The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Senior Navy officer won't excuse crasher

Offifficia­l refuses to blame hectic pace or strained budget.

- By Richard Lardner

WASHINGTON— Asenior U.S. Navy officer told a congressio­nal oversight panel Thursday that the hectic pace of military operations and a constraine­d military budget don’t excuse two warship accidents in the Pacific region that killed 17 American sailors and led the sea-going service to order a broad investigat­ion into its performanc­e and readiness.

“No matter how tough our operating environmen­t, or how strained our budget, we shouldn’t be and cannot be colliding with other ships and running aground,” Adm. William Moran, the vice chief of naval operations, told members of the House Armed Services Committee. “That is not about resourcing; it is about safety and it is about leadership at sea.”

Moran said the Navy is “shocked” by the collisions involving the USS John S. McCain in August the USS

Fitzgerald in June. But he also used the hearing to urge Congress to end the practice of providing defense budgets by way of stopgap spending measures. The stopgap bills have been used frequently over the last eight years and lock the Pentagon’s budget in at last year’s level, which bars military services from starting new programs or ending

old ones. That forces the services to move money from

their weapons modernizat­ion and training accounts to pay for current missions.

The shortfalls sparked a discussion about whether the Navy needs to refuse additional missions until the force is better stabilized. Moran said the Navy, in the wake of the McCain collision, launched a wide-ranging reviewto examine those questions and also assess sailor training and navigation­al proficienc­y. Separate investigat­ions are looking into the cause of the collisions.

“Our culture is we’re going to get it done. That’s what the Navy is all about,” he said. “And sometimes our culture works against us.

Ten sailors aboard the destroyer USS John S. McCain were declared missing after their ship crashed into a Liberian-flagged oil tanker in coastal waters offff Singapore. Seven sailors died when another destroyer, the USS Fitzgerald, hit a container ship offff Japan.

John Pendleton of the Government Accountabi­lity Office said the Navy is “treading water” in a push to keep up with operationa­l demands that have put a heavy strain on the force. Pendleton said GAO found that more than a third of the warfare certificat­ions for cruiser and destroyer crews based in Japan, including certificat­ions for seamanship, had expired as of June. That represents “a more than a fivefold increase in the percentage of expired warfare certificat­ions for these ships” over the last two years, according to Pendleton.

 ?? U.S. NAVY VIA AP ?? Damage is visible in the destroyer USS John S. McCain after a collision in August. Adm. WilliamMor­an, the vice chief of naval operations, toldmember­s of the House Armed Services Committee that the Navy is “shocked” by recent collisions.
U.S. NAVY VIA AP Damage is visible in the destroyer USS John S. McCain after a collision in August. Adm. WilliamMor­an, the vice chief of naval operations, toldmember­s of the House Armed Services Committee that the Navy is “shocked” by recent collisions.

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