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United States Navy Service Logistics

United States Navy Service Logistics. Welcome Aboard. LCDR Austin Matthews Joint Logistics Course. SEAPOWER Protects the American way of life!. 90% of the world’s commerce travels by sea. Vast majority of the world’s population lives within a few hundred miles from the oceans.

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United States Navy Service Logistics

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  1. United States NavyService Logistics Welcome Aboard LCDR Austin Matthews Joint Logistics Course

  2. SEAPOWER Protects the American way of life! 90% of the world’s commerce travels by sea. Vast majority of the world’s population lives within a few hundred miles from the oceans.

  3. Navy Strength Deployable Battle Force Ships: 284 Operational aircraft: 3700+ Personnel: 635,404 Active - 332,479 Reserves - 11,925 Civilians - 191,000

  4. Navy’s Supply Chain Manager

  5. NAVSUP Service Supply Chain equivalents… • Army Material Command • Air Force Material Command • Marine Corps Logistics Command • Coast Guard HQ (Logistics Branch)

  6. Carrier Strike Group Expeditionary Strike Group Ships typically deploy together as a group in either a Carrier Strike Group or an Expeditionary Strike Group. • The Carrier Strike Group could be employed in a variety of roles, all of which would involve the gaining and maintenance of sea control: • Protection of economic and/or military shipping. • Protection of a Marine amphibious force while enroute to, and upon arrival in, an amphibious objective area. • Establishing a naval presence in support of national interests. • Expeditionary Strike Group consist of Amphibious Assault Ships that deploy in support of US ground forces in remote locations.

  7. Carrier Strike Group Composition 1 Aircraft Carrier 1 Guided Missile Cruiser Approx. 3000 ship’s crew and 2500 air wing Approx. 400 ship’s crew 2 Guided Missile Destroyers Approx. 300 ship’s crew 1 Attack Submarine 1 Combined Ammo, Oil, Supply Ship Approx. 150 personnel Approx. 150 civis / 30 mil

  8. EA-6B Prowler F/A-18 Hornet SH-60 Seahawk S-3 Viking Carrier Strike Group Aircraft F/A-18 C/D/E/F Hornet– An all-weather aircraft used as an attack aircraft as well as a fighter. In its fighter mode, used primarily as a fighter escort and for fleet air defense; in its attack mode, used for force projection, interdiction and close and deep air support. EA-6B Prowler–Electronic warfare aircraft. Provides airborne electronic attack capability. E2C Hawkeye–All-weather airborne early warning, airborne battle management and command and control functions. Also surface surveillance coordination, air interdiction, offensive and defensive counter air control, close air support coordination, time critical strike coordination, search and rescue airborne coordination and communications relay. SH-60 Seahawk–Anti-submarine warfare, search and rescue, drug interdiction, anti-ship warfare, cargo lift, and special operations. E2C Hawkeye S-3 Viking Typical Carrier Air Wing Composition: 4 F/A18 Hornet Squadrons 1 EA-6B Squadron 1 E2C Squadron 1 Helicopter Squadron

  9. Expeditionary Strike Group The Gator Navy Amphibious Assault Ships (LHA/LHD) Approx. 1100 ship’s crew and 1500 MEU Dock Landing Ships (LSD) Approx. 400 ship’s crew and 400 Marine det Amphibious Transport Dock (LPD) Approx. 400 ship’s crew and 900 Marine det Landing Craft, Air Cushioned (LCAC) Landing Craft, Mechanized and Utility (LCM, LCU)

  10. Expeditionary Strike Group Aircraft CH-53E Super Stallion– Heavy lift, long range helicopter. Can be refueled in air. Scheduled to be replaced by the CH-53K. AV-8B Harrier II– Vertical takeoff and landing light attack aircraft. Provides offensive air support capability. Scheduled to be replaced by the F-35 (JSF). AH-1W Super Cobra– Close air support attack helicopter. Scheduled to be replaced by the AH-1Z. CH-46 D/E Sea Knight– Medium range cargo and passenger helicopter. Scheduled to be replaced by the V-22. CH-53E Sea Stallion AV-8B Harrier II AH-1W Cobra CH-46E Sea Knight

