Statement Of Administration Policy
H.R. 1735 – National Defense Authorization Act for FY 2016
(Rep. Thornberry, R-TX, and 1 cosponsor)
The
Administration appreciates the House Armed Services Committee’s
continued support of our national defense and supports a number of
provisions in H.R. 1735, the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year (FY) 2016, such as authorities that support ongoing
operations. The Administration also appreciates many of the acquisition
reform measures included in the bill and looks forward to continued
cooperation with the Committee on further progress in this area.
While
there are areas of agreement with the Committee, the Administration
strongly objects to a number of provisions in the bill. First, the
President has been very clear about the core principle that he will not
support a budget that locks in sequestration, and he will not fix
defense without fixing non-defense spending. Sequestration levels will
damage our ability to restore readiness, advance badly-needed
technological modernization, and keep faith with our troops and their
families. Unfortunately, the bill fails to authorize sufficient funding
for our military’s priorities, and instead uses Overseas Contingency
Operations (OCO) funding in ways that leaders of both parties have made
clear are inappropriate. Shifting base budget resources into OCO risks
undermining a mechanism meant to fund incremental costs of overseas
conflicts and fails to provide a stable, multi-year budget on which
defense planning is based. The use of OCO funding to circumvent budget
caps in defense spending also ignores the long-term connection between
national security and economic security and fails to account for vital
national security functions carried out at non-defense agencies.
Further,
the bill fails to adopt many of the needed force structure and weapons
system reforms included in the President’s Budget, including failing to
provide an authorization for a new Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC)
round to allow the Department of Defense (DOD) to properly align the
military’s infrastructure with the needs of its evolving force. It also
includes non-germane provisions, such as those undermining the
Endangered Species Act, that have nothing to do with national defense.
The President’s defense strategy depends on investing every dollar where
it will have the greatest effect, which the Administration’s FY 2016
proposals will accomplish through critical reforms that divest unneeded
force structure, slow growth in compensation, and reduce wasteful
overhead. The Committee’s changes would constrain the ability of DOD to
align military capability and force structure with the President’s
defense strategy and to reduce unneeded costs. The bill also continues
unwarranted restrictions, and imposes onerous additional ones, regarding
detainees at Guantanamo Bay. If this bill were presented to the President, the President’s senior advisors would recommend to the President that he veto it.
The
Administration looks forward to working with Congress to address these
and other concerns, a number of which are outlined in more detail below,
and urges Congress to work in a bipartisan fashion to make necessary
changes to the bill. In particular, this is the time to come
together to find a comprehensive and real solution to sequestration that
strengthens both our security and our economy. The
Administration also looks forward to reviewing the classified annex and
working with the Congress to address any concerns on classified
programs.
Guantanamo Detainee Provisions:
The Administration strongly objects to several provisions of the bill
that relate to the detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. As the
Administration has said many times before, operating this facility
weakens our national security by draining resources, damaging our
relationships with key allies and partners, and emboldening violent
extremists. Rather than taking steps to bring this chapter of our
history to a close, as the President has repeatedly called upon Congress
to do, this bill aims to extend it. Not only would it extend existing
restrictions, it would impose additional unwise and unnecessary ones
that would further impede efforts to responsibly close the facility.
Under existing law, the Secretary of Defense is already required to make
a determination that actions have been or will be taken to
substantially mitigate risks to the United States or U.S. persons or
interests posed by detainee transfers abroad. Sections 1038 and 1039
would impose still more onerous restrictions on such transfers, and, in
some cases, seek to prohibit certain transfers entirely. Sections 1036
and 1037 would prohibit the use of funds to transfer Guantanamo
detainees to the United States or to construct or modify any facility in
the United States to house detainees. The President has objected to
the inclusion of these and similar provisions in prior legislation. The
restrictions contained in this bill are unwarranted and threaten to
interfere with the Executive Branch’s ability to determine the
appropriate disposition of detainees and its flexibility to determine
when and where to prosecute them, based on the facts and circumstances
of each case and our national security interests, and when and where to
transfer them consistent with our national security and our humane
treatment policy. Sections 1036, 1038, and 1039 would, moreover,
violate constitutional separation-of-powers principles under certain
circumstances, and section 1038 could in some circumstances interfere
with a detainee’s right to the writ of habeas corpus. In addition,
section 1034 would require burdensome and unnecessary reporting to
Congress and could interfere with the President’s authority to protect
sensitive national security information. Sections 1040 and 1041 would
impermissibly require the disclosure of certain documents, including
those protected by privilege, and restrict specified DOD funds until
those documents are provided to Congress, despite the Administration’s
ongoing cooperation in providing documents and information to Congress.
