Ships, Sensors, and
Weapons
Undersea
Warfare Programs
Target an Expeditionary Future

As
the armed services re-orient themselves toward a greater
emphasis on expeditionary warfare, the Navy continues to
refine its ability to gain and sustain access, conduct
network-centric operations, and project power “…From
the Sea” in the 21st century. Accordingly, the focus
of the Submarine Force research, development, and
acquisition programs is also moving in that same
direction. While still maintaining their ability to
prevail in sustained “blue water” conflicts against
world-class adversaries, America’s submarines are moving
increasingly into the littorals of the world to face new
challenges. Recent national tasking for increased
intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR)
missions in these areas are already outstripping their
ability to address the current mission at hand.
Moreover, within future joint force or coalition
contingencies, U.S. submarines will be relied upon to be
the first in, establishing clandestine – or deliberately
overt – presence, well before the outbreak of
hostilities. Their first mission will be to deter our
potential adversaries, and if deterrence fails, they
reserve the ability to launch a first strike from
remarkably close range. |
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New Platforms for New Missions
While
designed primarily for Cold War-era anti-submarine warfare (ASW) and to
provide direct support to aircraft carrier battle groups (CVBGs), our
present force of 51 USS Los Angeles (SSN-688) and Improved
688-class submarines is well equipped for both ISR and strike missions.
Their inherent acoustic stealth, new and improved sensors, and
vertical-launch missile tubes for Tomahawk land-attack missiles have
prepared these increasingly venerable, yet still powerful, submarines for
a wide range of contingency and wartime missions. Two new attack submarine
classes currently under construction are especially well prepared to serve
in expeditionary roles – the USS Seawolf (SSN-21) and
USS Virginia (SSN-774) classes.
Seawolf herself was commissioned in July 1997 and USS
Connecticut (SSN-22) in December 1998. The third of the class, USS
Jimmy Carter (SSN-23), is now under construction and will deliver in
2004. The Seawolf class was intended originally to be the successor
to the 688 class and was designed to achieve higher submerged speeds,
deeper diving capabilities, and a new order of machinery quieting. With
new combat and sensor systems and an increased payload capacity,
Seawolf has demonstrated superior warfighting capabilities for both
deep-ocean and littoral missions. Jimmy Carter will be a unique
multi-mission platform, with additional volume and an innovative ocean
interface module for accommodating new capabilities in Naval Special
Warfare (NSW), tactical surveillance, and mine warfare. In this regard,
Jimmy Carter will embody many of the recommendations of the 1998
Defense Science Board study that called for novel payload capabilities and
a more flexible interface with the undersea environment.

Combat Ready. USS Virginia (SSN-774) will expand on
the ability of submarines to operate inside an enemy’s defenses not
only for surveillance, but to deliver powerful precision weapons to
targets on land or sea. |
The 30-ship Virginia class will
incorporate similar advanced acoustic technology, but with increased use
of commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) components and modular construction
techniques, it will be less expensive to build. Modularity allows for
construction, assembly, and testing of systems prior to installation in
the ship’s hull. This reduces costs, minimizes rework, and simplifies
system integration. The modular design also facilitates technology
insertion in both the new construction of future ships and back-fit into
existing ships throughout their 30-year service lives.

USS Jimmy Carter (SSN-23)
incorporates new innovations in submarine design |
While the Virginia SSNs will perform
traditional open-ocean anti-submarine and anti-surface missions, they are
specifically designed for multi-mission littoral and regional operations.
These advanced submarines will be fully configured to conduct mining and
mine reconnaissance, Special Operations Forces insertion and extraction,
battle group support, intelligence-collection and surveillance missions,
sea control, and land attack. Furthermore, they have been specifically
designed with an open architecture and system/component modularity to
allow easy reconfiguration for special missions and emerging
requirements.
While the
Virginia SSNs will perform traditional open-ocean anti-submarine and
anti-surface missions, they are specifically designed for multi-mission
littoral and regional operations

