Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle A— - General Military Law › Part PART I— - ORGANIZATION AND GENERAL MILITARY POWERS › Chapter CHAPTER 9— - DEFENSE BUDGET MATTERS › § 222c
Each year when the budget for the coming fiscal year is sent to Congress, the top officer of each military service (except the Coast Guard) must send a report to the congressional defense committees. The report must show, for every munition variant, the service’s long-term unconstrained munitions needs and current out-year inventory numbers. Those figures must be broken down by categories like combat needs (listed by operation plan, including plans involving China, Russia, North Korea, and Iran), current operations/forward presence, strategic readiness, homeland defense, air and missile defense, training and testing, the total calculated requirement, worldwide out-year inventory, protracted-war scenarios (using double the plan duration), and estimated demand from allies and partners. The report must also explain the implementation guidance the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment used. It must list the yearly production rates needed to meet the total requirement and the funding needed each year. The Secretary of Defense must fold those production levels into DoD planning and budgeting. Definitions: “chief of staff” — for the Marine Corps this means the Commandant; “Out-Year Unconstrained Total Munitions Requirement” — as defined in Department of Defense Instruction 3000.04.
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10 U.S.C. § 222c
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73