ID | 130774 |
Title Proper | US Coast Guard in review |
Language | ENG |
Author | DiRenzo, Joe III ; Doane, Chris |
Publication | 2014. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The year 2013 brought increased challenges to the Coast Guard as the service sought to balance a declining budget with increasing operational demand. Sequestration and other budget control actions forced a $295 million cut to the service's modest $8 billion budget. In his December testimony before the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation, Vice Admiral John Currier, the service's Vice Commandant, talked of the operational impacts of sequestration that forced the Coast Guard to reduce operations, defer depot-level maintenance, and decrease spare parts levels and training. Additionally, sequestration required a 25 percent operational reduction that affected the Coast Guard's ability to maintain an effective maritime presence to detect, deter, and intercept at-sea threats. |
`In' analytical Note | US Naval Institute Proceedings Vol.140, No.5; May 2014: p.90-5 |
Journal Source | US Naval Institute Proceedings Vol.140, No.5; May 2014: p.90-5 |
Key Words | United States - US ; US Navy ; US Coast Guards ; Coastal Operations ; Coastal Security ; Maritime Boundaries ; Maritime Threat ; Maritime Policy ; Defence Budget ; Naval Threat ; Sea Power ; Defence Acquisition ; Maritime Presence ; Budget Control Action - BCA ; Maritime Transportation ; Maritime Law ; Coastal Boundaries |