“We need a
capable, lethal-ready Navy more than we need a larger Navy that’s less
capable, less lethal, and less ready,” Admiral Gilday told a Senate committee. “Those ships, relative to others, just didn’t bring the war-fighting value to the fight.”
Asked
about the ships’ troubles, Mark Vandroff, the chief executive of
Fincantieri Marinette Marine and a retired Navy captain who served in
the Trump White House, referred questions to Lockheed, the primary
contractor on the project.
Patrick W. McNally, a spokesman for Lockheed — when also asked what went wrong —
said that the company was “proud of our longstanding partnership with
the United States Navy,” and was working with the Navy to “deliver
affordable capability improvements.”
The
lobbying campaign to block the retirement of the ships started with a
burst of phone calls to Capitol Hill, local officials in Jacksonville,
and the Navy’s ship-maintenance division. Orchestrating the appeals was
Tim Spratto, the general manager at the sprawling Jacksonville shipyard for BAE Systems, which in 2021 had won part of a Navy contract worth as much as $1.3 billion to do repairs on the troubled Freedom-class vessels.
Mr. Spratto, who joined BAE after a nearly two-decade Navy career, also serves as the president of a local trade group
representing the Jacksonville yards. He started his pitch with a call
to the office of Mr. Rutherford, Republican of Florida, who serves on
the House Appropriations Committee.
“He is a great friend of the shipyard,” Mr. Spratto said in an interview. “He carries the water for us.”
A delegation of
business leaders from Jacksonville headed to the airport for a “fly-in”
to Capitol Hill for a series of meetings with lawmakers including Senator Rick Scott, Republican of Florida, and Representative Jack Bergman, Republican of Michigan, a member of the House Armed Services Committee. Those gatherings were set up by the lobbying firm run by Brian Ballard, a top Republican fund-raiser with close ties to former President Donald J. Trump.
Other industry players joined in, targeting key House lawmakers in Virginia where work on the littoral combat ships is also performed. Letters, emails and other appeals, including opinion pieces in trade magazines, began to pour in.
“Don’t give up the ship,” Tony Parisi, the retired Navy captain, wrote in an opinion piece for Real Clear Defense, a trade publication, citing the War of 1812 warning from a Navy captain, James Lawrence, as his ship was sinking.
Mr.
Parisi did not mention that he was part of the team at General Dynamics
that trains the crews that operate the littoral combat ships at Naval
Station Mayport.
One Fincantieri
executive, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said he was
instructed to be careful not to be too public about the campaign, given
that they were also trying to convince the Navy to buy its new class of
ships as replacements.
Soon enough,
several lawmakers, including Mr. Rutherford and Mr. Wittman, were
introducing amendments to block the retirement of all or at least some
of the ships, even as other lawmakers, mostly Democrats, pushed to allow
the Pentagon to retire all nine ships.
“If
the LCS was a car sold in America today, they would be deemed lemons,
and the automakers would be sued into oblivion,” Representative Jackie
Speier, Democrat of California, told her House colleagues in June. (She has since retired.) “The only winners have been the contractors on which the Navy relies for sustaining these ships.”
.
There
remains a great deal of pride in these ships among those who work on
and around them, as was apparent during a visit last month to the
Mayport base near Jacksonville.
The
Little Rock and six other littoral combat ships were tied up there, with
teams of Navy sailors working and in some cases living on the ships.
The Little Rock — one of the ships now slated for retirement — still has
not been out for its second deployment since the failed trip in 2020.
During sea trials early last year that followed 19 months of repairs,
the Little Rock’s engines broke down again.
But
U.S.S. Sioux City, another of the Freedom-class ships that is slated
for decommissioning, spent five months last year on a deployment that
took it a total of 31,000 miles through
waters around Europe and as far as the Gulf of Oman, while it did
training exercises with foreign allies. It was proof, Navy officers and
backers of the ships said, that the ships should be saved.
“I’d love to see us keep all the ships,” said
Captain David Miller, the commander of the Florida-based littoral
combat ship squadron, said in an interview. “We have stuff we can do
with all the ships.”
There remains a great deal of pride in
these ships among those who work on and around them, as was apparent
during a visit last month to the Mayport base near Jacksonville.
The
Little Rock and six other littoral combat ships were tied up there,
with teams of Navy sailors working and in some cases living on the
ships. The Little Rock — one of the ships now slated for retirement —
still has not been out for its second deployment since the failed trip
in 2020. During sea trials early last year that followed 19 months of
repairs, the Little Rock’s engines broke down again.
But
U.S.S. Sioux City, another of the Freedom-class ships that is slated
for decommissioning, spent five months last year on a deployment that
took it a total of 31,000 miles through
waters around Europe and as far as the Gulf of Oman, while it did
training exercises with foreign allies. It was proof, Navy officers and
backers of the ships said, that the ships should be saved.
“I’d love to see us keep all the ships,” said
Captain David Miller, the commander of the Florida-based littoral
combat ship squadron, said in an interview. “We have stuff we can do
with all the ships.”
Mr. Wittman, who helped lead the effort to save the ships, is one of the biggest recipients of campaign contributions from military contractors and their employees, including many from companies that help build, equip or maintain these ships, such as Lockheed, Raytheon and General Dynamics.
In an interview, Mr. Wittman said that the lobbying from the ship repair contractors had played a role in his efforts.
“I
can’t tell you whether it’s a predominant factor,” he said in January,
while at a conference sponsored by Fincantieri and other shipbuilding
companies in Virginia. “But I can tell you it was a factor.”
Fincantieri, the builder of the Freedom-class ships, has not suffered from the squabble over the ships it built.
Its
Wisconsin shipyard is still building the Navy’s last Freedom-class
littoral combat ship while also starting work on the new $1.1 billion
Constellation-class ship that will replace it.
“When
you’re a ship builder, your goal is to build the ship that the Navy
tells you to build,” Mr. Vandroff, Fincantieri’s chief executive, said
in an interview as dozens of Navy commanders, midshipmen and others were
assembled in front of him at the Surface Navy Association conference in
Virginia to grab a glass of Prosecco and some Wisconsin cheese. “What
the Navy chooses to do with it — that is their choice.”
John Ismay contributed reporting
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