USS Freedom Gets Underway After Two Years of Repairs

By: Sam LaGrone
USNI.org

December 18, 2018 9:59 AM

USS Freedom (LCS-1) departs a pier in San Diego under its own power on Dec. 10, 2018. US Navy Photo

Littoral Combat Ship USS Freedom (LCS-1) left a pier in San Diego, Calif., for the first time in more than two years, after an extensive repair period to fix the ship’s propulsion system.

The underway was part of contractor trials to test repairs after a Colt-Pielstick diesel engine was damaged in 2016, a Navy spokesperson told USNI News on Monday.

“The Freedom-variant littoral combat ship USS Freedom (LCS-1) achieved a major milestone this week as the ship began contractor sea trials, Dec. 10,” LCS Squadron 1 spokeswoman Lt. Cmdr. Miranda Williams told USNI News.
“This important step is the culmination of nearly two years’ worth of work across multiple organizations. This milestone allows the first ship of its class to return to sea and fulfill its new role as a testing ship.”

In 2016, the crew of the ship discovered one of its two Colt-Pielstick diesels had failed due to contamination of the ship’s lube oil system by seawater.

After participating in the Rim of the Pacific 2016 exercise operating on its gas turbines, the ship returned to its homeport in San Diego. Once pier-side, a Southwest Regional Maintenance Center’s Diesel Engine Inspector found “significant damage to the engine caused by rust and seawater,” USNI News reported at the time. Since then, the ship has been undergoing repairs in San Diego. The first word on the successful repairs came from the ship’s Facebook page last week.

With the repairs to the ship completed, Freedom is now on its way to rejoin the four-ship LCS test force. The other Freedom-class ship in the test division, USS Fort Worth (LCS-3), was also sidelined after operator error damaged the combining gear that linked the ship’s main propulsion diesels with the Rolls Royce MT30 gas turbines in Singapore in 2016.

Questions on the status of both Freedom and Fort Worth left with a Naval Sea Systems Command spokesperson on Monday were not immediately returned.

In contrast to the two-years NAVSEA took to repair the two ships, the command was able to replace a damaged MT30 gas turbine on Zumwalt-class Michael Monsoor (DDG-1001) in a matter of months.

The inclusion of Freedom and Fort Worth back into the testing regime will free up operational assets that were waylaid to complete testing of the emerging mission package capabilities. Due in part to the demands of mission package testing, the Navy did not deploy any Littoral Combat Ships in 2018.

For example, USS Milwaukee (LCS-5) was used as a platform for Surface-to-Surface Missile Module (SSMM) developmental testing that will integrate the AGM-114L Longbow Hellfire onto the LCS.

180830-N-EA818-1173.jpg

Navy Awards 2 LCSs to Austal USA; Third FY 2019 Ship Still Being Negotiated

By: Megan Eckstein
USNI.org

December 17, 2018 6:20 PM

The future USS Charleston (LCS-18) during acceptance trials on July 18, 2018. Austal photo.

Austal USA was awarded two of the three Littoral Combat Ships the Navy can buy in Fiscal Year 2019, further increasing the number of Independence-variant LCSs the Navy will ultimately have in the fleet.

The Navy awarded contract to build LCS-36 and LCS-38 to the Mobile, Ala.-based company on Friday evening.

In a Monday statement, Austal highlighted the unprecedented calendar year it has had, delivering three LCSs and being awarded a total of four new ships, including two FY 2018 ships that were awarded in mid-September.

“To be awarded two more LCS contracts before the end of the year is beyond exciting,” Austal USA President Craig Perciavalle said in the statement.
“This contract directly reflects the confidence the U.S. Navy has in Austal USA and our supplier base of over 10,000 nationwide and our ability to build highly capable ships at an affordable cost.”

Though the Navy in the early days of the LCS program awarded equal numbers of Independence-variant LCSs to Austal and Freedom-variant LCSs to Lockheed Martin, Austal has in recent years been churning out its ships faster and for a lower cost, according to several sources.

With Friday’s award, Austal now has 19 LCSs built, under construction or under contract, whereas Lockheed Martin has 15. Austal has five of its even-numbered LCSs under construction – 20, 22, 24, 26 and 28 – and hulls 30, 32, 34, 36 and 38 have now been awarded. At Lockheed Martin’s production line at the Marinette Marine shipyard in Wisconsin, odd-numbered LCSs 15, 17, 19, 21, 23, 25 and 27 are all in various stages of construction and testing, with LCS-29 under contract but not yet started at the yard.

