31 March 2019 Military space gets big boost in Pentagon’s $750 billion budget plan By Sandra Erwin Space News |
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https://spacenews.com/militaryspace-gets-big-boost-in-pentagons-750-billio/ |
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Pentagon officials hailed the Trump administration’s
plan to spend $14.1 billion on national security space
programs in 2020 as a bold but necessary move to preserve
and strengthen U.S. military dominance. The nearly 20 percent increase in military space
spending sought by the Trump administration comes as the
White House and the Pentagon prepare to stand up a new
Space Development Agency, reestablish U.S. Space Command
and plead their case to Congress for establishing a new
Space Force within the Department of the Air Force. “Future wars will be waged not just in the air, on the
land or at sea but also in space and cyberspace,
dramatically increasing the complexity of warfare,” David
Norquist, acting deputy secretary of defense, told
reporters following the rollout of the Pentagon’s budget
March 12. Norquist said budget priorities were shaped by the
administration’s National Defense Strategy, which
emphasizes strategic competition with China and Russia.
The space investments, he said, support the military’s
transition to a more resilient architecture that allows
forces to operate in a contested environment. The funding request for space is part of the
president’s $750 billion proposed budget for national
defense — $718 billion for the Defense Department and $32
billion for national security programs performed by the
Department of Energy’s nuclear laboratories and other
agencies. The lion’s share of the space budget proposal, about
$13.8 billion, is for space programs primarily overseen by
the U.S. Air Force. An additional $306 million is for
standing up three new organizations: U.S. Space Force,
U.S. Space Command and the Space Development Agency. In
total, DoD is seeking a 19.5 percent increase for space,
or $2.3 billion more than the $11.8 billion Congress
enacted for 2019, according to Air Force budget deputy
Carolyn Gleason. Jamie Morin, vice president of defense systems
operations at the Aerospace Corp., called the $2.3 billion
boost for military space proposed by the administration a
“strong increase.”
But he cautioned that there are inconsistencies in how
DoD reports its space budgets from year to year. “I don’t
think there’s been a consistent presentation of that data
in the budget rollout,” Morin told SpaceNews. A
former director of the Pentagon’s Cost Assessment
and Program Evaluation office, Morin said DoD “picks and
chooses the data presentation rather than a long-term
consistent way.” Russell Rumbaugh, senior budget analyst at the
Aerospace Corp., said that while certain portions of DoD’s
space budget are in the public domain, those records are
not comprehensive and not easily recreated or traceable
over time. “Furthermore, current efforts to reorganize
space are likely to result in new ways of thinking about
what should comprise the defense space budget,” said
Rumbaugh. The $14.1 billion space request, like everything else
in the Pentagon’s budget, is far from a fait accompli.
Democrats already have rejected the proposal for shifting
$165 billion of the $718 billion DoD budget into the war
operations account known as Overseas Contingency
Operations (OCO) and for setting aside $3.6 billion of
military construction funds to help build a wall along the
U.S.-Mexico border. The OCO gambit allows the Trump administration to keep
DoD’s base budget request at $576 billion — the limit set
by the Budget Control Act — and still dramatically
increase defense spending without having to cut a deal
with Democrats, who would demand a matching increase for
non-defense agencies. OCO is not subject to Budget Control
Act spending caps Congress imposed in 2011 to resolve a
debt-ceiling crisis. The Pentagon acknowledged that $98
billion of the $165 billion OCO request is for “base
requirements” that support the National Defense Strategy
but are not war-related. House Appropriations Committee Chairwoman Nita Lowey
(D-N.Y.) called Trump’s budget a “reckless” proposal that
has “no chance of garnering the necessary bipartisan
support to become law.” House Armed Services Committee
Chairman Adam Smith (D-Wash.) said his committee will not
support any budget with such a large OCO request. Some
Democrats have hinted they would be open to a deal that
would lift Budget Control Act caps for both defense and
non-defense, and would reduce national defense spending to
$733 billion. Under any scenario, a protracted battle over
funding priorities lies ahead. This means the DoD budget
will be “up in the air again this year,” Morin said.
