ORIGINAL: herwin
ORIGINAL: el cid again
ORIGINAL: witpqs
My understanding is that they rotate those captains frequently. How many captains CO's in 6 years for a ship like that - 2, 3, more? Leave it to a bureaucracy to blame one of them.
A captain is usually captain for years - and no fool is supposed to make it to CVA captain. They are mainly rear admirals - and they are not noted for being bashful or timid. They have a vast array of assets and responsibilities - and letting a ship go to rot is not among them. Have no sympathy for the captain blamed - he could not be blamed if he had done his job properly.
I remember that period. Underfunding O&M by $50,000,000 per year for a carrier was flirting with disaster. They would have been better off laying her up.
I think it was 60 mil. And it is worse today: we built just 5 ships last year. This is absolute disaster - and makes the "sea basing" concept a joke. [We are supposed to move the military over to more ship oriented operations basing - and not depend on land bases with political issues. But no ships = no sea basing.] We also have done away with the EW rating - and now are stripping out the ECM recievers which technician-operators used to look at signals. So if the computer does not understand it and report it - the operators (called OS today) have no clue what is happening - and no one at all can look at the signal by any means. This is a symptom of a Navy that has not been seriously attacked in living memory.
We just had a disasterous confrontation in Taiwan Strait - officially disclosed yesterday - when USS Kittyhawk - after being refused entry to Hong Kong - tried to return to Japan "without permission through Chinese territorial waters." A submarine and a modern destroyer stood in her path - and the entire task group stopped moving for three days. This is not how to enforce the right of non bellegerant passage - diverting from course to zero movement is very dangerous in terms of both legal and operational concepts. They should have opened fire - under the doctrine "shoot first, shoot enough" - because passage was unlawfully blocked (as we did with Lybia in the Reagan era - two ships stood out to "enforce" the 200 km claims of Lybia - and both got burned out). We are in a very strange era if a carrier underway in an international waterway can be halted dead in its tracks days on end.