I'm real pleased to be here today,
discussing the most innovative and exciting vessel in the Navy's entire
shipbuilding program.
The schedule for today's event
describes me as the luncheon keynote speaker, which means I'm supposed
to capture the most compelling themes of the day -- despite the fact
that you're eating.
That's not a hard task
though, because the need for the Littoral Combat Ship is so obvious that only a
fool could fail to grasp its value, and the design concepts shaping LCS
set it apart as a true breakthrough in naval engineering.
As with any other revolution,
the story of LCS will not be a chronicle of steady, linear progress.
It is so different from what came
before that some surprises are inevitable along the way.
But I guarantee you that this
program will go forward, because the joint force can't live without it.
It is the only
hope the surface Navy has for operating in close proximity to the
complex threats of tomorrow, and it is the only hope the whole Navy has for
returning to a fleet of over 300 vessels in the near future.
So if there were no program like
the Littoral Combat Ship under development today, the Navy would need to
go out and start one.
It matches the needs of the
service better than any other war-fighting system currently in the budget.
What I'd like to do for the next
fifteen minutes is explain why that is so by looking at three
separate subjects...
-- First, the
way military threats have evolved since the end of the cold war.
-- Second, why a fast,
versatile littoral warship is so well matched to emerging threats.
-- And third, the role of
design concepts such as modularity in assuring the new warship can accomplish
its missions.
I only have five minutes to
spend on each topic, but by the time I'm done I think it will be obvious to you
that supplying mission packages for LCS is likely to be a very
rewarding business in the years ahead.
Changing Threats
Let's begin by looking at how
threats have changed.
By the time communism collapsed on
the eve of the new millennium, the U.S. Navy had grown accustomed to fighting a
certain kind of enemy.
That enemy typically was a
dictatorship with a large industrial economy capable of sustaining a blue-water
Navy.
The signature warships of these
big, state-based adversaries changed over time, from dreadnoughts to aircraft
carriers to nuclear-powered submarines, but the blue-water nature of the
challenge persisted.
The other services were oriented
mainly to security challenges ashore, but for the Navy the big question
was always how to secure the sea lanes that assured our access to Eurasia and points south.
So the Navy built a fleet that was
shaped mainly by the maritime forces of the other side, rather than by the need
to project power onto land.
That all began to
change around 1990, when the Navy faced the prospect of no peer adversary
at sea -- no Imperial Fleet, no Red Navy -- for the first time in many
generations.
Recognizing that relevance was
essential to survival in a world of reduced threats, the Navy began thinking
more creatively about the ways it could contribute to winning wars ashore,
especially in concert with the Marine Corps.
It came up with some pretty
interesting ideas, such as the notion of "network-centric" warfare
that was later appropriated by the rest of the joint force.
But the 1990s was no time to take
a radical turn in military investments, because threats were muted, force
structure was shrinking and funding for modernization was being slashed.
So the Navy entered the new
millennium with a lot of interesting ideas, but minimal political support for
implementing those ideas.
And then the 9-11 attacks
occurred.
Suddenly, the political system was
awakened to a raft of emerging threats that had previously been neglected...
-- Terrorists inspired by
extreme religious beliefs.
-- Insurgents bent on
overthrowing political order and altering borders.
-- Weapons traffickers eager
to sell the mass-murder technologies of the preceding century.
The more policymakers looked, the
more emerging challenges they saw, from rogue states to drug cartels to illegal
migrants to pirates.
And so the political system's
previous obsession with the danger posed by a few big, peer competitors gave
way to awareness of diverse threats emanating from many quarters.
As the defense establishment
sorted through these various threats, a few unifying features became
apparent...
-- First, they were all
asymmetric, meaning they challenged the U.S. where it was weak rather than
strong.
-- Second, they were
elusive, hard to track or target using conventional means of surveillance.
-- Third, they were
relatively weak in terms of resources and weaponry, which is one reason why
they employed asymmetric tactics.
-- Fourth, despite being
poorly resourced, they were all empowered by the availability of new
technologies such as the internet.
-- Fifth, they all sought to
reduce U.S.
access to areas where they were active, either by denying use of local bases or
by simply making it too dangerous to be in the neighborhood.
