 The Perfect Soldier: Special Operations, Commandos, and the Future of Us Warfare by James F. Dunnigan
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Dirty Little Secrets
Bye Bye Battleships
by Harold C. Hutchison January 13, 2006
Discussion Board on this DLS topic
The U.S. Navy is asking Congress for
permission to remove the battleships Iowa and Wisconsin from the Naval
Register of Vessels, citing the grand total of $1.4 million annual
maintenance costs for both vessels. The two ships are presently kept in
reserve as part of a 1996 Congressional mandate (Section 1011 of Public
Law 104-106), which was in response to the 1995 decision to remove all
four remaining battleships from the Naval Register of Vessels.
There
has been a push by a number of retired Marine officers and other former
officials (including former Secretary of the Navy John Lehman, former
Marine Commandants Paul X. Kelley and James Jones, and General Tommy
Franks, commander of CENTCOM during the liberation of Afghanistan and
Iraq) to reactivate the battleships. Total cost for reactivation as is
has been placed at $430 million, with 14 months needed to complete the
work. A 10-month modernization program costing a total of $500 million
for both ships is also proposed. This would permit the ships to be
ready in two years.
The Navy, however, wants to use the new
DD(X) to provide naval gunfire for supporting troops ashore. But the
first, or 24, DD(X) will not enter service until 2013. These vessels,
however, seem to be slated to operate with carriers, rather than
provide fire support, primarily due to their price tag, which will be
$2.5 billion per ship. This price for one of the later DD(X) vessels
(early versions are projected to run as high as $5 billion per ship) is
just a hair under three times the cost estimate of modernizing the Iowa
and Wisconsin.
There also is the matter of JDAM, GPS guided
smart bombs dropped from carrier and land-based aircraft. These have
provided all-weather precision-attack capability in close support of
ground troops, in both Afghanistan and Iraq. The troops prefer these to
artillery, because they are more flexible and accurate. Fire support
from ships is limited by the availability of deep water, which can be a
problem in places like Afghanistan and most of Iraq.
Despite
this, some people still favor the battleships due to their nine 16-inch
guns, which can hurl 2700 pound armor-piercing shells up to 44
kilometers away. In 1991, the Missouri and Wisconsin provided fire
support for Marine forces in Kuwait (and in one instance, forces from
Saddam Hussein’s regime surrendered to the unmanned aerial vehicle
being used for gunfire spotting). Proponents also point to their
ability to rapidly follow up when compared to aircraft (which have to
fly back to a carrier to refuel and rearm, then fly back – which takes
a lot longer). These ships are also heavily armored, and able to resist
all but the largest torpedoes and anti-ship missiles. They also can
carry 32 Tomahawk cruise missiles in armored box launchers and sixteen
Harpoon (or SLAM) missiles. Proposed modernization programs replace the
armored box launchers with vertical-launch systems that will at least
quadruple the number of Tomahawks carried (depending on the size of VLS
used, the number of Tomahawks carried could be octupled) and double the
number of Harpoons or SLAMs carried. Enhanced rounds for the 16-inch
guns capable of reaching targets 185 kilometers away are also part of
the upgrade proposal. However, since 1991, the JDAM has gone into
service, and that has changed the situation considerably.
That
said, reactivating battleships comes at a cost that the Navy considers
too high. Even with reduced crews of 1,100, the costs will be enormous.
Each crewman costs the navy an average of $90,000 per year – this is a
cost of $99 million per year per battleship. The battleships also
require a different type of fuel than the more modern naval vessels.
This means that they require an additional logistical train. Many of
the spare parts also have to be custom-made, which is also expensive,
since the shipbuilding industry has changed over the past sixty years.
The
debate over the Iowa-class battleships will continue to rage. The
marines want proven fire support (which the battleships are), and feel
that the Navy is treating naval gunfire support with less respect than
the air force treats close-air support. The navy does not wish to rely
on ships that will soon be old enough to collect Social Security. This
is a debate that will rage for a long period of time, even when the
first DD(X) enters service. – Harold C. Hutchison
(hchutch@ix.netcom.com)
Author's note: In the interest of full
disclosure, the author favors the modernization and reactivation of the
Iowa and Wisconsin, and opposes efforts to strike them until suitable
replacements have entered service.
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