Brumby
Major
I think the challenge they faced with the SSC/FF decision is that their two options of modding LCS with additional subsystems (like VLS and a better radar), or building a brand new design (such as based on Legend class), may have cost too much and arrive on the scene later than the USN would like. The first SSC is supposedly meant to be acquired from 2019, and I think the USN erring on the side of caution and choosing a LCS modification with minimal changes.
Considering recent USN shipbuilding programmes, I think that kind of caution is valid, therefeore possibly making the lightly upgunned LCS/FF the "safest" option that they currently have. Ironically, I think if they chose to develop a more conventional frigate instead of LCS from the very beginning, they may have come out with a more successful programme in the first place and wouldn't have needed to do a separate tender for SSC.
Who knows, maybe criticism of the decision will bring about changes, but I suspect the navy will have to either fork out more cash for development, or be patient enough to wait a bit longer, or both, compared to the LCS FF/SSC.
With the LCS it was always about money and that is to get as much out of the design with a cap around $500-$600 million per vessel. I just think that with a limited set amount of funding on the program a better outcome is to incorporate VLS into the design by way of offset with lower vessel numbers. This might require some hull modification and cost around $750 million per vessel. It is IMHO a better outcome to end up with less more capable vessels than stick with a less flexible armed design just to make the original total vessels count. It think it is ethically wrong to send the service personnel into harm's way with a capability and/or operational gap.
I think what is lacking is naval leadership committed in doing the right thing.