  11. Naval Fleet Auxiliary Force The ships of Military Sealift Command's Naval Fleet Auxiliary Force (NFAF) are the lifeline to the U.S. Navy ships at sea. They are referred to as Combat Logistics Force (CLF). • Fleet Ocean Tugs • Fast Combat Support Ships • Fleet Replenishment Oilers • Dry Cargo/Ammunition Ships • Rescue & Salvage Ships • Hospital Ships, USNS COMFORT & USNS MERCY

  12. Naval Fleet Auxiliary Force The ships of Military Sealift Command's preposition fleet (32 ships) • Sixteen Maritime Prepositioning ships support the U.S. Marine Corps • Eight Army Prepositioned Stocks-3 ships support the U.S. Army • Eight Navy, Defense Logistics Agency and Air Force ships support not only those three agencies contained in the name, but also the U.S. Marine Corps and U.S. Army

  13. NECC (Ground Forces) BLUE TO BROWN …. GREEN ….. DIRT …. JUST NOT BLUE. “Expeditionay” Adaptive Force Support • Navy Expeditionary Combat Command (NECC), established in January 2006, centrally manages the current and future readiness, resources, manning, training and equipping of approximately 40,000 expeditionary Sailorswho are currently serving in every theater of operation.

  14. Navy Expeditionary Combat Command • Global force provider of adaptive force packages of naval expeditionary capabilities to war-fighting commanders. • Extend maritime battle-space

  15. NECC Force Capabilities • Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) • Maritime Expeditionary Security Force • Riverine Force • Navy Diving Community • Naval Construction Force (Seabees) • Maritime Civil Affairs Group • Expeditionary Training Command • Navy Expeditionary Logistics Support Group • Navy Expeditionary Intelligence Command • Navy Expeditionary Combat Command (Combat Camera)

  16. Sustainment Engineering Maintenance Deployment/Distribution Health Svcs Contract Sppt Supply Logistics Svcs INDEPENDENT DEPENDENT

  17. Operating Forces Organization 6th Fleet = US Naval Forces Europe & US Naval Forces Africa 6th fleet 2nd fleet 7th fleet 5th fleet 3rd fleet 4th fleet Fleet Commands generally aligned to Combatant Commanders

  18. Navy’s Global Logistics Support Network… Supporting “The Last Nautical Mile”

  19. The Requirement…Global Logistics • Navy’s strategy requires the capability to forward deploy and maintain large task forces to fight and win wars as well as the capability to quickly employ smaller, mission-tailored forces to respond to crises and contingencies anywhere in the world, at any time. GLOBAL NAVY GLOBAL LOGISTICS MARITIME STRATEGY Global Force for Good Moving from Navy Supply System to Global Logistics Support Network

  20. Global Logistics… Vision & Initiatives Supporting Initiatives – Global Logistics Support Network (GLSN) Global Husbanding Support Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) Support Maritime Logistics Integration Multinational Partnerships • Vision – • Project support to naval and Joint warfighters world-wide through a global logistics network that seamlessly integrates the afloat and shore infrastructure. NAVSUP 2010 Commander’s Guidance Efficient, Effective, Optimized Global Logistics Response Capability

  21. Building Block…Alignment to Theater COMFISCS NOLSC NEXCOM NAVICP NAVSISA OPCON/TACON Relationship Supported/Supporting Relationship CCDR • FISCs provide direct support to operational commanders • FISCs are the theater lead for execution and delivery of NAVSUP logistics capabilities • NOLSC supports development of theater log conops • Maritime HQ, Maritime Ops Center (MHQ/MOC) Navy Component Commander JTF CxF (MHQ/MOC) JFMCC CTFx3 Theater Log Coordination Naval Units FISC CLF Units Other Log Capabilities NAVSUP Enterprise “Face to Theater” Supporting Capabilities Single NAVSUP Enterprise “Face to Theater”

  22. Building Block…NAVSUP Global Footprint FISC SITE/DET USNORTHCOM USEUCOM USPACOM C6F C7F PUGET SOUND C2F C5F C3F NORFOLK USCENTCOM JACKSONVILLE SIGONELLA SAN DIEGO YOKOSUKA PEARL HARBOR C4F USPACOM USSOUTHCOM C6F USAFRICOM World-wide Support Infrastructure

