• =?UTF-8?Q?The_Navy_needs_a_=E2=80=98Yorktown_Plan=E2=80=99_for_subm?= =

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 22 09:34:56 2023
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    from https://thehill.com/opinion/national-security/4371673-the-navy-needs-a-yorktown-plan-for-submarines-to-defeat-china/

    The Navy needs a ‘Yorktown Plan’ for submarines to defeat China
    BY WILLIAM TOTI, OPINION CONTRIBUTOR - 12/21/23 3:00 PM ET
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    A crew sits on the deck of U.S. Ballistic Missile Submarine USS Kentucky anchored in Busan Naval Base on July 19, 2023 in Busan, South Korea.

    There is an old saying in war that amateurs talk about strategy while professionals talk about logistics. If I were to craft an equivalent
    truism about submarines relative to a potential war with China, it would
    be that amateurs talk about submarine technology while professionals
    talk about submarine numbers.

    To that end, reporters exploring the impact of submarines in a potential
    war often talk to the wrong “experts.” The Wall Street Journal recently published an article that made this mistake, with naval experts and
    submarine veterans suggesting that a war over Taiwan would be some sort
    of “Hunt for Red October,” mano-a-mano fight with American submarines pitted against a Chinese Communist version of the “Russkies” of old,
    with evolving Chinese technology offsetting American submarine advantage.

    That is not how the war would play out. If it happens, this would be a
    war about numbers.

    While it may be true that our technical advantage is fading, that is not
    the most worrisome matter. Rather, the problem is that the American
    submarine numbers shortfall is so acute that if China invades Taiwan,
    our submarines won’t have the luxury of chasing Chinese submarines
    around the ocean — we simply won’t have enough submarines to pursue that mission.

    As the sole American asset that has any chance of stopping the
    cross-strait invasion of Taiwan in what we call a “denied environment,” America’s limited number of submarines will be completely consumed with sinking invading Chinese surface ships. Other American naval assets will
    simply have to figure out how to defend themselves against the Chinese submarine threat.

    China benefited from the 9/11 attacks against the U.S. in several ways, including a decades-long diversion of American resources away from
    capabilities with the potential to threaten that nation. But the decline
    of our submarine force began well prior to 2001, when President Bill
    Clinton decided to cash in on the so-called “peace dividend” by decommissioning submarines like the one I commanded halfway through
    their useful lives. His crystal ball said that with the Cold War over,
    we would never again need submarines. It’s incredible how myopic our
    crystal balls tend to be.

    If this poor premonition wasn’t enough, over the next 20 years
    malfeasance in Congress and the Department of Defense caused such damage
    to the submarine shipbuilding program that the Chinese themselves
    couldn’t have choreographed it better. Unsteady funding, poorly defined requirements, failure to stabilize a highly skilled workforce and
    policies that resulted in an active reduction in the number and quality
    of second- and third-tier suppliers all contributed to the inability of building yards to keep pace with submarine construction demand.

    During the Reagan administration, the same two building yards that are
    in existence today were able to pump out four to six submarines per
    year; today, they can’t even produce two per year. The difference
    between then and now is having a president who cared, a Congress that
    provided consistent funding, and a Defense Department and Navy staff
    that knew what they were doing. Budget efficiency is important, up until
    the point where weapon systems are delivered too late to do any good.
    Our government must come to the realization that in today’s strategic environment, the most important factor is delivery schedule.

    To add insult to injury, as new construction programs failed to achieve
    their targets, the number of operational submarines fell even further
    due to the improper management of submarine maintenance, to the extent
    that we currently have one submarine, the USS Boise, that has been out
    of action since 2017 awaiting repair. In all, 37 percent of our
    submarine force is now out of commission awaiting maintenance.

    If this doesn’t paint a sufficiently dire picture, Congress and the Navy
    have so underfunded submarine weapons that it’s possible that we could
    run out of torpedoes before any war over Taiwan could be won.

    It is these factors and not, as the much of the media asserts, China’s “underwater great wall,” that is the major threat to our freedom of
    action in a future war. As the great philosopher Pogo once put it, “We
    have met the enemy, and he is us.”

    During World War II, the aircraft carrier USS Yorktown was put out of
    action during the Battle of the Coral Sea. Returning for quick repairs
    to Pearl Harbor, Admiral Chester Nimitz ordered that the shipyard had to complete repairs to the Yorktown in a mere 72 hours in order to get the
    ship ready for the coming Battle of Midway.

    We won that battle, but it remains to be seen how we would do in a war
    over Taiwan. But one thing is clear: The Navy today needs to develop a “Yorktown Plan,” using waivers and temporary measures to get our
    submarines out of maintenance if necessary for a potential future war.

    In short, we need to focus less on the enemy, and focus more on
    restoring strategic priorities and governmental competence. From all appearances, we have an incredibly long way to go.

    William Toti is a retired submarine captain and commodore who operated
    in the Pacific his entire Navy career. He is former defense industry
    CEO, and now serves as a consultant and co-host of the “Unauthorized
    History of the Pacific War” podcast.

    TAGS BILL CLINTON BILL CLINTON CHINA SUBMARINES TAIWAIN UNITED STATES
    NAVY WORLD WAR II
    Copyright 2023 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may
    not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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