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article: the USN "Frigate gap"

CougarKing

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Thoughts, anyone? :eek:

http://www.navytimes.com/news/2009/06/navy_lcs_gap_061609w/


Navy has few FFG options to fill LCS gap

By Philip Ewing - Staff writer
Posted : Wednesday Jun 17, 2009 11:03:20 EDT
 
The Navy has few small-ship options if its littoral combat ship program continues to lag behind schedule, the service’s top requirements officer said Tuesday, because the fleet’s frigates are too old or maxed-out on equipment to upgrade further.

Vice Adm. Barry McCullough told lawmakers at a hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee’s seapower subcommittee that the fleet’s Oliver Hazard Perry-class frigates’ hulls were rusting and wearing thin, that the ships couldn’t bear the weight of additional weapons or sensors, and that it generally wouldn’t be worth trying to extend their lives
to have them around in place of the planned LCS platforms the Navy thought it would have by now.

“The ships have been great,” McCullough said of the frigates — he told Navy Times after the hearing “they’re doing God’s work,” and that he “had nothing against frigate sailors” — but, he told lawmakers, “upgrading them would provide little return on investment.”

Also, the frigates can only accommodate the SH-60B variant of the Navy’s workhorse Seahawk helicopter, which is scheduled to leave the fleet in 2017. But LCS is designed to carry the SH-60R and -S Seahawk variants — helicopters that are vital to its ability to do its jobs because LCS carries no onboard sonar, surface-to-surface missiles, torpedo launchers or mine-countermeasure gear, and needs its helicopter for those weapons or sensors. So even as-is frigates today couldn’t accommodate the anti-submarine, anti-mine or anti-surface equipment designed to fly on a helicopter carried by an LCS.

The topic of potential frigate upgrades was broached by Sen. Mel Martinez, R-Fla., as part of a larger discussion by the subcommittee concerning problems the Navy has had building LCS. Martinez and Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, asked the Navy witnesses whether the service could still do the jobs meant for the LCS it had planned on having by now, even though none are operational.

(The first littoral combat ship, Freedom, is undergoing testing at Naval Station Norfolk, Va.; the second, Independence, has yet to sail for sea trials, although the Navy hopes to commission it this fall. Although Navy officials are studying the notion that Freedom could make an early, short, trial deployment, its formal schedule doesn’t call for it to deploy until 2012.)

Yes, the Navy’s mine countermeasure ships and frigates can hold on for a few more years, said McCullough and the other witness, Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Research, Development and Acquisition Sean Stackley.

But many of the fleet’s minesweepers ships are in bad shape — the commanding officer of the Devastator was fired earlier this year because his ship was in such poor condition. And, after the hearing, McCullough described the long metal bars on the hulls of many frigates at Naval Station Mayport, Fla., which help strengthen metal that has rusted and thinned faster than engineers anticipated.

According to one analysis, under the Navy’s original plan it should now have 13 LCS platforms in the fleet and be requesting six in the fiscal 2010 budget request.
But beyond Freedom and Independence, it has ordered one of each additional variety, a Freedom-class ship named Forth Worth and an Independence-class ship named Coronado. It is asking for three more ships in its fiscal 2010 request.
 
This is not a surprise to anyone who has worked with the USN...whenever a foreign frigate gets tasked to a CSG the TG commander rubs his hands with glee because a frigate can do those jobs an Arleigh Burke cannot. Most US navy types I know have long thought that making their main surface combatant (ARleigh Burke) was not the way to go. After all the thing is the size of a WW1 battleship and that giving up the OHPs were a mistake. Now its finally dawned on command....Ooops!
 
Major update:

Navy Times

Decommissioning plan pulls all frigates from fleet by end of FY '15
Jul. 2, 2014
By David Larter
Staff writer

Start saying goodbye to the frigates.

By October 2015, the fleet will be devoid of frigates for the first time in more than 70 years, according to the Navy’s latest decommissioning plan.

The Navy plans to retire all of the remaining frigates, as well as five ships and two subs, during fiscal year 2015, the service announced Tuesday.

The last Oliver Hazard Perry-class frigate to be decommissioned is the Kauffman, scheduled for Sept. 21, 2015. After that, the battle force will be without a frigate class for the first time since 1943, according to fleet composition records kept by Naval History and Heritage Command.

The Kauffman will be the last ship to be inactivated, scheduled to leave service Sept. 21, 2015. Most of the frigates are to be sold to foreign navies.

The fiscal 2015 inactivation schedule, according to NAVADMIN 152/14:

■ Oct. 1, 2014: Minesweeper Defender, dismantling; research vessel Melville, Foreign military sale.
■ Dec. 1: Attack submarine La Jolla, conversion to moored training ship.
■ Dec. 15: Attack submarine Norfolk, dismantling.
■ Dec. 31: Research vessel Knorr, foreign military sale.
■ Jan. 14, 2015: Frigate McClusky, foreign military sale.
■ Jan 30: Frigate Elrod, foreign military sale.
■ March 31: Amphibious assault ship Peleliu, out of commission/in reserve.
Frigate Ingraham, dismantling.
Frigate Vandegrift, foreign military sale.
Frigate Rodney M. Davis foreign military sale.
■ May 8: Frigate Taylor, foreign military sale.
■ May 22: Frigate Samuel B. Roberts, dismantling.
■ Aug. 5: Frigate Gary, foreign military sale.
■ Aug. 14: Frigate Simpson, foreign military sale.
■ Sept. 21: Frigate Kauffman, foreign military sale.
■ Sept. 30: Replenishment ship Rainier, out of commission/in reserve.
 
Kauffman, Simpson, Elrond and Gary are all relatively new by our standards. By new, I mean they're not older than me.
 
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