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America’s Navy…. A Global Force For Good. UNCLASSIFIED. Regionally Concentrated, Credible Combat Power Limit regional conflict with forward deployed, decisive maritime power Deter major power war Win our Nation’s wars Globally Distributed, Mission-Tailored Maritime Forces
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America’s Navy… A Global Force For Good UNCLASSIFIED
Regionally Concentrated, Credible Combat Power Limit regional conflict with forward deployed, decisive maritime power Deter major power war Win our Nation’s wars Globally Distributed, Mission-Tailored Maritime Forces Contribute to homeland defense in depth Foster and sustain cooperative relationships with more international partners Prevent or contain local disruptions before they impact the global system Maritime Strategic Imperatives Secure Our Homeland, Citizens, and Interests around the World. Preventing wars is as important as winning wars.
Core Capabilities • Forward Presence • Deterrence • Sea Control • Power Projection • Maritime Security • Humanitarian Assistance / Disaster Relief
United States Navy Today Updated for 01 JUN 10 • ORANGE - Operations • BLUE - Underway ships • GREEN - Ground forces CENTCOM Boots on Ground Approx 14,000 sailors MOUNT WHITNEY (LCC) U/W North Sea RAMAGE (DDG) U/W EMED THE SULLIVANS (DDG) U/W CENTCOM AOR IWO JIMA (LHD) IPT NYC EISENHOWER (CSG) OEF BLUE RIDGE (LCC) IPT Yokosuka, Japan OIF / OEF Overseas Contingency Operations HS TRUMAN (CSG) U/W ELANT GEORGE WASHINGTON (CSG) U/W IVO ODJ, Japan Counter-Piracy Operations BONHOMME RICHARD (LHD) U/W SOCAL ESSEX (ARG) IPT Sasebo, Japan NASSAU (ARG) Deployed to CENTCOM AOR HSV SWIFT (HSV) IPT Vasco Nunez de Balboa, Panama UNDERWOOD (FFG) MODLOC IVO Guatemala USNS MERCY (T-AH) Anchored IVO Quy Nhon, Vietnam Africa Partnership Law Enforcement Counter-Narco Overseas Contingency Operations 286 Battle Force Ships DEPLOYED: 121 (42%) NON-DEPLOYED UNDERWAY: 37 (13%)
Operation Unified Response 10,000 Sailors, 17 ships, 60 aircraft A sea-based force supporting the immediate delivery of aid to earthquake victims in Haiti Reinforced and Expanded Assistance by: VINSON (CVN) USNS COMFORT (T-AH) NORMANDY (CG) BUNKER HILL (CG) HIGGINS (DDG) UNDERWOOD (FFG) USNS GRASP (T-ARS) USNS LUMMUS (T-AK) SACAGAWEA (T-AKE) USNS HENSON (T-AGS) ALAKAI (MV) CAPE MAY (T-AKR) USNS PFC DEWAYNE WILLIAMS (T-AK) HUAKAI (MV) Operating a few miles off the coast Maritime Civil Affairs, Maritime Security, Expeditionary Logistic Support, Seabee units, Combat Camera, Navy divers and engineers - with diverse capabilities including assessment, construction, security, civil affairs & logistic support NASSAU ARG with 24 MEU: NASSAU (LHD) MESA VERDE (LPD) ASHLAND (LSD) BATAAN ARG with 22 MEU: BATAAN (LHD) FORT MCHENRY (LSD) CARTER HALL (LSD) GUNSTON HALL (LSD)
Navy SEALs executing special operations Explosive Ordnance Disposal teams disabling Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) Navy aircraft providing close air support and electronic attack Riverine forces securing key waterways Civil Construction Battalions building critical infrastructure Individual Augmentees augmenting ground forces Navy “Boots on Ground” Contributing to the Joint force in Operation ENDURING FREEDOM (OEF) and Operation IRAQI FREEDOM (OIF) Ground Forces in Central Command Iraq - 3,860 Bahrain - 2,890 Kuwait - 1,594 Afghanistan - 3,696 Qatar - 558 Total in CENTCOM: over 12,600