Just one ship remains to be awarded before the Navy transitions from the LCS to the frigate – either LCS-31 or LCS-40, depending on which company is awarded the contract – and negotiations between the Navy and industry are ongoing.

“Based on the nature of the ongoing competitive procurement for the third FY 2019 LCS, the Navy is unable to release detailed information at this time,” Naval Sea Systems Command spokeswoman Colleen O’Rourke told USNI News today.
“The Navy is committed to an LCS program that provides the ships needed for the Navy’s force structure requirement, with an acquisition strategy that uses competition and fixed-price type contracts in order to meet overarching objectives of performance and affordability.”

team_keal.5b744a8b8691a.jpg

Watch Lockheed Martin drop a new combat ship into a river 

The 19th littoral combat ship, the future USS St. Louis, launches sideways into the Menominee River in Marinette, Wisconsin, on Dec. 15.

COURTESY LOCKHEED MARTIN

IN THIS ARTICLE

By Robert J. Terry  – Senior Staff Reporter, Washington Business Journal 

Dec 17, 2018, 12:07am EST

A shipbuilding team led by Bethesda-based Lockheed Martin launched its littoral combat ship 19 into the Menominee River in Wisconsin over the weekend.

The so-called sideways launch, at the Fincantieri Marinette Marine Shipyard in Marinette, Wisconsin, is something that needs to be seen to be believed so here’s video of it. 

LCS 19, the future USS St. Louis, is the second littoral combat ship christened and launched by Lockheed (NYSE: LMT) this year. The world’s largest defense contractor said last week the future USS Billings, currently known as LCS 15, had completed acceptance trials in Lake Michigan, making it the third littoral combat ship taken through sea trials this year. That includes a full-power run, maneuverability testing and surface and air detect-to-engage demonstrations of the ship's combat system.

With the launch, LCS 19 will now be readied for testing, trials and delivery to the U.S. Navy. The LCS program was created by the Navy to deliver affordable ships that are small enough to make their way into shallow waters and maneuver in tight spots. To pull that off, Lockheed designed a ship with a modular design, meaning the Navy can quickly swap out technology systems instead of taking the ship out of commission for six months to a year to rip and replace.

Along with being highly maneuverable and lethal, the ship is designed to support mine countermeasures, antisubmarine warfare and surface warfare missions. The littoral zone is the part of a sea, lake or river that is close to the shore. 

A team led by Lockheed (NYSE: LMT) and shipbuilder Fincantieri Marinette Marine, which operates three Great Lakes shipyards, designs and builds the Freedom-variant littoral combat ship. Austal builds the Independence-class variant. Lockheed’s ships are denoted by odd numbers while Austal’s feature even numbers.

Lockheed Martin is in full-rate LCS production and has delivered seven ships to the U.S. Navy. There are seven ships in various stages of production and test at Fincantieri Marinette Marine. 

This year, construction started on two ships while two have been delivered, sea trials have been completed for three ships and one delivered ship was commissioned. 

LCS 13, the future USS Wichita, is slated for commissioning in Mayport, Florida, on Jan. 12.

If you want more footage of the sideways launch, here’s a link to almost four minutes of B-roll footage Lockheed shot.

Littoral Combat Ship 19 (St. Louis) Christened and Launched

PR NewswireDecember 15, 2018

Yahoo Finance

Ship sponsor Barbara Broadhurst Taylor breaks a bottle of sparkling wine across the bow during the christening ceremony for the nation’s 19th Littoral Combat Ship, the future USS St. Louis.

Once commissioned, ship will operate independently on targeted missions around the world

MARINETTE, Wis., Dec. 15, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- The Lockheed Martin (LMT)-led shipbuilding team launched Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) 19, the future USS St. Louis into the Menominee River at the Fincantieri Marinette Marine Shipyard. Ship sponsor Barbara Broadhurst Taylor, the daughter of a decorated World War II aviator, christened LCS 19 just prior to launch.