Team Effort. The Virginia-class
submarines are being built at both Electric Boat and Newport News
Shipbuilding. Each shipyard constructs about one half of each ship,
and for the most part builds the same sections each time. The
shipyard designated as the "delivery yard" completes the final
construction. |
The first four Virginias
are being constructed under an innovative teaming arrangement between
General Dynamics’ Electric Boat Corporation (EB) and Newport News
Shipbuilding (NNS), in which the two companies are constructing different
portions of each ship. EB will assemble and deliver the first and third
ship; NNS the second and fourth. Construction of Virginia began in
1998, and the second submarine of the class, Texas (SSN-775), began
construction in FY 1999. Hawaii (SSN-776) will be laid down in
2001. Virginia-class acquisition will continue over the FYDP at a
rate of one ship per year. Under Program Objective Memorandum (POM) 2002,
production will increase to two ships per year beginning in FY 2007.
Building New
Capabilities for Intelligence,
Surveillance, and Reconnaissance
For close-in,
non-provocative surveillance and reconnaissance in hostile coastal areas
or in support of allied maritime forces, no other platform offers the
vantage point or the endurance of a nuclear-powered attack submarine. But
satisfying the increasing demand for submarine ISR services requires not
only a sufficient number of platforms, but also state-of-the-art sensor
systems capable of gathering a growing variety of signals, threat
intelligence, and environmental data. Submarines in ISR roles also need
robust communication pathways, both to receive tasking and to disseminate
the vital intelligence information they collect. A number of new sensors
and systems address this growing need.

The USS Emory S. Land (AS-39)
keeps submarines ready while deployed to the Mediterranean Sea. |
Acoustic Sensors,
Processing Systems,
and Fire Control
In the area of underwater surveillance, for example, several new acoustic
sensor, signal processing, and fire control systems are coming on line.
These systems will build on our robust deep-ocean capabilities to provide
even greater sensitivity to slow, quiet targets in shallow, coastal
waters. Additionally, mine detection and avoidance have become key
requirements for achieving and maintaining access to the littorals,
placing additional demands on new sensors and systems.
For use as its primary long-range acoustic sensor, the submarine community
is developing the TB-29A Submarine Thin-line Towed Array as a COTS
version of the legacy TB-29 towed array. These arrays will be used to
back-fit the Los Angeles-class submarines (both 688 and 688Is) and
forward-fit the Virginia-class ships. They will provide greater
capability than the current TB-23 Thin-Line towed arrays and will be more
supportable because of commonality throughout the fleet. Coupled with the
submarine A-RCI Phase II system, TB-29A arrays are expected to provide the
same 400-500 percent increase in detection capability against submerged
platforms as the current TB-29 has demonstrated. Technical Evaluation is
scheduled for the TB-29A in FY 2001, and Operational Evaluation will
follow in FY 2002 after the first three arrays are delivered to the
fleet.
These new sonar sensors with such superior
detection capabilities must be coupled with more sophisticated – and more
flexible – signal processing. The Acoustic Rapid COTS Insertion (A-RCI)
Program is a multi-phase development that is supplanting existing
legacy submarine sonar systems with a common, more capable and flexible
COTS-based Open Systems Architecture (OSA) on SSN-688-, SSN-688I-,
SSN-21-, and SSBN-726-class submarines. The powerful A-RCI Multi-Purpose
Processor (MPP) allows development and use of complex algorithms that were
previously well beyond the capability of legacy processors. More
importantly, COTS-based processors and OSA technology and systems allow
onboard computer power to grow at nearly the same rate as commercial
industry’s, and will enable regular updates to both software and hardware
with little or no impact on submarine scheduling.
A key facet of the A-RCI program (designated AN/BQQ-10) is the
Submarine Precision Underwater Mapping and Navigation (PUMA) upgrade.
These software-processing improvements will provide submarines with the
capability to map the sea bottom and register geographic and mine-like
features. This ability to map the ocean floor and display the results in
three dimensions will allow submarines to conduct covert battlespace
preparation of the sea floor, as well as minefield surveillance and
avoidance, with impunity.
A-RCI Phase II (FY 1999) provided substantial towed and hull array
software and hardware processing improvements that significantly improved
low-frequency detection capability. Phase III (FY 2001) augments the
current Digital Multi-Beam Steering (DIMUS) processing on the Spherical
Array with a linear beamformer and enhanced processing that improves
medium frequency detection capability. Phase IV (FY 2001) will upgrade the
high frequency sonar on late-generation SSN-688I-class ships. Each upgrade
installs improved processing and workstation interfaces and built-in
training software. Recent, real-world encounters have consistently
demonstrated the overwhelming success of this program in restoring and
maintaining U.S. acoustic superiority against likely adversaries.

