US Army Faces 'Wide-Ranging' Issues with Its Boats, Considers Replacing Them with Autonomous Vessels (cnn.com) 30
An anonymous readed shared this report from CNN:
[U.S. army boats] are poorly maintained and largely unprepared to meet the military's growing mission in the Pacific, a new government oversight report said this week. The Government Accountability Office released a report on Wednesday that concluded there are "wide-ranging" issues facing Army watercraft, which limit the Army's ability "to meet mission requirements in the Indo-Pacific theater where the need for Army watercraft is most pronounced."
Despite Army policy requiring the vessels to be at least at a 90% mission capable rate — meaning the vessels are ready to perform their mission — the boats currently have a less than 40% capable rate this year. Overall, the fleet of watercraft has dropped by nearly half since 2018, going from 134 vessels to 70 as of May this year, in part due to divestment of vessels in 2018 and 2019... "Army boats have not been ready, capable, or in a mindset they'll have to do something dangerous or in the real world ... for decades now," a retired warrant officer and former chief engineer on Army watercraft told CNN at the time...
[Army spokeswoman Cynthia Smith] said that the Army is "actively" working to address gaps in the watercraft's capability as a whole, and prioritizing improving the current fleet while also "investing in a modernized fleet to meet the needs of the 2040 force." Col. Dave Butler, a spokesman for Army Chief of Staff Gen. Randy George, told CNN that the Army is also looking at possibly replacing the existing fleet of Army watercraft with autonomous vessels in the future. "What we see is the oil industry and other shipping industries are doing this already, we see that happening all around the world," Butler said. "There's no reason the Army shouldn't be thinking that way ... leaders from down at ship level all the way to the Pentagon are looking at this and determining the best way to deploy our forces...
"Maybe the future fleet is all autonomous, we just don't know," he said. "This is all stuff we're looking at in terms of trying to modernize the way we move people, weapons, and equipment."
CNN notes that the report "also said the Army is considering leasing civilian watercraft to bolster its existing fleet and moving all of its watercraft to the Pacific."
The report also included a response from Army Secretary Wormuth, who said the Army is "actively pursuing a holistic approach to mitigate the gaps in Army watercraft capability and capacity."
Despite Army policy requiring the vessels to be at least at a 90% mission capable rate — meaning the vessels are ready to perform their mission — the boats currently have a less than 40% capable rate this year. Overall, the fleet of watercraft has dropped by nearly half since 2018, going from 134 vessels to 70 as of May this year, in part due to divestment of vessels in 2018 and 2019... "Army boats have not been ready, capable, or in a mindset they'll have to do something dangerous or in the real world ... for decades now," a retired warrant officer and former chief engineer on Army watercraft told CNN at the time...
[Army spokeswoman Cynthia Smith] said that the Army is "actively" working to address gaps in the watercraft's capability as a whole, and prioritizing improving the current fleet while also "investing in a modernized fleet to meet the needs of the 2040 force." Col. Dave Butler, a spokesman for Army Chief of Staff Gen. Randy George, told CNN that the Army is also looking at possibly replacing the existing fleet of Army watercraft with autonomous vessels in the future. "What we see is the oil industry and other shipping industries are doing this already, we see that happening all around the world," Butler said. "There's no reason the Army shouldn't be thinking that way ... leaders from down at ship level all the way to the Pentagon are looking at this and determining the best way to deploy our forces...
"Maybe the future fleet is all autonomous, we just don't know," he said. "This is all stuff we're looking at in terms of trying to modernize the way we move people, weapons, and equipment."
CNN notes that the report "also said the Army is considering leasing civilian watercraft to bolster its existing fleet and moving all of its watercraft to the Pacific."
The report also included a response from Army Secretary Wormuth, who said the Army is "actively pursuing a holistic approach to mitigate the gaps in Army watercraft capability and capacity."
Navy? (Score:1)
[U.S. army boats] are poorly maintained and largely unprepared to meet the military's growing mission in the Pacific
Why does the Army have boats in the Pacific? Isn't that why we have a Navy?
Re: Navy? (Score:2)
That is like asking why the navy has planes. Is that not what the Air Force is for?
