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Home » Ships and Subs » Size Doesn’t Matter, Part One

Size Doesn’t Matter, Part One

The new chair of the House Armed Services Committees sea-​​power sub­com­mit­tee is call­ing for a big­ger Navy fleet. Numbers do mat­ter, Rep. Gene Taylor, D-​​Miss, said last week. Taylors dis­trict includes major ship­yards. Noting that the Navy has shed around 50 major war­ships under the Bush Administration, Taylor added, I want to turn that around.

1942convoyTaylor is not the first admi­ral, wonk or elected offi­cial to lament an appar­ent ero­sion of the Navys strength. Problem is that Taylor, like many oth­ers, is fix­ated on num­bers of ships, which these days is one of the least reli­able met­rics for quan­ti­fy­ing naval power. In fact, todays Navy, while oper­at­ing fewer war­ships than at any time since the 1930s, remains more pow­er­ful than the next 17 largest navies com­bined — a 17-​​navy stan­dard. This is the great­est mar­gin of supe­ri­or­ity in mod­ern his­tory. The 19th–cen­tury British Royal Navy, the worlds pre­vi­ous great naval power, was only slightly larger than its near­est com­peti­tor the French navy. Whats more, our 17-​​navy-​​standard lead is prob­a­bly going to grow in com­ing years.

And it only grows fur­ther if you count ships oper­ated by other U.S. ser­vices includ­ing the Coast Guard, Military Sealift Command and the Army. The Coast Guard alone has embarked on an expan­sion that will trans­form it into one of the worlds top 15 navies. Military Sealift Command oper­ates the major­ity of the worlds large sealift ships.

Todays num­bers game started in the 1980s with President Ronald Reagans 600-​​ship buildup plan. We never quite got there, and post-​​Cold War cuts resulted in a shrink­ing force, which alarmed Navy types and resulted in the first of sev­eral plans estab­lish­ing a min­i­mum num­ber of ships. The 1992 Base-​​Force plan called for 450 major com­bat­ants. But aging ships, ris­ing ship­build­ing costs and the 1990s pro­cure­ment hol­i­day steadily eroded num­bers. In 1997, the Navy said weve got to estab­lish a floor and thats going to be 300 ships, says Robert Work, senior defense ana­lyst at Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. So the 1997 Quadrennial Defense Review says weve got have 300 ships.

Thats slightly more that what weve got right now, if you count only major Navy war­ships. The prob­lem, Work says, is that the Navy was psy­cho­log­i­cally inca­pable of accept­ing that number.

Why? Because of tra­di­tion, a very pow­er­ful force in todays U.S. military.

There was thing called the TSBF — the Total Ship Battle Force,
Work explains. It has an old his­tory in navy-​​versus-​​navy con­flicts,
where attri­tion was high and num­bers were very impor­tant. From 1890 to
now, the Navy has fol­lowed the TSBF.

Obsessed with num­bers, in 1997 the ser­vice and its con­gres­sional and
think-​​tank allies launched a cam­paign to grow the fleet. Recent plans
for 375 ships gave way to a more real­is­tic total of 313 endorsed by
Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Mike Mullen. Critics such as Taylor
seem to think even that num­ber is too low. But those 313 ships would
mean an only slight improve­ment to our cur­rent supe­ri­or­ity over every
other navy in the world.

And heres why: due to huge advance­ments in weapons, sen­sors and
air­craft, todays fleet car­ries more mis­siles than ever, can launch
more air­craft sor­ties than ever and has brand-​​new capa­bil­i­ties that no
ear­lier fleet has pos­sessed. Plus, today’s ships are big — much big­ger than past ships.

In sub­se­quent posts, well take a look at all the rea­sons why
todays U.S. Navy is more pow­er­ful than ever, and prob­a­bly does not
need to grow or get more money. Part two will address the Vertical
Launch System revolution.

Cross-​​posted at War Is Boring and Ares

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January 18th, 2007 | Ships and Subs | 3397No Comments »http://defensetech.org/2007/01/18/size-doesnt-matter-part-one/Size+Doesn%27t+Matter%2C+Part+One2007-01-19+02%3A45%3A53haninah_levine You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

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