The sonar team aboard USS San Juan
(SSN-751) conducts Acoustic Rapid COTS Insertion training. |
Submarine combat control – or
fire control – systems are also being upgraded and improved. Older legacy
systems will have a more common, capable, and flexible open architecture
under the Submarine Combat Control System Open System Enhancement
Program. This program will be implemented in three phases. Phase I (FY
2000) introduces automated strike planning capabilities of the Tomahawk
Weapons Control System (ATWCS), currently employed on strike capable
surface ships, and an upgrade to Virginia-class-like data
distribution and services. Phase II (FY 2002) further upgrades the
processing capability and introduces advanced weapons improvement. This
upgrade supports the Tactical Tomahawk (TACTOM) Weapon Control System (TTWCS)
and the improved anti-diesel littoral torpedo (ADCAP CBASS). Later, Phase
III (FY 2007) installs Virginia-class weapons-launch improvements
and provides an at-sea, end-to-end launcher testing capability. The first
Mk 2 Block 1C installation on a Los Angeles-class submarine has
already been completed, with developmental and operational testing to
support IOC scheduled for FY 2001.
The BSY-2 Submarine Combat System was designed to meet the expanded
operational requirements of the Seawolf (SSN-21)-class attack
submarines. The system is fully integrated for sonar tracking, monitoring,
and launch of all on-board weapons, including Mk 48 ADCAP/ADCAP MOD
torpedoes, Tomahawk missiles, and mines. Significant advancements include
the hull-mounted Wide Aperture Array (WAA) for rapid localization of
targets, a 92-processor node flexible architecture (“FLEXNET”), and a
fully integrated Interactive Electronic Technical Manual (IETM) supporting
on-board and shore-based maintenance, operations, and training. Three
systems have been procured, with the first delivered to the Seawolf
in February 1995, the second to Connecticut in October 1997, and
the third intended for Jimmy Carter.
The
Navy’s first priority in its current UUV plan is the
rapid development and deployment of a covert
mine reconnaissance capability. |
Non-acoustic
Sensors
The increasing demands on submarines for near-land ISR has raised
electro-magnetic sensors to new levels of importance. The AN/BLQ-10
Electronic Support Measures (ESM) Suite, formerly known as Advanced
Submarine Tactical ESM Combat System (ASTECS), will be deployed on the
Los Angeles, Seawolf, and Virginia classes and will support
operations in both the open ocean and in the complex littoral signals
environment. The system consists of periscope-mounted antennas, broadband
receivers, signal detectors, displays, and advanced processing and
analysis equipment. The BLQ-10 will detect, analyze, and identify radar
and communication signals from ships, aircraft, submarines, and land-based
transmitters. Additionally, it includes a powerful radio direction-finding
subsystem and will provide our ships an enhanced littoral
intelligence-gathering capability, particularly when augmented with
special carry-on signals intelligence (SIGINT) equipment. The AN/BLQ-10
ESM System entered development in October 1994, and successfully passed
OPEVAL in June 2000.

LMRS will Offer New Mine Ops
Capabilities. The Long-Term Mine Reconnaissance System will
enable submarines to conduct clandestine minefield reconnaissance by
launching and recovering a vehicle able to operate autonomously for
more than 40 hours. |
Another exciting new technology for
information gathering in coastal regions is that of Unmanned Undersea
Vehicles (UUVs) — particularly those that can be launched and
retrieved by submarines standing farther out to sea. The Navy’s first
priority in its current UUV plan is the rapid development and deployment
of a covert mine reconnaissance capability. The Long-Term Mine
Reconnaissance System (LMRS) is in development to enter service in FY
2003 and will enable submarines to conduct clandestine minefield
reconnaissance by launching and recovering a vehicle able to operate
autonomously for more than 40 hours. Potential preplanned product
improvement (P3I) enhancements are being reviewed to expand LMRS
capabilities with Precision Underwater Mapping and Navigation and more
cost-effective rechargeable energy sources. The Multi-Mission UUV
Program, an outgrowth of LMRS, scheduled to start in FY 2004. This
initiative is envisioned as building on the LMRS design by adding “plug
and play” sensor packages for potential missions in electro-magnetic and
electro-optical ISR, Indications and Warning, tactical oceanography, and
remote ASW tracking.
Enhanced Communications
A key requirement for expanding the role of attack submarines in both
intelligence gathering and joint operations is achieving an order of
magnitude increase in communications connectivity. The High
Data-Rate (HDR) Antenna will provide the Submarine Force with
world-wide, high data-rate satellite communications for accessing the
secure, survivable Joint MILSTAR Satellite Program in the Extremely High
Frequency (EHF) band, as well as the Defense Satellite Communications
System (DSCS) in the Super High Frequency (SHF) frequency band.