  23. Global Logistics …Integrated withJoint and National Partners NAVICP Vendor Factory Depot Repair From Factory to Sailor NAVSUP, DLA, GSA Forward Elements Of NAVSUP… Fleet Global Logistics Network … USTC Container Consolidation Point (CCP) POE POD AMC Navy ALSS/FLS Seabasing LAST NAUTICAL MILE Combat Logistics Fleet (CLF) SDDC Navy Ground Forces (SeaBees/SEALS etc) COD/VOD/NUFEA CONUS Strategic Node Inter-Theater Lift OCONUS Strategic Node INTRA-THEATER LIFT (Navy Organic) THEATER WARFIGHTER Supplier ALSS – Advanced Logistics Support Site FLS – Forward Logistics Site Global Logistics Network … Supporting the “Last Nautical Mile”

  24. Global Logistics… “Last Nautical Mile” Deliver support to naval warfighters afloat and ashore in a theater through a synchronized theater network that seamlessly integrates the flow of information and material from Joint and national partners. • Flows from Theater Logistics CONOPS • Leverages in-place logistics infrastructure • Adds nodes as required • Includes a mobile capability • Integrates and links to Joint and national partner capabilities Efficient, Effective, Optimized Intra-Theater Response Capability

  25. Last Nautical Mile…Theater Nodes (ALSS/FLS) ALSS = Advanced Logistics Support Site FLS = Forward Logistics Site KUWAITI NAVAL BASE PC Logistics Support in NAG AL MINHAD Major Air Hub in the SAG BAHRAIN LOGISTICS “HUB “ IN AOR Air/Sea Head IN CAG JEBEL ALI Major Container Sea Port in SAG Logistics Head Transit Shed Operation CLF Replenishment FUJAIRAH LOGISTICS SUPPORT IN GULF Of OMAN Air/Sea Head DJIBOUTI Sea/AirLogistics HUB in HOA Tailored to Specific Theater Logistics CONOPS

  26. Last Nautical Mile…Intra-Theater Distribution FLS Djibouti ALSS Bahrain Navy / AMC Terminal FLS Fujairah/ Minhad UAE FLS Jebel Ali-UAE Hub and Spoke Pipeline ALSS = Advanced Logistics Support Site FLS = Forward Logistics Site LAND BRIDGE C-130 Lifts: 3 per month C-9/C-40 Lifts: 10 per month Mideast Inter-modalDistribution (MEID) C-130 Lifts: 28 per month C-9/C-40 Lifts: 24 per month MEID Linking Theater Nodes to Global Logistics Support Network

  27. ResupplyUNREP Underway Replenishment: Ships can replenish ammunition, food, personnel, and supplies by Connected replenishment (CONREP) or Vertical Replenishment (VERTREP). • CONREP: Ship to ship transfer by which ships steam side-by-side and transfer material by means of wires, lines, and hoses. • VERTREP: Use of helicopters to transfer material ship-to-ship or shore-to-ship.

  28. Resupply USS RONALD REAGAN UNREP from USNS Niagara Falls VIA CONREP & VERTREP

  29. Last Nautical Mile…The big picture SurfaceIntra-TheaterTruckAMC FrequencyWWXRepair PartsFuelAmmoSubsistence/PV SDDC Newark, NJNorfolk, VA KuwaitDDKS CSG Beach Det (ATAC) C-130 Bahrain (Com’l) AMC Norfolk, VA 3x/wk Karachi Fujairah 3x/wk AMC Dover, DE Al Udeid MEID Jebel Ali WWX 7x/wk DEPORD EOW Port Sudan Salalah Massawa CLF (10 Day Round Trip) COD Djibouti Fully Linked to Global Logistics Support Network

  30. In Summary • Moving from Navy Supply System to Global Logistics Support Network • Tailored solutions for each theater • Adaptive, flexible to support full range of Navy missions, anywhere, anytime • Unity of Effort…leveraging Joint and national partners • Supported by full data integration

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