The Navy We Need

Shuger, Scott

The Navy We Need by Scott Shuger The current political and economic climate dictates that something like $300 billion worth of military programs will have to be canceled during the new...

...It seems that the Navy quietly admitted as much when some years ago it pretty much dropped carriers from our first-line nuclear war plans...
...The Navy wants to continue purchasing the carrier-based F/A-18 strike fighter, for a total of more than 1,000...
...Money well spent Let's turn now to submarines...
...civilian and military authorities preemptively they would suffer the response of a basically unlocatable fleet of autonomous sub commanders who would attack their targets as soon as they stopped hearing from home...
...The five aircraft that jam enemy radar and the five planes we use to provide our own radar are likewise impotent...
...If the F-14 carries all or mostly Phoenix missiles for its mission of shooting down bombers or the antiship cruise missiles they carry—it can carry up to six of these huge things—it must sacrifice all or some of its short- and mediumrange missiles, and also lose a good deal of its maneuverability...
...The present development of the Ohioclass sub and its D5 ballistic missile incorporates several principal changes over earlier systems: increased missile range (from 4,500 to 6,000 nautical miles), increased missile accuracy (from being able to hit a city to being able to hit a missile silo), increased missiles per sub (up from 16 on the Poseidon missile boats to 24 on the Ohio-class), and increased warheads per missile (from eight to ten, with the built-in possibility of going up to 14...
...It used to be that a carrier's fighter complement—the Hellcats, the Corsairs, the Panthers, the Phantoms—could sling bombs and rockets underneath...
...If we are going to spend more money for fighters based on carriers, we should go to something with the air-to-air capability of the F-14, which is due largely to the superb heat-seeking Sidewinder...
...If you make sub-launched missiles accurate enough to hit nuclear weapons sites, rather than accurate enough just to hit sprawling population centers, the enemy becomes jittery...
...Many of the items on the Navy's budget request aren't what we need for any of these scenarios...
...Thus these two most recent U.S...
...This even happens to squadrons already at sea...
...Submarine commanders know that no matter how stealthy their boats are in general, once they launch at least one missile they will be much easier to find...
...So powerful is the mystique of carriers that senior Navy officials admit that in wartime they'd really want not the 15 carriers their request is based on but 20 to 24...
...Probably" because, happily, our work remained in the realm of simulation, as all such exercises do...
...There are two kinds of ships," say the sub guys, "submarines and targets...
...But suppose we are in the Pacific, where Soviet missiles pose an enormous threat to our carriers...
...See "Dress Blues and Bleeding Mohawks," Scott Shuger, October 1983.] As a bomber, it's a big step backwards because it carries fewer bombs than the A-7 and can only carry them about half as far...
...The Soviets evidently believe that in a crisis, where only a limited bit of hell is breaking loose, one piece at a time—and where the theater of operations is bereft of hostile submarines—carriers can provide military power and a visually striking symbol of national presence, without depending on foreign basing arrangements...
...First, it follows that no matter how sophisticated and expensive, submarines are quite generally not high value units—we can afford to use them because we aren't as likely to lose them...
...Here is another instance where the Navy "modern ized" and lost punch...
...The manufacturer of the A-7, LTV, has put forward several programs to upgrade its engine, electronics, maneuverability, and survivability at about one-third the cost of an F/A-18...
...If these weapons are worthwhile—and the evidence is that the Russians respect them tremendously—then they should be put where they'll do the most good...
...There are crucial scenarios in which having friends with diesels won't do us much good...
...And of all the services, the Navy is the most likely to be deeply cut...
...Putting a weapon on a submarine enhances its stabilizing features more than putting it on anything else...
...Among the items the Navy is plumping for: ID- Two more Nimitz-class nuclear supercarriers, for a total of eight vessels of that class, bringing fleet strength to 15 flattops, up from 12 in 1981...
...Shortening all scheduled carrier flights to accommodate the F/A-18's poorer endurance restricts the range of the entire airwing...
