WASHINGTON — The office of the secretary of
defense (OSD) has directed the US Navy to limit its overall buy of
littoral combat ships to a total of 32 ships, foregoing 20 more of the
small, fast and controversial warships, Pentagon sources have confirmed.
The
decision, in a Jan. 6 memo from Acting Deputy Defense Secretary
Christine Fox, came after the Pentagon received its final 2015 budget
guidance from the White House. Several major acquisition decisions,
including direction on what to do with the LCS program, were awaiting
the numbers from the Office of Management and Budget.
The program
of record calls for the service to build 52 littoral combat ships, built
to two designs, one from Lockheed Martin and the other from Austal USA.
Three of the ships are in service, and a fourth ship will be
commissioned in April. Another 20 are under construction or on order,
split evenly between the two prime contractors.
Asked for comment,
Navy spokesman Cmdr. Ryan Perry said “we’ll continue to work with OSD
on LCS acquisition plans.” No date has been announced for the submission
of the 2015 budget to Congress, but it’s expected to take place no
earlier than mid-February.
Over the past year, the Navy and OSD
have debated cutting the LCS program — along with discussions about the
future of virtually every significant defense acquisition program.
Various alternatives have been put forth, including ending the buy at 24
ships.
It’s believed that OSD’s initial guidance in January was
to cut the program even further. Navy Secretary Ray Mabus, a strident
defender of the LCS program, personally argued to restore at least a
portion of the future ship buy, Pentagon sources said.
One Navy
source familiar with the situation declared that the decision to end LCS
at 32 ships isn’t yet a done deal. “This isn’t over yet,” the source
said.
The reduction is not surprising to the Navy, but it is a
disappointment to many senior officials and officers who have defended
the ships. Unlike most warships, LCS doesn’t carry a major load of
weapons and sensors, but rather features a large mission bay and
adaptable systems to accommodate a range of mission modules — equipment
fashioned to perform specific warfare tasks such as anti-submarine or
counter-mine missions.
OSD has long harbored a variety of LCS
critics, who each year have sought to limit the program’s scope. The
concept, under development for over a decade, remains hotly contested
within the Navy’s surface warfare community.
A major political
feature of the LCS program was that the 52 ships represented a major
portion — nearly one-sixth — of the 306-ship fleet. Among other issues,
the Navy is in the earliest stages of thinking about what sort of ship
might be useful and affordable instead of an LCS.
It’s also not
clear that any decision has been made as to how the eight ships
remaining to be ordered would be structured. Current plans call for two
ships per year, one from each builder, starting in 2016. Options would
include four ships per year, or a down-select to only one of the LCS
designs. ■
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