Title: Tactical Wheeled Vehicles Conference
1 2004 Tactical Wheeled Vehicles Conference 1- 3
February 2004 MG Skip Philips U.S. Army Reserve
2WHERE THE ARMY RESERVE IS HEADING
- A Complementary Force vs. a Supplementary Force
no longer a force in reserve - Inactive Duty to Active Duty to Inactive Duty
- Mission Capable not mobilization capable
- Reduced structure with same end strengthfully
manned units with modernized equipment - TTHS Account to account for non-ready soldiers
- Practiced, Institutionalized, Leader Development
and Growth through PME and Developmental
Assignments - PME outside the unit while in a training status
3MOBILIZATION HAS CHANGED
Then
Now
Oct 2002 to Present Operation Iraqi Freedom
79,123 troops
MOB
BOOTS ON GROUND
Continuous Mobilization (Institutional)
ALERT
DEMOB
SUSTAIN
RESET/ RETRAIN
Finite Period Of Mobilization
4CS/CSS TRANSFORMATION OBJECTIVES
- Reduce strategic lift requirements
- Reduce logistics footprint in area of operations
with the commonality in equipment platforms - Reduce inventories through management of like
type equipment requirements - Reduce costs through reduced inventories and
force structure - Reduce OS costs and training time
- Reduction in requisitioning, shipping and
receiving errors
Modern Equipment
How?
5ARMY RESERVE CSS TRANSFORMATION
- Optimize force structure through the Army RESET
- process (personnel equipment)
- Maintain readiness posture
- Single Theater CS/CSS (Theater Support Command)
-
- Forward presence
-
6ENABLERS AND INITIATIVES
Concept
Logistic Enablers are the Key to Success
- Change logistics
- doctrine
- Optimize Logistics
- Change Business
- Processes
- Reduce Requirements
- Improve/upgrade/right-
- size Infrastructure
- Field Improved Logistics
- Equipment (enablers)
- Exploit Science and
- Technology
- Intermediate Staging (Support) Base
- Split-Based Reach Operations
- Leverage Contractor/Host Nation Support
- Common Unit Design
- Reach Operations
- Intermediate Staging (Support)
- Base
- Distribution Based Logistics
- Standardized Strategic/Mission
- Combat Configured Loads
- National Maintenance Program
- Velocity Management
- Dollar Cost Banding
- Single Stock Fund
- Recapitalization
- Enhance Strategic Response
- Meet Deployment Timeline
- Cultural Change
- Update Planning Factor
- and Allocation Rules
- Identify and Validate ASOS
- Depots
- Containment Projection Platforms
- Palletized Load System
- Family of Medium Tactical
- Vehicles
- Tactical Fire Fighting Truck
- M915A3 Line Haul Tractors
- All Terrain Lifter Army System
- HMMWVs
- M878 Yard Tractor
- Rough Terrain Cargo Handler
- Diagnostic and Prognostics
- Precision Munitions
- Fuel Efficient Systems
- Common Chassis
7ARMY RESERVE EQUIPPING SOURCES
- New Procurement
- Projected in Procurement-1R submission (require
a minimum of 400M per year) - Funded through Other Procurement, Army
appropriation - The Redistribution or Cascading of Equipment
from the Active Component - The Army Reserve has 42 of the Armys combat
service support structure - As such, little combat service support
equipment is cascaded from the Active Component
to the Army - Reserve
- Likewise, little or no funding accompanies the
equipment that is cascaded to restore it to the
appropriate - standards
- Recapitalization of Old (Legacy) Equipment
- The rebuild and selected upgrade of currently
fielded systems to a zero mile/zero time system - Limited benefit from Army Recap program for
the Army Reserve - Congressional Adds
- Funding earmarked for specific equipment
8ARMY RESERVE MODERNIZATION CHALLENGE
ARMY RESERVE PROCUREMENT
641
550
567
Millions
424
279.5
278
300
282
281
243
186
205
177
158
167
149
142
191
125
126
114
115
84
147
133
64
90
103
91
75
20
30
45
5
8
10
14
10
12
3.5
Army Reserve POM Target 400 Million Annually
ESTIMATED P-1R PROJECTION
9 ARMY RESERVE UNFUNDED MODERNIZATION
REQUIREMENTS
ALL SOURCES P1-R, NGREA, CONG ADDS
10ARMY RESERVE P-1R PROJECTIONS
HISTORICALLY, FUNDING TENDS TO SLIP TO THE RIGHT
FMTV EXAMPLE
11ARMY RESERVE EQUIPMENT (AVERAGE AGE)
BOTTOMLINE Equipment exceeds Economical Usage
Life (EUL)
DATA SOURCE LOGSA, MAY 03
12DEPOT MAINTENANCE PROGRAM (FY 2003)
HMMWV
Yard Tractor
- High Mobility Multi-Purpose Wheeled Vehicles (99)
- 10K/4K Forklifts (122)
- 5000 Gal Fuel Tankers (65)
- M787 Yard Tractors (12)
- M915 Line Haul Tractors (111)
- HEMTT Cargo Truck Fuel Tankers (13/6)
- 5-Ton Dump Trucks (17)
- 5-Ton Cargo Trucks (102)
- 22.5 Ton Semi-Trailers (140)
M915 Tractor
HEMTT Cargo
13UNIT/DEPOT LEVEL MAINTENANCE ISSUES
- Unit Readiness Reporting only reports
approximately 9 of total equipment. - Operational Readiness rates for non-reportable
equipment is a challenge for the Army Reserve
because of the age of the non-reportable TWV
fleet......limited visibility. - Additional maintenance and rebuild funds are
needed to support aging Army Reserve tactical
wheeled vehicles and the increase in OPTEMPO due
to OIF requirements.
14 SUMMARY
-
- Lack of adequate funding stream to purchase or
upgrade TWV fleet -
- Reduced or decremented system quantities and
delayed fieldings impacts the ability to meet
Transformation goals - Aging equipment is expensive and
labor-intensive to maintain and sustainment
funding must be increased - Substitute or in-lieu-of items perpetuate
incompatibility and interoperability issues.
These incompatibility issues create impediments
to supporting the digitized force and OIF
requirements - Limited benefit from Army Recap program for the
Army Reserve - BOTTOMLINE
- Shortage of new equipment procurement (P-1R)
makes funding provided through NGREA,
Congressional Add and support of Depot
Maintenance Programs vital to the readiness of
the Army Reserve TWV fleet -
15- First is the Soldier. Our Soldiers are
paramount. They will remain the centerpiece of
our thinking, our systems, and our combat
formations. We must always remember, Humans are
more important than hardware. - We must always remember that Soldiers ARE the
Army. - Peter J. Schoomaker, CSA
- AUSA 2003
- Washington, DC
Person of the Year represents 2.6 million men and
women of the Armed Forces