| LETTERS
LCS Waste
If you've ever wondered why taxpayers are outraged
by government spending, look no further than the Littoral Combat Ship
(LCS) program. LCS is the
Navy's solution to the many new threats our armed forces face in littoral
areas, and as the bombing of the destroyer USS Cole and the mines in
Iraqi waters have shown us, LCS is vital to our defense arsenal.
So, what's the problem? For starters, the LCS
selection process is being loaded up with special-interest goodies based
on political patronage.
Consider this: The state of Mississippi, with a budget deficit of $100
million, provided Northrop Grumman with $50 million in bond proceeds
to modernize its Ingalls shipyard for LCS construction, even though the
contract will not be awarded until 2004.
Even more, Northrop Grumman's proposal is based
on a relatively new and untested composite structure that will "revolutionize the effectiveness
of small ships in littoral warfare." It seems ironic that, just
weeks after they made their proposal, Northrop Grumman received $15 million
to study if their "revolutionary" concept would work as advertised.
If Northrop Grumman's composite proposal is as
superior as they've claimed, why do they need $15 million in taxpayer
money to study its viability?
And why is the budget-strapped state of Mississippi guaranteeing $50
million in bond proceeds to modernize Northrop's shipyard for a contract
that hasn't even been awarded?
Taxpayers should be outraged. America needs the
best defense money can buy, but can't we at least award new programs
on their merits?
Sen. Malcolm Wallop (R-Wyo., retired)
Chairman
Frontiers of Freedom
LCS Draft
There is an interesting aspect concerning the
proposed draft of the intended Littoral Combat Ships (LCSs) in your excellent
article (May 2003), "Navy
Explores Exotic Shapes, Materials for LCS."
A draft of 20 feet for an LCS is excessive. Northern
European light cruisers in World War II had similar drafts. Our Oliver
Hazard Perry-class frigates
have a draft less than this. The Swedish Visby corvette that has been
used as an example for such a craft has a draft of less than 10 feet.
I would hope the Navy would settle on a design that was truly capable
of operating in shallow waters and not a relatively conventional warship
simply called an LCS. I also would like to see the Navy consider choosing
two of the six proposed designs if two of the six were quite similar
in capability but radically different in design. Being relatively low-cost,
such an approach might allow the Navy to evaluate more fully the various
design aspects under sustained operational conditions.
Jack Greene
Los Oses, Calif.
Bainbridge and Constitution
In reading the article concerning the naming of
two new navy ships [Sea Power, February 2003], I could not help but notice
that, in
discussing Commodore William Bainbridge, you never mentioned the
fact that he
was
in command of the USS Constitution when it engaged and defeated
the British ship Java. As a retired teacher of American history as
well
as a Navy
veteran of World War II and member of the Navy League, I always
enjoy reading your publication and am always in awe at the meticulous
reporting
which I find within its covers, but I do believe that you missed
the boat, so to speak, by not having given Commodore Bainbridge
due credit
for having been a commander of what is probably one of the Navy's
better-known vessels of early American history.
George A. Goodwin Jr.
Email
LCS Deja Vu
I noted with great interest the article in the
May 2003 issue about the Navy's rush to develop an LCS fleet. The artist's
concept--shown
on page
15--of Textron Marine and Land's proposed hybrid ship immediately
caught my eye.
Thirty years ago, Rohr Marine, a subsidiary of
Rohr Industries Inc. in Chula Vista, Calif., designed a 2,000-ton high-speed
Surface Effect
Ship
(2KSES), for which $46 million was authorized for research
and design. When the time came to create the prototype,
Congress,
in its infinite
wisdom, cut off the funding, and the craft became just
another ghost on the drawing board. My first glance at the Textron
ship
made me
think it was the Rohr creation, so identical are the lines.
Not long after the demise of the Rohr project,
the Soviet Union launched a similar SES. I do not know if it is still
operational
or not, but
the U.S. Navy missed a golden opportunity to float a
high-speed
multipurpose craft that would have been immensely cheaper
to build than one at
today's prices. Will we never learn, or are we destined
to continue to reinvent
the wheel (or, in this case, the SES)?
Paul B. Kincade
Reno, Nevada
MPF Offload
Your article regarding the MPF offload (May 2003)
failed to mention the personnel who were responsible for the
rapid offload,
including
the full
component of active-duty cargo-handling personnel
(combat stevedores) along with 74 Naval Reservists from Navy
Cargo Handling Battalion
Ten.
The reserve augmentation was in-theater within
eight days of being activated and arrived in-theater standing
hand-in-hand
with the
active-duty component.
This rapid deployment of reserve augmentation allowed
for the
manpower to be in place to conduct these offloads
in the timeline required.
This was a major accomplishment.
The Naval Reservists who responded to this call
to duty are remarkable people. Their patriotism
and
dedication to the
Navy are nothing
like I have ever seen. I am honored that I have
had the
opportunity to
serve as the operations officer for Navy Cargo
Handling Battalion Ten for
the last two years.
Greg Early, Lt., Supply Corps, USNR
Operations Officer
Navy Cargo Handling Battalion Ten |