Daily Press

NAVY INKS NEW SUBMARINE DEAL

Virginia-class boats cut from 11 to 9 in General Dynamics deal

- By Tony Capaccio Bloomberg

The agreement with General Dynamics slashes the order from 11 Virginia-class attack boats to nine.

The U.S. Navy has reached an agreement with General Dynamics Corp. on a multibilli­on-dollar deal to buy the next batch of Virginia-class attack submarines, according to the service.

After protracted negotiatio­ns, the deal was cut from 11 submarines to 9, with an option to buy a 10th vessel in 2023, because funding was running more than $1 billion short, according to service documents and congressio­nal correspond­ence. The value of the resulting agreement wasn’t immediatel­y disclosed.

“We have reached a multiyear” agreement “and are working to announce a contract” by Dec. 31, Navy spokesman Danny Hernandez said in a statement. It “will achieve significan­t savings, will include important lethality enhancemen­ts,” and “provide critical stability to the industrial base. Further informatio­n will be available upon contract award,” he said.

Elizabeth Power, a spokeswoma­n with General Dynamics’ Electric Boat unit, which makes the Virginia-class sub with Newport News-based Huntington Ingalls Industries Inc., said “we have been working closely with the Navy and stand ready to support their needs. The contract being contemplat­ed allows us to maintain a stable Virginia-class build rate.”

By law, the Pentagon must submit a detailed justificat­ion for proceeding with a multiyear contract, including outlining “significan­t savings” that would be realized over annual purchases that give Congress more oversight. Last week, the Defense Department submitted to congressio­nal defense committees a proposal certifying savings of 6.8%, or $1.8 billion, from a nine-ship contract.

Ellen Lord, the Pentagon’s acquisitio­ns chief, said in letters to the four defense committees that “while there are sufficient funds” to execute the program through 2024, “there are shortfalls” in fiscal 2022 and 2023 that the Navy has committed to address in its next proposed budget.

Reps. Joe Courtney of Connecticu­t and Rob Wittman of Virginia, the Democratic chairman and ranking Republican on the House Armed Services seapower panel, wrote Defense Secretary Mark Esper in September to “express our very serious concern” over the “reduced scope for the contract due to funding shortfalls.” They represent districts where the subs are built or workers live.

Navy Secretary Richard Spencer acknowledg­ed, in a Sept. 27 reply to lawmakers, the reduction to nine submarines with an option to add at least one. The Navy “has been in negotiatio­ns” to “achieve a balanced approach with full considerat­ions of technical risk, the industrial base capability and fleet requiremen­ts.”

“There seem to be two issues at work here,” said Ron O’Rourke, naval analyst for the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Research Service. “The first are the concerns about the capacity of the industrial base,” and the other is a funding shortfall, “the origin of which is unclear,” he said. “So it seems that something has happened on the Navy’s side regarding the cost of these submarines. It would be helpful for the Navy to explain what that is.”

 ?? ROB OSTERMAIER/STAFF FILE ?? Funding for the deal was running more than $1 billion short, according to service documents and congressio­nal correspond­ence.
ROB OSTERMAIER/STAFF FILE Funding for the deal was running more than $1 billion short, according to service documents and congressio­nal correspond­ence.

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