Special Report : Aircraft carriers,
championed by Trump, are vulnerable to attack
Send a link to a friend
[March 09, 2017]
By Scot Paltrow
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Last week, President
Donald J. Trump chose the deck of the newest U.S. aircraft carrier, the
$13 billion USS Gerald R. Ford, for a speech extolling his planned boost
in military spending.
Trump vowed that the newest generation of “Ford Class” carriers - the
most expensive warships ever built - will remain the centerpiece of
projecting American power abroad.
“We're going to soon have more coming,” Trump told an enthusiastic
audience of sailors, declaring the new carriers so big and solidly built
that they were immune to attack.
Trump vowed to expand the number of carriers the United States fields
from 10 to 12. And he promised to bring down the cost of building three
“super-carriers,” which has ballooned by a third over the last decade
from $27 to $36 billion.
The Gerald R. Ford alone is $2.5 billion over budget and three years
behind schedule, military officials say. The second Ford-class carrier,
the John F. Kennedy, is running five years late.
Trump's expansion plans come as evidence mounts that potential enemies
have built new anti-ship weapons able to destroy much of the United
States’ expensive fleet of carriers. And as they have been for decades,
carriers remain vulnerable to submarines.
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2017/Mar/09/images/ads/current/graue_sda_2016.png)
In a combat exercise off the coast of Florida in 2015, a small French
nuclear submarine, the Saphir, snuck through multiple rings of defenses
and “sank” the U.S. aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt and half of its
escort ships. In other naval exercises, even old-fashioned
diesel-electric submarines have beaten carriers.
All told, since the early 1980s, U.S. and British carriers have been
sunk at least 14 times in so-called “free play” war games meant to
simulate real battle, according to think tanks, foreign navies and press
accounts. The exact total is unknown because the Navy classifies
exercise reports.
Today, the United States is the only country to base its naval strategy
on aircraft carriers. The U.S. fleet of 10 active carriers is 10 times
as big as those deployed by its primary military rivals, Russia and
China, who field one active carrier each.
Roger Thompson, a defense analyst and professor at Kyung Hee University
in South Korea, says the array of powerful anti-ship weapons developed
in recent years by potential U.S. enemies, including China, Russia and
Iran, increase carriers’ vulnerability.
The new weapons include land-based ballistic missiles, such as China’s
Dong Feng-21 anti-ship missile, which has a claimed range of 1,100 miles
(1,770 kilometers) and moves at 10 times the speed of sound. Certain
Russian and Chinese submarines can fire salvoes of precision-guided
cruise missiles from afar, potentially overwhelming carrier-fleet
anti-missile defense.
Russia, China, Iran and other countries also have so-called
super-cavitating torpedoes. These form an air bubble in front of them,
enabling them to travel at hundreds of miles per hour. The torpedoes
cannot be guided, but if aimed straight at a ship they are difficult to
avoid.
A 2015 Rand Corporation report, “Chinese Threats to U.S. Surface Ships,”
found that if hostilities broke out, “the risks to U.S. carriers are
substantial and rising.”
“Beyond a shadow of a doubt, a carrier is just a target,” says defense
analyst Pierre Sprey, who worked for the U.S. Secretary of Defense’s
office from 1966 to 1986 and is a longtime critic of U.S. weapons
procurement.
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2017/Mar/09/images/ads/current/brickey_sda_2017.png)
DEFENDING CARRIERS
Navy leaders stand by the carrier. In an interview late last year,
Admiral Scott Swift, commander of the U.S. Pacific Fleet, lauded
carriers’ versatility. Swift says they remain “very viable,”
sufficiently impregnable to be sent into the thick of combat zones.
Swift said he would order carriers into close battle “in a heartbeat.”
Nevertheless, citing the new anti-ship weapons, Swift says the carrier
“is not as viable as it was 15 years ago.”
Trump has said he will make good on his campaign promise to increase the
Navy's fleet to 350 ships. The Navy currently has 277 deployable ships.
The cost of a single new, Ford-class carrier – $10.5 billion without
cost overruns – would consume nearly 20 percent of Trump’s proposed $54
billion increase in next year's defense budget.