HDR Offers New Connectivity. The
first operational installation of the Navy’s new High Data Rate (HDR)
Antenna was completed on USS Providence (SSN-719) in August
2000 and has already demonstrated a significant improvement in
submarine connectivity. |
The HDR antenna can also copy targeting
information from the Global Broadcast Service (GBS). The first Rapid
Prototype HDR Antenna was delivered to the Navy in June 1998 and has
successfully completed testing. The first operational installation was
completed on USS Providence (SSN-719) in August 2000 and has
already demonstrated a significant improvement in submarine connectivity.
Operational Evaluation is currently ongoing.
If Deterrence Fails – and
Conflict Escalates…
Submarines already on scene for the ISR
stages of a contingency are both well-positioned and well-prepared to
support U.S. interests if the tactical situation escalates toward armed
conflict. The first overt military action required of nearby submarines
might be the insertion of Special Operations Forces (SOF) for covert
missions in hostile territory. The new Advanced SEAL Delivery System (ASDS)
is particularly designed for assignments of this type. This dry
mini-submarine is 65 feet long and is operated by a two-man crew. It can
carry a Navy Sea-Air-Land (SEAL) squad or similar teams from the other
services for long-range clandestine insertions and extractions in support
of special operations missions. ASDS will be launched either from a host
submarine, much like the Deep Submergence Rescue Vehicle (DSRV), or
from the well decks of amphibious ships.

Advanced SEAL Delivery System
(above); the diagram below illustrates various elements of ASDS,
including the Thruster, Anchor, Transport Compartment, Battery, LIO
Compartment, Operator Compartment, and Forward Looking Sonar.
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Essentially, a “dry,” battery-powered
mini-submarine, it will eliminate the extended cold-water exposure
inherent with in-service, “wet,” submersible Swimmer Delivery Vehicles (SDVs)
and will bring SOF team members into action with much less physical and
mental fatigue. The U.S. Special Operations Command has funded all the
ASDSs now planned for procurement. The first is home-ported with SEAL
Delivery Team One (SDVT ONE) in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, and is currently
undergoing at-sea operational testing. Follow-on ASDSs are scheduled to be
homeported in Hawaii and in Little Creek, Virginia (with SDVT TWO), and
modifications to allow in-service submarines to host the vehicles are
underway.