“We’re into another year of high uncertainty.” The space request includes $10.2 billion for space
investments, a broad category that includes both research,
development, test and evaluation (RDT&E) and procurement. The more notable expenditures proposed for 2020 are for
a new constellation of missile-warning satellites known as
Next Generation Overhead Persistent Infrared (Next-Gen
OPIR); for the GPS 3 constellation of positioning,
navigation and timing satellites; for national security
launch services; and for the development of future
satellite communications systems. The Air Force is requesting $1.4 billion in RDT&E
funds. That includes $817 million for the development of
three Block 0 geosynchronous missile-warning satellites
being built by Lockheed Martin under a $2.9 billion
sole-source contract awarded in August, $107 for two
polar-orbiting satellites to be made by Northrop Grumman
under a much smaller contract, $264 million for ground
systems and $205 million for studies of future parts and
material obsolescence. The Air Force projects large
funding increases for next-gen OPIR over the next several
years to accelerate the program: $2 billion in 2021, $2.2
billion in 2022, $2.6 billion in 2023 $3 billion in 2024. Next-gen OPIR will replace the legacy Space Based
Infrared System (SBIRS) satellites Lockheed Martin has
been building for decades. The first Block 0 GEO satellite
will be fielded in 2025 and the first polar satellite by
2027. All five Block 0 satellites need to be on orbit by
2029. The budget also seeks $233 million in procurement funds
for SBIRS, to fund launch integration and early on-orbit
testing for the GEO-5 and -6 satellites. The budget includes $462 million for the development of
the GPS 3 follow-on satellites, or GPS 3F, to be built by
Lockheed Martin under a $7.2 billion contract awarded last
year for up to 22 satellites. There is also $414 million
for the procurement of the first GPS 3F in 2020. The Air
Force projects spending $3.8 billion on GPS 3F through
2024. It will procure two satellites in 2021, three in
2022, three in 2023 and three in 2024. According to the Air Force, the GPS 3F satellites
provide the same services as the GPS 3 satellites that
already are in production but have improved capabilities
to deliver high-power Military Code (M-Code) signals.
Lockheed is currently building 10 GPS 3 satellites the Air
Force initially ordered in 2008. The first GPS 3 satellite
launch in December was on a SpaceX Falcon 9. The second
GPS 3 is slated to launch in July on a Delta 4. The 2020
budget seeks $31 million for technical assessments of the
production of vehicles 3 through 10 and their preparation
for launch. The budget also has $329 million in RDT&E funds for GPS
user equipment, with an additional $400 million projected
from 2021 through 2024. User equipment consists of
receivers, antennas and electronics to derive navigation
and time information transmitted from GPS satellites. There is $380 million in RDT&E funds for the new ground
control system for GPS 3, called OCX, plus $64 million for
the integration of OCX into the GPS enterprise. Raytheon
is the prime contractor. The Air Force projects to spend
an additional $1.2 billion on OCX from 2021 to 2024. The request for satellite communication funds the
recapitalization of the Northrop Grumman-led Enhanced
Polar Satcom system ($427 million) and for Boeing-built
Family of Beyond Line-of-Sight Terminals ($197 million). The budget also seeks $174 million to accelerate the
prototyping of a Protected Tactical Satellite
Communications (PTS) system. The Air Force is developing a
Protected Anti-jam Tactical Satellite Communications
family of systems, one of which is the PTS, designed to
operate in contested environments using the Protected
Tactical Waveform. PTS includes a space segment, ground
segment and gateway segment. The budget includes $105 million for the PTS ground
system called the Protected Tactical Enterprise Service,
or PTES, being built by Boeing. Initially PTES will use
the Wideband Global Satcom system and be expanded later to
include commercial satellites and the PTS system. To develop a future replacement of the Advanced
Extremely High Frequency strategic satcom system, the Air
Force is seeking $172 million for the Evolved Strategic
Satcom program. ESS will support strategic missions such
as presidential, nuclear command and control strategic
communications. The Air Force is requesting $1.2 billion to procure
four launches under the program that used to be called
Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle and was renamed National
Security Space Launch (NSSL) per congressional mandate.
The budget also seeks $432 million for development of
next-generation vehicles.
The Air Force is responsible for funding its own
missions. Other NSSL launches are funded by the National
Reconnaissance Office and the Navy. The RDT&E investment is for Launch Service Agreement
public-private partnerships awarded last fall to Blue
Origin, Northrop Grumman and United Launch Alliance for
the development of new launch systems. The budget creates a new funding line for the
Enterprise Ground Services (EGS) program, with a $138
million RDT&E request. The EGS will become the primary
ground command-and-control system for Air Force space
systems. Legacy ground systems over the next decade will
transition to the EGS architecture. The EGS is expected to
support 23 missions, including missile warning, missile
defense, satellite communications, space domain awareness
and other experimental satellites. The Pentagon officially established the SDA on March 12
under the authority of the undersecretary of defense for
research and engineering. The SDA was created to
accelerate the development and fielding of new military
space capabilities. DoD is requesting $44.8 million for
staffing, $20 million to develop a proliferated low Earth
orbit sensor network, $85 million for space technology
development and prototyping, $15 million to develop
transport layer architecture and standards, $10 million
for commercial procurement of space situational awareness
and launch of small satellites in LEO, $30 million for LEO
missile warning ground integration, $15 million for a
space-based interceptors study and $15 million for a
space-based discrimination assessment.
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