Know Your ‘Reformers’: Episode 1 in potentially a long series
Introduction
I’ve been toying for quite some time with the idea of maybe taking on a book
project: a book about the modern era of so-called “Military Reformers” and
the also so-called ‘Military Reform Movement’. My interests in their activities reaches
back to at least the late 70’s. As a byproduct of examining the output of the
leading/most prolific ‘reformers’ in detail over the years I’ve managed to consume
a great many of their screeds. I have
also acquired a fairly significant selection of their writings not available by
other means (such as the internet).
Nearly all of the ‘reformer’ material I have acquired over the years has
been either library remainder (free) or (mostly) purchased second-hand. The fine
point here is this: as my research progressed and knowledge of the ‘Reformers’
increased, it became increasingly important to me to NOT subsidize their ‘work’
in any way, shape, or form.
Another Generation. Same Old Song and Dance.
In my ‘inbox’ earlier in the week was a link to an interesting piece posted at the Defense Professionals (DefPro) website (Although the
publication of same calls the ‘Professionals’ part seriously into question). It
is a classic example of the kind of thinking (or lack thereof) that goes into a
typical POGO rant, but in this case, it offers the kind of transparency to
POGO’s philosophy and modus operandi that I don’t think I’ve seen since Dina
Rasor’s early effluences, back when she was cranking up POGO’s prior
incarnation: the ‘Project on Military Procurement’.
The piece that follows was put together by one of POGO’s newest
(and therefore greenest) ‘investigators’, one Ben Freeman, who has been rather prolific
of late. The subject this time is the Littoral Combat Ship program, but it
could be about almost any program. Indeed, as I read through the piece, which
for our purposes Freeman conveniently structured in a ‘he said’-‘she said’
format, I was struck by the similarities in substance and tone that Dina Rasor
used when she attacked (yes, a ‘trigger’ word, but that is what it was) the M-1
(tank and program) performance ‘back in the day’ without really understanding what a tank was for much less how it was to be used. From the obvious parallels, it immediately became
apparent that we could also use Freeman’s POGO piece to illustrate clearly the
kind of philosophical, conceptual, and technical dissonance that exists between
the worlds of those who ‘do’ things in the real world and those who ‘second
guess’ from the trench lines of ‘Reformerland’.
Even better, we can accomplish this without having to deal with the
more substantial issues of whether or not the LCS program is needed and
justified and/or having to dissect the back-story motivations of the ‘second
guessers’ for this go around and save just them for another time.
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LCS 1 (Left) and LCS 2 (USN Photo) |
I now present the DefPro piece in its entirety, with
observations/commentary in [red brackets].
Navy Defends $120
Billion LCS Program, POGO Publishes Rebuttal
08:27 GMT, May 2, 2012 POGO certainly caused a stir last
week after sending a letter to U.S. Congress reporting that the USS Freedom,
the first ship commissioned under the Navy’s Littoral Combat Ship (LCS)
program, has been plagued with cracks, flooding, corrosion, and repeated engine
failures. In response to POGO’s letter, Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-CA) amended the
National Defense Authorization Act, “demanding that the Navy ‘fess up to
Congress on problems with its Littoral Combat Ship,” according to AOL Defense. [First, note the self-promoting claim of causing a ‘stir’;
we’ll get back to it later. The most interesting thing is how the quotation is
used. If not read carefully, it might lead one to believe that Rep. Hunter was
the one quoted, rather than a turn of a phrase that the author of the AOL piece
-- one Sidney J. Freeberg Jr.-- used to punch up the opening of his article.]
Hunter confirmed that our letter was the impetus for the
amendment. “I didn’t realize the Navy had been so restrictive in its reporting
even with DoD,” Rep. Hunter told AOL Defense. “We just want to know what’s
going on.”
[Again, a carefully deceptive use of
selective quotation. One that rather
carefully does NOT mention a more substantial quote a couple of paragraphs
ahead of the ‘punchline’ Freeman lifted from Freeberg’s article. If Freeman
had included the more explanatory quote ahead of this one, we would have read: "This
simply makes the navy come to us and explain all the problems [and] all the
good things about the LCS we need to know to conduct proper oversight,"
Rep. Hunter told the committee. "The Navy needs to be more forthcoming
with us." But perhaps
that more balanced description would have set the ‘wrong’ tone for what will
follow? The claim of confirmation that POGO’s letter was the ‘impetus for the
amendment’ is classic POGO:
1) make claims where is not important whether
or not they are ‘valid’, only that they cannot be ignored by legislators or
administrators without risking escalation and appearance of
indifference/malpractice.
2) Legislators/administrators move to at least pretend to examine the
claims to avoid further complaint.
