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posted by martyb on Sunday September 06 2020, @05:21AM   Printer-friendly
from the ship-it! dept.

Lessons for the Navy's New Frigate From the Littoral Combat Ship - War on the Rocks:

Since their inception over a decade ago, the U.S. Navy's littoral combat ships have been plagued by cost overruns, frequent breakdowns, and an ever-changing mission set. As the former navigator of the USS Coronado, the second littoral combat ship of the Independence-class, I experienced firsthand how these ill-conceived vessels impacted sailors. Recently, the U.S. Navy selected a variant of the Italian-made European multi-purpose frigate to revitalize its stock of surface combatants, which, given the ship's design is already in use by NATO navies, is a promising sign. However, as its newest class of warships begins construction and as the Navy continues to formulate its training and crewing structures, it should take stock in the lessons learned from its ongoing struggle with the littoral combat ship.

During my nearly three-year tenure in the program, I heard a range of derisive substitutes for the littoral combat ship acronym, LCS. "Let's Change Something" and "Little Circus Show" were common and among the more polite. Indeed, the program has largely been dismissed by insiders, and even by its own sailors, as a $30 billion failure. As the navigator of the USS Coronado from 2018 to 2020, I spent much of my time struggling with the ship's many shortcomings. On one occasion our vessel's propulsion lost all power in the middle of San Diego Bay and we were saved from grounding in the city's downtown only by an emergency anchorage. The Coronado, along with the other first three littoral combat ships, have proven so disastrous that the Navy announced their early decommissioning next year.

[...] How can the Navy redeem itself with the new guided-missile frigate class, or FFG(X), which seeks to fill the hole of small surface combatants left by the fledgling littoral combat ship? By selecting the Italian-designed FREMM frigate, the Navy has already taken a positive step. Littoral combat ships were originally conceived as part of a radical concept of operations: fast and customizable combatants that could operate in near-shore environments and meet a range of missions from minesweeping to anti-submarine warfare. In short, they were warships designed to face the asymmetrical threats of the 21st century. In the end, however, the customizable modules were deemed impractical and the ships were delivered with few weapons and no capability to detect mines or submarines. Furthermore, the Independence-class littoral combat ships were designed after high-speed ferries and featured aluminum hulls, waterjet propulsion, and empty compartments for a yet-to-be-chosen missile. In order to defend itself on deployment, the Coronado had to be retrofitted with harpoon missile cannisters on its bow. These were dubious choices for warships that were meant to cross the Pacific Ocean and fight independently at sea.


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by driverless on Monday September 07 2020, @02:59AM

    by driverless (4770) on Monday September 07 2020, @02:59AM (#1047397)

    The problem is that there's too much competition out there from ships that fulfil that role and do a pretty good job of it. A number of countries that have navies kept to sensible proportionate sizes and budgets are largely made up of vessels that would be probably be classed as littoral combat ships in the US, e.g. Germany, Sweden, Italy, and they've been selling them worldwide for years, e.g. the Blohm&Voss MEKO 200 class and similar.

    Another problem, as enunciated by Kelly Johnson in his "never do business with the Navy" dictum and described by Ben Rich in his Skunkworks book is that you never want to get involved in a project with the US Navy. For those who haven't read the book, an illustrative example: In the Sea Shadow, the Navy insisted on a design change to add a paint locker. It didn't matter that there was nothing to paint, and in particular you definitely didn't want to slap paint over the RAM, the US Constitution had a paint locker and if that was needed in 1797 then it was also needed today, dammit!

    And that's why you never do business with the Navy. Buy off-the-shelf Made in Germany instead.

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