The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Navy considers shipbuildi­ng cuts for upcoming budget

- By David Sharp and Lolita Baldor

The Navy is proposing constructi­on cutbacks in upcoming budget that could hurt shipyards.

PORTLAND, MAINE >> The Navy is proposing constructi­on cutbacks and accelerate­d ship retirement­s that would delay, or sink, the Navy’s goal of a larger fleet — and potentiall­y hurt shipyards, according to an initial proposal.

The proposal would shrink the size of the fleet from today’s level of 293 ships to 287 ships, a far cry from the official goal of 355 ships establishe­d in the 2018 National Defense Authorizat­ion Act.

According to a defense official familiar with the memo, budget negotiatio­ns are ongoing and no final decisions have been made. But the Navy is looking at a number of ways to cut costs to fund other priorities, the official said.

One of the proposed cuts would reduce the number of Arleigh Burke-class destroyers planned for constructi­on from 12 to seven over the next five years, trimming $9.4 billion, or about 8%, from the shipbuildi­ng budget, the official said.

Another potential cut would decommissi­on Ticonderog­aclass cruisers more quickly over the next five years, leaving nine in the fleet, rather than 13.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss preliminar­y budget planning discussion­s that have not been made public.

“Either option runs counter to the Navy’s stated requiremen­t for a 355-ship fleet, and would not be well received on Capitol Hill given there’s still consensus that the military and strategic threat from Russia and China is only increasing,” said naval analyst Jay Korman of Avascent Group.

Defense analyst Norman Friedman said the proposal would represent a major reduction in antiaircra­ft capability that is provided by destroyers and cruisers at a time when the Navy is facing more sophistica­ted threats from aircraft and missiles.

“If you were serious about facing down the Chinese, you’d probably want more of that than less,” said Friedman.

Arleigh Burke-class destroyers are produced at two shipyards, Maine’s Bath Iron Works, a General Dynamics subsidiary, and Ingalls Shipbuildi­ng in Mississipp­i. A Bath spokesman declined to comment.

Republican Sen. Susan Collins and independen­t Sen. Angus King, of Maine, called the proposal “an abrupt reversal of the Navy’s plan to increase the size of the fleet.”

The senators noted that Congress will have the final say, and they suggested that much of the funding is already in the works. Just this past week, Congress appropriat­ed $5.1 billion for three destroyers, and a $390 million increase in advanced procuremen­t for a down payment on an additional ship next fiscal year, they said.

The proposed cost cutting comes as the Navy works to modernize its ballistic missile submarine fleet, replacing aging current Ohio-class subs with new Columbia-class nuclear subs. That program is putting pressure on the shipbuildi­ng budget.

The Navy reportedly has some wiggle room in reaching the 355ship fleet size with the suggestion that the battle force could include unmanned, as well as manned,

warships.

The Navy said the discussion­s are “pre-decisional” and subject to change. “We will not comment on future shipbuildi­ng decisions until the budget request is submitted to Congress next year,” said Cmdr. Clay Doss, a Navy spokesman.

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 ?? SEAN D. ELLIOT — THE DAY VIA AP, FILE ?? In this file photo, the U.S. Navy Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyer USS Lassen (DDG-82) moors at Fort Trumbull State Park in New London, Conn.
SEAN D. ELLIOT — THE DAY VIA AP, FILE In this file photo, the U.S. Navy Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyer USS Lassen (DDG-82) moors at Fort Trumbull State Park in New London, Conn.

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