3) POGO then markets their activities as a ‘success’. “POGO gets
results!” (as in the claim to have caused ‘a stir’)
Note: Expect mention of
this ‘success’ in future POGO fundraising briefings/pleas to preserve and
expand their donor base.]
Rep. Hunter is joined in this bipartisan push for oversight
of the LCS program by fellow House Armed Services Committee Members Hank
Johnson (D-GA), who issued a statement supporting Hunter’s amendment, and
Jackie Speier (D-CA), who sources confirm will be issuing LCS legislation of
her own. And just yesterday, The Hill reported that Senators Carl Levin (D-MI)
and John McCain (R-AZ), the Chair and Ranking Member of the Senate Armed
Services Committee, respectively, have called for a Government Accountability
Office (GAO) review of the program.
It all seemed to touch a nerve with the Navy, which quickly
moved to defend the $120 billion LCS program, which calls for a new wave of
nimble combat ships designed to operate close to shore. The beleaguered
Freedom, manufactured by Lockheed Martin, is one of two LCS designs.
[Obviously Freeman is still trying to set up the right POGO
vibe here. ‘Touch a nerve’? Will we perhaps see in a short while why a rapid
response from the Navy should be considered so ‘remarkable’ or when viewed in
context will it be actually ‘unremarkable’?]
The Navy issued a response to our letter so quickly that
even Defense News remarked that it was delivered with “uncharacteristic
alacrity.”
[Again, setting up the idea that the ‘Navy’
(yes, apparently ALL of it) was ‘unsettled’, by the machinations of the (apparently)
‘mighty’ POGO? If the previous comments serve any purpose other than casting
the Navy in a less than flattering pose, it is not exactly clear what they are here for, or otherwise why they would
have been included in this POGO piece at all.]
One point the Navy protests is our statement that LCS ships
will make up as much as half of the Navy’s surface fleet. The Navy cites a
report to Congress that says the LCS will account for 22 percent of the “21st
Century Battle Force.”
We can admit when we’re wrong. But in this case the “22
percent” the Navy cites is not accurate, either. The planned 55 LCS ships will
account for 38 percent of the Navy’s surface combatant ships.
[So. POGO takes issue with the Navy’s ship count numbers. Is
it because POGO has a better list of ships, more authoritative definitions of
what constitutes a ‘surface fleet’ or ‘battle force’, or a better grasp of
naval force plans than the Navy itself? Why is this example of what is really ‘communication
at cross purposes’ included in this piece at all? I think we are again left with the perception
of some deceptive, and IMHO rather pissy, ‘battlefield prep’ on the part of
POGO’s Freeman.]
As for the rest of the Navy’s response to our letter, we’ll
beg to differ and stand by our work.
Here’s a side-by-side comparison of the Navy’s response and
our rebuttal:
[Finally!]
WHAT OUR LETTER SAID:
“Senior Navy officials have publicly praised the LCS program.
However, the Navy has been reluctant to share documents related to LCS
vulnerabilities with entities such as the Pentagon’s Office of the Director of
Operational Test and Evaluation (DOT&E).”
• The Navy’s Response:
This is not correct. The LCS Program Office has been working
in close coordination with the DOT&E community since the early days of the
program. DOT&E has been an active member of the T&E Working level
Integrated Program Teams (WIPTs) since 2004 and most recently at the [Office of
the Secretary of Defense (OSD)] level in the milestone-related Integrating IPTs
(IIPTs) and Overarching IPTs (OIPTs) that occurred in 2011. Draft Detail Design
Integrated Survivability Assessment Reports (DDISAR) were provided to DOT&E
in the second quarter of fiscal 2012 to initiate discussions while modeling
results and shot line selections are completed. DOT&E is working with the
program office to complete the DDISARs and move toward developing Total Ship
Survivability Trials (TSST) plans that assess Seaframe survivability in fiscal
2014. DOT&E will receive the final DDISARs prior to the planning and
conduct of the TSSTs. Additionally, the LCS Program Office provided a draft of
the 57mm Live Fire Test and Evaluation Management Plan to OSD/DOT&E on 29
March, and received comments on 3 April 2012. Comment resolution is in process.
• Our Rebuttal:
The only two documents the Navy confirms sharing with
DOT&E are a “draft of the 57mm Live Fire Test and Evaluation Management
Plan,” and a draft of the “Detail Design Integrated Survivability Assessment
Reports.” Both of which were just recently received by DOT&E. As our letter
indicates, the Navy possessed several documents related to the ship’s
performance and equipment failures that it failed to share with DOT&E. Plans
to create trials in 2014 do nothing to improve oversight of a ship that will be
deployed to Singapore in 2012.