Artist’s conception of swimmer
operations from an SSGN. |
New Torpedo
Developments
If a shooting war breaks out at sea, the primary underwater offensive
weapon of the Submarine Force is the Mark 48 Heavyweight Torpedo,
effective against both surface ships and hostile submarines. This 21-inch
diameter weapon has been in production since February 1972, and is carried
by both attack and ballistic missile submarines.
An improved Mark 48 Advanced Capability (ADCAP) Torpedo is now
fielded on the Seawolf-, Los Angeles-, Sturgeon
(SSN-637)-class, and Ohio (SSBN-726)-class submarines; it will also
arm the Virginia-class attack submarines. A modification to the
ADCAP (ADCAP MOD) will increase guidance/control speed and memory, and
significantly reduce radiated noise. Both versions will combat fast,
deep-diving nuclear submarines and high-performance surface ships and can
operate with or without wire guidance using active and/or passive homing
and preprogrammed search and attack procedures. A follow-on hardware
upgrade, known as the Common Broadband Advanced Sonar System (CBASS),
began development in FY 1998 and will further enhance the torpedo’s
performance against modern SSNs and SSKs employing advanced
countermeasures. ADCAP MOD upgrade production began in FY 1995, and
between FY 2000 and FY 2004, a total of 522 will be completed. CBASS MODs
are scheduled for implementation on 675 torpedoes between FY 2003 and
2007.
Tomahawks for Land Attack
If the developing scenario ashore demands a precision strike against
critical targets early in the conflict, U.S. submarines are equipped to
fire the A/N BGM-109 Tomahawk Land-Attack Missile (TLAM) from
either torpedo tubes or vertical launchers. From their unique vantage
point close to hostile coasts, submarines can often launch in complete
surprise from under the enemy’s air-defense umbrella and depend on a short
time of flight to increase the overall accuracy and effectiveness. TLAM is
the Navy’s premier, all-weather, long-range, subsonic land-attack cruise
missile, and it is deployed on surface warships as well. The TLAM/C
variant is armed with a unitary conventional warhead, while the TLAM/D
variant is armed with submunitions. TLAM is guided by an on-board Inertial
Navigation System (INS) and Terrain Contour Matching (TERCOM) system,
which correlates observed terrain contours with a map stored onboard to
determine where the missile is. Additional accuracy is attained through
multiple Digital Scene Matching Area Correlation (DSMAC) updates, which
take digital pictures of the terrain and compare them with stored digital
maps. The TLAM Block III upgrade improves accuracy and global strike
capability with the addition of Global Positioning System (GPS) guidance
capability and improved DSMAC IIA.

TACTOM will improve submarine
covert precision
strike capability. |
Tactical Tomahawk (TACTOM),
the Block IV upgrade to TLAM, will preserve Tomahawk’s long-range
precision-strike capability while significantly increasing responsiveness
and flexibility at significantly lower cost. The follow-on TACTOM
improvements include in-flight retargeting, the ability to loiter over the
battlefield to respond to emergent targets, satellite “backlinking” for
battle damage assessment (BDA), and a new family of alternative payloads.
The TACTOM program was initiated in FY 1998 and will reach IOC in FY 2003.
Current plans call for the Navy to procure 1,353 TACTOM variants.

