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A Fleet without a Rudder (The U.S. Navy's optimized fleet response plan is failing. It is redeploying ships on short notice for no apparent strategic purpose.)
The United States Naval Institute ^ | October, 2020 | LTJG Artem Sherbinin, U.S. Navy

Posted on 10/23/2020 3:44:52 PM PDT by Drew68

The Navy could soon deploy the Dwight D. Eisenhower and Theodore Roosevelt carrier strike groups—again. The USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (CVN-69) spent a record 206 consecutive days at sea during its last deployment. The USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN-71) made national headlines after a quarter of the 5,000 sailors on board were infected by COVID-19, and the ship remained tied to the pier in Guam for more than a month. If both strike groups deploy again in the coming months, thousands of sailors would spend double the normal period of time at sea, on top of normal predeployment exercises, routine at-sea training, and a newly mandated 21-day COVID mitigation sequester. A traditional deployment cycle has ships deploying once for 180 days in a three-year period. To meet its global force commitments, the Navy is frequently forced to double the typical deployment time of its CSGs. But, toward what end? What major war is the United States fighting?

Deploying the strike groups costs tax payers $5 million per day, or nearly $1 billion per deployment, assuming the ships remain at sea for only six months—unlikely given repeated deployment extensions. These figures do not factor in the maintenance deficit incurred by the ships or the associated $150 million annual maintenance cost of a Nimitz-class carrier. Meanwhile, the human costs of deploying in the midst of a global pandemic are staggering, causing what Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Mike Gilday described as burnout across the fleet.

The Navy’s need to deploy the Dwight D. Eisenhower and Theodore Roosevelt strike groups less than six months after completing record-breaking deployments demonstrates a failure to balance readiness and maintenance, a misunderstanding of the human costs of repeated deployments, and an astounding level of strategic dissonance. The Navy is a ship without a rudder—directionless and out of control.

The Matériel Crisis

For a ship to suffer a complete loss of steering, multiple redundant systems must fail. In this case, the first to go was the Optimized Fleet Response Plan (OFRP)—the Navy’s ill-fated attempt to normalize maintenance, training, and deployment cycles to ensure ships and their crews were able to sustain high levels of readiness while keeping maintenance predictable. This system does not work. In the words of Secretary of Defense Mark Esper, “The OFRP hasn’t worked for years, so why should we assume it will work in the future?”

The OFRP’s extended sustainment phase provides combatant commanders a perverse incentive to deploy ships twice in short succession since the system is designed for that possibility. Yet it is no secret that using this “double pump” option comes at the expense of material and personnel readiness. The Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group deployed for eleven months in 2019—the longest carrier deployment since the Vietnam War—after the USS Harry S. Truman (CVN-75) suffered an electrical problem that prevented her from relieving the Lincoln in the Persian Gulf. The Truman deployed twice the previous year and spent nearly nine months at sea. In other words, longer deployments lead to more material deficiencies, which in turn lead to longer maintenance periods, which cause other ships to remain at sea for longer periods of time.

These challenges sit on top of disastrous maintenance delays, a shortage of shipyards, and a military-industrial complex controlled by just three major contractors. As a result, more than 60 percent of the Navy’s ships fail to complete maintenance availabilities on time. Despite a $2.8 billion capital investment in maintenance between FY2015 and FY2019, the Navy experienced a combined total of 7,424 days of delays in that same period. That is more than 20 years’ worth of delays in five years!

An impending downturn in defense spending will exacerbate these trends. A White House Office of Management and Budget memo submitted by the Navy regarding its FY2021 budget request confirmed this reality—the Navy will be slightly smaller in five years than it is today, decommission twelve more hulls over the next four years, and reduce shipbuilding funding and hull buys by $4 billion and four ships, respectively, compared with the FY2020 ship procurement plan. This is a bleak future in which the Navy will be smaller and unable to address global challenges.

The Human Costs

“The Admirals back in Washington had so many pressures on them, so many diversions, they forgot their primary job is to make sure that the Fleet is ready to go with highly trained and motivated Sailors. The problem particularly manifests itself when the budget is way down.”

Admiral Thomas B. Hayward, 21st Chief of Naval Operations, recalling the post-Vietnam War drawdown (quoted in Commander Guy Snodgrass’s white paper on retention) Once the officers on the bridge recognize their ship has lost steering, they transfer control below the waterline where redundant systems take over. Beneath the metaphorical waterline of “Big Navy” exists the fleet’s most critical system—its sailors. This system is failing, and once it does, the fleet will truly be rudderless.

