Gun and Missile Systems · Gun and Missile Systems An Integrated Warfare Perspective Mr....
Transcript of Gun and Missile Systems · Gun and Missile Systems An Integrated Warfare Perspective Mr....
Gun and Missile SystemsGun and Missile SystemsAn An IntegratedIntegrated Warfare PerspectiveWarfare Perspective
Mr. Christopher DeeganMr. Christopher DeeganExecutive DirectorExecutive Director
PEO Integrated Warfare SystemsPEO Integrated Warfare Systems
UNCLASSIFIED
UNCLASSIFIED
Distribution Statement A: Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited. This brief is provided for information only and does not constitute a commitment on behalf of the U.S. Government to provide additional information on the program and/or sale of the equipment or system.
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OutlineOutline
• Today’s Environment• Where are we going?• How might we get there?
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Defense Budget as a Defense Budget as a Percentage of GDPPercentage of GDP
Percentage of GDP
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
1945 1955 1965 1975 1985 1995 2005
Source: Calculations based on Office of Management and Budget, Historical Tables, Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 2009 (Washington D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 2008), at www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/fy2009/pdf/hist.pdf (November 27, 2008)
Today
End of World War II
(1945) 34.5%
Korean War (1953) 11.7% Vietnam War
(1968) 9.5% Reagan
Buildup (1986) 6.2%
Gulf War
(1991) 5.4%
(2013)3.1%
End or PB09 FYDP
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FY2009 Budget AuthorityFY2009 Budget Authority
79%
21%DoD
$518.3B
Other Federal Spending
(non-DoD)$2,009.6B
Navy$149.0B
28%
Total Federal Budget = $2,527.9B Total DoD Budget = $518.3B(does not include non-DoD National Defense)
Source: National Defense Budget Estimates for FY2009, September 2008 (“The Green Book”)
Army$139.0B
27%
Air Force$143.7B
28%
Defense Wide
$86.6B17%
Department of Defense Budgetas % of Federal Budget
Department of Navy Budgetas % of DoD Budget
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Navy TOA Profile Navy TOA Profile 1947 1947 -- 20102010
5
0
2040
6080
100
120140
160
FY47
FY50
FY53
FY56
FY59
FY62
FY65
FY68
FY71
FY74
FY77
FY80
FY83
FY86
FY89
FY92
FY95
FY98
FY01
FY04
FY07
FY10
O&M PERS R&D PROC
CY06 $B
*Consumer Price Index conversion factors were used for FY45 – FY61 (CY$).
** Official DoD conversion factors were used for FY62 - FY11 (CY$).
Korea Vietnam Reagan Era Gulf War
9/11
OEF/OIF
1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s
PERS 28% 23% 22% 21% 29% 25%
O&M 26% 25% 30% 34% 35% 35%
R&D 7% 11% 11% 10% 10% 13%
PROC 39% 41% 37% 35% 26% 27%
2000-2006
AVG % of TOA BY DECADE
Navy TOA mirrors DoD Underlying Outlay CycleNavy TOA mirrors DoD Underlying Outlay Cycle
0
2040
6080
100
120140
160
FY47
FY50
FY53
FY56
FY59
FY62
FY65
FY68
FY71
FY74
FY77
FY80
FY83
FY86
FY89
FY92
FY95
FY98
FY01
FY04
FY07
FY10
O&M PERS R&D PROC
CY06 $B
*Consumer Price Index conversion factors were used for FY45 – FY61 (CY$).
