Old Sweat said:
It seems to me from following this thread over the past little while, that Admiral McFadden took the course that was going to result in the most cost and operationally effective solution. There are not the crews available to keep all the vessels in service at rotating standards of acceptable readiness. That opinion is far out of my lane, and I apologize for it if I totally misread the situation.
No Sir, you have not misread the situation at all. In fact, you nailed it. For years we have been rotating crews at too high a rate. Individual augmentees are sent to a ship often just for the Work-Up period and then sent to another ship (likely abouut to undergo Work-Ups). By the time the ship that passed whatever WUPs (Mission, Directed or Full) embarks on her mission, it has lost a good number of her worked-up crew.
E.R Campbell is also correct - this was not done in secrecy. This thread started on 3 May,
Chronicbny said that the west coast briefing had been held the week prior, and the UNCLAS letter announcing the way ahead was dated in late April.
GAP is also correct - this will very likely happen in phases in much the same way we have been slowly and quietly tying up KINGSTON-Class ships for a while now. We have never been running 12 ships (for any significant period of time) and we haven't been running 10 for a while. The drop to 6 was actually a loss of 2, not 6.
No, all we have here is an
Operational Commander, who made a sound (not just fiscally sound, but operationally sound)
operational decision, as was his purview, indeed his responsibility, and who was then overruled when it became politically embarrassing.
edited for grammar