Sequestration and Misuse of OCO Funds:
The Administration strongly objects to the bill’s authorization of
sequester level appropriations for items that were requested in and
belong in the base budget, and use of OCO - a funding mechanism intended
to pay for wars and not subject to the budget caps - to pay for $38
billion in base requirements. Sequestration adds risk to our national
security by threatening the size, readiness, presence, and capability of
our military, and threatens the economic security on which our national
security depends. The Committee clearly recognizes that the
President’s Budget level for defense is needed, but authorizes it in a
way that fails to acknowledge the need to reverse sequestration for both
defense and non-defense spending.
Military Compensation and Retirement Modernization Commission (MCRMC) Recommendations:
The Administration appreciates the Committee’s support for some of the
MCRMC recommendations to improve our military compensation and
retirement systems, and encourages Congress to support the additional
recommendations for which DOD has transmitted legislation. The
Administration is still evaluating how the more complex recommendations -
such as the Blended Retirement System and Reserve Component Duty
Statuses - would affect the All-Volunteer Force, and expects to provide
the Committee with further views on these proposals in the coming
months. The Administration looks forward to continuing to work with
Congress and the MCRMC on these provisions to meet our solemn
responsibility to ensure that any changes protect the long-term
viability of the All-Volunteer Force, improve quality-of-life for
service members and their families, and safeguard the fiscal
sustainability of the military compensation and retirement systems.
Compensation Reform:
The President’s Budget provides the funding and common-sense reforms
that will ensure that service members receive competitive pay and
benefits and critical training and equipment. The Administration
believes it is imperative to slow the growth of basic pay and housing
allowances, modernize military healthcare, and reform how commissaries
operate, and strongly encourages members of Congress to support these
reforms, which would save $1.7 billion in FY 2016 and $18 billion
through FY 2020.
Among
these reforms are proposed improvements that will modernize the TRICARE
program. TRICARE remains fundamentally unchanged since its inception
in the mid-1990s and is antiquated by contemporary health plan
standards. The Consolidated Health Plan structure would provide DOD
with substantial projected savings, simplify TRICARE for beneficiaries,
and offer participants more freedom to choose providers. Failing to
enact the TRICARE and other various reform proposals would compel DOD to
take additional reductions in the areas of readiness, modernization,
and force structure. The Administration looks forward to working with
Congress on these and other reforms to modernize and enhance the
military health care system.
Prohibition on Conducting Additional BRAC Round:
The Administration strongly objects to section 2702, which would
preclude any funds being authorized for use toward an additional BRAC
round. This impairs the ability of the Executive Branch to plan for
contingencies or make other needed adjustments that would improve
military effectiveness and efficiency. The Administration strongly
urges Congress to provide the BRAC authorization as requested, which
would allow DOD to rightsize its infrastructure while providing
important assistance to affected communities, freeing resources
currently consumed by maintaining unneeded facilities. In the absence
of authorization of a new round of BRAC, the Administration will pursue
alternative options to reduce this wasteful spending and ensure that
DOD’s limited resources are available for the highest priorities of the
warfighter and national security.
