US Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

Equation

Lieutenant General
he Blokes in Mi6 earned there Double 0 numbers when they created a Trading company which bought the T80U's supposedly for Morroco at 5 million per.

That's great to pull that off. BUT the best one and we all know now is the one where the Chinese company from HK bought an old Soviet Union aircraft carrier (now Liaoning) from the Ukraine to supposively turned it into a casino.;):p
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
WASHINGTON — The US Navy is now building towards a fleet goal of 308 ships, according to the latest 30-year shipbuilding plan — a small evolution from the previously-cited 306-ship target. The two ships added to the fleet total are a 12th LPD 17-class amphibious transport dock and a third Afloat Forward Staging Base (AFSB).

The addition of the LPD and AFSB to the fleet objectives mean the number of amphibious warfare ships has grown from 33 to 34 ships, along with the same growth in the number of support vessels — 33 to 34 ships.

The changes are detailed in the annual 30-year shipbuilding report — formally called the "annual long-range plan for construction of naval vessels" — that was sent to Congress April 2. Prepared by the Navy, the report was signed out to Congress by Deputy Defense Secretary Robert Work.

In the report, the Navy continues to take issue with Congress' prohibition in the 2015 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) of counting deployed patrol coastal (PC) ships as part of the battle force. "The Navy does not agree with the current NDAA language," the report says, noting that the PCs fulfill specific Congressional requirements for what constitutes a combatant vessel. The prohibition to counting the PCs, the Navy said, is a contradiction to Congress' own language.
Nevertheless, the Navy has returned to the same ship-counting methodology used in the FY 2014 report, removing 10 deployed PCs and the fleet's two hospital ships from the battle force computations.

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The addition of the 12th LPD — a ship the Navy did not request but was added by Congress to the 2015 shipbuilding budget — and the modest growth to the 34-ship amphibious force allows the Navy to keep a four-ship amphibious ready group (ARG) forward-deployed to Japan, without, the Navy said, "disrupting the deployment cycles of the remaining ARGs."

The report repeats statements by the Navy and virtually every other Pentagon leader that funding remain stable and the Budget Control Act (BCA) be rescinded.
"There are many ways to balance between force structure, readiness, capability and manpower," the report reads, "but none that Navy has calculated that enable us to confidently execute the current defense strategy within BCA-level funding."

The Navy also again cautioned that the impact of the Ohio Replacement Program to build a new 12-ship class of strategic ballistic missile submarines will present challenges throughout the ORP's procurement period — essentially into the 2030s — and that overall the shipbuilding program could be affected.

The controversial modernization plan to upgrade half the fleet's 22 cruisers remains a point of contention. The Navy notes that under its plan — rejected last year by Congress — the last of the ships would retire in 2045, whereas the Congressional direction adopted in the 2015 defense laws mean the last ship will leave service between 2036 and 2039. The Navy and the Pentagon, the report said, "will continue to work with Congress to implement the Navy's cruiser modernization plans."

The report confirms the Navy will request a ten-ship multi-year procurement (MYP) of DDG 51-class Flight III destroyers beginning in 2018, with a planned total of 27 of the ships that feature the new Air and Missile Defense Radar. A note in the report mentions that procurement of Flight IIIs "may continue … until a follow-on ship has been identified."

Enhanced littoral combat ships (LCSs) procured from 2019 on will be designated as frigates, a decision announced in January. The goal of acquiring a total of 52 LCSs and LCS frigates is reaffirmed. The first of a new class of replacement ships continues to be programmed for 2030.

Beginning in 2019, "at least one" Virginia-class attack submarine incorporating a Virginia Payload Module (VPM) will be purchased each year, a move that accelerates VPM installation two years, from 2021. Virginia-class procurement beginning in 2018 will be under a nine-ship MYP, although every Block V hull might not include the VPM, an 85-foot hull section containing four enlarged payload tubes that will be inserted into the midsection of the submarines. Now built under a two-sub-per-year profile, the plan notes that only one attack submarine will be purchased in those years where an ORP submarine also is requested. A follow-on class to the Virginia submarines is planned for 2034.

Plans remain in place to begin procuring 11 new LX(R) amphibious ships to replace existing LSD landing ship docks in 2020, with serial production beginning in 2022.

The acquisition of several support ships has been delayed a few years — a typical situation in a budget-constrained shipbuilding plan. An ATS salvage ship has been moved from 2017 to 2019, and the lead ship of a new class of T-AGOS surveillance ships delayed from 2020 to 2021. The Navy is considering whether to extend the service life of the five existing T-AGOS ships beyond 30 years.

Procurement of the T-AO(X) fleet oiler continues, however. The first ship is part of the 2016 budget request, and a total of 17 ships is planned.