** Official DoD conversion factors were used for FY62 - FY11 (CY$).
Korea Vietnam Reagan Era Gulf War
9/11
OEF/OIF
1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s
PERS 28% 23% 22% 21% 29% 25%
O&M 26% 25% 30% 34% 35% 35%
R&D 7% 11% 11% 10% 10% 13%
PROC 39% 41% 37% 35% 26% 27%
2000-2006
AVG % of TOA BY DECADE
Navy TOA mirrors DoD Underlying Outlay CycleNavy TOA mirrors DoD Underlying Outlay CycleUNCLASSIFIED
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Shipbuilding Procurement HistoryShipbuilding Procurement HistoryFY2009 PresidentFY2009 President’’s Budgets Budget
FYDP Projections Now Below Cold War Averages
0
4
8
12
16
20
24
28
1978
1980
1982
1984
1986
1988
1990
1992
1994
1996
1998
2000
2002
2004
2006
2008
2010
2012
02,0004,0006,0008,00010,00012,00014,00016,00018,00020,000
Total New Const (FY07$M) Ship Qty Ship Constr as % DoN TOA
# S
hips
# S
hips
// Shi
p C
onst
ruct
ion
% D
oN
Shi
p C
onst
ruct
ion
% D
oN
TOA
TOA
More High MixHigh/Low Mix
End of Cold War
(-70%)
Cold War Avg
(10%)
2 Carriers/Yr
PB 09 Avg 9%
Post Cold War Avg
7%
Updated 2/20/08
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Navy R&D and ProcurementNavy R&D and ProcurementFY2009 PresidentFY2009 President’’s Budget s Budget
Updated 2/15/08
SealiftMPF(F)T-AKEMLP
JCCXRCOHLPD-17LHA(R)
LCSCG(X)
DDG 1000SSN
CVN
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
55
FY07 FY08 FY09 FY10 FY11 FY12 FY13Fiscal Year
$ in
Bill
ions
Enabling RDT&E
Aircraft Procurement
Enabling RDT&EEnabling RDT&E
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FY09 Weapons Funding Allocations
FMS8%
Support6%
Development13%
Other to include Army, USCG, DFS
19%
Procurement54%
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Raytheon ERP/WR/2
‘Yesterday’s’ Problem‘Yesterday’s’ Problem
Today Today -- Changing Changing Operational EnvironmentOperational Environment
Raytheon ERP/WR/2
SelfDefenses
SelfDefenses
AreaDefenses
AreaDefenses
OuterDefenses
CombatAir Patrol
Raytheon ERP/WR/2
SelfDefenses
SelfDefenses
AreaDefenses
AreaDefenses
OuterDefenses
CombatAir Patrol
Today’s ProblemToday’s Problem
Terminal ShipDefense
Terminal Terminal ShipShip
DefenseDefense
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New ThreatsNew Threats……and Some Old Onesand Some Old Ones
Russia offers Yakhont
missile for export
US protests Iran Harassment of
US ships
China tests Russian
submarine missile
Diversity in the threat.... Results in an uneasy peace...
DHS/MDA concerns to hide ballistic Missile
Mobile Missile Launcher
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SMSM--66
SMSM--22
ESSMESSM
RAMRAMCIWSCIWS
SMSM--33
MK38
MK46
MK110
MK75
MK 45MK 4555””/62/62 AGS/LRLAPAGS/LRLAP
Surface Ship Weapons Surface Ship Weapons Defense in DepthDefense in Depth
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SMSM--6 Battlespace6 BattlespaceA
LTIT
UD
E (k
ft)
SURFACE RADAR HORIZON
SM-6 AWS Phase 1 & 2
SM-2
SM-6 AWS Phase 3 w/ IFC
DOWNRANGE (nmi)
•SM-6 Capability at IOC (2010)• AWS Phase 1: Launch as SM-2 Blk IV, fly as SM-6• AWS Phase 2: Launch as SM-6, fly as SM-6
SM-6 Buys Battlespace ….. Game Changer
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PEO IWS PEO IWS Supporting the Warfighter TodaySupporting the Warfighter Today
Mission• Force Protection• Counter-Rocket Artillery & Mortar (Phalanx)• Anti-ship cruise missile defense• Fleet area air and missile defense• Joint theater air and missile defense• Anti-Surface Warfare• Naval Surface Fire SupportDescription• Autonomous and/or integrated close-in weapons• Lightweight, low cost, high firepower ASMD • Medium range, all-weather, guided missiles• Extended range surface-to-air missile
– Compatible with joint integrated fire control • Advanced Gun System / 155mm LRLAP• Digital, joint-integrated, naval fires control system• Conventional naval gun systems and ammunition
– Major, intermediate, minor caliber, and small arms
Platforms• Land-based C-RAM for US and allied ground forces• CVN, LHD, LHA, LSD, LPD, CG, DDG, FFG, LCS• Fifteen allied naviesEmployment• Effective against current and future air threats• Layered defense against terrorist and conventional small fast surface craft• Engage land targets at long range with precise, high volume fires
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• Warning, disabling & destructive gun fire to respond anti-small boat asymmetric threats in support of Surface Warfare (SuW) and low, slow flyers.