GWOT Augmentation – Navy’s Biggest Missions • 809 JTF HQs (237 RC/573 AC) • 634 Support to USMC (19 RC/615 AC) • 626 Engineering (RC) • 425 Medical (34 RC/391 AC) • 345 Detainee Ops (164 RC/181 AC) • 384 Training Teams (76 RC/308 AC) • 228 Provincial Reconstruction Teams (75 RC/153 AC) • 190 Combat Support (86 RC/104 AC) • 67 Intel (34 RC/33 AC) • 721 JTF HQs (231 RC/490 AC) • 260 Detainee Ops (15 RC/245 AC) • 217 Electronic Warfare Spt (AC) • 155 Support to USMC (RC) • 126 C-RAM Support (AC) • 109 Airlift Support (76 RC/33 AC) • 108 Base Operating Support (3 RC/105 AC) • 94 Intel (40 RC/54 AC) • 87 Engineering (RC) • 77 NAVSPECWAR (RC) • 72 Training Teams (34 RC/38 AC) • 55 Civil Affairs (19 RC/36 AC) CENTCOM Overall Totals ~14,000 Ashore ~9,700 Afloat • 504 Customs Inspection (492 RC/12 AC) • 360 Medical (2 RC/358 AC) • 185 Port Security (RC) • 112 Law & Order/ Confinement Dets/Working Dogs (101 RC/11 AC) • OTHER GLOBAL: • 872 Guantanamo (55 RC/817 AC) • 292 Medical – Landstuhl (266 RC/26 AC) • 130 CENTCOM HQ (56 RC/75 AC) • 50 CENTCOM HQ J2 (48 RC/2 AC) • 191 JTF HQ (65 RC/126 AC) • 126 Base Operating Support (24 RC/102 AC) • 47 Comms Det (2 RC/45 AC) • 41 Medical (AC) • POC: CDR Brett Cottrell, N313 Navy Aug • AO: LCDR Howard Kolb howard.kolb@navy.mil 703-695-3085 As of 01 Jun 10
Navy Support to OEF / OIF EISENHOWER Carrier Strike Group and Carrier Air Wing 11 BONHOMME RICHARD Expeditionary Strike Group and 11th Marine Exp Unit 9,700 Sailors at Sea in CENTRAL COMMAND Supporting ground forces . . . and more Leading Combined Maritime Forces Comprised of 24 Nations UNCLASSIFIED
Counter-Piracy Operations European Union Turkey Spain Greece Sweden Netherlands Italy Portugal UK CTF 151 Turkey Singapore ROK Jordan U.S. Pakistan Australia Saudi UK Denmark Coordination Partners Canada India Japan Malaysia Yemen Coast Guard Independent Operators China Russia Iran CTF 150 Germany France • International response • Prosecution agreements • Commercial ships • adopting best practices • Continuing sanctuary ashore . . .
Emerging Missions Meeting high-end and low-end warfare challenges • EW Spectrum control • Anti-access • Piracy • Cyber Warfare • BMD • Unmanned vehicles • Swarm tactics • Riverine operations • Littoral capability • Joint operations • Low-tech threats • NEO • Nuclear proliferation
Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense Sea-based mid-course component of the Ballistic Missile Defense System Intercepts and destroys short- to intermediate-range ballistic missile threats Sustainable Forward Deployed Can pulse additional forces to respond to emergent crises Defending against established and emergent threats from int’l waters Maritime Ballistic Missile Defense
Operation Continuing Promise Latin America and Caribbean USNS COMFORT Pacific Partnership Oceana and East Asia USNS RICHARD E BYRD, USNS MERCY Africa Partnership Station East and West Coast of Africa LSD, DDG, HSV, USCGC Southern Partnership Station Latin America and Caribbean HSV SWIFT, USS OAK HILL Humanitarian Assistance . . . Beyond Haiti Using Maritime Power to Reach Out to Those In Need
Partnership Deployments – building maritime security Build partner Navy / Coast Guard capacity: Maritime Security Resource Protection Seamanship / Engineering / Medical U.S. / Coalition Interoperability Africa Partnership Station Deployments to East and West Coast Southern Partnership Station Caribbean and South America Building Partnership Capacity Trust and Cooperation Can Not be Surged
Maritime Security Force Assistance Navy Irregular Warfare Office established Global Maritime Partnerships established Navy Expeditionary Combat Command (NECC) established Riverine squadrons re-established Global Fleet Stations Combating Irregular Challenges Irregular Warfare uses the core strengths of seapower in innovative ways to add to the collective knowledge and increase security for our forces and international partners.
Fighting Two Wars United States Navy • The conventional deterrent force • The Nation’s Global Engagement Force • A Global Force For Good