Re: (Score:2)
The Army still has planes, too.
Re: (Score:2)
Let's nor forget the Top Gun pilots are all Naval Aviators.
If recollection is correct, the US Air Force's incipient operations were as the US Army Air Force.
Jee-zus... even our military services can't, mmmm, get along.
Re: (Score:2)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Re: (Score:2)
Because each branch doesn't want to have to call each others command and convince them to provide resources for every little operation. We have different military specializations to handle specific threats or objectives based on primary focus. The branches exist so that each division can assess and advocate for resources in specific areas.
Re: (Score:2)
The Secretary of Defense (not to mention the President) is the boss of all the services. One would assume the Army is not making deployment decisions on its own.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
In addition to good explanations in other posts, many of the Army ships are troop and cargo vessels as well as amphibious/landing craft, which the Navy probably/generally doesn't have any need for.
Re: (Score:2)
" amphibious/landing craft, which the Navy probably/generally doesn't have any need for."
Those are probably full of Marines, rather than army personel. But the crew would be navy.
Re: (Score:2)
Good point, I hadn't thought of that, thanks!
Though, to be fair, there are a lot more Soldiers than Marines.
This won't solve it (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Sometimes I feel like the US is doomed (Score:2)
"We need to be ready" doesn't focus the mind in the way that "why weren't we ready?" does.
This is the story of military procurement and readiness of the War of 1812, the Civil War, the Franco Prussian War, both World Wars, the Korean War, and the beginning of the Cold War with the launch of Sputnik and the perceived bomber and missile gaps.
It's going to be the story of whatever happens with China in the next decade or two, unfortunately.
Re: (Score:1)
Maybe you should expand your horizon a bit.
Government always over spend, that's what they do, but it can be so much worse, corruption in many countries is way worse than you could imagine, though if Trump is elected, I guess you won't have to imagine much longer.
Second amendment ? Do you think other countries don't have guns ? Do you think guns stop modern armies ?
Mass of doublespeak (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Maybe we're all better off it they're incompetent and can't "invade the Indo-Pacific Region".
Hey, North Carolina could use some bridge layers right now but they sent them all to Ukraine.
These schmucks just burn a trillion a year and don't protect the country in when it's attacked.
Re: (Score:2)
Autonomous maintenance? (Score:2)
So then only 40% of boats they have (what do those boats do? does the Navy know about this?) are ready for service. That speaks of a maintenance issue. So the solution is autonomous boats. Is it the maintenance on these new boats that is automated? If not, without changes to maintenance practices, we'll end up seeing only 40% of the automated boats being ready for service at any given time.
Re: (Score:2)
does the Navy know about this?
Shhh. The Navy is busy flying more airplanes than the Air Force.
I smell another F35 in the works (Score:3)
It'll be the most technologically advanced pork project congress has ever authorized, complete with cost over-runs, massive delays in delivery and a somehow overlooked inability to work in salt water.
We are literally the only country (Score:3)
But this is how we do socialism in America. We spent fuck tons of money on the military and a few people get middle class jobs and then we hope they spend some of that money in their community to keep the country just barely functional.
Eisenhower explicitly warned us about this and we never listen. We just never freaking listen... The worst thing is is there's still plenty of money to do good things domestically but the liberals are so obsessed with cutting the military budget they don't bother even trying to do anything else lately. Which of course costs an election so it's not like they could do anything either.
I mean for fuck sakes there's a reason why there's an army base in every fucking town and why we spread our weapons manufacturing across every single state. It creates a block of voters you can't touch. Just let them have their jobs. At least until you're in a position to give them other jobs. Don't put that cart before that horse
Re: (Score:2)
With a viable Navy.
That's not true. British Navy still exists, and even has aircraft carriers. French Navy is reasonable, although not well-designed for force projection.
Re: (Score:2)
You were saying something?
Who's getting fired? (Score:1)
Despite Army policy requiring the vessels to be at least at a 90% mission capable rate — meaning the vessels are ready to perform their mission — the boats currently have a less than 40% capable rate this year.
You'd think somebody would be fired for this?
I lived thereâ166; (Score:2)