I hate the practice of naming anything after anyone who’s still alive. Unless the living person made a really big donation or discovered a new disease.I hate, hate, hate the practice of naming these ships after politicians, especially ones who are still alive.
I'm inclined to think that the Congress committee or subcomittee that oversees such things know the significance or public recognition of the Enterprise name. I believe they will give it to a big carrier.I think you understood that I was talking about a carrier like CVN-65.
Sorry I should have expanded a little. I only meant that a $3 billion LHA or LHD Enterprise in the near term might be a better goal for the name than holding out for a $15 billion CVN.
I hate, hate, hate the practice of naming these ships after politicians, especially ones who are still alive. It's time to get back to the traditional ship names.
I'm inclined to think that the Congress committee or subcomittee that oversees such things know the significance or public recognition of the Enterprise name. I believe they will give it to a big carrier.
I would, just not on the next one or two.I'm inclined to think that the Congress committee or subcomittee that oversees such things know the significance or public recognition of the Enterprise name. I believe they will give it to a big carrier.
I wouldn't bet on it.
A few chance incidents of apparent clumsiness gave Ford an unjustified reputation for being a klutz. It made good material for Saturday Night Live's writers, though.Ironically, Ford was one of our most athletic presidents. Played center for Michigan, was recruited by Packers and Lions, but went Navy instead.
Had Nixon faced criminal proceedings after his resignation, what would have been the outcome? Months more of residual baggage from the Watergate affair, and Tricky Dick would have served a couple of years in a minimum-security facility. Maybe.Historians believe he pardoned Nixon from good motives, though cynical citizens (rightfully so) smelled a rat.
For the hypothetical WWIII Atlantic convoy protection scenario, the supposed deploying of a chain of defensive formations would not have benefited much from supercarriers. Their main role would have been self-defense, as they would have been the only targets warranting a massive air strike or a saturation missile attack. I wonder if any carriers would really have been used for the application in actual Armageddon conditions.
I guess a supercarrier is the ideal way to go nevertheless. The bigger, the better - because the floating airbase is never under any realistic threat, and a maximally concentrated deployment gives the best odds of success in the kinds of wars the USN really fights.
...carriers in the Baltic...
Is it possible to squeeze even an LHA through the straits to that little puddle, though?
Plus, the best hope of the USN surviving past the first few days of an all-out war would be for them to shoot down Russian (or putative Chinese or Indian or whatever) surveillance satellites. But that would do no good in confined waters where the location of a battle group would automatically be known even without radar satellites or extensive recce flights.
I agree the one true test of carrier survivability would be Mediterranean or Indian Ocean operations that for some reason had to be conducted close to the shores of a nation possessing operable attack subs and standoff-armed naval bombers. But there would always exist the option of flying from a greater distance at first, until no credible air threat remained, and frustrating the subs with a waiting game where the enemy would lose on every other front...
Building and deploying carriers with the understanding that they may be lost in battle is not a worthwhile enterprise. Building them to be unsinkable is probably futile as well. But just building them for use in easy wars is doing the USN a world of good.
Timo Saloniemi
A few chance incidents of apparent clumsiness gave Ford an unjustified reputation for being a klutz. It made good material for Saturday Night Live's writers, though.Ironically, Ford was one of our most athletic presidents. Played center for Michigan, was recruited by Packers and Lions, but went Navy instead.
Well agreed - as a floating symbol of US military power they are among the most impressive possible tools.
They better re-use the name, and fast. I don't even particularly care what kind of ship. There should always be an Enterprise. When was the last time we didn't have one?
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