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Waow :) a nice and big TF with 2 ESG/ARG !


US, ROK Navy kick off exercise Ssang Yong 16

Soldiers from the U.S., Australia, New Zealand and Republic of Korea, along with the Bonhomme Richards strike group and ROK Navy vessel started exercise Sang Yong 16 in the Republic of Korea on March 9.

Ssang Yong, which translates to “Twin Dragons,” is a biennial combined exercise conducted by Navy and Marine Corps forces with the ROK to strengthen interoperability and working relationships across the range of military operations from disaster relief to complex, expeditionary operations.

During Ssang Yong, approximately 9,200 U.S. Marines and 3,100 U.S. Navy personnel will work alongside 4,500 ROK Marine Corps, 3,000 ROK navy, 100 Australian army and 60 Royal New Zealand army forces.

During Ssang Yong, U.S. and ROK combined forces will conduct beach landings, flight operations, and personnel exchange and cross platform exercises which ensure that various components of ROK and U.S. Naval and Marine forces are able to respond to contingencies on the peninsula and across the Asia-Pacific region.

The Bonhomme Richard Expeditionary Strike Group (BHRESG) with embarked Amphibious Squadron (PHIBRON) 11 and 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU) consists of amphibious assault ship USS Bonhomme Richard, and amphibious dock landing ships USS Ashland and USS Germantown, and the Ticonderoga-class guided-missile cruiser USS Shiloh.

Joining the BHRESG is the Boxer Amphibious Ready Group (BOXARG) which consists of the amphibious assault ship USS Boxer, the amphibious transport dock ship USS New Orleans and the amphibious dock landing ship USS Harpers Ferry.

Commander, Flotilla (COMFLOT) 5 consisting of amphibious assault ship ROKS Dokdo (LPH-6111), amphibious landing ship class ROKS Cheon Wang Bong (LST 686), Chungmugong Yi Sun-sin-class destroyer ROKS Munmu the Great (DDH 976) is amongst the ROK assets participating in the exercise.

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Regime change coming to North Korea?

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C4iSR: Joint & Common Equipment
Annual US/South Korean drills include targeting of North Korean leadership
Sebastien Falletti, Seoul- IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
08 March 2016



The United States and South Korea are staging a mock pre-emptive strike against the top North Korean leadership during the biggest war games they have ever conducted, fuelling the risk of military escalation on the Korean peninsula.

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Republic of Korea Army K9 self-propelled howitzers in Paju, near the border with North Korea, on 7 March during the annual US/South Korean 'Foal Eagle' exercises. (AP/PA Images)

The joint exercises 'Foal Eagle' and 'Key Resolve', launched on 7 March, incorporate the so-called OPLAN 5015, which includes a pre-emptive strike against the North Korean nuclear arsenal and the top leadership in Pyongyang, according to sources in Seoul.

"This is a factor that increases risk of local conflict or possible skirmishes on the Yellow sea," Cheong Seong Chang, an analyst at the Sejong Institute in Seoul, toldIHS Jane's.

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(108 of 403 words)
 

navyreco

Senior Member
Now with video


Video: USS Porter is the First US Navy Burke-class Destroyer to Test Raytheon's SeaRAM CIWS


The US Navy released a video and pictures showing the first ever live-fire tests of the SeaRAM weapon system from an Arleigh Burke class (DDG 51) destroyer. The successful tests were conducted with USS Porter (DDG 78) during Combat Systems Ship Qualifications Trials at El Arenosillo Test Range off the coast of Huelva, Spain.
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very interesting:
Former Navy Secretary to Brass: Stop Focusing on 300-Ship Fleet

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but
Navy Likely to Seek Fleet-Size Increase
The Navy will likely ask Pentagon and Congressional leaders to support a significant increase in the size of its fleet as a way to meet fast-emerging threats and changing demands, service officials told Scout Warrior.

Navy officials explain that a formal analysis would be needed prior to any formal request to increase its overall fleet size above and beyond the current plan to reach 308 ships by the end of the decade.

