), and Harman to permit privately funded abortions for U.S. military personnel or their dependents at military hospitals overseas. It was rejected by a vote of 191-237. The House also rejected, by a vote of 124-301, an amendment by Representative Tierney to cut $4.7 billion from the Missile Defense Agency budget and allocate the funds to other defense priorities. And the House rejected, by a vote of 202-220, a motion by Representative Salazar to recommit the bill to committee with instructions to report back a measure that includes an amendment to change current procedures under which Survivor Benefit Plan benefits are reduced. Under current law, benefits to survivors of those who die while in service are reduced by the amount of Veterans Affairs benefits. Other amendments permitted by the rule were all approved by voice vote. One measure that passed was to require a study of the health impact of past ocean dumping of chemical weapons.17 In general debate on the bill, both Democrats and Republicans on the Armed Services Committee repeated lauded the committee bill as a bipartisan measure that was approved in the committee by a vote of 62-1. Table 6 summarizes House floor action on selected amendments. Table 6: House Floor Action on Selected Amendments: Defense Authorization Bill, H.R. 5122 Sponsor Purpose/Congressional Record Page Reference Outcome Andrews Requires a study to determine effects of ocean Agreed, disposal of munitions (pp. H2447-48). voice vote Andrews, for Lifts the current ban on privately funded abortions at Rejected, Davis (CA), U.S. military facilities overseas (pp. H2448-51, 191-237 Harmon, H2466-67). Sanchez (CA) Tanner Expresses a Sense of Congress that the Army should Agreed, consider converting to six-month deployments in Iraq voice vote and Afghanistan (p. H2453). Franks (AZ) Transfers $1 mn to provide health care for Iraqi Agreed, children (pp. H2467-68). voice vote McDermott Directs a comprehensive study of the health effects of Agreed, exposure to depleted uranium munitions (pp. Pages voice vote H2531-32) Lewis (KY) Provides that no more than 20% of a service Agreed, in member's paycheck can be garnished to recover en bloc overpayments through no fault of the service member amendment, (pp. H2537-40). voice vote 17 For a discussion of this issue, see CRS Report RL33432, U.S. Disposal of Chemical Weapons in the Ocean: Background and Issues for Congress, by David Bearden. CRS-29 Taylor (MS) Requires DOD to equip 100% of U.S. military Agreed, vehicles in Iraq and Afghanistan with IED jammers voice vote (pp. H2541-42). Goode Authorizes the Secretary of Defense to assign Agreed, members armed services to border security (pp. 252-171 H2526-28, H2542-43). Tierney Reduces missile defense agency funding from $9.3 bn Rejected, to $4.47 bn, prohibits deployment of space-based 124-301 interceptors (pp. H2532-37, H2543-44). FY2007 Defense Authorization -- Highlights of the Senate Armed Services Committee Bill The Senate Armed Services Committee marked up its version of the defense authorization, S. 2769, on May 4. A few themes stand out in the markup. One is that the Senate committee approved 30,000 more troops than requested for the Army and 5,000 more for the Marine Corps and also authorized 350,000 troops for the Army National Guard (ARNG), 17,000 above the number for which the Army requested funding. The House also approved the same, higher end-strength for ground forces. So Congress did not agree with Administration plans to reduce active ground forces to the pre-Iraq level. The Senate committee also undertook a number of initiatives to strengthen government-wide capabilities to engage in counterterrorism and stability operations. One potentially far-reaching initiative is to agree to an Administration proposal to expand the authority of regional military commanders to train and equip foreign military forces and to provide humanitarian and other assistance to foreign nations. These activities have traditionally been managed by the State Department under legal authorities that include, among other things, human rights conditions. In bills funding operations in Afghanistan and Iraq, Congress has temporarily provided some of this authority, but the Administration wants Congress to write it into permanent law. The committee restricted funding for the most far-reaching measure to two years, saying that the program it should be regarded as a pilot project with an assessment to follow. The committee also required consultations with ambassadors and did not agree to allow waivers of human rights and other restrictions on assistance. The Senate committee appeared more supportive of the Army Future Combat System (FCS) than the House committee, and provided the full $3.7 billion requested for the program. The committee did, however, mandate a review of the program, including an independent cost estimate of the program itself and of all associated Army programs. If the most recent Army cost estimates for the FCS appear unstable, Congress may consider ending or substantially restructuring the program. Highlights of the committee markup include: CRS-30 ! Total funding: The Committee authorized $517.7 billion for defense discretionary programs, including $50.0 billion in emergency funding overseas operations and $467.7 billion in budget including authority for DOD, DOE and other non-emergency programs. The total is $4 billion above the request and above the House authorization. ! Army and Marine Corps end-strength: The committee authorized end-strengths of 512,400 for the Army, 30,000 above the request, and of 180,000 for the Marine Corps, 5,000 above the request. ! Army National Guard end-strength: The committee also approved an end-strength of 350,000 for the ARNG, 17,000 above the request, and stipulated that, if the Army fails to recruit and retain enough personnel to meet the authorized level, and money saved may be used only to procure ARNG equipment. ! Military pay raise: The committee approved the requested pay raise of 2.2% rather than the 2.7% raise the House authorized. ! TRICARE fees and co-pays for under-65 retirees: As did the House, the Committee rejected increases in retiree TRICARE fees and co-pays. The Committee also required the Government Accountability Office to carry out a full audit of DOD health care costs, including comparisons of the Administration's proposed fee increases with increases in federal civilian health insurance fees. ! Flexibility for DOD to support foreign nations for counterterrorism operations: The Senate committee agreed to a number DOD's proposals to allow regional combatant commanders flexibility to use DOD funds to train and equip foreign militaries and to provide humanitarian and reconstruction assistance to foreign governments in support of counterterrorism operations, though with some amendments. In particular, the committee agreed to make available $200 million per year for the next two years, rather than $750 million per year indefinitely, to build the capabilities of foreign militaries. The committee specified that no more than $50 million per year could be used by any one regional combatant commander, and required detailed consultations with U.S. ambassadors. The committee also required the President to develop a plan to better coordinate interagency counterterrorism practices. With the appropriations committees cutting foreign operations funding for the State Department and AID, the Defense Department is, in effect taking on many roles that the State Department formerly carried on. ! Detainee treatment: The committee required an official government-wide coordinated legal opinion on whether specified interrogation techniques constitute cruel and inhuman treatment. CRS-31 ! Use of armed forces for domestic activities: The committee proposed amendments to the Insurrection Act that would make it easier for the President to employ the armed forces to respond to domestic emergencies, such as the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. ! UAV policy: The committee directed the Secretary of Defense to develop a comprehensive policy on UAVs and to give UAVs a preference in developing new systems. ! Navy shipbuilding: The committee added $1.5 billion to the shipbuilding request for a total of $12 billion. Increases include accelerating LPD procurement, increased advance procurement funds for the CVN-21 carrier and the LHA(R) amphibious ship. The committee included $50 million in advance procurement funding for long-lead items for three new CVN-21-class carriers, a measure that the House committee specifically rejected in a vote in the full committee markup. ! Permitting a reduction from 12 to 11 deployable aircraft carriers: The committee bill includes a provision repealing last year's requirement that the Navy maintain 12 deployable carriers. If approved this would allow retirement of the USS Kennedy. ! Continued C-17 production: As in the House bill, the committee bill rejects the DOD proposal to terminate C-17 production. The Senate bill authorizes funds for 2 aircraft in FY2007 and advance procurement for continued production later. ! Army Future Combat System (FCS) funding: As opposed to the House, the Senate committee authorized the full $3.7 billion requested for FCS development. The committee also, however, required a review of the program, including an independent cost estimate, though not with a view to a go/no go decision, as the House mandated. ! Readiness: The committee used the $50 billion emergency "bridge" fund as a means of adding funds to regular service accounts to correct some readiness-related shortfalls. The committee added $515 million in the emergency funds, for example, for Navy operations, $231 million for Army operations, and $106 million for Marine Corps operations. So, in effect, the committee is ameliorating constraints on the regular service budgets by adding funds for regular military operations to the emergency fund. ! Acquisition reform: The committee approved several measures to reform defense acquisition procedures, though none nearly so far- reaching as the House committee measure to recompete projects with excessive cost growth. One Senate committee measure is to align the tenure of program managers with the progress of their CRS-32 programs and another to require that incentive payments be more directly linked to acquisition outcomes. ! Land exchanges to build buffers around military facilities: The Defense Department has long been concerned about the encroachment of civilian development on military facilities. The Senate committee approved a measure to allow DOD to exchange excess land for other land that would be a buffer for military sites. ! Cooperative threat reduction with former Soviet states: In contrast to the House authorization, the Senate committee made no reductions in the $1.7 billion requested for Department of Energy nonproliferation programs (which finance plutonium purchases and reprocessing, for example) or the $372 million for the Department of Defense Cooperative Threat Reduction program. ! R&D science and technology funding target: Congress has required that the Defense Department invest 3% of the overall budget in basic science and technology (S&T) R&D programs. DOD has perennially fallen short of that target. The Senate committee included a provision requiring annual growth of 2% per year above inflation in S&T accounts. ! Missile defense funding: The Senate committee approved the full $9.3 billion requested for Missile Defense Agency (MDA) R&D programs (see Table A2 for details of the request), but, like the House, shifted funds away from longer-term, more risky programs to near term projects. The committee added $200 million for Ground-based Midcourse Defense (GMD) flight testing and $100 million for the Navy interceptor system. It cut $200 million from the $406 million requested for the boost-phase Kinetic Energy Interceptor. ! Space systems: The committee expressed support for DOD's restructuring of the Transformational Communications Satellite (TSAT) program, but trimmed $70 million from the program (an 8% cut) saying that it could not be executed. The committee also cut $66 million (a 24% cut) from the Space Radar program and expressed concern about the lack of a cost sharing agreement with the intelligence community. ! Long-range strike/Trident II missile conventional warhead: The committee expressed support for DOD's plan to develop prompt global strike capabilities, and provided the full $127 million requested to convert Trident II missiles to carry non-nuclear warheads. But, like the House committee, the Senate committee was concerned about the international diplomatic issues and prohibited expenditure of more than $32 million on conversion until the Secretary of Defense, after consulting with the Secretary of State, provides a report on the matters at issue. CRS-33 ! B-52 retirements: The committee prohibited the proposed retirement of B-52 bombers until the Air Force reports on force requirements, but also approved a measure that (1) permits the retirement of up to 18 B-52H aircraft, (2) requires that remaining B- 52Hs all be equipped with the specific upgrades, and (3) says the committee expects no additional B-52H retirements. ! F-35 Joint Striker Fighter alternative engine: Like the House, the Senate committee added $400 million to continue development of an alternate second engine for the F-35. ! F-35 schedule delays: The committee cut $1.2 billion from F-35 procurement funds due to schedule delays. ! F-22 funding: Like the House, the Senate committee rejected the Air Force plan to stretch out F-22 production and to provide funding incrementally rather than financing the full cost of deployable aircraft in the year for which funding is requested. The committee added $1.4 billion for full funding for the requested 20 F-22s. FY2007 Defense Authorization -- Highlights of Senate Floor Action The Senate began floor consideration of its version of the defense authorization bill, S. 2766, on June 12. On June 15, the Senate began a debate over Iraq policy. By a vote of 93-6, the Senate agreed to a motion by Senate Minority Leader Reid to table an amendment by Senator McConnell, SA 4269, requiring the President to establish a schedule for withdrawing U.S. combat troops from Iraq by December 31, 2006, leaving only troops needed to stand up Iraqi security forces. Senator McConnell brought up the measure that was originally authored by Senator Kerry, though Senator Kerry himself had not offered it, to force a debate on the matter. Later, on June 21 and 22, the Senate considered two other Iraq policy amendments, one by Senator Levin to require that troop reductions begin this year and another by Senator Kerry requiring that most troops be withdrawn from Iraq by July 1, 2007. The Senate rejected both measures on June 22. The Senate considered one other measure related to the war, an amendment by Senator McCain, SA 4242, to require the President to request funding for ongoing military operations with the regular federal budget request submitted in February of each year (approved by a vote of 98-0 on June 13). For the past two years, the Senate has approved amendments by Senator Byrd expressing the Sense of the Senate urging this, but the Administration has continued to request funding in supplementals.18 In the past, in bill signing statements Presidents have, on several occasions, rejected as unconstitutional, legislative provisions that direct the Administration to include 18 See Section 8138 of the FY2005 defense appropriations act, P.L. 108-287, and Section 8117 of the FY2006 defense appropriations act, P.L. 109-148. CRS-34 particular programs or activities in budget requests. Administrations have, nonetheless, sometimes adhered to such congressional requirements. In the conference report on the FY1996 defense appropriations act, P.L. 104-61, Congress required the Administration to request funding for Southwest Asia operations in the regular FY1997 defense request, though it did so not in the bill, but only in report language. The Clinton Administration agreed and requested funding for ongoing operations in Southwest and Bosnia in its FY1997 request.19 The McCain amendment, like the Byrd amendments to the FY2005 and FY2006 defense appropriations bills, would mean that the full cost of ongoing military operations -- almost $120 billion in FY2006 -- would be considered along with the rest of the federal budget at the start of next year's Congress. Table 7 briefly reviews Senate floor action on selected amendments. Table 7: Senate Floor Action on Selected Amendments: Defense Authorization Bill, S. 2766 Sponsor/ Purpose/Congressional Record Page Reference Outcome Number June 14, 2006 Lautenberg/ To prohibit increased retail pharmacy co-payments, Agreed Stabenow pages S5837, S5839-40. voice vote #4205 Dorgan #4230 To eliminate fraud and abuse and improve competition in Tabled Federal contracting, pages S5845-47, S5852-53, 55-43 S5854-57, S5861. McCain To require budgeting for ongoing military operations in Agreed #4242 regular requests, pages S5859-61, S5862-65. 