The Navy: Dead In The Water?

Authored by Brent Ramsey via RealClear Wire,

“Mission:  The United States is a maritime nation, and the U.S. Navy protects America at sea. Alongside our allies and partners, we defend freedom, preserve economic prosperity, and keep the seas open and free. Our nation is engaged in long-term competition. To defend American interests around the globe, the U.S. Navy must remain prepared to execute our timeless role, as directed by Congress and the President.” 

The preceding statement is from the U. S. Navy’s website.

There are many indicators that the Navy is at increasing risk of mission failure.

  1. Missing recruiting goals by thousands for two years in a row, missing its goal for FY 2023 by over 7000 new recruits. The impact of missing recruiting goals is cumulative. Its impact does not subside if in subsequent years deficits are not made up. Lack of manpower adds to the strain of a Navy struggling to meet its national priorities overseas. Failing to recruit enough people to man the Navy is a result of many factors. Since the Afghanistan debacle, the public’s faith in the military has plummeted to new lows. With relatively low unemployment, the competition for young people is high. American youth are less fit, less capable of serving in the military than at any time in our history. Fewer young people want to serve as the political left teaches them to hate our country, academia promotes socialism, and race hustlers malign our country for its supposed racism and white supremacy. Divisive ideologies like Critical Race Theory and Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion are now promoted vigorously up and down the chain of command in the Navy. These ideologies alienate the youth of what for generations was the most fertile recruiting grounds, white, southern, Christian Americans. This demographic is now increasingly averse to serving in our new politically correct Navy of DEI, Pride month, correct pronouns, drag queens, and transgender people. If the Navy cannot recruit now for the existing numbers of ships we have, we have no hope whatsoever of filling out the ranks of a Navy with much higher numbers of ships.
  2. Recently, due to the international wars simultaneously in Ukraine and Israel, and high tension in the Taiwan strait/South China Sea, the U.S. Navy had an almost unprecedented 8 Carriers at sea at the same time. The only three not at sea were unavailable due to long-term maintenance. Normally, the Navy might have three or four carriers at sea at one time. Navy ships and crews continually operating wear out rapidly. Typical deployments last 6 months. The USS Ford has been deployed for 7 months and SECDEF just extended its deployment in the eastern Med for the second time. The longer the deployment the more worn out the crew and the higher rates of equipment failures become. As deployments go on for longer and longer, the size of the crew shrinks due to illness, pregnancy, injury, and suicides. Typically ships returning to home port after a lengthy deployment are missing a substantial number of the deploying crew. This puts much more stress and strain on the remaining crewmen. The international situation with multiple wars demanding our attention simultaneously is eroding our Navy’s readiness at a high rate. When the ships and their crews wear out, there will be no alternative but to return them to port for re-fit and rest for the crews regardless of whatever pressing mission the ship is on. That the Navy does not have enough ships is now obvious to even the most casual observer when multiple hot spots in distant seas occur. When the proverbial stuff hits the fan, the very first question everyone, including the President asks is, “Where is the nearest carrier?”
  3. The Navy’s high suicide rate over a lengthy period demonstrates the leadership’s tragically being unable to ameliorate the problem. The higher the OP tempo, the longer the deployments, the more arduous the maintenance periods are, the more inadequate berthing arrangements are for ships in long term overhaul, aggravate already high stress environments and seemingly make things unbearable for too many of our sailors. The Navy seems content to muddle along with scores of sailors killing themselves year after year and the heart-rending loss of life continuing as an unsolved problem. We Navy folk like to call ourselves warriors and most of us fit the description of selflessly putting ourselves in harm’s way for the benefit of others, for the benefit of our nation. But what does it say about our culture to have so many warriors who end their own lives because somehow our organization does not recognize their despair until it is too late, and they have taken the irreversible step and ended their own life? Considering how extremely selective the Navy is at screening those who volunteer to serve, why do such high numbers of exceptional citizens, with all that the Navy has to offer, choose to end their own lives? Are our leaders so overwhelmed by the work the Navy has them do that they cannot be close enough to their sailors to recognize those who are in extremis in time to help them?
  4. Notable institutional leadership failures in multiple major program areas and multiple high profile operational failures are now far too common. Examples include well documented cases such as the LCS and Zumwalt ship classes, the USS Ford class’s cost overruns, lateness, and multiple of its ship systems not being fully operational (EMALS, ammo elevators, arresting gear, etc.) even years after being in commission. An egregious example of a mammoth leadership failure was the loss of the USS Bonhomme Richard, a multi-billion-dollar capital ship that due to negligence was allowed to burn at the side of a pier, a $3B loss with no replacement. A total of 45 Navy leaders were disciplined due to this one incident. The grounding of the USS Connecticut with this vital attack submarine being out of commission for years for repairs. The USS Gettysburg has been out of commission for over 8 years undergoing modernization. Four of the seven cruisers selected for modernization will instead be de-commissioned after the Navy has spent billions on upgrades. The collisions of the USS McCain and USS Fitzgerald with commercial shipping were failures of leadership that led to the deaths of 17 sailors.
  5. In the 2018 National Defense Authorization Act the Congress established the size of the Navy to be 355 battle force ships. According to the United States Naval Institute as of 6 November 2023 there are currently 291 battle force ships in the Navy. The predictions from the Congressional Research Service are that the size of the Navy will stay relatively the same for the rest of this decade before it slowly starts to increase in size in the 2030’s. In 2022, then CNO Gilday announced that the requirement is actually much higher, in excess of 500 battle force ships. Multiple other experts’ analyses confirm those higher numbers. The PRC’s PLAN is already at 350 combatants and building at a rate at least four times that of the U.S..
  6. In the FY 2023 NDAA there was a provision to establish a Commission to study the Navy and its requirements. The report of the Commission is due to the Congress by July 1, 2024. As of this writing, the commission has not even been formed. The Secretary of the Navy and the CNO should be urgently pressing Congress to get this Commission up and running. Furthermore, the Navy should be proactive in suggesting Navy advocates serve on the Commission or serve on the staff of the Commission. It is vital for the defense of the nation to have the definitive knowledge of what the Navy’s true requirements are in 2023 in the face of multiplying threats all over the world.