“In order to be good stewards of taxpayer funds, we need want to make sure that when we go over to the Hill (Congress) to have those conversations – we need to have that analysis that shows that we need more. That is what we are going to do within the next year,” a Navy official told Scout Warrior.

Along these lines, Chief of Naval Operations, Adm. John Richardson, recently told lawmakers the service is beginning a formal study designed to examine the possibility of increasing the size of the fleet in order to address a fast-changing threat environment.

While Richardson did not indicate what results the analysis might yield, he did say the service may very well need a new force structure alignment. A Navy official said the new assessment will likely be reflected in the 2018 defense bill budget submission expected early next year.

“I've directed that we open -- recommission -- we restart a study. We take a look at -- you know, what are the current warfighting demands -- the current demands -- the missions that we are tasked to achieve, take into account the updated threat environment and look forward to delivering that new force structure assessment,” Richardson told lawmakers.

When discussing the need for a fleet analysis, Richardson cited a range of current concerns which include the pace of Chinese naval modernization, a resurgent and aggressive Russia in or near both the Black Sea and Baltic Sea, ongoing operations in the Persian Gulf against ISIS and an unforeseen calculus of potential emergent threats which are not yet known.

“The way that we do that (address threats) is by virtue of a force structure assessment, which examines the combatant commanders' needs -- you know, the needs -- the warfighting needs, and the theater campaign plan needs. It's really an aggregate of trying to figure out the demand signal,” Richardson said. “The last time we did that for the whole force was in 2012, and we refreshed it in 2014. But -- you know, back then, we did not have a resurgent Russia, we did not have ISIL (ISIS) to contend with. The Chinese challenge was a -- in a much different place.”

The Reagan-Era Navy

During the Regan years, the Navy grew to more than 500 ships, nearly double the services’ current fleet size which is approximately 285 ships.

A close look at the Navy’s shipbuilding plan shows the service will decommission more ships in the next five years than it will commission. This is happening, in part, because some of the many ships added during the Reagan build-up, such as the Los Angeles-class submarines and Aegis cruisers, are now beginning to retire, analysts have said.

Many lawmakers and analysts have consistently called for a signifcantly larger Navy, citing the Cold War naval posture. However, proponents of a smaller Navy have made the point that today's ships are far more capable and technolgoically advanced compared to those of decades ago, precluding the need to match the Reagan-era in terms of sheer size. Nonetheles, service officials do say the current threat enviornment is such that the service will likely seek an increase above the current plan to hit 308 ships.

The Navy’s long-term fleet plan, articulated in the most recent 2016 Navy 30-Year
Shipbuilding plan, calls for the service to have 309 ships by 2022 to include: 12 Aircraft Carriers, 97 Large Surface Combatants, 37 Small Surface Combatants, 48 Attack Submarines, 4 Ohio Missile Submarines, 14 Ballistic Missile Submarines, 34 Amphibious Assault Ships, 29 Logistics Force Ships and 34 Support Vessels – bringing the total to 309.

Part of the challenge for the Navy is that the services’ attack submarine fleet will drop from 53 in 2016 down to 41 by 2029. This is one reason, among many, that the service may soon request that it be allowed to increase production of Virginia-Class attack submarines in coming years.

Another problem with the current ship-building trajectory is that, while the service plans to have 97 Large Surface Combatants in 2022 – the number drops all the way down to 82 by 2045, according to the shipbuilding plan.

In 2010, an independent panel of experts examined the 2009 Quadrennial Defense Review and told the Senate Armed Services Committee that, given the range of anticipated threats, a 346-ship Navy was their recommendation.

“We think the challenge is going to get greater, and we don’t see how you can meet a greater challenge with a diminishing number of ships,” Steven Hadley, co-chair of the QDR review independent panel, told the committee in 2010.

These challenged cited in 2010 have indeed continued to get greater as Navy combatant Commanders consistently report an inability to meet request due to a limited amount of assets.

