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Old 04-27-2006, 11:14   #1 (permalink)
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Default Littoral Combat Ships

NEWS RELEASES from the United States Department of Defense

No. 362-06 IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Apr 27, 2006 Media Contact: (703)697-5131
Public/Industry(703)428-0711

Navy to Base First Four Littoral Combat Ships in San Diego

The Navy announced today that the first four Littoral Combat Ships
(LCS) will be homeported at Naval Station San Diego, Calif.

Key in the success of implementing these new concepts is the
ability to collocate these ships to achieve readiness alignment and
economy of scale. This collocation is especially important for the first ships in the class as waterfront facilities, infrastructure, training and
maintenance efficiencies are developed. San Diego was chosen as the initial homeport because of the Navy's increased emphasis on the Pacific theater based on the Quadrennial Defense Review.

"Homeporting the first four ships in San Diego will enable us to establish synergy between the ships and with local commands," said Vice Adm.
Terry Etnyre, commander, Naval Surface Forces, based in Coronado,
Calif. "With the Undersea Warfare Command here in San Diego and the Mine Warfare Command moving here soon, the undersea warfare and mine warfare mission packages will have direct coordination and representation locally."

LCS will carry some core capabilities, such as self-defense and command and control; but its true war-fighting capability will come from its
innovative and tailored mission modules. These ships will be configured for
one mission package at a time, consisting of modules, manned aircraft,
unmanned vehicles, off-board sensors, and mission-manning detachments. This will operate within open-systems architecture giving it the capability to reconfigure mission modules and ship systems to tailor it for specific warfighting missions.

The Littoral Combat Ships are the first Navy vessels to separate capability from hull form and provide a robust, affordable, mission-focused warship designed to provide assured access for our joint forces. LCS will have the size, speed, endurance, and connectivity to deploy as a member of carrier strike groups, expeditionary strike groups or surface strike groups.

The innovative concepts in LCS do not end with its modularity. LCS will operate with a quarter of the crew normally assigned to ships this size through a combination of technology and process improvements for
maintenance, logistics, training and administration.

The keel for the first Littoral Combat Ship, to be named USS Freedom (LCS 1), was laid on June 3, 2005 and the second, to be named USS Independence (LCS 2), on Jan. 19, 2006.

For more information on the Littoral Combat Ship, visit the LCS
website at http://peoships.crane.navy.mil/lcs/default.htm
[http://peoships.crane.navy.mil/lcs/default.htm] or contact the Navy
news desk
at (703) 697-5342.
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Old 06-12-2006, 14:48   #2 (permalink)
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Default Re: Littoral Combat Ships

A new story on the LCS. This looks like a great concept.

Navy developing smaller, faster warships
By DAVID SHARP, Associated Press WriterSun Jun 11, 9:39 PM ET


Sailor, these are not your father's warships.
The first of a new breed of Navy ship — faster and easier to maneuver — is expected to launch later this year to meet threats including modern-day pirates and terrorists who turn speedboats into suicide weapons.
The Littoral Combat Ship is powered by steerable waterjets, so it doesn't need propellers or rudders. It's designed to go more than 50 mph; traditional destroyers have had the same top speed — about 35 mph — since World War II.
The LCS has a shallow draft and its waterjets let the ship zoom close to shore without getting stuck and to turn on a dime, allowing it to chase smaller boats. The name itself is taken from the coastal "littoral" waters in which the ship will operate.
The LCS will be more lightly armored than bigger ships, but its speed will give it a tactical advantage in combat, said Rear Adm. Charles Hamilton, program executive officer for ships, who's overseeing the project from Washington.
The Navy envisions several of the ships working together on missions using unmanned vehicles, helicopters and other weapons, he said. An LCS will have a core crew of only 40 sailors, and berthing for up to 75, compared to 330 sailors aboard a destroyer.
The new warship was conceived six years ago and fast-tracked after the USS Cole bombing and the Sept. 11 attacks. The first of the new ships will be delivered in roughly half the 10 to 15 years it takes under traditional shipbuilding programs.
"That's a miracle in Navy terms," said Jay Korman, naval analyst at Washington-based consultants DFI Corporate Services.
Two versions are under construction. Lockheed Martin Corp. is leading the team building LCS-1, with partners Marinette Marine Corp. in Wisconsin and Bollinger Shipyards Inc. in Louisiana.
The Freedom ship due to launch this fall in Marinette, Wis., resembles a traditional frigate or destroyer but features a sleek, semi-planing hull, meaning the bow lifts at top speed, reducing resistance and making it faster.
The other LCS version by team leader Bath Iron Works, a subsidiary of General Dynamics Corp., resembles a futuristic catamaran. The aluminum "trimaran" Independence being built by Austal USA in Mobile, Ala., is loosely based on fast ferries developed in Australia.
Lockheed Martin's LCS is 378 feet long, while General Dynamics' trimaran is 418 feet. By comparison, the typical Arleigh Burke-class destroyer is 510 feet long and the Zumwalt "stealth" destroyer being developed will be about 600 feet.
The Navy plans to build 55 of one or both models of the LCS to beef up a fleet that critics say was neglected even before the Iraq war. From nearly 600 ships in the 1980s, the fleet has dwindled to 289, a number the Navy wants to raise soon to 313.
Instead of lengthy research and development, the Navy encouraged contractors to utilize off-the-shelf technologies from the private sector, much like the Army did as it rushed its Stryker vehicles into service in urban warfare in Iraq.
The Navy also asked for ships that can be easily reconfigured for different missions.
The resulting designs feature removable "mission packages" that allow the ships to operate either for anti-submarine missions, mine removal or traditional surface warfare, said Lt. Tamara D. Lawrence, a Navy spokeswoman at the Pentagon.
Tests show the mission packages can be swapped out in 24 hours. And when those mission modules become outdated, the Navy can replace them instead of building new ships, Hamilton said.

At about $350 million, an LCS cost roughly a third as much as a destroyer, he said.
While there's support for LCS, shipbuilders don't want the Navy to neglect bigger, multimission ships that project U.S. seapower around the world, according to Cynthia Brown, president of the American Shipbuilding Association in Washington.
The six shipyards that build the Navy's largest ships — aircraft carriers, amphibious assault ships, cruisers, destroyers and submarines — have lost 24,000 jobs since 1991, she said.
Hamilton said the small shipyards were able to respond quickly to the Navy's needs on the LCS, and the new warships could have a positive effect of bringing pressure to bear on the bigger, traditional shipyards like Bath Iron Works.
Though Bath traditionally has built larger ships for the Navy, there's a lot of excitement about the LCS, said Mike Keenan, president of the local machinists union in Bath. Bath Iron Works could eventually build some of the ships.
"All in all, this could be a lucrative program where there could be a lot of work for a lot of shipbuilders," Keenan said.
___
On the Net:
LCS Program Executive Office for Ships: http://peos.crane.navy.mil/lcs
Bath Iron Works: http://www.gdbiw.com
Austal USA: http://www.austal.com
Lockheed Martin: http://www.lockheedmartin.com
Marinette Marine:
http://www.manitowocmarine.com/Facil...etteMarine.asp Bollinger Shipyard Inc.: http://www.bollingershipyards.com
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"You may have to fight when there is no hope of victory, because it is better to perish than to live as slaves.” — Winston Churchill
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