98-0, June 15, 2006 Feingold To strengthen the Special Inspector General for Iraq Agreed #4256 Reconstruction, pages S5914-17. voice vote Biden To state the policy of the United States on the nuclear Agreed #4257 programs of Iran, pages S5917, S5921-22 99-0 Warner/ To repeal the statutory requirement in place since Agreed Levin FY1985 that the Defense Department submit an annual voice vote #4280 report on Allied Contributions to the Common Defense, page 5933 Inhofe To modify the American Servicemembers' Protection Agreed #4284 Act of 2002 to permit certain military cooperation with voice vote and aid to nations that have not exempted U.S. troops from the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court, page 5936. 19 For a discussion of precedents for funding operations in regular or in supplemental bills from Korea on, see CRS Report RS22455, Military Operations: Precedents for Funding Contingency Operations in Regular or in Supplemental Appropriations Bills, by Stephen Daggett. CRS-35 Sponsor/ Purpose/Congressional Record Page Reference Outcome Number Lugar To repeal restrictions on funding for chemical weapons Agreed #4285 demilitarization programs in Russia under the voice vote Cooperative Threat Reduction Program, page S5936. Santorum To authorize assistance for pro-democracy programs and Rejected #4234 activities inside and outside Iran and to enhance the 45-54 Iran-Libya Sanctions Act of 1996, pages S5917-21. Warner To amend Buy American Act provisions regarding Agreed #4286 acquisition of certain speciality metals, page S5936. voice vote McConnell To require the withdrawal of United States Armed Forces Tabled #4265 from Iraq and urge the convening of an Iraq summit, 93-6 pages S5927-29. Feingold To provide for the redeployment of United States forces Withdrawn #4192 from Iraq by December 31, 2006, pp. S5913-14. June 16, 2006 Sessions To require a report on reporting requirements applicable Agreed #4295 to the Department of Defense, pages S5995-96. voice vote Obama/ To require the use of competitive procedures for Federal Agreed Coburn contracts worth over $500,000 related to hurricane voice vote #4254 recovery, subject to existing exceptions, pages S5995-96. June 20, 2006 McConnell To affirm the Iraqi Government position of no amnesty Agreed #4272 for terrorists who have attacked U.S. forces, pages 64-34 S6110-17. Nelson (FL)/ To express the sense of Congress that the Government of Agreed Menendez Iraq should not grant amnesty to persons known to have 97-19 #4265 attacked, killed, or wounded members of the Armed Forces of the United States, page S6117 Ensign/Reid To provide for expansion of the Junior Reserve Officers' Agreed #4308 Training Corps program, pages S6117-18 voice vote Bond/Leahy Bond/Leahy) Amendment No. 4271, to increase the Agreed #4271 grade of the Chief of the National Guard Bureau from 3 voice vote to 4 stars and to enhance the Chief's authority to over certain budget requirements, pages S6117, S6118-19 Ensign To authorize the temporary use of the National Guard to Agreed #2352 provide support for border security along the southern voice vote land border of the United States, pages S6117, S6119-20 Ensign To require a report on technologies to defeat the threat to Agreed #4354 military rotary wing aircraft posed by portable air voice vote defense systems and rocket propelled grenades, pages S6117, S6120 Jeffords To provide for 2 programs to authorize the use of leave Agreed #4215 by caregivers for family members of certain individuals voice vote performing military service, pages S6117, S6121-22 CRS-36 Sponsor/ Purpose/Congressional Record Page Reference Outcome Number Warner/ To increase authorized FY2006 general transfer authority Agreed Levin from $3.75 to $5 billion, Pages S6117, S6122 voice vote #4355 Warner/ To authorize additional emergency supplemental Agreed Levin appropriations for FY2006, pages S6117, S6122 voice vote #4356 Thune To require a report on the future aerial training airspace Agreed #4217 requirements, pages S6117, S6122 voice vote Warner To require a report on the desirability and feasibility of Agreed #4360 joint officer promotion selection boards, pages S6117, voice vote S6122 Dorgan To establish a special committee of the Senate to Rejected #4292 investigate the awarding and carrying out of contracts for 44-52 activities in Afghanistan and Iraq, pages S6108-10 Frist (To Amendment No. 4322), to amend title 18, United Withdrawn #4323 States Code, to prohibit taking minors across State lines in circumvention of laws requiring the involvement of parents in abortion decisions, page S6105 June 21, 2006 Kennedy To provide for an increase in the Federal minimum wage, Withdraw #4322 pages S6191-S6203 after vote of 52-46 Enzi To promote job creation and small business preservation Withdrawn #4376 in the adjustment of the Federal minimum wage, pages after vote of S6191, S6203-04 45-53 Kerry To require the redeployment of United States Armed Rejected #4442 Forces from Iraq in order to further a political solution in 13-86 Iraq, encourage the people of Iraq to provide for their own security, and achieve victory in the war on terror, pages S6324-35 Levin To state the sense of Congress on the United States Agreed #4320 policy on Iraq, pages S6324, S6335 98-1 Senate agreed to the motion to close further debate on the Agreed bill, page S6335 voice vote Hutchison To include a delineation of the homeland defense and Agreed #4377 civil support missions of the National Guard and voice vote Reserves in the Quadrennial Defense Review, page S6336 Harkin To require semiannual reports on efforts to investigate Agreed Modified and prosecute cases of waste, fraud, and abuse in Iraq, voice vote #4266 Afghanistan, and throughout the war on terror, pages S6346, S6347 Inhofe To require annual reports on United States contributions Agreed #4495 to the United Nations, pages S6346, S6347 voice vote Reid Modified To appoint a coordinator for policy toward North Korea Agreed #4307 and require reports to Congress, pages S6346, S6347-48 voice vote CRS-37 Sponsor/ Purpose/Congressional Record Page Reference Outcome Number Lott Modified To make funds available for the Arrow ballistic missile Agreed #4326 defense system, pages S6346, S6348 voice vote Allard To provide for an independent review of the organization Agreed #4497 and management of the Department of Defense for voice vote national security in space, pages S6346, S6349 Cantwell To require reports on the diversion of equipment from Agreed Modified reserve units, pages S6346, S6350 voice vote #4202 Martinez To give priority in allocating replacement equipment to Agreed #4500 states that have suffered a natural disaster, pages S6346, voice vote S6350 Menendez/ To require a plan to replace equipment withdrawn or Agreed Lautenberg diverted from the reserve components for Operation Iraqi voice vote #4441 Freedom or Operation Enduring Freedom, pages S6346, S6350 Feingold To require an annual report on the amount of the Agreed #4502 acquisitions made by the Department of Defense from voice vote outside of the United States, pages S6346, S6351 McCain #4503 To require an annual report on foreign military sales and Agreed direct sales to foreign customers of significant military voice vote equipment manufactured inside the United States, pages S6346, S6351 Graham/ To expand the authority of the Secretaries of the military Agreed Nelson (NE) departments to remit or cancel indebtedness of members voice vote #4504 of the Armed Forces, pages S6346, S6351-52 Reid To modify the effect date of the termination of the Agreed #4197 phase-in of concurrent receipt of retired pay and veterans voice vote disability compensation for veterans with service-connected disabilities rated as total by virtue of unemployability, pages S6346, S6354 Chambliss To reduce the eligibility age for receipt of non-regular Agreed #4365 military service retired pay for members of the Ready voice vote Reserve in active federal status or on active duty for significant periods and to expand eligibility of members of the Selected Reserve for coverage under the TRICARE program, pages S6346, S6355-56, S6373-7 McCain To name the Act after John Warner, a Senator from Agreed #4241 Virginia, pages S6346, S6356 voice vote Coburn #4371 To improve the provisions relating to the linking of Agreed award and incentive fees to acquisition outcomes, pages voice vote S6346, S6356 Biden Relating to military vaccination matters, pages S6346, Agreed #4244 S6356-57 voice vote Coburn To reform the Department of Defense's Travel System Agreed Modified into Pay-For-Use-of-Service System, pages S6370-73, voice vote #4491 S6376 CRS-38 Sponsor/ Purpose/Congressional Record Page Reference Outcome Number Coburn #4370 To require the Secretary of Defense to report on and Agreed classify congressional earmarks of funds available to the voice vote Department of Defense, pages S6374, S6376 Chambliss To authorize multiyear procurement of F-22A fighter Agreed #4261 aircraft and F-119 engines, pages S6336-45, S6376-77 70-28 Sessions To provide, with an offset, additional funding for missile Agreed #4471 defense testing and operations. 98-0 Warner #4520 To require a report before taking steps to reduce the Agreed number of Minuteman III Intercontinental Ballistic voice vote Missile from 500 to 450, pages S6377-78 Cantwell To provide for a study of the health effects of exposure Agreed #4374 to depleted uranium, pages S6377-78 voice vote Biden To ensure payment of United States assessments for Agreed #4458 United Nations peacekeeping operations in 2005, 2006, voice vote and 2007, pages S6677-78 Clinton #4264 To enhance the services available to members of the Agreed Armed Forces returning from deployments to assist them voice vote and their family members, in transitioning to civilian life, pages S6377, S6379-81 Bayh To add an independent panel as part of the Quadrennial Agreed #4489 Defense Review, pages S6377, S6381-82 voice vote Feingold To require the President to develop a comprehensive Agreed #4526 strategy toward Somalia, pages S6377, S6382 voice vote Feingold To require a report on the feasibility of establishing a Agreed #4527 United States military regional combatant command for voice vote Africa, pages S6377, S6383 McCain/ To ensure proper education, training, and supervision of Agreed Warner personnel providing special education services for voice vote #4434 dependents of members of the Armed Forces under extended benefits under TRICARE, pages S6377, S6383 Akaka To transfer custody of the Air Force Health Study assets Agreed Modified to the Medical Follow-up Agency, pages S6377, S6383 voice vote #4393 Warner/ To require the Defense Department to submit Agreed Levin Supplemental and Cost of War Execution reports, pages voice vote #4529 S6377, S6384 Reed To provide that acceptance by a military officer of Agreed #4311 appointment to the position of Director of National voice vote Intelligence or Director of the Center Intelligence Agency shall be conditional upon retirement of the officer after the assignment, rages S6377, S6384 Reid Modified To require reports on the implementation of the Darfur Agreed #4439 Peace Agreement, pages S6377, S6385 voice vote CRS-39 Sponsor/ Purpose/Congressional Record Page Reference Outcome Number Clinton To require that Congress be apprised periodically on Agreed #4361 implementation of the Darfur Peace Agreement, pages voice vote S6377, S6386 Levin To make available an additional $450,000,000 for Agreed #4533 RDT&E Defense-wide and provide an offsetting voice vote reduction for a certain military intelligence program, pages S6377, S6386 Vitter To authorize prepositioning of Department of Defense Agreed #4534 assets to improve support to civilian authorities, pages voice vote S6377, S6386 Domenici To require annual reports on the expanded use of Agreed #4451 unmanned aerial vehicles in the national airspace system, voice vote pages S6377, S6387 Burns/Dole To provide for the enhancement of funeral ceremonies Agreed #4538 for veterans, pages S6377, S6388 voice vote Biden To provide that not funds may be used to establish a Agreed #4423 permanent U.S. military base in Iraq, or to exercise voice vote control over the oil resources of Iraq, pages S6377, S6388 Allard To require an independent review of the organization and Agreed #4366 management of the Department of Defense for national voice vote security in space, pages S6377, S6389 Kerry Stating the Sense of Congress that the President should Agreed #4204 convene an international summit o promote a voice vote comprehensive political agreement in Iraq, pages S6377, S6389 Obama To require a report on Air Force plans for the Agreed #4541 realignment of aircraft, weapons systems, and functions voice vote at active and Air National Guard bases as a result of the 2005 round of defense base closure and realignment, pages S6377, S6390 House Appropriations Committee 302(b) Allocations Ultimately, the total amount provided for national defense in the regular appropriations bills (not including emergency appropriations) is determined by the allocation of funds among appropriations subcommittees. Under Section 302(a) of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974, the annual congressional budget resolution allocates a specific amount of discretionary budget authority to the appropriations committees. Under Section 302(b) of the Budget Act, the appropriations committees are required to report back on the allocation of the total to the subcommittees. The House-committee-passed FY2007 budget resolution, H.Con.Res. 376, approves a total of $872.8 billion in discretionary budget authority, which is $475 million below the Administration request, and the resolution allocated that amount to the appropriations committee under Section 302(a) of the Budget Act. The Senate-passed CRS-40 budget resolution approves $877.0 billion in discretionary spending, $3.7 billion above the Administration request, and allocates the total to the appropriations committee. On May 4, the House Appropriations Committee reported its initial subcommittee allocations under Section 302(b) of the Budget Act. Table 8 shows the committee action. It is important to note that these allocations may be revised periodically as congressional action on the appropriations bills proceeds. The initial House allocations trim $4.0 billion from the defense subcommittee, compared to the Administration request, $824 million from the Military Quality of Life/VA subcommittee, and $2.4 billion from the foreign operations subcommittee. These cuts, compared to the request, in defense and foreign affairs allow increases, again compared to the Administration request, mainly in Labor-HHS appropriations and homeland security appropriations. Last year, Congress trimmed $4.4 billion from DOD programs in the regular appropriations bills. The initial House allocations appear to follow the same approach. Table 8. Initial House 302(b) Subcommittee Allocations (budget authority in billions of dollars) Allocation FY2006 FY2007 Versus Enacted Request Allocation Request Agriculture 16.8 17.3 17.8 +0.5 Defense 358.3 381.4 377.4 -4.0 Energy and Water Development 30.2 29.5 30.0 +0.5 Foreign Operations 20.7 23.7 21.3 -2.4 Homeland Security 30.3 31.0 32.1 +1.1 Interior/Environment 25.9 25.5 25.9 +0.4 Labor, HHS, Education 141.1 137.8 141.9 +4.1 Legislative 3.8 4.2 4.0 -0.2 Military Quality of Life/VA 85.0 95.5 94.7 -0.8 Science, State, Justice, Comm 57.2 59.7 59.8 +0.1 Transportation, Treasury, HUD 64.1 67.6 67.8 +0.2 Total 302(a) Allocation 833.3 873.3 872.8 -0.5 Source: House Appropriations Committee. FY2007 Defense Appropriations ­ Highlights of the House Appropriations Committee Bill The House Defense Appropriations Subcommittee marked up its version of the FY2007 defense appropriations bill on June 7, and the full committee marked up the bill, which became H.R. 5631, on June 13. Among the committee's decisions, a few themes stand out. First, in accordance with the committee's 302(b) allocations, the committee approved a total $377.6 billion in the bill, $4.1 billion below the Administration request. The committee made about $2 billion of the cuts in "General Provisions" of the bill. Of these cuts $823 million are in rescissions of prior year funds (amounts CRS-41 identified by the committee in cooperation with the Defense Department), $949 million in revised inflation estimates, and $100 million in savings from foreign currency fluctuations. These are perennial sources of savings in appropriations bills. They have generally been used, however, to offset congressional additions to the budget rather than to trim the total amount in the bill. The committee also cut a net of $1.1 billion from procurement, $1.9 billion from operation and maintenance (O&M), and $1.2 billion from military personnel accounts, while it added $2.1 billion to R&D accounts. Of the cuts in military personnel, $784 million are from projected underexecution of approved personnel levels as reported by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) and $288 million from the Air Force to reflect a shift of Operation Noble Eagle costs (which provides security at military bases and air defense overflights) to the additional emergency appropriations in Title IX of the bill. In O&M, $433 million of savings are from shifting Operation Noble Eagle costs to Title IX, and substantial additional amounts are from shifting to Title IX funds for the regular pay of military technicians who are mobilized for overseas operations.20 In the procurement accounts, many of the committees cuts from the request are from following the authorization bill in shifting part of the requested amounts for several programs, such as M-1 tank upgrades, to emergency war funds in Title IX. Second, the committee did not provide funds for the 2.7% military pay raise approved in the House-passed authorization bill nor did it provide funds for increases in end-strength over the requested levels. This avoided the need for any increases in the military personnel accounts compared to the request. If the authorization conference report provides a 2.7% pay raise rather than the 2.2% requested, the appropriators may then either agree to add funds to the bill in conference or, instead, require the Defense Department to absorb the costs and transfer funds from other accounts. The committee approved an increase of general transfer authority to $4.75 billion in the regular bill with an additional $2.5 billion in Title IX to accommodate such requirements. On end-strength levels, the committee appears to assume that any increases will continue to be funded from emergency appropriations for war costs in FY2007, as they have been in the past. On major weapons programs, as is usually the case, the House appropriators generally followed the House authorization bill. As in the authorization, the appropriations -- ! Cut $326 million from Army Future Combat System R&D; ! Cut funding for Transformational Communications Satellite R&D, though by $100 million rather than by $80 million; ! Cut funding for Space Radar R&D, though by $66 million rather than by $30 million; 20 This is also a way of shifting costs that normally would be counted in the regular appropriations to emergency accounts. Technically, emergency funding is used to pay "incremental" costs of contingency operations -- i.e., expenses over and above the normal operating costs of the forces. Pay of mobilized military technicians is not an incremental expense of the operations. CRS-42 ! Added $50 million for DDG-51 destroyer modernization, though not the $200 million in the authorization; ! Added $1.4 billion to cover the full cost of procuring 20 F-22 aircraft, rejecting the Air Force incremental funding plan; ! Added $200 million in R&D to develop a second engine for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter (the authorization approved $245 million); ! Reduced funds to commence F-35 procurement; ! Eliminated funds to shut down C-17 cargo aircraft production, ! Eliminated $38 million requested to convert Trident II D-5 missiles to carry conventional warheads; and ! Shifted some procurement funds that were requested in the regular appropriations accounts to be funded with emergency funds for the war. In contrast to the authorization, the House appropriators -- ! Did not add $400 million in advance procurement for a second Virginia-class attack submarine in FY2009; and ! Eliminated funding requested to begin procurement of 12 EA-18G electronic warfare versions of the F-18 aircraft and instead shifted funds to add 12 F/A-18E/F aircraft. FY2007 Defense Appropriations -- Highlights of House Floor Action Traditionally, House floor debate on the defense appropriations bill is very brief and, although the bill generally comes to the floor with an open rule, very few amendments are proposed. This year, however, a number of controversial amendments were considered on the floor, including several proposals to strip specific congressional earmarks of funds from the bill. The House considered the bill on the floor on June 20, 2006. A number of less controversial amendments were approved by voice vote, including amendments ! By Representative Murtha to restore funding for the Perpetually Available and Secure Information Systems program; ! By Representative Granger to delete a provision in the committee bill that would prevent foreign sales of the F/A-22 fighter; ! By Representative Castle to prohibit award fees for performance that does not meet contract requirements; ! By Representative Markey to prohibit funds in the bill from being used in contravention laws or regulations to implement the UN Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment; ! By Representative Inslee to prohibit the use of funds to implement some provisions of the National Security Personnel System that a Federal court found not to preserve adequate collective bargaining and adverse action appeals procedures; and CRS-43 ! By Representative Holmes to prohibit the use of funds to privatize base operation support services at Walter Reed Army Medical Hospital. The House also debated and rejected several amendments on matters of U.S. national security policy, including a measure to prohibit National Security Agency surveillance activities not authorized through the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), a measure to prohibit military action against Iran without advance congressional approval, and a measure to delete a provision in the committee bill to prohibit the establishment of permanent basing rights agreement in Iraq. The measures that the House rejected include amendments ! By Representative Steve King to strike section 9012 of the Committee bill which prohibits funds from being used to enter into a basing rights agreement with Iraq (failed 50 - 376); ! By Representative Chocola to prohibit the use of funds from being available for the development, deployment, or operation the Defense Travel System (failed 141 - 285); ! By Representative Schiff to prohibit funds from being used to engage in electronic surveillance in the United States except as authorized under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 (failed 207 - 219); ! By Representative Hinchey to prohibit any of the funds from being used to initiate military operations against Iran except in accordance with Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution (failed 158 - 262); and ! By Representative Hinchey to prohibit any funds from being used for any contract with the Lincoln Group (failed 153 - 268). Four amendments were proposed and then withdrawn by their sponsors, specifically amendments ! By Representative Jackson-Lee to require that not less than $10 million be used for prosthetic research; ! By Representative Engel to comment the Navy for having the highest percentage of Alternative Fuel Vehicles acquired by any federal agency during FY2005; ! By Representative Stearns to prohibit the use of funds to interpret voluntary religious discussions as "official" as specified in the Air Force revised interim guidelines concerning free exercise of religion; and ! By Representative Filner to prohibit funds from being used to place a social security account number on any military identification card. Finally, the House rejected several amendments by Representative Flake to remove certain earmarks of funds for specific projects, including funding for ! the Wind Demonstration Project; ! the Institute for Exploration at Mystic Aquarium in New London, Connecticut; ! the JASON Education Foundation; CRS-44 ! the Center for Rotorcraft Innovation; ! the Illinois Technology Transition Center; ! the Northwest Manufacturing Initiative; ! the Lewis Center for Education Research; ! the Advanced Law Enforcement Rapid Response Training Program; and ! the Leonard Wood Research Institute. Senate Appropriations Committee 302(b) Allocations The Senate Appropriations Committee announced its initial 302(b) allocations to the subcommittees on June 22, 2006. The allocations provide $9.1 billion less than the Administration requested for the defense subcommittee, leaving substantially more for other subcommittees, particularly Labor-HHS-Education, with $5 billion more than the Administration requested (see Table 9). Table 9. Initial vs. Latest Senate 302(b) Subcommittee Allocations (budget authority in billions of dollars) Initial Latest FY2006 FY2007 Allocation Versus Allocation Versus Enacted Request 6/22/06 Request 9/26/06 Request Agriculture 18.4 17.4 18.2 +0.8 18.2 +0.8 Commerce, Justice, 49.4 49.6 51.0 +1.4 51.0 +1.4 Science Defense 399.3 423.6 414.5 -9.1 414.3 -9.2 District of Columbia 0.6 0.6 0.6 -- 0.6 Energy & Water 30.2 29.5 30.7 +1.3 30.7 +1.3 Homeland Security 30.5 31.0 31.7 +0.7 31.9 +0.9 Interior 25.9 25.5 26.0 +0.5 26.0 +0.5 Labor-HHS-Education 141.2 137.8 142.8 +5.0 142.8 +5.0 Legislative Branch 3.8 4.2 4.0 -0.2 3.9 -0.3 Military Construction/VA 44.0 52.8 52.9 +0.1 52.9 +0.1 State, Foreign Operations 30.1 33.7 31.3 -2.4 31.3 -2.4 Transportation, Treasury, 67.9 67.1 69.0 +1.9 69.0 +1.9 Judiciary, HUD Total 302(a) Allocation 841.3 872.8 872.8 -- 872.8 -- Source: Senate Appropriations Committee. The committee's initial 302(b) allocations put the Senate directly at odds with the White House on budget priorities and, to a degree, on the use of emergency appropriations to fund programs requested in the regular, non-emergency defense budget. The White House Statement of Administration Policy (SAP) on the House- reported version of the defense appropriations bill,21 issued on June 20, complained that the House bill cut $4 billion from the request and shifted about $2 billion from 21 Office of Management and Budget, "Statement of Administration Policy: H.R. 5631 -- Department of Defense Appropriations Bill, FY2007," June 20, 2006, on line at [http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/legislative/sap/109-2/hr5631sap-h.pdf]. CRS-45 the regular "base" DOD budget to the emergency spending accounts in Title IX of the House measure. "Base funding requirements," the White House said, "should not be shifted to supplemental bills as a way to increase non-security related discretionary funding." Moreover, the SAP warned very strongly, in text that was underlined in the official letter, that the President would veto a defense bill that cut spending too deeply: "If the President is presented with a final DOD appropriations bill that significantly underfunds the Department of Defense to shift funds to non-security spending, his senior advisors would recommend that he veto that bill [emphasis in the original]." FY2007 Defense Appropriations -- Highlights of the Senate Appropriations Committee Bill The Senate committee version of the defense appropriations bill would make available $453.5 billion for the defense programs in covers, including $50 billion in funding for overseas operations. An additional $11.3 billion is available as a permanent appropriation for retiree medical benefits, increasing the total appropriation for FY2007 to $464.8 billion (see Table 2). Funding Cuts and Caps on Discretionary Spending and on Emergency Spending. Perhaps the most controversial issue in the Senate bill is that the total amount is $9.1 billion below the Administration request. A House cut of $4.1 billion in its version of the bill prompted the White House to threaten a veto if the final bill "underfunds" defense in order to shift funds to non-defense programs. The Senate 302(b) allocations straightforwardly shift $9.5 billion from defense and military construction appropriations to non-defense appropriations bills. Though usually remaining unspoken, the premise of the Senate and House 302(b) cuts in defense is that the cuts can be made up from funding provided as additional money for overseas operations. So a directly related issue is the extent to which the Senate bill shifts funding from the regular defense appropriations accounts to Title IX of the bill that provides additional funding for Iraq and Afghanistan. The White House Statement of Administration Policy (SAP) on the House version of the appropriations bill also complained about this practice. The White House estimated that the House bill shifts about $2 billion of funding from the regular defense bill to the amounts provided as additional appropriations that are exempted from the $872.8 billion cap on total discretionary funding in FY2007. The Senate bill provides funds for many of the same programs as the House bill as additional appropriations, including funds for M-1 tank and Bradley Fighting Vehicle upgrades, to continue C- 17 production, and for V-22 tilt rotor aircraft. There is a further complication in the Senate. Section 402 of the Senate-passed budget resolution, S.Con.Res. 83, (1) establishes the $872.8 billion cap on FY2007 discretionary funding, (2) exempts funding that is designated as "emergency" appropriations from the cap, but also, (3) sets a cap of $86.3 billion on emergency funding in FY2007 (the total was reduced from $90 billion in a floor amendment). The FY2006 supplemental appropriations bill, H.R. 4939 "deems" all of these requirements to apply in the Senate in the absence of a conference agreement on the budget resolution. CRS-46 This presents a problem for the appropriators, however, because costs of a later emergency FY2007 supplemental request for Iraq and Afghanistan, expected next February, together with costs of Katrina-recovery and other disaster relief, bird flu preparations, border security, agricultural disaster relief, and other purposes, will almost surely exceed the cap by a substantial amount. It will still be possible to go ahead with emergency funding for these purposes, but only with offsetting rescissions of funds for costs that exceed the cap. As a result, the Senate Appropriations Committee took a step to reduce the potential need for offsets by declaring only part of the funding for Iraq and Afghanistan in the bill as FY2007 emergency funding. Within Title IX of the bill, only funds in Chapter 1, Military Personnel, and Chapter 2, Operation and Maintenance, are designated as emergency funding exempt from the FY2007 caps. These chapters provide $42.1 billion of the $50 billion in Title IX. Funds in Chapter 3, Procurement, Chapter 4, RDT&E, Chapter 5, Revolving and Management Funds, and Chapter 6, Related Agencies, which provide $7.9 billion, are simply made available "on enactment" of the bill. The effect is to have these amounts scored as FY2006 rather than FY2007 money. This is the key point. The additional $7.9 billion in FY2006 funds will not trigger a point of order for exceeding FY2006 discretionary spending levels, since room remains under the FY2006 budget caps due to the $8 billion across-the-board cut in appropriations that Congress made at the end of last year. Other Issues in the Senate Defense Appropriations Bill. Aside from the overall budget issues, the Senate Appropriations Committee version of the defense appropriations bill addresses a number of other key policy matters. The $9.1 billion of cuts in spending come mainly in operation and maintenance (O&M), $3.8 billion, and in general provisions of the bill, $2.6 billion (see Table 2 above). Within O&M, the major cuts include ! $332 million in Army depot maintenance because of a reduced peacetime requirement, a cut of about 1/3 in the $974 million requested -- Title IX of the bill provides $2.5 billion for Army depot maintenance and another $2.5 billion for Army reset, which involves some similar maintenance at the unit level; ! $245 million for an Army peacetime training offset, referring to training not done because troops are deployed abroad, a cut that otherwise might offset requirements for additional funds in Title IX; ! $188 million in Army unobligated balances; ! $215 million for a Navy peacetime training offset; ! $200 million for unexplained growth in Air Force air operations; ! $160 million from deterring some Air Force facilities repairs; ! $275 million for an overstatement of Air Force civilian personnel; ! $400 million for Air Force peacetime flying hour requirements; ! $200 million for a reduction based on the increase from prior year Air Force requirements; ! $108 million in Air Force unobligated balances; ! $220 million in Special Operations Command (SOCOM) funds realigned in part to Title IX; and CRS-47 ! $108.8 million in defense-wide unobligated balances. Within General Provisions of the bill, the major cuts include ! $53.2 million cut from Federally Funded Research and Development Centers (FFRDCs); ! $985.3 million in rescissions of prior year appropriations; ! $92 million from unspecified Army and Air Force efficiencies; ! $71 million from advisory and assistance services; ! $85 million in travel funds; and ! $520 million for changed economic assumptions, applied proportionately to amounts for procurement, R&D, and some other titles of the bill. On personnel-related policy, the committee ! provided funds for a pay raise of 2.2%, though the authorization conference agreement may agree to a 2.7% raise as in the House bill; ! agreed to an increase of 30,000 in Army and 5,000 in Marine Corps active duty end-strength, though with funds provided in Title IX (the report does not explicitly make that point, but the funding totals in Title IX reflect amounts the Administrations estimates would be need for what it calls "overstrength"); and ! provided $164 million to support an Army National Guard end- strength of 350,000 rather than the 333,000 for which funding was requested. On major