National Post (National Edition)

U.S. Navy poised for massive buildup

BID FOR 355 SHIPS

- DAVID SHARP

BATH, MAINE • With president-elect Donald Trump demanding more ships, the U.S. Navy is proposing the biggest shipbuildi­ng boom since the end of the Cold War to meet threats from a resurgent Russia and sabre-rattling China.

The Navy’s 355-ship proposal released last month is even larger than what Trump had promoted on the campaign trail, providing a potential boost to shipyards that have struggled because of budget caps that have limited money funding for ships.

At Maine’s Bath Iron Works, workers worried about the future want to build more ships but wonder where the billions of dollars will come from. “Whether Congress and the government can actually fund it, is a whole other ball game,” said Rich Nolan, president of the shipyard’s largest union.

Boosting shipbuildi­ng to meet the Navy’s 355-ship goal could require an additional $5 billion to $5.5 billion in annual spending in the Navy’s 30-year projection, according to an estimate by naval analyst Ronald O’Rourke at the Congressio­nal Research Service.

The Navy’s revised Force Structure Assessment calls for adding another 47 ships including an aircraft carrier built in Virginia, 16 large surface warships built in Maine and Mississipp­i, and 18 attack submarines built in Connecticu­t, Rhode Island and Virginia. It also calls for more amphibious assault ships, expedition­ary transfer docks and support ships.

In addition to being good for national security, a larger fleet would be better for both the sailors, who’d enjoy shorter deployment­s, and for the ships, which would have more down time for maintenanc­e, said Matthew Paxton, president of the Shipbuilde­rs Council of America, which represents most of the major Navy shipbuilde­rs.

“Russia and China are going to continue to build up their navies,” he said. “The complexiti­es aren’t going to get any easier. The Navy, more than any of the services, is our forward presence. We’re going to need this Navy.”

Many defence analysts agree that military capabiliti­es have been degraded in recent years, especially when it comes to warships, aircraft and tanks.

The key is finding a way to increase Navy shipbuildi­ng to achieve defence and economic gains “in a fiscally responsibl­e way that does not pass the bill along to our children,” said independen­t Sen. Angus King of the Armed Services Committee.

Even when Trump takes office, no one envisions a return to the heady days during the Cold War when workers were wiring, welding, grinding, pounding and plumbing ships at a furious pace to meet President Ronald Reagan’s audacious goal of a 600-ship Navy.

Lawrence J. Korb, a retired naval officer and former assistant defence secretary under Reagan, said the Navy’s request isn’t realistic unless the Trump administra­tion is willing to take the budget “to levels we’ve never seen.”

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