US Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

not exactly news, but some of you know I'm a fan of Naval Artillery :)
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The Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Farragut (DDG 99) fires its Mk 45 5-inch lightweight gun while conducting a live-fire exercise.

The exercise was undertaken on March 12 in the Atlantic Ocean.

Farragut, part of the Theodore Roosevelt Carrier Strike Group, will conduct operations in the U.S. Navy’s 5th, 6th, and 7th Fleet areas of responsibility.
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Jeff Head

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Naval Today said:
The Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Curtis Wilbur (DDG 54) completed the sea trials, after conducting a DDG midlife overhaul extended dry dock shipboard repair availability (EDSRA).

The EDSRA lasted 335 days and was the longest and most extensive DDG overhaul in Forward Deployed Naval Forces (FDNF) history. The availability was the first ever DDG EDSRA conducted and led by the Ship’s Repair Facility in Yokosuka, Japan.

This critical time is essential in the life of a ship to upgrade numerous systems, weapons, and much needed repairs. The underway opportunity allows for the Sailors to work closely with civilian technicians to put their gear to the final test.

Curtis Wilbur is one of seven Arleigh burke-class guided-missile destroyers assigned to Destroyer Squadron 15 and is permanently forward-deployed to Yokosuka supporting security and stability in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region.

This is exciting stuff.

The US Navy repair facility in Yokosuka, Japan, has now proven capable of doing a major mid-life overhaul and dry dock, while forward deployed in Japan.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
US Navy, US Marines & US Coast Guard Announce New Maritime Strategy: Cooperation is the Key

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GCaptain said:
On Friday, the U.S. Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard released their new maritime strategy in Washington, D.C. at a forum sponsored by the Center for Strategic and International Studies and the U.S. Naval Institute. A follow-on to the 2007 version, the much anticipated A Cooperative Strategy for 21st Century Seapower: Forward, Engaged, Ready (CS-21R) is a thoroughly updated version seeking to meet the strategic challenges of our current and future maritime environment and fiscal realities. The strategy, linked
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, charts a course for the future.

We are facing new challenges in the form of both non-state actors like transnational criminal organizations and terrorist organizations like ISIL, Al Shabab, and Al Qaeda, as well as nation states such as North Korea, Iran, and Russia. Cyber has emerged as a key concern that transcends the state and non-state divide. The strategy further gives a nod to environmental trends that may alter the maritime landscape.

Notably absent from the service chiefs’ discussion of the threat environment is the inclusion of China. While the strategy incorporates much concern about the maritime behavior of the Chinese, it appears the sea services are optimistic about working with China to build a cooperative maritime environment.

The strategy is forward-thinking and reflects a realization of the importance of cooperation with maritime allies and partners around the world. It has already been released in seven languages: English, Japanese, Korean, Mandarin, French, Arabic, and Spanish. This reflects both the current desire to work with partners to strengthen ties as well as the fiscal realities facing the United States today. Though still the preeminent global maritime force, the leaders of the tri-services have realized the U.S. simply cannot press forward alone.

Drawing upon the foundational nature of forward presence in the 2007 maritime strategy, the revised version acknowledges both the necessity of ensuring freedom of the seas – and access for U.S. forces – and the need to strengthen ties with partners around the world. The international maritime community faces a wide spectrum of challenges that threatens the global sea lanes, ranging from piracy and illicit waterborne trafficking to terrorist activity or high-end conflict. Global economic stability depends on maritime partnerships and cooperation in the hyper-connected world we live in today. This strategy underscores the absolute necessity of a global network of navies to join together to tackle common threats.

Geographically, the strategy includes a significant focus on the Indo-Asia-Pacific, a subtle re-branding of earlier emphasis on the Asia-Pacific that acknowledges the importance of the growing Indian navy and complexities with neighboring countries like Pakistan. The theme reiterates the U.S. Navy’s emphasis on the region as more than 60% of ships and aircraft will be realigned to the region by 2020. The Marines and Coast Guard will also continue to increase their presence in the region, building ties and strengthening regional partnerships with a goal of ensuring long-term security of the global economic system.