"LCS 19 is the second ship we've christened and launched this year. Our shipbuilding team has truly hit its stride. We completed trials on three ships and delivered two more. Once delivered to the Navy, LCS 19 will be on its way to independently completing targeted missions around the world," said Joe DePietro, Lockheed Martin vice president and general manager of Small Combatants and Ship Systems. "We remain focused on delivering these affordable ships to the fleet as quickly as possible and increasing capability with each hull."

The Freedom-variant LCS integrates new technology and capability to affordably support current and future missions from deep water to the littorals. LCS is a highly maneuverable, lethal and adaptable ship, designed to support focused mine countermeasures, anti-submarine warfare and surface warfare missions. LCS 19 is targeted to support the mine countermeasures mission.

Lockheed Martin is in full-rate production and has delivered seven ships to the U.S. Navy. There are seven ships in various stages of production and test at Fincantieri Marinette Marine. This year, the Lockheed Martin-led team began construction on two ships, delivered two ships, completed sea trials for three ships and saw one delivered ship commissioned. LCS 13, the future USS Wichita, is slated for commissioning in Mayport, Florida, on Jan. 12.

"I am thrilled and very honored to be the sponsor of the future USS St. Louis. The combination of my family's military background and the enduring spirit of the great city of St. Louis make this incredibly meaningful," Taylor said. "This is the seventh ship to bear the name St. Louis, and I know that the people of our great city are extremely proud that this distinguished legacy will continue."   

Unique among combat ships, LCS is designed to complete close-to-shore missions and is a growing and relevant part of the Navy's fleet.

  • It is fast—capable of speeds in excess of 40 knots. 

  • It is automated—with the most efficient staffing of any combat ship. 

  • It is lethal—standard equipped with Rolling Airframe Missiles (RAM) and a Mark 110 gun, capable of firing 220 rounds per minute. 

  • It is flexible—with 40 percent of the hull easily reconfigurable, integrating capabilities like the Longbow Hellfire Missiles, 30mm guns, and manned and unmanned vehicles targeted to meet today's and tomorrow's missions. 

"We are proud to be building LCS 19 and her sister ships at the heartland's only naval shipyard," said Jan Allman, Fincantieri Marinette Marine president and CEO. "Today's launch and christening is a testament to the hard work of more than 2,000 workers who pass through the shipyard's gates, put on their hard hats and build American warships."

Click here to view social media highlight video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mGURiaf-Gq4  
Click here to view photos: https://www.flickr.com/gp/143371902@N04/AT8Bk5  
Click here to view B-roll: https://vimeo.com/306583588  
Click here to view speaker remarks: https://vimeo.com/306585819

For more information, visit www.lockheedmartin.com/lcs.

About Lockheed Martin
Headquartered in Bethesda, Maryland, Lockheed Martin is a global security and aerospace company that employs approximately 100,000 people worldwide and is principally engaged in the research, design, development, manufacture, integration and sustainment of advanced technology systems, products and services. This year the company received three Edison Awards for ground-breaking innovations in autonomy, satellite technology and directed energy.

About Fincantieri Marinette Marine
Fincantieri is the leading western shipbuilder with a rich history dating back more than 230 years, and a track record of building more than 7,000 ships. Fincantieri Marine Group is the American subsidiary of Fincantieri, and operates three Great Lakes Shipyards: Fincantieri Marinette Marine, Fincantieri Bay Shipbuilding, and Fincantieri ACE Marine. Fincantieri Marine Group's more than 2,100 steelworkers, craftsman, engineers and technicians in the United States specialize in the design, construction and maintenance of merchant ships and government vessels, including for the United States Navy and Coast Guard.

View original content to download multimedia:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/littoral-combat-ship-19-st-louis-christened-and-launched-300767159.html

The 19th Littoral Combat Ship, the future USS St. Louis, launches sideways into the Menominee River in Marinette, Wisconsin, on Dec. 15.

The 19th Littoral Combat Ship, the future USS St. Louis, launches sideways into the Menominee River in Marinette, Wisconsin, on Dec. 15.

Littoral Combat Ship Report to Congress

November 22, 2018 6:23 AM

using.org

The following is the Oct. 22, 2018 Congressional Research Service report, Navy Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) Program: Background and Issues for Congress.

The Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) is a relatively inexpensive surface combatant equipped with modular mission packages. Navy plans call for procuring a total of 32 LCSs. The first LCS was procured in FY2005, and the Navy’s proposed FY2018 budget requested the procurement of the 30th and 31st LCSs. As part of its action on the Navy’s proposed FY2018 budget, Congress procured three LCSs—one more than the two that were requested. Thus, a total of 32 LCSs have been procured through FY2018.