[Got that? First POGO accuses the
Department of the Navy with not being forthcoming with DoD’s DOT&E
organization using the unbounded term ‘reluctance’ to describe LCS document
sharing concerning the LCS’s ‘vulnerabilities’ . In response, the Navy points
out that DOT&E representatives are embedded participants within the LCS
test community, and lists specific LCS Program draft reports that have been
submitted on relevant activities (to the ‘vulnerabilities’ topic that POGO
highlighted). It is also apparent from the statement these reports are being submitted
on an event-driven schedule.
POGO’s ‘rebuttal’ ? Freeman chooses
to ignore the statement concerning ongoing DOT&E participation with the
cognizant LCS Test &Evaluation IPT, then Freeman carps about the low number
of reports acknowledged to have been shared by the Navy. Does POGO/Freeman really feel entitled to a comprehensive
list of communications between the Navy and DOT&E based upon a ‘letter’
they wrote, or are they just keeping on the offensive as the best form of
defense? (The latter could be described as a typical ‘reformer’ move BTW: think
Boyd’s OODA Loop)
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LCS 1 USS Freedom replenishment with LHD 6 USS Bonhomme Richard (USN Photo) |
In this case though I believe the
former was more ‘wished for’ than expected. This appears more likely to be, in
the best POGO/Reformer tradition, a case of asking for information and then
making the next move based upon the response. 1) If the information requested
is not provided, make assertions of ‘reluctance’ (the cycle on this path
eventually ramps up to accusations of ‘coverup’ or worse). 2) If the
information requested IS provided, then interpret it to support the agenda in
hand.
The ‘tell’ this time is the
importance Freeman mentioning “several
documents related to the ship’s performance and equipment failures that it
failed to share with DOT&E”. Aside from the inflammatory ‘failed to
share’ phrasing, from a systems Reliability, Maintainability and Availability
(RM&A) point of view, it would be fundamental nonsense to analyze failure
data and draw any final conclusions as to failure significance or trends, and in some
cases even root cause, this early in a program. The mixing of complaint about
structural performance and system performance is either shotgunning the target
hoping to hit something, or indicative that like many ‘reformers’ Freeman
doesn’t know enough to distinguish between the two. Modern complex systems
typically require tens of thousands of operating hours before system
reliability can be ‘graded’ against specifications. The only purpose for outside and uninformed
interests to acquire such data this early is for target practice and laying
groundwork for further misadventures in furthering their agenda.
WHAT OUR LETTER SAID:
– “… (LCS-1, the first LCS ship) has been plagued by flawed
designs and failed equipment since being commissioned, has at least 17 known
cracks.”
– “Before and during the ship’s second set of rough water
trials in February 2011, 17 cracks were found on the ship’…”
– “Another crack was discovered “below the waterline and is
currently allowing water in... When discovered there was rust washing onto the
painted surface. It is thought this is rust from the exposed crack surface. It
is unknown how long this crack existed prior to being discovered.”
– “Similarly, cracks in the deck plating and center walkway
on the port side were mirrored by corresponding cracks on the starboard side.
Fifteen experts, including a source within the Navy, have informed POGO that
the cracks in nearly identical locations on opposite sides of the ship may be
indicative of systematic design issues.”
– “Last May, the LCS program manager issued near term
operating guidance for LCS-1, which placed significant constraints on the
ship’s safe operating envelope (SOE).”
– “Specifically, the new guidance states that in rough water
(sea state 7; 19.5- to 29.5-foot waves) with following seas, the ship cannot
travel at speeds greater than 20 knots, and cannot travel into head seas at any
speed. Even in calmer seas (sea state 5; 8.2- to 13.1-foot waves) the ship’s
peak speed into head seas is capped at 15 knots, relegating the Navy’s “cheetah
of the seas” to freighter speeds.”
• The Navy’s Response:
Speed restrictions for LCS 1 have been lifted. With regard
to the cracking discussion, these are not new findings. LCS 1 has experienced
minor structural issues. The details of the cracks found on LCS 1 were briefed
to the defense committees, including the Senate Armed Services Committee (SASC)
over a year ago (March 2011). All repairs were conducted using approved repair
procedures and satisfactorily inspected by American Bureau of Shipping (ABS)
and the appropriate Naval Technical Authority. Thorough analyses and reviews of
the designs and construction documentation were conducted, with the goal of
improved production processes. Design changes, as necessary, have been
incorporated in future hulls to resolve noted issues. Production processes were
modified as needed, to prevent future issues. These design changes were
implemented into LCS 1 throughout her post delivery period, the ship has been
approved to operate with the full scope of the approved Safe Operating Envelope
(SOE) since completion of the repairs.