...In addition, no naval aircraft has electronics immune to the debilitating electromagnetic pulse produced by nuclear explosions...
...And many of the weapons that we do need are either inadequately funded or missing from the budget entirely...
...Phoenix and Midway What about the planes that the Navy is requesting, those F/A-18s and F-14s...
...While this might work in a world with honest contractors and no interservice rivalries, it's likely that, in this world, any such ship will end up being a high value unit anyway...
...So they are inclined to fire all their missiles if they are inclined to fire any...
...Money spent on submarines is as well spent as money gets at the Pentagon...
...Attention should also be drawn to a curious feature of the Navy's current attempts to improve the wartime survivability of its ballistic missile submarine command, control, and communications (C3...
...Invariably, the flying distance required complicated refueling plans, and, in order to conserve fuel, these bomber routes would be at very high and hence very detectable altitudes...
...Having most of our strategic warheads on virtually impossible-to-find submarines is quite stabilizing—since the Soviets don't know where they are, they're less likely to launch against them...
...While it is quite generally true that in the U.S...
...As a response to this problem, we should consider the British navy's approach—maintaining two different classes of submarine officer, a general officer specializing in tactics and operations, and an engineering officer specializing in power plants...
...Limited uses of U.S...
...carrier airwings hardly altered the war's outcome—but did produce scores of POWs...
...In the Falklands, the British had these planes flying airdefense and ground-support missions, as well as helicopters providing antisubmarine protection and search-and-rescue missions...
...This reference to the Soviets is the worst kind of fallacy—like saying that because the Nazis introduced jets and rockets, we shouldn't have them...
...Strap on a small gun, some cruise and antiair missiles and you have something that in reasonable numbers can cause some real trouble...
...As for new surface ships, while there's still room in a modern navy for them, I don't think there's much for the likes of the Ticonderoga-class and Burke-class Aegis radar ships...
...But this doesn't mean that all of the proposed sub programs should be sacrosanct...
...I'd much rather have "less capable" carriers with more readiness...
...The Soviets maintain missile sub patrols off both our coasts, and we can't expect Britain to help us patrol them...
...Guerrillas and redcoats In effect then, the Ohio-class submarine and supporting programs aren't adding to stability...
...Just ask the U.S...
...But since most of a carrier battle group's elements aren't nuclearpowered, what good is this...
...And unlike the A-7, it is twin-engined—making it more survivable and thus better for long operations over open oceans...
...The closeness of Russian "boomers" to our shores positions them to fire first-strike salvos with only a fraction of the warning time we'd get on their ICBMs...
...To understand which weapons belong on the Navy's shopping list and which ones don't, you have to understand the scenarios the Navy is likely to encounter...
...Navy has only four diesel subs, none of them state-of-the-art combat vessels...
...On the best estimates available, the Soviets have at least 350-400 antiship cruise missiles launchable from the bombers of their Pacific fleet alone...
...See "The Sinking of a Supercarrier," Joseph Enright and James Ryan, May 1987.] In Vietnam, despite operating in an environment free of submarines and, for the most part, free of fighter aircraft, U.S...
...Since stationing tanker airplanes along flight routes would be enormously difficult during battle, many of these sorties would wind up being one-way missions—recovering on land or ditching in the sea after bomb delivery...
...carriers have had for a generation...
...The real solution was showcased in the Falklands war—the only comprehensive naval action since World War II...
...These are the fighter-style features that make it fun to fly, but the shortcomings of the F/A-18 have been clear for some time...
...The simple fact, of course, is that submarines are much, much harder to detect than surface ships...
...Also, conventionally powered subs require fewer men, and their crews don't have to undergo as much timeconsuming and expensive physics and engineering training...
...Over the past eight years, it is the only service that has actually grown...
...front-line nuclear attack sub, the Los Angeles-class—it has upgraded sonar, more torpedo tubes, and is equipped for under-ice operations—if we eliminated the Seawolf or cut back on it, we could build many more diesel/electrics, since they cost only about one-fourth as much...