Conclusion:  All of these factors outlined above make it clear that our Navy is in extremis. There are not enough ships to do the mission nor enough manpower to man the ships optimally. Deployments are too long, and our people and ships are wearing out. Recruiting is stagnant. Too few ships, not enough people, not enough shipbuilding, or repair capacity have us on the brink of mission failure. To put the size of the Navy in perspective, when this officer went aboard ship in 1970 to conduct anti-submarine patrols looking for Soviet ballistic missile submarines, the Navy had 792 battle force ships in commission. We now have 291. Then we had a cold war against one adversary, the old Soviet Union. Today we have adversaries all over the world and are trying to perform the mission quoted above with a tiny fraction of the ships we had decades ago. As a maritime nation with treaty allies all over the world coupled with our dependence upon the sea for 90% of the commerce that keeps our economy running, it is a travesty that such neglect of the Navy has occurred. Who is at fault for this neglect? Congress is ultimately at fault as it holds the power of the purse. However, it is incumbent upon senior Navy leaders to make the case for the right size Navy. The CNO and every other Navy flag who testifies before Congress should be sounding the alarm about the imminent failure of the Navy to perform its mission now in “peacetime” with multiple hots spots in Europe, the Middle East, and in the Taiwan Strait and South China Sea, and even more importantly in the next actual fighting war. Someone long since should have laid his stars on the table to make the point to politicians that we need more ships and more manpower for the survival of our nation. Our way of life and our very lives are at stake if we do not rebuild our Navy to an adequate size to perform its vital worldwide mission.

CAPT Brent Ramsey, (USN, ret.) is a writer on Defense matters. He has been featured in Washington Examiner, Real Clear Defense, Armed Forces Press, CD Media, American Thinker, and Patriot Post. He is a  Vice President with the Calvert Group, a Board of Advisors member for the Center for Military Readiness and STARRS, and a member of the Military Advisory Group for Congressman Chuck Edwards (NC-11).

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22 Comments
zappalives
zappalives
December 7, 2023 10:39 am

Admiral Levine’s brainchild………..”Operation lusty homo scamps” has been a great success.

Anonymous
Anonymous
December 7, 2023 10:42 am

Good. All it does is rape the world for the NWO. It unequivocally does NOT defend America.

" rape the world for the NWO"?
" rape the world for the NWO"?
  Anonymous
December 7, 2023 3:54 pm

Yeah. But ONLY since the beginning/formation.

Gregabob
Gregabob
December 7, 2023 10:47 am

The U.S. Government has no business ‘patrolling the world’s oceans’. The Navy should be limited to coastline patrols past where the Coast Guard operates–and that’s it.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Gregabob
December 7, 2023 12:09 pm

Smedley Butler, USMC approves this message:
https://ratical.org/ratville/CAH/warisaracket.html

EXCERPT:

Then, incidentally, they announce maneuvers in the Pacific. For defense. Uh, huh.

The Pacific is a great big ocean. We have a tremendous coastline on the Pacific. Will the maneuvers be off the coast, two or three hundred miles? Oh, no. The maneuvers will be two thousand, yes, perhaps even thirty-five hundred miles, off the coast.

