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SamuraiBlue

Captain
I on't know who wrote this but Prowlers have many times flown into combat areas with no fighter escort. They don't need one. There array of ECM rended useless enemy aircraft.
Wouldn't it be hazzardous for any escort to fly in close proximity with a Prowler while the Prowler is doing it's job emmiting active ECM?
Passive ESI I can understand but flying near a source of ECM is not what you call safe flying.
 

Jeff Head

General
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Naval Today said:
Royal Navy Type 45 destroyer HMS Duncan is working around the clock to support day and night strikes against key ISIL targets in the Middle East launched from the USS Theodore Roosevelt.

She’s the latest Royal Navy Type 45 destroyer to take her place with a US carrier battle group on operations in the Gulf region, and is part of a coalition of more than 60 countries.

The vessel has the ability to provide air traffic and fighter control.

As well as supporting the international effort against the ISIL fundamentalists – the 8,500-tonne warship has also joined the wider security mission in the region: patrolling the Red Sea, Gulf of Aden, the Gulf of Oman and accompanying shipping through the key choke points in the region such as the Strait of Hormuz and the Bab al Mandeb.

Working with the US carrier also sets the pace for the arrival of the Royal Navy’s two new Queen Elizabeth class carriers – allowing the Service the opportunity to develop effective techniques.
 

navyreco

Senior Member
Oceaneering to Modernize Dry Deck Shelters (DDS) for US Navy Virginia Class SSN
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Modernization efforts include extending the existing DDS by 50-inches and providing remote operations for the hangar outer door, remotely operated power handling system (i.e., track and cradle) and remotely operated hangar capability. These upgrades will allow for larger payload deployment from a Virginia-class submarine, such as larger swimmer delivery vehicles (SDV) such as Teledyne Brown Engineering's Shallow Water Combat Submersible (SWCS) which is set to replace the existing US Navy SEALs' SDV (the MK 8 Mod 1 SEAL Delivery Vehicle).
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Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Oceaneering to Modernize Dry Deck Shelters (DDS) for US Navy Virginia Class SSN
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"These upgrades will allow for larger payload deployment from a Virginia-class submarine, such as larger swimmer delivery vehicles (SDV) such as Teledyne Brown Engineering's Shallow Water Combat Submersible (SWCS) which is set to replace the existing US Navy SEALs' SDV"
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included the above statement because it is an important one.

The new SWCS system is getting along now in its design and a full scale mockup was provided to the US Navy last year. It is important to note that the AWCS is not meant to by a completely dry delivery vehicle, nor is it really a replacement for the ASDS. it is a replacement for the SDV, as your article states NavyReco.

However, the US is working on a new Dry Combat Submersible as well, the DCS, which is the follow-on to the failed ASDS. Three prototypes of the DCS have already been built and are being tested, they are called User Operational Evaluation Systems (UOES).

I had thought earlier that these vehicles were supposed to be able to dock themselves with the subs, and themselves be carried in this position., It is interesting to note that the DDS itself is going to be enlarged to allow launching the SWCS and DCS from the DDS.

Here's an informative article that talks about the two new designs, their differences, and when they expect to get tem in operation::

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The week said:
The U.S. Navy is hard at work developing new underwater transports for its elite commandos. The SEALs expect the new craft — and improvements to large submarine "motherships" that will carry them — to be ready by the end of the decade.

SEALs have ridden in small submersibles to sneak into hostile territory for decades. For instance, the special operators reportedly used the vehicles to
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and spy on terrorists in 2003.

Now the sailing branch is looking to buy two new kinds of mini-subs. While details are understandably scarce, the main difference between the two concepts appears to be the maximum range.

The Shallow Water Combat Submersible will haul six or more naval commandos across relatively short distances near the surface. The SWCS, which weighs approximately 10,000 pounds, will replace older Mark 8 Seal Delivery Vehicles, or SDVs.

