Wednesday, December 5, 2012

The Rising Cost Of Maintaining A Declining US Navy

Flashes of lighting are seen over the horizon as the aircraft carrier USS Dwight D. Eisenhower operates in the U.S. 5th Fleet area of responsibility, Nov. 19, 2012. U.S. Navy photo by Lt. Greg Linderman

Is the Fleet Steaming Forward…Or Backward? -- Winslow Wheeler, Time

The prevailing wisdom holds that America’s smaller fleet is more capable than the U.S. Navy of yore because of higher capability per individual ship. It is a dangerous assumption.

To its credit, in 2010 the Navy completed a study of the surface fleet’s manning, training, and equipment readiness.

The Balisle Report was a brutal assessment: ship maintenance went underfunded for years; one-fifth of the fleet cannot pass inspections; aircraft and ships had junk as equipment and/or insufficient spare parts; fewer than one half of deployed combat aircraft are fully mission-capable at any given time; training throughout the surface fleet has been inadequate; ships are undermanned, and returning ships are cannibalized for parts to keep others running.

Read more .....

My Comment: A sobering look at the US Navy .... and one that does not inspire confidence. The other two Time articles on the US Navy are the following ....

Part 1: If more money buys a smaller fleet, what does less money buy?
Part 2: More than the Navy’s numbers could be shrinking

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