Arleigh Burke-class destroyer: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 17:13, 2 November 2021
USS Arleigh Burke in the Chesapeake Bay in 2013 | |
Class overview | |
---|---|
Name | Arleigh Burke class |
Builders | |
Operators | United States Navy |
Preceded by | |
Succeeded by | Zumwalt class |
Cost | US$1.843 billion per ship (DDG 114–116, FY2011/12)[1] |
Built | 1988–present |
In commission | 1991–present |
Planned | 89 as of April 2020 |
On order | 3 |
Building | 7 |
Completed | 70 |
Active | 68 |
Retired | 0 |
Preserved | 0 |
General characteristics | |
Type | Guided missile destroyer |
Displacement | |
Length |
|
Beam | 66 ft (20 m) |
Draft | 30.5 ft (9.3 m) |
Installed power | 3 × Allison AG9140 Generators (2,500 kW (3,400 hp) each, 440 V) |
Propulsion |
|
Speed | In excess of 30 kn (56 km/h; 35 mph) |
Range | 4,400 nmi (8,100 km) at 20 kn (37 km/h; 23 mph) |
Boats & landing craft carried | 2 × rigid hull inflatable boats |
Complement | |
Sensors and processing systems |
|
Electronic warfare & decoys |
|
Armament |
|
Aircraft carried |
|
Aviation facilities |
|
The Arleigh Burke class of guided missile destroyers (DDGs) is a United States Navy class of destroyer built around the Aegis Combat System and the SPY-1D multifunction passive electronically scanned array radar. The class is named for Admiral Arleigh Burke, an American destroyer officer in World War II, and later Chief of Naval Operations. The lead ship, USS Arleigh Burke, was commissioned during Admiral Burke's lifetime.
These warships were designed as multimission destroyers,[5] able to fulfill the strategic land strike role with Tomahawk missiles; antiaircraft warfare (AAW) role with powerful Aegis radar and surface-to-air missiles; antisubmarine warfare (ASW) with towed sonar array, anti-submarine rockets, and ASW helicopter; and antisurface warfare (ASuW) with Harpoon missile launcher. With upgrades to their AN/SPY-1 phased radar systems and their associated missile payloads as part of the Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense System, the ships of this class have also begun to demonstrate some promise as mobile antiballistic missile and anti-satellite weaponry platforms, operating on 15 ships as of March 2009.[11] Some versions of the class no longer have the towed sonar, or Harpoon missile launcher. Their hull and superstructure were designed to have a reduced radar cross-section.[12]
The first ship of the class was commissioned on 4 July 1991. With the decommissioning of the last Spruance-class destroyer, USS Cushing, on 21 September 2005, the Arleigh Burke-class ships became the U.S. Navy's only active destroyers, until the Zumwalt class became active in 2016. The Arleigh Burke class has the longest production run for any post-World War II U.S. Navy surface combatant.[13] Besides the 62 vessels of this class (comprising 21 of Flight I, 7 of Flight II and 34 of Flight IIA) in service by 2016, up to a further 42 (of Flight III) have been envisioned.
With an overall length of 505 to 509.5 feet (153.9 to 155.3 m), displacement ranging from 8,230 to 9,700 tons, and weaponry including over 90 missiles, the Arleigh Burke class are larger and more heavily armed than most previous ships classified as guided missile cruisers.[3][14]
Characteristics
Structure
The ships of the Arleigh Burke class are among the largest destroyers built in the United States. Only the Spruance, Kidd (563 ft or 172 m) and Zumwalt classes (600 ft or 180 m) are longer. The larger Ticonderoga-class ships were constructed on Spruance-class hull forms, but are designated as cruisers due to their fundamentally different mission and weapons systems than the Spruance and Kidd-class destroyers. The Arleigh Burke class were designed with a new, large, water-plane area-hull form characterized by a wide flaring bow which significantly improves seakeeping ability. The hull form is designed to permit high speed in high sea states.[12]
The designers of Arleigh Burke incorporated lessons learned from the Ticonderoga-class guided-missile cruisers, which were deemed too expensive to continue building and too difficult to further upgrade. With the Arleigh Burke class, the U.S. Navy also returned to all-steel construction. An earlier generation had combined a steel hull with a superstructure made of lighter aluminum to reduce top weight, but the lighter metal proved vulnerable to cracking. Aluminum is also less fire-resistant than steel;[15] a 1975 fire aboard USS Belknap gutted her aluminum superstructure.[16] Battle damage to Royal Navy ships exacerbated by their aluminum superstructures during the 1982 Falklands War supported the decision to use steel. Another lesson from the Falklands War[17] led the navy to protect the ship's vital spaces with double-spaced steel armor (creating a buffer against modern rockets) and kevlar spall liners.