weapons programs, the committee ! cut 6 helicopters and $40 million from the 18 aircraft and $141 million requested in the Army Armed Reconnaissance Helicopter program; ! cut 223 aircraft and $18 million from the 39 aircraft and $199 million requested for the Army Light Utility Helicopter program; ! cut $78 million for Bradley Fighting Vehicle mods, but added funds in Title IX; ! cut $254 million from the $3.7 billion requested for Future Combat System R&D, compared to a $326 million cut in the House bill; ! cut $220 million for 1 of the 2 Littoral Combat Ships (LCS) requested, complaining that Navy cost figures in the past were incomplete and therefore understated costs; ! eliminated $455 million requested in the National Defense Sealift fund to build one T-AKE cargo ship saying that the Navy had not begun building 5 previously funded ships and that $2.4 billion of prior year funding remains unexpended; ! added $117 million for one oceanographic survey ship; ! eliminated the almost $1.3 billion requested in the Navy and Air Force to begin procurement of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, but CRS-48 added $340 million in R&D to continue development of an alternative aircraft engine for the program; ! like the House, added $1.4 billion to fully fund procurement of 20 F-22 fighter aircraft; ! rejected the Administration proposal to shut down C-17 production after FY2007 and shifted $329 million requested in the regular budget to fund the shutdown to Title IX to purchase 7 aircraft; ! cut 4 aircraft and $257 million from the 12 aircraft and $905 million requested for the Navy EA-18G aircraft and added $219 million for 4 F/A-18E/F aircraft -- the House had cut all 12 EA-18s and added funds for 12 F/A-18s; ! cut $230 million of the $867 million requested for Transformational Communications Satellite R&D, compared to $100 million cut in the House bill; ! cut $109 million of the $266 million requested for the Space Radar compared to $66 million cut in the House bill; and ! provided $340 million for National Guard and Reserve equipment, compared to $500 million in the House bill. For additional details on selected major weapons programs, see Table A5. FY2007 Defense Appropriations -- Highlights of Senate Floor Action The Senate began floor action on the defense appropriations bill on the evening of August 1, and both the majority and minority leaders expressed the hope that the Senate could complete action before adjourning for the August recess on Friday, August 3. On August 3, however, Senator Reid said that as many as 50 Democratic amendments remained to be addressed. Although Senator Stevens argued that the Senate should stay through the night, in the end the leadership agreed to resume consideration of the fill when the Senate returned on September 5. The Senate took up the bill on September 5 and completed action on September 7. The most high profile debate when the Senate returned was on an amendment by Senator Reid and other Democrats expressing the sense of the Senate on the need for a new direction in Iraq policy and in the civilian leadership of the Department of Defense ­ a direct rebuke to Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld. The Senate debated the measure for much of the day on September 6, though it was finally ruled out of order by the chair as not germane. The largest substantive change in the bill on the Senate floor was an amendment by Senator Stevens and Senator Inouye, the chairman and ranking member of the defense subcommittee, respectively, to add $13.1 billion in emergency funds to repair and replace equipment being used by Army and Marine units in Iraq and Afghanistan. Between the time the bill was reported on July 20 and the time the it came up on the floor, an ongoing debate about Army and Marine Corps readiness became increasingly heated. In June, Army and Marine Corps officials testified to congressional committees about the estimated costs of "resetting" units to repair, upgrade, and replace equipment either worn out or lost in overseas operations or left CRS-49 in the theater by units returning to home. The Army estimated as yet unfunded, long term reset costs of $17 billion and the Marine Corp estimated costs of $12-13 billion. In addition, in July, leaders of the Army National Guard have said that it would take $21 billion over the next few years to reset ground forces and to reequip the force to meet official requirements for new "modular" units. In response, Senators Reed and Dayton announced that they would propose an amendment to the appropriations bill to add $10 billion to "reset" Army and Marine Corps units returning from operations abroad. This led Senator Stevens to work with DOD and the White House on an alternative, which ultimately became his and Senator Inouye's surprise $13.1 billion amendment. The second largest addition of emergency funding was an amendment by Senators Sessions and Kyl to add $1.8 billion for border security. This was to fund fences and vehicle borders that the Senate authorized in action on the Immigration Reform Act, S. 2611, in May, but that was not funded in the Homeland Security Appropriations Act, H.R. 5441. Now that the Senate has approved the funding as part of the defense bill, the issue is (1) whether the defense bill, rather than the homeland security appropriations bill is the proper vehicle for it and (2) whether and how to find offsets for the increased funding. A third debate on the Senate floor did not involve a large amount of money, but nonetheless became quite contentious. On August 2, Senator Durbin proposed an amendment earmarking $2 million in Army R&D funds for a program to improve imaging of brain injuries. Senator Stevens opposed the amendment, arguing that the Senate needed to limit the amount of money it perennially adds to the defense appropriation bill for medical R&D programs, many of which, such as breast cancer and prostate cancer research, are at best only indirectly related to military requirements. Senator Inouye supported Senator Stevens and the Senate tabled the amendment by a largely party-line vote of 54-43. Subsequently, a number of veterans organizations complained that requested FY2007 funding for an Army-funded center for treating brain injuries was lower than the FY2006 level. When the Senate returned in September, Senator Allen offered an amendment to add $19 million for brain injury programs. Between the time it began debate on August 1 and the time it passed the appropriations bill on September 7, the Senate disposed of almost 90 amendments. As is usually the case, most of the amendments were non-controversial measures to add relatively small amounts for specific projects. In action on the more significant amendments, the Senate ! on the opening evening of debate on August 1, approved a proposal by Senators Stevens and Inouye, Senate Amendment (SA) 4751, to add $13.1 billion in emergency funds22 to reequip Army and Marine 22 Technically, the amendment designates the additional funding as "emergency" appropriations in the Senate and as "appropriations for contingency operations" in the House. Section 402 of the Senate-passed FY2007 budget resolution exempts funds that are (continued...) CRS-50 Corps units returning from Iraq -- this amendment was as an alternative, approved by the White House and the Defense Department, to an amendment earlier proposed by Senators Reed and Dodd to add $10.2 billion to "reset" Army and Marine forces; ! approved an amendment by Senators Bond and Leahy, SA 4827, to specify that $2.4 billion of the $13.1 billion provided in the Stevens/Inouye amendment be allocated to National Guard and Reserve units; ! approved, by a vote of 94-3, an amendment by Senator Sessions, SA 4775, adding $1.8 billion in emergency funds for fences and vehicle barriers on the Mexican border -- this was a substitute for a similar amendment, SA 4788, by Senator Kyl; ! rejected, by a vote of 54-43, an amendment by Senator Durbin, SA 4781, to add $2 million, with an offset, for an Army medical R&D program -- in this, the Senate supported Senator Stevens's effort to limit the amount medical R&D earmarks; ! approved a proposal by Senator Coburn, SA 4848, to require the Defense Department to list, identify the location, and assess the utility of all congressional earmarks in the defense bill; ! approved another proposal by Senator Coburn, SA 4784, with Senator Obama, to require the Defense Department to post electronically all reports to Congress required by the act within 48 hours after they are submitted and to post all budget justification material; ! approved, by a vote of 96-0, another amendment by Senator Coburn, SA 4785, to require reports on the risk of improper Department of Defense payments for travel; ! approved an additional amendment by Senator Coburn, SA 4787, to limit DOD funding for conferences to $70 million; ! approved an amendment by Senator Allen, SA 4883, to provide $19 million for a DOD/VA brain injury center; 22 (...continued) designated as an "emergency requirement" from the cap that the resolution places on total discretionary funding. Section 402 of the House-passed resolution exempts funding "for contingency operations directly related to the global war on terrorism, and other unanticipated defense-related operations." In the Senate, most of the $50 billion provided in Title IX as "Additional Appropriations" are designated as emergency funds, though, as discussed above, $7.9 billion of the amount is made available when enacted, presumably in FY2006. In the House, all of the $50 billion in Title IX for "Additional Appropriations" are designated as being for "contingency operations directly related to the global war on terrorism, and other unanticipated defense-related operations." CRS-51 ! rejected by a vote of 30-70 an amendment by Senators Feinstein and Leahy, SA 4882, to require that rules of engagement prohibit cluster munitions from being used near large groups of non-combatants; ! tabled by a vote of 54-44 an amendment by Senators Kennedy and Reid, SA 4885, to require that quarterly reports on Iraq include more information on trends toward civil war; ! tabled by a vote of 50-48 an amendment by Senators Mikulski and Sarbanes to privatize base support services at the Walter Reed Hospital; ! considered an amendment by Senator Rockefeller, SA 4906, that was then withdrawn, to eliminate parts of the bill authorizing intelligence activities, a measure the Senator proposed to urge passage of the intelligence authorization bill; ! approved, by a vote of 98-0, an amendment by Senator Conrad, SA 4907, to add $200 million in emergency funds enhance intelligence community efforts to capture Osama bin Laden and other key leaders of al Qaeda; ! approved, after rejected a motion to table the measure by a vote of 45-51, an amendment by Senator Schumer, SA 4897, to provide $700 million in emergency funds (in Title VI of the bill, rather than in Title IX), for counter-drug programs in Afghanistan; ! approved an amendment by Senator Boxer, SA 4913, to require a report on procedures and guidelines the event of further sectarian violence in Iraq; ! approved an amendment by Senators Kennedy and Hatch, SA 4857, to prohibit privatization of civilian work if contractors have an advantage because they provide inferior retirement benefits; ! approved an amendment by Stevens and Murkowski, SA 4917, to allow the Secretary of the Army to reimburse servicemembers and their families for financial hardships due to extended deployment overseas; ! approved an amendment by Senators Reid and Obama, SA 4912, to provide $20 million in emergency funds to assist the African Union force in Sudan; ! approved and amendment by Senator Bingaman, SA 4915, to appropriate $275 million in emergency FY20006 funds for wildfire suppression; CRS-52 ! approved, by a unanimous vote of 98-0, an amendment by Senators Reed and Bayh, SA 4911, to provide $65.4 million in emergency funds to procure Predator UAVs for Special Operations forces; and ! tabled by a vote of 51-44 an amendment by Senator Menendez, SA 4909, to prohibit the use of funds for a public relations program designed to monitor news media in the United States and the Middle East and promote positive coverage of the war in Iraq. Table 10 provides a list of Senate action on these and some other selected amendments to the bill. Table 10: Senate Floor Action on Selected Amendments: Defense Appropriations Bill, H.R. 5631 # Purpose Sponsor Status Amendments Agreed To August 1, 2006 4751* To appropriate as additional appropriations Stevens Agreed to in Senate by $7,800,000,000 for the Army and $5,300,000,000 for the Unanimous Consent. Marine Corps for the reset of equipment due to continuing combat operations and to designate such amounts as emergency requirements. August 2, 2006 4772 To provide that none of the funds appropriated or Carper Agreed to in Senate by otherwise made available by this Act may be obligated or Unanimous Consent. expended to provide award fees to any defense contractor for performance that does not meet the requirements of the contract. 4775* To provide $1,829,100,000 for the Army National Guard Sessions [To SA 4788] as modified for the construction of 370 miles of triple-layered fencing, agreed to in Senate by and 461 miles of vehicle barriers along the southwest Yea-Nay Vote. 94 - 3. border. Record Vote Number: 220. 4788* To provide $1,829,000,000 for the Army National Guard Kyl Agreed to in Senate by for the construction of 370 miles of triple-layered fencing, Unanimous Consent. and 500 miles of vehicle barriers along the southwest [Note: Amended by SA border. 4775]. 4819* To make available up to an additional $6,700,000,000 to Dodd Agreed to in Senate by fund equipment reset requirements resulting from Yea-Nay Vote. 97 - 0. continuing combat operations, including repair, depot, and Record Vote Number: 221. procurement activities. August 3, 2006 4784 To require the posting of certain reports of the Department Coburn As modified agreed to in of Defense on the Internet website of the Department of Senate by Voice Vote. Defense. CRS-53 # Purpose Sponsor Status 4785 To ensure the fiscal integrity of travel payments made by Coburn As modified agreed to in the Department of Defense. Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. 96 - 0. Record Vote Number: 224. 4787 To limit the funds available to the Department of Defense Coburn/ Agreed to in Senate by for expenses relating to conferences. Obama Voice Vote after Senate failed table the amendment by Yea-Nay Vote. 36-60 Record Vote Number: 223 4801 To make available from Shipbuilding and Conversion, DeWine As modified agreed to in Navy, up to $10,000,000 for the Carrier Replacement Senate by Unanimous Program for advance procurement of nuclear propulsion Consent. equipment. 4802 To require a new National Intelligence Estimate on Kennedy As modified agreed to in prospects for security and stability in Iraq. Senate by Unanimous Consent. 4827* To ensure that of the $13.1 billion provided by SA 4751, Bond As modified agreed to in $2.4 billion is available for National Guard and Reserve Senate by Unanimous equipment. Consent. 4848 To require notice to Congress and the public on earmarks Coburn Agreed to in Senate by of funds available to the Department of Defense. Yea-Nay Vote. 96 - 1. Record Vote Number: 226. 4851 To prohibit the use of funds for establishing United States Biden Agreed to in Senate by military installations in Iraq or exercising United States Unanimous Consent. control over the oil resources of Iraq. 4858 To prohibit the use of funds by the United States Boxer Agreed to in Senate by Government to enter into an agreement with the Yea-Nay Vote. 97 - 0. Government of Iraq that would subject members of the Record Vote Number: 225. Armed Forces to the jurisdiction of Iraq criminal courts or punishment under Iraq law. September 6, 2006 4883 To make available from Defense Health Program up to Allen Agreed to in Senate by $19,000,000 for the Defense and Veterans Brain Injury unanimous consent. Center. September 7, 2006 4907* To add $200 million in emergency funds to enhance Conrad Agreed to in Senate by a intelligence community efforts to bring Osama bin Laden unanimous vote of 96 yeas. and other key leaders of al Qaeda to the justice they Vote No. 235. deserve. 4897* To make available up to an additional $700 million for Schumer Agreed to in Senate by Drug Interdiction and Counter-Drug Activities to combat Voice Vote. Senate earlier the growth of poppies in Afghanistan, to eliminate the failed to table the production and trade of opium and heroin, and to prevent amendment by 45 yeas to terrorists from using the proceeds for terrorist activities in 51 nays. Vote No. 237. Afghanistan, Iraq, and elsewhere, and to designate the additional amount as emergency spending. CRS-54 # Purpose Sponsor Status 4913 To require a report on procedures and guidelines the event Boxer Agreed to in Senate by of further sectarian violence. unanimous consent. 