Supporting U.S. Navy Strength

Navy League of the United States
Citizens in Support of the Sea Services
The U.S. Navy:
America’s Strength
1
For Congressman Matt Gaetz, Florida 1
st
 District, August XX, 2017
AGENDA
Citizens in Support of the Sea
Services
  History of the Navy League of the United States
  Background on the Pensacola, FL. Council
  The Decline in size of the U.S. Navy Fleet
  Navy League Priorities
  Closing
2
Navy League of the United States
Citizens in Support of the Sea
Services
  Founded in 1902 with the support of President Teddy
Roosevelt
  Promotes the need for strength in seapower
  Civilian organization
  230 Local Councils 
 
  42,000 members worldwide
  Our Goal: to educate the public and elected officials
on the importance of a strong maritime component for
our National Security
  Supports and advocates for members of the Navy,
Marine Corps, Coast Guard, and U.S.-Flag Merchant
Marine
3
The Pensacola Council of Navy League
Citizens in Support of the Sea
Services
Pensacola
 NL members; more
than 350 in the 1st
Congressional District of
Florida
Civilian Volunteers come from
a variety of backgrounds, but
all believe in strong sea
services.
Key Activities: Junior Navy and
Marine Corps ROTC, Adopt-a-
Ship, public education on sea
services, ship commissionings,
Naval Sea Cadets Corps
4
“Protecting the Sea Lanes & America’s Commerce”
Citizens in Support of the Sea
Services
5
The Declining U.S. Naval Fleet
Citizens in Support of the Sea
Services
  Before 2003, nearly every President and every
Congress maintained a fleet size of over 300 ships.
  High deterrent value; our Navy is present
worldwide
  Serious decline in fleet size that began in 1990s
continues because of insufficient funds
  Our Fleet is imperative to ensure capabilities for:
  Conflict Deterrence
  Forward Presence
  Maritime Security
  Protection of International Sea Lanes
  Humanitarian Assistance/ Disaster Response
  While our fleet size declines, our global trade
increases
  90% of world wide trade is transported by sea
The Navy League recommends a fleet of 355 ships
6
The World Needs the U.S. Navy
Citizens in Support of the Sea
Services
7
Even when the U.S.
Navy attempts to scale
down operations, reality
interferes:  actual
deployments far exceed
planned deployments as
Combatant Commanders
request ships to  project
forward, deter
adversaries,
demonstrate American
strength and respond to
crises.
Fewer Ships + Sustained OpTempo = Longer
Deployments
Citizens in Support of the Sea
Services
8
Fewer ships and  a
growing mission
means longer
deployment lengths.
Not only does this
lead to increased
rates of wear and
tear on ships, but,
more importantly, this
hurts sailors and
their families.
New Force Structure Assessment Supports Need for
Bigger Fleet
Citizens in Support of the Sea
Services
  When countries won’
t support land-based military operations, we
can depend on Naval platforms, making Navy in high demand by all
Combatant Commanders.
  To fulfill all Combatant Commander requests for Navy assets, we
would need a fleet of 653 ships.  The realistic number determined by
the Navy is a fleet of 355 ships.
  To support the new Force Structure Assessment and meet the 10-
year goal set by the CNO, the SCN budget should be increased to
$26.6 billion and the Navy should procure 12 deployable battle force
ships in FY18
The Navy League Recommends:
  SCN budget of $26.6 Billion or greater
  Funding the Columbia-class program outside the SCN account as authorized  to
avoid budget disruptions and recognize this program as a national asset as
authorized in the National Defense Authorization Act
9
Navy League’s Top Priority:
Repeal the Budget Control Act
Citizens in Support of the Sea
Services
  In FY2018, the defense budget drops back to sequestration levels, a 19%
reduction from projected funding levels.
  There is no corresponding reduction in requirements as threats like ISIL,
Chinese, North Korean, and Russian aggression increase around the globe
   Other nations are investing more and more in their own shipbuilding and
aircraft capability, especially submarines
   