The decision to send the most advanced platforms to the region first indicates a recognition of the advancing capabilities of China – while not a direct threat according to the strategy, there is an undeniable concern surrounding the often belligerent action of the Chinese in maritime hotspots like the South China Sea.

While strengthening global ties with partners and allies is important, the strategy does not lose sight of the primary objectives of a military force. It takes a serious approach to the capabilities our future threat environment will require. Gone is the humanitarian assistance and disaster relief core capability of the 2007 strategy.

War-fighting has emerged supreme with a focus on ensuring the following pillars:

All Domain Access – a response to the anti-access/area denial (A2AD) challenges the future undoubtedly holds. While the term Air Sea Battle (ASB) has been replaced with the more cumbersome JAM-GC, the ASB concepts have clearly influenced this emphasis on prioritizing capabilities,

Deterrenceemphasizes both nuclear and conventional forces to deter conflict. From forward deployed Carrier Strike Groups and Marine expeditionary combat power to Coast Guard presence in ports and waterways, the U.S. expects naval forces to offer a range of credible deterrence.

Sea Control – focuses on naval forces establishing local maritime superiority by employing a wide range of warfighting capabilities to both deny or destroy enemy forces, but also to protect vital sea lanes to ensure global commerce remains unencumbered.

Power Projection – while traditionally thought of as the ability to conduct strikes against targets ashore, the strategy incorporates “smart power” missions ashore like humanitarian assistance and disaster response, as seen in disasters like the 2011 tsunami in Japan or 2013 typhoon in the Philippines.

Maritime Security – encompasses a wide array, from combatting terrorism, piracy, and illicit trafficking to maintaining freedom of navigation around the globe. Notably, this pillar offers the greatest opportunity for collaboration with allies and partners, as all maritime nations have a vested interest in ensuring global maritime security.

In an acknowledgement of the current fiscal environment – and subsequent debates on fleet size – the service chiefs have included a force design section which sets a fleet level required to support global requirements. Perhaps optimistic given the current battle force of 275 ships, it uniquely sets minimum acceptable force numbers – something not present in the previous strategy. It calls for “more than 300 ships, including 11 aircraft carriers, 14 ballistic missile submarines (replaced by 12 Ohio Replacement Program SSBN(X)), and 33 amphibious ships, while the Coast Guard must maintain a fleet of 91 National Security, Offshore Patrol, and Fast Response Cutters.” Failure to meet such fleet levels would require “hard choices” to be made, which range from increased risk to decreased presence.

Overall, the strategy offers careful consideration of the current and future threats and implications for U.S. naval forces. It charts a course for a future that must navigate an increasingly varied and dangerous maritime security environment while balancing high-end war-fighting capacity required to win a war at sea, even in a fiscally constrained environment.

Here's another look at it:

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Brumby

Major
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One of the most significant statements I have seen in recent US military news as reflected in this article :
a)The elevation of EW to the top of the leadership chain. That means this policy will drive CONOPS, military development and acquisitions. It is no longer subordinate.
b)China is mentioned specifically in driving this change amongst others.
c)ABM and ASCM defence will not primarily be kinetic. There is a shift in emphasis that there are other wholesale way of dealing with salvo of missiles.

a large part of the reason Work and the Pentagon launched its third Offset Strategy last year. The first offset strategy of the ’50s relied on our nuclear superiority over the Soviet Union; the second offset of the 1970s relied on smart weapons, stealth, and networks, which are the advantages we’ve relied on since. Now adversaries from China to Hezbollah are increasingly getting their hands on precision guided munitions, however, and we might be on the receiving end.

Work, understandably, would like the stop that. “So the first aspect of the third offset strategy is to win a guided munitions salvo competition,” he said — that is, to survive the enemy’s precision-guided barrage while crippling him with your own.

Being able to win the missile and electrons war is a matter not just of warfighting but of (non-nuclear) deterrence, Work emphasized: “If you cannot do that and you cannot convince your adversary that you will dominate in that confrontation, then
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.”