...And we would be better off without the impractical weight and expense of the Phoenix missile...
...Moreover, the Navy's proposals for new programs—those not already underway— total around $80 billion...
...The Navy wants 26 Burke-class guided-missile destroyers to go with the three already under construction and the 27 larger, Ticonderoga-class guided-missile cruisers already funded...
...In other words, as an offensive threat, a navy supercarrier is only about 44 percent efficient...
...Gas money Despite these drawbacks, there remains some evidence that carriers can be useful in limited, tactical fighting...
...At the center of the British naval force were two small, straight-deck carriers supporting Harrier vertical/short-take-off-and-landing (VSTOL) jets, which don't require a catapult because they take off almost as vertically as helicopters...
...And fourth, and perhaps most relevant to any discussion of the budget, the Phoenix missile is so expensive—costing $1 million apiece— that carrier airwings don't carry enough of them to outfit each of their F-14s with six...
...The Navy also wants money to complete the Ohio-class nuclear-powered submarines with their long-range Trident D5 missiles, for a total of 16-20 boats of that class...
...So in all-out and anti-Soviet scenarios, supercarriers look to be a one-shot deal...
...Ditto for the ten antisubmarine planes and the eight antisubmarine/search-and-rescue helicopters...
...Nor is it the best device for shooting down planes—another plane is...
...Second, one of those carriers deployed in the Pacific Fleet is likely to be the Midway, which, due to its smaller flight-deck and hangar, doesn't have any F-14s...
...Unlike the Libyans, the Soviets won't settle for even odds...
...There are some features of the situation that make it hard to accept even this optimistic an outcome...
...Even supposing round-trip missions could be pulled off, the carrier may well be located and sunk any time after the raid launches, because, while carriers have a hard time hiding from the Soviets under the best of circumstances, they become much more detectable once planes start operating...
...Amazingly, it's not uncommon for navy squadrons to cut back their flight hours drastically or even to be grounded due to the scarcity of aviation fuel near the end of a fiscal quarter...
...The Navy wants up to 30 SeawolfScott Shuger is writing a book on the Navy class attack submarines—subs designed to sink other subs—producing a fleet of 100 nuclear-powered attack subs...
...Here is a sobering example where technological changes have been adopted not because they further military goals but simply because the technology exists...
...Indeed, the Soviets seem to recognize this...
...The Soviets have more than 500 of them...
...we'll need to be ready to fight in limited, "tactical" engagements...
...So even if inland targets get hit, you might still lose the subsequent use of an entire airwing...
...No one knows for sure what would really happen...
...The argument in favor of this kind of propulsion is that it can go 13 years between refuelings...
...Scott Shuger, October 1988] That's because the Navy is loath to deploy carriers to bodies of water it considers too small—where it fears they can become trapped...
...11.- Don't forget the planes...
...But increasing the accuracy of a missile actually harms stability...
...Third, it's more than a little reasonable to expect that in any such scenario the Soviets will also be shooting at our carriers with sub-launched and surface-launched antiship missiles, not just those from bombers...
...We currently depend on the diesel subs of our allies to perform the missions diesels do best...
...We must build to this advantage, not trade it away for cheaper, smaller, less capable ships and aircraft arid weapons built in greater numbers, which is the forte of a totalitarian, centralized, Gosplan economy...
...Were the Navy to switch over to a VSTOL/helo small carrier force, it wouldn't need more F/A-18s and F-14s...
...No, that accolade goes to diesel/electric boats running on batteries...
...Let's say that any feature of a weapon system that tends to discourage potential adversaries from starting a war or escalating one already in progress is "stabilizing" and that any feature that would encourage them to do so is "destabilizing...
...Now these conventional designs don't have the operating range that nukes have and hence would be suited only for roles where range doesn't matter—say, a patrol off Norfolk or a minelaying operation in the Dardanelles Straits near the Black Sea...
