kzt wrote:Fireflair wrote:I brought this up before I retired from the Navy, in a more moderate way. My primary complaint which I strove to address while I was in was that the USN has become a highly administrative organization. A great deal of what the average sailor does on a daily basis is grounded in paperwork getting completed. This is not to say that individuals are not highly skilled or capable, but the processes which are in place do not encourage skilled individuals but the best administrators.
In part I feel that this stems from the fact that the majority of the USN does not engage in active combat exercises, but also because I feel that those in charge do not see the USN as having any peer challengers, so there is nothing to concern the powers that be.
I forget exactly what percentage of US sub COs were relieved within 6 months of Pearl Harbor, but it was a huge percentage. Like 2/3rds. The things that made you an outstanding peacetime CO usually made you a terrible wartime CO.
The last time the USN lost a ship was in 1945. The last vaguely serious naval engagement was Operation Preying Mantis, 35 years ago.
The 'leadership' of the USN is laser-like focused on leftist politics, not with naval combat. How long do you think it will be before you have race riots on carriers again?
Preying Mantis wasn't even against a "peer" Navy, it was against the Iranians and undertaken in part as a response for attacking oil tankers with ships and aircraft as well as laying the mines that nearly sunk USS SAMUEL B ROBERTS as well as damaging a number of merchant ships.
Our Navy sunk ONE frigate, damaged another and took out two drilling platforms that were being used for maritime surveillance.
Our national military leadership as well as our Navy's leadership had best be preparing to face off against China, a true peer because sooner or later (probably sooner) the Chinese ARE going to start using that military machine they've been building.
I can guarantee you that the Chinese are training for war and have the numbers of conventional (non-nuclear) forces to pull it off.