Some 40 years ago, Work went on, the US developed a demonstration system called “Assault Breaker,” which paved the way for long-range smart-weapon strikes and put the fear of God — or rather US technology — into the Soviet general staff. Today, “we need a ‘Raid Breaker,'” he said. “We need a demonstration called Raid Breaker which can demonstrate to us that if someone throws a salvo of a hundred guided munitions [at us], we’ll be able to ride it out.”

It would take 100 incoming missiles to overwhelm existing missile defense systems, which rely on stopping enemy missiles with anti-missile missiles — expensive, specialized weapons available in sharply limited numbers. So for Raid Breaker, Work said, “it doesn’t have to be a kinetic solution. Hell, I don’t really want a kinetic solution [i.e. shooting a missile with a missile]. It’s got to be something else.”
 

Jeff Head

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One of the most significant statements I have seen in recent US military news as reflected in this article :
a)The elevation of EW to the top of the leadership chain. That means this policy will drive CONOPS, military development and acquisitions. It is no longer subordinate.
b)China is mentioned specifically in driving this change amongst others.
c)ABM and ASCM defence will not primarily be kinetic. There is a shift in emphasis that there are other wholesale way of dealing with salvo of missiles.

I agree 100% that placing someone so high in the china is, admittedly very good and very important.

However, I want to make sure that the impression is not taken that somehow the US military...Navy, Army, Air Force, etc. have been sitting on their laurels here either..

They have most decidedly not been.

The US has the best in class EW capabilities on earth and these span the spectrum from soft kill to hard kill options...electronically...as well as all of the in depth the kinetic solutions.
 

Brumby

Major
However, I want to make sure that the impression is not taken that somehow the US military...Navy, Army, Air Force, etc. have been sitting on their laurels here either..

They have most decidedly not been.

The US has the best in class EW capabilities on earth and these span the spectrum from soft kill to hard kill options...electronically...as well as all of the in depth the kinetic solutions.

I agree with your statement regarding both soft and hard kill investments to-date. However my read is that there would be a significant shift in emphasis in the soft both in development and tactics. I believe they would be looking at solutions that would be game changers rather than just incremental. The type in my mind that would have the effect of basically making cruise missiles obsolete and impotent.
 

Brumby

Major
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NEWSEUM: After more than a year of saying that the United States is losing its relative edge in military technology to China and Russia, the Pentagon’s top weapons buyer upped the ante today and said that the top American advantage — space — “is particularly bad” because
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.

The chart below sketches out the most detailed accounting Kendall has offered on this crucial topic. Of course, the details are classified as they involve threat assessments and assessments of foreign governments’ technological prowess. But in this simplified depiction, downward-pointing arrows are bad — and the “space domain” has more of them than any other category:

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Areas where US technology advantage is eroding in the short term (2020) and long term (2025), according to Undersecretary Frank Kendall.

China has long targeted America’s space assets, having learned from the first Gulf War just how crucial those capabilities were and what an edge they gave American forces. First came their lazing of American spy satellites. Then they destroyed
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. Since then they have tested at least one more anti-satellite weapon — possibly two. And Russia has continued, Kendall made clear, to press ahead on its own systems.

A 2007 study conducted by the CBO for a 2015 implementation. Putting a satellite constellation in space is very expensive. The numbers below are in billions of 2007 dollars. Imagine what it would be like in today's dollars.
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strehl

Junior Member
Registered Member
I agree.

There are some very NEAT and even exotic possibilities on the threshold.

They talk the talk but don't walk the budget walk. I don't see meaningful funding levels for microwave/laser/railgun R&D that would support this strategy. Compared to previous decades, the R&D levels for advanced technology is significantly smaller. I suppose they could be supporting black programs but I doubt it.

If they are talking about cyber warfare then it's possible there is major work going on. Again, this would be hard to prove since research in this area is easy to hide. Still, I would feel uncomfortable fending off high speed metal loaded with explosives with just a few lines of code.

Even new developments like the EMP missile are being funded at hobby shop levels. Politically, I don't think the current administration is ideologically capable of initiating a major military program (including FA-XX or LRS). It would require too much cognitive dissonance and upset their voting base.


 
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