US Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

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LOL the article drifting against the current with fanboish praise of MODULARITY, for example showing 'jaw dropping' vid
Published on Feb 23, 2012
before it became apparent what BUNK are LCS Mission Modules ... jaw dropping indeed LOL!

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the first chapter sounds as if written directly in the Propaganda Department of the Pentagon, anyway
Jan 28, 2018
...
  • in the USN top brass, there have been two groups:
    1. one oriented towards readiness (related of course to proper maintenance; long training; sufficient testing etc.),
    2. the other group are so called visionaries with the concept of "distributed lethality" who are full of network-centric ultimately revolutionazing naval warfare ... ideas
    the visionaries with their LCSs and Zumwalts prevailed, and I'd prefer not to comment any more;

...
... and the CNO is one of these 'visionaries' as far as I noticed


The Three Hulls of Interest
The British type 26? I think this is an Error Type 26 is a Frigate and smaller then the Burke class or Tico. They said Type 45 it would make sense.
I think that ANALYST really said this hooey


The Burke of course
yeah that's what's left of the USN surface forces
by the way Sunday at 10:04 AM
Friday at 8:22 AM
... and Merz: Life of All Arleigh Burke DDGs to Be Extended to 45 Years
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and the Zimwalt class
revolutionary transformational quantum leap game changer = the biggest balsa wood ever


thanks for posting naval articles anyway LOL
 
about time
Navy Plans to Spend $21B Over 20 Years to Optimize, Modernize Public Shipyards
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The Navy will execute a $21-billion,
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as a series of small projects that can be done even as maintenance work on submarines and aircraft carriers continues at the yards, the assistant secretary of the Navy for research, development and acquisition told senators today.

James Geurts said in
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that, though the yard improvement plan is massive, the Navy is now looking at how to time “a collection of a multitude of small things” that can be executed while shipyard operations continue, rather than shutting down a yard completely to overhaul it.

“It’s not going to be one yard, then another yard. It’s going to be all four in parallel,” he explained, adding that the shipyard optimization plan that the Navy submitted to Congress in February “lays the overall strategy out, and now we’ve got to get to year-by-year, facility-by-facility planning, because the challenge will be, we can’t stop doing all the work we’re doing now, so we’ll have to get very detailed planning, how do we build a new facility as we’re executing the existing work. You’ll see that continue to get refined over the coming year.”

Naval Sea Systems Command leadership had previously told USNI News that the shipyard optimization plan would outline a plan to overhaul the yards’ aging drydocks and potentially add more drydocks; to upgrade old equipment; to optimize the workflow at the yards, which are now working on ships that hadn’t even been conceived of when the yards were first designed; and to ensure the workforce was properly trained and equipped to do their jobs more efficiently and effectively.

NAVSEA commander Vice Adm. Tom Moore had previously told USNI News that the effort would be a “fairly significant investment over the course of about 20 years, $10 billion-plus.” However, the scope and cost of the plan has grown, with both Geurts and Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for Warfare Systems (OPNAV N9) Vice Adm. Bill Merz saying at the hearing that the plan would cost $21 billion. Merz noted the effort would include drydocks, recapitalization and an overhaul of the tooling and equipment at all four yards.

The Navy for years has faced a daunting backlog of work at the four yards – Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, Norfolk Naval Shipyard, Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility, and Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard and IMF – though
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at that backlog for the first time in years. Geurts said at the hearing today that “we’re in pretty good shape of working off existing backlog; now we’ve got to be ready for the growing fleet,” he said, referencing the Navy’s goals to grow to a 355-ship fleet that would ultimately include more aircraft carriers and more attack submarines than the fleet has today.

“As we grow the fleet, we’ve got to be very cognizant that we’re growing the maintenance capability of the fleet,” Geurts said.

The path to boosting output at each yard will look a little different, based on each yard’s current condition and their expected role in maintaining and modernizing ships going forward – though Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) noted during the hearing that all four yards had been judged to be in
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.

Geurts said “the yards know where there’s opportunity, they’re motivated to get there, we just need to help resource them, and then at the secretariat level manage that work – and so we’re setting up a governance structure to make sure we’ve got the right senior oversight to keep that effort on track. It’s a collection of a multitude of small things, but if we can enable that workforce with modern tools, put the development programs in there to have a sustainable workforce, then I think we can see great improvement, and we’re going to need that improvement if we’re going to sustain this 355-ship navy.”

