STATEMENT OF
VADM DENNIS C. BLAIR,
DIRECTOR
THE JOINT STAFF
Mr. Chairman, members of the subcommittees, thank you for the
opportunity to appear and discuss the status of our Unmanned Aerial
Vehicle Programs. My name is Vice Admiral Dennis Blair, and I serve
as the Director of the Joint Staff.
To orient you on the JROC and its involvement in Unmanned Aerial
Vehicles, I plan to discuss four topic areas: JROC Organization, the
JROC Process, UAV requirements evolution, and current UAV priorities.
I will be followed today by representatives from each of the four
Services who will discuss the future of UAVs from their individual
service perspectives. Your last witness today is the Director of the
Defense Airborne Reconnaissance Office who will discuss the UAV
efforts from a programmatic view.
The JROC continues to evolve into one of the most useful tools
available to the Secretary of Defense, the Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, the Services, and the CINCs, validating mission
needs and requirements and ensuring that we develop and procure
weapons systems that will enhance our joint capability to meet all
threats and contingencies. The Chairman designated the Vice Chairman
to serve in the critical position of JROC Chairman; each Service Vice
is a voting member of the JROC.
The JROC plays a central role validating the warfighter's mission
needs and requirements for the acquisition process emphasizing
commonality, interoperability, compatibility, and integration. It
also oversees assessment of warfighting capabilities through a series
of eleven Joint Warfighting Capability Assessment (JWCA) teams. In
both of these crucial roles, the JROC supports the Chairman in
executing his important Title 10 responsibilities to advise the
Secretary of Defense on the establishment of requirements priorities
and the assessment of military requirements for defense acquisition
programs. The JROC does this by validating mission needs recommended
by the CINCs and Services and reviewing Operational Requirements
Documents and validating system Key Performance Parameters. These Key
Performance Parameters become the measuring stick for the success of
a developmental system.
On behalf of the Chairman and the JROC, I would like to express
our appreciation that the Congress has acknowledged the important
accomplishments of this body by recognizing the Chairman's and the
JROC's role in requirements management by codifying this authority in
the FY96 Defense Authorization Bill and Title X.. The JROC will
continue to emphasize joint warfighting while evaluating cost,
schedule, and performance and advocating the principle of cost as an
independent variable. We view this a critical role because the JROC
Chairman also serves as the Vice-Chairman of the Defense Acquisition
Board. In this capacity, he represents a consistent formal link
between the requirements generation process and the acquisition
process. At this critical decision panel, General Ralston speaks for
the warfighter to ensure we achieve the optimal military capability
at the right time.
Within the last 12 months, the JROC elected to charter a new
subcommittee to assist them in the management of their expanding
roles. The JROC Review Board or JRB is a two star panel with
representatives from each Service. The JRB has rapidly evolved into a
forum for the members to refine and shape JROC issues and provide
focus for assessment at the four star level.
The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff assesses military
requirements for defense acquisition programs and represents the
CINCs with respect to their operational requirements. The JROC is the
focal point for the requirements generation process. The JROC reviews
potential acquisition category one (ACAT I) programs and major
defense acquisition programs to support the acquisition process. The
JROC may also address non-major acquisition programs to resolve
contentious issues or high interest issues as they arise or at the
request of a CINC or Service.
After an acquisition program passes beyond Milestone 0, the JROC
reviews and validates Key Performance Parameters and designates
Operational Requirements Document approval authority to the
appropriate Service. Validation of the Key Performance Parameters
(KPPs) by the JROC ensures that the proposed concept or system will
provide a capability that will satisfy the mission need. Once the
KPPs are approved, the JROC submits them to OSD for inclusion in the
Acquisition Program Baseline. JROC involvement does not stop here.
The JROC conducts periodic reviews in parallel with the acquisition
process, and members of the Joint Staff and Services remain engaged
in the program through the integrated product team concept to ensure
the warfighters' needs are met while monitoring cost, schedule, and
performance.
Now that we have reviewed the current JROC organization and its
function, I would like to focus my next remarks on the JROC's
involvement in the development of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles or UAVs.
The Chairman, the CINCs, and the Services recognize that UAVs have
the potential to become a great force multiplier throughout the full
spectrum of future military operations. UAVs and their envisioned
concepts fully support Joint Vision 2010 and, once proven, will
contribute to the tenets of Dominant Maneuver and Precision
Engagement by providing complete, accurate, and timely battlefield
assessment and dominant battlespace knowledge dissemination.
In 1988, the Congress directed that UAVs be managed by DoD to
prevent duplication among the Services. The JROC recognized the joint
service potential of a family of UAV systems, validating mission need
statements for the full range of the spectrum to meet expressed CINC
requirements. Later, the JROC chartered a UAV Special Study Group
(SSG) to assist the JROC in carrying out its responsibility to assess
military utility requirements for all UAVs and to ensure
interoperability, commonality among Services, and monitoring of cost,
schedule, and performance. The SSG is a General Officer panel with
Service, Joint Staff and OSD representation with the flexibility to
increase membership as necessary to carry out its expressed
responsibilities. The panel is supported by an action officer working
group which assists in the management of UAV requirements and system
evolution. The UAV Special Study Group meets on a regular basis and
periodically reports to the JROC on the status of the ongoing UAV
efforts.