For instance, Navy and Marine Corps officials explain that the greater use of amphibious assault ships is likely as the Marine Corps continues to shift toward more sea-based operations from its land-based focus during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

With this trend as part of the equation, Navy and Marine Corps leaders are quick to acknowledge that there is a massive shortfall of Amphibious Assault Ships across the two services. Service leaders have said that if each requirement or request for amphibs from Combatant Commanders worldwide were met, the Navy would need 50 amphibs.

Senior Navy leaders have told Scout Warrior that the Navy currently operates only 30 amphibs and plans to reach 38 by the late 2020s, a number well short of the 50 needed to complete current operations.

Rep. Randy Forbes, R-Va., Chairman of the HASC Seapower and Projection Forces Subcommittee, has said that the Navy was able to meet 90-percent of the combatant commander's requirements in 2007, a number which wound up dropping to nearly half in future years.

Forbes, who has authored several op-eds recently about the growing importance of seapower and force projection in coming decades, is concerned that there may be a budget shortfall when it comes to allocating funds needed for shipbuilding.

In a special written statement to Scout Warrior, Forbes called the Navy's analysis a "welcome" development.

"While the Navy has shrunk dramatically over the last generation, the service has repeatedly lowered its requirement for the minimum number of ships needed to execute its missions even as the world has grown more dangerous. Any effort to reevaluate this downward spiral in both ships and expectations is welcome. I continue to believe that the independent and bipartisan National Defense Panel's recommendation of 346 vessels well captures the demands placed on our Fleet and the resources required to best-serve our sailors," Forbes said.

If the Navy does request a substantive increase in fleet-size, its implementation will largely hinge upon several factors including budget dollars made available by Congress and whatever the next Presidential administration's position is on the issue.
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did you know
US Air Force Faces 500 Fighter Pilot Shortfall
?
The US Air Force is about 500 fighter pilots short of the total requirement, a deficit that is expected to grow to more than 800 by 2022, top service officials warned Congress.

Air Force officials blamed the shortage on recent reductions in active duty fighter and fighter training squadrons due to budget cuts, according to written testimony submitted to the Senate Armed Services subcommittee March 8.

The service was forced to rebalance its fighter force structure in 2012 due to severe fiscal constraints, slashing the force by 100 aircraft, according to the statement. There are currently 54 squadrons in the Air Force, significantly less than the 134 fighter squadrons that existed during the Gulf War in the early 1990s.

The remaining active component fighter squadrons do not produce enough experienced fighter pilots to meet all of the Air Force’s requirements, officials wrote in the statement.

“Without these fighter pilots, the Air Force will be very challenged to continue to provide the air supremacy upon which all our other forces depend,” the statement reads.

The Air Force is having trouble making up the shortfall because of competition from commercial airlines, Lt. Gen. John Raymond, deputy chief of staff, told the subcommittee during a Tuesday hearing. Airlines are hiring about 3,500 fighter pilots a month, he said.

The Air Force will present lawmakers a concrete plan to bridge the fighter gap next year, Lt. Gen. Mike Holmes, deputy chief of staff for strategic plans and requirements, told the subcommittee. The plan will include standing up two additional fighter training units to train students straight out of undergraduate pilot training (UPT), and increasing UPT production, he told lawmakers.

In the short term, the Air Force is focused on retaining the existing fighter pilot force through bonuses and other tools, Holmes told lawmakers. The service is also going to work to absorb pilots who leave active duty into the Reserve or the Guard “so that we hold onto that expertise,” he added.

“We think if we do that we can start to address that gap, and next year we’ll bring you a plan,” Holmes said. “We’re going to make it fit into our budget, but there’ll be something else that falls out, and we’ll bring you a plan next year to address it.”

But even with the planned changes to address the shortfall, in the current fiscal environment the Air Force will only be able to slow the decline in fighter pilot numbers, not stop it, officials wrote in the statement. The Air Force will need additional dollars to fully solve the problem, Holmes told reporters after the hearing.

“It’s a big problem for our Air Force in general to survive as an Air Force and to be able to continue to do our work, it’s a priority problem for us to solve,” Holmes said. “I think I know how to solve it, but I’ve got to get the money to do it. ”
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Brumby

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Pentagon worried about dwindling USAF fighter numbers

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US deputy secretary of defence Robert Work has expressed concern about the size of the US Air Force’s tactical fighter force, which has dropped from 88 squadrons before the invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 to just 54 squadrons today.