Geurts told USNI News after the hearing that the advantage to tackling this massive upgrade effort as a collection of a lot of small projects is that, if the Navy finds an opportunity to accelerate one project, or another encounters a snag and has to slow down, the plan as a whole is not thrown off course.

He said that addressing the aging drydocks would likely be the first priority, but he said overall “the real key is we’ve got to continue to execute work while we upgrade. So you can’t just shut down a whole yard for a couple years. So it’ll be a combination of aging equipment like drydocks, optimizing flow in the yard and trying to reduce wasted effort there. And then a lot of outdated infrastructure.”
 
interesting:
US Marine Corps F/A-18 complete first operational flights with APKWS
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US Marine Corps’ F/A-18 squadrons recently completed operational flights with the Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System (APKWS) 2.75 rocket that provides air-to-ground weapon support.

APKWS allows the F/A-18A-D to maintain a forward-firing, moving-target capability while increasing available ordnance per aircraft and provides a more efficient weapons match versus target sets currently seen in theater.

“This is an incredible weapons system that our most experienced pilots down to the newest pilots can effectively employ,” said Lt. Col Jon “TAG” Curtis, commanding officer of one of the F/A-18 squadrons.

The low-cost 2.75-inch rocket has a laser guidance kit that gives it precision-kill capability. It has ability to destroy targets while limiting collateral damage in close combat.

Curtis’ squadron received the new weapon system in February and completed ground training and in-flight training to ensure the weapon worked effectively. All of the weapons fired during training directly impacted the final aim point.

“The PMA-242 APKWS and PMA-265 F/A-18 joint Integrated Product Team (IPT), with key stakeholders (Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft and Weapons Divisions, VX-31/VX-9, Marine Corps headquarters and BAE Systems), rapidly developed and executed an integration plan, cutting normal integration time by nine months and saving $4.9 million of allocated funds,” said Lt. Cmdr. Daniel Ropp, APKWS deputy program manager

The team established a land-based integration program to expedite fielding with a limited employment envelope using a tailored approach in engineering, logistics, and contracting to deliver units to theater as quickly as possible. This effort supported on time training and operational employment of APKWS for the deploying squadron in OIR, exemplifying “Speed to the Fleet”, he said.

The F/A-18 is the second Navy fixed-wing platform to carry APKWS. It is also employed from the AV-8B as well as rotary-wing platforms including the UH-1Y, AH-1Z and MH-60S/R.
 
Apr 11, 2018
Feb 11, 2018and Navy Fleet Forces commander nominated for top military post in the Pacific
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so Three Things to Watch from the PACOM’s (Likely) Next Commander
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The current leader of U.S. Fleet Forces command says he would work on the U.S.-India relationship “with great energy.”

The man tapped to lead U.S. Pacific Command says the region contains four of the five threats identified in the National Defense Strategy — and one of the most promising strategic relationships.

“I think the historic opportunity for the United States going forward is probably with India,” Adm. Philip Davidson told lawmakers Tuesday in his
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before the Senate Armed Services Committee. “That would be a relationship that I intend to work on with great energy.”

That means building up the military-to-military relationship, Davidson said, and helping India move on from its historical reliance on Russian weapons. The Trump administration has
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a push to
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as a way of deepening the cooperation with the world’s most populous democracy and counterbalancing China.

“India’s military has long relied on the former Soviet Union, and then Russia, for some of their technology and training,” he said. “We have to break down that historical background, to a certain extent — break down is not the correct word, but be willing to work with that so we can move forward with India.”

A careful line with Taiwan

Keep an eye on the U.S. military’s level of engagement with Taiwan, which senators have been pushing to deepen in the face of a rising China. Last month, SASC’s No. 2 Republican, Oklahoma’s Jim Inhofe,
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to sell Taiwan F-35 stealth fighters — or, barring that
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, upgraded F-16Vs.

Today, Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., asked Davidson if he would support port calls between the Taiwanese and U.S. navies. The nominee didn’t have any immediate thoughts on “new initiatives,” but said he would report back.

