Monday, February 23, 2026

Where Did It All Go Wrong?

Clearly, today’s Navy is badly broken in almost every respect but that wasn’t always the case.  In WWII, the Navy was an efficient, deadly, fighting force that knew how to produce warriors and ships on a routine basis.  What changed between then and now?  Where did it all go wrong?
 
Let’s start with the “what changed”.
 
What changed is the focus. From the early 1900's (pre-WWI) on, the Navy had an intense focus on combat effectiveness (with a few notable exceptions such as the WWII faulty torpedo fiasco).  After the late 1950's and early 1960's, the war veterans (those who understood combat and designed ships to meet that requirement) retired leaving people whose focus shifted from combat to career. The focus became empire building, budget pursuit, and career enhancement rather than combat-effective ship and fleet design and procurement.  Without the crucible and filter of combat to weed out the incompetent, idiots who were politically adroit took over and foolish policies became the norm.
 
Okay, that’s clear enough.  Now, when did it happen?  What event triggered the shift?  Let’s check some noteworthy events in history that lead to our current state of affairs.  Some of the events were even hailed at the time as great achievements.  Here’s a chronology (nowhere near all-inclusive!) of events that clearly traces the rise of incompetence:
 
 
General Board (1951) – The Board was dissolved by CNO Forrest Sherman in a move to consolidate his power.  This began the shift in focus from combat to bureaucracy and career.
 
Spruance (1970) – This was the point at which the Navy abdicated its design responsibility and relinquished it to industry as a result of the Total Package Procurement concept originated by the Whiz Kids of SecDef Robert McNamara.  There has been a steady downhill erosion of technical capability and competence by the Navy ever since.
 
Adm. Zumwalt’s Hi/Lo Policy (1970’s) – instead of building the fleet we needed, he settled for the fleet he could get; he compromised the nation’s security and naval strength and institutionalized mediocrity and acceptance of inferiority.
 
Note that my rejection of hi/lo does not mean that we want a fleet of all battleships and carriers.  We need smaller combatants because there are some functions they can fill better than larger ships.  A mix of large and small combatants is not an example of a hi/lo mix, it is an example of a balanced fleet whose needs are all met.  Hi/lo, on the other hand, is an example of an unbalanced fleet that lacks vital levels of warships and attempts to compensate by substituting larger numbers of smaller ships.
 
Offsets (1980’s) – This introduced the pursuit of technological leaps instead of consistent, steady, evolutionary development.  Unfortunately, it has failed every time.
 
Fall of the Soviet Union (1991) – This eliminated all the remaining intense focus on combat that the Navy had.
 
2-1/2 War Abandonment (1993) – Being able to fight and win 2-1/2 wars was the long time standard requirement by which we sized and composed our military.  When that proved expensive (duh!), instead of making the case for it to Congress, the military began adopting a series of ever-shrinking requirements leading to the current “1 regional conflict (not even a war) plus holding against another.  The threat level did not change and yet the requirement shrank, justified by budget rather than threat.
 
Minimal Manning (1990’s) – This began the physical decline of the fleet as maintenance was deferred and ships were allowed to, literally, rot.  This also instituted and formalized the Navy’s acceptance of cripplingly lowered standards of readiness.
 
Concurrency (2000’s) – This god forsaken practice has cost the Navy dearly and has failed miserably every time it’s been attempted and yet the Navy continues to practice it.
 
Unmanned (2000’s) – This marks the Navy’s public and formal acceptance of insufficient combat power in the pursuit of technological fads.  Instead of doing the hard work of evolutionary development, the Navy institutionalized the pursuit of magic beans and the delusional, lazy, easy way forward.
 
Diversity (2010’s) – This marked the Navy’s formal recognition of priorities other than combat effectiveness.
 
 
 
And here we are, today.  It’s clear that there was no single event that crippled the Navy but, rather, a creeping rot evidenced by a series of misguided (to be polite) actions over the years.
 
Ironically, many of the flawed actions were praised at the time they were implemented but only by people who did not have a combat focus.  Looking back, it is easy to see the actions for the mistakes they were.  Our current failure is our inability to see the failings and course correct.

