Weird Harold wrote:The SLN has already made that decision and the GA may well downsize the expensive and manpower intensive SDs for BCL sized Battle Cruisers and smaller.
After all, How many battleships has anyone built since 1945? Carriers, Yes. Subs (of multiple types,) yes. Battleships, no.
Well, that depends on how you define "battleship" i guess.
And of course, the French Jean Bart wasn´t completed until 1952 despite being started in 1936. It wasn´t scrapped though, but rather completed post WWII.
The British similarly finished the Vanguard 1946 instead of scrapping it.
The USSR started building the Stalingrad class in 1951, cancelled after their primary supporter Stalin died in 1953 with 2 hulls started. Sometimes called battlecruisers, they´re too big to be legal as battleships under the pre-WWII London treaty, where 35kt was the set limit for battleship size.
However, the most relevant design is probably the Soviet Kirov-class. As it is often considered the "next generation" for battleships.
A bit light for a BB at 28kt, and very little armour it is commonly listed as a battlecruiser, but some disagree as it is "too big" to be a cruiser of any sorts.
Similar to how the Alaska class was often considered "battleship light" about as much as "cruiser superlarge" or similar, and the Alaska´s are slightly heavier but also slightly smaller(because they have more armour).
I wont say the Kirov IS a BB, but i will say there´s some decent and valid argument for saying that it is.
Also, UK, France, USA and USSR(and Chile) maintained BBs after WWII. Though the French and Soviet ones were primarily used as school ships.
There was also the Sovetsku Soyuz class, started before WWII, put on indefinite hiatus and finally scrapped after WWII, some sources claim they were close to being resumed instead, and with tonnage greater than all previous BBs except the Japanese Yamato class(but guns like on a US Iowa class), well they were definitely and without any doubt BBs.
So, the world isn´t quite as clearcut as sometimes said.
Most importantly perhaps is that it is not that BBs are considered useless in a modern war, it is that they are considered not useful enough compared to their costs.
At least as long as you do not say that BBs are strictly big guns and superheavy armour.