To understand the human cost of a second deployment under pandemic conditions, it is instructive to listen to the sailors who experienced the last one. Their ships remained at sea for more than 200 days—an unheard of length since the early days of the war in Afghanistan. Upon returning to port, they could not visit families in other states because of quarantine restrictions. Now, as they prepare for another arduous deployment, they must undergo a 21-day quarantine period and a month-long at-sea exercise, further cutting their time to rest and spend with family to just three of eighteen months.

The Army’s experience with personnel fatigue after two decades of wars in the Middle East is particularly instructive to Navy leaders seeking to understand burn out in the fleet today. “The Army is worn out. We are keeping people in theater who are exhausted,” said one Army public affairs officer while speaking to reporters in 2007. He was right. Between the initial invasion in 2003 and the drawdown in 2009, the Army saw an 80 percent increase in suicides, an equal increase in desertion rates, and a shortage of more than 3,000 officers.

Full data on retention, divorce, and suicide rates in today’s Navy are not available to open-source researchers, but they would not tell the full story even if they were. Any Navy leader would be hard pressed to ignore the toll these recent decisions have had on personnel. I personally see exhausted and mentally distraught sailors every day; these observations are not always quantifiable, but the human costs are real.

As leaders, we are trained to communicate problems up the chain of command and explain “the why” behind decisions to junior members of the organization. What happens when you no longer provide feedback because senior leaders do not listen to recommendations or it becomes impossible to explain to sailors the strategic “why” behind major decisions such as deployments?

Strategic Dissonance

Before the rudder even jammed, the Navy did not know where it was going. Enter strategic dissonance, which occurs when an organization fails to recognize a major change in its industry or operating environment and continues to follow an outdated model of success. Today, the lack of a coherent strategic logic behind the CSG deployments demonstrates that the Navy’s senior leaders pay extensive lip service to “great power competition” but fail to match words to actions.

The Dwight D. Eisenhower CSG previously deployed from Norfolk, Virginia, to the Persian Gulf in support of U.S. Central Command (CentCom). During testimony on 10 March 2020, the CentCom commander, Marine Corps General Kenneth McKenzie, told the House of Representatives that aircraft carriers have “a profound deterring affect principally upon Iran.” McKenzie’s assertion started a discussion of returning to a two-carrier presence in the Persian Gulf—a decision with significant consequences for the Navy’s falling readiness level, strained maintenance cycles, and exhausted personnel.

Yet U.S. naval power does not deter Iranian power projection, which is primarily manifested in international terrorism and through Middle East proxies. Carrier air power has limited effectiveness against irregular forces. Even more to the point, if the United States identified Russia and China as its key strategic competitors, the Indo-Pacific as the primary theater for competition, and the Middle East, in Clausewitzian terms, as a “secondary front” or “lesser objective,” why is it sending the bulk of its combat power to the Persian Gulf?

On the other side of the country, the Theodore Roosevelt strike group recently returned from the Western Pacific. Though Western Pacific deployments make more strategic sense than sending the Dwight D. Eisenhower to the Persian Gulf, simply adding more carriers to the Indo-Pacific is not the answer to deterring China. The reality of the missions the Navy is being asked to perform, and the carriers’ perceived vulnerability against China’s sensor-to-shooter networks, suggest now is a good time to rethink the Navy’s carrier fleet and deployment concepts of operations. During my own time operating with CSGs in the Western Pacific, the carrier provided limited utility to regional missions, such as ballistic missile defense and sanctions enforcement against North Korea.

As in past operations, it is unclear how the Dwight D. Eisenhower or Theodore Roosevelt strike groups could support U.S. strategic objectives if they deployed again. As some within the national security community have pointed out, great power competition is not a strategy in and of itself.

So What?

After an accident such as a loss of steering occurs, ship or aircraft crews are required to generate a mishap report to determine what went wrong and how to prevent it in the future. In the tradition of the naval service, the fleet should undertake an honest assessment of its recent shortfalls, and hold accountable those responsible for poor decisions.

The 2017 Comprehensive Review and Strategic Review were positive steps in the right direction, but three years later, little change is visible at the deck-plate level. For example, the Comprehensive Review identified the Navy’s “can-do” culture as a “barrier to success,” as well as the fact a “high number of inspections, certifications, assessments, and visits by external organizations create a burden on ship’s crews.” In 2020, both the can-do culture and constant stress of inspections remain, and those are just two of many examples.

