3
Recommendations
Based on the results of this study and on the implications of those results
as discussed in Chapter 8 of this report, the following recommendations are
conveyed to the Department of the Navy.
Recommendation 1: Plan and implement an aggressive program to create
the entering wedges of capability that will position the naval forces to
meet the challenges of the 21st century. Key technical capabilities anticipated
by this study include:
-
Information superiority as an integrated warfare area; capitalizing on and
adapting to the vast commercial
infrastructure;1
-
Technological support for highly qualified, better trained, and better educated
people, retained in the force longer;
-
A family of rocket-propelled, surface- and submarine-launched, land-attack
guided missiles (adaptable to air delivery and to other missions);
-
In combat aircraft: STOL, STOVL, standoff, and stealth;
-
Air-to-air cooperative engagement at long-engagement ranges;
-
Stealth and automation in ships, which must be designed as complete systems;
-
Unmanned aerial and underwater vehicles providing essential capabilities for combat;
-
Greatly expanded capability of submarines to support forces ashore;
-
Advancing ASW through coherent signal processing and cooperative engagement
in undersea warfare;
-
Becoming able to clear mines rapidly during expeditionary operations;
-
Ability of small units to neutralize large, built-up, populated areas with
minimal casualties and collateral damage;
-
A logistic system based on the use of modern information technology with
lift, ships, and processes tailored for supporting forces at sea and ashore
from the sea;
-
Modeling and simulation applied to acquisition, readiness, deterrence, and
warfare: theory and methods to suit the needs of future naval forces for
deterrence and warfare.
Recommendation 2: Design, implement, and sustain a vigorous program
of naval systems R&D to create the new capabilities.
This program should capitalize as much as possible on commercial technology
development, while sustaining Department of the Navy science and technology
and advanced development oriented toward specific naval force needs that
the commercial world will not meet. The areas to be covered are described
in the eight panel reports that present in detail the results of this study.
References
1. Of necessity, the information system will include some organic targeting
capability as a fallback.