The Navy’s proposed FY2019 budget, which was submitted to Congress before Congress finalized action on the Navy’s FY2018 budget, requests $646.2 million for the procurement of one LCS. If Congress had procured two LCSs in FY2018, as requested by the Navy, the LCS requested for procurement in FY2019 would have been the 32nd LCS. With the procurement of three LCSs in FY2018, the LCS requested for procurement in FY2019 would be the 33rd LCS.

The Navy’s plan for achieving and maintaining a 355-ship fleet includes a goal for achieving and maintaining a force of 52 small surface combatants (SSCs). The Navy’s plan for achieving that goal is to procure 32 LCSs, and then procure 20 new frigates, called FFG(X)s, with the first FFG(X) to be procured in FY2020. Multiple industry teams are now competing for the FFG(X) program. The design of the FFG(X) is to be based on either an LCS design or a different existing hull design. The FFG(X) program is covered in another CRS report.

The LCS program includes two very different LCS designs. One was developed by an industry team led by Lockheed; the other was developed by an industry team that was then led by General Dynamics. LCS procurement has been divided evenly between the two designs. The design developed by the Lockheed-led team is built at the Marinette Marine shipyard at Marinette, WI, with Lockheed as the prime contractor; the design developed by the team that was led by General Dynamics is built at the Austal USA shipyard at Mobile, AL, with Austal USA as the prime contractor.

The LCS program has been controversial over the years due to past cost growth, design and construction issues with the first LCSs, concerns over the survivability of LCSs (i.e., their ability to withstand battle damage), concerns over whether LCSs are sufficiently armed and would be able to perform their stated missions effectively, and concerns over the development and testing of the modular mission packages for LCSs. The Navy’s execution of the program has been a matter of congressional oversight attention for several years.

Issues for Congress for the LCS program for FY2019 include the following:

  • the number of LCSs to procure in FY2019;

  • the Navy’s proposal to procure a final LCS in FY2019 and then shift to procurement of FFG(X)s starting in FY2020;

  • a July 2018 Department of Defense (DOD) Inspector General (IG) report regarding IOC dates for LCS mine countermeasures (MCM) mission package systems;

  • survivability, lethality, technical risk, and test and evaluation issues relating to LCSs and their mission packages; and

  • LCS deployments in 2018.

lcs-patrol.jpg

Littoral Combat Ship Sioux City Set to Commission on Saturday at the Naval Academy

By: Ben Werner
using.org

November 16, 2018 9:00 PM • Updated: November 19, 2018 5:55 AM

Future USS Sioux City (LCS-11) at the U.S. Naval Academy before the ship’s commissioning ceremony. US Naval Academy photo.

The future USS Sioux City (LCS -11) is moored at U.S. Naval Academy for a commissioning scheduled for Saturday, the first such ceremony held for a warship on the Severn River.

U.S. Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) is scheduled to deliver the commissioning ceremony’s principal address. Mary Winnefeld, the wife of former Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. James “Sandy” Winnefeld (ret.), is the ship’s sponsor.

For shipbuilder Lockheed Martin, the commissioning provides a ready example of how production line improvements at the Fincantieri Marinette Marine facility in Marinette, Wisc., are paying off.

“LCS-11 was the first ship to get through the modernized yard,” Joe DePietro, Lockheed Martin’s vice president of Small Combatants and Ship Systems said during a media briefing this week. “We laid two keels this year, and delivered two ships, and will launch two ships this year, so we really hit our stride.”

Sioux City is the 13th littoral combat ship to enter the fleet and is the sixth Freedom-class variant. In August, Lockheed Martin also delivered the 14th LCS, the future USS Wichita (LCS-13). Both ships are expected to be homeported in Jacksonville, Fla.

One of the hallmarks of the LCS program is the relatively small crew size. Sioux City will start with a crew of about 70 officers and enlisted personnel, but the ship has berthing for up to 98 sailors, DePietro said. The purpose of adding crew accommodations was to allow Navy personnel to take care of more maintenance while underway.

The ship sends more than 80,000 signals to about 10,000 sensors, all with the goal of helping the smaller crews better manage the parts or components requiring replacement, DePietro said.