Description:• Minor Caliber Guns: Lightweight, low cost,
remotely controlled stabilized gun weapon systems with on-mount Electro-Optic FireControl System (EOFCS)
• Medium Caliber Guns: Main battery deck guns on frigate size platforms; also used as secondary battery on DDG 1000 Destroyers.
Ships:• DDG / CG• LPD-17 / LPD / LHD• Large Deck Amphibs• FFG Class Frigates• Littoral Combat Ships (LCS)• US Coast Guard Cutters
– WMSL / WHEC / WMSM / WMEC / WPB
PEO IWS PEO IWS Guns and Gun Weapon SystemsGuns and Gun Weapon Systems
Medium / Minor Caliber Gun Weapons System Mission:
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22 ShipsCG 52-73 * SM-2 SM-2 + SM-6 + ESSM
SM-2DDG 51-78 *28 Ships
SM-2 + ESSMDDG 79-11223 Ships
RIM-7 + ESSM + RAM11 Ships 1 ShipCV/CVN
12 ShipsESSM + RAM
Present FY 201528 Ships
34 Ships
22 Ships
11 Ships
RIM-7 + RAMLHD 1-68 Ships
5 Ships
RAMLHA 13 Ships
2 Ships
RAMLSD 4112 Ships
12 Ships
RAMLPD 174 Ships
9 Ships
Tomahawk SM-2
73 Ships
Tomahawk SM-2
73 Ships
ESSM24 ShipsESSM24 Ships
2 ShipsLCS 33 ShipsRAM / SeaRAM
2 Ships
LHA 6In Design
1 Ship
In DesignDDG 1000
SM-2 + SM-6 + ESSM
RAM
ESSM + RAM
RAM
RAM
RAM
SM-2 + SM-6 + ESSM
RIM-7 + RAMLHD 7-8* 2 ShipsESSM + RAM
* Some are ABMD / SM-3 capable
SM-2 + ESSM
Surface Ship WeaponsSurface Ship WeaponsMissiles Missiles
RAM38 ShipsRAM38 Ships
TomahawkSM-2
86 Ships
TomahawkSM-2
86 Ships
ESSM98 ShipsESSM98 Ships
RAM75 ShipsRAM75 Ships
SM-684 ShipsSM-684 Ships
SM-318 ShipsSM-318 Ships
SM-3XX ShipsSM-3XX Ships
RAM / SeaRAM
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0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
FY99 FY00 FY01 FY02 FY03 FY04 FY05 FY06 FY07 FY08 FY09 FY10 FY11 FY12 FY13 FY14End of Fiscal Year
Block IB CIWS
Non-Block IB CIWS
Increasing capability without increasing footprint.Note: Includes past and projected decommissioning of Fleet Units.
CIWS Population(Block IB vs. Non- Block IB)
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Future DirectionFuture Direction
• Expand the Battlespace to Defeat Evolving Threat
• Improve Systems and Employment
• Support the Warfighters’Requirements
Quality....Let’s not forget about it!