Modification of Authority to Provide Assistance to Counter the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant:
The Administration strongly objects to section 1223, which would
significantly restrict the authority to provide the Government of Iraq
with assistance to counter the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant
(ISIL) and threaten to interfere with the Executive Branch’s ability to
implement the President’s strategy to counter ISIL. The provisions
providing that three groups should be treated as “a country” for certain
assistance purposes and mandating that assistance be provided directly
to specific groups - even absent authorization from the Government of
Iraq - are particularly damaging, have already created negative
diplomatic consequences for the United States, are inconsistent with the
longstanding U.S. foreign policy of working to maintain a stable,
unified Iraq, and could put the United States at risk of violating
Iraq’s sovereignty as well as the arms embargo on Iraq established by
relevant U.N. Security Council resolutions. These provisions would
fundamentally undermine the Government of Iraq and undercut our ongoing
military operations in coordination with the Government of Iraq to
degrade, destroy, and ultimately defeat ISIL. Moreover, while the
Government of Iraq has made progress toward political reconciliation,
that process is ongoing, and requiring that the provision of the
assistance specified in section 1223 be contingent on satisfaction of
all conditions articulated in that section could undermine this
progress. Finally, with the consent and full support of the Government
of Iraq, the United States already has provided - and plans to continue
to provide - significant military assistance to the security forces of
the Kurdistan Regional Government and Sunni tribal security forces.
Rocket Propulsion System Development Program:
The Administration strongly objects to section 1603, which would place
restrictions on the funds to eliminate the Nation’s use of non-allied
space launch engines for national security space launches by 2019. The
Administration also strongly objects to moving Evolved Expendable Launch
Vehicle (EELV) development funding into the more restrictive Rocket
Propulsion System Development line item. The Administration is
committed to transitioning from non-allied engines; however, an
engine-centric approach as laid out in this section would not preserve
the Nation’s assured access to space. While rocket engines are a major
component of a launch vehicle, they are only one of many critical
components. These components must be designed and developed together to
meet the ultimate cost and performance goals, not only for the launch
vehicle but also for the support, operations, and production
infrastructure as well. Without a comprehensive strategy that ensures
the availability of operational launch systems, the government risks
investing hundreds of millions of dollars without any guarantee of
ensuring assured access to space.
Counterterrorism Partnerships Fund:
The Administration objects to the elimination of the Counterterrorism
Partnerships Fund (CTPF) because it removes a flexible,
partnership-focused approach to counterterrorism. While the
Administration is appreciative of support for the border security and
capability enhancements for Jordan, military construction, and specific
counter- ISIL programs, redirecting CTPF funding to these other
activities precludes DOD from building on existing tools and authorities
to respond to a range of terrorist threats. The Administration
strongly encourages Congress to authorize the $2.1 billion originally
requested to continue support for CTPF activities in FY 2016.
Sense of Congress on the Government of Iran’s Nuclear Program and Malign Military Activities:
Section 1232 contains language pertaining to the ongoing P5+1 nuclear
negotiations with Iran that will likely undermine our negotiating team
as they work with our international partners to achieve a long-term,
comprehensive deal that prevents Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon.
Open Skies Treaty:
The Administration objects to section 1244, which would change the
reporting requirement to provide an assessment to Congress on Russian
proposals to introduce new or modified sensors or aircraft from 30 days
to 90 days prior to the United States certifying the aircraft or
sensors. The 90-days requirement is impractical as it is only 30 days
after we will be informed of Russia’s notification of intent to certify,
generally before analyses are completed. The Administration also
objects to section 1265, which would limit the availability of Research,
Development, Test and Evaluation (RDT&E) funds for arms control
implementation in the Air Force until the Secretary of Defense reports
to Congress on issues related to the Open Skies Treaty. The provision
could affect the ability of the United States to modernize its
observation aircraft sensors by delaying funding needed to upgrade from
wet film to digital sensors.
Missile Defense Programs:
While appreciating the Committee’s support of DOD’s ballistic missile
defense programs, the Administration objects to section 1668 requiring a
concurrent anti-air warfare capability at the Aegis Ashore site in
Poland and Romania by 2018. This requirement would entail hardware and
software upgrades not previously planned and would introduce additional
costs and potentially delay the deployment in Poland. Installing this
capability would also require amending previously negotiated agreements
with the host nation as well as extensive discussions with our NATO
Allies. The Administration also objects to the requirement that a
Terminal High Altitude Area Defense battery be available for rotational
deployment to U.S. European Command’s area of responsibility. This
requirement would constrain DOD’s flexibility in managing these
high-demand/low-density assets. The Administration objects to the
section 1401 authorization of $30 million in FY 2016 for the planning
and design of an East Coast missile field. The authorization is
premature and other missile defense requirements have higher priority.
