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NEW TARGETS FOR COOPERATION U.S. Soldiers from 2nd Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Infantry Brigade, 25th Infantry Division and Indonesian soldiers from 1st Infantry Division of Kostrad conduct tomahawk training during Garuda Shield in West Java, Indonesia, in August 2015. One of several stops on a 2015 Pathways deployment, Garuda Shield supports greater regional security and cooperation, and is part of the pivot to Asia announced by President Obama in 2012. (U.S. Army photo by SPC Michael Sharp, 55th Combat Camera)


of military hardware to foreign nations, the Army will save the U.S. government millions of dollars while also engaging its Pacific allies and partners. Te three Pathways in 2015 com- bined training events that, if implemented in isolation, would have cost taxpayers twice as much, resulting in millions of dol- lars in savings over the course of a year.


Nevertheless, there are certainly areas where the Pathways pro- gram can be improved. For example, choosing the right ship is critical to agility and flexibility. Current laws and policy limit access to the most capable, cost-effective vessels, those that are owned by the government and managed by the Navy’s Mili- tary Sealift Command. When U.S. government vessels are not available, the government prefers contracting U.S.-flagged com- mercial ships. When these ships are unavailable, the military


must rely on contracting other commercial vessels. (Additional information about the program can be found at the Military Sealift Command website http://www.msc.navy.mil/PM5/.) Unfortunately,


the U.S. Army in the Pacific currently lacks dedicated strategic and operational intra-theater-assigned sealift.


Dedicated strategic sealift vessels would make the Pathways ini- tiative more effective than reliance on U.S.- or foreign-flagged commercial vessels by allowing access to shallower ports; enabling multiple loading and unloading options; providing secure communications suites; offering bunks for more troops; allowing for bulk fuel, ammunition and water storage; and pro- viding maintenance and medical treatment facilities. At


the


same time, dedicated sealift would strengthen the capabilities of the U.S. Pacific Command.


ASC.ARMY.MIL 41


LOGISTICS


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