A new review process conducted by an outside entity could explain how the Navy got to the point of deploying two carrier strike groups without a functioning maintenance system, without accounting for the human costs, and without a clear strategy. A Congressional mandate that the study’s recommendations be followed could produce meaningful changes within the organization. Removing poor decision-makers from senior ranks would send a clear signal that the Navy takes accountability seriously at all levels of command.

Moreover, the Navy should release a new maritime strategy that articulates clear geographic priorities, sheds mission requirements that do not improve warfighting against great powers, presents a fleet design with realistic ship numbers, and creates a timeline for achieving these objectives. Likewise, shipyard reform, an investment in new maintenance technologies, and a realistic assessment of readiness would reform the OFRP and significantly improving the Navy’s ability to take combat-ready ships to sea. Finally, a renewed focus on personnel resiliency, talent retention, and how deployments affect sailors and their families is needed.

Above all else, not deploying the Dwight D. Eisenhower or Theodore Roosevelt strike groups would show sailors and Congress that the Navy recognizes its shortcomings and is making a course correction. But until the Navy understands why it should not deploy them, it will remain a fleet without a rudder.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: navy; usn; usnavy
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To: CaptainMorgantown
Somehow the expectation that our ships should be deployed only 180 days out of 3 year period seems unreasonably low to me. Maybe freepers with experience in the Navy could educate me.

It isn't entirely like this. 180 days is the deployment. Prior to deployment, there are what we call "work-ups." These are shorter underway periods that don't involve foreign travel. Stuff like carrier qualifications where the pilots practice landing and taking off. There are exercises where the entire Strike Group practices together. There's Fallon, Nevada where the whole Air Wing trains for a month. A work-up cycle prior to deployment might last a year or so where you're away from home off and on for several months. And when you're home, there's inspections to prepare for. There's an incredible amount of maintenance required on a ship, much of it performed by highly-skilled civilian contractors. An aircraft carrier is of no use if the elevators don't work, or the catapults. Or radar systems. The sea is a very rough environment and things break all the time.

So, out of 3 years, it's closer to 1.5 years that you're expected to be able to go to sea, and then it's supposed to be about 1.5 years to slow down the tempo, enjoy extensive and much-needed dry-dock maintenance, and let another Strike Group take the watch.

41 posted on 10/23/2020 6:26:48 PM PDT by Drew68
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To: Drew68

“War with a significant enemy will start nuclear right from the get-go”

I don’t think so.

“probably by us.”

Oh, that’s despicable. We went through over half a century of MAD, and never launched. That’s because we are the good guys.


42 posted on 10/23/2020 7:06:30 PM PDT by dsc (Do not pray for easy lives; pray to be stronger men.)
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To: dsc
Oh, that’s despicable. We went through over half a century of MAD, and never launched. That’s because we are the good guys.

We're the only country to ever use nukes against an enemy and just because we potentially use them first in the future, doesn't necessarily make us the bad guys. It could simply just make us the winner.

43 posted on 10/23/2020 7:23:57 PM PDT by Drew68
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To: Chode

That ship is beat up and looks awful.

Maybe if the Navy spent more time on mission and less time and effort on diversity the leadership might do a little more thinking about the mission.

Relieving a whole bunch of barky era leadership would be a good start to reform.


44 posted on 10/23/2020 8:00:56 PM PDT by Sequoyah101 (We are governed by the consent of the governed and we are fools for allowing it.)
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To: dsc

Oh my! You’ll get hit by lightning or something for a comment like that. I’ll be right there beside you when it happens.

As for the tempo and this article, I guess our enemies already know how weak we are? Is there really any need to telegraph it to them though?

That ship with all the rust on it? Are people now prohibited from scraping and painting? What happened to anti fouling biocide paint?


45 posted on 10/23/2020 8:04:19 PM PDT by Sequoyah101 (We are governed by the consent of the governed and we are fools for allowing it.)
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To: Sequoyah101

100%


46 posted on 10/23/2020 8:08:08 PM PDT by Chode (Send bachelors and come heavily armed.)
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To: PIF

The shape of that ship is shameful. I have seen rust bucket cold stacked semi-submersibles and drill ships in better condition.

All the things you mention reek of incompetence at the highest levels and people that make nothing but excuses even making allowance for the wreck and ruin that barky exacted on the fleet and military in general.

Just sad. They aren’t flying the flag. Good to see that and not ID the ship as one of ours.


