LCS Test Vs. Fast Attack Boats ‘Unfair': Missile Missing, Navy Says
http://breakingdefense.com/2016/01/lcs-test-vs-fast-attack-boats-unfair-missile-missing-navy-says/
LCS Test Vs. Fast Attack Boats Unfair': Missile Missing, Navy Says
By Sydney J. Freedberg Jr.
on January 29, 2016 at 5:23 PM
PENTAGON: Unfair! That, in a word, is the Navys response to a Director of Operational Test & Evaluation report saying the controversial Littoral Combat Ship had trouble defending itself against Iranian-style swarms of fast attack boats.
Yes, a Navy official told me, in the test some enemy boats got dangerously close to the USS Coronado and inflicted simulated damage. But the LCS still repelled the attack and without its full complement of weapons: The long-range Hellfire missile has yet to be installed.
That Navy hasnt managed to equip the LCS with all its small-boat-killing weapons doesnt exactly speak well of the program. The mine-clearing and anti-submarine packages are even further behind. (The Navy also wants to equip the ship with an over the horizon missile to sink big ships). But without the Hellfires 20-pound warhead and its its five mile range, the LCS would have to rely entirely on its 57 millimeter and 30 mm cannon to defeat incoming threats, radically reducing its reach and punch. Since the missile will go on LCS, leaving it out of the test is a big deal.
First and foremost, the LCS defeated the adversary, right? the Navy official said. How nitpicking is that to criticize, oh, some of them got too close. Oh, cmon. I would call baloney on that.
--
An unfair comparison?
Paying $800 million dollars for one of these things is unfair, especially since they were to cost $200 million a pop.
If they ever get the mission modules straightened out, the price tag for these things will be at least a billion a pop.
10 LCS =
1 LHC.