posted on Nov, 5 2007 @ 08:09 PM
Let me say that the official stated role of the Littoral Combat Ship and the operational requirement which it will attempts to fill are both
legitimate and necessary. The Littoral Combat Ship was considered when several trends started to emerge. Namely the future of the USN in terms of ship
building (development) project and the associated price of each one thereof, the likely future threat areas and weapons development and the need to
replace decommissioned warships in the emergence of a future (see mid term) credible blue water opposing force. First, the current fleet of US Naval
vessels consists of highly expensive, complex, large, essentially fixed design (capability) and very powerful warships. Now this is useful and serves
it's purpose but it also means that there are limitations when one considers other factors. The US is likely not going to continue building such
warships are the rate and pace which it has done so in the past, historical trends and figures point to this. As such, it is imperative that we
preserve our current high end force for essential and comparative missions only utilizing it as little as possible for roles which they were not
designed for. For example, a Burke class has no business patrolling international waters for pirating activities and or performing other duties which
do not necessarily rewire it's impressive firepower (capability) nor which put it's considerable investment in harms way. Shadowing the PLAN,
patrolling strategic location around the world etc... are what that force should be doing. Another example would be sending in an expensive Burke
class into littoral waters to again perform duties which do not require it's overkill firepower set, again putting it in unneeded risk. As the USS
Stark, USS Samuel B. Roberts and INS Hanit (just to name a few) incidents illustrate unexpected and costly events can occur in such an environment.
For large capitol ships blue water is much safer and accommodating as it allows maximum efficiently and output. This is why an alarming number of
countries are focusing on relatively cheap and less capable weapon systems for use in this area. On paper they may be no match for our systems but
their operational environment coupled with careful planning will increase their effectives. While they may not be able to ultimately defeat the USN
just denying us operational freedom in a certain area due to unacceptable loss ratios and recourse consumption is unacceptable.
The USN, given that most of our ships were designed and built during the Cold War, focused most on this environment, winning against comparable Soviet
fleets. With brown water operations not given much consideration or left up to other NATO member states. Problem is that with the end of the Cold War
and the castration of NATO, compared to what it was, the USN finds itself having to perform several roles with less and less resources.
By having a, relatively speaking, cheap warship which only has the minimum armament requited and which can easily be outfitted with different mission
models if a situation calls for a more specialized role we can increase the effectiveness of our force. Ships like the LCS can handle the day to day
activates and the low end of the USN's requirements while the larger ships are utilized for more strategic roles. They can also, given the mission
module component be highly effective in a number of roles, more so than even the larger warships, not to mention being complimented by their large
force size. Currently we can manage due to an insufficient rise in blue water opposition. However once China and or Russia (even India as I'm not
entirely convinced of their future path) gain blue water credibility the USN will be unable to fulfill all it’s responsibilities.
This would not be an issue if money was not that big of an object, if our military industrial production capacity had not been weakened. If we could
continue to develop and produce ships at cold war rates then it would not matter if they were all large capitol ships as we would have so many we
could afford to take such risks. However we have been distracted and slow to react to recent indications that old strategic rivalries are not a thing
of the past. In part due to the recent conflict(s) we are involved in which are wasting resources and capability but also due to long terms historical
factors. Such as our public being brainwashed into believing that after the Berlin wall come down we would live in harmony for all time. That our
position would not be challenged even if we purposely reduced our capability and if our leadership had not lost our main strategic view which guided
us for the better part of half a century. But I digress that is for another topic...
For more detailed sources just Google Littoral Combat Ship and any various related phrase you are interested in.