Print
Email
>
>
LCS 1 Demonstrates Its Potential At RIMPAC Exercises
Tags
2011 budget Acquisition Reform Aegis AEHF Afghan surge Afghanistan AgustaWestland airborne laser Airbus Al Qaeda Allies Alternate Engine Al-Yamamah American Enterprise Institute Ammunition Industrial Base APL Arms Control Arms Sales Arms Transfers Army Arrow Ashton Carter Babcock & Wilcox BAE Systems Bath Iron Works Bechtel BMDR Boeing Brown C-17 C-2 CAPE Carriers CENTCOM CH-47 Chabraja China climate change Cluster Bombs Cluster Munitions Conflicts of Interest Constellation CVN-78 CVN-91 cyber attack cyber defense cyber offense Cyber Threats Cyber Warfare DDG-1000 DDG-51 defense acquisitions Defense Budget Defense Business Board Defense Industry Defense Planning Defense Spending deficit Democrats & Defense deterrence Donald Rumsfeld Dong Feng DRS Technologies EA-18G EADS Efficiency Initiative EFV EH101 energy security Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle Export Controls F-16 F-22 F-35 Finmeccanica FMS FMTV force structure forcible entry Ford class Foreign Military Sales Free Trade Future Combat Systems GBI GCV General Dynamics General Mattis General McChrystal Global Hawk Global Strike GMR Greyhound Ground Combat Vehicle guns versus butter Handheld Manpack Radio Hapag-Looyd Helicopters Heritage Foundation High-Speed Rail Homeland Security Humvee hybrid warfare ICBM Inherently Governmental insourcing Intellectual Property Intelligence Community Iran Iran Sanctions Iraq Israel Jammer JFCOM Joint Forces Command Joint Heavy Lift Joint Operating Environment Joint Stars Joint Strike Fighter JSTARS JTRS KC-45 KC-X Kent Kresa Korea Larry Prior Linda Hudson Littoral Combat Ship Lockheed Martin Logistics Lynn M1 Mabus Maersk ManTech manufacturing Marine Corps Marine One Marinette Massachusetts M-ATV MH-60 Mid-term election Mine Countermeasures Mine Warfare Missile Defense MQ-9 MRAP NASA National Security Strategy NATO Navy NCADE Network-Centric Warfare Next Generation Jammer NGEN Nigeria NII Nimitz class NLOS-LS NMCI Non-Proliferation Norm Dicks North Korea Northrop Grumman NPR Nuclear Power Nuclear Shipbuilding Nuclear strategy Nuclear weapons Nunn-McCurdy O&M Operations and Maintenance Oshkosh Osprey P-8 Partnering Patriot PBL Performance-Based Logistics Persian Gulf Phalanx presidential helicopter Private Contractors Public-Private Partnerships QDR QHSR Rapid Fielding Initiative Ray Mabus Raytheon Rebalancing Reset RIMPAC Robert Gates Rocket Motors Ron Epstein RQ-7 Russia S-300 Samsung SBINet Scan Eagle Secretary Gates Shadow shipbuilding Sikorsky Soft Power solid rocket motor South Korea Space Tracking and Surveillance Satellite Space-X SSBN SSBN(X) Standard Missile Standard Missile 3 START Treaty Strategic Architecture strategic arms control Submarines Super Hornet Sustainable Defense Sustainment Taiwan Taliban Tanker terror terrorism THAAD Trade Deficit Trade Policy Trident Trident submarine UH-60 Unmanned Aerial Systems Unmanned Aerial Vehicles US Ports US101 USS Missouri V-22 Vertical Lift Virginia class weapons spending Wes Bush WGS Wideband Global Satcom William Perry World Trade Organization WTO Yemen
Recent
<< Previous
Next >>

LCS 1 Demonstrates Its Potential At RIMPAC Exercises


Every two years, the United States organizes and hosts the Rim of the Pacific Exercise (RIMPAC). This is the world’s largest maritime exercise, this year involving some 32 ships, 5 submarines, more than 170 aircraft and 20,000 personnel. Participating countries include Australia, Canada, Chile, Colombia, France, Indonesia, Japan, the Republic of Korea, Malaysia, the Netherlands, Peru, Singapore and Thailand. It is a clear and powerful demonstration of the value of collaborative defense efforts in the Pacific region.

While RIMPAC has been going on since 1971, this year is notable for, among other things, the first appearance at one of the biennial events of the Littoral Combat Ship (LCS). USS Freedom, LCS 1, is demonstrating the characteristics that will make the planned fleet of LCS a vital element of the U.S. Navy for decades to come. The value of the LCS comes from the inherent capabilities of the vessel, its shallow draft and high speed and from its adaptability. A defining feature of the LCS is its ability to deploy modular force packages tailored to specific missions. In this instance, USS Freedom was outfitted for an interdiction mission. It was equipped with the LCS Surface Warfare Mission Package and embarked Maritime Expeditionary Security Squadron (MAREXSECRON) 2 and Helicopter Sea Combat Squadron (HSC) 22. LCS 1 and its onboard units conducted simulated boarding exercises and even participated in the sinking of a target ship.

Both LCS 1 and LCS 2, the USS Independence, will open up new opportunities for naval collaboration between the U.S. and its allies, particularly in the Pacific region. Its modular design will allow the LCS to rapidly switch between the currently planned set of surface warfare, ASW and mine countermeasure missions. Clearly, the inherent flexibility of the LCS design will allow for other combinations of capabilities to be deployed, such as air and missile defense, shore bombardment, humanitarian assistance and air and sea surveillance.

Equally important, both LCS variants offer the potential to equip foreign navies. In the past, U.S. Navy ships have been too expensive and even too capable for all but the richest and most sophisticated foreign navies to procure. LCS will be relatively less expensive and possesses the virtue of an open architecture that will enable foreign navies to customize the ship to meet their needs. There is a tremendous value also to foreign navies operating the same platforms and weapons systems as the U.S. Navy.

RIMPAC 2010 is a demonstration both of the power of collaborative defense efforts and a clear reminder of the central role the United States, in general, and the U.S. Navy, in particular, play in maintaining the peace and stability of the Pacific region. As defense budgets tighten both for the U.S. and many friendly nations, collaboration in regional security will only grow more important. So too will the ability of the United States to provide its friends and allies with the military equipment they need to defend themselves and help secure regional peace.

Daniel Goure, Ph.D.

Return to Early Warning Blog
<< Previous
Next >>
1600 Wilson Boulevard, Suite 900
Arlington, VA 22209
P: 703-522-5828 | F: 703-522-5837
©2009 Lexington Institute. All Rights Reserved.
Website designed by Borcz:Dixon | Powered by Agency of Record