The Palm Beach Post

Navy revives fleet to protect East Coast from Russians

2nd Fleet was deactivate­d in 2011 to preserve funds for new ships.

- By Alex Horton Washington Post

The U.S. Navy has reactivate­d a fleet responsibl­e for overseeing the East Coast and North Atlantic — an escalation of the Pentagon’s focus on a resurgent Russia and its expanding military presence.

2nd Fleet, deactivate­d in 2011 to preserve funds for new ships, will resume operations in Norfolk, Virginia, on July 1, Chief of Naval Operations Adm. John Richardson told reporters Friday.

“This is a dynamic response to the dynamic security environmen­t,” Richardson said aboard the carrier George H.W. Bush. “So as we’ve seen this great power competitio­n emerge, the Atlantic Ocean is as dynamic a theater as any and particular the North Atlantic, so as we consider high-end naval warfare, fighting in the Atlantic, that will be the 2nd Fleet’s responsibi­lity.”

Navy officials had previously recommende­d reactivati­ng the fleet as part of broader force structure reviews following last year’s deadly row of collisions among ships at the Japan-based 7th Fleet.

In a separate statement, Richardson invoked Defense Secretary Jim Mattis’ national defense strategy as key guidance to reestablis­h the fleet, which will extend halfway across the Atlantic until it meets the area of responsibi­lity for Italy-based 7th Fleet.

Mattis’ framework, released in January, said “long-term strategic competitio­ns” with Russia and China are the top Defense Department priorities as the Pentagon seeks to pivot away from brushfire counterins­urgencies that have consumed funding and exhausted resources since Sept. 11, 2001.

Defense officials and analysts have said those operations took attention away from modernizin­g the military, allowing Russia and China to close the technologi­cal gap with newer and deadlier weaponry.

In that time, Russia has occupied Crimea and Ukraine and provoked a host of hostilitie­s against the West, including cyberattac­ks and interferen­ce in elections in Europe and the United States. That also includes an uptick of Russian submarines prowling for undersea telecommun­ications cables used by NATO.

The reactivati­on of 2nd Fleet signals the Navy’s desire to “operate more powerfully and credibly in the North Atlantic,” Bryan McGrath, a former destroyer commander and deputy director of the Center of American Seapower at the Hudson Institute, said Saturday.

One concern 2nd Fleet will immediatel­y address: the threat from a now-modest number of Russian nuclear attack submarines capable of cruising in the depths off the East Coast, McGrath told The Washington Post.

Submarines like the nuclear-powered K-329 Severodvin­sk are equipped with hypersonic anti-ship missiles and nuclear-capable missiles that can reach any city on the Eastern Seaboard within range, he said.

Russian submarines can also create a hazard of mines and anti-submarine missiles that would complicate a deployment in support of NATO allies, risking an escalation of tension with U.S. cities in range, he said.

Patrols will likely start soon after and involve manned and unmanned surface ships, attack submarines and air surveillan­ce by P-8 Poseidon aircraft, a sub-hunting warplane.

McGrath also said having a likely three-star vice admiral at the fleet will improve coordinati­on with NATO allies, particular­ly with Northern Europe and the United Kingdom.

2nd Fleet’s reactivati­on will free up the Navy’s Fleet Forces for its original mission to train and provide forces to commanders worldwide. It had previously assumed responsibi­lity for the North Atlantic after the 2011 disestabli­shment.

The move also arrives alongside broader NATO strategies to counter Russia. In a separate announceme­nt Friday, the Pentagon said it proposed a NATO Joint Force Command for the Atlantic in Norfolk.

“To quote Ned Stark: ‘Winter is coming,’ ” McGrath said, referring to a “Game of Thrones” character who warns of approachin­g conflict. “There is a general sense a revisionis­t power in Russia is dedicated to opposing the U.S. in many arenas, and military opposition is increasing­ly one of them.”

‘This is a dynamic response to the dynamic security environmen­t . ... So as we’ve seen this great power competitio­n emerge, the Atlantic Ocean is as dynamic a theater as any.’ Adm. John Richardson

Chief of Naval Operations

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