Author Topic: REPORT: Barack Obama Literally Running Out Of Weapons To Fight ISIS....DW Ulsterman  (Read 534 times)

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rangerrebew

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- Washington Free Beacon - http://freebeacon.com -



Defense Leaders Warn of Tomahawk Missile Shortage

Posted By Adam Kredo On September 30, 2014 @ 5:00 am In National Security | No Comments


As the United States steps up its battle against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL or ISIS), defense leaders on Capitol Hill are raising concerns about a looming shortage in the Tomahawk missile supply, a key offensive weapon that the Navy has deployed against militant strongholds in Syria and elsewhere.

The U.S. Navy’s current reliance on the Tomahawk, known as “the world’s most advanced cruise missile,” comes just months after the Obama administration attempted to significantly cut funding for the weapon and then eliminate it completely it in 2016, a move that drew heavy criticism from defense experts and lawmakers.

With the military relying on the weapons in its strikes against ISIL targets in Syria, defense leaders have begun to warn that the Pentagon could quickly run through its Tomahawk stockpiles, a problem exacerbated by defense budget cuts known as sequestration, defense sources say.

The House Armed Services Committee (HASC) is now expressing concern that the Pentagon has “insufficient weapons inventories” and that the Obama administration’s proposed termination of the Tomahawk missile program in fiscal year 2016 would worsen “a deficient inventory problem,” according to defense insiders and sources close to the committee.

The U.S. Navy deployed 47 Tomahawks last week during its strikes in Syria, which amounts to 47 percent of its planned purchases of the weapon in 2015, according to the American Thinker. There are currently enough Tomahawks left “for roughly 85 days of a campaign, at the current rate of use,” the report states.

With a stockpile of about 4,000 Tomahawks—and the administration still contending that cuts are needed despite its reliance on the missile—defense insiders warn that the inventory could quickly run low as the military campaign against ISIL continues in Syria and Iraq.

“You could see that if you’re starting to really ramp up [use] and be more aggressive, it wouldn’t take you too long to expend a significant portion of that [inventory],” one defense insider told the Washington Free Beacon. “If you’re firing 600 to 800 during a campaign … it starts to chip away at it pretty fast.”

About 200 Tomahawks were used in the brief 2011 military campaign in Libya; 2,000 have been deployed since the program’s inception.

The low stockpile of Tomahawks has highlighted how deepening defense cuts are impacting on-the-ground realities, according to Rep. Howard “Buck” McKeon (R., Calif.), HASC’s chairman.

“As we saw in this week’s airstrikes against ISIL, Tomahawk missiles are among the most valuable and precise tools in our military arsenal,” McKeon said in a statement provided to the Free Beacon. “They provide unmanned, all-weather, deep-strike attack capability against both fixed and mobile targets which makes them particularly useful against terrorist groups like ISIL that transcend nations and borders.”

McKeon and his colleagues have fought against the Obama administration’s cuts to the Tomahawk and have attempted to restore funding in part.

“I was deeply troubled that in this year’s budget request, DoD called for significantly reducing the number of Tomahawks in the arsenal and even recommended suspending their entire production line beginning in 2016,” McKeon said. “That is why all four House national security committees, including the Armed Services Committee, rebuffed the administration’s request and restored the Tomahawks.”

“Unfortunately,” McKeon added, “this a prime example of the types of dangerous cuts our military leaders are being forced to consider under the new sequestration budget regime. It is my hope that the next Congress will reverse sequestration and ensure that vital national security programs like the Tomahawk system are adequately funded.”

Rep. Randy Forbes (R., Va.), a member of the Armed Services Committee, also expressed concern about limiting production of the Tomahawk missiles in the face of new military campaigns.

“All four of Congress’ defense committees have rejected the administration’s reckless plan to suspend the Tomahawk production line beginning in 2016 and have moved to add additional missiles to the budget,” Forbes told the Free Beacon in a statement.

“As recent operations in the Middle East show, it is essential that the United States have the sophisticated land-attack capability contained in the Tomahawk missile, especially for striking high-value targets in areas that have advanced air-defense systems,” he said. “Even more alarming, because a replacement for the Tomahawk is still years away, it would be a foolish decision to shut down the Tomahawk industrial base and leave the nation without a hot production line.”

The administration originally sought to cut the Tomahawk missile program by $128 million under its fiscal year 2015 budget proposal. It also aimed to fully eliminate production of the missile by year 2016, according to budget documents released by the Navy.

Additionally, the Obama administration sought to reduce the actual number of Tomahawk missiles acquired by the United States in 2015 from 196 last to just 100, a proposal that all four congressional defense committees rebuffed in a notable show of solidarity.

The procurement of Tomahawks was slated to drop to zero in 2016 under the president’s original budget proposal.

Now the administration is relying heavily on the very same missile it had sought to eliminate.

“Ninety-five percent of the munitions that we dropped were precision-guided munitions. And that includes the Tomahawk missiles, which are very precise,” a senior Obama administration official said on background during a conference call last week with reporters on the strikes in Syria against ISIL.

Between Iraq and Syria, the use of Tomahawks could be significant in the coming months and years, insiders say.

“It’s difficult for anyone to say how much is enough,” said the defense insider. “How can you know for certain? God forbid you end up fighting a two front war.”

The other concern is that as the administration seeks to ramp down procurement of the Tomahawk, a working replacement for the missile is still years off. And once production of the Tomahawk is ended, it becomes much more difficult to restart the program if more missiles are needed.

“Without a suitable replacement it would be unwise to shut off that production line,” said the defense source. “It’s not like flipping a switch to reactivate suppliers who have been turned off.”

Mackenzie Eaglen, a former Defense Department official, explained that while the stockpile should be adequate into the near future, replenishments will be needed during the next year.

“Given the fact that most military officials are predicting a years-long campaign against ISIL, there is little doubt that some replenishment will be required over the next 12 months,” said Eaglen, a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI). “If and when that happens, it will call into question the Navy plan to shut down this production line.”

“Congress was already moving in that direction to reverse Navy plans regarding Tomahawk, but this air war is sure to solidify them,” she explained.

A Defense Department official did not respond to multiple requests for comment on the issue.


Article printed from Washington Free Beacon: http://freebeacon.com

URL to article: http://freebeacon.com/national-security/defense-leaders-warn-of-tomahawk-missile-shortage/


rangerrebew

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Obama Wants to Stop Tomahawk Missiles in 2016. But the Navy Is Firing Them at ISIS.

Melissa Quinn / September 27, 2014

President Obama ordered the launch of 47 Tomahawk cruise missiles last Monday night from the USS Philippine Sea and USS Arleigh Burke, all aimed at targets in Syria as part of what he calls a military campaign to “degrade and destroy” the terrorist group ISIS.

However, the future of the Tomahawk program is threatened because of Defense Department budget cuts. The cruise missiles may not be produced at all for the Navy by 2016 – when America still could be fighting ISIS, brutal jihadists also called the Islamic State or ISIL.

“As we saw in this week’s airstrikes against ISIL, Tomahawk missiles are among the most valuable and precise tools in our military arsenal,” House Armed Services Chairman Buck McKeon told The Daily Signal, adding:


They provide unmanned, all-weather, deep-strike attack capability against both fixed and mobile targets, which makes them particularly useful against terrorist groups … that transcend nations and borders.

At 20 feet long and 2,900 pounds, Tomahawk missiles can be launched from both surface ships and submarines,  the Navy says, and travel at 550 miles per hour. The weapon, which has wings that fold out, is powered by a jet engine.

Historically, the Pentagon has purchased roughly 200 Tomahawks a year from manufacturer Raytheon, at about $1.4 million per missile. But Obama slashed that number to 100 for all of 2015 – just double what the Navy fired into Syria in one day.

The Navy has 4,000 Tomahawks stockpiled. That supply would last roughly 80 days if 50 Tomahawk missiles were fired daily, as they were Monday. Pentagon officials have warned that waging war with ISIS could last years.




Steven Bucci, a former top Pentagon official who oversees defense and foreign policy studies at The Heritage Foundation, told The Daily Signal:


It is interesting that after making the decision to close down the Tomahawk production line as a part of cutting defense spending, the Obama administration relies on them to kick off their Syria strikes. This sure ups the cost of the action, as the missiles will really have no replacement.

As part of plans to pare Pentagon spending, Obama proposed $118 million in cuts to the Tomahawk program in 2015.  Procurement of the missiles is to be eliminated by the following year, budget documents from the Navy show — five years earlier than the president proposed in his 2014 budget.

 

“We had been sustaining a 200 Tomahawk-per-year rate,” Navy acquisition executive Sean Stackley told DoD Buzz in March. “In 2015, we’ll drop down to 100. In 2016, we will revisit the question of whether the time is right to stop production of Tomahawks.”

The president called on the Pentagon to find a replacement for the cruise missile within a decade.

[Article continues after infographic below.]
 
 

As a result of sequester cuts that went into effect in 2013, the Department of Defense faces $1 trillion in decreased spending through 2021. The cuts have left top Pentagon officials scrambling to determine where to decrease funding.

Despite the reduced spending outlined in Obama’s budget, key House and Senate committees joined in calling for a boost in missile production beginning in 2015.

During markups of the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal 2015, the armed services committees in both chambers supported continued production of Tomahawk missiles.

In the Senate Armed Services Committee’s revision of the NDAA, lawmakers allocated an additional $276.3 million to maintain a rate of 200 per year.

 

The Senate Appropriations Committee, similarly, in July called for $82 million to continue producing Tomahawks.




McKeon said:


Unfortunately, this is a prime example of the types of dangerous cuts our military leaders are being forced to consider under the new sequestration budget regime. It is my hope that the next Congress will reverse defense sequestration and ensure that vital national security programs like the Tomahawk system are adequately funded.

In March, just after Navy spokeswoman Lt. Caroline Hutcheson confirmed the service would reduce its Tomahawk purchase, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., expressed skepticism during an Armed Services Committee hearing.

“This is really rolling the dice, in my view,” McCain told Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus, “when we haven’t even begun the assessment of what a new weapon would look like.”

 

Mabus, though, argued the current supply of Tomahawks would be “sufficient” to “carry us through any eventuality that we can foresee.”

Mackenzie Eaglen, a defense analyst at the American Enterprise Institute, said the Obama administration’s campaign to “degrade and destroy” ISIS could change the outcome of the Tomahawk program proposed by Obama.

“The caveat for ending the program next year, by the Navy, was always that there would be no unanticipated events that would drain current stockpiles of Tomahawks before a new missile is ready,” Eaglen told Marketplace.

In an April paper for The Heritage Foundation before the rise of ISIS, Bucci and another foreign policy expert,  Ted Bromund, advised against stopping the Tomahawk program in 2016, calling it “an error in both defense strategy and alliance policy.”

Citing Mabus’ defense that the current stock was adequate for the foreseeable future, Bucci and Bromund argued that most U.S. military operations “are not foreseen.”

At the start of the Iraq War in 2003, for example, coalition forces fired upward of 725 missiles, accounting for one-third of the entire inventory.

Eight years later, in 2011, the United States and the United Kingdom launched more than 160 Tomahawks in the opening days of the campaign in Libya.

http://dailysignal.com/print/?post_id=159262
« Last Edit: September 30, 2014, 11:51:10 am by rangerrebew »

Offline flowers

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I raised this question on another thread about the Tomahawks. We know one of these hit a grain silo. What other crap targets is he/valjar ordering to be hit?  Nothing about any isis members deaths  are there?


rangerrebew

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We know it couldn't be a golf course. :whistle:

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http://ulstermanbooks.com/report-barack-obama-literally-running-weapons-fight-isis/

The administration’s offensive against terrorist forces in both Iraq and Syria is running into a bit of a self-created dilemma. The military is now warning the White House it could soon run out of Tomahawk missiles, known as the “the world’s most advanced cruise missile”.



More uncomfortable for President Obama is the fact it was his administration that aggressively moved to cut Tomahawk funding, and then eliminate it altogether by 2015, a situation that sent warnings from several within the military and Congress.  Those warnings were ignored though (much like the security updates on ISIS that Mr. Obama never bothered to read as well) and now it appears that at the current pace of bombing, the United States will run out of Tomahawk missiles in less than three months.

 

The impending missile shortage further reveals just how anti-defense the Obama administration has been, which in turn leaves both America and the world more vulnerable to attack from any number of enemies.  Some might argue, given the still troubling conditions perpetrated upon thousands of U.S. military veterans revealed during the ongoing V.A. scandal, that the Obama White House has become a symbol of not only military weakness to the world, but indifference to those men and women who serve.

 

And therein we find another paradox. With Tomahawk missiles quickly running out due to Obama budget cuts against the military, the need for “boots on the ground” in Iraq and Syria becomes even more likely. It will be yet another promise broken by the President Of Broken Promises.

 

Imagine too if another conflict arises in another part of the world. Due to Barack Obama’s war on the American military, the United States is now signaling to the rest of the world it cannot be counted upon to restore peace, or even protect our own interests.

 

Weak at home and weak abroad – that is the lasting Obama legacy…

 

H/T to the Washington Free Beacon

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September 30, 2014
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Offline Fishrrman

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Hmmmm..... lemmmeeesssseee here....

Runnin' out of Tomahawks...
Aircraft carriers laid up....
Military cuts....

.... before you know it, the USA will be as well-armed as Canada !!