Posted on 04/20/2016 5:37:13 AM PDT by markomalley
An arm of the House Armed Service Committee wants Reagan-era spending for the Navy, even as the service seeks to shed ships and aircraft amid potential defense budget cuts down the road.
The Seapower and Projection Forces subcommittee wants to hike shipbuilding to $20.6 billion $2.3 billion more than the Obama administrations budget request, according to a subcommittee markup of the 2017 National Defense Authorization Act released Tuesday in Washington.
The markup calls for more of everything from ships to missiles and faster production of carriers and submarines.
The subcommittees recommendations remain far from enactment. The full committee will vote on them well before a House vote and later reconciliation with the Senates defense legislation.
With this legislation, we are rejecting further budget cuts, bending the curve lines, and making a down payment on the 350-ship Navy we need for national defense, Rep. Randy Forbes, R-Va., said in a statement.
The proposal comes during a year that the final defense budget isnt threatened by sequestration, a mechanism of across-the-board federal budget cuts, following a bipartisan deal last fall. However, the Defense Department will face $100 billion in cuts from 2018 to 2021 if Congress cant come to another deal, Defense Secretary Ash Carter told Congress in March.
The subcommittee markup would prevent the Navy from inactivating 11 of its 22 guided-missile cruisers under a phased modernization plan, Forbes said. It also prevents the Navy from cutting costs by disbanding one of its 10 carrier air wings.
The Navy is legally mandated to maintain 11 carriers; however, it has only 10 on active duty while work continues on the USS Gerald R. Ford. The USS George Washington is undergoing a multiyear overhaul, with other aging carriers scheduled afterward for similar overhauls and nuclear refueling.
That gives the Navy nine operable carriers, though at any given time, some of those are in port under maintenance.
The Secretary of the Navys schedule to procure 1 aircraft carrier every 5 years will reduce the overall aircraft carrier inventory to 10 aircraft carriers, a level insufficient to meet peacetime and war plan requirements, the subcommittee markup said.
The markup includes an additional $433 million for a new destroyer, $856 million for an amphibious ship and $385 million for a littoral combat ship, as part of what Forbes labeled the largest shipbuilding funding level since 1988.
The markup also calls for doubling Tomahawk missile production and a report on producing more fast-attack submarines an area where the Navy faces a 25 percent reduction by the end of the 2020s as Cold War-era subs retire.
A prohibition on retiring the Navys mine countermeasure ships, unmanned aircraft funding and replacement cargo planes for guard and reserve units further add to the funding total.
Meanwhile, Forbes call for a 350-ship Navy goes well beyond the services plans.
The Navys latest report on its 308-ship, 30-year shipbuilding plan estimates a spending average of about $16.5 billion per year in 2015 dollars, according to a Congressional Research Service report in March.
However, at current procurement and retirement rates, the Navy would likely fall short of the 308-ship goal, according to the report.
There is a storm coming.
Ships are useless without crews to sail them.
L
Lots of women available to serve in combat now. Draft them
Build the Montana class.
I thought our goal was to switch from blue water to brown water Navy? At least that’s the direction the ship building has been going.
Nah. They can all be autonomous drones. We don’t need no stinking people.
Robots man, get with it. /s
Right.
-—However, the Defense Department will face $100 billion in cuts from 2018 to 2021 if Congress cant come to another deal, Defense Secretary Ash Carter told Congress in March.-—
Given the current political environment, forecasting anything past 2017 is useless at best. A lot of changes coming.
The Sleeping Giant is stirring, about to wake up from a long slumber - and he’s hungry...
I’m trying to get the Montana in World of Warships... I want my Yamato killer.
“Build the Montana class.”
Is that better/more appropriate than the Nimitz class?
And why do we need a 350 ship navy to defend just us?
I see - the Nimitz is an aircraft carrier while the Montana is a battleship.
Different functions.
Should have looked that up before posting to you.
The congressman can throw all the money he wants at the Navy but he can't change one inescapable fact. The U.S. has two shipyards that can build destroyers and amphibious ships, two shipyards that can build submarines, and one shipyard that can build aircraft carriers or overhaul and refuel them. Your capacity is maxed out.
I wish they would stop naming these ships after jackass politicians.
“The Navy is legally mandated to maintain 11 carriers; however, it has only 10 on active duty while work continues on the USS Gerald R. Ford. The USS George Washington is undergoing a multiyear overhaul, with other aging carriers scheduled afterward for similar overhauls and nuclear refueling.”
And the next closest navies have...what?...one carrier group? Why do we need 11?
So we are going to raise our Navy budget by the price of one Obama vacation how exciting.
Probably do not have the technology anymore to build this type of warship. The big gun shop at the Washington Navy Yard closed decades ago. They built the 16 inch 45 and 50 caliber guns for the Maryland class, North Carolina Class, Massachusetts class and the Iowa class battleships. All the machinery has been scrapped, and the skilled labor has for the most part gone to their final rewards by now. Doubt any steel mill in this country has the capability, equipment or skill level to Krupp harden 18 inch thick steel, let alone weld it. I could be wrong, but I don’t think so.
Free trade is destroying out ability to make war.
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