...But we should probably cancel the Sparrow missile, which imposes maneuvering restrictions on the aircraft launching it and which is vulnerable to countermaneuvers and electronic countermeasures...
...The first was finished in 1985, but it's still not deployed...
...It has the longest-range fighter weapon—the Phoenix missile...
...The Soviets' development of a worldwide reconnaissance system, cruise missiles, and a substantial ocean-going, blue-water navy has largely negated any pre-existing American edge...
...With its airplanes, a Nimitz-class carrier costs at least $5 billion...
...And if a submarine is simpler to operate, crew members can concentrate more on tactics...
...That means it's not unlikely that a few air-launched cruise missiles will score nuclear hits on carriers in such an all-out scenario even if every navy F-14 pilot has a perfect day...
...Given the resultant gains in strategic stability, independence from our allies, and tactical crew talent, this seems like a good trade...
...While the number of Army divisions has remained the same and the number of planes in the Air Force's tactical wings has actually shrunk, the Navy's fleet has swelled by more than 100 ships to 587, and its senior enlisted ranks have almost doubled since 1981...
...And a surface ship is not the best antisubmarine platform—another submarine is...
...And increasing the number of warheads per sub is also problematic...
...The Vincennes, a Ticonderoga-class ship, and the Stark already showed that...
...A prominent proposal to make naval airpower more practical and cost-effective has been the midsize or "Gary Hart" carrier—a conventionally powered smaller carrier...
...The F-14 that the Navy wants more of is a formidable aircraft...
...Furthermore, the plane is advertised as being preeminent in air-to-air combat against other planes and in defending a ship against cruise missiles or bombers—but it's very difficult to carry out both missions simultaneously...
...At a shipyard on the Black Sea, they are now completing their second medium-sized, U.S.-style aircraft carrier...
...And the planes on board a carrier guzzle fuel at about the same rate...
...This success was due, at least in part, to the absence of a credible Argentine submarine threat...
...As far as the strategic nuclear environment goes, it is hard to see their advantage...
...This fact makes such preemptive strikes less attractive to them...
...Spit and shoestring Although the Seawolf does represent some advances over the current U.S...
...It's long been suspected that the Navy's nearly all-nuke sub force is very strong on running submarines but not as strong as it should be on fighting with them...
...For all their gee-whiz equipment, they won't really be capable of acting independently without air cover...
...Its variable geometry wing gives it an unrivaled combination of performance and "station time," the ability to stay aloft for long periods...
...Smaller ships...
...While it's impossible to know just what our military needs will be next year, let alone 5, 10, 15 years from now, we can be certain that we'll need conventional weapons and nuclear weapons to keep the peace with the Soviets...
...A gassed-up VW beats a bone-dry Corvette off the line every time...
...Outfitting the F/A-18 with external fuel tanks hampers its bomb capacity and hinders its much-vaunted maneuverability...
...This isn't nearly as exciting as buying a new plane, but it makes more sense...
...World War II's largest aircraft carrier, Japan's Shinano, had been in service for only ten days when it was sunk by four torpedo hits from a single American submarine...
...The Navy We Need by Scott Shuger The current political and economic climate dictates that something like $300 billion worth of military programs will have to be canceled during the new administration...
...military, combat C3 has been horribly neglected and stands in need of great repair, here is a case where the neglect is stabilizing...
...The Navy has tried to solve the problem, but there's no quick fix...
...This is probably an area where the Navy should spend heavily, although in a somewhat different fashion than is currently being suggested...
...Of these features, only the first—increased missile range—is stabilizing...
...The U.S...
...As long as C3 with our missile subs remains at the spit-and-shoestring level, the Soviets know that if they were to decapitate the U.S...
...Instead, they carry air-to-air weapons designed to stave off fighters and bombers that might attack the carrier...
...Much of the huge expense of a Nimitz-class carrier stems from the cost of its nuclear power plants...
