Transcript Document

U.S. Fleet Forces Command
Implementing Our Maritime Strategy
Briefing to AFCEA/ASNE Luncheon
Mr. Mark Honecker
13 November 2007
United States Fleet Forces
Operational Readiness, Effectiveness, Primacy
Topics
• USFF Mission and Organization
• Delivering the Navy Operational Model
• Cooperative Maritime Strategy
United States Fleet Forces
Operational Readiness, Effectiveness, Primacy
2
U.S. Fleet Forces Mission
Navy
Readiness
• Generate ready Navy forces for assignment to Combatant Commanders
– Organize, man, train, maintain and equip
– Unified voice for Fleet training policies
– Navy Global Force Manager
Navy Warfighting
Capability
Requirements
Joint Operational
and Planning
Support
Navy Anti-Terrorism
Force Protection
(ATFP)
• Articulate integrated authoritative Fleet warfighting, readiness, and
personnel capability requirements to the CNO, coordinated with other
Navy Component Commanders
• Develop transformational concepts for maritime operations
• Provide planning and operational support to COCOMs
• Exercise operational control (OPCON) and/or tactical control (TACON) of
forces when assigned by COCOM
• Perform duties as CNO Executive Agent for ATFP
• Establish and implement ATFP standards and policies for Navy units
United States Fleet Forces
Operational Readiness, Effectiveness, Primacy
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USFF Service and Joint Roles
Joint / Operational
Navy / Title X
SECRETARY
OF DEFENSE
JOINT
CHIEFS
CNO
SECNAV
STRAT
COM
JF
COM
NORTH
COM
CNO
U.S. Fleet Forces Command (FFC)
Prepare Forces
Provide
SOCOM
TRANS
COM
Other Regional CCDRs
(PAC / EUR / CENT / SOUTH)
Forward Navy
Operating Commands
Plan and Operate
(organize, man, train, equip)
United States Fleet Forces
Operational Readiness, Effectiveness, Primacy
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USFF and Supporting Commands
U.S. Fleet Forces
(USFF)
Collaborate
and Force
Provision
Naval Forces
Central Command
Operational Commanders
Second
Fleet
Surface
Forces
Command
Air
Forces
Command
Naval Forces
European Command
Submarine
Forces
Command
Naval Forces
Southern Command
Third
Fleet
Network
Warfare
Command
PACIFIC FLEET
Expeditionary
Combat
Command
Military
Sealift
Command
Force Commanders
Other U.S. Fleet
Service Providers
United States Fleet Forces
- Board of Inspection and Survey
- Meteorology & Oceanography Command
- Munitions Command
- Warfare Development Command
- Regional Maintenance Commands
Operational Readiness, Effectiveness, Primacy
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USFF Maritime Homeland Roles
• Commander, USFFC activated as Joint Force
Maritime Component Commander – North to:
– Position forces in preparation to deal with threats
based on specific or abundant intelligence
– Execute operations against specific maritime threat
• Navy maintains alert forces
– Ready response for surveillance, interdiction
– Duty Cruisers, Destroyers, aircraft
Navy Alert Bases
• Defense Support of Civil
Authorities
– Disaster relief
– Consequence management
United States Fleet Forces
Operational Readiness, Effectiveness, Primacy
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Navy Operational Model
• Forward, rotational forces responsive to Component Commander
demand
– Disaggregated for regional maritime security
– Aggregated for major operations
• Rapid surge to meet emerging demands
• Dissuade/deter to reduce chances of major combat ops
– Deliver access and Maritime Domain Awareness
– Shape through Navy Component Commanders
– Power projection and strike capability readiness
• Globally-netted Maritime Headquarters and Operations Centers
– Information Operations, reachback, and info sharing
United States Fleet Forces
Operational Readiness, Effectiveness, Primacy
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Fleet Response Plan
Delivering the Operational Model
Get ready sooner
BASIC
UNIT
INTEGRATED
GROUP
Surge for specific MCO Surge
Ready
mission
United States Fleet Forces
Stay ready longer
DEPLOYMENT and SUSTAINMENT
MAINTENANCE
FORCES
Major Combat Operations (MCO) Ready
Lifecycle
investment
Operational Readiness, Effectiveness, Primacy
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Maritime Headquarters /
Maritime Ops Centers
EUCOM
NORTHCOM
FFC
NAVEUR
C3F C2F
C6F
PACOM
CENTCOM
NAVCENT
SOUTHCOM
PACFLT
C7F
C3F
C5F
NAVSOUTH
STRATCOM
JFCOM
SOCOM
TRANSCOM
FFC
FFC
NAVSPECWAR
MSC
NNWC
MOC
SUBFOR
Globally-Netted Maritime Network
United States Fleet Forces
Tailored
Operational Readiness, Effectiveness, Primacy
MOC 9
Globally Netted Maritime Force
Net-Centric warfighting
capabilities
today and tomorrow
Robust, adaptable
maintainable solutions
Increasing naval
network complexity
Improved situational
awareness
United States Fleet Forces
Operational Readiness, Effectiveness, Primacy
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Cooperative Maritime Strategy
“United States seapower will be globally
postured to secure our homeland and citizens
from direct attack and to advance our interests
around the world…
Strategic Imperatives:
- Limit regional conflict with forward deployed,
decisive maritime power.
- Deter major power war.
- Win our Nation’s wars.
- 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.”
“We believe that preventing wars is as important as winning wars.”
United States Fleet Forces
Operational Readiness, Effectiveness, Primacy
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Cooperative Maritime Strategy
Expanded Core Naval Capabilities
- Forward Presence
- Deterrence
- Cross-Domain Sea Control
- Power Projection
- Maritime Security
- Humanitarian Assistance / Disaster Response
Implementation Priorities
- Improve Integration and Interoperability
- Enhance Awareness
- Prepare Our People
United States Fleet Forces
Operational Readiness, Effectiveness, Primacy
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Takeaways
• Our Navy has an enduring Mission
• USFF plays critical roles in Fleet Readiness and Global
Maritime Operations
• Executing our Maritime Strategy requires:
– Capability and Capacity (People and Systems)
– Partnerships and Interoperability... Industry, Joint, International,
Inter-Agency
– Continued technological advantages
United States Fleet Forces
Operational Readiness, Effectiveness, Primacy
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United States Fleet Forces
Operational Readiness, Effectiveness, Primacy
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