Production of existing big-deck aviation ships will continue throughout the plan. A new Ford-class aircraft carrier is planned every five years, through 2043, while procurement of amphibious assault ships continues into the 2040s.

Replacement of two of the Navy's most active ships — the fleet flagships Blue Ridge and Mount Whitney — has disappeared from the latest shipbuilding plan, with elimination of last year's forecast replacements in 2032 and 2034. Instead, the report said, the Navy "will look at alternative means to meet the requirements fulfilled by these ships, such as modular systems that can be temporarily installed on an existing ship."
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FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
WASHINGTON — The past few days have been good for a number of the US Navy's shipbuilders. The service issued building contracts for two new destroyers, three littoral combat ships (LCS) and two new landing craft. Long-lead funding was issued for another LCS, and even the Coast Guard got in on the action, ordering another large National Security Cutter. A destroyer was launched, a new amphibious ship christened, and a high-speed catamaran vessel successfully completed sea trials.

Down at Ingalls Shipbuilding in Pascagoula, Mississippi, the DDG 51 Arleigh Burke-class destroyer John Finn (DDG 113) was launched on March 28. The ship is the first of the DDG 51 restarts, the result of a 2008 Navy decision to cap production of DDG 1000 Zumwalt-class destroyers at three ships and return to building Burkes. Two yards build DDG 51s – Ingalls, and the General Dynamics Bath Iron Works yard in Bath, Maine. Before 2008, the Navy's plan was to stop buying Burkes after the Michael Murphy (DDG 112), delivered in 2012. The John Finn will be christened May 2, and is expected to be delivered in 2016.

Ingalls also is building the Ralph Johnson (DDG 114), Paul Ignatius (DDG 117) and Delbert D. Black (DDG 119), and the current block buy includes DDGs 121, 123 and 125. Bath is at work on the Ralph Peralta (DDG 115), Thomas Hudner (DDG 116), Daniel Inouye (DDG 118) and the yet-to-be-named DDG 120. The DDG block buy for Bath also includes DDGs 122, 124 and 126.
On March 27, both destroyer-building shipyards received construction contracts for their next destroyers. Ingalls was awarded a $604.3 million contract modification to build the yet-to-be-named DDG 121, while Bath received a $610.4 million contract modification to build DDG 122. Both ships were funded in the 2015 defense appropriations act.
Construction of the remainder of the block buy ships are to be funded in 2016 and 2017 under the Navy's existing two-destroyers-per-year acquisition construct.
On March 31, the Navy awarded contract modifications to its two LCS builders. Lockheed Martin received $362 million to fund construction of one Freedom-class ship, LCS 21, while Austal USA was awarded $691 million for two Independence-class ships, LCSs 22 and 24. Lockheed also received $79 million for advanced procurement of LCS 23. The full-funding ships were provided for in the 2015 budget, while full funding for LCS 23 is part of the 2016 request.

Lockheed builds the Freedom class at Fincantieri Marinette Marine in Marinette, Wisconsin, while Austal USA's shipyard for the Independence class is in Mobile, Alabama. To date, all odd-numbered ships are Freedom LCS 1-class vessels, all even-numbered ships belong to the Independence LCS 2 class.
The Navy has announced no plans to deviate from evenly distributing construction of the ships between the two yards. As detailed in the latest 30-year shipbuilding plan, sent to Congress April 2, the service plans to request three LCSs per year through 2025. The latest LCS contracts were initially covered by 10-ship block buys awarded to each shipyard in 2010, covering LCSs 5 through 24. A new acquisition strategy for LCS frigates is expected to be announced May 1, and the Navy plans to shift to LCS frigate construction no later than LCS 33. A total of 52 LCSs and LCS frigates are planned.
The Navy noted that LCS costs remain significantly under the congressional cost cap of $480 million per ship, expressed in 2009 dollars, or $538 million in then-year, or current, values. The latest construction awards reflect an average price of $432 million in then-year dollars.
Both LCS shipyards are in full-rate production on their LCS variants. At Marinette, the Milwaukee (LCS 5) is about 97 percent complete, according to the Navy, and the Detroit (LCS 7) is about 80 percent complete. Both are scheduled to be delivered this year. Of next year's ships, the Little Rock (LCS 9) is about 68 percent complete while the Sioux City is at 53 percent.
At Austal USA, the Jackson (LCS 6) also is at 97 percent completion, while the Montgomery (LCS 8) is at 89 percent. Both are to be delivered in 2015. For delivery in 2016, the Gabrielle Giffords (LCS 10) is at 82 percent completion, while the Omaha (LCS 12) is at 60 percent.

Austal USA also is about half-way through production of ten Joint High Speed Vessels (JHSVs). The Trenton (JHSV 5) completed acceptance trials March 13 and will shortly be delivered to the Navy's Military Sealift Command. The next ship, the Brunswick (JHSV 6), is to be floated off in mid-May. Construction contracts for all ten ships, through the Burlington (JHSV 10), have already been awarded.

At Ingalls, the new San Antonio LPD 17-class amphibious ship John P. Murtha (LPD 26) was ceremonially christened on March 21, having been launched on Oct. 30. The ship is scheduled to be delivered in 2016.
At the other end of the amphibious ship scale, Textron of New Orleans, Louisiana, received an $84 million contract modification on March 31 to build two new Landing Craft Air Cushion vehicles, LCACs 102 and 103. The craft are part of the Ship to Shore Connector (SSC) program, developed to replace the existing fleet of LCACs. LCAC 101, first craft of the SSC program, was ordered last August from Textron.

Ingalls Shipbuilding got another boost March 31 with a $500 million fixed-price incentive contract to build the eighth and last National Security Cutter (NSC) for the US Coast Guard. The Midgett (WMSL 757) is scheduled to be delivered in 2019. The fifth NSC, James (WMSL 754), is scheduled to be delivered this year, with the Munro (WMSL 755) and Kimball (WMSL 756) following in successive years. The cutters are the most advanced ships ever built for the Coast Guard
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WASHINGTON — The US Navy is now building towards a fleet goal of 308 ships, ...

FORBIN thanks for emphasizing some parts of the article (which I already read today in the morning :) though); I'd have added this sentence:
The goal of acquiring a total of 52 LCSs and LCS frigates is reaffirmed.
LCSs will form (almost exactly) one sixth part of the USN ... and almost two times bigger part of combatant ships

EDIT
some of you know the USN LCSs have an enemy in the middle of Europe LOL
 
Last edited:

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
10 billion dollars missile defense project flopped.

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No...they have not been flops at all. The funding has not been wasted at all.

This is typical liberal/progressive rhetoric...and the cancellations have all occurred under the Obama administration...which is just more of the same.

The fact is that each of these programs have advanced the technology and science significantly.

As a result of the research and tests that went into all of these programs, the US has in fact fielded Anti-missile defense systems of several types.

- There are long range interceptors now deployed in Alaska and California.
- There are AEGIS ABM capabilities deployed at sea and on land.
- THAADS has been deployed for land based Theater level defense

We have allies also benefiting from and using these defenses as well. From nations in Europe, to Japan, Korea, Australia, and others..

The US leads the world in ballistic missile defense, with scores of successful, live fire intercepts, and numerous systems deployed

It is programs like these that have made that possible.

The not-journalists at the LA Times and other places leave out...or, more likely, never even research...the complete other side that I have mentioned. They do this because it does not fit their narrative.

That is why I refer to them as "not-journalists," because their journalistic credentials, IMHO, are completely suspect. They do not do real journalism...in most cases they simply print articles that support their various "causes," and negate anything that does not fit it.
 

Equation

Lieutenant General
No...they have not been flops at all. The funding has not been wasted at all.

This is typical liberal/progressive rhetoric...and the cancellations have all occurred under the Obama administration...which is just more of the same.

The fact is that each of these programs have advanced the technology and science significantly.

As a result of the research and tests that went into all of these programs, the US has in fact fielded Anti-missile defense systems of several types.

- There are long range interceptors now deployed in Alaska and California.
- There are AEGIS ABM capabilities deployed at sea and on land.
- THAADS has been deployed for land based Theater level defense

We have allies also benefiting from and using these defenses as well. From nations in Europe, to Japan, Korea, Australia, and others..

The US leads the world in ballistic missile defense, with scores of successful, live fire intercepts, and numerous systems deployed

It is programs like these that have made that possible.

The not-journalists at the LA Times and other places leave out...or, more likely, never even research...the complete other side that I have mentioned. They do this because it does not fit their narrative.

That is why I refer to them as "not-journalists," because their journalistic credentials, IMHO, are completely suspect. They do not do real journalism...in most cases they simply print articles that support their various "causes," and negate anything that does not fit it.

It's the sign of the times where journalism or wannabes don't need to check their credentials for their sources. Just like that Rolling Stone magazine article about a suppose fraternity rape occurred at the University of Virginia campus ONLY to be find out that it wasn't true.
 

asif iqbal

Lieutenant General
A snap shot of the ship inventory from Forbins link

If the USN brings in some sort of Nimitz Class life extension programme they could have up to 15 carriers operational

But if they start replacing like for like with Ford Class we will a drop before a rise again and stick to 10/11 carrier fleet

407b19929ea11fa58d57c048328a34db_zpswfrgmmfp.jpg
 
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