“We have not in our recent past, Senator. I understand that’s something to discuss now,” he said. “I haven’t talked about it with [current PACOM chief] Admiral [Harry] Harris at any extent. I look forward to having that conversation across the interagency here and with the Congress.”

Ditto for having Taiwan participate in military exercises in the Indo-Pacific.

China’s hypersonic weapons

It’s “essential” the U.S. develop new hypersonic missiles, Davidson told the committee. Not only because “hypersonic and directed energy weapons, resilient space, cyber and network-capabilities, and well trained [troops] will be crucial to our ability to fight and win” future wars, but also because America is currently falling behind potential adversaries in the region.

“I’m highly concerned about China’s pursuit of hypersonics,” Davidson said.

He’s not the only one. Gen. John Hyten, the commander of U.S. Strategic Command,
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that the U.S. would have a hard time stopping a hypersonic missile if China or Russia launched one.

“That is one area we need to get at quickly,” Davidson said today. “Some help there on the acquisition side would allow us to innovate more quickly.”

Davidson, who currently leads Fleet Forces Command, has served multiple tours in the Pacific, including two on the U.S. Pacific Fleet staff. He would replace Harris, who was nominated as ambassador to Australia in February.

Of the five threats to the U.S. identified in the National Defense Strategy, four are present in-theater, he acknowledged in opening remarks: long-term strategic challenges from China and Russia, plus the immediate threat posed by North Korea and violent extremist groups.
 
Mar 20, 2018
US Army to demo precision strike, hypersonics, ramjet capabilities in just a few years
makes me wonder for how many decades they've been "mulling" it

the text anyway:
it's DefenseNews
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now Air Force awards nearly $1 billion contract for a hypersonic cruise missile
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The U.S. Air Force has selected Lockheed Martin to design and prototype a new
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, as part of a
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to kickstart America’s hypersonic arsenal.

The indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract for the “design, development, engineering, systems integration, test, logistics planning, and aircraft integration support of all the elements of a hypersonic, conventional, air-launched, stand-off weapon” was announced by the service Wednesday.

The total value for Lockheed could be as high as $928 million over the course of the program, which has an unspecified timeline.

“This effort is one of two hypersonic weapon prototyping efforts being pursued by the Air Force to accelerate hypersonics research and development,” service spokeswoman Ann Stefanek said in a statement. “The Air Force is using prototyping to explore the art-of-the-possible and to advance these technologies to a capability as quickly as possible.”

The other program referenced by Stefanek is the Tactical Boost Glide program, a co-development between the service and DARPA. That program expects to have a prototype in the 2022-2023 timeframe, according to DARPA head Steven Walker.

Hypersonic flight is defined as anything about Mach 5, meaning five times the speed of sound. Such a weapon, if successfully developed, would be able to skirt past existing air defenses and hold enemy forces at risk from great ranges. Lockheed Martin CEO Marillyn Hewson has
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a focus on developing the technology.

Stefanek noted the dollar amount represents the “estimated face value” for the project and is not a full commitment from the service. Money will be given out through a series of tasking orders, the first of which will come in the next few weeks.

The announcement comes as Pentagon officials, most vocally Undersecretary of Defense and Research Michael Griffin, have
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of more investment into hypersonic technology.

“The most significant advance by our adversaries has been the Chinese development of what is now today a pretty mature system for conventional prompt strike at multi thousand kilometer ranges,” Griffin told the House Armed Services Committee during an April 17 hearing. “We will, with today’s defensive systems, not see these things coming.”

“It is time for us to renew our emphasis on and funding of these areas in a coordinated way across the department to develop systems which can be based on land for conventional prompt strike, can be based at sea, and later on can be based on aircraft,” Griffin later said.
 
30656273_2215856528431456_9215243188476837888_o.jpg

from the USNI News
Navy’s Submarine Service Wants More Women
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ending with
“It’s an operational imperative for the Navy to increase our numbers of women so we are frankly targeting them in our recruiting efforts and our messaging because that’s where the talent is,” Burke said during the hearing. “Our new ad campaigns prominently feature women. Our most recent one, has a female submariner earning her dolphin.”
 
...
revolutionary transformational quantum leap game changer = the biggest balsa wood ever


...
... and now Merz: Zumwalt to Proceed to Fleet While Navy Works on Advanced Gun System Solution
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The Navy’s new Zumwalt-class destroyers will be proceeding into operational status while the Navy searches for an acceptable round for the ships’ Advanced Gun System (AGS), a senior Navy admiral said.

