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Ships: America Doesn't Build Them Like It Used To (Or at All)
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Ships: America Doesn't Build Them Like It Used To (Or at All)

America has the largest navy in the history of the world. It isn’t great at maintaining it.
U.S.S. Eisenhower leaving drydock. U.S. Navy photo.

A lot goes into keeping a navy afloat. There’s ship husbanding, maintenance, and buckets of haze gray. The U.S. used to be good at this, but it hasn’t been on an active war-footing for a long time and the manufacturing base that created its massive navy has seen better days. So what happens if there’s a war and America doesn’t have enough welders, let alone drydocks, to build out its fleets?

Gil Barndollar is a senior analyst at Defense Priorities and the co-author of a recent piece in Foreign Policy about America’s inability to build new ships. Barndollar sounds the alarm on a number of different issues facing the U.S. military: the recruitment crisis, manufacturing issues, and sailors pushed to the limits of their physical abilities.

We might even talk about arming container ships with missile batteries to augment existing forces.

The U.S. Navy Can’t Build Ships

Converting Merchant Ships to Missile Ships for the Win

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