The Administration objects to the requirement of section 1673 to
homeport the Sea-based X-band (SBX) radar on the East Coast in 2020,
which does not take into consideration the threat environment or cost
and may constrain DOD’s ability to best defend the United States.
Alternative Fuels:
The Administration strongly objects to sections 315 and 316, which
would impede DOD’s use of alternative fuels. Sections 315 and 316 would
impede efforts to foster a diverse, cost-competitive energy supply that
enhances energy security for both military uses and civilian aviation.
Section 315, which would exempt DOD from section 526 of the Energy
Independence and Security Act of 2007, undercuts a law passed with
strong bipartisan support that provides an environmentally sound
framework for the development of future alternative fuels. Section 316,
which would prevent the Secretary of Defense from entering into
contracts to construct biofuels refineries, would restrict DOD’s
discretion to support the development of drop-in alternative military
fuels to improve fuel diversity, increase operational flexibility, and
manage budgetary risks associated with oil prices. A diverse approach
to energy security - one that includes both conventional and new sources
- would benefit the economy and enhance our military capability.
Additional Requirements for Streamlining of Department of Defense Management Headquarters:
While the Administration welcomes the Committee’s support for the
Department’s plan to reduce headquarters personnel and spending by 20
percent, the Administration strongly objects to section 905 as
unnecessary. The Department’s execution of then-Secretary of Defense
Hagel’s Department-wide 20 percent headquarters reduction plan projects
savings of $5.3 billion. These cuts were incorporated into the
President’s FY 2016 Budget and will continue through FY 2019. Section
905 also is overly restrictive in scope because it targets the National
Capital Region and exempts DOD civilians whose salaries are funded from
the Defense Working Capital Fund. This could have a profound impact on
personnel and cause arbitrary across-the-board cuts.
Level of Readiness of Civil Reserve Air Fleet (CRAF) Carriers:
The Administration strongly objects to section 1084, which would
severely constrain DOD’s flexibility in managing the military airlift
system by effectively requiring the Department to set aside a projected
minimum amount of business for commercial air carriers without prior
considerations of the impacts on military readiness. DOD’s management
of commercial air carrier support ensures commercial augmentation must
not be at the expense of the operational readiness of organic military
airlift. However, section 1084 would mandate a consultative - and
inherently conflicting - role for industry in apportioning business
between commercial and organic resources, inhibiting military airlift
readiness, the military airlift system, and DOD’s ability to rapidly
respond to emerging airlift requirements.
Requirement to Provide Certain Documents to Congress:
The Administration objects to section 1061, which would require the
provision of summaries of defense planning guidance and contingency
planning guidance to Congress. Release of these summaries outside the
Executive Branch could detrimentally affect the Department’s programs by
interfering with the ability of the President and the Secretary of
Defense to give direction to subordinate military commanders and by
compromising the candor and confidentiality of the advice given to the
Secretary of Defense.
Congressional Notification of Sensitive Military Operations:
The Administration strongly objects to section 1032, which modifies
section 130f of title 10, United States Code, by striking the explicit
Afghanistan exception to the notification requirement for sensitive
military operations. Afghanistan continues to be regarded as an area of
active hostilities. The counterterrorism mission to defeat the
remnants of al-Qa’ida is ongoing, in addition to operations to prevent
attacks by other extremist groups threatening U.S. forces and personnel
in Afghanistan. This amendment would place an undue burden on the
Executive branch, which already reports extensively to Congress on U.S.
operations in Afghanistan.
Restriction on Retirement of the A-10:
The Administration strongly objects to section 133, which is
inconsistent with DOD’s fiscal constraints and current priorities.
