Acquisition Policy International Trends Overview Defense Acquisition Basics
Acquisition Policy & International Trends
Overview Defense Acquisition Basics International Acquisition Policies Sales, Cooperation, and Defense Trade Trends Program Trends 2
Do. D Decision Support Systems “Big A” Acquisition Joint Capabilities Integration and Development System (JCIDS) REQUIREMENTS Planning, Programming, Budgeting and Execution (PPBE) MONEY Defense Acquisition System MATERIAL “Little A” Acquisition 3
JCIDS – The Basics Joint Capabilities Integration and Development System ‒ Strategic Guidance ‒ Joint Operations Concepts ‒ CONOPS ‒ Defense Planning Scenarios ‒ Feedback from the field Guidance for Future Joint Warfighting Capabilities Non-Materiel Solutions Requirements Managers ‒ Assess current capabilities ‒ Identify gaps ‒ Recommend non-materiel and/or materiel approaches ‒ Identify operational performance requirements ‒ PPBE ‒ Congress Resources Fielded Capabilities JCIDS Recommended Materiel Approaches Acquisition ‒ Determine materiel solution ‒ Estimate cost and obtain funding ‒ Design, develop, and test ‒ Produce and field 4
Defense Acquisition System • The Materiel Development Decision precedes entry into any phase of the acquisition management system • Entrance and Exit Criteria for each phase Model 1: Hardware Intensive Program IOC A Materiel Solution Analysis Materiel Development Decision ICD Engineering & Manufacturing Development Technology Maturation & Risk Reduction. LRIP Sustainment FRP DRFPRD CDD DRAFT CDD Operations & Support Decision CDD-V Draft CDD Initial Capabilities Document (ICD) C B PDR CPD Capability Development Document (CDD) Production & Deployment FOC Disposal Capability Production Document (CPD) RELATIONSHIP TO JCIDS § PDR: Preliminary Design Review § CDR: Critical Design Review § CDD-V: CDD Validation § LRIP: Low Rate Initial Production § IOC: Initial Operational Capability § FRP: Full Rate Production § FOC: Full Operational Capability § DRFPRD: Development Request For Proposals Release Decision 5
International Acquisition Policies 6
Preferred Order for Solutions Non-Materiel Solutions JCIDS Guidance JCIDS Only DOTMLPF-P Procurement or Modification Additional Production or Modification Materiel Solutions Cooperative Development Program JCIDS and Defense Acquisition System New Do. D Joint Program New Do. D Component Program 7
JCIDS Provisions “For capability requirements documents advocating creation of international acquisition programs with allies/partner nations, Sponsors will consider to the greatest extent possible, foreign disclosure review and document structuring to facilitate releasability, in whole or in part, to the nations concerned. ” “Other system attributes may include …… physical and operational security needs, including technology security, foreign disclosure, defense exportability features, and JCIDS Manual (New in 2015 version) anti-tamper. ” 8
Acquisition Strategy “[Program Management [PM] is responsible for integrating [IA&E] considerations into the program’s Acquisition Strategy at each major milestone or decision point. [PM] will consider the potential demand likelihood of cooperative development or production, Direct Commercial Sales, or Foreign Military Sales early in the acquisition planning process; and consider U. S. export control laws, regulations, and Do. D policy for international transfers when formulating and implementing the acquisition strategy … Where appropriate, [PMs] will pursue cooperative opportunities and international involvement throughout the acquisition life cycle to enhance international cooperation and improve. . . ” 2, paragraph 7. a. ) New Do. DIinteroperability 5000. 02 (Enclosure 9
Cooperative Opportunities • 10 USC 2350(a) requires Cooperative Opportunities Document before 1 st milestone or decision point • Statutory Cooperative Opportunities requirement is addresses in Do. DI 5000. 02 − Due at first program milestone review − Documented in Acquisition Strategy or equivalent document − Required for MDAP, MAIS, ACAT II & III − Approved by Milestone Decision Authority (MDA) Table 2 (Milestone and Phase Information Do. DI 5000. 02, Requirements), Page 47 10
