Battleship misinformation
Since 07-14-05
From: Waspscpo@aol.com [mailto:Waspscpo@aol.com]
Sent: Thursday, July 14, 2005 5:56 AM
To: undisclosed-recipients
Subject: Battleship misinformation
http://www.washtimes.com/op-ed/20050713-085131-2040r.htm
Battleship misinformation
By Dennis Reilly
OP-ED Washington Times,
July 14, 2005
James Zumwalt's July 7 Commentary "Dread not the DD(X)" could not have been more
aptly named. As was stated in my June 21 Op-Ed, "Battling for battleships," the
Navy's misguided effort to develop the DD(X) is effectively dead. Our purpose
here is to correct misstatements regarding the battleship, presumably obtained
from the Navy.
Mr. Zumwalt appears unaware that his famed father was a proponent, not an
opponent, of battleship reactivation during his tenure.
Contrary to the Zumwalt article, Rear Adm. Charles Hamilton did not provide "an
honest ... assessment of the DD(X) versus the battleship," as is clear from
James O'Bryon's June 17 Op-Ed, "Distortions about ships." A document, now under
review by the Government Accountability Office (www.usnfsa.org), presents a
side-by-side comparison of official Navy claims with detailed rebuttal by U.S.
Naval Fire Support Association.
The article implies that the battleship would be vulnerable. The latest Rolling
Airframe Missiles provide competent anti-air/anti-missile protection to our
carriers, and even destroyers. Modernization of the battleships would surely
include this protection. The battleship's deck and turret armor, not just the
belt, as claimed in the article, were designed to and proven to take hits.
Should a weapon get through, no other ship would have a greater chance of
remaining operational.
But, one has to ask why, in a high-threat environment, would not a battleship,
like a carrier, be entitled to its own battlegroup with overlapping protections
against threats from above and below the sea surface. After all, within the
range of its guided projectiles (near-term 52 miles, midterm 115 miles,
long-term 450 to 600 miles) the battleship has firepower comparable to that of a
carrier. But unlike the carrier, the battleship's firepower is all-weather with
tactical response times. Because its projectiles are immune to anti-aircraft
defenses, the Hanoi Hilton problem disappears.
The Navy has failed in its attempt to discredit the battleship's firepower
potential, so it has turned its attention to the cost and availability of
manpower. The rational way to discuss costs of any weapons system is in terms of
costs per unit of firepower.
It would take 19 DD(X)s to put the same number of pounds on target per minute
(at the Marine Corps' near-term goal of 52 miles range) as can a single
battleship. The 1,100-man battleship crew with a $1.5 billion modernization and
reactivation cost will be doing the work of the 1,900 men manning 19 DD(X)s
costing a whopping total of $32 billion to build (at the unrealizable
congressionally mandated $1.7 billion per copy).
Would not the $30 billion savings pay for crew training and reconstitution of
the spare parts, ammunition, and support infrastructure trashed by the Navy,
with some of this in clear violation of the law, (PL104-106)?
The battleship's boilers are fired by "diesel fuel marine," not oil, as stated
in the Commentary article. It uses the same power plant and the same fuel as the
AOE-1 fast supply ships that support our carriers today. Presumably, AOE-1 ships
will be replaced by the gas-turbine-powered T-AOE(X). There is wonderful synergy
going on here. This would free up a considerable pool of sailors who would be
quite familiar with the battleship's propulsion system, answering another
manpower issue cited by the Navy.