Passive defenses
The Arleigh Burke design incorporates stealth techniques, such as the angled rather than traditional vertical surfaces and the tripod mainmast,[18][19] which make the ship more difficult to detect, in particular by antiship missiles. The ship has an electronics warfare suite that provides passive detection and decoy countermeasures.[12]
A Collective Protection System makes the Arleigh Burke class the first U.S. warships designed with an air-filtration system against nuclear, biological, and chemical warfare (NBC).[20] Other NBC defenses include a "countermeasure wash down system".[21]
Weapon systems
The Arleigh Burke class is a set of multimission ships with numerous combat systems, including a "combination of... an advanced antisubmarine warfare system (ASW), land attack cruise missiles, ship-to-ship missiles, and advanced antiaircraft missiles,"[17] An onboard 5-inch gun can attack ships, aircraft, and land targets.[22][23]
Their Aegis Combat System differs from a traditional rotating radar that mechanically rotates 360 degrees for each sweep scan of the airspace. Instead, Aegis uses a passive electronically scanned array, which allows continual tracking of targets simultaneous with area scans. The system's computer control also allows centralization of the previously separate tracking and targeting functions. The system is also resistant to electronic countermeasures. Their stand-alone Harpoon antiship missile launchers give them an antiship capability with a range in excess of 64 nautical miles (119 km; 74 mi).[12]
With the development of the Tomahawk Block V, all existing Block IV Tomahawks carried converted to the Block V version and become dual-role missiles with anti-ship capability along with their land attack role. The Tomahawk Block Va version is called the Maritime Strike version, and the Block Vb version features the Joint Multi-Effects Warhead System.[24] This provides Burke destroyers an additional missile for the anti-ship role -- along with the Harpoon (which is not carried on the Flight IIA ships). The Tomahawk can be carried in much larger numbers than the Harpoon, and has a much larger warhead.[citation needed]
The class's RIM-7 Sea Sparrow/RIM-162 ESSM missiles provide point defense against missiles and aircraft.
The Standard Missile SM-2 and SM-6 provide area antiaircraft defense; the SM-6 provides over-the-horizon missile defense.[25][26] The Standard Missile 3 and 6 also provide Ballistic Missile Defense (BMD).[26] So vital has the Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense System (BMD) role of the class become that all ships of the class are being updated with BMD capability.[27]
Burkes have the Navy's latest antisubmarine combat system with active sonar, a towed sonar array, and antisubmarine rockets. They support strategic land strikes with their VLS launched Tomahawks.[12] They are able to detect antiship mines at a range of about 1400 meters.[28]
The 5-inch (127 mm) Mark 45 gun is mounted on the Arleigh Burke class. The Mark 45 Mod 2 variant, with a barrel length of 54 calibers (270 inches, 6,900 mm) is installed on ship hull numbers DDG-51 – DDG-80 (30 ships). Hull numbers beginning with DDG-81 employ the Mark 45 Mod 4 variant, which has a barrel length of 62 calibers (310 inches, 7,900 mm).[22] The 5-inch Mark 45 gun, directed by the Mark 34 Gun Weapon System (GWS), is capable of use in antiship and close-in anti-aircraft roles, and Naval gunfire support (NGFS) supporting forces ashore, with a range of up to 20 miles (32 km) and capable of firing 16–20 rounds per minute.[22]
Aircraft
The class's Light Airborne Multi-Purpose System (LAMPS) helicopter system improves the ship's capabilities against submarines and surface ships, a helicopter able to serve as a platform to monitor submarines and surface ships, and launch torpedoes and missiles against them, as well as being able to provide fire support during insertions/extractions with machine guns and Hellfire antiarmor guided missiles.[29] The helicopters also serve in a utility role, able to perform ship replenishment, search and rescue, medical evacuation, communications relay, and naval gunfire spotting and controlling.
Development
In 1980, the U.S. Navy initiated design studies with seven contractors. By 1983 the number of competitors had been reduced to three: Bath Iron Works, Todd Shipyards, and Ingalls Shipbuilding.[20] On 3 April 1985 Bath Iron Works received a US$321.9 million contract to build the first of class, USS Arleigh Burke.[30] Gibbs & Cox was awarded the contract to be the lead ship design agent.[31] The total cost of the first ship was put at US$1.1 billion, the other US$778 million being for the ship's weapons systems.[30] She was laid down by the Bath Iron Works at Bath, Maine, on 6 December 1988, and launched on 16 September 1989 by Mrs. Arleigh Burke. The Admiral himself was present at her commissioning ceremony on 4 July 1991, held on the waterfront in downtown Norfolk, Virginia.
The "Flight II Arleigh Burke" ships have the following improvement over the original Flight I: incorporation of combat direction finding, SLQ-32V-3, TADIX-B, JTIDS command and control processor, and the capability to launch and control SM-2 Block IV Extended Range Missile.[32]
The "Flight IIA Arleigh Burke" ships have several new features, beginning with USS Oscar Austin (DDG-79). Among the changes is the addition of two hangars for antisubmarine warfare (ASW) helicopters, and a new, longer 5-inch/62-caliber (127 mm) Mark 45 Mod 4 naval gun (installed onto USS Winston S. Churchill (DDG-81) and later ships). Later Flight IIA ships starting with USS Mustin (DDG-89) have a modified funnel design that buries the funnels within the superstructure as a signature-reduction measure. TACTAS towed array sonar was omitted from Flight IIA ships and they also lack Harpoon missile launchers.[33]
Ships from DDG-68 to DDG-84 have AN/SLQ-32 antennas that resemble V3 configuration similar to those deployed on Ticonderoga-class cruiser, while the remainder has V2 variants externally resembling those deployed on some Oliver Hazard Perry-class frigate. V3 has an active electronic countermeasures component while V2 is passive only. AN/SLQ-32 is being upgraded under the Surface Electronic Warfare Improvement Program (SEWIP), the first SEWIP Block 2 upgrades were installed in 2014 with full-rate production scheduled for mid-2015.[33]
A number of Flight IIA ships were constructed without a Phalanx CIWS because of the planned Evolved Sea Sparrow Missile, but later the Navy decided to retrofit all IIA ships to carry at least one Phalanx CIWS by 2013.[34] The 60 kW High Energy Laser and Integrated Optical-dazzler and Surveillance (HELIOS) will be tested on an Arleigh Burke ship in 2021.[35]
USS Pinckney, USS Momsen, USS Chung-Hoon, USS Nitze, USS James E. Williams and USS Bainbridge[36] have superstructure differences to accommodate the Remote Mine-hunting System (RMS). Mk 32 torpedo tubes were moved to the missile deck from amidships as well.
Modernization
In an effort to address congressional concerns over the retirement of the Iowa-class battleship, the Navy began a modernization program for the Arleigh Burkes aimed at improving their gun systems. This modernization was to include an extension of the range of the 5-inch (127 mm) guns on the flight I Arleigh Burke-class destroyers (USS Arleigh Burke to USS Ross) with extended range guided munitions (ERGMs) that would have given the guns a range of 40 nautical miles (74 km).[37][38][39] However, the ERGM was cancelled in 2008.[40]
The modernization program is designed to provide a comprehensive mid-life upgrade to ensure that the class remains effective. Reduced manning, increased mission effectiveness, and a reduced total cost including construction, maintenance, and operation are the goals of the modernization program. Modernization technologies will be integrated during new construction of DDG-111 and 112, then retrofitted into DDG flight I and II ships during in-service overhaul periods.[3] The first phase will update the hull, mechanical, and electrical systems while the second phase will introduce an open architecture computing environment (OACE). The result will be improved capability in both ballistic missile defense (BMD) and littoral combat.[41][42] By 2018, all Arleigh Burke-class ships homeported in the Western Pacific will have upgraded ASW systems, including the new AN/SQR-20, renamed the TB-37/U, Multi-Function Towed Array (MFTA) sonar systems.[43][44]
The Navy is also upgrading the ships' ability to process data. Beginning with USS Spruance (DDG-111), the Navy is installing an internet protocol (IP) based data backbone, which enhances the ship's ability to handle video. Spruance is the first destroyer to be fitted with the Boeing Company's gigabit Ethernet data multiplex system (GEDMS).[45]
In July 2010, BAE Systems announced that they had been awarded a contract to modernize 11 ships.[46] In May 2014, Sam LaGrone reported that 21 of the 28 Flight I/II Arleigh Burke-class ships would not receive a mid-life upgrade that included electronics and Aegis Baseline 9 software for SM-6 compatibility, instead they would retain the basic BMD 3.6.1 software in a $170 million upgrade concentrating on mechanical systems and on some ships, their antisubmarine suite.[47] Seven Flight I ships – DDG 51–53, 57, 61, 65, 69 – will get the full US$270m Baseline 9 upgrade.[47] Deputy of surface warfare Dave McFarland said that this change was due to the budget cuts in the Budget Control Act of 2011.[48]
In 2016, the Navy announced they would begin the outfitting of 34 Flight IIA Arleigh Burke vessels with a hybrid-electric drive (HED) to lower fuel costs. While the four LM-2500 gas turbines of the Arleigh Burkes are most efficient at high speeds, an electric motor is to be attached to the main reduction gear to turn the drive shaft to propel the ship at speeds under 13 knots (24 km/h), such as during ballistic missile defense or maritime security operations. Use of the HED for half the time could extend time on station by 2.5 days before refueling.[49] In March 2018, the Navy announced the HED would complete installation onto USS Truxtun (DDG-103) but upgrades of further destroyers would be halted. Budget priorities and design issues caused the move, and Truxtun will be used to test the technology and see if it can be improved.[50]
Also in 2016, four destroyers patrolling with the U.S. 6th Fleet based in Naval Station Rota, Spain (USS Porter, USS Carney, USS Ross, USS Donald Cook) received self-protection upgrades, replacing a Phalanx CIWS with the SeaRAM close-range ship defense system combining the Phalanx sensor dome with an 11-cell missile launcher. This was the first time the system was paired with an Aegis ship.[51]
In February 2018, Lockheed Martin received a contract to deliver their High Energy Laser and Integrated Optical-dazzler with Surveillance (HELIOS) system for installation onto an Arleigh Burke destroyer. The laser can output 60–150 kW of power to "dazzle" or destroy small boats and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and be the first time a laser weapon will be put on a warship. The HELIOS is to be delivered in 2020.[52][53] In November 2019, USS Dewey (DDG-105) had the Optical Dazzling Interdictor, Navy (ODIN) system installed, which was publicly revealed in February 2020. Going from an approved idea to installation in two and a half years, ODIN differs from the XN-1 LaWS previously mounted on USS Ponce from 2014 to 2017 in that it functions as a dazzler, the first operational employment of such a stand-alone system, which blinds or destroys delicate optical sensors on drones rather than fully shooting down the aircraft.[54][55]
In October 2020, National Security Advisor Robert C. O'Brien said that the Common Hypersonic Glide Body (C-HGB) missile developed under the Conventional Prompt Strike program would be fielded on all three flights of Arleigh Burke-class destroyers. The U.S. Navy would field the weapon on surface ships after first putting them on submarines in the late 2020s. However, the C-HCB is expected to be around 3 ft (0.91 m) wide, making it too large to fit in Mk 41 VLS tubes or on deck launchers. Installing them on Arleigh Burke destroyers would require removing a number of Mk 41 cells to accommodate the larger weapon, which would be an expensive and time-consuming process.[56][57] There is some criticism to this idea, including the oldest Flight I ships needing a service life extension to justify refit costs that would only prolong their service lives a short time when they are already more expensive to operate, and the newest Flight III ships being optimized for BMD so they would be given a new, complex mission requiring a major refit so soon.[58]
Production restarted and further development
The class was scheduled to be replaced by Zumwalt-class destroyers beginning in 2020,[59] but an increasing threat from both long- and short-range missiles caused the Navy to restart production of the Arleigh Burke class and consider placing littoral combat mission modules on the new ships.[60][61] Burke production is being restarted in place of additional Zumwalt-class destroyers.[62]
In April 2009, the Navy announced a plan that limited the Zumwalt class to three units while ordering another three Arleigh Burke-class ships from both Bath Iron Works and Ingalls Shipbuilding.[62] In December 2009 Northrop Grumman received a $170.7 million letter contract for DDG-113 long-lead-time materials.[63] Shipbuilding contracts for DDG-113 to DDG-115 were awarded in mid-2011 for US$679.6m–$783.6m;[64] these do not include government-furnished equipment such as weapons and sensors which will take the average cost of the FY2011/12 ships to US$1.843b per vessel.[1]
DDG-113 to DDG-115 will be "restart" ships, similar to previous Flight IIA ships, but including modernization features such as Open Architecture Computing Environment. DDG-116 to DDG-121 will be "Technology Insertion" ships with elements of Flight III.[65] Flight III proper will begin with the third ship procured in 2016.[66]
Flight III ships, construction starting in FY2016 in place of the canceled CG(X) program, have various design improvements including radar antennas of mid-diameter increased to 14 feet (4.3 m) from the previous 12 feet (3.7 m).[67] These Air and Missile Defense Radars (AMDR) use digital beamforming, instead of the earlier passive electronically scanned array radars.[68]
Costs for the Flight III ships increased rapidly as expectations and requirements for the program have grown. In particular, this was due to the changing requirements needed to carry the proposed Air and Missile Defense Radar system required for the ships' ballistic missile defense role.[69] The Government Accountability Office found that the design of the Flight IIIs was based on "a significantly reduced threat environment from other Navy analyses" and that the new ships would be "at best marginally effective". The U.S. Navy disagrees with the GAO findings, claiming the DDG-51 hull is "absolutely" capable of fitting a large enough radar to meet requirements. Installation of the AMDR would require double the power and double the cooling, but there is room to fit what is needed inside the hull.[70]