“Let’s not just do maintenance for the sake of maintenance,” DePeitro said. “Let’s understand the condition of the system to drive us to do that maintenance.”

Other examples of automation include being able to control the ship’s speed from a single console, instead of having to call to engineering to adjust speed. The LCS combat systems combine some functions to accommodate combat control teams of 5 to 8 sailors. On a destroyer or cruiser, DePietro said teams of 20 or more sailors typically run the combat systems. Cutting crew sizes, he explained, is one of the critical factors to cutting the cost of operating the LCS program.

“At the end of the day, the LCS is still getting delivered and delivered at a cost that’s under the Congressionally mandated cost cap that was set,” DePietro said.

th-5.jpeg

Navy Thinking Beyond Littoral Combat Ship for Future Mine Warfare

By: Megan Eckstein

USNI.org

November 2, 2018 12:45 PM

Petty Officer 2nd Class John Christner assigned to Commander, Task Group 56.1 (CTG 56.1), Explosive Ordnance Disposal Mobile Unit One, embarked aboard RFA Lyme Bay (L 3007), examines an inert mine training shape on Oct. 15, 2016, during UK/US Mine Countermeasures Exercise 2017 (UK/US MCM-Ex 17). US Navy photo.

THE PENTAGON – The Navy is moving to further divorce mine warfare capabilities from specific platforms, going even beyond the modular setup of the Littoral Combat Ship.

The service already moved away from legacy equipment, which paired mine-hunting and mine-neutralizing gear with dedicated Avenger-class mine countermeasure ships and MH-53E Sea Dragon helicopters. The Littoral Combat Ship created a new dynamic, where a prepackaged kit of MCM tools could be installed on the ship, or it could be taken off and swapped wholesale for a mission package for a different warfare area.

Now, according to Director of Expeditionary Warfare Maj. Gen. David Coffman (OPNAV N95), that mission package will be deconstructed. Instead of aiming to deliver to operational commanders a cookie-cutter set of MCM tools in a box, the Navy will focus on developing sensors and effects that are applicable to mine warfare; that can be mixed and matched with various manned or unmanned offboard vehicles; and that are employed from an LCS, from ashore or from other vessels of opportunity.

As an example, a key piece of the mine-hunting capability today is the Knifefish unmanned underwater vehicle with its synthetic aperture sonar. While it has performed well in testing, officials have previously told USNI News that the UUV itself is limited in endurance and may not be able to operate in areas of the world with strong underwater currents. However, with this piece of gear, the sonar and the UUV are a package deal, meaning an operational commander’s hands are tied in certain areas of the world.

Going forward, Coffman said, the Navy would prioritize the development of families of unmanned air, surface and undersea vehicles – not built for any specific mission set – with known performance parameters, towing capacities, space for sensor packages and other specifications. An operational commander could then select the right unmanned vehicle, select the sensor or effects package needed for the mission, and tailor that combination for the physical environment and threat environment he faces.

On the one hand, this approach frees up the Navy to field bits of capability as technology evolves, rather than waiting for a whole package of equipment to all be ready. The Navy previously broke its LCS mission packages up into increments, to address a widening gap in expected fielding timelines for the pieces of the package. As warfighters are constantly asking to experiment with the latest and greatest gear, moving away from the idea of a mission package altogether may increase the ability to put new sensors out into the field for demonstrations and experiments faster.

On the other hand, the MCM community already struggled to get sufficient funding in the Navy budget request – and then keep that funding as the budget went through Congress – and deconstructing the mission packages into individual sensors or unmanned vehicles runs the risk of exacerbating the funding challenges.

“It’s a typically historically under-resourced warfare area. It does not have a strong ownership of governance in terms of people waking up every day saying, we are going to work on this,” Coffman said.
“I think it’s going to be very challenging. … The services, Washington, Congress, everybody’s choking a little bit on this divorce of platforms, payloads, sensors. The system tends to like, ‘I bought one of these and one of these and it does this one thing.’ In mine warfare, as I’ve articulated, our thesis is that’s definitely not the right approach for this warfare area. … That typically doesn’t translate well in the rough world of the marks” to the budget request.

Despite the potential drawback of having to work even harder to help the Navy, the Defense Department and Congress understand an even more complex budget request, Coffman said the total decoupling of capabilities from offboard vessels from ships and aircraft is a natural move that was bound to happen as the LCS program matured.