...On the other hand, it is possible to build surface ships that are more like guerrillas and less like redcoats—wellarmed, high-speed, highly maneuverable, small craft...
...Navy has a crappier small-boat fleet than your average Colombian drug dealer...
...carrier pilots who tried, without much luck, to sink Vietnamese and Cambodian gunboats...
...I've seen enough photos of American carriers through periscope crosshairs—most sub crew offices feature one—to become a believer...
...In light of the raft of technotroubles bedeviling the Navy that Lehman bought us, we need to think much more carefully about the Navy his successors want to buy us next...
...That leaves only 38 planes—A-6, A-7, and F/A-18 bombers—for enemy ships and installations to worry about...
...When we practiced long-range strikes against non-Soviet targets, we ran into the same kinds of problems...
...Yet the carrier mystique belies considerable historical shortcomings...
...Most of the navies of the world have good stocks of these craft...
...These new vessels have catapults for launching heavy aircraft, arresting-gear for landing them, and angled decks that allow carriers to launch and land aircraft at the same time— features U.S...
...We have seven...
...This includes the obsolescent and obsolete planes they keep operational...
...In other words, firepower put on a submarine is more efficient than that put on anything else...
...A one-shot deal Consider that first item: two more big nuclear aircraft carriers...
...Once again the Falklands war is instructive—of the 29 surface ships in the British task force, five were sunk and seven others were damaged—a casualty rate of 41 percent...
...Navy already has 12 similar VSTOL/helo carriers (and is hoping to build two more), but because naval planners are so enthralled/paralyzed by big carriers and the kind of aircraft that needs a big flight deck, it limits them to the very ancillary role of supporting marine amphibious assaults...
...The best response to this would be to fill the waters close to our shores with super-quiet diesel/electric boats, watching for the slightest indication of launch by those Russian subs...
...One reason for the calamities aboard the Stark (hit by an Iraqi plane) and the Vincennes (which accidentally downed an Iranian 747) was that they found themselves operating in the Persian Gulf without any air support from a carrier...
...For instance, although nuclear power makes much more sense for subs than surface ships—since they operate pretty independently, they aren't hampered by a conventionally powered entourage—and although nuke-powered subs are getting quieter all the time, they still aren't the quietest subs...
...Since it's politically infeasible nowadays to call any ships "Gary Hart" carriers, perhaps we can think of these as "Donna Rice" carriers—capable of causing some trouble and unimportant enough to be used...
...It also wants to buy a new version of the carrier-based F-14 fighter, and to fund improvements for the older models already in the inventory, for a total of nearly 600...
...Naval aviators proudly think of the 86-plane airwing as the carrier's "main battery," but much of that air strength has gone over to defending the carrier...
...There are two important corollaries of the submarine's stealth...
...The second consequence is of particular importance for strategic scenarios...
...Despite all the antisubmarine warfare (ASW) equipment that carrier groups take with them to sea, in my own experience most exercises against subs ended up with my carrier getting a green flare at close quarters, the standard simulation for a successful torpedo or cruise missile attack...
...Despite the fact that one-on-one the F-14 can probably beat any fighter in the world (with the possible exception of the U.S...
...If he knows you have lots of virtually impossible-to-find weapons targeted at the bulk of his nuclear arsenal,Ilten (especially in a crisis) his fear of losing it altogether tempts him to launch his nuclear weapons first...
...But even if big-deck carriers are retained, there are grounds for concern about the particular aircraft the Navy wants...
...Because of the difficulties facing them, our carriers have come to resemble this punch line...
...Subs anyone...
...But the importance of those missions is a good reason to build non-nuke subs...
...The old joke is that the reason you build aircraft carriers is so you can put planes on them to keep them from getting sunk...
...This is dangerously destabilizing...
...See "Why Did the Navy Shoot Down 290 Civilians...
...If your subs can hit the enemy's targets from farther away, there is more ocean for the subs to hide in...
...It has an advanced "heads-up" cockpit design, where the gauges are displayed as part of the windshield...
