Sea Based Logistics: Full Speed Ahead

Sea Based Logistics: Full Speed Ahead
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1999
Genre:
ISBN:

Reduced access to and availability of forward-based military installations can impede the operational commander's reach in projecting combat power and constrain his logistics effort. Emerging concepts have been proposed that mitigate infrastructure reduction without sacrificing support to the fluid nature of logistics. Sea Based Logistics (SBL) is the conceptual centerpiece of how the United States Marine Corps (USMC) envisions logistics support and sustainment for the next century. This research project enthusiastically advocates SBL. After defining SBL and presenting the thesis, the paper begins with a brief historical perspective of sea basing and SBL. A summation of adopted business practices and developments in modern logistics as they pertain to SBL follows. The importance of sealift and current SBL capabilities provides a point of departure for SBL's future. Emphasis is placed on what present-day naval expeditionary forces can do to further exploit and encapsulate the fusion of SBL. The author's principal focus includes an analysis of what SBL offers the operational commander. The brief scope of this effort leaves opportunities for others to argue the many unresolved and difficult SBL issues. SBL provides the operational commander the means to further extend his operational reach through the integration of business practices, emerging technologies, and the use of available sealift platforms. With continued refinement and increased sophistication of SBL platforms, naval expeditionary forces will continue to provide the operational commander an added dimension and enhanced force multiplier. SBL provides the operational commander with the synchronization of the right forces, material, and support, in the right quantity, at the right place and right time.

Naval Expeditionary Logistics

Naval Expeditionary Logistics
Author: Committee on Naval Expeditionary Logistics
Publisher: National Academies Press
Total Pages: 110
Release: 1999-02-23
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 0309517958

At the request of the Chief of Naval Operations, the National Research Council (NRC) conducted a study to determine the technological requirements, operational changes, and combat service support structure necessary to land and support forces ashore under the newly evolving Navy and Marine Corps doctrine. The Committee on Naval Expeditionary Logistics, operating under the auspices of the NRC's Naval Studies Board, was appointed to (1) evaluate the packaging, sealift, and distribution network and identify critical nodes and operations that affect timely insertion of fuels, ammunition, water, medical supplies, food, vehicles, and maintenance parts and tool blocks; (2) determine specific changes required to relieve these critical nodes and support forces ashore, from assault through follow-on echelonment; and (3) present implementable changes to existing support systems, and suggest the development of innovative new systems and technologies to land and sustain dispersed units from the shoreline to 200 miles inland. In the course of its study, the committee soon learned that development of OMFTS is not yet at a stage to allow, directly, detailed answers to many of these questions. As a result, the committee addressed the questions in terms of the major logistics functions of force deployment, force sustainment, and force medical support, and the fundamental logistics issues related to each of these functions.

Seabasing and Joint Expeditionary Logistics

Seabasing and Joint Expeditionary Logistics
Author: Amy Bender
Publisher:
Total Pages: 525
Release: 2004-12
Genre:
ISBN: 9781423522553

Recent conflicts such as Operation Desert Shield/Storm and Operation Iraqi Freedom highlight the logistics difficulties the United States faces by relying on foreign access and infrastructure and large supply stockpiles ashore to support expeditionary operations. The Navy's transformational vision for the future, Sea Power 21, involves Seabasing as a way to address these difficulties by projecting and sustaining joint forces globally from the sea. This study analyzes logistics flow to, within and from a Sea Base to an objective, and the architectures and systems needed to rapidly deploy and sustain a brigade-size force. Utilizing the Joint Capabilities Integration and Development System (JCIDS), this study incorporates a systems engineering framework to examine current systems, programs of record and proposed systems out to the year 2025. Several capability gaps that hamper a brigade-size force from seizing the initiative anywhere in the world within a 10-day period point to a need for dedicated lift assets, such as high-speed surface ships or lighter-than-air ships, to facilitate the rapid formation of the Sea Base. Additionally, the study identifies the need for large-payload/high-speed or load-once/direct-to- objective connector capabilities to minimize the number of at-sea transfers required to employ such a force from the Sea Base in 10 hrs. With these gaps addressed, the Joint Expeditionary Brigade is supportable from the Sea Base.