Some critics, including former senior Defense Department personnel, say
Washington has put too much of the country’s defense budget into a
handful of expensive, vulnerable carriers.
At a naval symposium in 2010, then-Secretary of Defense Robert Gates
called into question making such big investments in a few increasingly
sinkable ships. Gates said “a Ford-class carrier plus its full
complement of the latest aircraft would represent potentially $15
billion to $20 billion worth of hardware at risk.”
The Navy, with the backing of Congress, went ahead nevertheless. The
program has strong Congressional backing. In the 1990s, when defense
spending was cut after the end of the Cold War, Congress enacted a law
requiring the Navy to maintain an 11-carrier fleet.
Congress has given the Navy a temporary exemption to have 10 active
carriers while one is overhauled. When the Ford is commissioned, it will
bring the U.S. carrier fleet to 11.
Trump did not specify in his speech how he would bring the carrier fleet
to 12. But he said the Ford-class carriers would be invulnerable to
attack because they represent the best in American know-how.
“There is no competition to this ship,” declared Trump, who called the
Gerald R. Ford American craftsmanship “at its biggest, at its best, at
its finest.”
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2017/Mar/09/images/ads/current/Symphony_lda_2017.png)
FAILING SYSTEMS
Trump did not mention that the ship’s builder, Huntington Ingalls
Industries, launched the Ford more than three years ago, but the Navy
has yet to commission it and put it into service because of severe
flaws. Many of its new high tech systems failed to work, including such
basic ones as the “arresting gear” that catches and stops landing jets.
The Navy says the ship will be commissioned sometime this year. But the
criticism has continued.
In a written statement in July, John McCain, chairman of the Senate
Armed Services Committee, noted the cost overruns and cited a list of
crucial malfunctioning systems that remained unfixed. “The Ford-class
program is a case study in why our acquisition system must be reformed,”
McCain wrote.
Ray Mabus, who in January stepped down as secretary of the Navy, said in
an interview that the Gerald R. Ford “is a poster child for how not to
build a ship.” He added: “Everything that could have been done wrong was
done wrong.”
Mabus said that because of commitments made before he became Navy
secretary, the Ford was loaded with high-tech equipment that had not
even been designed yet. He also faulted awarding the shipbuilder a “cost
plus” contract, under which it gets a fixed profit regardless of how
much it costs to build the vessel. “There was no incentive to hold down
costs,” Mabus said.
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2016/Aug/26/images/ads/current/best_friends_sda_120215.png)
[to top of second column] |
![](../images/030917pics/news_a3.jpg)
Pre-Commissioning Unit Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) is maneuvered by tug
boats in the James River during the aircraft carrier's turn ship
evolution in Newport News, Virginia, U.S. June 11, 2016. U.S.
Navy/Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Apprentice Gitte
Schirrmacher/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo
![](../images/ads/current/richardson_lda_090916.png)
Others criticize carriers as strategically flawed. Jerry Hendrix, a
retired Navy captain and Defense Department official, is now
director of the Defense Strategies and Assessments Program at the
Center for a New American Security. Carriers, he said in an email
exchange, give Washington’s rivals a cheap opportunity to score big.
For the cost of a single carrier, he calculates, a rival can deploy
1,227 anti-carrier missiles.
“The enemy can build a lot more missiles than we can carriers for
equivalent investments,” Hendrix said, “and hence overwhelm our
defensive capabilities.”
The most commonly proposed alternative to carriers is building a
much larger number of smaller, nimbler vessels, including submarines
and surface ships. Submarines don’t require escorts and can hit
distant targets on land. And carriers have not been tested in battle
against an enemy able to fight back since World War II – more than
70 years ago.
The Navy and some outside defense experts say that despite increased
threats, carriers remain fully viable and perform an essential
service. They laud carriers’ mobility and swiftness, enabling the
United States to project air power to places otherwise unreachable.
Carrier proponent Bryan McGrath, the deputy director of the Hudson
Institute’s Center for American Seapower in Washington, said
carriers are less vulnerable than stationary, land-based air bases.
“A carrier is a big floating airport, and not only a floating
airport, but it moves at 40 knots,” says McGrath, a former captain
of a guided missile destroyer. “How much more vulnerable are
airfields on land that don’t move?”