Testifying April17 before the Senate Armed Services Seapower subcommittee, Vice Adm. William R. Merz, deputy chief of naval operations for Warfare Systems, said the AGS “has become a particularly hard challenge to get through, not because of the gun but the projectile. The projectiles were too expensive, and they were not meeting the range [requirement]. So even at the high cost, we still weren’t getting what we asked for.

“What we’ve elected to do is to separate the gun effort from the ship effort,” he said. “We really got to the point where we’re really holding back the ship. That ship is very capable with or without the gun. So what we’ve elected to do is proceed with the ship, deliver it to the fleet as a strike platform — with 80 vertical-launch cells. That opens up opportunities for advanced development on our weapons side.”

Merz said the Zumwalt’s combat system is “very good” and that the ship is “very well-built” and “ready to join the fleet. We are very excited to get her and will continue to develop the rounds for the gun in parallel. … Whether or not directed energy is an ultimate replacement for [the AGS], time will tell in how we deal with the projectile, but [a directed-energy weapon] is a candidate option for all ships.”
 

PiSigma

"the engineer"
Looks like the Southwest flight that got a hole blown into it by the engine was piloted by a ex-navy pilot. Lt. Commander Shults. Thank the navy for her training and experience, saved the lives of hundred.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Lockheed Martin received contract for THAAD and PATRIOT integration work
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The AAV is not dead yet: The Corps wants new tracks to improve land and sea mobility
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  4 hours ago
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, don’t expect the assault amphibious vehicle to be sent to the scrap pile anytime soon: The Corps is looking for new tracks to prolong the life of the vehicle into 2035.

It’s part of the Corps’ assault amphibious vehicle, or
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survivability upgrade program to keep the over 40-year-old vehicle ticking and on Tuesday the Marines posted a request for information for new tracks that could enhance the legacy amphib vehicle’s mobility.

The RFI submitted by
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seeks information “to assess industry’s capability to produce Improved Amphibious Tracks [IAT] that enhance land mobility and water swim capabilities for approximately 400 AAV SU [ assault amphibious vehicle survivability upgrade],” according to the RFI.

While the Corps waits on the production of the ACV, the legacy AAV’s are amidst various upgrades to plug gaps in the vehicle’s ability to protect crew and Marines in the vehicle from breaching and explosions, a lesson learned from operations in Iraq.

“The AAV SU provides enhanced protection to the crew and embarked Marines with increased underbelly armor, blast mitigating seats, external fuel cells, and redesigned external armor,” the RFI states.

The new survivability upgrades allow the AAV to operate with M1A1 tanks and other armored vehicles associated with a Marine Air-Ground Task Force in urban and or restrictive terrain.

There are three types of AAVs, personnel carrier, command and control, and recovery and the Corps is planning to upgrade 361 AAVP7A2s, 44 AAVC7A2s, and 39 AAVR7s.

While the AAV undergoes upgrades the Corps is nearing a contract award decision expected sometime in June for a low-rate initial production between BAE Systems and SAIC. The Corps plans to acquire 30 low-rate initial production vehicles during fiscal year 2019, according to Navy budget documents.

V5GNQC5PYVAENJL2G2VATSPA7M.jpg

BAE Systems' Amphibious Combat Vehicle prototype took part in operational tests with Marines over the past two months. SAIC and BAE are competing to win the Marine Corps' ACV low-rate initial production contract expected to be awarded in June 2018. (Photo courtesy of BAE Systems)
Testing of the two companies’ prototypes concluded in December and the Corps submitted a request for proposal in January.

The new eight wheeled ACV is expected to be more lethal, better mobility on land and water, and increased blast protection.

But the AAV will remain in use for the foreseeable future, as the Corps expects the ACV to serve as a partial and complimentary replacement to the AAV.

