Statement of Vice Admiral Joseph Sestak at Hearings on FY 2006 Defense Authorization Budget Request for Space Activities
STATEMENT OF
VICE ADMIRAL JOSEPH A. SESTAK, JR.
DEPUTY CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS
WARFARE REQUIREMENTS AND PROGRAMS (N6/N7)
BEFORE THE
STRATEGIC FORCES SUBCOMMITTEE
OF THE
SENATE ARMED SERVICES COMMITTEE
ON
FISCAL YEAR 2006 DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION BUDGET REQUEST
FOR SPACE ACTIVITIES
MARCH 16, 2005
FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
NOT FOR PUBLICATION UNTIL RELEASED BY THE
SENATE ARMED SERVICES COMMITTEE
STRATEGIC FORCES SUBCOMMITTEE
Mr. Chairman, distinguished members of the Committee, I am honored to appear before you
today to address Navy space activities. As Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for Warfare
Requirements and Programs, we provide the substantive analysis — the “warfighting story” —
and supporting capabilities investment plan to the Chief of Naval Operations to ensure naval
forces remain operationally relevant today… and in the future.
Integrating space capabilities throughout the naval force is fundamental to our Sea Power 21
vision. The objective of Sea Power 21 is to ensure that our nation possesses credible combat
capability on scene to promote regional stability, to deter aggression throughout the world, to
assure access of joint forces and to fight and win should deterrence fail. Sea Power 21 guides the
Navy’s transformation from a threat-based platform centric structure to a capabilities-based, fully
integrated force. The pillars of Sea Power 21 — Sea Strike, Sea Shield, Sea Base — are integrated
by FORCEnet, the means by which the power of sensors, networks, weapons, warriors and
platforms are harnessed in a networked combat force. It is this networked force that will provide
the access with the strategic agility and persistence necessary to prevail in the continuing war on
terror, as well as the speed and overwhelming power to seize the initiative and swiftly defeat any
regional peer competitor in combat operations.
The Navy of the future must be capabilities-based and threat-oriented. While the fabric of our
fighting force will still be the power and speed needed to seize the initiative and swiftly defeat
any regional threat, we believe FORCEnet’s pervasive awareness (C4ISR) will be more
important than mass. And because of its access from the sea, the Navy and Marine Corps are
focusing significant effort and analysis in support of joint combat power projection by leveraging
this traditional access provided by the oceans through Seabasing, with the access now provided
by space and cyberspace through FORCEnet. It is the synergistic access provided by these great
“commons” — the sea and space and cyberspace — that is the revolution of the future.
To this end, the technological innovations and human-systems integration advances in future
platforms remain critical. Our future warships will sustain operations in forward areas longer, be
able to respond more quickly to emerging contingencies, and generate more sorties and
simultaneous attacks against greater numbers of multiple aimpoints and targets with greater
effect than our current fleet. However, the future is about the capabilities posture of this fleet,
which is why the future is also about establishing C4ISR as a warfighting weapon and
integrator… and understanding the impact of changing C4ISR investment strategies on the
warfight.
The Navy’s Investment
In the last year, we have realigned the Navy Staff to establish C4ISR as a warfighting weapon
and integrator of other Sea Power 21 Pillar efforts (Sea Base, Sea Shield and Sea Strike). We
have also established an Analysis Center of Excellence to form the leading edge of mission level
analysis and align our modeling analysis — including the accurate modeling of space and
cyberspace networked systems, and how they contribute to warfighting effectiveness — under the
Sea Power 21 FORCEnet Pillar. I am particularly enthusiastic about the ongoing assessment of
space capabilities with regard to their contribution to Maritime Domain Awareness (MDA), a
new operational concept that we have been working closely with the U.S. Coast Guard and others to develop so that we can better defend the homeland against those who attempt to use the
seas to transport terror to our shores, as well as to help forgo threats early forward overseas.
MDA will enable identification of threats as early and as distant from our borders as possible to
determine the optimal course of action. Armed with this better awareness and visibility, we will
provide an active, layered system of defense that incorporates not only the maritime domain, but
space and cyberspace as well.
The Navy’s space investment portfolio reflects our partnership with the Department’s Executive
Agent for Space and the rest of the National Security Space community — as well as our
maritime responsibilities. We rely on the Air Force and National Reconnaissance Office (NRO)
to acquire most of the major space platforms, collaborating on the required capabilities, and then
we buy the user equipment for the fleet. We also take the lead in tackling maritime challenges
through our participation in the Science and Technology/Research and Development
(S&T/R&D) process.
The Navy’s major space segment responsibility to the joint community is the acquisition of the
Mobile User Objective System (MUOS). The MUOS contract was awarded to Lockheed Martin
on 24 September 2004 and is fully funded in the Fiscal Year 2006 budget request to meet all
threshold requirements with an Initial Operational Capability (IOC) of 2010. MUOS will
provide “communications on the move”, through double canopy foliage and in the urban
environment to small antennas used by bandwidth-disadvantaged users. MUOS is the common
denominator for command and control providing the capability to communicate from tactical to
theater levels, to allies and coalition partners and between defense and non-defense agencies.