Program Protection “Program protection also supports international partnership building and cooperative opportunities objectives by enabling the export of capabilities without compromising underlying U. S. technology advantages. ” Program managers will describe in their PPP the program’s critical program information and mission-critical functions and components … [including] planning for exportability and potential foreign involvement. Countermeasures should include anti-tamper, exportability features, security … and other Do. DI 5000. 02 (Enclosure 3, paragraph 13) New mitigations …” 11
Sales, Cooperation, and Defense Trade Trends 12
Adapting to a Changing Environment 13
The Scale of FMS and Service Procurement: 5 Year Average, FY 10 -14 #1. $45. 1 Billion Navy (incl. USMC) #2. $39. 0 Billion FMS #3 $38. 8 Billion Air Force #4 $32. 4 Billion Army Benefits to the U. S. • Builds U. S. -partner relationships • Maintain production lines • Interoperability • Dollars into the U. S. economy • Lowers unit costs for the U. S. Do. D • Jobs UNCLASSIFIED 14
Agreement R&D Contributions ($ in Millions) OUSD(AT&L) International Cooperation 88 IAs IA = International Agreement
Top 10 Arms Exporters & Importers (2001 -2012) Exporters USA $86437 Russia $74574 Germany $22540 France $20829 UK $12435 China $9955 Netherlands $6625 Italy $6507 Israel $5997 Spain $5768 Importers India $28776 China $27875 South Korea $13896 UAE $11914 Pakistan $10430 Australia $10365 Greece $10286 USA $9095 Turkey $7962 Singapore $7426 Source: Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) Arms Transfer Database (US$1990 millions) 16
Share of International Arms Exports (%) 20092013 Top 3 Customers USA 29 Australia, South Korea, UAE Russia 27 India, China, Algeria Germany 7 USA, Greece, Italy China 6 Pakistan, Bangladesh, Myanmar France 5 China, Morocco, Singapore UK 4 Saudi Arabia, U. S. , India Spain 3 Norway, Austria, Venezuela Ukraine 3 China, Pakistan, Russia Italy 3 India, UAE, USA Israel 2 India, Turkey, Columbia Source: SIPRI Arms Transfer Database 17
Defense Companies - 2013 (World-Wide excluding China) Ran k Company Arms Sales, 2012, ($M) Defense Sales % of Total Sales 1 Lockheed Martin (USA) 35, 490 78 2 Boeing (USA) 30, 700 35 3 BAE Systems (UK) 26, 820 94 4 Raytheon (USA) 21, 950 93 5 Northrop Grumman (USA) 20, 200 82 6 General Dynamics (USA) 18, 660 60 7 EADS (trans. European)* 15, 740 20 United Technologies 10, 560 (USA) Airbus Group in January 2014 * EADS was renamed 19 8 9 Finmeccanica (Italy) 12, 530 www. sipri. org 50 18
International Acquisition Program Trends 19
Program Trends Foreign Military Sales (FMS) Sale of Do. D Configuration Integration of Buyer Development and Integration with Exportability Modifications Furnished Equipment (BFE) of New Equipment Direct Commercial Sales Sale of Do. D Configuration DCS/FMS Hybrid Programs with Exportability Modifications Sale of New or Highly Modified Systems International Cooperative Programs (ICPs) Cooperative Development of Incorporating Foreign New Systems Participation in Do. D Program Past Cooperation Throughout Programs’ Life-Cycles Present 20
Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) Program Description Foreign Military Sales • Do. D requirement to replace • Current FMS customers: the Israel, Japan, Korea F-16, F-18, and AV-8 B • Future FMS customers: TBD • UK Mo. D joins as partner • Coordination of ICP and accepts Do. D’s STOVL FMS customer investment in capability requirement follow-on development • Other partner nations follow anticipated nternational Cooperative Program Combined Activities • Concept Demo MOUs • OT&E (selected partners) (several) • Training • EMD MOU (U. S. and 8 – Various “Training partners) Pooling” Implementing • Production, Sustainment, Arrangements and Follow-On Development • Sustainment (Logistics) (PSFD) MOU (U. S. and 8 – Coordinated depot partners) Investment 21
RC-135 V/W Rivet Joint Program Description • UK retires Nimrod R 1; wants • • to retain SIGINT capability • • UK decides to “buy into” U. S. RJ program • USAF provides three KC 135 Rs as Cooperative EDA nternational Program • Sustainment & Follow-on • Development (SFD) MOU • Common logistics support • Cooperative follow-on • development • Cost shares based on fleet size (17 U. S. /3 UK) Foreign Military Sales FMS Case UK-D-SAO KC-135 s converted to RC 135 s Ground support equipment, spares, and training Combined Operations Co-Manning MOU – USAF to train UK cadre under FMS Cooperative Operations MOU – Framework for cooperative operations 22