• Our Rebuttal:
The Navy’s claim that the cracking issues have been reported
is partially correct. The cracks were reported, but the extent of the cracking
was not. These cracks have been repaired, but the cracking problem continues
according to sources close to the program. Faulty welds and construction
continue to cause new cracks on the ship that the Navy has yet to report.
The Navy also claims “the ship has been approved to operate
within the full scope of the approved Safe Operating Envelope (SOE) since
completion of the repairs.” But, being approved to operate within the full
scope of the SOE and actually operating are completely different. The simple
fact is that since completion of these repairs the ship has been unable to
successfully perform at the upper end of its SOE.
[POGO first makes a litany of
assertions related to structural cracks and their consequences, including a
rather humorous appeal to authority in
employing ‘Fifteen experts’ stating a rather obvious factoid ‘may’ be true. One would think one
expert would have sufficed for such a weak assertion of something not likely to
be disputed. Once you get past the unintended humor, the first questions that
come to my mind are:
1) Is the discovery of the need to
make structural tweaks a normal part of wringing out a new ship?
2) Is the scope and impact of the
cracking to date typical, lower or higher than might be reasonably expected?
3) Does the Navy (or ship builders
in general) employ a methodical strategy for identifying, tracking and fixing
structural issues/problems?
4) If they do not, why isn’t POGO
raising a holy stink over the absence of same?
But we don’t need to get too deep
into the topic of what the norms are because of the Navy response: Ummm.
We fixed all those problems.
POGO’s rebuttal: There’s more
problems that have occurred, and an unsupported assertion that the LCS in
question has been unable to ‘perform at the upper end’ of its operating
environment, which even if true, from the sound of it this is unrelated to
structural problems, so why bring it up at all on this subtopic, except as sort
of a ‘yes but’ deflection? ]
WHAT OUR LETTER SAID:
“From the time the Navy accepted LCS-1 from Lockheed Martin
on September 18, 2008, until the ship went into dry dock in the summer of 2011
— not even 1,000 days later — there were 640 chargeable equipment failures on
the ship. On average then, something on the ship failed on two out of every
three days.”
• The Navy’s Response:
As with any ship, all equipment failures on LCS 1,
regardless of how minor the impact to mission, have been meticulously tracked,
and this data has been invaluable in improving the reliability of ship systems.
The 640 chargeable equipment failures from Ship Delivery until the summer dry
docking, tracked in the LCS 1 Data Collection, Analysis, and Corrective Action
System (DCACAS) represent all equipment failures to the ship for all systems
(propulsion, combat systems, auxiliaries, habitability, C4I, etc) regardless of
whether the equipment was repaired by the crew or off ship maintenance
personnel.
The 640 failures referenced include multiple failures on a
piece of equipment (38 for the Main Propulsion Diesel Engine) and single
failures to equipment (one Man Overboard Indicator). From the DCACAS report
dated 31 Aug 2011, approximately 12 percent of the equipment failures since
delivery can be attributed to the Ship Service Diesel Generators (SSDGs). In
May 2010 the Navy and Lockheed Martin instituted a Product Improvement Program
for the SSDG. The resulting effort increased Mean Time Between Failures (MBTF)
for the equipment from less than 150 hours (October 2008) to over 500 hours
(April 2011).
This is a case of how the DCACAS data is used to improve the
reliability of the ships early in the acquisition program. Overall the DCACAS
data is a mechanism to evaluate every failure on the ship to determine if it
can be attributed to infant mortality of the equipment, normal wear and tear
for that equipment/component, or is a trend that needs to be addressed via
design changes or reliability growth efforts.
• Our Rebuttal:
The Navy does not dispute the 640 failures, which had not
been previously reported. The Navy mentions that the DCACAS data is used to
determine if failure can be attributed to infant mortality, normal wear and
tear, or is a trend. Their file confirms that nearly a third of these failures
were potential or confirmed trends, which, according to the Navy should “be
addressed via design changes or reliability growth efforts.” This is precisely
our rationale for questioning this ship’s design.
[ POGO’s Freeman first commits the
‘fundamental nonsense’ I mentioned earlier. The Navy pretty much responds as if
helping a child with their color matching skills. Freeman double-downs on the
640 failures as not being reported’ yet they must have been reported somewhere
for Freeman to have been aware of them. Then Freeman takes the point that the
Navy notes that failures where trends have been identified (obviously either
simple systems or related to simple installation, or operating factors or
problems anticipated via earlier analysis and test) should “be addressed via
design changes or reliability growth efforts”. Freeman then makes the illogical
claim that the existence of problems, the scope of which he has failed to
establish are truly worrisome or even out of the expected norm “is precisely
our rationale for questioning this ship’s design”.
