- A Second Hand Conjecture
- Ace of Spades
- All American Blogger
- Bearing Drift
- Belgravia Dispatch
- Betsy’s Page
- BitsBlog
- Blackfive
- Bookworm Room
- Cafe Hayek
- Christian Peacenik
- Club For Growth
- Confederate Yankee
- Conservatism Today
- Coyote Blog
- CrockTock
- Dale’s Motorcycle Blog
- Dean Esmay
- Econopundit
- Eschaton
- Ezra Klein
- Fausta's Blog
- Freedom Pub
- Gad-fly
- Greg Mankiw
- Hindenblog
- Hot Air
- Instapundit
- Irons In The Fire
- Jules Crittenden
- Just One Minute
- Little Miss Atilla
- Maggie’s Farm
- Marginal Revolution
- Master Resource
- Matt Yglesias
- Megan McArdle
- Michelle Malkin
- Neo-Neocon
- New Energy And Fuel
- New Paltz Journal
- Obsidian Wings
- Oliver Willis
- Open Left
- Outside the Beltway
- Pirate’s Cove
- PoliBlog
- Political Byline
- Politician, Tar, Feathers – some assembly required
- Polling Report
- Powerline
- Protein Wisdom
- Pundit Review
- Red State
- Riehl World View
- Right Wing News
- Rightwing Nuthouse
- Samizdata
- Say Anything
- Scrappleface
- Searchlight Crusade
- Sharp As A Marble
- She’s Right
- Sister Toldjah
- Soldier’s Angels Germany
- Stop The ACLU
- Talking Points Memo
- The Agitator
- The Corner
- The Glittering Eye
- The Moderate Voice
- The Neolibertarian
- The Next Right
- The Volokh Conspiracy
- This Ain’t Hell
- Townhall Blog
- Two-Four
- United Liberty
- Viking Pundit
- Villainous Company
- Vox Popoli
- WizBang
- Wolves Of Liberty
- Blogometer
- Bureau of Labor Statistics
- Cato Institute
- CIA Factbook
- Congressional Votes
- Economic Freedom Index
- Heritage Foundation
- Libertarian Papers
- Memeorandum
- MEMRI
- NationMaster
- Open Congress
- Real Clear Politics
- Reason Magazine
- Statistical Abstract of the United States
- Tax Facts
- TCS Daily
- White House
- Abortion
- Academia
- Admin
- Afghanistan
- Arts
- Ayn Rand
- Billy Hollis
- Blogging
- Books
- Bruce McQuain
- Bryan Pick
- Business
- capitalism
- Charity
- China
- Congress
- Constitution
- Crime
- Culture
- Dale Franks
- Democrats
- Economics
- Economy
- Education
- Elections
- Energy
- Environment
- Ethics
- Examiner.com
- Farce
- Federal Reserve
- federalism
- Final Thoughts
- Foreign Affairs
- Freedom and Liberty
- Further Reading
- Government
- Guns and Gun Rights
- Health Care
- history
- Hugo Chavez
- Humor
- Immigration
- Iran
- Iraq
- Israel
- Jason Pye
- Judiciary
- Lance Paddock
- Law Of Unintended Consequences
- Legal Affairs
- legislation
- Libertarian
- market
- Media
- Michael Wade
- Military Affairs
- Miscellaneous
- Nanny State
- National Security
- NeoLibertarian
- North Korea
- Obama Administration
- Open Thread
- Personal
- Philosophy
- Photoblogging
- Podcasting
- Policy
- Politics
- Polling
- Project Hero
- propaganda
- QandO TV
- Questions and Observations
- Quote of the day
- Race
- regulation
- Religion
- Republicans
- rights
- Sarcasm
- Scandals
- Science
- SCOTUS
- Security
- spending
- STIHT
- Taxation
- Technology
- Terrorism
- The Left
- Trade
- UN
- Uncategorized
- Venezuela
- War
- Weird
- June 2013
- May 2013
- April 2013
- March 2013
- February 2013
- January 2013
- December 2012
- November 2012
- October 2012
- September 2012
- August 2012
- July 2012
- June 2012
- May 2012
- April 2012
- March 2012
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
Obama’s Navy: Ignorance or intent?
A little more on the abject ignorance Obama displayed concerning the Navy. Â Or was it, instead, the usual attempt to have it both ways? Â You know, talk about how everything is under control while in reality it is spinning out of control? Â Or, as we’ve warned many times, don’t believe a thing the man says, look at what he does.
The Obama administration’s neglect of the Navy can be typified by the early retirement of the USS Enterprise (CVN 65) and its plans to decommission other naval assets. In August of this year, I outlined on NRO why the Enterprise should remain in service, but the Big E is only the most prominent asset slated for premature retirement. The administration also plans to decommission and scrap six Ticonderoga-class cruisers, although the vessels have as many as 15 years of service life left (even without further overhauls). Maintaining freedom of the seas requires hulls in the water — and the Navy hasn’t even started building the replacements for these cruisers. At present, all we have is a design study called CGX, which may or may not enter production.
