DoD 2020 Budget Looks to Fix Shipbuilding, Ammo Industrial Base
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As the Pentagon starts pumping cash into shipyards and small weapons manufacturers, is it enough to save some ailing production lines?
Navy Unveils Record Budget, Pushing Above 300 Ships
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The US Navy now says it’ll reach 355 ships by 2034, while whacking F-35Bs and a carrier from its five-year plan. What’s the strategy?
Why DoD Cut A Carrier in 2020 Budget: Survivable Robots & Missiles Vs. China
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Navy Adds Attack Sub For 2020, But Shipyard Challenges Loom
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The Navy is set to release plans to buy an extra fast-attack sub, another destroyer, and a handful of unmanned boats. Next step: Congress.
Keep 12 Carriers, It’s A National Imperative: Rep. Wittman
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What does one of the most influential defense lawmakers on the Hill, Rob Wittman, think about the Trump Administration plan to cut the number of aircraft carriers from 11 to 10?
Carrier Cutback Plan ‘Mind Boggling’: Sen. Kaine
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Two top congressmen joined Virginia’s Sen. Kaine in rejecting the Pentagon’s proposal to retire the USS Truman two decades early.
Two LPD Amphibious Ships Cut From 2020 Budget Plan
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Are big, expensive vessels like amphibious ships and carriers too vulnerable in a long-range missile war with Russia or China?
Pentagon To Retire USS Truman Early, Shrinking Carrier Fleet To 10
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The move could save more than $30 billion over 25 years to invest in high-tech weapons — but Congress is sure to explode in outrage.
Navy’s New Nuke Sub On Track; Early Problems Fixed
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CAPITOL HILL The head of the Navy’s Columbia-class nuclear submarine program says that the program, despite earlier concerns over cost, schedule, and industrial base issues, is set to meet its goal of a first deployment in 2031, putting the service’s most expensive and consequential program on track. The boats will come just in time to… Keep reading →
Navy Wants Faster Ship Repairs; 70% Of Destroyer Fleet Late
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SAN DIEGO: If the Navy ever hopes to reach its goal of a 355-ship fleet, it won’t be by simply building new hulls and launching them. Instead, the admirals have long recognized they’ll have to extend the lives of dozens of ships already long in the tooth — and do so at a time when… Keep reading →