...Subjecting more warheads to this logic heightens the rate at which a nuclear war would accelerate...
...and we should have the capacity to fight "strategic" battles on a global scale...
...Right now, the U.S...
...During my own service as a naval officer in the late seventies and early eighties I participated in some exercises where, in theory at least, my carrier battle group arrived undetected at a point in the ocean from which it could launch raids against Soviet targets...
...The results were impressive: Harriers destroyed 26 Argentine aircraft in exchange for only two losses due to enemy action, and their cluster-bombs and rockets helped crumble opposing army units...
...There is no reason why the U.S...
...In his just-published book on his years as Reagan's secretary of the Navy, John Lehman defends his opposition to what he describes as the "whole trendy cchnnl of military reform . . . [built] around the ideas that complexity and technology were bad and that simplicity and cheapness were good ." He argues: "The tremendous American edge in technology is an inherent advantage provided by our culture and our economic system...
...This is like having a couch so expensive, everyone is afraid to sit on it...
...It's foolish to rely on the British, German, and Italian navies for our security...
...Further suppose that all 60 of the F-14s are "mission capable" and each is fully loaded with six Phoenix missiles...
...We could get back to pure strategic strength if we opted for a submarine force with the following features: long-range missiles, the longer the better, but with decreased accuracy, fewer warheads per submarine, but more missile-bearing submarines...
...Or the navy investigators who found that the Vincennes's troubles with Iranian gunboats contributed to its miscalculations about the Airbus...
...Because the chief strategic value of submarines is that they enhance whatever stabilizing features a weapon has, we need to think more carefully about strategic subs...
...But there are still big problems...
...Amazingly, it could probably build eight or ten more of them for the price of the two proposed nuclear big-decks...
...Such a simplified airwing—far simpler than that which would operate from a "Gary Hart" carrier—can still perform a wide variety of operations...
...It has a better radar...
...All the escorts—the battleships, the cruisers, the destroyers, the frigates— must refuel every week or so...
...Several times during my carrier service we had to drop anchor and wait for more fuel money...
...Navy plenty of usable Falklands-style power for limited battles using conventional weapons without wasting assets on big, strategic nuclear scenarios against the Soviets in which naval air power no longer makes much sense...
...These instances of vulnerability and inefficiency suggest that the Nimitz-class big-deck carriers the Navy wants won't be useful in many of the scenarios it must plan for...
...naval disasters clearly illustrate what we might call the paradox of the "high value unit": if a weapon is considered too valuable to lose, it is often considered too valuable to use...
...First, I have never witnessed or heard of an F-14 squadron with all its planes "up" at once...
...But we probably never did get close enough to pull off an airstrike that would truly work...
...carriers in Grenada and Lebanon, and the use of an Argentine carrier in the Falklands, were likewise ineffectual...
...Air Force F-15 and F-16), it's hard to see how that's relevant to combat against the Soviets, whose fighter planes outnumber ours somewhere between six and seven to one...
...The upshot is that the enemy is that much less encouraged to try a first strike, since retaliation is ensured...
...It's true, the F/A-18 is faster and more maneuverable than the A-7 bomber it is replacing...
...But there are factors that impugn the need for bigdeck, nuclear-powered carriers like the Nimitz-class...
...But the 20 F-14 fighters onboard today's carriers carry no air-to-surface weapons (save for an extremely short-range gun...
...This drains capital from training, testing, parts, and maintenance...
...That's one reason why the Navy's recent trend of putting Harpoon and Tomahawk cruise missiles on attack submarines is a good move...
...It has the best fighter radar there is (because of its long-range detection, Iranians successfully used it as an early warning plane...
...The resultant force of 20 small carriers would give the U.S...
...In most scenarios, these fancy ships will fall prey to all the (far cheaper) cruise missiles and torpedoes out there...
...And suppose that we have three carriers deployed there...

Vol. 21 • March 1989 • No. 2


 
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