15 comments:

  1. The best example today is "Where are the carriers?" Trump ordered a build up near Iran several months ago. Yet our great Navy could only deploy one carrier group to the region, and a second is now arriving after already doing an eight-month deployment. Where are the others!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Apparently, the Ford had to stop in Crete since the sewer system failed again.

      Delete
    2. "sewer system"

      Where did you hear that?

      Delete
    3. The persistent issues with the VCHT system have been reported on for some time. Another "new and improved" technology - just doesn't get the press of EMALS or the wep elevators.

      https://gulfnews.com/world/americas/sewage-crisis-hits-uss-gerald-ford-aircraft-carrier-report-1.500452069

      Delete
    4. Yes, Ford has persistent issues with their sanitary system but I've seen nothing that indicates that was the reason for stopping in Crete. Let's be fair.

      Delete
    5. Multiple reports that the Ford had to make a port stop to, once again, provide a temporary fix to the potty problem. Apparently it required a port call with the appropriate equipment & material to provide that fix- Crete was the closest one. Who knows, the Navy does not have a history of being open or honest about the Ford's problems.

      Delete
    6. "Multiple reports"

      Can you give a reference? I haven't seen a report.

      Delete
  2. Honestly, over the past 15 years, China... well, I don't know how to put it—it's a complicated feeling.
    May I ask, what right things has China done?
    Is there anything we can learn from them?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. This is not a Chinese propaganda blog. If you have some aspect of Chinese military developments that you wish to relate to US Navy matters, feel free to explain.

      Delete
  3. Once an empire stretches too far, it no longer has enough resources to take care all theaters. Too many theaters even a great empire cannot afford.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That's a meaningless and ill-informed platitude. We have more than enough resources to cover a 2-1/2 war requirement, IF WE SPEND THEM WISELY.

      Why don't you try again and this time give us some informative, useful analysis?

      Delete
  4. It's ironic that the Air Force's hi-lo mix of F-15 and F-16 has evolved into a hi-hi mix, with all the upgrades the final form F-16C Block 50 has versus the original F-16A Block 1. It's gone from being a radarless day fighter with only a pair of heatseekers to an all weather strike fighter.

    The only reason the F-35 fits the lo end of the hi-lo mix is because the F-47 is planned to be a quantum leap in air dominance. In every other nation's air force, the F-35 forms the hi component of their hi-lo mix.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You also see this with burkes. Our relevant surface fleet is just Burkes; meanwhile, in the Japanese and Korean navies, their Burke equivalents are destroyer leaders that lead destroyer squadrons.

      Delete
  5. I commend and applaud this insightful post from ComNavOps. This is the kind of long term analysis, yet in a brief and sharp form we rarely get to enjoy in any public forum. Well done!

    Regards!

    ReplyDelete
  6. You fogot someone that might be a major player in the downfall: John Lehmen

    When SecNav Lehmen got appointed, there were 5 ship classes that had completed designs and/or had completed operational testing and been introduced into the fleet. The ship classes were:

    Nimitz Aircraft Carriers
    Los Angeles Attack Submarines
    Ohio Missile Submarines
    FFG-7 (Oliver Perry Hazard) Frigate
    Ticonderoga Cruisers
    Arleigh Burke Destroyer, started its design in the mid 1980s (the ship we keep building more of because it works).

    All of those designs were generated under the Naval Material Command organization. SecNav Lehmen didn't like that he could not control everything about Navy Acquisition so he abolished NavMat and pushed authority to the SysComs. He sold it on getting rid of a layer of management that slowed things down. He made SPAWAR first among equals (the role that NavMat had). Since then the Navy is unable to design and build a rowboat.

    All SecNav Lehmen had to do was keep or increase the money flowing to proven designs in production. He did that and we almost got to 600 ships. But as far as ships Requirements, designs, Testing, CONOPS, etc. he only had the Burke done without NavMat. Everything else was done with an overseeing organization to ride herd on the specialized systems commands.

    ReplyDelete

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