In spite of the production restart, the U.S. Navy is expected to fall short of its requirement for 94 destroyer or cruiser platforms capable of missile defense starting in FY 2025 and continuing past the end of the 30-year planning window. While this is a new requirement as of 2011, and the U.S. Navy has never had so many large missile-armed surface combatants, the relative success of the Aegis ballistic missile defense system has shifted this national security requirement onto the U.S. Navy. The shortfall will arise as older platforms that have been refitted to be missile-defense-capable (particularly the cruisers) are retired in bulk before new destroyers are planned to be built.[71]
The U.S. Navy was considering extending the acquisition of Arleigh Burke-class destroyers into the 2040s, according to revised procurement tables sent to Congress, with the procurement of Flight IV ships from 2032 through 2041.[72] This was canceled to cover the cost of the Columbia-class submarines, with the air defense commander role retained on one cruiser per carrier battle group.[73]
Future replacement
USS Michael Murphy (DDG-112) was originally intended to be the last of the Arleigh Burke class. However, with reduction of the Zumwalt-class production, the U.S. Navy requested new DDG-51-class ships.[74] Long-lead materials contracts were awarded to Northrop Grumman in December 2009 for DDG-113 and in April 2010 for DDG-114.[75] General Dynamics received a long-lead materials contract for DDG-115 in February 2010.[76][77] It was anticipated that in FY2012 or FY2013, the U.S. Navy will commence detailed work for a Flight III design and request 24 ships to be built from 2016 to 2031.[78] In May 2013, a total of 76 Arleigh Burke-class ships were planned.[79] The Flight III variant is in the design phase as of 2013[update]. In June 2013, the U.S. Navy awarded $6.2 billion in destroyer contracts.[80] Up to 42 Flight III ships may be procured by the U.S. Navy with the first ship entering service in 2023.[81]
Future Surface Combatant
In April 2014, the U.S. Navy began the early stages of developing a new destroyer to replace the Arleigh Burke class called the "Future Surface Combatant". The new class is expected to enter service in the early 2030s and initially serve alongside the 22 Flight III DDGs. No hull design or shape has been speculated yet, although the destroyer class will incorporate emerging technologies like lasers, on-board power-generation systems, increased automation, and next-generation weapons, sensors, and electronics. They will leverage technologies in use on other platforms such as the Zumwalt-class destroyer, littoral combat ship, and Gerald R. Ford-class aircraft carrier.[82]
The Future Surface Combatant may place importance on the Zumwalt-class destroyer's electric drive system that propels the ship while generating 58 megawatts of on-board electrical power, levels required to operate future directed energy weapons. Laser weapon systems are likely to become more prominent to engage threats without using missiles that could potentially cost more than the target it is engaging. Less costly weapon systems may help keep the destroyer class from becoming too expensive. Initial requirements for the Future Surface Combatant will emphasize lethality and survivability, as well as being able to continue to protect aircraft carriers. The ships also have to be modular to allow for inexpensive upgrades of weaponry, electronics, computing, and sensors over time as threats evolve.[82]
Operational history
In October 2011, it was announced that four Arleigh Burke-class destroyers would be forward-deployed in Europe to support the NATO missile defence system. The ships, to be based at Naval Station Rota, Spain, were named in February 2012, as Ross, Donald Cook, Porter, and Carney.[83] By reducing travel times to station, this forward deployment will allow for six other destroyers to be shifted from the Atlantic in support of the Pivot to East Asia.[84] Russia has threatened to quit the New START treaty over this deployment, calling it a threat to their nuclear deterrent.[85] In 2018, however, Chief of Naval Operations Admiral John Richardson criticized the policy of keeping six highly mobile BMD platforms "in a little tiny box, defending land," a role which he believed could be performed equally well at less cost by shore-based systems.[86]
Accidents and major incidents
USS Cole bombing
USS Cole was damaged on 12 October 2000 in Aden, Yemen while docked, by an attack in which an apparently shaped charge of 200–300 kg in a boat was placed against the hull and detonated by suicide bombers, killing 17 crew members. The ship was repaired, and returned to duty in 2001.
USS Porter and MV Otowasan collision
On 12 August 2012, USS Porter collided with the oil tanker MV Otowasan near the Strait of Hormuz. Though there were no injuries on the ships, the US Navy removed the Porter's commanding officer from duty. Repairs took two months at a cost of $700,000.
USS Fitzgerald and MV ACX Crystal collision