The awesome power of the
submarine-launched Mark 48 ADCAP Torpedo is clearly illustrated as
it tears through a former destroyer escort during a combat systems
test conducted by the Australian Navy. |
Undersea Warfare and the
MRC
In the event of a Major Regional
Contingency (MRC) – either without warning or as the result of the failure
of deterrence and the escalation of conflict – the attack submarine force
will quickly become heavily tasked within the context of either joint or
combined operations. In addition to continuing ISR missions now expanded
to include Battle Damage Assessment (BDA), U.S. submarines will take the
predominant part in “sanitizing” the undersea battlespace in preparation
for the arrival of follow-on joint forces by sea. Similarly, their
close-in precision strike capability will be called on frequently to
neutralize enemy command and control nodes, time-critical targets, and
hostile air defenses, thus preparing the way for manned aircraft strikes
from aircraft carriers or forward bases. A major new initiative in this
area is the proposal to convert four older Ohio-class SSBNs –
excess to the impending START treaty limits – to SSGNs capable of carrying
up to 154 TLAMs or TACTOMs in their reconfigured vertical-launch tubes,
more than any other warship in the Navy. This would provide the U.S. with
an unmatched combat power that is covert, survivable, forward deployed,
and has a nearly unlimited endurance.
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ADS – Valuable to
Littoral Surveillance. The Advanced Deployable System (ADS) is a
passive acoustic undersea surveillance system designed for rapid
deployment in littoral areas for the detection, classification,
localization, and tracking of both underwater and surface targets. |
Undersea
Surveillance
Securing and maintaining control of the sea, both in an MRC’s operational
area and along the sea lines of communication (SLOCs) that support joint
forces, requires effective means of detecting and interdicting enemy
threats, surface and subsurface. The sine qua non of this
capability is pervasive surveillance – of both large ocean areas and
specified regions of particular importance. Largely as an outgrowth of the
enormous effort expended on ASW during the Cold War, a number of new
sensor and surveillance systems are coming on line.
A major asset in this context is our fleet of T-AGOS Ocean Surveillance
Ships – small, civilian-manned auxiliary towed-array vessels that play
a prominent role in augmenting the Navy’s overall anti-submarine warfare
capability. There are eight total ships in three classes: a three-ship
monohull Stalwart (T-AGOS-1) class, a four-ship twin-hull
Victorious (T-AGOS-19) class, and a single leased vessel, the R/V Cory
Chouest. The Victorious class is a Small Waterplane Area
Twin-Hull (SWATH) design that allows the ships to operate in relatively
high seas.
T-AGOS ships provide the platform for the Surveillance Towed Array
Sensor System (AN/UQQ-2 SURTASS). The SURTASS ships provide passive
detection of quiet nuclear and diesel submarines and real-time reporting
of surveillance information to theater commanders. For passive sensors,
they employ either a long-line passive sonar acoustic array or a shorter
twin-line passive acoustic array. The twin-line system is our best
operational shallow-water towed array and the only multi-line towed array
in the Navy. It consists of a pair of arrays towed side-by-side from a
SURTASS ship and offers significant advantages for undersea surveillance
operations in the littoral zone. It can be towed in water as shallow as
180 feet, provides significant directional noise rejection, resolves
bearing ambiguities without turning, and allows the ship to tow at higher
speed. The twin-line Engineering Development Model is currently installed
on the USNS Assertive (T-AGOS-9), and the first production model
has been installed on the USNS Bold (T-AGOS-12).
U.S. submarines will take the predominant part in “sanitizing”
the undersea battlespace in preparation for the
arrival of follow-on joint forces by sea. |
With a Low Frequency Active
(LFA) add-on to SURTASS, the system is capable of making long-range
detections of both submarines and surface ships using a low frequency
active sonar transmitter suspended beneath the T-AGOS ship. As a mobile
system, SURTASS/LFA can be employed as a force-protection sensor wherever
the force commander directs, including forward operating areas or in
support of battle group activities. Only one LFA system exists, currently
installed on board the R/V Cory Chouest. LFA will be transitioned
to USNS Impeccable (T-AGOS-23), a single large (5,500-ton) SWATH
ship designed specifically as a platform for the SURTASS towed array and
its LFA adjunct, when it becomes operational in FY 2002. Efforts to
develop smaller and lighter LFA-type active systems are ongoing.
Fixed Acoustic
Surveillance
For conducting acoustic surveillance and monitoring in delimited
geographical areas of interest, two innovative new systems are under
development. The Advanced Deployable System (ADS) is a rapidly
deployable, short-term, large-area undersea surveillance asset, designed
to detect, locate, and report quiet conventional and nuclear submarines in
shallow-water littoral environments. ADS will consist of a Processing and
Analysis Segment (PAS) contained in reusable, transportable vans and
connected to the ADS sensor field by a shore cable. The Underwater Segment
(UWS) is an expendable, battery-powered, wide-area field of passive
undersea arrays. ADS will provide threat location information directly to
tactical forces and contribute to the joint force commander’s real-time
maritime picture in areas where timely surveillance is needed to maintain
undersea battlespace dominance.
ADS is in the Engineering and Manufacturing Development phase following a
highly successful May 1999 Fleet Exercise Test that demonstrated the
capability to detect and track a quiet diesel-electric submarine and
provide real-time cueing information to tactical platforms. Incremental
capability builds will provide a Trip Wire in FY 2003, a Small Field in FY
2004, and Large Field in FY 2006.
 |
T-AGOS Ocean
Surveillance Ships like USNS Loyal (T-AGOS-22) are small,
civilian-manned auxiliary towed-array vessels that play a prominent
role in augmenting the Navy’s overall anti-submarine warfare
capability. |
On a somewhat larger scale is the Fixed
Distributed System (FDS), intended as a fixed, long term,
passive-acoustic, ocean-bottom surveillance system. Currently under
development is a more modern variant of FDS, called FDS-COTS, which
will make maximum use of COTS components to upgrade the existing
capability. Both versions consist of a series of arrays deployed on the
ocean floor in deep-ocean areas, across straits and other chokepoints, or
in strategic shallow-water littoral areas. Both also include two
components: the Shore Signal and Information Processing Segment (SSIPS)
that handles the processing, display, and communication functions; and the
Underwater Segment consisting of a large area distributed field of
acoustic arrays. The initial FDS program was suspended in 1993 following
the deployment of the first system, designated FDS-1. Additional planned
systems were cancelled due to high costs relative to the perceived threat
after the breakup of the Soviet Union, and FDS-COTS was developed as a
less-expensive follow-on version. Development of an all-fiber-optic
hydrophone passive array will increase system reliability and performance,
and may also reduce costs. System testing and evaluation are complete, and
a contract is in place for the production of the next generation of
underwater systems.
Deep submergence rescue
vehicles, like Mystic (DSRV-1) pictured above aboard USS
Dallas (SSN-700), continue to provide the U.S. and its allies a
worldwide, quick-response submarine rescue capability unmatched by
any other nation. |
 |
Strategic Deterrence
While the Navy’s attack submarines prepare for participation in a wide
range of potential littoral and expeditionary contingencies, the nation’s
ballistic missile submarines – the SSBNs – continue their quiet strategic
deterrence patrols – day in and day out – with little publicity or
fanfare. The ultimate guarantors of the international security of the
United States, they have performed this mission with proud dedication and
near-perfect proficiency since 1960. The future of our seaborne nuclear
deterrent rests on two key elements: the SSBN force and the TRIDENT
missile system.