Page 18 UNCLASSIFIEDTransition from Platform to Enterprise SolutionsTransition from Platform to Enterprise Solutions
SM-3, SM-6, RAM Blk 2, ICWI, P3I Link, Adv. Int. Range Missile
RadarDevelopment
Task Force ASW/ Transformational
Technologies
AGS, CIWS 1B+, Medium & Minor Caliber Guns
SQQ-89A(V)15 SIPS ARCI / APB Periscope
Detection Radar SSDT
Distributed Netted Sensors
ASW Combat C2
LCS ASW MM
Twin-Line TB29
OA CS Applications
Aegis BL 7.1 HW ArchitectureSSDS Mk 2 HW ArchitectureDDG 1000 TSCE
Future Open, Modular, Scalable,Multi-level, Computing Environment for Future Platforms
OA Computing Environment
EnterpriseProcesses
Ship Construction InnovationWarfare System TurnkeyStandardized Ship Hotel SpacesMultiyear Ship Procurement
Common Cert Common DisplaysEnterprise T&E Next Generation ISE
S-VSRSPY-3
CJR XCJR S
New
Deve
lopm
ent
Low-Cost Radar Periscope Detection
Future Radar Suite
DDG 1000
CVN 78CG(X)
Radars for new shipsDBR
SPS-49 / SPN-43 Replacement
CJR Suite
IABM / SIAP BMD Merge
SBTNIFC-CA
Missile Development
ASWDevelopment
DDG 1000Functionality
GunDevelopment
Common enterprise solutionsEffective warfighting capabilitiesCreate culture of aligned warfare system acquisition & life cycle support
Navy Enterprise Warfare Systems
PEO IWS Future DirectionPEO IWS Future Direction
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PEO IWS Missile and Gun EvolutionPEO IWS Missile and Gun Evolution
• MK 45 5”/54• MK 45 5”/62
• MK 46 30mm• MK 38 25mm
• MK 110 57mm• MK 75 Mod 0
• AGS• TBD
• TBD
• MK 46 30mm • MK 38 30mm
Major Major CaliberCaliber
• AGS• MK 45 5”/54• MK 45 5”/62
Intermediate Intermediate CaliberCaliber
Minor Minor CaliberCaliber
• MK 110 57mm• MK 75 76mm
• MK 46 30mm• MK 38 25mm
GunsGuns
• SM-2 Blk IV
• RAM Blk 0• RAM Blk 1A• CIWS Blk 1B• SeaRAM
• SM-2
• SM-6
• Advanced Intermediate Range Missile
• RAM• SeaRAM
Long Range Long Range Area DefenseArea Defense
• SM-6
Medium Range Medium Range Area DefenseArea Defense
Terminal Terminal DefenseDefense
• SM-2 Blk III• SM-2 Blk IIIA• SM-2 Blk IIIB
• RAM• CIWS Blk 1B• SeaRAM
MissilesMissiles
• RIM-7P (NSSM)• ESSM
Short Range Short Range Self DefenseSelf Defense • ESSM
Today 2014 TBD
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Advanced Intermediate Advanced Intermediate Range MissileRange Missile
• Fill anticipated Gaps between SM-6 ER Active and RAM Block II – Each will IOC in 2011
• Dual Mode Semi-Active and Active Seeker
• SM-2 Block IIIB and ESSM were introduced in Mid 1990s.
• Investment to Pace the Threat
• Develop Capability to Defeat Future Air Threats at Intermediate Ranges
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Future TrendsFuture TrendsFighting at HypervelocityFighting at Hypervelocity
• Current Surface Ship Weapons programs have planned product improvements through the mid term, i.e. 2015.
• Hypervelocity and Directed Energy Technologies are the future of Surface Ship Weapons and Launching Systems
• Enablers:– New and improved power systems
on future ships – Advanced materials and
manufacturing techniques• Electromagnetic Rail Gun• Free Electron Laser• Solid State Lasers• High Power Microwaves• Enhanced Weapon System
Technologies
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SummarySummary
• Persistent Technology Innovation is the US Asymmetric Advantage – Problem never gets any
easier• Government/Industry
Partnership will get Us to the Next Generation of Capability
• Integrated Guns and Weapon system Approach Ensures Maximum Benefit from Our Efforts