“When you start the program, you’ll say, I need 24 MCM mission packages, and they’re each going to have this, this, this, this and this,” he said.
“And then when you do your exercises and your experiments, you’ll overlay an environmental and they’re like, 7th Fleet will say, ‘why are you sending that over here? That stuff doesn’t work either in my threat environment or my environmental environment.’ So we’re going to have to move from the idea of nascent programs to the real world of operational employment.”

He likened the deconstructed mission packages to his time leading Marine Corps units.

“Warfighting has always been a mix-and-match capability. So when I’ve been a commander at the [Marine Expeditionary Unit] and [Marine Expeditionary Brigade] level and supporting the [Marine Expeditionary Force]-level commanders, you have the diversity of your portfolio. So you find the [capabilities] and [limitations] across those portfolios” and use people and gear to best accomplish your mission, without having any kind of homogenous pre-packaged answer available.

Just as the Navy intends to separate the sensors from the manned and unmanned vehicles that carry them – the Common Unmanned Surface Vehicle, the MH-60S manned helicopter and the MQ-8 Fire Scout unmanned helicopter, among them – so too is the Navy trying to separate these offboard vehicles from the LCS.

Coffman acknowledged the Navy would still deploy LCSs with mission packages and acknowledged that the Program Executive Office for Unmanned and Small Combatants – formerly PEO LCS – would still oversee the development of many of these sensors and offboard vehicles.

“But, we are not going to have the mine warfare mission area hostage to LCS as unique, only, primary platform,” he said.

As the mine warfare community branches out from the LCS as a host platform, it is looking for closer ties to the Expeditionary Sea Base, like USS Lewis B. Puller (ESB-3) operating in the Middle East today – whose original mission set was to serve as an afloat staging base for mine warfare operations but instead has forged closer relationships with the special operations community and the Marines Corps’ land-based units serving in U.S. Central Command.

Coffman called the Puller-class a “high-quality afloat forward staging base for mine countermeasures and other mission sets, but really trying to strengthen the hand in terms of their mine warfare interface.”

USS Gabrielle Giffords (LCS-10) is pierside at Naval Base San Diego and preparing to conduct final contract trials (FCT) in 2017. US Navy Photo

USS Gabrielle Giffords (LCS-10) is pierside at Naval Base San Diego and preparing to conduct final contract trials (FCT) in 2017. US Navy Photo

U.S. contractors with the Navy Mine Hunting Unit (MHU) depart the well deck of the RFA Lyme Bay (L3007) to test a common unmanned surface vehicle (CUSV) in the Arabian Gulf as part of U.K.-U.S. Mine Countermeasures Exercise 17-1 on Nov. 15, 2016. US…

U.S. contractors with the Navy Mine Hunting Unit (MHU) depart the well deck of the RFA Lyme Bay (L3007) to test a common unmanned surface vehicle (CUSV) in the Arabian Gulf as part of U.K.-U.S. Mine Countermeasures Exercise 17-1 on Nov. 15, 2016. US Navy photo.

Sailors assigned to Explosive Ordnance Disposal Mobile Unit (EODMU) 5 conduct floating mine countermeasures training in the Philippine Sea, May 2, 2018. EODMU-5 is assigned to Commander, Task Force 75, the primary expeditionary task force responsibl…

Sailors assigned to Explosive Ordnance Disposal Mobile Unit (EODMU) 5 conduct floating mine countermeasures training in the Philippine Sea, May 2, 2018. EODMU-5 is assigned to Commander, Task Force 75, the primary expeditionary task force responsible for the planning and execution of coastal riverine operations, explosive ordnance disposal, diving engineering and construction, and underwater construction in the U.S. 7th Fleet area of operations. US Navy photo.

CNO: U.S. Still Committed to Littoral Combat Ship Deployments in Southeast Asia

By: Dzirhan Mahadzir
USNI.org

November 1, 2018 1:51 PM

Manchester (LCS-14) rests in the Port of Los Angeles during during a scheduled visit for LA Fleet Week on Aug. 31, 2018. US Navy Photo

KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA – The Navy is still committed to resuming rotational deployments of the Littoral Combat Ship to Southeast Asia, Chief of Naval Operations Adm. John Richardson said, though he declined to specify when the deployments would resume. 

