The recent surge of forces in Iraq has proven
so successful that the Army may soon begin revisiting prewar plans for the
rationalization of its domestic logistics network. Supply centers and
repair depots are once again reflecting on what their long-term roles
should be, and in the process showing a good deal of imagination.
The Sierra Army Depot is about an hour north of Reno,
Nevada in the California desert. It is a huge place
with a motivated management and labor force, and is well-positioned for west
coast/Pacific theater military contingencies. The depot's specialty is
low-priced storage and supply-chain management, with some repair work on
the side. Sierra also has a 10,000 foot runway that can handle C-5s
and C-17s, and is the Army industrial base's IT infrastructure test-bed.
But unlike most other Army depots,
Sierra has a miniscule private presence inside its gate, and is far away from
the center of the Army industrial base, where the big maintenance and repair
facilities reign supreme.
Sierra is driving itself to bring
more private companies inside its government fence, and the clear business
and political benefits that come with partnering. Candidates include
container specialists like Maersk Line, global supply-chain managers like FedEx
and UPS, and vehicle makers like BAE Systems and AM General.
Sierra already gets good
assistance from its high-powered Senators from California and Nevada,
especially Senators Reid and Feinstein, but in the competitive Army depot world
with big gorillas like the Anniston and Red River depots and the
Defense Logistics Agency always breathing down your neck, new muscle and ideas
are always necessary.
Sierra has thousands of military
vehicles stored in the desert, which is the perfect environment for
preserving metal assets from capricious weather. These include hundreds
of tanks, Bradley fighting vehicles, and howitzers. Hundreds of additional
tanks and other vehicles are expected to be delivered to Sierra in 2008, and it
is a logical place to store and even help repair the huge MRAPs after the
war.
Policy-makers will need to figure
out what is going to happen to all the heavy armor in Iraq and Afghanistan, including thousands of
uparmored Humvees, in the war's aftermath. Will the next contingency
require as much force protection as Iraq
and Afghanistan,
or will it be lighter and more mobile? What should be done with all the
extra armor being fastened onto vehicles at a time when our industrial base is
stretched to the breaking point? The new administration on the way
in the door next year will have to deal with these questions at a time when the
Army is faced with huge new personnel, repair, and modernization bills.
Sierra may afford the Army with
the space, labor and climate to deal with some of these difficult supply-chain
and fiscal challenges. And that depot may also be an opportunity for
defense companies looking for new business in the post-supplemental,
post-Bush defense arena.