4857 To provide that none of the funds appropriated by this Act Kennedy/ Agreed to in Senate by may be available for the conversion to contractor Hatch unanimous consent. performance of certain activities or functions of the Department of Defense in cases where the contractor receives a competitive advantage by offering inferior retirement benefits to workers who are going to be employed in the performance of such activities or functions than those offered by the Department to comparable civilian employees. 4900* To make available up to $2,000,000 for infrastructure for Graham Agreed to in Senate by the Afghanistan military legal system. unanimous consent. 4917 To provide the Secretary of the Army the ability to Stevens/ Agreed to in Senate by reimburse servicemembers and their families for financial Murkows unanimous consent. hardships due to extended deployment overseas. ki 4912* To increase by $20,000,000 the amount made available by Reid/ Agreed to in Senate by chapter 2 of title IX for Operation and Maintenance, Obama unanimous consent. Defense-Wide for the purpose of assisting the African Union force in Sudan. 4915* To appropriate $275 million for emergency wildfire Bingaman Agreed to in Senate by suppression. unanimous consent. 4911* To make available an additional $65,400,000 for additional Reed/ Agreed to in Senate by a appropriations for Aircraft Procurement, Air Force, for the Bayh unanimous vote of 98 yeas. procurement of Predators for Special Operations forces, Record Vote No. 238. and to designate the amount as an emergency requirement. Amendment Rejected August 2, 2006 4781 To appropriate, with an offset, an additional $2,000,000 for Durbin Motion to table agreed to Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Army for the in Senate by Yea-Nay improvement of imaging for traumatic brain injuries. Vote. 54 - 43. Record Vote Number: 222. August 3, 2006 4844 To make available from Research, Development, Test, and Sessions Not agreed to in Senate by Evaluation, Navy, up to $77,000,000 for the Conventional Yea-Nay Vote. 31 - 67. Trident Modification Program. Record Vote Number: 227. September 6, 2006 4882 To protect civilian lives from unexploded cluster Feinstein/ Not agreed to in Senate by munitions. Leahy Yea-Nay Vote. 30-70. Record Vote No. 232. 4885 To include information on civil war in Iraq in the quarterly Kennedy/ Motion to table agreed to reports on progress toward military and political stability in Reid in Senate by Yea-Nay Iraq. Vote. 54 -44. Record Vote No. 233. CRS-55 # Purpose Sponsor Status 4895 To provide that none of the funds appropriated or Mikulski/ Motion to table otherwise made available by this Act may be used to enter Sarbanes amendment agreed to in into or carry out a contract for the performance by a Senate by Yea-Nay Vote. contractor of any base operation support service at Walter 50-48. Record Vote No. Reed Army Medical Hospital pursuant to a private-public 234. competition conducted under Office of Management and Budget Circular A-76 that was initiated on June 13, 2000, and has the solicitation number DADA 10-03-R-0001. September 7, 2006 4909 To prohibit the use of funds for a public relations program Menendez Motion to table amendment designed to monitor news media in the United States and agreed to in Senate by Yea- the Middle East and create a database of news stories to Nay Vote. 51-44. Record promote positive coverage of the war in Iraq. Vote No. 236. Amendments Ruled out of Order August 2, 2006 4768 To provide emergency supplemental appropriations for Cornyn Ruled out of order by the border security and immigration reform. chair. 4795 To provide for the extension and modification of certain Reid Ruled out of order by the tax relief provisions, and for Surface Mining Control and chair. Reclamation Act amendments. 4805 To improve Federal contracting and procurement by Dorgan Ruled out of order by the eliminating fraud and abuse and improving competition in chair. contracting and procurement and by enhancing administration of Federal contracting personnel. 4806 To prohibit the suspension of royalties under certain Kyl Ruled out of order by the circumstances, to clarify the authority to impose price chair. thresholds for certain leases, to limit the eligibility of certain lessees for new leases, and to restrict the transfer of certain leases. August 3, 2006 4853 To appropriate funds for a Cuba Fund for a Democratic Nelson Ruled out of order by the Future to promote democratic transition in Cuba. (FL) chair. 4875 To increase by $200,000,000 the amount appropriated or Stabenow Ruled out of order by the otherwise made available by title IX for the purpose of chair. supplying needed humanitarian assistance to the innocent Lebanese and Israeli civilians who have been affected by the hostilities between Hezbollah and the Government of Israel. September 6, 2006 4904 Providing a sense of the Senate on the need for a new Reid Ruled out of order by the direction in Iraq policy and in the civilian leadership of the chair. Department of Defense *Notes: Amendments 4788, 4819, 4827, and 4900 do not add funds to the total in the bill. SA 4788 was incorporated into a modification of SA 4775 which was subsequently approved, so the total in SA 4775 adds to the bill, but not the total in SA 4788. Amendments 4819, 4827, and 4900 all allocate funds already provided in the bill. Amendments 4751, 4775, 4897, 4907, 4912, 4915, and 4911 add a total of $16.2 billion in emergency funds. CRS-56 FY2007 Defense Appropriations -- Highlights of the Conference Agreement Conferees announced an agreement on the defense appropriations bill on September 21 and issued a conference report on September 25, H.Rept. 109-676. Perhaps the most contentious issue resolved in the conference agreement was the total amount of spending in the bill. Both the House and the Senate Appropriations Committees provided less money for defense than the Administration requested as a means of freeing up funds for non-defense appropriations bills while still remaining under the cap of $872.8 billion on total discretionary spending in the House and Senate versions of the FY2007 budget resolution. The House trimmed $4.1 billion, from the request, while the Senate cut $9.1 billion. Most of the reductions were made up, indirectly, with funding provided as emergency appropriations (or, technically, in the House, as funding for overseas contingency operations). But the White House objected to the process of, in effect, using emergency funds to offset defense cuts which, in turn, left room under discretionary spending caps to increase non-defense spending. So, in the formal OMB Statement of Administration Policy on the House-passed defense appropriations bill, the White House threatened to veto the measure if it cut funding by more than $4 billion as a means of allowing increased non-security spending. The White House stuck to this position when House and Senate appropriators proposed a compromise that would trim defense by about $6 billion. In the end, the appropriations conference agreement cut defense by $4 billion. It remains to be seen how this will play out when Congress resumes consideration of non-defense appropriations bills after it returns in November. Another key issue resolved in the conference agreement was how to address complaints from the Army and Marine Corps about shortfalls in funding to "reset" their forces ­ that is, to repair, upgrade, and replace equipment used in operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. The services insisted that even the additional funding provided for reset in the $50 billion bridge fund for overseas operations in the early months of FY2007 was inadequate to meet their established requirements. In response, in floor action on the appropriations bill, the Senate added $13.1 billion in emergency funding to meet Army and Marine Corps reset goals. The conference agreement goes still further. It increases the total in the bridge fund to $70 billion, and, according to figures in a House Appropriations Committee press release on the conference agreement, it provides $17.1 billion for Army and $5.8 billion for Marine Corps reset, a total of $22.9 billion. The Senate also added some other emergency funding to the bill during floor action, including $1.8 billion for fences and vehicle barriers on the Mexican border, $700 million for counter-drug measures in Afghanistan, $200 million for intelligence programs to help capture Al Qaeda leaders, $65 million for Predator UAVs, $20 million for help to peacekeepers in Sudan, and $275 million for wildfire suppression. The conference agreement rejected most of these measures ­ it left border security to be addressed in other appropriations bills, provided $200 million for Afghan counter-drug operations, $20 million for Sudan, and $200 million for wildfires ­ the wildfire money was provided in a new title, Title X, of the bill. CRS-57 In addition, the conference agreement resolved a number of disagreements, both between Congress and the Administration and between the House and the Senate, over funding for major weapons systems. On some of the key weapons issues, the conference agreement, ! rejects the Administration proposal to terminate C-17 cargo aircraft production after FY2007 and buys 22 aircraft, 12 in the regular bill and 10 in the "bridge fund" for operations abroad; ! approves a Navy proposal to provide partial funding for 2 DDG- 1000 destroyers ­ formerly the DD(X) ­ rather than providing full funding for just one ship as in the House bill; ! includes funds as requested for one T-AKE cargo ship and for 2 Littoral Combat Ships (LCS), rather than eliminating T-AKE funds and procuring only one LCS, as in the Senate bill; ! also adds $117 million, as in the Senate bill, for a T-AGS ocean survey ship; ! provides $3.4 billion for Army Future Combat system R&D, about $300 million below the request; ! slows F-35 Joint Strike Fighter procurement, with funds to buy 2 rather than the requested 5 aircraft, but does not eliminate FY2007 aircraft procurement funds as the Senate bill did, and also adds $340 million to maintain development of an alternative engine; ! provides full funding for F-22 procurement in FY2007, rather than partial funding as the Air Force requested, and also approves the requested multiyear procurement of F-22s, although the multiyear contract must also be approved in the defense authorization bill;23 ! follows the Senate bill by shifting funds for 4 EA-18Gs to procurement of 4 F/A-18s ­ the House had eliminated all funds for the 8 EA-18s requested and added funds for 12 F/A-18s; ! provides $70 million in R&D for a new refueling aircraft to replace KC-135 tankers, which will allow the Air Force to carry on a request for bids in what appears to be a very high-stakes, high-profile competition between Boeing and Airbus; ! adds $290 million for National Guard and reserve equipment; 23 Section 2306b i (3) of Title 10 U.S. Code requires that an Act other than an appropriations Act must approve multiyear procurement ­ "In the case of the Department of Defense, a multiyear contract in an amount equal to or greater than $500,000,000 may not be entered into for any fiscal year under this section unless the contract is specifically authorized by law in an Act other than an appropriations Act." CRS-58 ! reduces funding for the Transformational Communication Satellite (TSAT) by $130 million, for the Space Radar by $80 million, and for the Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle by $80 million; ! for missile defense, cuts $48 million from the Kinetic Energy Interceptor, adds $200 million for the Ground-Based Missile Defense program, adds $85 million for sea-based missile defense, and adds $58 million for the U.S.-Israeli Arrow system. On other issues, the conference agreement ! provides funding for a 2.2% military pay raise ­ if the authorization conference agreement approves a raise of 2.7% as in the House- passed bill, then the Defense Department can reprogram funds or ask for supplemental appropriations to cover the cost; ! provides funds for Army National Guard end-strength of 350,000, 17,000 above the request, in regular appropriations and provides funds for 30,000 additional Army and 5,000 additional Marine active duty personnel in the overseas bridge fund; ! eliminates $127 million requested for deploying conventional warheads on the Trident II missile and instead provides $5 million for a study of short- and long-term alternatives for the global strike mission and $20 million for technology common to any future system; ! in the bridge fund for operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, also provides $1.5 billion to train and equip Afghan security forces, $1.7 billion for Iraqi security forces, and $500 million for the Commander's Emergency Response Fund for military forces in Iraq to support reconstruction projects; ! requires a report on Iraq that includes measures of various trends, including information on militias; and ! provides that none of the funds provided in the Act may be used None of the funds made available in contravention of U.S. laws implementing the 1985 UN Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. One issue that has received a great deal of attention among military advocacy organizations ­ and that has stimulated a lot of mail to congressional offices ­ was not resolved in the conference agreement on the defense appropriations bill, but will, presumably be addressed in final action on the military quality of live/VA appropriations bill. That issue is funding for a Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center. During floor action on the defense appropriations bill, the Senate added $19 million for the center within funding for the Defense Health Program (DHP). The conference agreement on the defense appropriations bill, however, does not include CRS-59 funding for DHP. Instead, it is provided in the military quality of life/VA bill. Final action on DHP, including action on brain injury funding, will be discussed in CRS Report RL33409, Veterans' Medical Care: FY2007 Appropriations, by Sidath Viranga Panangala. FY2007 Defense Authorization -- Highlights of the Conference Agreement House and Senate conferees announced an agreement on the defense authorization bill on the evening of September 28, the agreement was officially reported on September 29 and approved by the House on September 29 and the Senate on September 30. In the course of conference negotiations, it was periodically reported that disputes over various measures were holding up final agreement. One of the last issues to be resolve was, reportedly, whether to accept a House provision that permitted military chaplains to offer prayers "according to the dictates of their conscience." Conferees resolved the issue by dropping the House provision, but by including language in the report on the bill that requires the Army and Navy to rescind recent directives on prayer and return to earlier practices. The defense authorization conference agreement resolves a number of other major defense policy issues. Table 11 provides a side-by-side summary of House, Senate, and conference action on selected major issues. Among the key that the conference resolved, a few merit a bit more comment. ! TRICARE for reservists: The conference agreement allows non- deployed, as well as mobilized reservists, with the exception of Federal employees eligible for the Federal health benefits plan, to sign up for health insurance through the DOD-run TRICARE program, with a premium of 28% of the cost, equal to the cost share Federal employees pay for their insurance. Over the past few years, Congress has been inching toward this kind of measure, progressively making TRICARE available to certain reservists. The Administration opposed full expansion of access to TRICARE, on the grounds that it was an unnecessary cost, covering reservists who have access to private health insurance. Congress has no decided to go ahead with expansion of TRICARE eligibility anyway. ! Army and Marine Corps End-Strength: For FY2007, Congress has, for the third year in a row, approved higher Army and Marine Corps end-strength than the Administration wants. This has not yet had any great budgetary impact, first, because the cost of additional end- strength has been paid with emergency supplemental funding, rather than within the regular defense budget, and second, because DOD has not been able to recruit up to the full target level in any event. It remains, however, a harbinger of disputes in the future that could have major budget implications. Both the services clearly want additional personnel. The issue is whether Congress will agree to a permanent increase in the defense budget tp pay for it, or whether CRS-60 costs will have to be absorbed. This year, Congress has also set targets for further increases in end-strength in FY2008 and FY2009. ! Amendments to the "Insurrection Act:" The conference agreement accepted a substantial Senate amendment to Chapter 15 of Title 10 U.S. Code, know as the "Insurrection Act." Previously these provisions allowed the President to use armed forces to suppress a rebellion, an insurrection, or domestic violence if state authorities are unable to do so. The new provisions, approved in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, give the President authority to use armed forces in response to natural