On 17 June 2017, USS Fitzgerald collided with the MV ACX Crystal cargo ship near Yokosuka, Japan. Seven sailors drowned. Following an investigation, the ship's commanding officer, executive officer, and Command Master Chief Petty Officer were relieved of their duties. In addition, close to a dozen sailors were given non-judicial punishment for loss of situational awareness. Repairs were to be completed by summer 2019 originally. However, initial repairs were made by February 2020. After the subsequent sea trials, she was brought in for additional repairs. The ship departed for home port in June 2020.[citation needed]
USS John S. McCain and Alnic MC collision
On 21 August 2017, USS John S. McCain collided with container ship Alnic MC. The collision injured 48 sailors and killed 10, whose bodies were all recovered by 27 August. The cause of the collision was determined to be poor communication between the two ships and the bridge crew lacking situational awareness. In the aftermath, the ship's top leadership including the commanding officer, executive officer and Command Master Chief Petty Officer were removed from command. In addition top leadership of the US Seventh Fleet including the commander, Vice Admiral Joseph Aucoin, were relieved of their duties due to loss of confidence in their ability to command. Other commanders who were relieved included Rear Admiral Charles Williams, commander of the Task Force 70, and Captain Jeffrey Bennett, commodore of Destroyer Squadron 15. This was the third incident involving a US Navy ship in 2017, with a repair cost of over $100 million.[87]
Contractors
- Builders: 34 units constructed by General Dynamics, Bath Iron Works Division, and 28 by Huntington Ingalls Industries (formerly Northrop Grumman Ship Systems), Ingalls Shipbuilding
- AN/SPY-1 radar and combat system integrator: Lockheed Martin
Ships in class
Name | Hull no. | Flight | Builder | Laid down | Launched | Commissioned | Home port | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Arleigh Burke | DDG-51 | I | Bath Iron Works | 6 December 1988 | 16 September 1989 | 4 July 1991 | Rota, Spain | Active |
Barry | DDG-52 | I | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 26 February 1990 | 8 June 1991 | 12 December 1992 | Yokosuka, Japan | Active |
John Paul Jones | DDG-53 | I | Bath Iron Works | 8 August 1990 | 26 October 1991 | 18 December 1993 | Pearl Harbor, Hawaii | Active |
Curtis Wilbur | DDG-54 | I | Bath Iron Works | 12 March 1991 | 16 May 1992 | 19 March 1994 | Yokosuka, Japan | Active |
Stout | DDG-55 | I | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 8 August 1991 | 16 October 1992 | 13 August 1994 | Norfolk, Virginia | Active |
John S. McCain | DDG-56 | I | Bath Iron Works | 3 September 1991 | 26 September 1992 | 2 July 1994 | San Diego, California | Active |
Mitscher | DDG-57 | I | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 12 February 1992 | 7 May 1993 | 10 December 1994 | Norfolk, Virginia | Active |
Laboon | DDG-58 | I | Bath Iron Works | 23 March 1992 | 20 February 1993 | 18 March 1995 | Norfolk, Virginia | Active |
Russell | DDG-59 | I | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 24 July 1992 | 20 October 1993 | 20 May 1995 | San Diego, California | Active |
Paul Hamilton | DDG-60 | I | Bath Iron Works | 24 August 1992 | 24 July 1993 | 27 May 1995 | San Diego, California | Active |
Ramage | DDG-61 | I | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 4 January 1993 | 11 February 1994 | 22 July 1995 | Norfolk, Virginia | Active |
Fitzgerald | DDG-62 | I | Bath Iron Works | 9 February 1993 | 29 January 1994 | 14 October 1995 | San Diego, California[88] | Active |
Stethem | DDG-63 | I | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 11 May 1993 | 17 July 1994 | 21 October 1995 | San Diego, California | Active |
Carney | DDG-64 | I | Bath Iron Works | 8 August 1993 | 23 July 1994 | 13 April 1996 | Mayport, Florida | Active |
Benfold | DDG-65 | I | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 27 September 1993 | 9 November 1994 | 30 March 1996 | Yokosuka, Japan | Active |
Gonzalez | DDG-66 | I | Bath Iron Works | 3 February 1994 | 18 February 1995 | 12 October 1996 | Norfolk, Virginia | Active |
Cole | DDG-67 | I | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 28 February 1994 | 10 February 1995 | 8 June 1996 | Norfolk, Virginia | Active |
The Sullivans | DDG-68 | I | Bath Iron Works | 27 July 1994 | 12 August 1995 | 19 April 1997 | Mayport, Florida | Active |
Milius | DDG-69 | I | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 8 August 1994 | 1 August 1995 | 23 November 1996 | Yokosuka, Japan[89] | Active |
Hopper | DDG-70 | I | Bath Iron Works | 23 February 1995 | 6 January 1996 | 6 September 1997 | Pearl Harbor, Hawaii | Active |
Ross | DDG-71 | I | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 10 April 1995 | 22 March 1996 | 28 June 1997 | Rota, Spain | Active |
Mahan | DDG-72 | II | Bath Iron Works | 17 August 1995 | 29 June 1996 | 14 February 1998 | Norfolk, Virginia | Active |
Decatur | DDG-73 | II | Bath Iron Works | 11 January 1996 | 10 November 1996 | 29 August 1998 | San Diego, California | Active |
McFaul | DDG-74 | II | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 26 January 1996 | 18 January 1997 | 25 April 1998 | Norfolk, Virginia | Active |
Donald Cook | DDG-75 | II | Bath Iron Works | 9 July 1996 | 3 May 1997 | 4 December 1998 | Mayport, Florida | Active |
