Expeditionary Warfare Conference



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Expeditionary Warfare Conference LtGen R.T. Tryon U.S. Marine Corps Forces Command 30 October 2013 UNCLASSIFIED

Today s World 95% of international communications travels via underwater cables 21 of the world s 28 mega-cities are within 62 mi / 100 km of the sea 70% of the world is water 23,000 trading ships are underway daily 49% of the world s oil travels through 7 major sea chokepoints 95% of the world s commerce moves by sea 50% of the world's population lives within 62 mi / 100 km of a coast At the Geo-Strategic level, it s all about the littorals. 2

Emerging Security Environment Sources of Stress Nuclear Armed States NPT Non-Signatory Undeclared / Emerging NAS World Top Ten Oil Reserves Water Stress Conflict Terrorism Crime Youth Bulge Undernourished Populations Competition for resources, natural disasters, social unrest, hostile cyber activity, violent extremism (criminal, terrorist, religious), regional conflict, proliferations of weapons of mass destruction and advanced weaponry in the hands of the irresponsible are becoming all too common. These challenges are harbingers of potential crisis around the world, 3 and more specifically for naval forces in the littoral regions.

CMC Guiding Principles 1. EXPEDITIONARY FORCE IN READINESS a. Deployed forward for deterrence and proximity to crises b. Poised and ready for rapid crisis response, with no tiered readiness a. Conduct operations under very austere conditions b. Self-sustaining in an expeditionary environment c. Leverages assets for rapid deployment 2. NAVAL FORCE a. Leverages sea as maneuver space b. Integrated into a larger Naval enterprise c. Preserve core amphibious competencies 3. MIDDLEWEIGHT FORCE a. Light enough for rapid deployment b. Heavy enough to prevail against littoral threats c. Command and control operations up to the MEF 4. FORCIBLE ENTRY IN DEPTH a. Capable of operations impact early b. Aggregates 2 brigades (MEBs) from the sea c. Allows for strategic flexibility & asymmetric advantage 5. INTEGRATED COMBINED ARMS FORCE a. Designed for combat employment as a MAGTF. b. Not every employment will include every function 6. MODERN FORCE a. Preserve qualitative edge over its opponents. b. Leverages technology and ISR to fight with precision c. Integrates aviation, fires, mobility, and logistics 7. LEADING EDGE OF THE JOINT FORCE a. Facilitates integration of GPF and SOF capabilities b. Integrates into joint force air and logistics operations in sustained conflict 8. FORCE BIASED FOR ACTION a. Agile: meets the needs of Geographic Combatant Commanders a. Standing MAGTF HQs for immediate employment b. Maintains a 1:2 deploy/dwell c. Integrates Reserve capabilities across a wide range of contingencies a. Trained to full range of missions b. Inherently adaptive but comprehensively trained Value Proposition : A forward postured, agile expeditionary force focused on assuring littoral access and responding 4 to crisis that can adapt for missions from theater security cooperation to major operations

Current Force Posture (As of 24 Oct 13) Operations ~14,150 + Amphibious Ops ~6,700 + Exercises ~900 TSC + ~450 = Total Deployed ~22,200 EUCOM: ~2,700 NORTHCOM: ~50 AFGHANISTAN: ~8,000 OTHER CENTCOM: ~3,650 FAST PLTS USEUCOM USCENTCOM USPACOM USNORTHCOM USSOUTHCOM MARSOC USCENTCOM USPACOM USNORTHCOM WTI 1-14 USSOUTHCOM EXPEDITIONARY MISO TEAM CIVIL AFFAIRS TEAM SIGINT SUPPORT TEAM COMBAT LOGISTICS SMEE SMALL UNIT LEADERSHIP MTT C2 FUNCTIONS SMEE RECON BILATERAL EXCHANGE USEUCOM GEORGIA DEPLOYMENT PROGRAM-ISAF 2 BLACK SEA ROTATIONAL FORCE 14 TARTAN EAGLE 26 TH MEU USEUCOM AFRICA PARTNERSHIP STATION USAFRICOM 13 TH MEU USCENTCOM USAFRICOM CJTF-HOA OPERATION ONWARD LIBERTY LIBYA EMBASSY REINFORCEMENT SPMAGTF - CRISIS RESPONSE SPMAGTF - AFRICA 13.3 USCENTCOM OEF-AFGHANISTAN JORDAN DEPLOYMENT PROGRAM YEMEN EMBASSY REINFORCEMENT UAE SECURITY COOPERATION COMBAT EXCHANGE 31 ST MEU USPACOM USPACOM OEF-PHILIPPINES JPAC PHIBLEX 14-1 KMEP 14.1 COMBINED SAPPER 13 FOREST LIGHT 14 MAX THUNDER OPERATION AMPHIBIOUS OPERATION OTHER DEPLOYMENTS SOUTHCOM: ~100 AFRICOM: ~1,100 PACOM: ~6,600 5 5

Future Force Posture The Nation s Crisis Response Force forward deployed and poised to respond within the arc of instability and within regions of anticipated future conflicts. CONUS-Based MEB CR SPMAGTF-CENT SPMAGTF-CR/AF/EUR 31 st MEU III MEF Alert Contingency MAGTF ARG/MEU SPMAGTF-South SPMAGTF-CR/AF/EUR ARG/MEU South China Sea Choke Points MRF-Darwin Piracy Current Favorable Allied/Coalition Access/Basing Support Regions of Naval Maneuver Future force posture Current force posture Current Area of Interest Arc of Instability

The Corps in Transition 7

Moving Forward Where we are today Where we are going 8

Assured Access benefits more than just our Nation s security 9

Present and Future Seabasing Capability 10

11