current SecNav comments are worth looking atSorry, but I don't see a Unicorn. I see a tired old mule that someone has strapped a fake horn to.
current SecNav comments are worth looking atSorry, but I don't see a Unicorn. I see a tired old mule that someone has strapped a fake horn to.
And what would they replace it with? The politicos like to grandstand and LCS and LCS/FG is just another political football. The critical reviews emanate from agencies whose job it is to find fault and often nitpick, exagerrate and highlight issues and problems that have already been fixed or are being addressed.Littoral Combat Ship: The US Navy’s ‘Alleged Warship’ | The Diplomat
Some in the Trump Administration defend it and scorned Ash Carter's edict to limit LCS numbers to 40 - but I wonder if McCain & Co of the Senate Armed Services Committee will push back so only 40 are built.
They have bureaucratic issues and most of that is in the Pentagon, with some claims that there are more civilian bureaucrats in the DoD than service personnel in the USAF, US Army, USN, USMC & USCG. Part of the problem is that the Department of Defense is unable to undertake an audit so it actually doesn't know what it owns. Another problem is their budgetary and procurement processes and the political interference that they are subject too with pork barrel politics to the fore from Congress. Some severe rationalisation of their system would not go amiss. Mind you we all say that about our own countries defence funding and procurement processes as well sometimes$88 billion a year just to fill in the holes.. bloody hell.
I have to wonder if the size of the US forces are actually hurting them rather then helping.
Rather then increasing defence spending (which the country cant truly afford) they should shake the tree around and improve productivity (How many billions have been wasted time and again on cancelled projects that at times already have viable options existing that would require little to no modifications).
But it does highlight the security of UUVs and their data which I mentioned several posts back. Even though tactical UUVs are very different to this commercial type and their cruise profile may be very different, the security issue is not minor.other chinese sources are stating that it was an unidentified shipping hazard
its an interesting issue as research vessels are allowed to operate in an EEZ - and they usually are because they're non military vessels.But it does highlight the security of UUVs and their data which I mentioned several posts back. Even though tactical UUVs are very different to this commercial type and their cruise profile may be very different, the security issue is not minor.
Maybe a self destruct mechanism/sensor needs to be inserted in case of rogue retrieval.
But it's not just the datspa but the entire drone tech including Nav system, command system ad nauseum. My guess is that this would be highly protected, navies aren't familiar with this todate.Doesn't need to be anything destructive, just needs to fry the data if the uuv is interfered with. I think the issue China has is they assume everyone else is as paranoid as they are, then again looking at the sort of leaders the world is churning out now they could have a point.
But it's not just the datspa but the entire drone tech including Nav system, command system ad nauseum. My guess is that this would be highly protected, navies aren't familiar with this todate.
I've not expressed it well enough. I understand the incident was a commercial relatively low tech drone.Its only a commercial ROV, anyone could buy one through the list of advertisers on Sea Technology, Ocean News etc.... for about $150-200K USD
they'll be looking at the datasets. the chinese basically only started comprehending sophisticated datasets after they bought civilian transducers off of a scottish company in the late 90's
all that pre beijing olympics tech and engineering has been maximised since mid 2000's on.. eg they only got the dredging and reclamation tech from western engineering firms involved with hong kong airport at the turn of the prev decade.
the main thing about their behaviour is paranoia - because they know that they're way behind the curve on naval systems and navtech
the Type 52's, STOBAR carrier and their latest subs aren't the pinnacle of maritime tech - so they need to know how others operate.
even the ROV datasets are the equiv of someone giving them a spectrum guide and then telling them to build a bearer diagram around it.
not trying to understate the event here, but the actual haul bears little in gifts
yep, it has an immediate impact on ROVs (and I'm including all AUV, UUV, USV, UASW, UASuW tech under the ROV parent child umbrella) that are tethered or untetheredI've not expressed it well enough. I understand the incident was a commercial relatively low tech drone.
My concern was about future UUVs for ASW/ASuW