Full Speed Ahead!

Full Speed Ahead!
Author: Cruschiform
Publisher: Abrams
Total Pages: 64
Release: 2014-11-04
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 1613126786

Did you know that a tornado travels faster than a race car? Or that a human and spider travel at the same speed? Full Speed Ahead! is the first picture book to directly compare the speeds of animals, modes of transport, and forces of nature in a clear and visually striking album format. Objects are grouped from slowest to fastest, with objects of the same speed on one spread, creating fascinating “match” races. And with a sleek, graphic design and vibrant spot-color printing, Full Speed Ahead! is as gorgeous to look at as it is informative to read. On your mark, get set, go! Praise for Full Speed Ahead "The information will intrigue curious minds." --School Library Journal

Seabasing and joint expeditionary logistics

Seabasing and joint expeditionary logistics
Author: Ammy Bender
Publisher:
Total Pages: 487
Release: 2004
Genre: Amphibious warfare
ISBN:

Recent conflicts such as Operation Desert Shield/Storm and Operation Iraqi Freedom highlight the logistics difficulties the United States faces by relying on foreign access and infrastructure and large supply stockpiles ashore to support expeditionary operations. The Navy's transformational vision for the future, Sea Power 21, involves Seabasing as a way to address these difficulties by projecting and sustaining joint forces globally from the sea. This study analyzes logistics flow to, within and from a Sea Base to an objective, and the architectures and systems needed to rapidly deploy and sustain a brigade-size force. Utilizing the Joint Capabilities Integration and Development System (JCIDS), this study incorporates a systems engineering framework to examine current systems, programs of record and proposed systems out to the year 2025. Several capability gaps that hamper a brigade-size force from seizing the initiative anywhere in the world within a 10-day period point to a need for dedicated lift assets, such as high-speed surface ships or lighter-than-air ships, to facilitate the rapid formation of the Sea Base. Additionally, the study identifies the need for large-payload/high-speed or load-once/direct-to- objective connector capabilities to minimize the number of at-sea transfers required to employ such a force from the Sea Base in 10 hrs. With these gaps addressed, the Joint Expeditionary Brigade is supportable from the Sea Base.

Signal

Signal
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 872
Release: 2003
Genre: Armed Forces
ISBN:

Army Logistician

Army Logistician
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 520
Release: 2000
Genre: Logistics
ISBN:

The official magazine of United States Army logistics.

Sea Basing and Alternatives for Deploying and Sustaining Ground Combat Forces

Sea Basing and Alternatives for Deploying and Sustaining Ground Combat Forces
Author: United States. Congressional Budget Office
Publisher:
Total Pages: 48
Release: 2007
Genre: Amphibious warfare
ISBN:

"A centerpiece of the Department of Defense's (DoD's) transformation efforts in recent years has been the move toward making ground forces less reliant on access to foreign-controlled facilities such as harbors, airports, or logistics bases on the ground in their area of operations." "The United States Marine Corps and Army have long maintained expeditionary forces organized and equipped to be rapidly moved and inserted into combat with little reliance on access to local bases or infrastructure. Recognizing the vulnerability of forces that are dependent on local access (as U.S. forces have been in Afghanistan and Iraq), the Department of Defense (DoD) is improving its expeditionary capabilities across all of the military services. Prominent among those efforts is the Navy's plan to field a 14-ship squadro--the Maritime Prepositioning Force (Future), or MPF(F--that would be capable of deploying, employing, and sustaining a Marine expeditionary brigade with little or no need for access to local bases or other infrastructure. This study ... looks at the capabilities and costs associated with MPF(F) and sea basing in general as well as other approaches that DoD might take to improve its expeditionary capabilities."--Preface.