Section 133 would restrict DOD from obligating or expending funds to
retire A-10 aircraft as well as require a study by an independent agency
focusing on what capabilities should be included in an A-10
replacement. The retirement restriction puts at risk needed
recapitalization efforts impacting the acquisition and manning of the
Air Force fighter enterprise. Additionally, the study specifies
capability thresholds that may or may not be valid in future conflicts.
DOD believes the Joint Strike Fighter and other multi-mission aircraft
will replace the A-10’s singular mission of close air support while also
providing other critical capabilities.
Modernization of Ticonderoga Class Cruisers:
The Administration strongly objects to the Committee’s restrictions on
the Department’s plan to modernize its Ticonderoga Class Cruisers. The
Committee’s provision would erase planned savings of $300 million to
$400 million, result in early depletion of Ship Modernization,
Operations and Sustainment Fund funds, and accelerate the retirement of
the cruisers. The Administration also strongly objects to the provision
restricting the removal of ballistic missile defense capability from
the cruisers. Maintaining this capability on cruisers will prevent
scheduled combat systems upgrades, and upgrading the ballistic missile
defense capability will increase overall modernization costs and delay
the Navy’s cruiser modernization.
National Guard Civil and Defense Support Activities and Related Matters:
The Administration strongly objects to section 515, which would
authorize Governors and Adjutants General of the various States to
expend DOD funds to employ the National Guard of their States to perform
support operations, missions, or activities in support of a civil
authority of a State or Federal agency. This unwarranted intrusion on
the authorities of the President and the Secretary of Defense would
impose significant fiscal burdens on an already tight defense budget in
order to fund non-defense missions, expose DOD to legal and fiscal risks
for missions not under its control, and circumvent the national
response system.
Limitation on Project Authorization to Carry Out Certain FY 2016 Projects:
The Administration objects to section 2310, which would limit expending
funds associated with the construction of Joint Intelligence Analysis
Complex Consolidation (JIAC), Phase 2, at Royal Air Force Croughton,
United Kingdom, and would limit action to realign forces at Lajes Field,
Azores, until the Department conveys specific information to the
Committee. The Administration looks forward to working with Congress on
this issue in order to avoid the potential for significant financial
costs during a period of constrained resources, uncertainty among our
allies that share equities in the JIAC, and disruption in intelligence
support to the warfighter.
Prohibition on Per Diem Allowance Reductions Based on the Duration of Temporary Duty Assignment or Civilian Travel:
The Administration objects to section 602, which would prohibit a
reduced rate of per diem for uniformed service members and DOD civilian
employees based on the duration of travel. This prohibition, which
applies only to DOD, is counterproductive to a growing government-wide
trend toward implementing flat rate per diem for long-term travel.
Section 602 would nullify an evidence-based policy decision that fairly
compensates DOD travelers, demonstrates the Department’s stewardship of
taxpayer funds, and meets external mandates to simplify travel and
reduce costs. It also would negate an estimated $81.5 million in annual
programmed savings and would produce additional contingency travel
costs while imposing an unfunded annual requirement on the military
departments.
Unrequested Funding:
In this fiscally constrained environment, the Administration objects to
the authorization of billions of dollars of unnecessary funding offset
by equal cuts to higher priority items requested in the President’s
Budget. Unrequested items include $1.15 billion for extra F/A-18
aircraft, $1 billion for extra Joint Strike Fighters, $683 million to
keep A-10 aircraft, $128 million for extra UH-60 helicopters, and $722
million to reverse planned savings associated with compensation reform
proposals to slow the growth in basic housing allowance payments and to
reform commissary operations. The Administration has made extensive
efforts to assess, prioritize, and balance force capacity, capability,
and readiness in developing the FY 2016 Budget. Extra programs inserted
in the budget come at the expense of programs that are more important,
and will create ripple effects across the rest of the budget.
Operation and Maintenance and Military Personnel Reductions:
The Administration objects to the billions of dollars of undistributed
reductions in the bill across the operation and maintenance and military
personnel accounts. The operation and maintenance reductions would be
applied to those programs funded in section 4301, which include
readiness, depot maintenance, base operations support, and facilities
sustainment, restoration, and modernization line items. These
reductions will delay the Department’s full-spectrum readiness recovery
efforts and increase the backlog of maintenance at the military
departments’ depot facilities.
Restrictions on the Overhaul and Repair of Naval Vessels in Foreign Shipyards:
The Administration strongly objects to section 1021, which would
prohibit the Navy from proceeding with planned overhaul, repair, or
maintenance efforts with a duration of more than six months, which are
scheduled to be accomplished in foreign shipyards on ships whose
homeports are not in the United States or Guam. This restriction on
Forward Deployed Naval Force ships would reduce operational availability
and increase costs due to the transit time to the United States or
Guam, and negatively affect Sailors’ quality of life by subjecting them
to extended separations from their families. Alternatively, changing
ship homeports would cause harm to Sailors and their families by
requiring earlier and more frequent relocations.
Unified Medical Command:
The Administration strongly objects to section 711, which would direct
DOD to establish a Unified Medical Command (UMC). In addition to
already possessing the necessary authorities to organize its medical
forces, past reviews by the Department have concluded a UMC is not in
the best interest of the Department. In order to best balance oversight
from the Office of the Secretary of Defense with the Services’ mission
needs, the Department believes that the current organizational construct
contained in the Defense Health Agency is optimal. The establishment
of a UMC would likely impose significant costs without realizing
efficiencies or savings.
Proposed Realignments of Military Medical Treatment Facilities:
The Administration objects to section 713, which would require a
mandatory 90-day waiting period before restructuring or realigning a
military treatment facility and impose a burdensome reporting
requirement. As the Army, for example, draws down end strength, it must
have the flexibility to realign medical capabilities corresponding to
end strength levels. Keeping medical personnel at underutilized
facilities directly impacts the ability to properly resource fully
utilized facilities and to have our medical providers maintain their
clinical skills. Any delay would adversely affect medical readiness and
clinical proficiency to the detriment of our Soldiers and their
families.
Landmines:
The Administration strongly objects to section 1057, which would limit
the availability of funds for the destruction of anti-personnel
landmines. This provision would interfere with DOD’s ability to dispose
of unneeded munitions and undermine the Administration’s policy of
working to eliminate anti-personnel landmine stockpiles other than those
required for the defense of the Republic of Korea.
Limitation on Service Secretary Revocation of Combat Valor Awards:
The Administration objects to section 582, which would infringe on the
authority of the military service Secretaries to revoke certain combat
valor awards. Such a limitation would create a disconnect with the
authority vested in the Secretaries to approve valor awards. Current
provisions of title 10, that prohibit award or presentation of valor
medals to a person whose continuous and on-going service has not been
honorable, protect the integrity of awards by ensuring that they are not
given to those who might demand the benefits of the award even after
engaging in heinous criminal acts, such as hostile acts against the
United States and sexual assault.
Disposition of Weapons-Usable Plutonium:
The Administration strongly objects to section 3116, which would
require the Secretary of Energy to carry out construction and project
support activities for the Mixed Oxide (MOX) Fuel Fabrication Facility.
This language is unnecessarily restrictive and would preclude
alternative, and potentially more cost-effective approaches to
implementing U.S. commitments in the 2000 Plutonium Management and
Disposition Agreement and its 2010 annex to dispose of excess weapons
plutonium. The Department of Energy (DOE) contracted for an independent
validation of costs for plutonium disposition alternatives in
accordance with congressional mandates. Based on the first phase of
this analysis, the remaining costs for disposing of plutonium using the
MOX approach exceed $47 billion, which is over $22 billion more than the
preliminary estimates done in 2014. The results of this analysis will
inform the Administration's approach to plutonium disposition.
Nuclear Weapons Dismantlement:
The Administration strongly objects to section 3121, which would limit
funding for nuclear weapons dismantlement. It restricts the Executive
Branch’s ability to determine the appropriate stockpile adjustments to
meet national security goals and runs counter to the Nation’s
commitments in support of the goals of the Nuclear Nonproliferation
Treaty. Requiring the President to certify that any dismantlement is
for a life extension program constrains our ability to respond
expeditiously to the needs of the stockpile. Additionally, the National
Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) already provides annually, in
the Stockpile Stewardship and Management Plan, dismantlement
accomplishments and plans for the future.