disasters, terrorist attacks, or health emergencies if state and local agencies cannot ensure order. ! Expanded authority for cooperation with foreign governments: Since the attacks of September 11, 2006, Congress has given the Defense Department increased authority to use its funds to cooperate with foreign military forces and foreign governments. Section 1206 of the FY2006 defense authorization act allowed the Defense Department to use funds to build the capacity of foreign militaries. The Defense Department requested a substantial further expansion of such authorities in its proposed FY2007 legislative measures. Section 1206 of the FY2007 authorization permits a further expansion of the FY2006 section 1206 authorities to allow military commanders to build the capacity of foreign governments to carry out counterterrorist operations and to support stability operations, including some economic development activities. CRS-61 Table 11: Side-by-Side Comparison of House, Senate, and Conference Action on Major Policy Issues in the FY2007 Defense Authorization Bill, H.R. 1522/S. 2766 Request House Authorization Senate Authorization Conference Authorization Increase in Military Basic Pay 2.2% 2.7% 2.2% 2.2% Active Duty and Reserve End-Strength Proposes FY2007 end-strengths of Sections 401 and 411 establish end- Sections 401 and 411 establish end- Sections 401 and 411 establish end- Army: 482,400 strengths of strengths of strengths of Marine Corps: 175,000 Army: 512,400 Army: 512,400 Army: 512,400 Army National Guard: 350,000 but Marine Corps: 180,000 Marine Corps: 180,000 Marine Corps: 180,000 with funding for 333,000 Army National Guard: 350,000 Army National Guard: 350,000 Army National Guard: 350,000 Also establishes minimum active Also establishes minimum end- duty end-strengths of 502,400 for the strengths of 502,400 for the Army Army and 180,000 for the Marine and 180,000 for the Marine Corps. Corps. Also authorizes FY2008 and FY2009 Also authorizes FY2008 and FY2009 active duty end-strengths of 532,400 active duty end-strengths of 532,400 for the Army and 184,000 for the for the Army and 184,000 for the Marine Corps. Marine Corps. CRS-62 Request House Authorization Senate Authorization Conference Authorization TRICARE for Reservists None Section 709 expands eligibility for Section 708 allows reservists Senate recedes. Section 706 permits coverage under the TRICARE employed by businesses with 20 or all non-active duty reservists to enroll standard program to all members of fewer employees to enroll in in TRICARE standard with a the Selected Reserve and their TRICARE for themselves and their premium of 28% of the cost as families while in a non-active duty families with a premium of 50 determined by the Secretary of status provided they pay a monthly percent of the estimated cost and Defense, except for Federal premium equal to 28 percent of the reduces from 85 percent to 75 percent employees eligible for the Federal cost established by the Secretary of of cost the portion that must be paid health benefits plan. Defense. Federal employees eligible by reservists who are eligible for for the Federal health benefits plan employer-provided insurance but are not eligible. chose primary coverage under TRICARE. Tricare Enrollment Fees and Co-pays Proposes increases in Tricare Section 704 prohibits increases in Section 705 prohibits any increase in Section 704 prohibits any increases enrollment fees, deductibles, and any premiums, deductibles, co- enrollment fees during fiscal year between April 2, 2006, and pharmacy co-payments for military payments, or other charges under 2007; Section 706 limits any increase September 30, 2007. retirees not yet eligible for Medicare Department of Defense contracts for in premiums for TRICARE for medical care for retirees, dependents, reservists to 2.2 percent. and survivors between April 1, 2006, and December 31, 2007 as well as in enrollment premiums for TRICARE for reservists. CRS-63 Request House Authorization Senate Authorization Conference Authorization Tricare Mail Order Pharmacy Requirement and Retail Pharmacy Co-payments Section 731 limits co-pays in the Section 702 requires use of the Contains neither provision TRICARE mail-order program to no TRICARE mail-order program to more than the co-pays for generic and refill most long-term maintenance formulary drugs in military hospitals medications, unless waived by the and clinics (currently zero) and limits Secretary of Defense based on co-pays for the TRICARE retail clinical need and eliminates copays pharmacy program to $6 for generic for most drugs in the mail order drugs, $16 for formulary drugs and program. $22 for non-formulary drugs. Repeal of Reduction of Survivor Benefit Plan Annuities (SBP) by Dependency and Indemnity Compensation None None Sec. 642 repeals the offset under Not included current law of SBP benefits by the amount of VA compensation. Concurrent Receipt of Military Retired Pay and VA Disability Benefits for Retirees with Service-Connected Disabilities Rated as Total by Virtue of Unemployability None None Sec. 649 authorizes full concurrent Not included receipt for military retirees rated as 100% unemployable by the Department of Veterans Affairs effective December 31, 2004. CRS-64 Request House Authorization Senate Authorization Conference Authorization Department of Defense Contributions to the Medicare-Eligible Retiree Health Care Fund None Section 589 (1) changes the formula Section 641 changes the formula for Section 592 adopts the House for contributions to the military contributions to the military changes in the formula for health- retirement fund for health care to retirement fund for health care to care related contributions to the exclude cadets, midshipmen, and exclude cadets and midshipmen and military retirement fund but rejects certain reservists and (2) prohibits to limit contributions for mobilized the House provision that would using DOD funds to make the reservists to part-time rates. prohibit DOD from making the contributions. contributions. Whistleblower Protection None None Section 1089 would amend Title 5 None U.S. Code to expand protections for Federal employees who disclose information on violations of law; waste, mismanagement, or abuse of authority; threats to public health or safety; or certain false statements to Congress. CRS-65 Request House Authorization Senate Authorization Conference Authorization Rank and Responsibilities of the Chief of the National Guard Bureau None Section 594(b)) would direct the Sections 931-933 would elevate the Section 529 directs the Commission Commission on the National Guard grade of the Chief of the National on the National Guard and the and Reserves to study and report to Guard Bureau to general and make Reserves to study, assess, and report Congress on whether the Chief of the the Chief the principal advisor to the on matters proposed in the House and National Guard Bureau should serve Secretary of Defense and the Senate provisions and on the in the grade of general and whether Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff advisability and feasibility of Department of Defense processes are on National Guard matters; require authorizing National Guard officers adequate for determining the the Chief to identify gaps between to serve in both Federal status under equipment and funding necessary for Federal and State capabilities to title 10, U.S. Code, and State status the National Guard to perform its prepare for and respond to under title 32, U.S. Code, to unify responsibilities ­ these proposals are emergencies and make command of units that are composed included in H.R. 5200, the "Defense recommendations to the Secretary of of both active-duty members and Enhancement and National Guard Defense on the provision of military National Guard personnel. Empowerment Act of 2006". assistance to civil authorities; and require that the position of Deputy Commander, U.S. Northern Command, be filled by a National Guard officer eligible for promotion to the grade of lieutenant general. CRS-66 Request House Authorization Senate Authorization Conference Authorization Insurrection Act/Use of Armed Forces in Major Public Emergencies None None Section 1042 amends Chapter 15 of Section 1072 includes all of the Title 10 U.S. Code, known as the Senate revisions of the Insurrection "Insurrection Act," to allow the Act with an amendment to clarify and President to employ the armed expand the President's authority to forces, including the National Guard, call up reserves. not only to suppress an insurrection or domestic violence, as permitted by current law, but also to restore public order and enforce the laws when, as a result of natural disaster, terrorist attacks, or other emergency, State authorities are incapable of maintaining public order. Prayer in the Military None Section 590 provides that any None House recedes, but report language military chaplain shall have the requires the Army and Navy to prerogative to pray according to the rescind recent guidance on prayer dictates of the chaplain's own and return to earlier guidance. conscience, except as must be limited by military necessity. CRS-67 Request House Authorization Senate Authorization Conference Authorization Assignment of members of the Armed Forces to Assist in Border Security and Customs Enforcement None Section 1026 would authorize the Section 1044 would authorize the None Secretary of Defense to assign Governor of a State, with the members of the Armed Forces to approval of the Secretary of Defense, assist the Bureau of Customs and to order any units or personnel of the Border Protection and the United National Guard of such State to States Immigration and Customs annual training duty or other duty to Enforcement with their homeland carry out in any State along the security missions. southern land border of the United States specified activities for the purpose of securing the border. Amendment of the Buy American Act to Permit Use of Foreign-Supplied Specialty Metals None Section 831 would prohibit Section 822 permits foreign-supplied Section 842 permits use of foreign- procurement of a specialty metal or specialty metals in U.S. supplied supplied specialty metals when not item critical to national security military equipment up to specified available domestically or in other unless it is reprocessed, reused, or percentages of the value of the specified circumstances. produced n the United States. equipment. CRS-68 Request House Authorization Senate Authorization Conference Authorization Requirement to Request Funding for Ongoing Operations Iraq and Afghanistan in the Budget Submitted in February of Each Year None None Section 1085 requires that the Section 1008 includes the Senate President's budget for FY2008 and language with a technical beyond, submitted at the beginning of amendment. each year, include a request for funds for ongoing operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, an estimate of all funds required in the fiscal year, and a detailed justification of the request. Permanent Bases in Iraq None None Section 1419 prohibits the obligation Section 1519 provides that no funds or expenditure of funds within this may be obligated or expended to Act to establish a permanent United establish a permanent United States States military installation or base in military installation or base in Iraq. Iraq. Investigation of Contractor Waste Fraud and Abuse in Iraq, Afghanistan, or Global War on Terrorism Operations None None Section 1069 requires a report from In report language, conferees direct the Justice Department within 90 the Attorney General to assess the days investigations of contractor level of resources devoted to waste, fraud, and abuse in Iraq and investigating and prosecuting alleged Afghanistan and in the global war on fraud cases in Iraq and Afghanistan terror. and in the global war on terror. CRS-69 Request House Authorization Senate Authorization Conference Authorization Retirement of an Aircraft Carrier and Reduction to 11 Deployable Carriers Proposes repeal of a statutory None Section 1011eliminates the Section 1011 reduces the minimum requirement to maintain no fewer requirement for the Navy to maintain number of operational aircraft than 12 operational aircraft carriers. no fewer than 12 operational aircraft carriers required by law to 11. carriers. Multi-Year Procurement of F-22 Fighter Aircraft Requests approval of multi-year Section134 authorizes a 3-year Section 146 authorizes a multiyear Section 134 authorizes multiyear procurement of F-22s. multiyear contract for procurement of contract for the procurement of up to procurement but requires the up to 60 F-22A Raptor fighter 60 F-22A fighter aircraft. Secretary of Defense to certify that aircraft. the program meets the requirements for a multiyear contract in Section 2306b of Title 10 U.S. Code. CRS-70 Appendix A: Additional Tables Table A1. Administration Projection of National Defense Funding, FY2007-FY2011 (budget authority in millions of dollars) FY2006 FY2007 FY2008 FY2009 FY2010 FY2011 Military Personnel 115,824 113,147 114,603 117,879 121,166 124,589 Operation and Maintenance 178,346 152,646 159,338 165,260 171,925 174,523 Procurement 86,185 84,197 99,776 108,622 111,708 117,722 Research, Development, Test, 71,046 73,444 74,388 75,128 73,232 70,626 and Evaluation Military Construction 8,936 12,613 12,872 12,592 11,957 10,644 Family Housing 4,439 4,085 3,182 3,108 2,960 2,967 Other 3,374 1,118 31 1,178 949 3,150 Anticipated Additional Funding 70,000 50,000 - - - - for War on Terror /a/ 051 Subtotal, Department of 538,150 491,250 464,190 483,767 493,897 504,221 Defense -- Military 053 Atomic energy defense 18,101 17,017 16,238 16,608 16,388 16,736 activities 054 Defense-related activities 5,564 4,758 4,794 4,878 4,979 5,150 Total, National defense 561,815 513,025 485,222 505,253 515,264 526,107 Sources: Office of Management and Budget, Historical Tables: Budget of the United States Government, FY2007, February 2006; Department of Defense, National Defense Budget Estimates, Fiscal Year 2007, March 2006. Note: a. In the FY2006 column, the Administration included a "placeholder" amount of $70 billion for FY2006 supplemental appropriations that were requested later in February of 2005 and a placeholder of $50 billion for a "bridge fund" in FY2007 to be added to the regular appropriations bill. Subsequently, in May, congress approved $67.7 billion in FY2006 supplemental appropriations and, in September, approved a $70 billion FY2007 "bridge fund." CRS-71 Table A2. Proposed Missile Defense Funding, FY2007-FY2011 (budget authority in millions of dollars) Total FY07- PE Number and Title FY2007 FY2008 FY2009 FY2010 FY2011 11 Missile Defense Agency (MDA) RDT&E 0603175C Ballistic Missile Defense 207 183 214 223 228 1,055 Technology 0603881C Ballistic Missile Defense 1,038 904 682 754 469 3,847 Terminal Defense Segment 0603882C Ballistic Missile Defense 2,877 2,650 2,397 2,148 1,685 11,758 Midcourse Defense Segment 0603883C Ballistic Missile Defense 632 577 456 457 687 2,809 Boost Defense Segment 0603884C Ballistic Missile Defense 515 589 647 326 220 2,298 Sensors 0603886C Ballistic Missile Defense 406 425 895 1,202 1,675 4,603 System Interceptors 0603888C Ballistic Missile Defense 600 595 629 635 656 3,114 Test and Targets (includes MILCON) 0603889C Ballistic Missile Defense 507 506 510 507 513 2,542 Products 0603890C Ballistic Missile Defense 473 501 524 555 573 2,626 System Core 0603891C Special Programs - MDA 375 715 630 725 695 3,140 0603892C Ballistic Missile Defense 1,032 952 980 973 799 4,736 Aegis 0603893C Space Tracking & 391 427 772 958 885 3,433 Surveillance System 0603894C Multiple Kill Vehicle 165 286 357 413 505 1,726 0603895C BMD System Space - 45 151 167 207 570 Program 0901598C/ 0901585C Management 103 93 92 75 75 438 Headquarters / PRMRF 0207998C Base Realignment and - 85 19 3 - 107 Closure (BRAC) Total Missile Defense Agency 9,318 9,536 9,956 10,121 9,873 48,803 R&D RDT&E Army 0604869A PATRIOT/MEADS 330 460 517 592 422 2,320 Combined Aggregate Program 0203801A PATRIOT Product 11 11 11 12 13 58 Improvement Program RDT&E The Joint Staff 0605126J Joint Theater Air and 52 54 55 56 58 275 Missile Defense Organization Total Army, Joint Staff R&D 393 524 583 660 492 2,653 Procurement Army PATRIOT PAC-3 489 473 479 0 0 1,441 PATRIOT/MEADS Combined 0 90 65 430 674 1,259 Aggregate Program CRS-72 Total FY07- PE Number and Title FY2007 FY2008 FY2009 FY2010 FY2011 11 PATRIOT Modifications 70 77 50 54 56 307 Subtotal, Army Procurement 559 639 594 484 731 3,006 Operation and Support PE Air Force Military Personnel 8 8 9 9 9 42 PE Air Force Operations and 12 34 33 34 35 148 Maintenance PE Air Force Other Procurement 1 11 0 18 26 57 PE Army Operations and 68 70 71 73 75 358 Maintenance PE Army Natl Guard Military 24 25 26 26 26 126 Personnel PE Army Natl Guard Operations and 0 0 0 0 0 1 Maintenance PE Navy Operations and 24 24 25 23 24 120 Maintenance Subtotal Operation & Support 138 173 164 183 195 852 Grand Total Missile Defense R&D, 10,409 10,871 11,296 11,448 11,291 55,314 Procurement, O&S Sources: Department of Defense, RDT&E Program Descriptive Summaries, FY2007: Missile Defense Agency, and other budget justification material. Table A3. Authorized and Actual Active Duty End-Strength, FY2004-FY2007 (number of personnel at the end of each fiscal year) Marine Air Total Army Navy Corps Force Active FY2004 Actual 482,400 373,800 175,000 359,300 1,390,500 FY2005 Authorized 502,400 365,900 178,000 359,700 1,406,000 FY2005 Actual 492,728 362,941 180,029 353,696 1,389,394 FY2006 Authorized 512,400 352,700 179,000 357,400 1,401,500 FY2007 Request 482,400 340,700 175,000 334,200 1,332,300 FY2007 House 512,400 340,700 180,000 334,200 1,367,300 FY2007 House vs Request +30,000 0 +5,000 0 +35,000 FY2007 Senate 512,400 340,700 180,000 334,200 1,367,300 FY2007 Senate vs Request +30,000 0 +5,000 0 +35,000 Sources: Office of Management and Budget, Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 2007: Appendix, Feb. 2006, p. 245; H.Rept. 109-452; S.Rept. 109-254. CRS-73 Table A4. House and Senate Action on Selected Weapon Programs: Authorization (amounts in millions of dollars) House Senate Conference Request Authorization Authorization Authorization Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ Comments Army/Marine Corps Armed Recon Helicopter 18 141.4 132.8 18 141.4 132.8 18 141.4 132.8 18 101.8 132.8 Conf cuts $40 mn due to schedule risk. Light Utility Helicopter 39 198.7 -- 39 198.7 -- 39 198.7 -- 39 198.7 -- -- UH-60 Blackhawk Helicopter 38 740.4 127.0 38 870.4 127.0 38 740.4 127.0 38 767.1 127.0 House adds $115 mn for Army Reserve aircraft and $15 mn for engine upgrade. Conf adds $19 mn for Reserve and $7.7 mn for upgrade. AH-64 Apache Helo Mods -- 794.6 123.4 -- 801.6 123.4 -- 794.6 123.4 -- 794.6 123.4 House adds $7 mn in proc for upgrades. CH-47 Helicopter Mods -- 620.0 13.1 -- 621.9 13.1 -- 620.0 13.1 -- 620.9 13.1 -- M-2 Bradley Vehicle Mods -- 359.7 -- -- 506.7 -- 597.7 -- 359.7 -- House adds $147 mn to program. Senate adds $238 mn. M -1 Abrams Tank Mods 23 536.0 12.7 23 482.4 12.7 23 707.0 12.7 23 536.0 12.7 House shifts $182.5 mn to Title XV emergency funds, adds $128.9 mn to program.