Nuclear Security & Deterrence Monitor Vol. 23 No. 25
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Nuclear Security & Deterrence Monitor
Article 11 of 13
June 21, 2019

House and Senate NDAA Would Require New Reports on Columbia Subs

By Staff Reports

Both the House and Senate defense authorization bills, approved by their respective armed services committees, directed reports and briefings on the Columbia-class submarine program due to schedule and cost concerns.

The House Armed Services Committee’s 2020 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), approved by the Committee on June 13, includes an amendment from Rep. Michael Waltz (R-Fla.) directing a classified briefing on funding requirements for inadequately funding strategic weapons on ballistic missile submarines.

The House NDAA focuses more on potential issues in Columbia strategic weapons than on the submarine itself. The bill says that if critical programs in the Trident II (D5) nuclear weapon system are delayed further, Columbia may be without a critical subsystems or cyber requirements.

The bill says that if cuts are made to “critical and necessary programs” such as Increment 8 navigator upgrades systems, the Increment 15 required network cross-domain solutions capability for cyber requirements, and Life Extension 2 funding, the Navy’s ability to field the weapon on the Columbia boats is “at significant risk.”

Meanwhile, the Senate Armed Services Committee’s NDAA, approved in May, would require the Navy secretary to deliver a report to Congress by December on Columbia’s schedule and the impact of potential lead ship delays.

The Senate committee’s prescribed report requires: a description of the current schedule margin and paths for the lead ship to meet its planned delivery and deployment dates; possible risks to the lead vessel’s schedule and the potential schedule impact for each risk; potential operational and shipbuilding impacts as well as mitigation options if the lead ship delivery is delayed by six months to three years; and recommendations for DoD or congressional action to reduce the liklihood or mitigate the impact of schedule delays.

The Senate could begin debating its version of the 2020 NDAA next week.

The House appears set to debate the measure on the floor some time after lawmakers’ annual July 4 recess, according to a notice published this week by the chamber’s Rules Committee. Proposed amendments to the House’s NDAA are due Tuesday, the Rules Committee stated.

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