The Day

Region: Lawmakers seek details on proposal to cut an attack submarine

They say budget proposal contradict­s Navy goal of 355 ships, Trump’s own National Defense Strategy

- By JULIA BERGMAN Day Staff Writer

U.S. Rep. Joe Courtney, D-2nd District, and Republican Rob Wittman, who represents Virginia’s 1st Congressio­nal District, are asking Defense Secretary Mark Esper for documents to support the Trump administra­tion’s decision to cut an attack submarine in its latest budget request.

U.S. Sens. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., and Chris Murphy, D-Conn., also questioned the decision in a letter to the defense secretary this week.

At the start of the week, President Donald Trump unveiled a $4.8 trillion budget proposal that would increase defense spending overall but proposes cutting Virginia-class attack submarine production in half — from two submarines to one. These submarines are built by Electric Boat in Groton and Newport News Shipbuildi­ng in Virginia. The Trump administra­tion is planning to build six new Navy war ships, compared to the 10 previously planned and the 12 approved by Congress.

The lawmakers said in both letters that the proposal contradict­s the Navy’s goal of reaching 355 ships, including 66 fast-attack submarines, by 2048 — the Trump administra­tion’s own National Defense Strategy, which says the U.S. is again in a great power competitio­n with Russia and China, which have continued advancemen­ts in their undersea fleets.

The U.S. Navy currently has 294 ships.

The House letter, sent Wednesday, said “it is challengin­g to put this request in a strategic or analytical context without two key plans.”

Courtney and Wittman, the chairman and ranking member of the House subcommitt­ee with oversight of Navy shipbuildi­ng, are referring to the Navy’s 30-year shipbuildi­ng plan and force structure assessment, which determines what the Navy’s future fleet should look like.

Federal law requires that the ship

building plan be submitted with the president’s annual budget request, which the lawmakers said did not happen this year. They requested the plan be submitted no later than Feb. 27.

The subcommitt­ee was set to receive a briefing this week on the Navy’s force structure assessment. That briefing “meant to provide larger strategic and analytical context needed to review the new budget request,” was canceled indefinite­ly, Courtney and Wittman said.

They requested an update in writing on when Congress can expect to receive it.

Blumenthal and Murphy said in their letter to Esper that they request “immediate justificat­ion for this shortsight­ed proposal” and would work with their Senate colleagues to restore the Virginia submarine. They cited comments Esper made during a visit to EB’s Groton shipyard in August 2019, emphasizin­g the importance of continued investment in the submarine fleet.

The submarine that the Trump administra­tion is proposing to cut is one that would be delivered by Newport News Shipbuildi­ng.

The administra­tion, in its budget proposal, shifted about $1.6 billion in funding from the Virginia class program to the National Nuclear Security Administra­tion. The proposal “is an insult to the hardworkin­g and talented submarine workforce in Connecticu­t and across the country,” the senators said.

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