Higgins | DDG-76 | II | Bath Iron Works | 14 November 1996 | 4 October 1997 | 24 April 1999 | Yokosuka, Japan | Active |
O'Kane | DDG-77 | II | Bath Iron Works | 8 May 1997 | 28 March 1998 | 23 October 1999 | San Diego, California | Active |
Porter | DDG-78 | II | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 2 December 1996 | 12 November 1997 | 20 March 1999 | Rota, Spain | Active |
Oscar Austin | DDG-79 | IIA[a] | Bath Iron Works | 9 October 1997 | 7 November 1998 | 19 August 2000 | Norfolk, Virginia | Active |
Roosevelt | DDG-80 | IIA[a] | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 15 December 1997 | 10 January 1999 | 14 October 2000 | Rota, Spain | Active |
Winston S. Churchill | DDG-81 | IIA[b] | Bath Iron Works | 7 May 1998 | 17 April 1999 | 10 March 2001 | Norfolk, Virginia | Active |
Lassen | DDG-82 | IIA[b] | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 24 August 1998 | 16 October 1999 | 21 April 2001 | Mayport, Florida | Active |
Howard | DDG-83 | IIA[b] | Bath Iron Works | 9 December 1998 | 20 November 1999 | 20 October 2001 | Yokosuka, Japan | Active |
Bulkeley | DDG-84 | IIA[b] | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 10 May 1999 | 21 June 2000 | 8 December 2001 | Norfolk, Virginia | Active |
McCampbell | DDG-85 | IIA[c] | Bath Iron Works | 15 July 1999 | 2 July 2000 | 17 August 2002 | Everett, Washington | Active |
Shoup | DDG-86 | IIA[c] | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 13 December 1999 | 22 November 2000 | 22 June 2002 | San Diego, California | Active |
Mason | DDG-87 | IIA[c] | Bath Iron Works | 19 January 2000 | 23 June 2001 | 12 April 2003 | Norfolk, Virginia | Active |
Preble | DDG-88 | IIA[c] | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 22 June 2000 | 1 June 2001 | 9 November 2002 | Pearl Harbor, Hawaii | Active |
Mustin | DDG-89 | IIA[c] | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 15 January 2001 | 12 December 2001 | 26 July 2003 | San Diego, California | Active |
Chafee | DDG-90 | IIA[c] | Bath Iron Works | 12 April 2001 | 2 November 2002 | 18 October 2003 | Pearl Harbor, Hawaii | Active |
Pinckney | DDG-91 | IIA[c] | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 16 July 2001 | 26 June 2002 | 29 May 2004 | San Diego, California | Active |
Momsen | DDG-92 | IIA[c] | Bath Iron Works | 16 November 2001 | 19 July 2003 | 28 August 2004 | Everett, Washington | Active |
Chung-Hoon | DDG-93 | IIA[c] | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 14 January 2002 | 15 December 2002 | 18 September 2004 | Pearl Harbor, Hawaii | Active |
Nitze | DDG-94 | IIA[c] | Bath Iron Works | 20 September 2002 | 3 April 2004 | 5 March 2005 | Norfolk, Virginia | Active |
James E. Williams | DDG-95 | IIA[c] | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 15 July 2002 | 25 June 2003 | 11 December 2004 | Norfolk, Virginia | Active |
Bainbridge | DDG-96 | IIA[c] | Bath Iron Works | 7 May 2003 | 13 November 2004 | 12 November 2005 | Norfolk, Virginia | Active |
Halsey | DDG-97 | IIA[c] | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 13 January 2002 | 9 January 2004 | 30 July 2005 | Pearl Harbor, Hawaii | Active |
Forrest Sherman | DDG-98 | IIA[c] | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 7 August 2003 | 2 October 2004 | 28 January 2006 | Norfolk, Virginia | Active |
Farragut | DDG-99 | IIA[c] | Bath Iron Works | 9 January 2004 | 23 July 2005 | 10 June 2006 | Mayport, Florida | Active |
Kidd | DDG-100 | IIA[c] | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 29 April 2004 | 22 January 2005 | 9 June 2007 | Everett, Washington | Active |
Gridley | DDG-101 | IIA[c] | Bath Iron Works | 30 July 2004 | 28 December 2005 | 10 February 2007 | Everett, Washington | Active |
Sampson | DDG-102 | IIA[c] | Bath Iron Works | 20 March 2005 | 16 September 2006 | 3 November 2007 | Everett, Washington | Active |
Truxtun | DDG-103 | IIA[c] | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 11 April 2005 | 2 June 2007 | 25 April 2009 | Norfolk, Virginia | Active |
Sterett | DDG-104 | IIA[c] | Bath Iron Works | 17 November 2005 | 19 May 2007 | 9 August 2008 | San Diego, California | Active |
Dewey | DDG-105 | IIA[c] | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 4 October 2006 | 26 January 2008 | 6 March 2010 | Yokosuka, Japan | Active |
Stockdale | DDG-106 | IIA[c] | Bath Iron Works | 10 August 2006 | 10 May 2008 | 18 April 2009 | San Diego, California | Active |
Gravely | DDG-107 | IIA[c] | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 26 November 2007 | 30 March 2009 | 20 November 2010 | Norfolk, Virginia | Active |
Wayne E. Meyer | DDG-108 | IIA[c] | Bath Iron Works | 18 May 2007 | 18 October 2008 | 10 October 2009 | Pearl Harbor, Hawaii | Active |
Jason Dunham | DDG-109 | IIA[c] | Bath Iron Works | 11 April 2008 | 1 August 2009 | 13 November 2010 | Mayport, Florida | Active |
William P. Lawrence | DDG-110 | IIA[c] | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 16 September 2008 | 15 December 2009 | 4 June 2011 | Pearl Harbor, Hawaii | Active |
Spruance | DDG-111 | IIA[c] | Bath Iron Works | 14 May 2009 | 6 June 2010 | 1 October 2011 | San Diego, California | Active |