The fact that Freeman believes
technical problems or issues arising on the introduction of a new weapon system
(on which he has no expertise or just as important, no experienced perspective
to judge the significance of) into its operating environment SHOULD give him
cause to be “questioning this ship’s design”, would normally cause the
recreational sailor in me to suspect that Freeman apparently has never been
around a ‘boat’ much less a ‘ship’ long or often enough to be a proper judge of
ship systems reliability and performance, and this last passage would seem
to be evidence enough to suspect his qualifications to even ask the RIGHT
questions concerning same.
EXCEPT…
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LCS 2 Under Construction (GD/Austal Photo) |
Except if you know how ‘reformers’
work, you would realize that this kind of faux indignance is their bread and
butter. Good engineers and program
managers understand the challenges of complexity and can distinguish between
necessary and unnecessary complexity, and they even know there is room for
disagreement on same, one of the reasons for the term: Best Engineering Judgment. Engineers and program managers know there will
always be technical problems to solve when fielding any complex (and even
simple) system. Engineers and program managers know that sources and remedies
to the technical problems may be found in the design, the construction, the
integration, or even the training and education of the operators. Engineers and
program managers know that until you actually field a system--complex or simple--you
will NEVER know about all-- much less be able to preclude all-- potential
technical problems. Good Engineers and program managers see a technical problem
as to be expected and solved. So-called ‘Reformers’ see technical problems as simply
reasons to do something other than what is being done, something to be used in
furthering their own agendas. And those agendas may or may not be what is publicly
stated, but they are never FOR advancing a weapon system under development. ]
WHAT OUR LETTER SAID:
“Secretary of the Navy Raymond Mabus told the Senate Armed
Services Committee in December 2010 that both variants of the LCS were
performing well, and that “LCS–1, the Freedom, demonstrated some of the things
we can expect during her maiden deployment earlier this year.” Then-Chief of
Naval Operations Admiral Gary Roughead echoed this praise for the LCS-1,
stating “I deployed LCS earlier than any other ship class to assure we were on
the right path operationally. It is clear to me that we are.”
• The Navy’s Response:
USS FREEDOM (LCS 1) arrived in San Diego on April 23, 2010,
successfully completing her maiden deployment more than two years ahead of
schedule and three to five years faster than conventional ship acquisition
strategies. LCS 1 traveled 6,500 miles, transiting the Panama Canal. Highlights
of operations in 3rd and 4th Fleet Areas of Responsibility include theater
security cooperation port visits in Colombia, Panama, and Mexico, successful
performance of strike group operations with the USS Carl Vinson Carrier Strike
Group, joint maneuvers with the Mexican Navy, and counter-illicit trafficking
patrols which resulted in 4 interdictions yielding over 5 tons of cocaine, 2
seized vessels, and 9 suspected smugglers taken into custody. The second phase
of the early deployment included LCS 1 participating in the bi-annual Rim of
the Pacific (RIMPAC) exercise with 14 other nations, 34 ships, 5 submarines,
100 aircraft and over 20,000 personnel. The early deployment included the
development of a coordinated logistics support plan. The lessons learned from
the LCS 1 deployment have provided critical data to inform the permanent
support plan for the 55 ships of the LCS class, as well as valuable information
used in the construction of both LCS 3 and the Block buy ships.
• Our Rebuttal:
These quotes are not an “issue” that we raised. We mentioned
them in context of the ship’s failures to show the disconnect between what Navy
officials were telling Congress and what was actually happening on the ship.
[No. To be accurate, you might
reasonably claim you “mentioned them in context of” of what POGO views
as “the ship’s failures” in an attempt “to show” what POGO asserts is
“the disconnect between what Navy officials were telling Congress and what” POGO
views as “was actually happening on the ship”.
WHAT OUR LETTER SAID:
“Mabus and Roughead failed to mention that during the
approximately two-month deployment when the ship traveled from Mayport,
Florida, to its home port in San Diego, California, there were more than 80
equipment failures on the ship. These failures were not trivial, and placed the
crew of the ship in undue danger. For example, on March 6, 2010, while the ship
was in the midst of counter-drug trafficking operations and reportedly
“conducted four drug seizures, netting more than five tons of cocaine, detained
nine suspected drug smugglers, and disabled two ‘go-fast’ drug vessels,” there
was a darken ship event (the electricity on the entire ship went out),
temporarily leaving the ship adrift at sea.”