Nonproliferation Technology Development:
The Administration strongly objects to section 3120, which would limit
funds for nonproliferation or arms control verification or monitoring
technologies from being used to develop technologies beyond technology
readiness level (TRL) 5 unless certain requirements are met. NNSA
activities span the full range of TRLs, from basic research to
production and deployment. As drafted, this language would
significantly impede development of all high TRL work including:
space-based nuclear detonation detection; advanced radiation detection;
nuclear safeguards; emergency response and verification; and monitoring
technology. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) can only meet
its mission if it has state-of-the-art safeguards approaches and
technologies. This is particularly important as we look forward to the
IAEA’s safeguards implementation responsibilities.
Authorization
of Production of Special Nuclear Material Outside the United States by
Foreign Country with Nuclear Naval Propulsion Program:
The Administration strongly objects to section 3119, which would limit
and condition authorizations under 10 CFR Part 810 of technology
transfers and assistance to countries that have a naval nuclear
propulsion program. Countries with such programs include generally
authorized countries such as the United Kingdom, France, and Brazil, as
well as countries like Russia, China, and India, for which specific
authorization is required. The Secretary would be prohibited from
issuing authorizations with respect to such countries until the Director
of National Intelligence and the Chief of Naval Operations submit an
assessment to the specified committees of the risks of diversion of such
nuclear technology transfer to a country’s naval nuclear propulsion
program, even if the technology or assistance has no relationship to or
utility in naval propulsion. Halting these authorizations would have a
significant negative financial impact on the U.S. nuclear industry and
on diplomatic relations between the United States and the impacted
countries.
Fixed Site Radiation Portal Monitors:
The Administration objects to section 3117, which would prohibit use of
FY 2016 and subsequent fiscal year funds for research and development,
installation, or sustainment of fixed site radiological portal monitors
or equipment in foreign countries. This prohibition would preclude
maintenance, training, and gradual transition to indigenous support for
equipment to detect potential trafficking in nuclear and radiological
materials, an important element of the U.S. multi-faceted strategy to
interdict materials outside of regulatory control. It would also
negatively impact U.S. relationships and cooperation with foreign
partners to prevent proliferation of nuclear and radiological materials.
Personnel Levels:
The Administration objects to section 3111, which would limit the size
of the NNSA Federal workforce needed to provide necessary program and
project guidance and oversight to execute nuclear security programs.
NNSA must have the ability to recruit, hire, and retain a highly skilled
Federal workforce that includes an appropriate mix of competitive and
excepted service in order to fulfill its mission consistent with
programmatic requirements. The cap on Federal competitive staffing
unduly restricts NNSA's flexibility and places at risk the appropriate,
and inherently governmental Federal oversight and management of critical
programs.
Transfer of Nonoperational Facilities:
The Administration objects to section 3141, which would require the
transfer of NNSA excess facilities within three years to the
Environmental Management (EM) program for decontaminating and
decommissioning (D&D). In January 2015, the Secretary established a
working group that is already developing an analysis and options for
how the Department may prioritize and address the numerous contaminated
excess facilities owned by the various DOE program offices. The path
forward for disposition of these facilities should be determined through
this ongoing analysis and appropriate planning, not a required
three-year timeline for transfer. Although the Administration agrees
that high-risk, excess facilities should be “dispositioned” quickly,
safely, and cost-effectively, section 3141 would not address the
underlying issue of risk because the Department is unable to undertake
D&D of all of these facilities in the foreseeable future due to
ongoing mission requirements and enforceable regulatory cleanup
commitments.
Uranium Enrichment Decontamination and Decommissioning Fund:
The Administration objects to section 4701, which would eliminate the
authorization of appropriations for the contribution to the Uranium
Enrichment Decontamination and Decommissioning Fund. This funding is
critical to the Administration’s proposal to reauthorize the Fund to
address the significant shortfall in resources allocated for cleanup of
shutdown uranium enrichment plants that supported nuclear weapons
production and commercial power generation.