The U.S. must project strength to deter adversaries.  The Navy is the only
service that not only WINS wars, but PREVENTS wars.
10
Navy League Priorities
Citizens in Support of the Sea
Services
Columbia-class Submarine Program
   The Ohio-class replacement provides strategic
nuclear deterrence and is the most survivable leg
of our nuclear triad
   We must fund both the Columbia-class submarine,
crucial to deterrence, while growing the fleet.
Protect Readiness
  Lack of spare parts, delayed maintenance on many F/A-18 Hornets
  Many squadrons are not able to meet flying hours, eroding carefully-honed
skills
  Shipyards have a significant backlog of ship and submarine maintenance due to
sequestration cuts
  Long deployments hurt morale, increase maintenance needs, and are
unsustainable over the long-term
  The FY2018 budget request makes significant investments in readiness that
must be preserved.
11
FY2018 Priorities
Citizens in Support of the Sea
Services
The Navy League supports:
Raising the defense budget caps by repealing the
Budget Control Act
A fleet of 355 ships, as directed by the Force
Structure Assessment
Increasing the shipbuilding budget to $26.6B to
achieve a fleet of at least 355 ships
Prioritizing the Columbia-class ballistic missile
submarine program
Protecting readiness
12
The Navy League of the United States
Citizens in Support of the Sea
Services
In Conclusion:
Our national fleet size is smaller today smaller than we need in a time of
global instability.
A strong national fleet of at least 355 is imperative to national security and
secure trade.
Building and maintaining a fleet of this size requires the support of
Congress.
Congress must pass regular budgets in a timely fashion.  Continuing
resolutions, sequestration, and delayed budgets hurt our Navy!
In the words of Navy League’s founder, President Teddy Roosevelt, “ A
good navy is not a provocation to war.  It is the surest guarantee of peace.”
13
Navy League of the United States
Citizens in Support of the Sea Services
Daniel McCort
Vice President/LA
Pensacola Council
CTW600000@aol.com
832-630-3727
navyleagueofus@bellsouth.net
Join the Congressional Shipbuilding Caucus to help save
American shipbuilding!
14
Slide Note
Embed
Share

Navy League of the United States advocates for a strong maritime component for national security, supporting Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, and U.S.-Flag Merchant Marine. The organization aims to educate the public and elected officials on the importance of sea services, highlighting the decline in the U.S. Navy fleet size and the need for a fleet of 355 ships to ensure capabilities for conflict deterrence, maritime security, and protection of international sea lanes.

  • Navy League
  • U.S. Navy
  • Maritime Security
  • National Security

Uploaded on Mar 01, 2025 | 0 Views


Download Presentation

Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author. Download presentation by click this link. If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Navy League of the United States The U.S. Navy: America s Strength For Congressman Matt Gaetz, Florida 1st District, August XX, 2017 1 Citizens in Support of the Sea Services

  2. AGENDA History of the Navy League of the United States Background on the Pensacola, FL. Council The Decline in size of the U.S. Navy Fleet Navy League Priorities Closing Citizens in Support of the Sea Services 2

  3. Navy League of the United States Founded in 1902 with the support of President Teddy Roosevelt Promotes the need for strength in seapower Civilian organization 230 Local Councils 42,000 members worldwide Our Goal: to educate the public and elected officials on the importance of a strong maritime component for our National Security Supports and advocates for members of the Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, and U.S.-Flag Merchant Marine Citizens in Support of the Sea Services 3

  4. The Pensacola Council of Navy League Pensacola NL members; more than 350 in the 1st Congressional District of Florida Civilian Volunteers come from a variety of backgrounds, but all believe in strong sea services. Key Activities: Junior Navy and Marine Corps ROTC, Adopt-a- Ship, public education on sea services, ship commissionings, Naval Sea Cadets Corps Citizens in Support of the Sea Services 4

  5. Protecting the Sea Lanes & Americas Commerce Citizens in Support of the Sea Services 5

  6. The Declining U.S. Naval Fleet Before 2003, nearly every President and every Congress maintained a fleet size of over 300 ships. High deterrent value; our Navy is present worldwide Serious decline in fleet size that began in 1990s continues because of insufficient funds Our Fleet is imperative to ensure capabilities for: Conflict Deterrence Forward Presence Maritime Security Protection of International Sea Lanes Humanitarian Assistance/ Disaster Response While our fleet size declines, our global trade increases 90% of world wide trade is transported by sea The Navy League recommends a fleet of 355 ships Citizens in Support of the Sea Services 6

