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Navy issues final request for next-generation frigate proposals
by Allen Cone
Washington (UPI) Jun 21, 2019

BAE awarded $67M to develop amphibious combat vehicle for Marines
Washington (UPI) Jun 21, 2019 - BAE Systems was awarded a $67 million contract to develop three amphibious combat vehicle command and control variants, as well as the ACV medium caliber cannons, for the U.S. Marine Corps.

The contract for Systems Land and Armaments includes development of engineering drawings, manufacture and test support for the command and control mission role variants, and the development of engineering drawings for the cannon mission role variants, the Defense Department announced Thursday.

The ACV program is managed within the Program Executive Officer Land Systems in Quantico, Va.

Eight-five percent of the work will be performed in York, Pa., and 15 percent in Aiken, S.C. And it is expected to be completed by Sept. 30, 2022.

Fiscal 2018 research, development, test and evaluation funds in the amount of $2.5 million and fiscal 2019 RDT&E funds in the amount of $20.1 million will be obligated at the time of award, and funding in the amount of $2.5 million will expire at the end of the current fiscal year.

BAE Systems has produced an assault amphibious vehicle since 1984. The vehicles have "earned a reputation for rugged durability and superior mobility for transporting troops and cargo from ship to shore," according to the company.

The Marines sought a stronger vehicle that can maneuver from ship to shore and beyond in combat situations. Defence Blog noted the vehicles are becoming increasingly costly and difficult to maintain.

In December 2016, BAE rolled out the first of the 16 prototypes for the USMC ahead of schedule, the ACV 1.1, which is 34 tons and has eight-wheel drive.

"Our amphibious combat vehicle 1.1 solution is designed from the ground up to fulfill the complex mission objective of deploying Marines from ship to shore," the company said.

The vehicle can carry 13 embarked Marines and three crew with internal storage capacity for all their equipment and two days of supplies.

On land, the vehicle has a range of more than 325 miles before refueling and can travel at speeds in excess of 65 miles per hour.

On water, AAV7A1 vehicles have a cruising speed of 7 knots and the ability to negotiate 10-foot plunging surfs heading seaward or to shore.

Last September, the Marines terminated an amphibious assault vehicle survivability upgrade program with SAIC that included new tracks to enhance mobility, increased underbelly armor, blast-mitigating seats, a new engine and transmission, suspension upgrades.

The U.S. Navy released the final solicitation for companies to bid on the design and construction of the next generation of guided-missile frigates, the FFG(X).

The request for proposals, or RFP, are for the first 10 ships -- one base ship and nine option vessels. The Navy said Thursday it expects to award a contract to one company in fiscal year 2020.

Interested bidders will have until Aug. 22 to submit their technical proposals to the Navy and until Sept. 26 to submit their pricing proposal, USNI News reported.

The Navy released a draft RFP to industry on March 1 and hosted an Industry Day event on March 19 to gain feedback.

The Navy wants more weapons and capabilities than the two current littoral combat ships currently in production.

The branch said the next-generation frigate will have "multi-mission capability to conduct air warfare, anti-submarine warfare, surface warfare, electronic warfare and information operations. " The ship would have at least 32 vertical launching system cells and an AEGIS-based combat system.

The Navy awarded five development contracts in July 2018 to shipbuilders to refine an existing parent hull design as a basis for the frigate, which must be build in domestic shipyards, according to federal law.

The $15 million contracts were awarded to Huntington Ingalls Industries, Austal USA, Lockheed Martin, Fincantieri Marine and General Dynamics Bath Iron Works to refine their own frigate parent designs.

Navy acquisition executive Hondo Geurts told Congress last year he anticipates the lead ship's cost will be $1.2 billion.

Lockheed Martin, which builds the Freedom-variant littoral combat ship, was part of the early process but announced it would not continue with the frigate competition. Austal USA is building four Independence-class LCS ships in Mobile, Ala.

The Navy wants to reach the full requirement of 20 ships and is planning a second contract closer to fiscal year 2025 for the next 10 ships "to ensure more accurate pricing on out-year ships." This will be beyond the six years planned for this initial contract.

A parent ship design must have been through production and demonstrated in full scale at sea.

The first ship would be outfitted 72 months after contract award.

Cherokee Nation is name for Navy's newest towing, salvage, rescue ship
Washington (UPI) Jun 21, 2019 - The U.S. Navy's newest towing, salvage and rescue ship will be named Cherokee Nation, the military branch announced Friday.

"It is my privilege to announce that the many Cherokee Nation citizens who've served throughout the years will be remembered with the highest honor a Secretary of the Navy can bestow, the naming of a ship," Secretary of the Navy Richard V. Spencer said in a news release. "The future USNS Cherokee Nation will expand our capabilities and form a critical backbone for the strength and readiness of our entire fleet."

Four other ships have been named in honor of the Cherokee Nation: a blockade gunboat during the American Civil War, a steam yacht built in 1903 and commissioned as a patrol ship in the Atlantic during World War I, a boat built in 1891 but commissioned as a tug during World War I and a World War II-era tug

The Cherokee Nation is the federally recognized government of the 360,000 Cherokee citizens over 7,000 square miles in Northeastern Oklahoma.

"The Cherokee Nation is extremely honored that the U.S. Navy is recognizing our tribal nation and the generations of Cherokee men and women who have bravely, and humbly sacrificed for our freedom today," Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Bill John Baker said. "Our Cherokee people have contributed in every major battle and war ever fought in this country, and continue to serve in the Armed Forces in some of the highest rates per ethnicity."

A Cherokee member, Joseph James "Jocko" Clark, was the first Native American to graduate from the Naval Academy and went on to command the USS Suwannee and USS Yorktown during the Battle of Midway in World War II, according to Cherokee Nation in a news release.

All seven of the planned class of ships will be named in honor of prominent Native Americans or Native American tribes.

The future USNS Cherokee Nation, which is designated as T-ATS 7, is the second ship in class.

In March, T-ATS 6 was named in honor of the major contributions the Navajo people, who occupy 27,000 acres in Arizona, Utah and New Mexico with a population of roughly 250,000.

The ships serve as open ocean towing vessels, and support salvage operations and submarine rescue missions.

The Cherokee Nation will be built at Gulf Island Shipyards in Houma, La., and is expected to be completed in July 2021, according to the Navy.

The company has been awarded $522.7 million to build the seven ships, including $63.5 million contract option for the design and construction of the ship class signed in 2018. It replaces the current T-ATF 166 and T-ARS 50 Safeguard class ships in service with the U.S. Military Sealift Command called

The company is contracted to build one ship per year through 2025.


Related Links
Naval Warfare in the 21st Century


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Littoral combat ship USS Minneapolis-St. Paul christening is Saturday
Washington (UPI) Jun 14, 2019
The U.S. Navy said it will christen its latest Freedom-variant littoral combat ship, the future USS Minneapolis-St. Paul, on Saturday. The ship, designed for near-shore environments, is also designated LCS 21. Rep. Betty McCullum, D-Minn., whose congressional district includes the city of St. Paul, will be the principal speaker at the event at the Fincantieri Marinette Marine Corp. shipyard in Marinette, Wis., on Saturday. Jodi Greene, deputy undersecretary of the Navy, will ceremonially break ... read more

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