The TRIDENT II (D5) missile. |
The USS Ohio (SSBN-726)-class TRIDENT Fleet Ballistic Missile
Submarines (SSBN) comprise the Navy segment of the nation’s strategic
triad, which also includes long-range manned bombers and land-based
intercontinental ballistic missiles. The SSBN is the most survivable and
enduring leg of the triad, and thus remains one of the Navy’s highest
policy, program, and operational priorities. All 18 of the Ohio-class
SSBNs have been commissioned; the final ship of the class, the USS
Louisiana (SSBN-743), joined the fleet in FY 1997. The Ohio-class
submarines each carry 24 TRIDENT missiles – TRIDENT I/C4s on the first
eight ships stationed in Bangor, Washington, and TRIDENT II/D5s on the ten
ships stationed in Kings Bay, Georgia. Conversion of four of the C4 ships
to carry the TRIDENT II/D5 missile began in FY 2000 and will be completed
in FY 2008, with USS Alaska’s (SSBN-732) and USS Nevada’s
(SSBN-733) conversions currently in progress. The first four Ohio-class
submarines are scheduled for inactivation starting in 2003 to comply
with the 1994 Nuclear Posture Review target of 14 SSBNs. USS
Pennsylvania (SSBN-735) and USS Kentucky (SSBN-737) will shift homeport
from Kings Bay to Bangor in 2003 to balance the strategic force.
The UGM-133A TRIDENT II/D5 Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missile is
the sixth generation of the U.S. Navy’s Fleet Ballistic Missile (FBM)
program, which started in 1955. The D5 is a three-stage, solid-propellant,
inertially-guided, submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) with a
range greater than 4,000 nautical miles and accuracy measured in hundreds
of feet. TRIDENT II missiles are capable of carrying W76 or W88 Multiple
Independently Targeted Reentry Vehicles (MIRVs). In operation, these
missiles have been declared at eight MIRV warheads under the Strategic
Arms Reduction Treaty (START). As the Navy continues to address future
deterrence requirements against weapons of mass destruction, the TRIDENT
II/D5 will ensure that the United States has a modern, survivable
strategic deterrent.
TRIDENT II/D5 missile construction continues with an inventory objective
of 425 missiles for 14 TRIDENT II/D5 SSBNs in two oceans. Planned
procurement through FY 2005 is 5 to 12 missiles per year.
The
SSBN is the most survivable and enduring leg of the triad, and thus
remains one of the Navy’s highest policy,
program, and operational priorities.
|

The USS Alexandria (SSN-757)
underway. |
Despite a dramatic downsizing
in the decade since the Cold War, today’s Submarine Force is responding to
the volatile demands of the 21st century by designing-in flexibility, both
in computer and sensor systems and in hull and mechanical systems.
Exciting new programs for ships, sensors, and weapons are already in place
both to revitalize our existing force structure, and to bring on- line an
entirely new generation of submarines specifically suited for the
expeditionary missions of the new millennium.
From UNDERSEA
WARFARE
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