Got that? Â 6 Ticonderoga-class cruisers being decommissioned, all with at least 15 years service life left. Â These are the cruisers, as mentioned yesterday, which protect those things we have called aircraft carriers.
Here’s another report that makes it clear that the administration’s plan is, in fact, leaving the carrier strike groups even more vulnerable than they are now:
As noted at the Navy-oriented Information Dissemination blog, when the proposed cuts were first outlined in late 2011, the decommissioning plan will take out of service cruisers that can be upgraded with the ballistic missile defense (BMD) package – now a core capability for the Navy – while keeping five cruisers that cannot receive the BMD upgrade.
Emphasis mine. That borders on criminal. Â After bloviating about technology and capability, his plan is to reduce both.
Meanwhile, here’s the stark reality of the situation the Obama administration has created:
His administration, in an effort to cut costs, proposed the retirement of the USS Enterprise (which his allies in Congress passed in 2009) and the six cruisers. Numerous crises are heating up around the world, as recent events show, but there is no indication that Obama has reconsidered these retirement plans. Certainly, it would not be hard to halt the retirements, and extenuating circumstances clearly warrant a supplemental appropriations bill. None of our carriers or submarines — no matter how high-tech they are — are capable of covering the Persian Gulf and South China Sea at the same time, or the Mediterranean Sea and the Korean Peninsula simultaneously.
Or, said a much simpler way, and despite Obama’s ignorant claims, we don’t have enough ships to cover all the contingencies that his failed foreign policy has helped foment. Â Technology still can’t have you in two places at once.
Instead, we have a Commander-in-Chief who apparently thinks those things we call aircraft carriers are like magic unicorns. Â You kind of wave one toward a crisis and everything works out. Â He has no concept of force protection. Â He has no idea how a carrier strike group operates. Â He just knows we have these things called aircraft carriers and they’re apparently magic because, you know, we have this “technology” and we’re much more “capable” than when it was all about horses and bayonets. Â Or something.
Reality?
Yet in 2010, the Navy could only fulfill 53% of the requirements for presence and missions levied by the combatant commanders (e.g., CENTCOM, PACOM). Cutting this Navy will reduce further its ability to fill warfighter requirements.
This guy is dangerous, folks. Â His ignorance is both appalling and frightening.
He needs to go.
~McQ













To the point of being beyond ignorance. One could ALMOST make that argument, were it not for the fact that many other people in the Obami support this insanity.
Â
Soooo…Â We are left with the predicate, “Since this cannot be ignorance on the part of one man, what then explains this policy?”.
I always like to consider that one of his “guy who live in my neighborhood, nudge nudge” mentors co-founded a group that bombed the Pentagon.
Â
Unlike his clueless narcissistic protege, Ayers probably does understand that if the Navy doesn’t have ships, or ships to protect and supply the capital ships, it can’t properly fulfill it’s role or our commitments to our allies.
Â
Â
The WSJ reports today that the Army and Marines now have more bayonets today than in 1916, but not more ships.
To be fair, the Army has never had all that many ships…Â
You are confusing “feature” for “bug”…
And they call this feature Pearl Harbor 2.0
With a Chinese accent
So Peal Halbol?
Pingback: Obama’s Navy: Ignorance or intent? | Liberal Whoppers
The Enterprise, while still a powerful vessel, had serious money ($700 mil or so?) spent on her for 1 more deployment. Insiders have claimed she is sailing with only 4 of her 8 reactors functional. From what I gather she is a maintenance intensive vessel – what ship wouldn’t be after 50+ years of service? Couple that with a complex reactor plant to really make it a challenge.
I would sell the 5 cruisers to, say, Taiwan?
I highly doubt the CX will ever see hulls in the water. Back in the early 2000′s there was plans for a CGX and even GCNX. Problem is you would end up with a ship costing $5 billion each when what the USN appears to need is a large number of smaller combatants. I don’t think the LCS qualifies.
The DD-1000 Zumwalts will be 3 very expensive ships that are essentially technology test beds. I’m not certain that was the best way to go Galhran has had interesting reading on the balsa wood topside deck structure for these vessels.
I dunno. Maybe it’s time to quit trying to cram the absolute latest tech into ships and work with good enough until the costs etc come down. I’m not hopeful about that, either, since military tech costs always seem to go sharply upwards.
Â
http://pjmedia.com/vodkapundit/2012/10/25/sea-stories/
Good points and gooder links…
Ramirez schools Pres. Bumps on “naval intelligence”
http://townhall.com/political-cartoons/2012/10/24/104507
I recall making a model of the USS Enterprise when I was about 14 years old—that was over 50 years ago. It’s about time to move on. Now with the development of rays and kinetic bombardment from outer space (long considered the thing of science fiction), for example a mere pole that can be launched from outer space—attaining a speed of 50,000 mph through the atmosphere, and hitting a target with such great force, causing the destruction of an atomic bomb (without the threat of residual radioactivity).