-- And finally, although
they had no significant capability on the high seas, they were very active in
littoral regions where population, commerce and marine traffic is densest.
The latter characteristic,
obviously, was of great interest to the Navy.
The Navy had long realized
that most of the world's population and commerce was within easy reach of the
sea, but until the cold war ended it had seen its role in the littorals largely
in terms of supporting the rest of the joint force.
For example, the next-generation DDG-1000
destroyer had been built around long-range guns that could sustain high rates
of precision fire in support of Marines ashore.
But now the Navy began to see a
broader array of responsibilities for the fleet in littoral regions, as other
services faced difficulties tracking adversaries, gaining base access, and
sustaining forces ashore.
The big question was how to
reorganize the fleet so it could operate effectively in the littorals, given
the fact that it had been built mainly to operate in the open sea.
The Navy wasn't ready to give up
on the idea of deploying big warships such as aircraft carriers in harms way,
but it was obvious something would need to be done to reduce the danger in
littoral waters before the big guns arrived, and it wasn't so obvious that big
warships were always the right answer to the threats found there.
Thus was born the Littoral Combat
Ship, an agile warship constructed from the keel up to operate effectively in
the shallow, crowded, dangerous environment of the littorals.
There are actually two different
stories behind the LCS, one about the emergence of new threats and
missions, the other about the use of new technology and tactics.
Let's turn first to the new
missions, and examine how LCS was uniquely responsive to the emerging threat
environment.
Critical Missions
When we look at the defining
features of the Littoral Combat Ship, five characteristics stand out...
-- First, it is a fast,
stealthy warship designed to operate in shallow water.
-- Second, it is a
multi-mission vessel that can be easily reconfigured and refreshed.
-- Third, it hosts an array
of sensors, airframes and unmanned vehicles that assist in the execution
of missions.
-- Fourth, it is
continuously connected to the rest of the fleet and designed to fight in a
networked environment.
-- Finally, when you wrap
the whole package together, it costs a small fraction of what a new destroyer
would cost.
Now, how would these five features
help the Littoral Combat Ship to cope with the kind of war-fighting environment
likely to be found in the future near the coastlines of hostile countries?
Well, the threats the Navy is most
likely to encounter there are mines, diesel-electric submarines and swarming
speedboats.
But it will encounter those
threats in a cluttered, confusing environment where they cannot be addressed
unless U.S.
forces can first sort out who is friendly, who is hostile, and who is neutral.
Much of the time, the
warship may be operating in close proximity to noncombatants whose
accidental death or injury would severely impede the success of the mission.
So the design features of
the Littoral Combat Ship have been selected to address
this constantly changing, unpredictable landscape of challenges where
larger surface combatants would operate at a distinct disadvantage -- at least
until LCS has cleared the way for the rest of the fleet.
In terms of speed and agility, LCS
will be able to navigate successfully where no other warship in the fleet could
easily venture, alternately chasing down enemies or racing to escape hostile
vessels and munitions.
In terms of multi-mission
reconfigurability and refresh, LCS delivers a maximum
measure of flexibility for mixing and matching capabilities as threats
dictate, both today and tomorrow.
In terms of on-board sensors,
airframes and vehicles, LCS can extend its reach well beyond the scope of
action of a more traditional warship, tracking and targeting many
different littoral dangers with exceptional precision.
In terms of connectivity and
networking, LCS will have the capacity to tap into the full information
resources of the joint force, not only assimilating knowledge from off-board
sources but also sharing its own collections with them.
And in terms of cost, the low price
of the hull combined with minimal crewing requirements and interchangeable
modules will enable the Navy to buy enough ships so that the
service can cover the littoral regions of the world with an
adequately-sized fleet.
Thus, the Littoral Combat Ship
really is well-suited to the challenges presented by littoral warfare as we
understand them today.
The baseline missions for the
warship, as you know, are anti-mine, anti-submarine, and anti-surface warfare.
Beyond that, LCS will be a
multi-sensor reconnaissance asset, a special-warfare platform, a
maritime-interdiction vessel, and a homeland-security asset.
The inherent versatility of its
design will permit each LCS to conduct many different missions well, and the
ability to configure mission packages differently from vessel to vessel in a
multi-ship deployment will make it a very flexible asset indeed.