* Senate adds $170 mn. Stryker Armored Vehicle 100 796.0 5.4 100 796.0 15.4 100 796.0 5.4 100 796.0 5.4 House adds $10 mn in R&D. Future Combat System -- -- 3,745.6 -- -- 3,419.8 -- -- 3,745.6 -- -- 3,491.6 House cuts $325.8 mn in R&D, conf cuts $254 mn. Hi Mob Multi-Purpose Veh. -- 617.4 -- -- 582.6 -- -- 617.4 -- -- 617.4 -- House shifts $34.8 mn to Title XV emergency funds.* Family of Medium Tact. Veh. -- 695.1 1.9 -- 695.1 2.3 -- 695.1 1.9 -- 695.1 1.9 -- Family of Heavy Tactical Veh. -- 353.2 4.0 -- 353.2 4.0 -- 353.2 4.0 -- 353.2 4.0 -- CRS-74 House Senate Conference Request Authorization Authorization Authorization Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ Comments Armored Security Vehicle -- 155.5 -- -- 77.7 -- 155.5 -- 155.5 -- House shifts $77.5 mn to Title XV emergency funds.* Heavy Expanded Tactical Truck -- 220.4 -- -- 110.2 -- 220.4 -- 220.4 -- House shifts $110.2 to Title XV emergency funds.* Warfighter Information -- -- 158.2 -- -- 118.2 100.0 158.2 -- 128.2 House cuts $40 mn in R&D. Senate adds Network-Tactical $100 mn in procurement. Conf cuts $30 mn in R&D. Bridge to Future Networks -- 340.2 -- -- 340.2 -- 240.2 -- 340.2 -- Senate cuts $100 mn. Joint Tactical Radio System -- 1.3 832.3 -- 1.3 828.3 1.3 832.3 1.3 832.3 -- Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle 15 256.2 188.3 15 256.2 188.3 15 256.2 188.3 15 256.2 188.3 -- Navy Shipbuilding CVN-21 Carrier Replacement -- 784.1 309.1 -- 784.1 309.1 834.1 309.1 794.1 309.1 Senate adds $50 mn for long-lead items for 3 Program ships, conf adds $10 mn. Virginia Class Submarine 1 2,452.1 169.6 1 2,852.1 214.6 1 2,452.1 234.6 1 2,852.1 224.2 House adds $400 mn in advance procurement for 2nd ship in FY2009 and $45 mn in R&D. Senate adds $65 mn in R&D for affordable design. Conf adds $400 mn in adv proc, $55 mn in R&D. Carrier Refueling Overhaul -- 1,071.6 -- -- 1,071.6 -- 1,091.6 -- 1,071.6 -- Senate adds $20 mn for defueling facility Missile Submarine Conversion -- 226.2 -- -- 226.2 -- 226.2 -- 226.2 -- -- DD(X)/DDG-1000 Destroyer 2 2,568.1 793.3 1 2,568.1 818.3 2 2,568.1 793.3 2 2,568.1 810.8 House provides requested proc funding, but specifies funds are to fully fund one ship rather than to partially fund 2 ships. Senate and conf permit split funding as requested. DDG-51 Destroyer -- 355.8 -- -- 555.8 -- 355.8 -- 405.8 -- House adds $200 mn for ship modernization, conf adds $50 mn. CRS-75 House Senate Conference Request Authorization Authorization Authorization Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ Comments LCS Littoral Combat Ship 2 520.7 319.7 2 520.7 319.7 2 520.7 319.7 2 520.7 319.7 -- LPD-17 Amphibious Ship -- 297.5 -- 297.5 -- 1 1,582.5 -- -- 297.5 -- Senate adds $1.6 bn for 1 ship, cuts $298 mn for adv. proc. Conf supports request. LHA(R) Amphibious Ship 1 1,135.9 34.5 1 1,135.9 34.5 1 1,310.9 34.5 1 1,135.9 34.5 Senate adds $175 mn adv. proc. Prior Year Shipbuilding -- 577.8 -- 577.8 -- 557.8 -- -- 557.8 -- Senate and conf cut $20 mn. Other Shipbuilding -- 588.7 -- 593.3 -- 558.7 -- -- 591.7 -- -- T-AKE Cargo Ship 1 455.0 -- 1 455.0 -- -- -- 1 455.0 -- Senate eliminates funding. Total Shipbuilding 7 11,033.6 -- 6 11,638.2 -- 7 12,058.6 -- 7 11,476.6 -- -- Aircraft F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, AF 5 1,015.0 1,999.1 5 932.0 2,408.6 -- 60.0 2,199.5 4 875.0 2,170.6 House cuts $83 mn from advance procurement to reduce concurrency. Senate cuts all procurement except $60 mn in adv proc. Conf cuts $140 mn and one aircraft from proc. House adds $408 mn in R&D for alternative engine, Senate adds $204 mn, conf adds $170 mn. F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, Navy -- 245.0 2,031.0 -- 92.0 2,031.0 -- -- 2,231.4 -- 123.0 2,201.0 House cuts $153 mn from adv proc to reduce concurrency. Senate eliminates $245 mn in adv proc to reduce production rate. Conf cuts $122 mn from adv proc to slow program. Senate adds $200 mn in R&D for alternative engine, conf adds $170 mn. F-22 Fighter, AF -- 2,197.4 584.3 20 3,597.4 584.3 20 3,597.4 584.3 20 3,597.4 584.3 House adds $1.4 bn to support full funding of 20 aircraft. Senate adds $1.6 bn for full funding, cuts $200 mn in adv proc. Conf adds $1.4 bn for full funding of 20 aircraft. CRS-76 House Senate Conference Request Authorization Authorization Authorization Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ Comments C-17 Cargo Aircraft, AF 12 2,887.6 173.8 15 3,187.4 173.8 14 2,887.6 173.8 12 2,539.6 173.8 House adds $300 mn for 3 aircraft. Senate adds $400 mn for 2 aircraft, cuts $433 mn for settlement fees, adds $33 mn for adv proc. Conf cuts $348 mn for termination fees. C-130J Cargo Aircraft, AF 9 787.3 288.8 9 787.3 288.8 9 787.3 288.8 9 787.3 288.8 -- KC-130J Aircraft, Navy 4 298.9 -- 4 298.9 -- 4 298.9 -- 4 298.9 -- -- C-130 Aircraft Mods, AF -- 256.7 -- -- 276.0 -- -- 256.7 -- -- 264.0 -- -- C-5 Cargo Aircraft Mods, AF -- 223.1 150.2 -- 289.8 150.2 -- 223.1 150.2 -- 223.1 150.2 House adds $44.5 mn for upgrades and $22.2 mn for adv proc. Global Hawk UAV, AF 6 493.2 247.7 6 493.2 247.7 6 493.2 247.7 5 443.2 247.7 Conf cuts $50 mn, but adds funds in Title XV. Predator UAV, AF 26 229.1 61.5 26 114.5 61.5 26 229.1 61.5 26 152.4 61.5 House shifts $114.6 mn to Title XV emergency funding.* Conf cuts $77 mn for SOF capability. EA-18G Aircraft, Navy 12 905.2 372.4 12 905.2 372.4 12 905.2 372.4 12 905.2 372.4 -- F/A-18E/F Fighter, Navy 30 2,341.2 31.1 30 2,341.2 48.2 30 2,341.2 31.1 30 2,341.2 38.7 -- V-22 Tilt Rotor Aircraft, Navy 14 1,584.5 268.5 14 1,584.5 268.5 14 1,584.5 268.5 14 1,584.5 268.5 -- CV-22 Tilt Rotor Aircraft, AF 2 243.0 26.6 2 243.0 26.6 2 243.0 26.6 2 243.0 26.6 -- MH-60S Helicopter, Navy 18 548.6 83.7 18 548.6 83.7 26 660.6 83.7 18 548.6 83.7 Senate adds $112 mn for 8 aircraft. MH-60R Helicopter, Navy 25 915.7 19.3 25 915.7 19.3 26 943.7 19.3 25 915.7 19.3 Senate adds $28 mn for 1 aircraft. E-2C Hawkeye Aircraft, Navy 2 203.6 1.5 2 203.6 1.5 2 203.6 1.5 2 203.6 1.5 -- T-45 Goshawk Trainer, Navy 12 411.3 -- 12 411.3 -- 10 347.3 -- 12 411.3 -- Senate cuts $32 mn for 2 aircraft. JPATS Trainer Aircraft, AF 48 305.1 2.2 48 305.1 2.2 48 305.1 2.2 48 305.1 2.2 -- JPATS Trainer Aircraft, Navy 21 146.1 -- 25 175.0 -- 21 146.1 -- 21 146.1 -- House adds $28.9 mn for 4 aircraft. Missiles/Space Trident II Missile Mods, Navy -- 957.6 124.5 -- 919.6 127.0 -- 957.6 124.5 -- 919.6 124.5 House and conf cut $38 mn from proc for conversion to conventional warhead. CRS-77 House Senate Conference Request Authorization Authorization Authorization Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ Comments Tactical Tomahawk, Navy 350 354.6 18.6 350 354.6 18.6 350 354.6 18.6 350 354.6 18.6 -- Mobile User Objective System, -- -- 655.3 -- -- 655.3 -- -- 655.3 -- -- 655.3 -- Navy Jt Air-to-Surface Standoff Msl., 234 187.2 40.9 234 187.2 40.9 234 187.2 40.9 234 187.2 40.9 -- AF Minuteman III Mods, AF -- 691.7 45.5 -- 691.7 45.5 -- 711.7 45.5 -- 702.7 45.5 Senate adds $20 mn, conf adds $11 mn for propulsion replacement. Advanced EHF Satellite, AF -- -- 633.3 -- -- 633.3 -- -- 633.3 -- -- 633.3 -- Wideband Gapfiller Satellite, 1 414.4 37.7 1 414.4 37.7 1 414.4 46.2 1 414.4 37.7 Senate adds $8.5 mn in R&D for command AF and control. Evolved Expendable Launch 4 936.5 18.5 4 936.5 18.5 4 931.5 18.5 4 936.5 18.5 -- Vehicle, AF Space-Based Infrared System- -- -- 668.9 -- -- 668.9 -- -- 668.9 -- -- 668.9 -- High, AF Transformational -- -- 867.1 -- -- 787.1 -- -- 797.1 -- -- 867.1 House cuts $80 mn and Senate cuts $70 mn Communications Satellite, AF due to excessive risk. Space Radar, AF -- -- 266.4 -- -- 236.4 -- -- 200.0 -- -- 266.4 House cuts $30 mn and Senate cuts $66 mn due to excessive risk. National Guard and Reserve NG & Reserve Equipment -- -- -- 318.0 -- -- -- -- -- 318.0 -- House and conf add $318 mn. Sources: DOD; H.Rept. 109-452; S.Rept. 109-254. *Note: Title XV of the House bill, Title XIV of the Senate bill, and Title XV of the conference agreement authorize emergency funding for overseas operations. CRS-78 Table A5. House and Senate Action on Selected Weapon Programs: Appropriations (amounts in millions of dollars) House Senate Conference Request Appropriations Appropriations Appropriations Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ Comments Army/Marine Corps Armed Recon Helicopter 18 141.4 132.8 -- 70.7 112.8 12 101.8 132.8 12 101.8 132.8 House cuts $70.7 in proc for schedule risk, cuts $20 mn in R&D. Senate anc conf. cut $39.6 mn in proc. Light Utility Helicopter 39 198.7 -- 39 198.7 -- 16 91.2 -- -- 167.2 -- Senate cuts $108 mn for 23 aircraft. Conf. cuts $32 mn due to delays. UH-60 Blackhawk Helicopter 38 740.4 127.0 39 767.1 127.0 38 740.4 127.0 38 763.7 127.0 House adds $19 mn for 1 Medevac version for reserve. Conf. adds $23 mn for mods. AH-64 Apache Helo Mods -- 794.6 123.4 -- 794.6 123.4 -- 794.6 123.4 -- 797.0 123.4 -- CH-47 Helicopter Mods -- 620.0 13.1 -- 620.0 17.1 620.0 28.1 -- 621.0 29.3 -- M-2 Bradley Vehicle Mods -- 359.7 -- 359.7 4.0 -- 281.7 -- -- 281.6 Senate and conf. cut $78 mn, adds funds in Title IX. M -1 Abrams Tank Mods 23 536.0 12.7 -- 358.5 12.7 23 537.0 12.7 -- 359.5 14.5 House and conf shift $177 mn to Title IX. Stryker Armored Vehicle 100 796.0 5.4 100 800.0 9.4 100 796.0 5.4 -- 798.6 7.2 -- Future Combat System -- -- 3,745.6 -- -- 3,419.8 -- -- 3,502.8 -- -- 3,426.4 House cuts $326 mn citing better cost controls. Senate cuts $254 mn. Conf cuts $326 mn. Hi Mob Multi-Purpose Veh. -- 617.4 -- -- 582.6 -- -- 623.3 -- -- 586.5 -- House shifts $35 mn to Title IX. Senate adds $6 mn. Conf. shifts $35 mn, adds $4 mn. CRS-79 House Senate Conference Request Appropriations Appropriations Appropriations Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ Comments Family of Medium Tact. Veh. -- 695.1 1.9 -- 695.1 5.9 -- 692.1 13.9 -- 692.1 9.7 -- Family of Heavy Tactical Veh. -- 353.2 4.0 -- 353.2 8.7 353.2 17.4 -- 353.2 13.5 -- Armored Security Vehicle -- 155.5 -- -- 77.7 -- -- 155.5 -- -- 77.7 -- House and conf. shift $78 mn to Title IX. Heavy Expanded Tactical Truck -- 220.4 -- -- 110.2 -- -- 220.4 -- -- 111.2 -- House and conf. shift $110 mn to Title IX. Warfighter Information -- -- 158.2 -- -- 118.2 -- -- 128.2 -- -- 123.2 House cuts $40 mn, Senate cuts $30 Network-Tactical mn. Conf cuts $35 mn. Bridge to Future Networks -- 340.2 -- -- 347.4 -- -- 340.2 -- 346.0 -- -- Joint Tactical Radio System -- 1.3 832.3 -- 1.3 797.3 -- -- 832.3 -- -- 797.3 House cuts $35 mn in R&D. Senate and conf. cut proc. Conf cuts $35 mn in R&D and transfers remainder from Army to Navy. Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle 15 256.2 188.3 15 192.2 194.9 15 256.2 188.3 -- -- 349.2 House cuts $64 mn in proc for schedule slip. Conf cuts $101 mn in proc and shifts remaining $155 mn to R&D. Navy Shipbuilding CVN-21 Carrier Replacement -- 784.1 309.1 -- 784.1 313.6 -- 784.1 309.1 -- 791.9 309.1 -- Program Virginia Class Submarine 1 2,452.1 169.6 1 2,452.1 190.0 1 2,452.1 216.8 1 2,452.1 202.1 House adds $20 mn, Senate adds $47 mn in R&D. Carrier Refueling Overhaul -- 1,071.6 -- -- 1,071.6 -- -- 1,071.6 -- -- 1,071.6 -- -- Missile Submarine Conversion -- 226.2 -- -- 226.2 -- -- 204.1 -- -- 204.1 -- Senate and conf cut $22 mn in adv proc due to delays. DD(X) Destroyer 2 2,568.1 793.3 1 2,568.1 807.3 2 2,568.1 794.3 1 2,568.1 826.2 House provides same amount for proc CRS-80 House Senate Conference Request Appropriations Appropriations Appropriations Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ Comments but to fully fund one ship rather than partially fund two, Senate and conf permit split funding. DDG-51 Destroyer -- 355.8 -- -- 405.8 -- -- 355.8 -- -- 385.8 -- House adds $50 mn for modernization program, conf adds $30 mn. LCS Littoral Combat Ship 2 520.7 319.7 2 520.7 332.3 1 300.7 321.5 2 520.7 330.7 Senate cuts $220 mn for one ship citing inaccurate Navy cost figures. LPD-17 Amphibious Ship -- 297.5 -- -- 297.5 -- -- 297.5 -- -- 297.5 -- -- LHA(R) Amphibious Ship 1 1,135.9 34.5 1 1,135.9 34.5 1 1,135.9 34.5 1 1,135.9 34.5 -- Prior Year Shipbuilding -- 577.8 -- -- 436.4 -- -- 557.8 -- -- 512.8 -- House cuts $141 mn, Senate cuts $20 mn, conf cuts $65 mn for delays. T-AGS Oceanographic Ship -- -- -- -- 1 117.0 -- 1 117.0 -- Senate adds $117 mn for 1 ship. Other Shipbuilding -- 588.7 -- -- 593.2 -- -- 548.7 -- -- 521.6 -- -- T-AKE Cargo Ship 1 455.0 -- 1 455.0 -- -- -- 1 455.0 -- Senate eliminates funding. Total Shipbuilding 7 11,033.6 -- 6 10,946.7 -- 6 10,393.5 -- 711,034.1 -- -- Aircraft F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, AF 5 1,015.0 1,999.1 4 803.0 2,200.6 -- -- 2,137.4 -- 574.0 2,138.4 House cuts $140 mn for 1 aircraft, cuts $72 mn in adv proc, adds $200 mn in R&D for alternate engine. Senate eliminates proc funds and, in R&D, adds $170 mn for 2nd engine, cuts $32 mn for excess accumulation of withheld awards fees. In proc., conf. cuts $390 mn for 2 aircraft, leaving $480 mn for 3, and cuts $51 mn in adv proc, leaving $94 mn for 6 CRS-81 House Senate Conference Request Appropriations Appropriations Appropriations Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ Comments aircraft in FY2008. In R&D, conf adds $170 mn for 2nd engine, cuts $32 mn for excessive accumulation of award fees. F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, Navy -- 245.0 2,031.0 -- 123.0 2,033.7 -- -- 2,172.3 -- 125.0 2,172.1 Request is $245 mn in adv proc for 4 aircraft in FY2008. House cuts $122 mn in for 2 aircraft. Senate eliminates adv proc funds. Conf cuts $120 mn in adv proc, leaving $125 mn for 2 aircraft in FY2008. In R&D, Senate adds $170 mn in R&D for 2nd engine, cuts $32 mn for excess awards fee. F-22 Fighter, AF -- 2,197.4 584.3 20 3,597.4 584.3 20 3,547.8 584.3 20 3,397.8 584.3 House, Senate and conf. add $1.4 bn for full funding for 20 aircraft. Senate cut $67 mn in adv proc for price reduction. Conf adds $210 mn for multi-year procurement economic order quantity. C-17 Cargo Aircraft, AF 12 2,887.6 173.8 12 2,497.6 173.8 12 2,558.1 173.8 -- 2,516.1 173.8 House cuts $390 mn requested for shutdown. Senate shifts $329 mn for shutdown to Title IX to buy aircraft. Conf. cuts $390 mn for shutdown, and adds $2.1 billion for 10 aircraft in Title IX -- not shown here. C-130J Cargo Aircraft, AF 9 787.3 288.8 9 787.3 258.3 9 787.3 290.8 9 787.3 273.7 House cuts $39 mn, Senate cuts $100 mn, conf cuts $54 mn for mods. KC-130J Aircraft, Navy 4 298.9 4 298.9 2 172.3 2 172.3 Senate and conf cut $127 mn for 2 aircraft. CRS-82 House Senate Conference Request Appropriations Appropriations Appropriations Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ Comments C-130 Aircraft Mods, AF -- 256.7 -- -- 217.7 -- 195.8 -- -- 256.7 Senate cuts $60.9 mn. C-5 Cargo Aircraft Mods, AF -- 223.1 150.2 -- 223.1 152.2 -- 235.1 150.2 -- 228.5 151.2 Senate adds $12 mn for mods, conf adds $5 mn. Global Hawk UAV, AF 6 493.2 247.7 4 387.2 248.7 6 443.2 247.7 6 449.9 248.7 House cuts $88 mn for 2 aircraft and $18 mn in adv proc. Senate cuts $50 mn, conf cuts $43 mn. Predator UAV, AF 26 229.1 61.5 -- 37.9 64.0 26 152.4 67.5 -- 37.9 68.2 House shifts $115 mn to Title IX, cuts $77 mn due to SOF increase. Senate cuts $77 mn. Conf cuts $191 mn from regular budget and adds $197 mn in Title IX , shown in