Saudi Arabia F-15 SA Program Description • $30 B development, production, test, modification/conversion, and sustainment program • Largest single FMS case in history Scope • Production: 84 F-15 SA new aircraft • Conversion: 70 F-15 S to SA’s • Sustainment: Construction/ modification at multiple bases/ training ranges/centers • • • Program Structure PEO: AFLCMC/CC – PEO-FB Security Asst PM (SAPM) (WR) D-SAPM Production (WP) D-SAPM Conversion (WR) D-SAPM Sustainment (WR) D-SAPM Training (AFSAT) New Development Digital Electronic Warfare System Missile Warning System Fly-by-Wire flight controls Reconnaissance pod (DB 110) Color flat panel displays New precision weapons 23
P-8 Maritime Patrol Aircraft Program Description • • Navy establishes a requirement to replace the P • -3 • Full cooperative program • with Australia, Germany, and Italy attempted w/o success • Australia Cooperative decides on Program nternational combination of P-8 and • MOU late in EMD • Navy w/Australia MQ-4 C Triton • Production, Sustainment, and Follow-On Development (PSFD) MOU w/Australia • • PSFD MOU cost shares based on projected U. S. and Australia P-8 buys DCS and FMS Current DCS Customer: India Current FMS Customers: None Future FMS Customers: TBD (but likely) Combined Activities Sustainment (logistics) – AUS will be treated as “ 13 th Squadron” by Navy Follow-on development requirements definition – Australia Cooperative Program Personnel part of Navy process 24
IA&E Policy Discussion Allied and Coalition Partner Interoperability • Establish JCIDS attributes for equipment interoperability Acquisition Strategy • Integrate IA&E considerations at each milestone/decision point Program Protection Planning • Consider TSFD and exportability throughout lifecycle International Cooperative Programs (ICPs) • Consider partnership opportunities throughout lifecycle What’s driving these policies? Are they appropriate? Are they 25
Handouts 26
Capability Requirement and Acquisition Processes Materiel Development Decision Initial Capabilities Document* Materiel Solution Analysis Phase Requirements Authority Review of Ao. A Results Draft Capability Development Document Legend A Technology Maturation & Risk Reduction Phase Capability Development Document* = Decision Point = Milestone Decision = Requirements Document = Requirements Authority Reviews * Or equivalent Approved/Validated Requirements Document Dev. RFP Release Decision Point B Engineering & Manufacturing Development Phase Capability Production Document* C Production & Deployment Phase Operations & Support Phase. Disposal 27
JCIDS Documents • • Initial Capabilities Document (ICD) Summarizes the Capability-Based Assessment Justifies requirement for materiel/non-materiel solutions Supports MDD for materiel solutions Guides MSA phase activities Capability Development Document (CDD) • Outlines an affordable increment of militarily useful, logistically supportable, technologically mature capability • Draft CDD supports Milestone A “risk reduction” decision • Matured during TMRR and validated at requirements decision point prior to Milestone B Capability Production Document (CPD) • Addresses production elements specific to a single increment of an acquisition program • Defines an increment that is ready for a production decision • Guides the production and final testing of the system demonstrated during EMD 28
Defense Acquisition System • The Materiel Development Decision precedes entry into any phase of the acquisition management system • Entrance and Exit Criteria for each phase Model 1: Hardware Intensive Program IOC A Materiel Solution Analysis Materiel Development Decision ICD Engineering & Manufacturing Development Technology Maturation & Risk Reduction. LRIP Sustainment FRP DRFPRD CDD DRAFT CDD Operations & Support Decision CDD-V Draft CDD Initial Capabilities Document (ICD) C B PDR CPD Capability Development Document (CDD) Production & Deployment FOC Disposal Capability Production Document (CPD) RELATIONSHIP TO JCIDS § PDR: Preliminary Design Review § CDR: Critical Design Review § CDD-V: CDD Validation § LRIP: Low Rate Initial Production § IOC: Initial Operational Capability § FRP: Full Rate Production § FOC: Full Operational Capability § DRFPRD: Development Request For Proposals Release Decision 29