The Japanese, a proud people, of course will be pleased beyond expression to see the united States fleet so close to Nippon’s shores. Even as pleased as would be the residents of California were they to dimly discern through the morning mist, the Japanese fleet playing at war games off Los Angeles.

The ships of our navy, it can be seen, should be specifically limited, by law, to within 200 miles of our coastline. Had that been the law in 1898 the Maine would never have gone to Havana Harbor. She never would have been blown up. There would have been no war with Spain with its attendant loss of life. Two hundred miles is ample, in the opinion of experts, for defense purposes. Our nation cannot start an offensive war if its ships can’t go further than 200 miles from the coastline. Planes might be permitted to go as far as 500 miles from the coast for purposes of reconnaissance. And the army should never leave the territorial limits of our nation.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
December 7, 2023 3:29 pm

I would imagine it is an indirect ‘show of force’ for Japan. Japan has been restricted to vassal status of the US Corporation since WW2 and Japan has now had enough of it. Japan is a creditor nation and they are maneuvering to come out of this fiasco, that the west built, as an independent nation once again. The Fed is trying to force the JCB to go negative again to prevent cash outflows from Europe and the US that will surely send shockwaves through markets (hence why Powell just threatened a hike).

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
December 7, 2023 5:27 pm

The above statement is from 1935 (or somewhat earlier).

TwatWaffle
TwatWaffle
December 7, 2023 10:59 am

Trying to be the world’s policeman and instigating wars will wear down any military force; especially when run by special ed people. Fighting the last war certainly doesn’t help (re: aircraft carriers), while at the same time enriching the MIC by procuring worthless equipment.

Until 'Space Force' takes over, SMOOTH passage
Until 'Space Force' takes over, SMOOTH passage
December 7, 2023 11:09 am

“The replenishment oiler USNS Harvey Milk slid down the shipyard ways after a bottle of champagne was smashed on the bow by former Navy officer Paula M. Neira, clinical program director for the John Hopkins Center for Transgender Health.

https://www.militarytimes.com/news/your-navy/2021/11/07/navy-launches-ship-named-for-gay-rights-leader-harvey-milk/

morongobill
morongobill

Kind of hard to slide down with the giant butt plug still in place.

Jdog
Jdog
December 7, 2023 11:50 am

The problems with the Navy are the same problem with the entire military, which is the systematic corruption of the entire system. The purpose of the MIC is not to make weapons, it is to steal money. It is a system of stealing trillions of dollars of taxpayer money by bribing Congress and the Military and producing low numbers of over complicated systems that are not suitable for real war against real advisories.
At this point, even if they wanted to modify the MIC to actually do what it is supposed to do, it would be nearly impossible, because the entire system is built for doing something else.
Corruption, once established, is impossible to change. The only way to correct it is to abolish the entire system and rebuild it from scratch.

WTF
WTF
  Jdog
December 7, 2023 9:03 pm

Down voted by a complete retard.

Mountain Rat
Mountain Rat
December 7, 2023 12:01 pm

This is just laying the ground work to let illegals serve in the military. They programing to normalize this idea in american minds has begun.

pyrrhus
pyrrhus
  Mountain Rat
December 7, 2023 2:52 pm

That will be a truly great spectacle…The Chinese won’t have to worry after that…80 IQ men who don’t speak english running billion dollar ships…

Joe Risk
Joe Risk
  pyrrhus
December 8, 2023 3:04 am

You encapsulate it perfectly

GNL
GNL
December 7, 2023 1:49 pm

“As deployments go on for longer and longer, the size of the crew shrinks due to illness, pregnancy, injury, and suicides.”

Pregnancy…hahahaha

Suicides…you mean jabbicides?

pyrrhus
pyrrhus
December 7, 2023 2:49 pm

So is there any bad news about the Navy? This is the military that illegally forced members to take the deathjab or quit, that promotes women and minorities over competent whites, and that has had one accident after another as a consequence…Sailers should get out, not kill themselves…but good luck recruiting white men.

Fatman from Oz
Fatman from Oz
December 7, 2023 5:21 pm

When you see your father, brothers, uncles, your friends’ fathers and others who you grew up with, get treated like DRIED DOGSHIT when they return home, by the DVA and other fuck-knuckle scrooge bureaucracies, it tends to set in motion a train of thought about the myriad of reasons to NEVER enlist.

WTF
WTF
December 7, 2023 9:00 pm

“Where is the nearest carrier?”
You mean where is the nearest target for a hypersonic missile? The navy is a joke.

Gaping sphincter
Gaping sphincter
December 7, 2023 10:29 pm

Be all you can be village people.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
December 8, 2023 4:26 pm

I guess it AIN’T so fun at the YMCA after all.

Anonymous
Anonymous
December 10, 2023 9:19 pm

“In the GAYVY, you can sail the semen seas…”