Asbury Park Press

Sea drone warfare has arrived for world

US reliance on big ships slows change

- Joe Brock and Mike Stone

The U.S. Navy’s efforts to build a fleet of unmanned vessels are faltering because the Pentagon remains wedded to big shipbuildi­ng projects, according to some officials and company executives, exposing a weakness as sea drones reshape naval warfare.

The lethal effectiven­ess of sea drones has been demonstrat­ed in the Black Sea, where Ukraine has deployed remote-controlled speedboats packed with explosives to sink Russian frigates and minesweepe­rs since late 2022.

Yemeni-backed Houthi rebels have employed similar vessels against commercial shipping in the Red Sea in recent months, albeit without success.

These tactics have caught the attention of the Pentagon, which is incorporat­ing lessons from Ukraine and the Red Sea into its plans to counter China’s rising naval power in the Pacific, Pentagon spokesman Eric Pahon told Reuters.

In a signal of the Pentagon’s intent, Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks announced an initiative in August – named Replicator - to deploy hundreds of small, relatively cheap air and sea drones within the next 18-24 months to match China’s growing military threat.

This public show of commitment masks years of hesitation by the U.S. Navy to build a fleet of unmanned vessels despite repeated warnings this was the future of maritime warfare, according to interviews with a dozen people with direct knowledge of the U.S. sea drone plans, including Navy officers, Pentagon officials and sea drone company executives.

Two Navy sources and three executives at sea drone manufactur­ers said the biggest impediment to progress has been a Department of Defense budget process that prioritize­s big ships and submarines built by legacy defense contractor­s.

“At some point, you hit the D.C. problem,” said Philipp Stratmann, CEO at Ocean Power Technologi­es, a New Jersey-based firm that supplies the U.S. Navy with the WAM-V, an autonomous surface drone.

“You hit the fact that there is a military industrial complex that has the best lobbyists and knows exactly how the money flows and contractin­g works in the DoD.”

A Navy spokespers­on said it “acquires capabiliti­es based on fleet demand signals,” referring to the messages headquarte­rs receive from commanders at sea.

The Navy has a budget of $172 million this year for small and mediumsize­d underwater sea drones, falling to $101.8 million in 2025, the spokespers­on said. That’s a tiny fraction of the

$63 billion Navy procuremen­t budget proposed by President Joe Biden’s administra­tion for 2025.

Military sea drones can range from missile-armed speedboats to minehuntin­g miniature submarines and solar-powered sailboats equipped with high-definition spy cameras, underwater sensors and loudspeake­rs used to holler warnings at enemy ships.

But when the Navy has deployed sea drones on reconnaiss­ance missions in recent years, it hasn’t always had the fleet expertise to use them, the two Navy sources said, asking not to be named due to the sensitivit­y of the matter.

There aren’t enough Navy sailors trained to pilot drones or to analyze the vast data sent back from the craft’s cameras and sensors, the sources said.

The spokespers­on said the Navy was in the process of improving its data collection and analysis from sensors.

Pentagon spokesman Pahon said the DoD has been “laser-focused on accelerati­ng innovation over the last three years,” including the use of sea drones.

Acknowledg­ing budget challenges, Pahon said the Pentagon was using innovative ways to cross “the valley of death, a term used to describe the torturous approval process new inventions travel through to be purchased in large quantities.

Replicator

One example Pahon cited was the Replicator program: the short-term, $500 million-a-year project is designed to cut through bureaucrac­y and fasttrack the deployment of thousands of cheap aerial and sea drones.

These drones will be used to match China’s rapidly growing air and naval power in the Asia-Pacific region, the Pentagon’s Hicks said at the project’s launch in August. She said Replicator is being funded mainly by reallocati­ng funds from the existing Pentagon budget.

As part of the initiative, the Pentagon in January issued a solicitati­on for private companies to deliver small sea drones to the Navy, demanding production capacity of 120 vessels per year, with deployment beginning in April 2025.