As you know, MUOS is critical to satisfying the demand for tactical satellite communications.
During OPERATION ENDURING FREEDOM, UHF Follow-On (UFO) and LEASAT 5
supported only 80% of narrowband tactical UHF satellite communication requirements.
Additionally, in the 2010-2012 timeframe, LEASAT 5 will reach end of life and UFO is
expected to reach an unacceptable level of performance. Complete loss of these UHF satellite
communication resources would have a significant impact on combat operations if not replaced
by MUOS. Today, UFO supports approximately 500 accesses worldwide. Based on evolving
future warfighting concepts in support of the Defense Planning Guidance (DPG), access
requirements have grown by at least a factor of four. MUOS will provide a minimum of 1,997
worldwide accesses. As Lockheed Martin refines its design, we expect this capacity to grow.
Innovation
The Navy continues to invest in its Tactical Exploitation of National Capabilities (TENCAP)
Program. Navy TENCAP’s R&D process includes matching innovative responses to emerging
Fleet requirements and mission capability gaps identified within the analytical Naval Capability
Development Process (NCDP). This R&D process emphasizes the following rigor: (a) rapid
prototyping (12-24 months); (b) testing under field conditions; and (c) rigorous, independent
assessment of results. Over the past 24 years, Navy TENCAP has completed 110 R&D efforts
with 54% resulting in new operational and improved ISR capabilities for the Fleet and joint
forces all for a cost less than $20M per year.
Additionally, the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) built TacSat-1 as part of the Office of Force
Transformation Operationally Responsive Space initiative, and it is ready for launch this year on
Space-X’s Falcon launch vehicle. TacSat-1 uses a commercial MicroStar spacecraft to carry
several sensor payloads into low earth orbit. The payloads are designed to allow machine-tomachine
collaboration between Air and Space assets for geo-location, as well as specific sensor
discrimination capability. Even more significant, TacSat will demonstrate tactical control of
payload and dissemination of data through SIPRNET — a truly net-centric thrust. For TacSat-1,
NRL is working in partnership with the Air Force Space Command, NRO Office of Space
Launch, and NASA. The Air Force is leading subsequent TacSat demonstrations, on which
Navy will also have secondary payloads; TacSat-2’s Navy payload is focused on the Maritime
Domain Awareness challenge. This partnership is a significant step forward to leverage small
satellite technology to design more responsive space capabilities.
Space Cadre
The key to success is the mix of operational experience and space savvy found in our Navy
Space Cadre. As members of the National Security Space team, we participated in the
development of the National Security Space Human Capital Resources Strategy and the
establishment of the Space Professional Oversight Board, the Senior Officer Forum for the
discussion and resolution of matters concerning space professional development within the
Department of Defense.
Navy Space Cadre officers are assigned to NRO, the National Security Space Office,
USSTRATCOM, many Joint Program Offices and throughout the fleet. Their operational
expertise provides critical insight into how space can optimize warfighting capabilities. To
further improve the management of our space cadre, we have designated VADM McArthur,
Commander, Naval Network Warfare Command, as the Navy’s Space Cadre Functional
Authority, providing strategic guidance on priorities for the development and employment of the
Navy Space Cadre. He recently released the Navy Space Cadre Human Capital Strategy, which
outlines our vision and way ahead.
The Navy Space Cadre Advisor is working closely with his Service counterparts to meet both
Navy and National Security Space goals. The Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) Space Systems
Operations and Space Systems Engineering curricula continue to provide the Navy and other
Services graduate education, post-graduate (Engineer) degrees and doctoral degrees. In addition,
the Navy has developed a Space Certification at the NPS, with courses available on-line. We
also created a formal Educational Alliance with the Air Force through a memorandum of
agreement between NPS and the Air Force Institute of Technology (AFIT), with the goal of
leveraging strengths and eliminating duplication in space education.
Summary
Our mission remains bringing the fight to our enemies. The increasing dependence of our world
on the seas, coupled with growing uncertainty of other nations’ ability or desire to ensure access
in a future conflict, will continue to drive the need for naval forces and the capability to project
decisive joint power by access through the seas, space and cyberspace.
Accordingly, we will continue to fight the global war on terror while transforming for the future
fight. We will continue to refine our operational concepts and appropriate technology
investments to deliver the kind of dominant military power from the sea envisioned in Sea Power
21. We will continue to pursue the operational concepts — such as MDA — even as we invest in
technology and systems to enable naval vessels to deliver decisive, effects-based combat power
in every tactical and operational dimension. We understand that space capabilities will be
critical to our efforts and must be integrated throughout the naval force… and we understand that
because the future of the Navy is tied to space, we must succeed in growing and maintaining our
space cadre. We also look forward to the future from a strong partnership with Congress that has
brought us many successes today.
My highest priority is to transform Navy organizational processes and culture to fully integrate
the warfighting capabilities that space systems present to our warfighters. And to that end, Navy
intends to be a full joint partner in space.