• The Navy’s Response:
Throughout its deployment, LCS 1 safely operated and
conducted its mission. Few of the 80 equipment failures cited above were
mission critical. The ship did experience a brief loss of power, however, it
should be noted that many commercial and U.S. Navy vessels have periods of
power loss due to plant set-up and operator control. In the event of power
loss, there are specific U.S. Navy procedures documented in the Engineering
Operational Sequencing System (EOSS) to quickly restore power throughout the
ship. To address concerns documented with electric power generation, the LCS
Program executed Electric Plant Reliability Improvement Programs on both ship
designs to increase reliability of ship service diesel generators and the
performance and management of the shipboard electrical systems. This has
resulted in changes that have been implemented through post-delivery
availabilities on LCS 1 and LCS 2 as well as captured for LCS 3 and follow
ships. Additionally, sensors were installed to monitor performance trends.
• Our Rebuttal:
The Navy confirmed “the ship did experience a brief loss of
power” while deployed, which again had not been previously reported or shared
with Congress in any public testimony. In addition, the Navy claims that,
“Throughout its deployment, LCS 1 safely operated and conducted its mission.
Few of the 80 equipment failures cited above were mission critical. The ship
did experience a brief loss of power…” The fact that other ships lose power
does nothing to lessen the danger of unexpected power outages on a ship the
Navy would have us believe can survive naval warfare.
In other words, the Navy admits there were mission critical
failures, including a brief loss of power, on this LCS-1 mission. This stands
in stark contrast to Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus telling Congress that this
mission was a success and the ship “demonstrated some of the things we can
expect.” Unless we are to expect rampant equipment failures, it appears that
the Navy was misleading Congress about these issues.
[POGO says: Problems BAD! USN says:
Problems Typical and Unremarkable. POGO says: Navy BAD for not reporting
Typical and Unremarkable problems.
This reads more like POGO trying to
manufacture the appearance of a cover up than anything else.]
WHAT OUR LETTER SAID:
“According to the DoD’s DOT&E FY 2011 Annual Report, the
LCS is “not expected to be survivable in a hostile combat environment.”
• The Navy’s Response:
The LCS Ships are built to meet Joint Requirements Oversight
Council-approved survivability requirements and include OPNAVINST 9070.1 Level
1 Survivability standards [note: OPNAVINSTs are instructions issued with the
office of the chief of naval operations]. The LCS design specifically includes
Level 1 plus additional tailored survivability enhancements (“Level 1+”). LCS
survivability depends on a combination of ship design, ship numbers, and ship
CONOPS [concepts of operations] which says LCS will:
– Operate as part of a networked battle force
– Conduct independent operations only in low to medium
threat scenarios
– Operate as part of a networked battle force operation in
high threat environments
– Create Battle Space/Avoid being hit
– Rely on networked battle force for threat attrition
– Rely on overboard systems
– Fight and survive if hit
– Ship design: Accept ship mission kill; keep ship afloat
and protect crew after hit
– Battle force design: Maintain battle force fight-through
capability through LCS numbers and mission flexibility
– Withdraw/reposition if hit
LCS is designed to maintain essential mobility after a hit,
allowing the ship to exit the battle area under its own power. The LCS systems
allow ship’s crew to navigate and communicate while repositioning after a hit
all the while utilizing numbers (of LCSs), and CONOPS as force multipliers. LCS
incorporates survivability systems to perform required missions in the littoral
with an emphasis on crew survival.
• Our Rebuttal:
The Navy again confirms that the LCS has a “Level 1+”
survivability rating. According to the Navy “Level I represents the least
severe environment anticipated and excludes the need for enhanced
survivability…in the immediate area of an engaged Battle Group or in the
general war-at-sea region.” In other words, the ship is not expected to survive
a true battle at sea. Additionally, given that the littoral combat ship will,
by definition, be operating close to shore, it is also extremely vulnerable to
land-based attacks, which it is ill-equipped to defend against.
The Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Greenert recently said
the LCS was not prepared to “challenge the Chinese military” and you can’t
“send it into an anti-access area.”
In short, this is a surface combatant that can’t truly
engage in surface combat.
[POGO: DOT&E Report says ship
not survivable, USN: Ship designed to be survivable where and when used as
intended and BTW: here’s how, POGO: But the Navy can’t use it this other way--
so it doesn’t count. Neener Neener.
BTW: You just gotta’ love the ‘reformer’ chutzpa in rolling
out their own definition of surface combat and insisting it overrides that of
the USN’s.]
WHAT OUR LETTER SAID:
“Sources close to LCS-1 have now told POGO that after more
than six months in port, the ship has been back to sea just twice. The sources
also informed us about critical problems that surfaced on the ship during those
two outings: several vital components on the ship failed including, at some
point in both trips, each of the four engines.”