Table xx below. EA-18G Aircraft, Navy 12 905.2 372.4 -- 126.2 375.4 8 647.8 372.4 8 647.8 373.7 House cuts $779 to defer production. Senate and conf cut $257 mn for 4 aircraft, add 4 to F/A-18E/F. F/A-18E/F Fighter, Navy 30 2,341.2 31.1 42 2,999.3 38.7 34 2,560.2 41.6 34 2,560.2 39.4 House adds $658 mn for 12 additional aircraft. Senate and conf add $219 mn for 4 aircraft. V-22 Tilt Rotor Aircraft, Navy 14 1,584.5 268.5 14 1,584.5 268.5 14 1,574.5 268.5 14 1,574.5 268.5 -- CV-22 Tilt Rotor Aircraft, AF 2 243.0 26.6 2 243.0 26.6 2 243.0 26.6 2 243.0 26.6 -- MH-60S Helicopter, Navy 18 548.6 83.7 18 548.6 83.7 18 548.6 83.7 18 548.6 83.7 -- MH-60R Helicopter, Navy 25 915.7 19.3 25 921.1 19.3 25 915.7 19.3 25 920.0 19.3 -- E-2C Hawkeye Aircraft, Navy 2 203.6 1.5 2 203.6 6.2 2 203.6 7.5 2 203.6 9.8 -- T-45 Goshawk Trainer, Navy 12 411.3 -- 12 411.3 -- 10 347.3 -- 12 412.3 -- Senate cuts $64 mn for 2 aircraft. JPATS Trainer Aircraft, AF 48 305.1 2.2 48 305.1 2.2 48 305.1 2.2 48 305.1 2.2 -- JPATS Trainer Aircraft, Navy 21 146.1 -- 21 146.1 -- 21 146.1 -- 21 146.1 -- -- CRS-83 House Senate Conference Request Appropriations Appropriations Appropriations Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ Comments Missiles/Space Trident II Missile Mods, Navy -- 957.6 124.5 -- 919.6 129.5 -- 919.6 124.5 -- 919.6 127.2 House, Senate, and conf cut $38 mn in procurement for convention warhead conversion. [Note: Conventional Warhead -- 38.0 89.0 -- -- 30.0 -- -- -- -- -- 25.0 House and Senate reject conventional for Trident II Missiles] warhead for Trident. House and conf provide R&D funding for alternative global strike systems. Tactical Tomahawk, Navy 350 354.6 18.6 350 354.6 25.6 350 354.6 18.6 350 354.6 24.2 -- Mobile User Objective System, -- -- 655.3 -- -- 655.3 -- -- 655.3 -- -- 655.3 -- Navy Jt Air-to-Surface Standoff Msl., 234 187.2 40.9 234 187.2 40.9 234 147.2 40.9 -- 167.2 40.9 Senate cuts $40 mn in proc, conf cuts AF $20 mn. Minuteman III Mods, AF -- 691.7 45.5 -- 625.3 65.0 -- 691.7 45.5 -- 651.3 61.1 House cuts $66 mn for propulsion replacement program, adds $15 mn in R&D for conventional warhead study. Senate adds $11 mn for propulsion replacement mod program. Conf cuts $46 mn for replacement program, adds $11 mn for replacement mod program. Advanced EHF Satellite, AF -- -- 633.3 633.3 -- -- 633.3 -- -- 633.3 -- Wideband Gapfiller Satellite, AF 1 414.4 37.7 1 414.4 37.7 1 414.4 37.7 -- 414.4 37.7 -- Evolved Expendable Launch 4 936.5 18.5 4 692.3 20.5 4 936.5 18.5 -- 856.5 19.8 House cuts $244 mn due to launch Vehicle, AF delays. Conf cuts $80 mn. Space-Based Infrared System- -- -- 668.9 -- -- 668.9 -- -- 668.9 -- -- 668.9 -- CRS-84 House Senate Conference Request Appropriations Appropriations Appropriations Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D Procurement R&D # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ # $ $ Comments High, AF Transformational -- -- 867.1 -- -- 767.1 -- -- 637.1 -- -- 737.1 House cuts $100 mn for delays. Communications Satellite, AF Senate cuts $230 mn. Conf cuts $130 mn. Space Radar, AF -- -- 266.4 -- -- 200.0 -- -- 166.4 -- -- 186.4 House cuts $66 mn to moderate pace of program. Senate cuts $100 mn. Conf cuts $80 mn. National Guard and Reserve Equipment National Guard and Reserve -- -- -- -- 500.0 -- -- 340.0 -- -- 290.0 -- House adds $500 mn, Senate adds Equipment $340 mn, conf adds $290 mn. Sources: DOD; House Appropriations Committee, Senate Appropriations Committee. *Note: Title IX of House, Senate, and conference bills appropriate funding for overseas operations. CRS-85 Table A6. Emergency Funding, Authorization and Appropriations (millions of dollars) Authorization Appropriations House Senate Conf. House Senate Conf. Military Personnel 9,362.8 7,335.9 8,107.0 5,992.1 5,760.8 5,386.5 Army 6,869.9 5,467.0 6,464.8 4,346.7 5,054.5 4,346.7 Army Reserve 150.0 -- -- -- 90.9 87.7 Army National Guard 100.0 -- 251.0 251.0 214.1 296.0 Navy 333.0 321.0 193.0 229.1 114.5 143.3 Navy Reserve -- -- -- 10.0 -- -- Marine Corps 749.4 466.1 568.0 495.5 142.3 145.6 Marine Reserve -- -- -- -- 15.4 15.4 Air Force 1,071.8 1,081.8 592.5 659.8 129.0 351.8 Air National Guard 36.7 -- 6.7 -- -- -- Benefits 52.0 -- 31.0 -- -- -- Operation and Maintenance 31,983.3 32,246.2 38,102.5 33,409.4 34,526.4 39,090.0 Army 22,397.0 22,124.5 28,045.4 24,280.0 24,037.2 28,364.1 Army Reserve -- -- 0.5 -- 211.6 211.6 Army National Guard 50.0 59.0 221.5 221.5 204.0 424.0 Navy 1,834.6 2,349.6 2,007.9 1,954.1 1,284.2 1,615.3 Navy Reserve -- -- -- -- 8.0 9.9 Marine Corps 1,485.9 1,544.9 2,257.1 1,781.5 1,809.5 2,689.0 Marine Corps Reserve -- -- -- -- -- 48.0 Air Force 2,823.0 2,779.9 2,478.9 2,987.1 1,940.6 2,688.2 Air Force Reserve -- -- -- -- 65.0 65.0 Air National Guard 15.4 -- 2.0 -- 200.0 200.0 Defense-Wide 3,377.4 3,388.4 1,544.6 2,186.7 2,383.2 2,775.0 Total Procurement 5,166.3 2,126.7 16,605.8 5,598.5 7,255.1 19,825.8 Army Procurement 3,773.8 1,755.1 9,235.7 3,562.1 3,421.8 10,096.3 Aircraft 232.4 404.1 1,524.3 132.4 556.0 1,461.3 Missiles -- 450.0 3.2 -- -- -- Weapons & Tracked Combat Vehicles 1,029.7 214.4 3,022.8 1,214.7 1,048.3 3,393.2 Ammunition 328.3 -- 48.6 275.2 -- 237.8 Other 2,183.4 686.6 4,636.8 1,939.8 1,817.5 5,004.0 Navy/Marine Corps Procurement 955.4 319.8 5,062.8 959.8 1,811.2 5,942.5 Aircraft -- -- 389.5 34.9 153.7 486.9 Weapons 131.4 -- 109.4 131.4 -- 109.4 Ammunition 143.2 -- 151.4 143.2 99.9 127.9 Other 44.7 -- 14.6 28.9 276.5 320.0 Marine Corps 636.1 319.8 4,397.9 621.5 1,281.1 4,898.3 Air Force Procurement 296.9 51.8 2,179.7 955.0 1,965.8 3,641.6 Aircraft 201.6 -- 2,174.0 912.4 720.1 2,291.3 Missiles 32.7 -- -- 32.7 25.4 32.7 Other 62.7 51.8 5.7 9.9 1,220.3 1,317.6 Defense-Wide Procurement 140.2 -- 127.6 121.6 56.3 145.6 Total 140.2 -- 127.6 121.6 56.3 145.6 Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation 37.5 -- 10.5 -- 298.2 407.7 Army 25.5 -- 2.6 -- -- -- Navy -- -- 7.9 -- 110.0 231.1 Air Force 7.0 -- -- -- 33.1 37.0 Defense-Wide 5.0 -- -- -- 155.1 139.6 CRS-86 Authorization Appropriations House Senate Conf. House Senate Conf. Other Programs 3,450.2 8,291.2 8,718.8 5,000.0 392.7 5,290.0 Drug Interdiction and Counterdrug Activities --- --- --- --- --- 100.0 Related Agencies -- -- 19.3 -- 19.3 19.3 Revolving Funds, Fuel Prices -- -- -- 1,000.0 373.5 -- Defense Health Program 950.2 960.2 869.2 -- -- -- Classified Programs 2,500.0 3,000.0 2,500.0 -- -- -- Joint IED Defeat Fund* -- 2,100.0 2,100.0 -- -- 1,920.7 Iraqi Freedom Fund* -- 2,231.0 50.0 4,000.0 -- 50.0 Afghanistan Security Forces Fund -- -- 1,446.3 -- -- 1,500.0 Iraq Security Forces Fund -- -- 1,734.0 -- -- 1,700.0 Grand Total 50,000.0 50,000.0 71,544.6 50,000.0 48,233.2 70,000.0 Sources: House and Senate committee reports and conference reports. CRS-87 Table A7. Appropriation of Emergency Funds for Procurement: Line Item Detail (thousands of dollars) Aircraft Procurement, Army: 1,461,300 CH-47 Replacement/Mods/Battle Losses (17 aircraft) 511,500 AH-64 Replacement (18 aircraft) 621,000 UH-60 Blackhawk -- Battle Losses (15 aircraft) 225,000 UH-60 Blackhawk -- Army National Guard (5 aircraft) 95,100 Aviation Ground Support Equipment 2,200 Air Traffic Control 6,500 Procurement of Weapons and Tracked Combat Vehicles, Army: 3,393,230 Bradley Base Sustainment 1,402,500 Abrams Integrated Management Program, incl. TUSK and IED prot. 574,700 Abrams SEP M1A2, incl. Combat losses 700,000 Stryker--Combat Losses 82,130 Stryker Slat Armor 25,000 Carrier Mods 132,200 FIST Vehicle Mods 130,000 Improved Recovery Vehicle 272,400 MK-19 Grenade Machine Gun (40mm) 10,050 M240 medium machine gun (7.62mm) 21,600 M4 carbine mods 15,450 M249 SAW machine gun (5.56mm) 22,200 M2 50 caliber machine gun mods 5,000 Procurement of Ammunition, Army: 237,750 CTG, 5.56MM, All Types 107,300 CTG, 7.62MM, All Types 56,800 CTG, .50 CAL, All Types 62,550 CTG, 20MM Phalanx 11,100 Other Procurement, Army: 5,003,995 Tactical Trailer/Dolly Sets 56,800 Semitrailer FB/BB/Cont Trans 22 ½ T 87,000 Semitrailer, Tankers 53,600 Up-Armor HMMWVs: M1114, M1151, M1152 1,074,900 Up-Armor HMMWV Fragmentation Kits and Gunner Protection Kits 214,000 Family of Medium Tactical Vehicles 794,700 Truck, Firefighting, Tactical 6,000 HMMWV Recap 455,000 HEMTT ESP 131,200 Family of Heavy Tactical Vehicles 647,600 Family of Heavy Tactical Vehicles Trailers 12,500 Armored Security Vehicles 83,000 Truck, Tractor, Line Haul 138,200 Items less than $5 million (tactical vehicles) 8,000 Towing Device -- Fifth Wheel 174 SINCGARS Family 124,500 Radio Improved, HF Family 48,200 Combat Survivor Radios 8,270 Information System Security Program 1,100 Force XXI Battle Command BDE and Below (FBCB2) 80,000 CRS-88 Mortar Fire Control System 6,300 NAVSTAR Global Positioning System (Space) 12,700 Prophet Ground 48,250 Knight Family 50,000 TC AIMS II 124 Night Vision Devices 160,500 Fire Finder Radar 9,600 CBRN Soldier Protection 50,300 Tactical Unmanned Aerial System (TUAS) (MIP) 50,150 Ground Standoff Mine Detection System 26,400 GSTAMIDS Route Clearance Team Equipment 66,100 Laundries, Showers, and Latrines 12,300 Field Feeding Equipment 1,800 Items less than $5 million (engineering support) 800 Distribution Systems, Petroleum and Water 42,600 Water Purification System 800 Combat Support Medical 21,900 Shop Equipment Contact Maintenance Truck (MYP) 32,100 Welding Shop, Trailer MTD 2,100 Items less than $5 million (maintenance equipment) 25,700 Grader, MTZD, HVY 10,000 Loader, Scoop Type 5,000 Hydraulic Excavator 2,600 Cranes 4,200 High Mobility Engineer Excavator (HMEE) 1,400 Construction Equipment ESP 17,500 Generators and Associated Equipment 21,600 Rough Terrain Container Handler 64,500 All Terrain Lifting Arm System 33,200 Integrated Family of Test Equipment 4,700 Physical Security Systems 1,000 Mod of In-Service Equipment (OPA 3) 4,600 Fire Support C2 Family 7,000 Tactical Bridge, Float Ribbon 70,900 Classified Programs 64,527 Single Army Logistics Enterprise (PBUSE) 36,000 HMMWV and Tactical Truck Crew/Convoy Training Simulator 10,000 Aircraft Procurement, Navy: 486,881 War Consumables 34,916 P-3 Series Modifications 62,500 AV-8B Attrition Recovery 15,507 AV-8B Oil Tester/JETSCAN 1,400 AV-8B Litening on Station 4 4,200 TAV-8B 30KVA Generator 3,470 TAV-8B Depot Maintenance 10,700 CH-46E Aircraft Sustainment 11,850 CH-46E Engine Electrical Overspeed Protection 3,866 CH-46E M240D Machine Gun 750 CH-53E AMARC 5,620 CH-53E IMDS 8,900 CH-53 EAPS Seals 2,100 CH-53 T-64 Engine Reliability Improvement 5,100 CH-53D rate gyro 1,150 H-1 Y/Z Procurement 68,600 CRS-89 H-46 Crash Attenuating CC & AO Seats 2,752 KC-130-J procurement 71,800 Misc Aviation Sustainment Support Packages 35,800 MV-22 Aircraft Procurement 71,000 MV-22 Pre Block A to Block B Mods 54,600 MV-22 Spares 10,300 Weapons Procurement, Navy: 109,400 Hellfire II -- Marine Corps 100,000 Pioneer UAV Sustainment 9,400 Procurement of Ammunition, Navy and Marine Corps: 127,880 5.56mm, All Types 16,437 7.62MM, All Types 10,675 .50 Caliber 4,947 Grenades, All Types 13,145 Artillery, All Types 11,956 Linear Charges, All Types 4,216 40mm, All Types 9,227 60mm, All Types 9,876 81mm, All Types 17,474 120mm, All Types 11,034 Ctg 25mm, All Types 1,322 9mm, All Types 471 Rockets, All Types 7,062 Demolition Munitions, All Types 7,668 Fuzes, All Types 1,136 Non Lethals 1,137 Item Less Than $5 Million 97 Other Procurement, Navy: 319,965 Physical Security Equipment 28,865 Classified Programs 21,500 Construction & Maintenance Equipment 48,584 Items under $5 million 19,203 Material Handling Equipment 1,000 Tactical Vehicles 186,213 Littoral Battlespace Sensing 500 Al Asad Facility Transfer 14,100 Procurement, Marine Corps: 4,898,269 AAV7A1 PIP 39,448 Air Operations C2 Systems 35,279 Amphibious Support Equipment 28,257 Bridge Boat 22,717 Bulk Liquid Equipment 20,174 Comm Switching and Control Systems 218,671 Comm & Electrical Infrastructure Support 53,580 Command Post Systems 102,357 Common Computer Resources 40,162 Container Family 7,741 Environmental Control Equipment 30,998 EOD Systems 652,067 Expeditionary Air Defense System 2,924 Family of Construction Equipment 98,914 CRS-90 Family of Field Feeding Systems 2,598 Family of Internally Transportable Vehicles (ITV) 10,845 Family of Tactical Trailers 92,807 Field Medical Equipment 6,902 Fire Support System 43,265 HIMARS 215,350 Intelligence Support Equipment 81,720 Items Less Than $5M (BLI 523000) 775 Items Less Than $5M (BLI 667000) 26,891 Items Less Than $5M (BLI 462000) 14,183 Javelin 46,500 LAV PIP 73,300 Logistics Vehicle Replacement 48 M1A1 Firepower Enhancements 1,154 Material Handling Equipment 68,818 Medium Tactical Vehicle Replacement 15,226 Mod Kits (BLI 206100) 78,266 Mod Kits (BLI 312300) 159,434 Mod Kits (BLI 465200) 43,185 Mod Kits (BLI 665400) 7 Modular Weapon System 51,590 Motor Transport Modifications 163,600 Night Vision Equipment 210,501 Power Equipment Assorted 12,569 Radar Systems 21,093 Radio Systems 854,719 Repair and Test Equipment 96,609 Tactical Fuel Systems 37,455 Training Devices 165,653 Unit Operations Center 267,200 Up Armored HMMWV: M1114, M1151, M1152 557,521 Weapons Enhancement Program 2,703 Weapons and Combat Vehicles under $5 million 122,493 Aircraft Procurement, Air Force: 2,291,300 C-17 Procurement (10 Aircraft) 2,094,000 Predator UAV 131,900 Predator UAVs for SOCOM 65,400 Missile Procurement, Air Force: 32,650 Predator Hellfire Missiles 32,650 Other Procurement, Air Force: 1,317,607 HMMWV, Up-Armored 5,650 HMMWV Armored 4,200 Classified Programs 1,307,757 Procurement, Defense-Wide: 145,555 MH-47 Service life extension program 4,100 Time delay firing device/Sympathetic detonation 6,000 Persistent Predator Operations and Intelligence (PPOI) 13,400 Payload Integration -- Predator 6,000 Specialized Ballistic Protection 2,200 Counter-Ambush Weapons System 6,300 MH-47 Radio Frequency countermeasures 8,000 CRS-91 M134 DT Miny-Gun Replacement 12,400 Miniature Milti-Band Beacons 8,900 Small Arms-Laser Acquisition Marker 5,300 SU-232 / PAS Thermal Clip On Night Vision Device 6,100 Classified Programs 66,855 Total Procurement 19,825,782 Sources: H.Rept. 109-452; S.Rept. 109-254. CRS-92 For Additional Reading CRS Report RL33110, The Cost of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Other Global War on Terror Operations Since 9/11, by Amy Belasco. CRS Report RL33298, FY2006 Supplemental Appropriations: Iraq and Other International Activities; Additional Katrina Hurricane Relief, coordinated by Paul M. Irwin and Larry Nowels. CRS Report RS22455, Military Operations: Precedents for Funding Contingency Operations in Regular or in Supplemental Appropriations Bills, by Stephen Daggett. CRS Report 98-756C, Defense Authorization and Appropriations Bills: FY1970-FY2006, by Thomas Coipuram Jr. FY2007 Defense Budget Issues for Congress: Slides from a CRS Seminar, February 10, 2006, by Stephen Daggett, Ronald O'Rourke, and Charles A. Henning. Available on line at [http://www.crs.gov/products/browse/documents/WD00005.pdf]. CRS Report RS20851, Naval Transformation: Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke. CRS Report RL32665, Navy Force Structure and Shipbuilding Plans: Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke. CRS Report RL32513, Navy-Marine Corps Amphibious and Maritime Prepositioning Ship Programs: Background and Oversight Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke. CRS Report RL32418, Navy Attack Submarine Force-Level Goal and Procurement Rate: Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke. CRS Report RL33161, The Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS) and the Army's Future Combat System (FCS): Issues for Congress, by Andrew Feickert. CRS Report RL32888, The Army's Future Combat System (FCS): Background and Issues for Congress, by Andrew Feickert. CRS Report RL32476, U.S. Army's Modular Redesign: Issues for Congress, by Andrew Feickert. CRS Report RL33390, Proposed Termination of Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) F136 Alternate Engine by Christopher Bolkcom. CRS Report RL33543, Tactical Aircraft Modernization: Issues for Congress, by Christopher Bolkcom. CRS-93 CRS Report RS20859, Air Force Transformation, by Christopher Bolkcom. CRS Report RL30563, F-35 Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) Program: Background, Status, and Issues, by Christopher Bolkcom. CRS Report RL30685, Military Airlift: C-17 Aircraft Program, by Christopher Bolkcom. CRS Report RL33067, Conventional Warheads For Long-Range Ballistic Missiles: Background and Issues for Congress, by Amy F. Woolf. CRS Report RS21754, Military Forces: What is the Appropriate Size for the United States?, by Edward F. Bruner. CRS Report RS22402, Increases in Tricare Fees: Background and Options for Congress, by Richard A. Best Jr. CRS Report RL33446, Military Pay and Benefits: Key Questions and Answers, by Charles A. Henning. CRS Report RL33432, U.S. Disposal of Chemical Weapons in the Ocean: Background and Issues for Congress, by David Bearden. CRS Report RS21988, Radioactive Tank Waste from the Past Production of Nuclear Weapons: Background and Issues for Congress, by David Bearden. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ For other versions of this document, see http://wikileaks.org/wiki/CRS-RL33405