The other sub, called the Dry Combat Submersible, will carry six individuals much farther and at greater depths. The most recent DCS prototype weighs almost 40,000 pounds and can travel up to 60 nautical miles while 190 feet below the waves.

Commandos could get further into enemy territory or start out a safer distance away with this new vehicle. SEALs could also use this added range to escape any potential pursuers.

Both new miniature craft will also be fully enclosed. The current SDVs are open to water and the passengers must wear full scuba gear — seen in the picture above.

In addition, the DCS appears to pick up where a previous craft, called the
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, left off. The Pentagon canceled that project in 2006 because of significant cost overruns.

But the Navy continued experimenting with the sole ASDS prototype for two more years. The whole effort finally came to a halt when the mini-sub was destroyed in an accidental fire.

SOCOM and the sailing branch also want bigger submarines to carry these new mini-subs closer to their targets. For decades now, attack and missile submarines have worked as motherships for the SEALs.

Eight Ohio- and Virginia-class subs currently are set up to carry the special Dry-Deck Shelter used to launch SDVs, according to
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at the Special Operations Forces Industry Conference in May.

The DDS units protect the specialized mini-subs inside an enclosed space. Individual divers also can come and go from the DDS airlocks.

The first-in-class USS Ohio — and her sisters Michigan, Florida, and Georgia — carried ballistic missiles with nuclear warheads during the Cold War. The Navy had expected to retire the decades-old ships, but instead spent billions of dollars modifying them for new roles. Today they carry Tomahawk cruise missiles and SEALs.

The VirginiasHawaii, Mississippi, New Hampshire, North Carolina, and the future North Dakota — are newer. The Navy designed these attack submarines from the keel up to perform a variety of missions.

SOCOM projects that nine submersible motherships — including North Carolina as a backup — will be available by the end of the year.

Special Operations Command hopes to have the SWCS ready to go by 2017. SOCOM's plan is to get the DCS in service by the end of the following year.

The Navy has a pool of six shelters to share between the subs. SOCOM expects the DDS to still be in service in 2050.

But prototype DCS mini-subs cannot fit inside the current shelter design. As a result, a modernization program will stretch the DDS units by 50 inches, according to SOCOM's briefing.

The project will also try to make it easier to launch undersea vehicles and get them back into the confines of the metal enclosure. Right now, divers must manually open and close the outside hatch to get the SDVs out.

Crews then have to drive the craft back into the shelter without any extra help at the end of a mission — underwater and likely in near-total darkness. The sailing branch wants to automate this process.

The SEALs are hoping to have both of their new mini-subs operational before 2020.
 
I hope somebody will comment on this, as to me the numbers below are rather abstract (on the payroll of the Czech Military there's 29 thousand people -- includes 8 thousand civilian employees -- numbers are off top of my head):
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Army officers and officials hit Capitol Hill this afternoon to brief congressional staff on the coming round of personnel cuts. We’ve known for over a year that
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— going down from 490,000 troops to 450,000 — but now the service is finally saying which units get cut. Further, unlike
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, these 40,000 solders will come out of bases in the United States. So, for many members of Congress and the public alike, what’s been an abstract debate is about to get painfully real.

Will news of
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change the politics? At stake isn’t this current round of cuts, which it’s almost certainly too late to stop. The bigger issue is whether there’ll be more cutbacks when and if the
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goes into full force next year. Sequestration — shorthand for the BCA– would drive the Army down by another 30,000 active-duty troops, to 420,000 soldiers. Sequester would probably force politically explosive cuts to the
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and Army Reserve as well, which have so far been largely (not entirely) spared.

“Numbers like 450,000 or 420,000 have no real meaning to the public,” said retired Lt. Gen.
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, vice-president for education at the influential
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. “But
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at local bases will get some attention, certainly by the members of Congress who have constituencies there.”

“I suspect it will be ugly,” one Army source told us. “In some communities, it will seriously degrade tender economies still trying to recover from the Great Recession.”

A Hill staffer who’d seen the Army brief, however, was skeptical the cuts would be much of a wake-up call. “They spread the cuts as much as possible, so the reaction may be limited,” the staffer told me. “Some bases were barely touched at all.”

So who’s been hit? USA Today
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cuts to what sound like combat brigades at two locations, Fort Benning in Georgia and Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Alaska. But legislators who have such big bases back home tend to already be aware of the Army’s budget plight and are opposed to sequestration. Their minds don’t need changing. Conversely, legislators whose minds the Army might need to change will probably be among those whose bases — if any — are “barely touched at all.”

Unsurprisingly, the chairmen of the two armed services committees were quick to denounce the cuts. “People who believe the world is safer, that we can do with less defense spending and 40,000 fewer soldiers, will take this as good news,” said
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in an unusually acid statement. “I am not one of those people.”

“Any conceivable strategic rationale for this cut to Army end-strength has been overturned by the events of the last few years from the rise of ISIL, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine,
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, and more,” declared
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. “Stopping this decline will require the Congress to find a bipartisan solution that ends sequestration once and for all.”

But how? The House and Senate Armed Services Committees have proposed
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by designating much of the defense budget as exempted emergency spending (Overseas Contingency Operations funds, or OCO). The Administration sees this as an irresponsible fiscal gimmick and has threatened a veto.

What’s more, even if the White House and Capitol Hill can come to terms, they’ll only be preventing a fall below 450,000. The current cut to 450,000 is going to happen. A presidential veto or a sequester would simply mean the Army gets cut more.

“Congress and the administration want a smaller Army, with reduced capacity to respond to contingencies overseas and at home,” the Army source said grimly. “This is great news for
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,
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,
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, and
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, but concerning for our allies and friends in NATO, the Middle East, and the Pacific. History tells us that ‘chickens come home to roost.’ We should prepare for a lot of disruptive, painful roosting in our future.”
source:
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FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
I hope somebody will comment on this, as to me the numbers below are rather abstract (on the payroll of the Czech Military there's 29 thousand people -- includes 8 thousand civilian employees -- numbers are off top of my head):
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source:
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At the end of Cold War US Army has 780000 pers, 18 Divisions in more ofc independent units Brigades etc... after in 2001 before 11 September down to 490000, 10 Divisions and recently 566000 in 2011, now 490000.

Actually US Army have very few equipment spending for a big Ground Army M-1, M-2 remains Stryker, M-777 deliveries finished or almost in fact buy mainly now helos.
See there
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For USN and USAF no personnel or almost cuts and F-35, Virginia... to buy with new Air-Naval strategy in the Pacific privileged services but don't forget USMC bugdet is including in USN budget, it is administratively under its supervision, in practice mainly for combat training/operations no.

And USMC help also for ground force, have 185000 pers, ( 1989, 180000, 2012, 202000 ) which is almost entirely land force ( Aviation 35000 pers ) about 3 Div motorised/light but with elite troops.

Then with 450000 personnal Army must remain sufficiently powerful with in more ANG whis is a active milice which use modern equipment only in the world, 350000 pers, 8 Div etc...

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Last edited:

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Clearly the US has established its policy of more patrols in the South China Sea with US Navy vessels, from LCS to Burke destroyers, and even Tico cruisers.

The latest:

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Naval Today said:
The Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Mustin (DDG 89) patrolled the South China Sea from April 12 to June 6.

During her patrol in the South China Sea, Mustin was observed in a professional manner by a host of People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLA (N)) warships and aircraft.

Mustin communicated with foreign warships via CUES communication method, a standard method used to formally communicate ships’ maneuvering intentions and maintain safety of navigation.

Mustin also conducted daily flight operations with her two embarked MH-60R Seahawk helicopters, assigned to Helicopter Maritime Strike Squadron (HSM) 51, also known as the “Warlords.”

Mustin, forward deployed to Yokosuka, Japan, and assigned to DESRON 15, is on patrol in the 7th Fleet area of responsibility in support of security and stability in the Indo-Asia-Pacific Region.
 
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