Greater Sage-Grouse and Public Land Management:
The Administration strongly objects to section 2862, which would
mandate a delay until 2025 in listing or deciding not to list the
Greater Sage-Grouse under the Endangered Species Act and would
effectively override longstanding principles of major Federal land
management statues, including the Federal Land Policy and Management Act
and the National Forest Management Act. Such unprecedented delays
undermine science-based decision-making, are unnecessary for military
readiness, and are ill-advised for purposes of public land management.
Such delays create uncertainty for landowners and businesses, and
effectively suspend unprecedented collaborative conservation
efforts that have been developed with extensive public input.
Additional provisions would divest stewardship of Federal land from
Federal agencies, requiring these lands to be managed consistent with
State-approved management plans. Moreover, existing law already allows
the Secretary of Defense to obtain an exemption of any action from the
requirements of the Endangered Species Act for reasons of national
security.
The National Historic Preservation Act:
The Administration objects to section 2853, which would amend the
National Historic Preservation Act to allow Federal agencies to object
to a designation of Federal properties for reasons of national
security. Listing a property on the National Register of Historic
Places, or designating it as a National Historic Landmark, does not
limit any Federal agency’s decision-making authority. Decisions on how
to manage the property, informed by the evaluation of its significance
and integrity, remain the responsibility of the agency with jurisdiction
over that property. The Administration is not aware of any specific
instance where such a designation has adversely affected national
security. Enactment of this section could lead to a fundamental
weakening of highly successful and widely admired programs that Congress
intended to help recognize and protect our shared heritage.
Military Land Withdrawals:
The Administration has concerns with the bill’s provisions relating to
military land withdrawals. The responsible agencies will continue to
coordinate to facilitate responsible use of public lands to support
military readiness, training, and testing, acknowledging the current
system of periodic legislative re-withdrawals is not particularly
efficient and does not provide for the optimum land management regime.
But, the Administration is not prepared to support transfers of such
lands without a process that provides careful consideration of the
evolving needs, interests, and any supporting legislative provisions.
The Administration stands ready to consider measures and approaches to
make the use of public lands for military needs more efficient.
The Annual Compliance Report:
The Administration has concerns with section 1262 as it vests in the
Office of the Director of National Intelligence functions for which the
Department of State has lead responsibility, specifically regarding
international compliance with arms control and nonproliferation
agreements and commitments. The Department of State is uniquely
positioned to provide policy and legal expertise on a range of complex
arms control compliance issues and already has the responsibility to
prepare an annual report on such compliance.
Special Immigrant Visas (SIV):
The Administration appreciates the Committee’s indication of support
for continuation of the Afghan SIV program, but is concerned about the
absence of authority to provide additional visas for this program in the
bill. The Administration proposes an additional 5,000 visas for FY
2016. The SIV program enables Afghan nationals who have aided U.S.
efforts through their work, and who have experienced or are experiencing
an ongoing serious threat as a result, to apply for these visas. The
Administration strongly supports extension of this program and looks
forward to working with Congress to enact the President’s proposal.
Maritime Security Fleet:
The Administration objects to section 3504, which could significantly
reduce the U.S. Government’s oversight of vessels of the Maritime
Security Fleet by placing the primary responsibility for ensuring fleet
readiness with classification societies, some of which are foreign-owned
and foreign-controlled. Since 2013, there have been 27 documented
cases of nonconformities for lifesaving, firefighting, or environmental
conditions aboard vessels that classification societies certified; of
these, 55 percent were discovered by the Coast Guard after certification
and directed back to the classification society for remediation. By
restricting the Secretary’s discretion to guarantee the fleet’s
readiness to carry critical military cargo at all times, section 3504
would leave the U.S. Government reliant on domestic and foreign
classification societies to perform necessary inspections and, by
extension, to certify that these vessels meet the U.S. Government's
requirements for national security operations.
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