Materiel Solution Analysis PURPOSE: to conduct the analysis and other activities needed to choose the concept for the product that will be acquired A Materiel Development Decision ICD Materiel Solution Analysis Draft CDD • ENTER: Approved ICD, study guidance for conducting the Ao. A, and • • • an approved Ao. A plan. Ao. A study guidance for MDAPs and Ao. A plan approval will be provided by CAPE. ACTIVITIES: Establish PM & PMO, conduct Ao. A, user writes draft CDD, develop initial: • Acquisition Strategy • Test & Evaluation Master Plan (TEMP) • Systems Engineering Plan (SEP) • Life Cycle Sustainment Plan (LCSP) • Cyber Security Strategy • Program Protection Plan (PPP) GUIDED BY: ICD and Ao. A Plan EXIT: Completed the necessary analysis and activities to support a decision to proceed to the next decision point and desired phase in the acquisition process. 30
Technology Maturation and Risk Reduction PURPOSE: to reduce technology, engineering, integration, and life cycle cost risk to the point that a decision to contract for EMD can be made with confidence in successful program execution for development, production, and sustainment A Final RFP B Technology Maturation & DRFPRD Risk Final Reduction RFP CDD-V Draft CDD Regarded by the USD (AT&L) as the most important decision in the program’s lifecycle CDD PDR • ENTER: MDA approved materiel solution and Acquisition Strategy, initial major program documentation and funding in the FYDP • ACTIVITIES: Competitive prototyping of critical subsystems, SE trade-off analysis, develop contracting strategy, conduct CDD Validation, conduct Preliminary Design Review (PDR), conduct Development RFP Release Decision, begin source selection for EMD • GUIDED BY: Acquisition Strategy and draft CDD/approved CDD • EXIT: Demonstration that technology, engineering, integration, manufacturing, sustainment, and cost risks have been adequately mitigated to support a commitment to design for production, Validated capability requirements, full funding in the FYDP, and compliance with affordability goals for production and sustainment 31
Engineering and Manufacturing Development PURPOSE: to develop, build, and test a product to verify that all operational and derived requirements have been met and to support production or deployment decisions C B Engineering & Manufacturing Development CPD PDR? CDR • ENTER: Adequate risk reduction; approved requirements; full funding in FYDP • ACTIVITIES: Complete detailed design, system-level CDR, integrated testing, establish product baseline, demonstrate manufacturing processes and supportability • GUIDED BY: CDD, Acquisition Strategy, SEP, and TEMP • COMPLETION: (1) the design is stable; (2) the system meets validated capability requirements demonstrated by developmental and initial operational testing as required in the TEMP; (3) manufacturing processes have been effectively demonstrated and are under control; (4) industrial production capabilities are reasonably available; and 32
Production and Deployment PURPOSE: to produce and deliver requirements -compliant products to receiving military organizations IOC C LRIP Production & Deployment CPD FRP Decision FOC Full Rate Production • ENTER: Acceptable performance in DT & Operational Assessments (OA); mature software; no significant manufacturing risks; approved CPD; acceptable interoperability and operational supportability; demonstration of affordability; fully funded • ACTIVITIES: Low Rate Initial Production, IOT&E, LFT&E (if required) and interoperability testing of production-representative articles; Full-Rate Production Decision; fielding and support of fielded systems; IOC/FOC • GUIDED BY: CPD, TEMP, SEP, LCSP • EXIT: Full operational capability; deployment complete 33
Operations and Support PURPOSE: Execute a support program that meets materiel readiness and operational • support performance • requirements, and sustains the system in the most cost • -effective manner over its total life cycle Sustainment Operations & Support Disposal FOC ENTER: Approved CPD; approved LCSP; successful FRP Decision ACTIVITIES: LCSP implementation; Performance-Based Life-Cycle Product Support (PBL) planning, development, implementation, and management; initiate system modifications as necessary; continuing reviews of sustainment strategies, demilitarize and dispose of systems IAW legal and regulatory requirements, particularly environmental considerations and explosives safety GUIDED BY: CPD/Acquisition Strategy/LCSP 34
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