Speaking to reporters in the Asia Pacific region, Richardson told USNI News he did not want to get into specifics of future deployment dates.

“I can tell you that that the United States Navy is committed to the rotational deployment of the Littoral Combat Ship to Singapore in Southeast Asia. We look forward to using this to engage with our allies and partners, to continue to advocate for freedom of navigation as we have done with the Littoral Combat Ships and other classes,” he said.

The Navy is now focused on ensuring that the follow-on deployments of the LCS incorporate the lessons learned from earlier deployments, he said.

The U.S. and Singapore had agreed in 2011 to rotational deployments of up to four Littoral Combat Ships to Singapore. It was envisaged that by 2018 up to four Littoral Combat Ships would be operating from there; however, issues with the LCS program have led to only three single-ship deployments being carried out so far in the program’s history. The Navy planned for two LCSs to be deployed in Singapore in 2018, but a readjustment of the LCS program led to shifting deployment schedules.

Richardson also stressed the need for nations operating in Pacific waters to adhere to the Code for Unplanned Encounters at Sea (CUES) and avoid miscalculations and escalations. While encounters between the U.S. Navy and Chinese People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) in the region have largely been professionally conducted according to CUES, the recent encounter between USS Decatur (DDG-73) and a PLAN destroyer marked a departure from these safety practices.

“We would certainly advocate for a return to the consistent adherence to the agreed-to code that would minimize the chance for a miscalculation that would possibly lead to a local incident and potential escalation, and so what we want to do is avoid those type of scenarios, stick to the code and maintain safe and professional behavior,” he said.

Richardson stressed that the carrying out of Freedom of Navigation operations were part of a broader scope of contesting excessive maritime claims around the world – and not solely limited to the South China Sea – and that the Navy would continue to conduct such operations in conjunction with its allies and partners globally. On the recent passage of guided-missile destroyer USS Curtis Wilbur (DDG-54) and guided-missile cruiser USSAntietam (CG-54) through the Taiwan Strait, Richardson said the mission was meant to demonstrate free and open navigation in international waters and was executed in a safe and professional manner by all parties involved.

Richardson was in Australia as part of a regional tour that also included visits to the Philippines and Indonesia. He is scheduled to visit New Zealand next on his tour.

Chief of Naval Operations Adm. John M. Richardson speaks with reporters on a trip to Australia on Nov. 1, 2018. US Navy Photo

Chief of Naval Operations Adm. John M. Richardson speaks with reporters on a trip to Australia on Nov. 1, 2018. US Navy Photo

CBO Analysis of U.S. Navy FY 2019 Shipbuilding Plan

October 18, 2018 2:21 PM

USNI.org

The following is the Congressional Budget Office report, An Analysis of the Navy’s Fiscal Year 2019 Shipbuilding Plan.

From the report

The Department of Defense (DoD) submitted the Navy’s 2019 shipbuilding plan, which covers fiscal years 2019 to 2048, to the Congress in February 2018. The average annual cost of carrying out that plan over the next 30 years would be about $28.9 billion in 2018 dollars, the Congressional Budget Office estimates. The Navy’s 2019 shipbuilding plan differs substantially from its 2017 plan in its goal for the total inventory of battle force ships, the number and types of ships that the Navy would purchase, and the funding proposed to implement the plan. If fully carried out, the shipbuilding plan would represent the largest naval buildup since the Reagan Administration in the 1980s.

The Navy’s 2019 Plan Aims to Expand the Fleet to 355 Battle Force Ships
In September 2018, the Navy’s fleet numbered 285 battle force ships—aircraft carriers, submarines, surface combatants, amphibious ships, combat logistics ships, and some support ships. The Navy’s goal (in military parlance, its requirement), as stated in its 2019 shipbuilding plan and reflecting its 2016 force structure assessment, is to build and maintain a fleet of 355 battle force ships. Toward that goal, the Navy would buy 301 ships over the 2019–2048 period: 245 combat ships and 56 combat logistics and support ships. If the Navy adhered to the schedule for retiring ships outlined in the 2019 plan, however, it would not meet the goal of 355 ships at any time over the next 30 years.