  7. The World Needs the U.S. Navy Even when the U.S. Navy attempts to scale down operations, reality interferes: actual deployments far exceed planned deployments as Combatant Commanders request ships to project forward, deter adversaries, demonstrate American strength and respond to crises. Citizens in Support of the Sea Services 7

  8. Fewer Ships + Sustained OpTempo = Longer Deployments Fewer ships and a growing mission means longer deployment lengths. Not only does this lead to increased rates of wear and tear on ships, but, more importantly, this hurts sailors and their families. Citizens in Support of the Sea Services 8

  9. New Force Structure Assessment Supports Need for Bigger Fleet When countries won t support land-based military operations, we can depend on Naval platforms, making Navy in high demand by all Combatant Commanders. To fulfill all Combatant Commander requests for Navy assets, we would need a fleet of 653 ships. The realistic number determined by the Navy is a fleet of 355 ships. To support the new Force Structure Assessment and meet the 10- year goal set by the CNO, the SCN budget should be increased to $26.6 billion and the Navy should procure 12 deployable battle force ships in FY18 The Navy League Recommends: SCN budget of $26.6 Billion or greater Funding the Columbia-class program outside the SCN account as authorized to avoid budget disruptions and recognize this program as a national asset as authorized in the National Defense Authorization Act Citizens in Support of the Sea Services 9

  10. Navy Leagues Top Priority: Repeal the Budget Control Act In FY2018, the defense budget drops back to sequestration levels, a 19% reduction from projected funding levels. There is no corresponding reduction in requirements as threats like ISIL, Chinese, North Korean, and Russian aggression increase around the globe Other nations are investing more and more in their own shipbuilding and aircraft capability, especially submarines The U.S. must project strength to deter adversaries. The Navy is the only service that not only WINS wars, but PREVENTS wars. Citizens in Support of the Sea Services 10

  11. Navy League Priorities Columbia-class Submarine Program The Ohio-class replacement provides strategic nuclear deterrence and is the most survivable leg of our nuclear triad We must fund both the Columbia-class submarine, crucial to deterrence, while growing the fleet. Protect Readiness Lack of spare parts, delayed maintenance on many F/A-18 Hornets Many squadrons are not able to meet flying hours, eroding carefully-honed skills Shipyards have a significant backlog of ship and submarine maintenance due to sequestration cuts Long deployments hurt morale, increase maintenance needs, and are unsustainable over the long-term The FY2018 budget request makes significant investments in readiness that must be preserved. Citizens in Support of the Sea Services 11

  12. FY2018 Priorities The Navy League supports: Raising the defense budget caps by repealing the Budget Control Act A fleet of 355 ships, as directed by the Force Structure Assessment Increasing the shipbuilding budget to $26.6B to achieve a fleet of at least 355 ships Prioritizing the Columbia-class ballistic missile submarine program Protecting readiness Citizens in Support of the Sea Services 12

  13. The Navy League of the United States In Conclusion: Our national fleet size is smaller today smaller than we need in a time of global instability. A strong national fleet of at least 355 is imperative to national security and secure trade. Building and maintaining a fleet of this size requires the support of Congress. Congress must pass regular budgets in a timely fashion. Continuing resolutions, sequestration, and delayed budgets hurt our Navy! In the words of Navy League s founder, President Teddy Roosevelt, A good navy is not a provocation to war. It is the surest guarantee of peace. Citizens in Support of the Sea Services 13

  14. Navy League of the United States Daniel McCort Vice President/LA Pensacola Council CTW600000@aol.com 832-630-3727 navyleagueofus@bellsouth.net Join the Congressional Shipbuilding Caucus to help save American shipbuilding! 14 Citizens in Support of the Sea Services

Related


More Related Content

giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#