Author Topic: Our Navy is Broken, and That is a Bad Thing  (Read 344 times)

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rangerrebew

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Our Navy is Broken, and That is a Bad Thing
« on: September 01, 2017, 08:48:15 am »
 Our Navy is Broken, and That is a Bad Thing


August 30, 2017



The fleet’s problems stem from decades of flat acquisition budgets and declining ship numbers.

The recent string of ship collisions in the western Pacific is a clarion call to the American nation that its Navy is on the brink of combat ineffectiveness. This dismal condition is the result of a long string of irresponsible budgetary actions and strategic mistakes on the part of the nation’s leaders. While it is true that the string of mishaps has, thus far, been limited to one region of the world, the underlying contributing factors of a steady demand for 85-100 deployed ships, a shrinking fleet, and shorter and inadequately resourced maintenance and training periods are eroding the fleet’s effectiveness everywhere. The unique stresses of the western Pacific simply present the ships operating there as the canaries in the proverbial coal mine.

http://www.defenseone.com/ideas/2017/08/our-navy-broken-and-bad-thing/140636/?oref=d-skybox

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Re: Our Navy is Broken, and That is a Bad Thing
« Reply #1 on: September 01, 2017, 08:56:44 am »
I wouldn't want to be on any ship other that perhaps a nuclear powered submarine in an actual full scale war with a modern enemy. Aircraft carriers and the like have to be sitting targets that can't be truly protected.