• The Navy’s Response:
LCS 1 had one of two gas turbines engines fail after over
three years of operations (including post-delivery testing, fleet operations
and ship early deployment). The root cause analysis of the engine failure revealed
that the gas turbine intakes were allowing salt spray to be ingested into the
engine intake structure during high seas evolutions, which lead to the eventual
failure of a high pressure turbine blade. The salt water did not induce
corrosion internal to the engine. However, it changed the air flow through the
engine, which eventually led to the failure. As a result of the failure, a
redesign of the intake structure along with improved mating seals was
implemented on LCS 1 on post delivery and is in-line for LCS 3 and subsequent
ships.
• Our Rebuttal:
The Navy does not dispute these previously unreported engine
failures. They only discuss the results of an engine failure that occurred in
2010, which we do not mention in our letter.
[The USN blew off what smelled like
a POGO fishing expedition, POGO doesn’t like it. That doesn’t make POGOs claims
true or accurate and it doesn’t mean the USN even knew for certain what POGO
was talking about (which would be just as valid a reason to not respond to POGO
as any).]
WHAT OUR LETTER SAID:
“In addition, there were shaft seal failures during the last
trip, which led to flooding.”
• The Navy’s Response:
During February 2012 sea trials LCS 1 suffered a failure of
the port shaft mechanical seal (1 of 4 such seals). The remaining underway
portion of the sea trial was ended and the ship returned to port unassisted.
The failed boost shaft stern tube seal was analyzed by independent third party
to gain insight into the failure. Repairs to the Port Boost Stern Tube Seal
have been completed and the USS Freedom undocked on April 7. All other stern
tube seals on FREEDOM were inspected and found not to have this issue. Due to
manufacturing timelines and differences, it was determined that LCS 3 seals
were not at risk of the same issue. In addition, LCS 3 seals have undergone
extensive operation without failure.
• Our Rebuttal:
The Navy reports that shaft seals on the other engines of
LCS-1 and those on LCS-3 were not at risk of this same failure. However, prior
to this incident, the Navy was not aware the shaft seal that blew was at risk
of failing either. [This is an incredibly stupid paragraph, isn’t it? What’s
the difference between before and after? Hint: the Navy looked for the problem
elsewhere after it occurred once. The Navy must understand the failure for them
to state there is no risk for the same failure after looking at the rest of the
seals.]
In short, the Navy has not taken any corrective action in
response to this issue.
[POGO: Seal Problem! USN: After looking closely, seal failure
seen as a onetime thing. Seal repaired! POGO: We don’t know the difference
between a ‘repair’ for what appears to be a onetime issue and something that
has to be fixed for all the ships (so we want to see a ‘corrective action’
plan?).
WHAT OUR LETTER SAID:
“The DOT&E’s FY 2011 Annual Report states that “[t]he
program offices have not released any formal developmental T&E reports.”
The report goes on to state that “the Navy should continue to report
vulnerabilities discovered during live fire tests and analyses. Doing so will
inform acquisition decisions as soon as possible in the procurement of the LCS
class.”
• The Navy’s Response:
The Navy is actively developing the required reports
documenting the results of all the Developmental Testing that has occurred on
LCS 1. Once completed, these reports will be delivered to DOT&E as
required.
• Our Rebuttal:
The Navy confirms the DOT&E’s statement, which we
referenced in our letter, that “[t]he program offices have not released any
formal developmental T&E reports.” In fact, the Navy’s response to this specific
critique confirms that “the required reports documenting the results of all the
Developmental Testing that has occurred on LCS 1” have not been completed. The
Navy states that they will be delivered to DOT&E once they are, but offer
no explanation as to why they have not been completed.
[Back to the ‘reports’ bleat eh?
Notice how POGO conflates the fact there are no formal reports yet per 2011
DOT&E SAR, but conveniently fails to mention whether or not there were supposed
to be any formal reports. Now, if one
bothers to actually read the report
without bias, the reader will see that noting the absence of formal reports is not
a critique, but a simple observation. How
typically ‘reformer’ of Freeman and POGO to twist facts to satisfy their
purposes. ]
It is not unreasonable to ask the Navy to provide testing
and evaluation reports for a ship that is scheduled to be deployed to Singapore
and has already been deployed in the Caribbean. If the ship is performing as
well as the Navy claims they should be eager to provide these reports.
[The assertion of belief as fact:
more typical ‘reformer’.
Let’s correct this last paragraph:
POGO BELIEVES it is not unreasonable
to ask the Navy to provide testing and evaluation reports for a ship that is
scheduled to be deployed to Singapore and has already been deployed in the
Caribbean. POGO BELIEVES if the ship is performing as well as the Navy claims
they should be eager to provide these reports.
There, all better. ]
WHAT OUR LETTER SAID:
“The Navy has also repeatedly made significant changes to
the program while giving Congress little time to evaluate these changes.”