The Marines anticipate a contract award date for the new and improved AAV tracks for testing purposes in December 2018, according to the RFI. “The operational need dates for delivery of IAT to the Operating Forces is 100 sets per year over four years starting October 2021,” the RFI states.
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"The new eight wheeled ACV is expected to be more lethal, better mobility on land and water, and increased blast protection." slightly better mobility on the water the speed and range is better but only marginally, They also have smaller payload in terms of equipment and personal.
ACV is better suited to replace the LAV series of the USMC.
US Army stops accepting AH-64E helos from Boeing due to safety concerns
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  4 hours ago
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from Boeing because the service is not confident in the durability of what it deems a “critical safety” item, Defense News has learned.

“We stopped accepting deliveries of new AH-64 Echoes because of a strap pack nut that we believe to be really suspect,” Brig. Gen. Thomas Todd, program executive officer for Army aviation, confirmed to Defense News on April 19.

As part of Army safety inspections of the fleet, the service determined it was “not happy” with the performance of the nuts in severe, coastal environments and saw corrosion due to climate and stress, according to Todd.

The nut in question holds very large bolts that subsequently hold the rotor blades on the helicopter and is therefore determined to be a critical safety item, Todd explained.

While Boeing had already begun a strap pack nut redesign effort six months prior, the Army decided to not take delivery of AH-64 Echo models in February, Todd said, and received guidance from the Army secretary reinforcing the decision. In March, the Army told Boeing it would stop taking receipt of helicopters permanently until the company began fielding a new and improved, acceptable strap pack nut.

It took Boeing and the Army some time to get at exactly what was the root cause of the corrosion and aggressive wear and tear on the nut. But a cause has been identified and the Army has approved a redesign, and Boeing will provide new nuts after testing of the new design beginning in the summer, Todd said.

The company has been working at a “very thorough but expeditious pace over the last six months,” he said. “We are in testing as we speak.”

The Army has estimates that Boeing will be able to field two Apache battalions per month, starting sometime this summer, with the new parts, Todd said. “And we expect them to keep that pace until complete through the entire fleet as well as [Foreign Military Sales] customers that purchase through the U.S. Army,” he added.

Countries that have bought or ordered AH-64Es are India,
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, Qatar,
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,
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and Taiwan.

In fact, Todd said, the Army would push Boeing to do better than two battalions in a month, “so there is every chance that we could accelerate.”

Boeing, in a statement provided to Defense News, said: “Our highest priority is the safety of the warfighter and the reliability of our products. We’re continuing to partner with the Army to address issues, deploying Boeing experts to assist the Army in the field with inspections, and return to the delivery schedule.”

The first units to receive new parts will be those that fly regularly in severe, coastal environments. Todd estimates that is roughly six units in the Army.

There are 653 AH-64Es currently fielded. “We are stable there because ultimately we stopped inductions as well because we did not want to hurt the fleet,” Todd said.

Boeing builds an average of six AH-64Es per month in its Mesa, Arizona, facility.

When the Army first fielded the Echo model, it was forced to ground the entire fleet within a month of declaring operational capability following an incident at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington, in December 2013, related to a transmission issue. The service and Boeing resolved the issue in roughly a month.

There have been eight AH-64E mishaps since the Army began fielding the variant in 2013, with five of those considered major accidents involving millions of dollars in damage and/or causing fatalities or major injuries. A crash in 2016 at Fort Campbell, Kentucky, resulted in the loss of both crew members. And earlier this month, also at Fort Campbell,
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.

While the Apache safety record is not unblemished, the Army’s overall current safety record is steadily improving.

“We believe, quite frankly, that some of these things that we do, to include stopping production, is the exact type of management that is expected of us and helps us achieve those safety rates,” Todd said.

“Airworthiness and safety of our fleet is paramount. We put nothing higher than that. That is why we put inspections in place. It is largely an enterprise effort across all the engineering organizations inside Army aviation and we certainly think this puts us on a path to recovery,” he added. “We expect Boeing as well as anybody that provides a product to the U.S. Army to put a good-faith effort forward in addressing efforts like this any time, and again we look forward to returning a great capability of the Echo model to the fleet soon.”
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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
The Army Raids New York...
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The Army has been talking out the possibility of having to fight in "Mega Cities". trouble is No one owns a Urban warfare center anywhere near large enough to actually conduct training missions most Urban warfare centers top out at 3-4 stories and at best are suburban so the US DOD has been conducting training ops in the real deal. LA, Seatle, NY, Denver, Portland, Miami and Saint Paul have all played host to these small ops.
 
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