Michael Murphy | DDG-112 | IIA[c] | Bath Iron Works | 18 June 2010 | 7 May 2011 | 6 October 2012 | Pearl Harbor, Hawaii | Active |
John Finn | DDG-113 | IIA Restart | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 5 November 2013 | 28 March 2015[90] | 15 July 2017 | San Diego, California | Active |
Ralph Johnson | DDG-114 | IIA Restart | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 12 September 2014 | 12 December 2015 | 24 March 2018[91] | Yokosuka, Japan | Active |
Rafael Peralta | DDG-115 | IIA Restart | Bath Iron Works | 30 October 2014 | 1 November 2015[92] | 29 July 2017[93] | Yokosuka, Japan | Active |
Thomas Hudner | DDG-116 | IIA TI | Bath Iron Works | 16 November 2015 | 23 April 2017 | 1 December 2018[94] | Mayport, Florida[95] | Active |
Paul Ignatius | DDG-117 | IIA TI | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 20 October 2015 | 12 November 2016 | 27 July 2019 | Mayport, Florida[96] | Active |
Daniel Inouye | DDG-118 | IIA TI | Bath Iron Works | 14 May 2018[97] | 27 October 2019 | 08 December 2021 est.[citation needed] | Pearl Harbor, Hawaii | Sea trials |
Delbert D. Black | DDG-119 | IIA TI | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 1 June 2016 | 8 September 2017[98] | 26 September 2020 | Mayport, Florida | Active |
Carl M. Levin[99] | DDG-120 | IIA TI | Bath Iron Works | 1 February 2019 | 16 May 2021 | 2022 est.[100] | Pearl Harbor, Hawaii | Launched |
Frank E. Petersen Jr.[101] | DDG-121 | IIA TI | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 21 February 2017 | 13 July 2018 | 2021 est.[102] | Pearl Harbor, Hawaii[103] | Sea trials[104] |
John Basilone[105] | DDG-122 | IIA TI | Bath Iron Works | 10 January 2020 | 2022 est.[106] | Keel laid | ||
Lenah H. Sutcliffe Higbee[107] | DDG-123 | IIA TI | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 14 November 2017 | 27 January 2020 | 2024 est.[106] | Launched[108] | |
Harvey C. Barnum Jr.[99] | DDG-124 | IIA TI | Bath Iron Works | 6 April 2021 | 2024 est.[106] | Keel laid | ||
Jack H. Lucas[109] | DDG-125 | III | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 8 November 2019 | 4 June 2021[110] | 2023 est.[111] | Launched | |
Louis H. Wilson Jr.[109] | DDG-126 | III | Bath Iron Works | 2024 est.[111] | Contract awarded (MYP) | |||
Patrick Gallagher[112] | DDG-127 | IIA TI[d] | Bath Iron Works | 2023 est.[111] | Contract awarded (MYP) | |||
Ted Stevens[113] | DDG-128 | III | Ingalls Shipbuilding | Keel laid | ||||
Jeremiah Denton[114] | DDG-129 | III | Ingalls Shipbuilding | Approved for construction | ||||
William Charette[115] | DDG-130 | III | Bath Iron Works | Approved for construction | ||||
George M. Neal[116] | DDG-131 | III | Ingalls Shipbuilding | Approved for construction | ||||
Quentin Walsh[117] | DDG-132 | III | Bath Iron Works | Approved for construction | ||||
Sam Nunn[118] | DDG-133 | III | Ingalls Shipbuilding | Approved for construction | ||||
John E. Kilmer[119] | DDG-134 | III | Bath Iron Works | Approved for construction[120] | ||||
Thad Cochran | DDG-135 | III | Ingalls Shipbuilding | Approved for construction[121] | ||||
Richard G. Lugar | DDG-136 | III | Bath Iron Works | Approved for construction[122] | ||||
John F. Lehman[123] | DDG-137 | III | Ingalls Shipbuilding | Approved for construction[124] | ||||
Unnamed | DDG-138 | III | Bath Iron Works | Approved for construction[125] | ||||
Unnamed | DDG-139 | III | Ingalls Shipbuilding | Approved for construction[126] |
- ^ a b Flight IIA variant with 5"/54-caliber gun
- ^ a b c d Flight IIA Variant with 5"/62-caliber gun
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Flight IIA Variant with 5"/62-caliber gun, and one 20 mm CIWS (Ewing 2008)
- ^ The DDG-127 contract was awarded separately at a later date. Though two ships preceding her, DDG-125 & DDG-126 had begun the Flight III series, DDG-127 was designated as a Flight IIA Technology Insertion build (Department of Defense 2017). The Flight III series continued with DDG-128.
In popular culture
The 2012 film Battleship features the Arleigh Burke-class destroyer USS John Paul Jones as a major setting for most of the film scenes.[127]
The 2014 television series The Last Ship, loosely based on the 1988 novel of the same name, is set on the fictional USS Nathan James.[128] Its hull designation in the book is DDG-80, but was changed to DDG-151 for the television series, to avoid confusion with the real-life USS Roosevelt (DDG-80), which did not exist when the book was written. USS Halsey (DDG-97), a real Flight IIA Arleigh Burke-class destroyer, stood in for Nathan James during filming.[129]
See also
References
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- ^ No Name (DDG134)
- ^ No Name (DDG135)
- ^ No Name (DDG136)
- ^ https://news.usni.org/2020/10/13/secnav-names-attack-boat-after-wwii-uss-barb-ddg-for-former-secnav-lehman
- ^ No Name (DDG137)
- ^ No Name (DDG138)
- ^ No Name (DDG139)
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Further reading
- Sanders, Michael S. (1999). The Yard: Building a Destroyer at the Bath Iron Works. New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 0-06-019246-1. Describes the construction of USS Donald Cook (DDG-75) at Bath Iron Works.