
Specials Ops Requests Funding to Modernize, TransformBy Sgt. 1st Class Doug Sample, USAAmerican Forces Press Service |
WASHINGTON, The fiscal 2006 defense budget request that President Bush submitted to Congress includes a 3 percent increase in funding for U.S. Special Operations Command, for a total of $6.7 billion. Thomas W. OConnell, assistant secretary of defense for special operations and low-intensity conflict, and Army Gen. Bryan D. Brown, SOCOM commander, told a House subcommittee that the increased funding was needed to maintain force readiness and sustainability, and to provide the sufficient force structure to fight the war on terror. In 2003, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld expanded SOCOMs role in the war on terrorism by giving the command a lead role in planning and synchronizing DoD activities. This increase is essential to sustaining the necessary operations and to ensuring we can meet the secretarys transformation requirements, OConnell explained to members of the House Terrorism, Unconventional Threats and Capabilities Subcommittee. He added the funding request will continue modernization and transformation efforts the command started two years ago. Those efforts, OConnell testified, include transforming SOF capabilities to better locate and track terrorists across the globe and to conduct small, surgical operations with minimal risk to the employed force, as well as to maintain sustained operations in areas where terrorist networks are operating. The funding also would go toward continued investments in critical low-density/high-demand aviation assets that provide Special Forces units with the mobility necessary to deploy quickly and to execute their missions, OConnell said. Other funding will go toward better command, control and communications infrastructure, and to help SOCOM personnel continue worldwide deployments and 24-hour-a-day operations. During his testimony, Brown noted that his commands priorities in the war on terrorism are the readiness of our forces, and building SOFs future capabilities to be even more capable to meet the demands of the changing strategic environment. Brown noted a request for an $85 million increase in the commands operations and maintenance budget, to $2.2 billion. That increase includes a $22 million for training, as well as funds associated with sustaining SOF-specific weapons systems -- technologies that enable our operators to become faster, stealthier, more precise, lethal, survivable and sustainable, he said. The general said the nations special operations capabilities cant afford to stand pat. Special operations forces will continue to play a lead role in this war by bringing terrorists, their supporters and their state facilitators to justice, or by bringing justice to them, he explained. But winning this war will require new capabilities, sustainable increases in capacity, and significant improvements in the global reach and speed of specials operations forces. Brown told the committee that the long-term success in the global war on terrorism depends largely on the militarys ability to rapidly employ a sustainable mix of capabilities with little warning -- requiring agile, adaptive, and responsive warriors. He said the command is quickly transforming its forces to provide better the on-the-ground capability to operate in the different gray areas around the world where conventional forces are traditionally uncomfortable. OConnell warned lawmakers that the United States is at a critical moment in the war on terrorism. We have realized initial successes and achieved a degree of momentum that together support a general assessment that we are making progress in winning this war, he emphasized. But sustaining that momentum and continuing the successes against terrorists and their supporters now and into the future is just as critical. We must ride the crest of successes of the Afghan and Iraqi elections to a new level of democratic processes in the region. |
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Mar2005/20050318_242.html
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