We can't predict everything that
is going to unfold in the littorals of the future, but we can say that if any
warship will be ready on day one of a war to cope with the diversity found
there, it is likely to be the LCS.
None of which should obscure the
fact that LCS fits into a broader fleet architecture in which it is merely one
component of a more comprehensive force structure -- a force structure
that ultimately will amount to a new Navy radically different from the maritime
forces of the past.
Design Concepts
That brings me to my last topic
for today, the role of design concepts such as modularity in assuring the
Littoral Combat Ship can accomplish its missions.
I mentioned several minutes ago
that there are really two different stories behind LCS, one about emerging
threats and missions, the other about emerging technologies and tactics.
I've talked about the new threats
and missions, but I haven't said much about the role new technology plays in
driving the design of the warship.
The technology story needs to be
told, because LCS isn't just about trying to keep up with changing threats,
it's also about capturing the benefits of the information revolution.
The latter goal is referred to
within the Pentagon as "military transformation," and in some ways it
transcends the demands imposed on our forces by emerging adversaries.
That's why Secretary Rumsfeld
referred to Pentagon investment priorities on his watch as
"capabilities-based" rather than "threat-based" -- because
he wanted war-fighters to leverage the full potential of information technology
regardless of whether the threats they were addressing were new or old.
Rumsfeld continuously urged the
joint force to rethink its concepts of operation, its organization and its
tactics in light of what emerging technologies might make possible.
Well, that's a big part of what
the Littoral Combat Ship is all about -- using new technologies to their
maximum potential regardless of who your adversary is or where you encounter
him.
The Navy pioneered such thinking
when it formulated the precepts of network-centric warfare, and LCS is its most
sophisticated interpretation of what kind of combat system is best suited to a
networked, distributed force.
Other than net-centricity itself,
the two most pervasive ideas informing the design of LCS are modularity and
open architecture, complimentary concepts that make the warship more flexible and
adaptable than any other surface combatant in history.
It is so different from what came
before that even calling it a "warship" may be a bit misleading,
because that term summons forth images of more traditional platforms LCS is
supposed to replace.
As Robert Work of the Center for
Strategic and Budgetary Assessments puts it,
"The LCS is less a ship and
more a battle network component system, consisting of a sea frame, a core crew,
assorted mission modules, assembled mission packages, mission package crews and
a reconfiguration support structure."
This certainly doesn't sound like
the kind of warships the Navy used to buy, which were hard-wired to the nth
degree and about as flexible as the steel that made up most of their weight.
The new ideal, fully captured in
LCS, is a war-fighting system that can be shifted quickly from one role to
another, or accomplish several different roles simultaneously, through the
rearrangement of modular components that share common design standards and
network interfaces.
When you combine the modularity of
LCS hardware with the open-architecture approach used in fashioning its
software and networks, the end result is a war-fighting system that is ready
for just about any threat or technological opportunity you can imagine.
Among the benefits the Navy
expects to realize from its new design concepts are....
-- Enhanced operational
flexibility.
-- Increased crew
productivity.
-- Reduced investment
outlays.
-- Streamlined maintenance
practices.
-- Faster technological
refresh of on-board systems.
-- Easier inter-operability
with other services.
-- And perhaps even more
opportunities for overseas sale of U.S. warships.
So being able to fight effectively
in the littorals is just the beginning of the benefits delivered by the design
principles underpinning LCS.
We tend to use simple metaphors in
explaining these principles -- Lego blocks for modularity, plug-and-play
computer games for open architectures -- but the impact of the principles on
how the Navy does business in the future is likely to be profound.
Today, it is so costly for the
service to upgrade legacy, proprietary software systems that it sometimes
decides to retire ships long before they have reached the end of their design
lives.
And when confronted by urgent
needs not anticipated in the naval planning process, the service often has very
few options from which to choose.
Those problems will be much less
common in the future, because modularity and open architectures, like net-centricity,
aren't just design features -- they are also business models and cultural
values.
They transform the way the Navy
thinks as well as the way that it acts.
By embracing the ethos of the
information age, the Navy is committing its fleet and its fortune to a
fundamentally different way of preparing for and waging war.
The Littoral Combat Ship is the
leading edge of a revolution in naval warfare, and you all will be proud
that you were able to play a part in its birth.