The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in his 1997 Posture
Statement before the full committee conveyed his vision for UAVs and
his commitment to an interoperable UAV fleet. He stated that, "Once
the Services establish that UAVs can carry the necessary sensors and
meet mission requirements in anticipated weather conditions, DoD
should move swiftly to evaluate the cost-saving tradeoffs between
manned and UAV reconnaissance systems." His statement is key because
it recognizes the potential of UAVs but cautions against making
trades before the capability is fully demonstrated and tested.
The UAV SSG has been instrumental in formulating the current UAV
requirements as they exist today. It is because of this group of
professionals that we are developing a family of UAV systems that
will be jointly procured and truly interoperable. Due to their
efforts, the JROC has been able to convey clear and concise
prioritization of UAV requirements to the material developer.
Tactical UAV continues to be the JROC's number one UAV priority.
Transition of the Predator to production and fielding is our second
priority. The High Altitude Endurance UAVs are the JROC's third UAV
priority. In each of these systems, the JROC has clearly delineated
the system requirements and has demanded Joint Service
interoperability, challenging industry to achieve realistic goals.
Just last year, the JROC, working closely with OSD, defined and
validated the requirement for a Joint Service UAV Tactical Control
Station which is scaleable in functionality and can be hosted on
existing service computer resources. Ever mindful of the CINCs'
growing reconnaissance needs, the JROC is also working with the
Science and Technology community assessing independent development
efforts that may be leveraged to enhance UAV payload and sensor
development.
As you can clearly see, there has been a great deal of activity in
the UAV arena over the last few years. After the JROC recommended
termination of the Hunter UAV procurement effort, it supported the
recommendation to pursue a Joint Tactical UAV as an Advanced Concept
Technology Demonstration or ACTD. As you know, all three of our
current UAV efforts began as ACTDs. ACTDs are designed to get an
off-the-shelf technology in the hands of the warfighter in a short
time.
The Tactical UAV, Outrider, is the ACTD that, if successful, will
meet the needs of the tactical commander in the Army, Navy, and
Marine Corps. The Outrider just accomplished its first flight.
Although the flight was late in the programmed schedule, it was a
complete success, accomplishing the planned test profile without
incident. The JROC is monitoring this ACTD closely, as some of the
current performance projections appear today to fall short of JROC
validated requirements. While the JROC does not want to continue with
a vehicle that does not fully satisfy the requirements, the JROC can
not afford to hastily recommend termination of an effort without
first obtaining demonstrated performance data on which to base the
decision. Once verifiable data is available , the JROC will assess
the potential to meet the mission requirements while considering
cost.
The Predator Medium Altitude Endurance UAV was our first major
ACTD, and it rapidly placed a theater reconnaissance asset in the
hands of the warfighter, resulting in a positive CINC military
utility assessment. This system is operating in Bosnia today. The
Predator ACTD is being praised as a major success in acquisition
reform. I would concur with this statement, but I will also tell you
that this was a learning experience, and we are applying the lessons
learned to our future ACTDs. Specifically, we should have identified
a lead Service early in the ACTD to facilitate its transition to the
formal acquisition process, and we needed to more deeply consider the
logistics tail in the demonstration as well.
The High Altitude Endurance ACTD is comprised of a demonstration
of two different air vehicles that share a common ground station, the
Global Hawk and the DarkStar. While all three UAV ACTDs are planned
to meet an established need, the HAE air vehicles, if successful, are
envisioned to replace some aging, existing fleet aircraft. The
DarkStar flew its maiden flight last year and subsequently crashed
during its second flight. The contractor identified and corrected the
problems and the first flight of air vehicle number two is scheduled
for late summer of this year. The Global Hawk has slipped slightly on
schedule, accomplishing the roll out of its first air vehicle in
February and the aircraft is preparing for its maiden flight
scheduled this fall.
We must remember that ACTDs are not full scale development
programs. They are designed to rapidly demonstrate a capability to
meet a need and are by their nature high risk. However, to control
risk, we have the option of terminating ACTDs if convinced our
requirements won't be met, or we can recommend further development,
resulting in the system entering the acquisition process at the
appropriate milestone short of production. Rest assured that the JROC
will remain engaged with these critical UAV ACTDs to ensure we
procure only the systems that will enhance the warfighter's ability
to perform his mission.
In conclusion, let me leave you with this thought. The JROC, with
the help of the UAV SSG, is a proactive participant in the evolution
of our UAVs. We know there are many future challenges, but we must
continue to press ahead with a well structured Joint UAV vision that
meets all Service and Combatant Commander reconnaissance needs.
Timely information and information dominance will be key in our
future contingencies. I believe UAVs are critical to our success for
current and future missions.
Thank You.
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