• The Navy’s Response:
Configuration change management has been a key factor in
controlling program cost. After incorporation of lessons learned from the lead
ships into follow ships, the Program Office has controlled the design baseline
closely in order to manage risk and cost.
The Program Office has captured and continues to capture
data from these “first of class” vessels. The “first of class” discussion is an
important perspective to add. USS Freedom (LCS 1) and USS Independence (LCS 2)
not only are they “first of class” vessels but they were procured using
research and development funds in a manner outside the bounds of previous ship
programs. Previous combatant procurements leverage off of years of research and
development, integration testing and validation of systems using surrogate
platforms. Aegis Cruisers implemented a new combat system that was tested for
over ten years on surrogate ships to a hull form that had already been tested
and delivered. Aegis destroyers laid the same propulsion, power generation and
combat system into a new hull form. All of these efforts did not preclude these
ships from seeing “first of class” challenges.
The LCS programs however, took measures to instrument and
collect data on the hull designs, execute design reviews/design updates and
implement those findings into the follow-on awards. In addition, those findings
have led to upgrades and changes on LCS 1 and LCS 2 to ensure that these
research and development hulls are viable assets.
LCS 1 has traveled more than 65,000 nautical miles since it
was delivered to the Navy in September 2008 and continues to meet our
expectations.
• Our Rebuttal:
The Navy fails to respond to the actual issue we raised
related to Congressional notification of program changes, specifically the
shift from a down-select to a dual-award acquisition strategy. The Navy opted
to instead discuss the “first of class” challenges on Aegis ships.
It’s true that all first of class ships will have problems.
However, the extent and nature of the problems on this littoral combat ship are
far more problematic than on other ships. Faulty welds, design, and ship
construction are the root cause of many of this ship’s failings. These are not
first of class issues; they are basic ship-building issues that appear to have
been largely ignored on this ship.
[ Gee. We could have saved a lot of
trouble by starting with this exchange.
POGO accuses the Navy of making changes
that Congress can’t keep up with. The
Navy could have had some fun and just said “What do you mean?” or “Whose fault
is that?’ but instead chose to detail why the LCS program is different. And
from the Navy’s response we learn just HOW different the program is from
previous programs (I had no idea how different anyway: sounds like a DARPA
program that quickly turns into production). The Navy details some of the ways
the LCS had none of the advantages of previous classes (Aegis cruisers and
destroyers) of ships and that those ships still had hurdles to overcome, then
the Navy notes that the LCS ships are instrumented to find the kinds of things
that might lurk in any design. This should be a hint to Freeman as to why the
Navy apparently isn’t (and shouldn’t be?) too excited about the problems
they’ve encountered.
Freeman twists those observations
into a “we’re not talking about the Aegis” snark and NOW he tells us that by
‘changes’ POGO meant the change from a downselect to one LCS to the
continuation of both LCS designs. It turns out this is the one thing about the
LCS I’ve watched with some interest.
First we can throw out Freeman’s characterization
of Navy decision-making concerning Congressional ability to keep up with the
program and the change from a downselect to proceeding with a dual contractor
approach. It is simplistic and reflects what I would call the Congressional
Vanity POV (It was all about them!) found as part of a more extensive review of
the issue in a Congressional Research Service Report. Thus POGO’s carping over timing of requests and decisions in
retrospect is pretty unoriginal as well as weak. Read the CRS report, and then
ask yourself why it seems POGO would rather have the Navy going to Congress
earlier with a half-baked plan, just to give Congress reason to refuse it
because it was half-baked. BTW: There
were arguments being made as early as 2004 that the navy should buy two
squadrons of competing designs and have them fight for supremacy. The ‘do we
downselect’ or ‘do we continue with both designs’ question is hardly ‘new’
Seems Freeman just can’t stop
himself form asserting opinion as fact. He’s got the ‘reformer’ spirit within! With
his last paragraph, he again tries to pass off ‘reformer’ POV as fact. Helping
once again with a rewrite:
POGO agrees that what the Navy says is true: that all first
of class ships will have problems. However, POGO believes the extent and nature
of the problems on this littoral combat ship are far more problematic than on
other ships. POGO believes Faulty welds, design, and ship construction are the
root cause of many of this ship’s problems and are representative of failings
in the program, design, and construction (that POGO believes should be seen as
cause to kill this program? Notice the undeclared intent – we can only guess). POGO
believes these are not first of class issues; POGO believes they are basic
ship-building issues that appear to POGO to have been largely ignored on this
ship
There. All better again]
FYI, and not that it matter one
whit, I find the GD/Austal (LCS 2) design most appealing.