– Air Force – The USAF is developing the tactics and technology needed for operations against targets in the vast Pacific.
Category Archives: USNavy
On Their Own Steam
– Air and Space – Navy carriers are only now breaking away from using 19th century tech to put jets in the air.
Submarines: Key to the Offset Strategy
– US Naval Institute Proceedings – As has been the case for decades, the strategic spotlight shines once again on the U.S. Navy’s subsurface force.
Advocating Naval Heresy
– US Naval Institute Proceedings – Is the new maritime strategy really ‘new,’ or merely a repackaging of increasingly threadbare ideas?
Carl Vinson Strike Group Returns Home After Nearly 10 Months in Middle East, Pacific
– USNI News – The Carl Vinson Strike Group will return to the San Diego area today and tomorrow after a nearly 10-month deployment to U.S. 5th Fleet and 7th Fleet that included six months of strikes against the Islamic State.
USS Ross Leaves Black Sea
– USNI News – The guided missile destroyer USS Ross (DDG- 71) departed the Black Sea on Wednesday after an 11-day cruise of the region.
U.S. Navy Denies Russian Fighters Chased Off Destroyer USS Ross in Black Sea
– USNI News – The Pentagon is pushing back against anonymously sourced reports in state controlled Russian media that guided missile destroyer USS Ross (DDG-71) was chased from Russian controlled waters in the Black Sea by Russian fighters over the weekend.
Navy’s EA-6B Prowler Takes Last Active Duty Flight Before Sunset Ceremony
– USNI News – The Navy’s EA-6B Prowler electronic warfare jet flew its last active duty flight on Wednesday and officially decommissioned at the Museum of Flight in Seattle.
LCS Fort Worth Needed 90 Percent Less Maintenance than Freedom in First 3 Months of Deployment
– USNI News – The Littoral Combat Ship USS Fort Worth (LCS-3) is six months into its 16-month deployment and requiring an order of magnitude fewer hours of corrective maintenance than its predecessor, USS Freedom (LCS-1).
Changing the Anti-Ship Cruise Missile Paradigm
– USNI News – At a recent congressional hearing Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Jon Greenert bluntly stated “[the] Navy remains challenged in this (anti-surface warfare) mission area due to both capability and capacity shortfalls.”
Submarine Force Could Become the New A2/AD Threat
– USNI News – Targeted investments in improving weapons and decoys could propel the U.S. submarine fleet to be the underwater answer to anti-access and area-denial (A2/AD) threats.
Nato’s ‘Dynamic Mongoose’: Hunting for submarines
– BBC – In the North Sea, off the coast of Norway, Nato has been conducting its largest ever anti-submarine warfare exercise.
Pentagon weighs sending planes, ships near disputed South China Sea reefs
– Reuters – The Pentagon is considering sending U.S. military aircraft and ships to assert freedom of navigation around rapidly growing Chinese-made artificial islands in the disputed South China Sea.
Top 5 Weapons the U.S. Navy Needs Now
– Real Clear Defense – It’s tough to winnow the U.S. Navy’s priorities list down to five weapon systems. However, I applied a secret method to come up with the definitive, incontrovertible list of the Top 5 Weapons the U.S. Navy Needs Now. The list employs such metrics as a system’s national-level importance, its capacity to multiply the fleet’s offensive and defensive fighting power, and its ability to exploit enduring enemy weaknesses at manageable cost to the United States.
The Navy’s New Museum Drone and Strategic Malpractice
– War on the Rocks – Aviation history was made last week: an unmanned aircraft — the X-47B — successfully completed an air-to-air refueling demonstration, taking 4,000 pounds of fuel from a KC-707 tanker aircraft. This historic achievement followed last year’s equally revolutionary series of carrier launch and recovery operations by the X-47B. You would think that the Navy, cognizant of the need to take advantage of the promise of robotics would be aggressively pushing to do further testing, to make unmanned carrier-based surveillance and strike aircraft real, and thus extend the reach and power of the aircraft carrier — the crown jewel of America’s conventional power projection forces. Instead, the Navy wants to decommission the two X-47Bs (named Salty Dog 501 and Salty Dog 502) and put them in museums, even though they have 80% of their approved flight hours left. Such an action flies in the face of the imperative to counter the most strategically troubling elements of the emerging set of anti-access/area-denial threats that Secretary of Defense Ash Carter and his team are aiming to offset.
U.S. Navy stops accompanying ships through Strait of Hormuz
– Reuters – The U.S. Navy has stopped accompanying commercial ships through the Strait of Hormuz, a mission it began last week in the wake of Iran’s seizure of a cargo ship.
America’s Defense Still Requires Aircraft Carriers
– National Review – Jerry Hendrix of the Center for a New American Security took to the pages of National Review to advocate the elimination of the aircraft carrier from the arsenal of the U.S. Navy. A former naval aviator, Hendrix is a serious man and a gifted navalist, so his arguments should be taken seriously. Under scrutiny, however, his logic wilts, his understanding of modern warfare is revealed as unrealistic, and his ability to hone in on actual cause-and-effect relationships is questionable.
BMD-Equipped Destroyer USS Porter Arrives in Rota, Spain
– USNI News – The Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Porter (DDG-78) arrived in Spain on Thursday to being its ballistic missile defense mission. Porter will join USS Donald Cook (DDG-75) and USS Ross (DDG-71) in the forward-deployed naval force at Naval Station Rota to carry out the European Phased Adaptive Approach to BMD. USS Carney (DDG-64) will arrive later this year.
US Navy to assist US-flagged ships through Strait of Hormuz
– BBC – Defence officials have said that US Navy ships will accompany US-flagged commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz, to make sure they are not interfered with by Iran.
The Navy’s Most Shadowy Spy Is 450 Feet Long & Named After Jimmy Carter
– Foxtrot Alpha – Submarines are a lot like Batman, they are covered in rubber and are great fighters, but they are gadget toting stealth detectives at their core. Of the Navy’s sub force, there is no boat more capable at sleuthing under the high seas than the heavily modified Seawolf Class submarine, the USS Jimmy Carter SSN-23.
The U.S. Navy Needs to Radically Reassess How It Projects Power
– National Review – If the Navy wants to address its budget crisis, its falling ship count, its atrophying strategic position, and the problem of its now-marginal combat effectiveness — and reassert its traditional dominance of the seas — it should embrace technological innovation and increase its efficiency. In short: It needs to stop building aircraft carriers.
Navy Leans Toward Building More Super Hornets After F-35C Delays
– Military.com – The Navy is considering extending production of its F/A-18 Super Hornet beyond 2017 because of delays in production of the Navy’s carrier-launched F-35C and increased demands on the Hornet fleet.
Two Littoral Combat Ships to Deploy to Singapore Next Year, Four by 2017
– USNI News – The U.S. Navy will begin a permanent presence of two Littoral Combat Ships in Singapore next year with four planned to be forward deployed and based at the Changi Naval Base by 2017
Global Guided Missile Expansion Forcing U.S. Navy to Rethink Surface Fleet Size
– USNI News – Rapid growth in the capability and quality of guided missiles — mostly Chinese in origin — is causing the U.S. Navy to rethink the number of surface ships it needs to effectively fight a high-end war.
Navy Conducts Successful Test of Aerial Refueling with X-47B, UCAS-D Program Ending
– USNI News – The Navy successfully tested autonomous aerial refueling for the first time with its Northrop Grumman X-47B test unmanned aerial vehicle on Wednesday, marking the end of the Navy’s Unmanned Carrier Air Vehicle demonstrator (UCAS-D) program.
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