August 20, 2008
Associated Press
PORTLAND, Maine - The Navy has reversed course and decided to push for construction of a third stealth destroyer, Sen. Susan Collins said yesterday.
The Navy had said a month ago that it was scrapping the Zumwalt destroyer program once the first two are built. The DDG-1000 warship has massive firepower but is costly. The Navy said then that it was opting instead to build more of the current-generation DDG-51, or Arleigh Burke, destroyers.
Collins, a Maine Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said Navy Secretary Donald Winter informed her of the decision and of the Navy's plans to buy spare parts for DDG-51s that could also be used to restart production of that class of ships.
The ship will be built at Maine's Bath Iron Works, Collins said.
"This is great news for Bath Iron Works," she said in a telephone interview. "It means that the third (DDG-1000) ship is very likely to go forward, and yet there's also the potential of building more DDG-51s."
In a letter to Collins, Deputy Defense Secretary Gordon England indicated the Navy was concerned about a potential disruption in the nation's shipbuilding base.
"This plan will provide stability of the industrial base and continue the development of advanced surface ship technologies such as radar systems, stealth, magnetic and acoustic quieting, and automated damage control," England wrote.
The Zumwalt features composite materials, an unconventional wave-piercing hull and a smaller crew than the Arleigh Burke. At 14,500 tons, the Zumwalt is 50 percent larger than its predecessor and costs twice as much
Associated Press
PORTLAND, Maine - The Navy has reversed course and decided to push for construction of a third stealth destroyer, Sen. Susan Collins said yesterday.
The Navy had said a month ago that it was scrapping the Zumwalt destroyer program once the first two are built. The DDG-1000 warship has massive firepower but is costly. The Navy said then that it was opting instead to build more of the current-generation DDG-51, or Arleigh Burke, destroyers.
Collins, a Maine Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said Navy Secretary Donald Winter informed her of the decision and of the Navy's plans to buy spare parts for DDG-51s that could also be used to restart production of that class of ships.
The ship will be built at Maine's Bath Iron Works, Collins said.
"This is great news for Bath Iron Works," she said in a telephone interview. "It means that the third (DDG-1000) ship is very likely to go forward, and yet there's also the potential of building more DDG-51s."
In a letter to Collins, Deputy Defense Secretary Gordon England indicated the Navy was concerned about a potential disruption in the nation's shipbuilding base.
"This plan will provide stability of the industrial base and continue the development of advanced surface ship technologies such as radar systems, stealth, magnetic and acoustic quieting, and automated damage control," England wrote.
The Zumwalt features composite materials, an unconventional wave-piercing hull and a smaller crew than the Arleigh Burke. At 14,500 tons, the Zumwalt is 50 percent larger than its predecessor and costs twice as much
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