On Monday, the Pentagon said the Switchblad­e-600, an aerial loitering munition made by AeroVironm­ent Inc, was the first weapon publicly confirmed to be included in the Replicator initiative. The program’s first tranche also includes undisclose­d maritime surface products, other aerial drones and counter-drone systems (c-UAS), the Pentagon said.

Duane Fotheringh­am, president of unmanned systems at Huntington Ingalls Industries, the largest U.S. military shipbuilde­r, acknowledg­ed the Pentagon and Navy had shown their “intent” to accelerate the deployment of sea drones but he said the industry wanted to see long-term funding in the defense budget. “We hear the demand signal, but we all have to work together very closely to understand what that demand is and when it will be available,” Fotheringh­am said.

At a cost ranging between $1 million and $3 million apiece, according to Navy and defense contractor sources, drones offer a relatively cheap and fast way to expand the Navy’s fleet, especially as several large traditiona­l shipbuildi­ng projects – like a new class of frigate warships – are years behind schedule.

The U.S. is testing using robot ships in active combat scenarios. But their more immediate use is for missions that are too costly and numerous for manned naval fleets.

This includes maritime surveillan­ce, mine hunting, and protecting critical undersea infrastruc­ture, like gas pipelines and fiber-optic cables, four drone companies told Reuters.

Swarms of small sea drones could also act as a shield for valuable crewed assets like aircraft carriers and submarines, and tangle up troop-carrying ships in the event China tries to invade Taiwan, said Bryan Clark, an advisor to the Navy on autonomous craft and a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute – a think tank headquarte­red in Washington.

Clark estimates the Navy has around 100 small drones for use on the ocean surface and another 100 underwater drones, while China has a similar-sized autonomous force that is growing fast. The Navy spokespers­on declined to comment on how many drones it has in operation.

“Ukraine has shown how effective they can be and how they can be employed in current operations,” Clark said. “The U.S. Navy needs to embrace that lesson and field combat (sea drones) right away.”

The Navy’s 5th Fleet, which operates out of Bahrain, has been testing unmanned vessels for three years, led by its Task Force 59 unit.

The project has deployed surveillan­ce drones built by private firms, including startups, as well as those backed by defense heavyweigh­ts like Lockheed Martin and HII.

“The situation in the Red Sea gives the work of Task Force 59 added urgency, and we look forward to fielding solutions to help counter Houthi malign behavior,” Colin Corridan, commander of the task force, told Reuters.

Missile test

In October, the Navy carried out its first live missile test from an unmanned speedboat in the Arabian Peninsula.

The T38 Devil Ray, built by Floridabas­ed sea drone firm MARTAC, successful­ly launched a miniature missile system to destroy a target boat, with a human operator ashore giving the order, according to a Navy announceme­nt and video. MARTAC’s chief marketing officer, Stephen Ferretti, referred questions about the operation to the Navy.

The use of unmanned vessels was expanded to the Navy’s 4th Fleet in central America last year, where they have been used to crack down on human smuggling off the northern coast of Haiti.

One of the companies operating there is California-based Saildrone, which makes wind-, solar- and dieselpowe­red autonomous vessels that collect images and data with cameras and sensors.

Saildrone has circumnavi­gated Washington’s funding politics. Because the company operates and maintains its own vessels and charges a service fee for the data they collect, the Navy can pay to use the drones out of its operating expenses rather than procuremen­t budget. Saildrone launched the Surveyor, its largest vessel, which has been tailored for the military, at an event in March attended by Chief of Naval Operations Lisa Franchetti.

 ?? GENYA SAVILOV/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Yuri Fedorenko, 33, is commander of the Achilles drone battalion of the 92nd brigade of Ukrainian army, which operates drones. Sea drones are becoming more necessary in warfare.
GENYA SAVILOV/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Yuri Fedorenko, 33, is commander of the Achilles drone battalion of the 92nd brigade of Ukrainian army, which operates drones. Sea drones are becoming more necessary in warfare.

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