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2017/Mar/09/images/ads/current/brickey_lda_061314.png)
But Sprey, the former Defense Department official and longtime
Pentagon procurement critic, says carriers waste funds that could be
used to build more cost-effective weapons systems.
“Every Ford-class carrier we build detracts from U.S. defense,”
Sprey said.
LIMITED PROTECTION
Both strong supporters of carriers as well as opponents agreed that
there is a serious flaw in the current configuration of U.S.
carriers: their complement of strike aircraft. Almost all are
short-range jets, the F-18 Hornet, whose range could render the
planes useless in some conflicts.
The Chinese, in particular, have established sea zones bristling
with anti-ship weapons meant to make it impossible for enemy
flotillas to enter.
Top U.S Navy commanders, including Pacific commander Swift and Vice
Admiral Mike Shoemaker, the Navy “Air Boss” in charge of carriers,
say carriers could safely enter such zones long enough to carry out
a mission. But many outside analysts say a U.S. president would be
hesitant to risk such an expensive ship and the lives of up to 5,500
crew members.
In order to be relatively safe, a carrier would have to stand off by
1,300 nautical miles, or 2,300 kilometers – out of range of the Dong
Feng missiles. And the F-18s have a range of only 400 nautical miles
(equal to 460 statute miles or 740 kilometers) to a target with
enough fuel to return.
Experts on both sides of the debate say that if the carriers have to
stand off, the Hornets would have to be refueled in midair an
impractical number of times while flying to and from their targets.
It thus would be all but impossible for carriers to send air power
into war zones.
The F-18s are to be replaced by 2020 with new F-35C Lightning IIs,
but these have only a marginally better range of 650 nautical miles.
The Hudson Institute’s McGrath, who champions carriers, says the
short-range jets impair the mission.
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2017/Mar/09/images/ads/current/Carroll_catholic_lda_EDUCATION_2017.png)
“What they (the Navy) haven’t done yet is to design and fund a
strike aircraft that can fly 1,000 miles, drop its bombs and come
home,” McGrath said.
The cost of carriers in terms of strategy and money is multiplied
because carriers do not travel alone. For protection, they move with
large escorts, making every “carrier strike group” a virtual armada.
Each carrier usually has an escort of at least five warships, a
mixture of destroyers and cruisers, at least one submarine and a
combined ammunition-supply ship and helicopters designed to detect
subs. When close enough to shore, carriers are also protected by
new, land-based P-8 Poseidon jets, designed to detect and destroy
subs.
OLD THREATS
For carrier commanders, the most feared weapon is a 150-year-old
one. A single, submarine-launched torpedo could send a carrier to
the bottom.
Most modern torpedoes aren’t targeted to hit ships. Instead they are
programmed to explode underneath. This creates an air bubble that
lifts the ship into the air and drops it, breaking the hull.
For decades, critics have faulted the Navy for failing to develop
effective defenses against modern torpedoes. A 2016 report by the
Pentagon’s Office of Operational Test and Evaluation said the Navy
has recently made significant progress, but the systems still have
crucial deficiencies.
Experts also say that carriers are at risk from updated versions of
one of the oldest naval vessels still in use: the diesel-electric
submarine. These were the subs used in both World Wars.
Diesel-electric subs have the advantage of being small – and while
on electric power, silent, and in general quieter and harder to
detect than nuclear subs.
Diesel-electric subs are also far cheaper to build than nuclear
ones. Allies and rivals have been building large numbers of them.
Worldwide, more than 230 diesel-electric subs are in use. China has
83 in use, while Russia has 19.
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2017/Mar/09/images/ads/current/ldn_sda_062409.png)
Hendrix, the former Defense Department official, says the carriers'
vulnerabilities make the fleet a profligate use of money, vessels
and aircraft.
“We have paid billions of dollars to build ships that are largely
defensive in their orientation, thus taking away from the offensive
power of the fleet,” Hendrix says. “In the end, we spend a lot of
money on defense to send 44 strike aircraft off the front end of a
carrier.”
(Editing by David Rohde. Reporting by Scot Paltrow.)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |