Author Topic: Experts say Ford delay to cause more deployment flux  (Read 588 times)

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rangerrebew

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Experts say Ford delay to cause more deployment flux
« on: August 13, 2015, 09:40:49 am »

Experts say Ford delay to cause more deployment flux


By David Larter, Staff writer 6:10 p.m. EDT August 12, 2015



New tests for the first-in-class supercarrier are likely to delay the ship's arrival in the fleet, and experts say the delays will lead to less presence overseas or the last-minute ship schedule changes that officials have been trying to avoid.

Pentagon leaders have ordered the Navy to run the carrier Gerald R. Ford through shock tests, where explosives are set off close to the ship to test the soundness of the design. The tests, Navy leaders say, will push the Ford's first deployment back by half a year at least, according to a report in Navy Times' sister publication Defense News.

 
That forces the fleet to operate with 10 flattops even longer, a setup where the slightest setback will force officials to take up unpopular moves like extended  deployments or temporarily lower carrier force levels overseas.

It's just the latest hitch in the implementation of the new deployment scheme that promises sailors more predictable schedules but has suffered repeated setbacks.

Chief Of Naval Operations Adm. Jon Greenert has stated that the Navy is seeking to return to 7-month deployments, calling repeated eight, nine and 10-month deployments unsustainable.

But with 10 carriers, and a standing requirement to have a carrier in the Pacific and one in the Middle East, the Navy has no more room for error, said Bryan Clark, a retired commander and analyst at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments.

"You can just barely provide 2.0 [carrier] presence in PACOM and CENTCOM, and that's with the [forward deployed] carrier in Japan," Clark said. "You can't account for any additional presence, like a three month tour somewhere, there is no time for that. And if somebody breaks or there are maintenance delays in the yards, there is no time for that either."

"You are basically in a heel-to-toe deployment cycle from now to the time that Ford enters the fleet," Clark added.

A day after news of the shock testing emerged, Navy spokesman Lt. Tim Hawkins was unable to elaborate on the delay's ramifications for the fleet but said the service is committed to predictable deployments.

"We were aware of the implications when the decision was made and we're prepared to manage our way through this," Hawkins said. "It is too early to speculate on future force-wide impacts, but we remain committed to implementing the Optimized Fleet Response Plan and scheduling regular deployments that are seven months in length."

Bryan McGrath, a retired destroyer skipper and head of the Ferrybridge Group, agreed, saying that as long as there were 10 carriers, the Navy's options for fulfilling the standing requirements are narrow.

McGrath pointed to the looming carrier shortage in the Middle East — and amid the campaign against the Islamic State militants — as a symptom of the delays in getting the Ford to the front. Navy Times reported in June that the Navy planned to pull its carrier from Central Command in the fall.

"The carrier gap is a fact of life with a 10-carrier Navy, which we essentially are until Ford joins the fleet," he said. "So the longer it takes for the Ford to take its place in the fleet, the more likely we will be to have either gaps in presence and/or extended deployments."

http://www.defensenews.com/
 
« Last Edit: August 13, 2015, 09:41:40 am by rangerrebew »