In testimony on April 12, 2018, two months after the Navy released its 2019 plan, senior Navy officials told the Congress that the Navy intends to extend the service life of all DDG-51 destroyers to 45 years, 5 to 10 years longer than indicated in the 2019 and earlier shipbuilding plans. It also expects to extend the life of up to 7 Los Angeles class submarines from 33 years to about 43 years. Together, the 2019 plan and the service life extensions would allow the Navy to reach a 355-ship fleet by 2034, although it would fall short of the specific goals for some types of ships that were identified in the Navy’s 2016 force structure assessment. As those developments illustrate, the size of the Navy does not depend on ship construction alone; the length of time that particular ships remain in the fleet also affects the force structure.

CBO Estimates That Funding for New Ships in the Navy’s Plan Would Average $26.7 Billion per Year

The Navy estimates that buying the new ships specified in the 2019 plan would cost $631 billion (in 2018 dollars) over 30 years, or an average of $21.0 billion per year— $3.3 billion more per year than the Navy estimated newship construction would cost under its 2017 plan. Using its own models and assumptions, CBO estimates that those new ships would cost $801 billion (in 2018 dollars) over 30 years, or an average of $26.7 billion per year.

a21599005f05a8fff18ca9790444b4cc.jpg

Navy Developing New Mine Countermeasures USV for Littoral Combat Ships

By: Sam LaGrone

USNI.org

October 17, 2018 12:04 PM • Updated: October 17, 2018 1:43 PM

A developmental, early variant of the Common Unmanned Surface Vehicle (CUSV) autonomously conducts maneuvers on the Potomac River Test Range on March 28, 2018. US Navy Photo

ANNAPOLIS, Md. – Last week Naval Sea Systems Command won Pentagon approval to develop a mine countermeasure unmanned surface vehicle as part of the Navy’s ongoing effort to replace its aging MCM infrastructure.

The goal is to create a platform that can accommodate several different modular systems for mine hunting, mine sweeping and mine neutralization, officials said on Tuesday.

“We’ll have a common craft serving at least those three payloads and then the contracting and programmatic stuff to acquire the payload and the middle ware which will adapt the payload to the craft to support the numbers that we need for the different mission sets and load outs for the Littoral Combat Ships,” said Capt. Pete Small, NAVSEA program manager for unmanned maritime systems (PMS 406) during the NDIA Expeditionary Warfare Conference.
“Once we get that payload defined we could indeed adapt more payloads to that craft as necessary for that MCM mission.”

The craft could eventually carry counter piracy, surveillance and anti-submarine warfare payloads as well as communications relays, according to a slide in Small’s presentation at the conference.

Initially, the craft will field the Raytheon AN/AQS-20C towed sonar, which is currently being tested by NAVSEA on the small Textron Common Unmanned Surface Vehicle (CUSV), Small told USNI News on Tuesday. The sonar is an upgrade over the AN/AQS-20A systems the Navy has been testing as part of the LCS MCM mission package. The service is expecting delivery of ten of the sonars by the first quarter of Fiscal Year 2019, according to Small’s presentation.

CUSV was developed as part of the Littoral Combat Ship’s mine countermeasure package to tow the Unmanned Influence Sweep System (UISS). The UISS is designed to emit signals that would cause influence mines – mines triggered by sound or nearby electromagnetic signatures – to detonate.

Last year, the Navy bought two additional CUSVs for $14.8 million to conduct mine hunting tests with the AN/AQS-20C and AN/AQS-24B airborne and surface mine hunting sonar. The testing is set to start sometime next year. The Navy is testing USVs forward deployed to U.S. 5th Fleet fielding the AN/AQS-24B

Amidst the testing program, NAVSEA is set to compete for the MCM USV with an acquisition program that could start as early as 2020.

The development of a common USV for the MCM mission is the latest change in what’s arguably to be the most complex and difficult to execute mission package for the LCS program.

Part of the pitch for the Littoral Combat Ship was a wholesale replacement of the Navy’s 1980s vintage Avenger-class minesweepers and MH-53E Sea Dragon MCM helicopters. However, the MCM mission package has been plagued with starts and stops due to equipment failures and testing delays.

A major delay was centered on the first carrier of the AN/AQS-20A, the Lockheed Martin Remote Multi Mission Vehicle. Reliability issues pushed the Navy to shelve the semi-submersible in 2016 to search for a new vehicle to tow the AN/AQS-20 sonar.

Common Unmanned Surface Vehicle. Textron photo.

Common Unmanned Surface Vehicle. Textron photo.