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Unmanned
subs
would revolutionize warfare, analyst says
To counter China's
rapidly strengthening submarine fleet,
the United States should spur
a revolution in undersea warfare
By Megan Scully
CongressDaily
Govexec.com
Infosearch:
José Cadenas
Bureau Chief
USA
Research Dept.
La Nueva Cuba
April 21, 2006
To counter China's rapidly strengthening submarine fleet, the United
States should spur a revolution in undersea warfare by focusing
greater attention and resources on developing advanced unmanned
underwater vehicles, a top naval analyst said Tuesday.
Such a move could make China's submarine investments "worthless"
and secure the Navy's place as the world's premier maritime fleet,
said Robert Work, an analyst at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary
Assessments. Struggling domestic shipbuilders, who are urging Congress
to increase submarine purchases to two a year by 2009, are capable
of changing "the rules of the game" in naval warfare,
Work said.
That would be "much more important than two boats a year,"
he added. Indeed, pouring dollars into research and prototyping
efforts for advanced unmanned vehicles could provide industry with
"some hedges" against potential cuts in future shipbuilding
budgets, said Work, speaking at a Heritage Foundation forum on "Building
a New Submarine Fleet."
Unmanned underwater vehicles, or UUVs, are typically among the first
systems cut during the Pentagon's annual budget drill, Work said.
Instead, resources have been poured into buying manned platforms,
including new nuclear submarines and destroyers, whose price tags
exceed $2 billion a copy.
Work added that
he finds it "very troubling" that the Navy does not have
an expansive operational UUV fleet to launch from submarines. Last
year, the Navy released a new UUV plan, establishing four size classes
of the unmanned vehicles ranging from 25 pounds to 25,000 pounds.
The plan also
set nine missions for the vehicles, and stressed the need for commonality
and modularity among the platforms. But a July 2005 Congressional
Research Service report questioned whether the Navy is adequately
funding UUVs, and recommended congressional oversight on the matter.
The unmanned
vehicles can act as extensions of manned platforms to perform intelligence,
surveillance and reconnaissance missions. They also can act as mine
countermeasures, as well as communication, navigation and antisubmarine
warfare platforms.
In addition
to the underwater vehicles, the Navy also should explore linking
unmanned aerial vehicles to submarines to expand the boats' use
for intelligence missions, said Ron O'Rourke, a Congressional Research
Service naval analyst who also appeared at Tuesday's event.
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