Speaking at a 9 March forum in Washington DC to commemorate the 25th anniversary of Operation Desert Storm, Work questioned the wisdom of moving to an all fifth-generation fighter force at the expense of higher overall fighter numbers, saying the air force will probably need to maintain its Lockheed Martin F-16s and Boeing F-15s into the 2040s “and possibly beyond”.

Work admits that the air force “has taken the brunt of the defence drawdown” since 2001, which has seen more spending on counterterrorism and stability operations in Iraq and Afghanistan at the expense of procurement and force modernisation.

He says since 2001 the Army has gone from 480,000 soldiers to 450,00 today and the number of marines has increased from 172,000 to 182,000. The US Navy, meanwhile, has dropped from 316 ships to 308.

When Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990, the air force had 134 tactical fighter squadrons in its inventory, but those numbers dropped sharply as airframes like the General Dynamics F-111 Aardvark, McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom and Lockheed F117 were withdrawn from service.

Meanwhile, Lockheed F-22 Raptor production was truncated at 187 aircraft – well short of the 750 aircraft the military planned to buy when production began in 1994.

The F-35, meanwhile, is running well over cost and about six years behind schedule, and Work worries about the air force cutting its planned A-model production rate in this decade from 80 to 60 and now just 48 Lightning IIs per year – historically low production volumes.

“Without question, the part of the joint portfolio which has taken the brunt of the defence drawdown is the US Air Force and our capacity in aerospace combat power,” says Work, who describes fifth-generation fighters as “battle network” or BN aircraft. “Now, the problem is that we truncated the BN-22, and the ramp rate for the BN-35 is now at a point where the air force was trying to stay at 80 per year, then we dropped down to try stay at 60, and now our programme is 48 per year. The mere fact is, we’re going to have a mixed fifth-gen and fourth-gen fleet for a long time.”

Even if the department were awash with cash, Work says he doesn't know if it would be wiser to pump that money into legacy fleet upgrades or into buying more F-35s.

“I really worry about the size of the air force,” he says. “If you told me we were going to go down from 54 tactical fighter squadrons to 45 but they’d all be F-35s, I’m not certain I’d say that’s a good thing, simply because the air force’s operational tempo right now is driving the force into a bad place.”

Congress has passed legislation banning the air force from dropping below 1,900 fighter aircraft, of which, 1,100 must be combat-coded. The service currently funds 54 fighter squadrons in its base budget, and one F-15 squadron is funded through the Pentagon’s European Reassurance Initiative (ERI) fund “primarily because it’s the only dual-capable aircraft we can move without causing problems with [Russian president Vladimir Putin]”.

The air force says it is also hamstrung when it comes to fighter pilots, with officials saying at a congressional hearing this week that the service is 511 fighter pilots short of its requirement. That deficit will grow to 834 by 2022 without intervention.

America currently faces the end of F-16, F-15 and Boeing F/A-18 production as the services pursue three variants of the F-35. The navy and air force are currently studying sixth-generation fighter options that would enter service in the 2030s.
 

navyreco

Senior Member
Boeing Echo Voyager Unmanned Undersea Vehicle Can Operate Autonomously for Months
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Boeing today introduced Echo Voyager, its latest unmanned, undersea vehicle (UUV), which can operate autonomously for months at a time thanks to a hybrid rechargeable power system and modular payload bay. The 51-foot-long vehicle is not only autonomous while underway, but it can also be launched and recovered without the support ships that normally assist UUVs. Echo Voyager is the latest innovation in Boeing’s UUV family, joining the 32-foot Echo Seeker and the 18-foot Echo Ranger.

...

“Echo Voyager can collect data while at sea, rise to the surface, and provide information back to users in a near real-time environment,” said Lance Towers, director, Sea & Land, Boeing Phantom Works. “Existing UUVs require a surface ship and crew for day-to-day operations. Echo Voyager eliminates that need and associated costs.”
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