47 posted on 10/23/2020 8:11:42 PM PDT by Sequoyah101 (We are governed by the consent of the governed and we are fools for allowing it.)
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To: RetiredTexasVet
The Navy has at least one “Officer” left .... the LTJG that wrote the article ... soon to be drawn and quartered.

He wrote a good piece. This kid knows of what he speaks. And I say this as a genuine Navy Chief.

48 posted on 10/23/2020 9:44:27 PM PDT by Drew68
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To: Sequoyah101
That ship with all the rust on it? Are people now prohibited from scraping and painting?

Why does the USS Stout look like a reject from the Black Sea Fleet?

There's several reasons, and from reading the article, all are plausible.

Is the Navy out of Haze Gray paint? Possibly.

Is the Navy out of wire brushes? Again, possibly.

Are the air compressors that would operate the needle guns broken? Yes, possibly.

Are the air compressors that would operate the needle guns perfectly functional but the only qualified operator to turn on the air compressors let his PHA lapse because he doesn't have eye glasses aboard the vessel and now the ship's QA won't let him turn on the air compressors? Yes, this could be possible.

Perhaps the ship has plenty of paint, needle guns, air compressors, and everything they need to paint the ship except the respirators they'd need to wear to paint have expired. That's also possible. Or perhaps the qualification they need to inspect the respirators to use the paint has expired and they can't log on to the NKO course they need to take to requal because the ship's internet isn't working....

This is the current state of the Navy.

49 posted on 10/23/2020 10:07:16 PM PDT by Drew68
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To: Drew68

Sounds like some of the major corporation safety and environmental edicts.

All just insanity and crushing to motivation.


50 posted on 10/23/2020 11:41:13 PM PDT by Sequoyah101 (We are governed by the consent of the governed and we are fools for allowing it.)
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To: Drew68

Thanks for the explanation!

I knew that were were probably aspects of the deployment cycle that I just didn’t know about.


51 posted on 10/24/2020 3:03:05 AM PDT by CaptainMorgantown
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To: Drew68

Only read about a third of the article, but saving to read the rest later. ...Thanks, Drew68, for posting it all.

I served on a CVA in the early ‘60s in Catapults, so have an interest in the topic.

I noticed the author of this “downer” article was a LTJG. Had several come into our division and they each thought they knew more than anyone else; real asses.


52 posted on 10/24/2020 3:47:38 AM PDT by octex
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To: Mariner

Agree! If I was his CO, I’d have him transferred somewhere.

Too many LTJGs have an inflated opinion of themselves.

Some learn soon that they’re not so great, after a run-in with a Chief with 4-6 gold stripes on his sleeve.


53 posted on 10/24/2020 4:28:45 AM PDT by octex
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To: Drew68

That was a good description of the routine I experienced in the early ‘60s in the 6th Fleet on a CVA.


54 posted on 10/24/2020 5:03:48 AM PDT by octex
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To: Sequoyah101

When I served we always had sailors removing signs of rust and painting; interior and exterior surfaces.

A boyhood friend of mine was on a carrier in Subic Bay. When assigned to painting the side, he and another guy were lowered on a platform to do the job. ...Something went wrong and they were dumped into the water. He said it was horrible because the water had raw sewage everywhere.


55 posted on 10/24/2020 5:13:57 AM PDT by octex
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To: Drew68

Wow Drew women should not be on warships PERIOD. Who the hell are you?


56 posted on 10/24/2020 5:19:12 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: dsc; Drew68

Drew is a complete PC idiot.


57 posted on 10/24/2020 5:20:11 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: CaptainMorgantown

Even if a ship is not formerly deployed ( attached to the sixth fleet for 180 days for example ) they still go out to sea a lot. My ship spent over 200 days at sea in 1984. Not all at once. We had some port calls to keep us sane. Most of the time independent ops/ref-training/ASW.


58 posted on 10/24/2020 5:25:06 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: Drew68
War with a significant enemy will start nuclear right from the get-go

OMG. BS. Nukes will never be used. Were nukes used in KOREA, VIETNAM, AFGHANISTAN? NO!! Why? When only one nuke would have ended all those wars.

59 posted on 10/24/2020 5:27:19 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: octex

I worked on tow boats a couple of years. Scraped and painted all three from the waterline to the mast.

Worked on offshore rigs. Needle scaling and painting are a way of life. Somebody told the boss rg hands will die without it.

A lot of combat ships now is hard to reach but a lot is not. Cant see then running at 30 knots all the time.


60 posted on 10/24/2020 9:42:57 AM PDT by Sequoyah101 (We are governed by the consent of the governed and we are fools for allowing it.)
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