Author Topic: Navy, Marines Rethinking How to Build Future Fleet with Unmanned, Expeditionary Ships  (Read 157 times)

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Navy, Marines Rethinking How to Build Future Fleet with Unmanned, Expeditionary Ships

By: Megan Eckstein
September 26, 2019 5:38 PM


THE PENTAGON – Though the Navy had already advertised it was updating its desired fleet size and composition, after a 2016 effort pegged the future fleet at 355 ships, the service is now taking an even bigger step: working on an Integrated Naval Force Structure Assessment that also includes emerging unmanned and expeditionary platforms to support new concepts of warfare, according to a memo signed by the chief of naval operations and commandant of the Marine Corps.

The planned force structure assessment (FSA) would examine how many of today’s ships – today’s hull designs, with current or near-term capabilities – the Navy needs to meet operational requirements around the world. However, questions have been swirling for the last year or so about what unmanned surface vessels – into which the Navy is planning to invest significantly in the coming years – will mean for the future force size and composure, as well as what the Marines’ desire to leverage alternate platforms to get more people and gear afloat might mean.

https://news.usni.org/2019/09/26/navy-marines-rethinking-how-to-build-future-fleet-with-unmanned-expeditionary-ships