Department of Defense Authorization for Appropriations for Fiscal Year 2004: Hearings Before the Committee on Armed Services, United States Senate, One Hundred Eighth Congress, First Session, on S. 1050, to Authorize Appropriations for Fiscal Year 2004 for Military Activities of the Department of Defense, for Military Construction, and for Defense Activities of the Department of Energy, to Prescribe Personnel Strengths for Such Fiscal Year for the Armed Forces, and for Other Purposes, Part 1U.S. Government Printing Office, 2004 - United States |
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Page 4
... civilian personnel of your de- partment . All you've given in protecting our homeland and your focus on preparing our Armed Forces to meet the expected and un- expected stress of the future have greatly enhanced our national security ...
... civilian personnel of your de- partment . All you've given in protecting our homeland and your focus on preparing our Armed Forces to meet the expected and un- expected stress of the future have greatly enhanced our national security ...
Page 6
... civilian employees by denying them the right to union representation , eliminating grievance procedures , making it easier to fire them , and making it easier to transfer work currently performed by civilian employees to the private ...
... civilian employees by denying them the right to union representation , eliminating grievance procedures , making it easier to fire them , and making it easier to transfer work currently performed by civilian employees to the private ...
Page 13
... civilian personnel . A nonintuitive effect is the difficulty in managing won- derful people on the civilian side . It's a difficult element of the De- partment to manage , and as a result , we find that people are con- stantly using ...
... civilian personnel . A nonintuitive effect is the difficulty in managing won- derful people on the civilian side . It's a difficult element of the De- partment to manage , and as a result , we find that people are con- stantly using ...
Page 15
... civilian pay by $ 3.7 billion . We increased missile defense by $ 1.5 billion , including increased funds for research and development ( R & D ) of promising new tech- nologies and to deploy a small number of interceptors beginning in ...
... civilian pay by $ 3.7 billion . We increased missile defense by $ 1.5 billion , including increased funds for research and development ( R & D ) of promising new tech- nologies and to deploy a small number of interceptors beginning in ...
Page 19
... civilian personnel - so we can attract and retain and improve the perform- ance of our 700,000 - plus civilian work force . Today it is managed outside the Department . The unintentional effect has been that the Department uses military ...
... civilian personnel - so we can attract and retain and improve the perform- ance of our 700,000 - plus civilian work force . Today it is managed outside the Department . The unintentional effect has been that the Department uses military ...
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acquisition active Admiral CLARK Admiral FARGO Afghanistan air and space Air Force aircraft airmen al Qaeda areas Army Army's ballistic missile BILL NELSON billion budget capabilities Chairman WARNER challenges civilian combatant commanders committee continue DD(X Department of Defense deployed deployment efforts enhance ensure environment fight fiscal year 2004 funding future Future Combat System global homeland ICBM improve increase initiatives integrated investment Iraq Joint Force joint warfighting Jumper logistics Marine Corps ment military missile defense mission mobility National NATO Naval Navy North Korea nuclear weapons Objective Force Operation Noble Eagle operations OPTEMPO percent personnel readiness region requirements Reserve component Secretary JOHNSON Secretary of Defense Secretary ROCHE Secretary RUMSFELD Secretary WHITE Senator LEVIN SHINSEKI ships soldiers staff strategic terrorism terrorist Thank threat tion transformation United unmanned unmanned aerial vehicles USPACOM war on terrorism
Popular passages
Page 224 - Above all, we must realize that no arsenal, or no weapon in the arsenals of the world, is so formidable as the will and moral courage of free men and women.
Page 63 - Iran could test an ICBM that could deliver a several-hundred kilogram payload to many parts of the United States in the latter half of the next decade, using Russian technology and assistance.
Page 70 - ICBMs, it would probably be able to maintain only about half of the weapons it could maintain without the ban. • We judge that an unauthorized or accidental launch of a Russian strategic missile is highly unlikely so long as current technical and procedural safeguards are in place.
Page 68 - We project that during the next 15 years the United States most likely will face ICBM threats from Russia, China, and North Korea, probably from Iran, and possibly from Iraq.
Page 367 - IT-21 and incorporate them across the full spectrum of naval operations to achieve significant improvement in knowledge management and operational performance. This full dimensional approach, called FORCEnet, will provide the operational construct and architectural framework for naval warfare in the information age.
Page 202 - Along with our sister services, the Navy-Marine Corps team continues to play a key role in the Global War on Terrorism and in the establishment of stability and security in many of the world's trouble spots. Marines, both active and reserve, are operating...
Page 60 - Foreign Missile Developments and the Ballistic Missile Threat to the United States Through 2015 September 1999 Preface Congress has requested that the Intelligence Community produce annual reports on ballistic missile developments.
Page 276 - President is authorized to use the Armed Forces of the United States as he determines to be necessary and appropriate in order to ( 1 ) defend the national security of the United States against the continuing threat posed by Iraq; and (2) enforce all relevant United Nations Security Council resolutions regarding Iraq.
Page 69 - Assessments include: — likely before 2010 and very likely before 2015 (noting that an SLV with ICBM capabilities will probably be tested within the next few years); — no more than an even chance by 2010 and a better than even chance by 2015; — and less than an even chance by 2015.
Page 189 - Invest in our bold new Navy vision — Sea Power 21 — to recapitalize and transform our force and improve its ability to operate as an agile, lethal and effective member of our joint, networked warfighting team.