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Trump's Promises


kscarbel2

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37 minutes ago, HeavyGunner said:

Did you watch him sign the 3 executive orders yesterday? Have you not been hearing every news station whining about trump working revamping healthcare?  He hit the ground running and has done more than most politician do in a year on day one. So I say he's kept his word as best as he could. 

Just having a little fun with you is all.

By the way, to put things in perspective, President Obama signed two executive orders on his first day, and three on his second, 16 for his first month. 

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Trump did more good before signing in and has been kicking ass ever since, are you people so stupid to think that he can just wave a magic wand and all is good, well he is doing pretty good for a Government outsider, he's done more good in short time than O sh## for brains did in 8 years, get real. take a look at what he has done so far all good and O sh&& for brains could have done the same but he hated this country was never going to do anything good for the working people.

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3 minutes ago, TeamsterGrrrl said:

Trump would be better off if he just shut up and laid low the next 4 years... He's just digging himself a deeper hole!

Why? He's done more for National Security in the last 4 days than The Light Bringer did in 8 years. 

Now Rob Emmanuel (who has managed to crawl out from under the Light Bringer's desk.....no wait scratch that, HAD to get out from under the Light Bringer's desk because Light Bringer got fired.....) has asked Trump for help with the homicide rate in Chicago........

TWO STROKES ARE FOR GARDEN TOOLS

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49 minutes ago, 1958 F.W.D. said:

Why? He's done more for National Security in the last 4 days than The Light Bringer did in 8 years. 

Now Rob Emmanuel (who has managed to crawl out from under the Light Bringer's desk.....no wait scratch that, HAD to get out from under the Light Bringer's desk because Light Bringer got fired.....) has asked Trump for help with the homicide rate in Chicago........

would tickle the hell out of me if trump just said      live with it

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5 hours ago, 1958 F.W.D. said:

I say again: Why? He's done more for National Security in the last 4 days than The Light Bringer did in 8 years. 

Don't you feel The Light Bringer scrapping 6 aircraft carriers (5 of which were reserve) and gutting the military didn't help the National Security of Russia, Iran and China? They did promise to be his friend.....

Edited by 41chevy

"OPERTUNITY IS MISSED BY MOST PEOPLE BECAUSE IT IS DRESSED IN OVERALLS AND LOOKS LIKE WORK"  Thomas Edison

 “Life’s journey is not to arrive at the grave safely, in a well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, totally worn out, shouting ‘Holy shit, what a ride!’

P.T.CHESHIRE

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C'mon Paul. You can't blame are Navy's unacceptably small size, including carriers, on Obama. Any ex-Navy man can tell you that our Navy has been shrinking since the end of the Vietnam war.

I myself want a return to a large and well-funded Navy. But every presidential administration since Nixon has underfunded the Navy.

As a result, for example, rather than buy similar replacements for the "purpose-designed" A6 bomber and F-14 air superiority fighter, the Navy was forced to buy an inferior flying compromise, the F-18, saddled with both missions, all because they weren't funded to do the right thing.

Our oldest Ohio Class ballistic submarines are as old as 41 years, and their replacement (Columbia Class) is still a 3D picture.

By 1990, President H.W. Bush had sent our four battleships (Iowa, Missouri, New Jersey and Wisconsin), which had figured so prominently during the first Iraq War, back into retirement. These platforms, modernized, had (have) vast potential. Nothing send a "message" better than the sight of a dreadnought.

(And there's also the strong argument that the aircraft carrier, with today's weapons in mind, is a sitting duck. That's a now vulnerable critical wheel need to cleverly re-invent.)

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

U.S. Navy Active Ship Force Levels, 1972-1978

DATE ^ 6/30/72 6/30/73 6/30/74 6/30/75 6/30/76 6/30/77 9/30/78
BATTLESHIPS - - - - - - -
CARRIERS 17 16 14 15 13 13 13
CRUISERS 27 29 28 27 26 26 28
DESTROYERS 132 139 119 102 99 92 95
FRIGATES 66 71 64 64 64 64 65
SUBMARINES 94 84 73 75 74 77 81
SSBNS 41 41 41 41 41 41 41
COMMAND SHIPS - - - - - - -
MINE WARFARE 31 34 34 34 25 25 25
PATROL 16 14 14 14 13 6 3
AMPHIBIOUS 77 65 65 64 65 65 67
AUXILIARY 153 148 135 123 116 114 113
SURFACE WARSHIPS 225 239 211 193 189 182* 188
TOTAL ACTIVE 654 641 587 559 536 523 531
 
EVENTS

•  Last U.S. forces withdraw from South Vietnam following the ceasefire 1973.

•  South Vietnam falls to North Vietnamese communists 1975.

 
NOTES

^     Beginning with FY 78, the fiscal year runs 1 October through 30 September.

*     Post-Vietnam low for surface warships.

U.S. Navy Active Ship Force Levels, 1979-1985

DATE 9/30/79 9/30/80 9/30/81 9/30/82 9/30/83 9/30/84 9/30/85
BATTLESHIPS - - - - 1 2 2
CARRIERS 13 13 12 13 13 13 13
CRUISERS 28 26 27 27 28 29 30
DESTROYERS 97 94 91 89 71 69 69
FRIGATES 65 71 78 86 95 103 110
SUBMARINES 80 82 87 96 98 98 100
SSBNS 41 40 34 33 34 35 37
COMMAND SHIPS - 3 4 4 4 4 4
MINE WARFARE 25 25 25 25 21 21 21
PATROL 3 3 1 4 6 6 6
AMPHIBIOUS 67 63 61 61 59 57 58
AUXILIARY 114 110 101 117 103 120 121
SURFACE WARSHIPS 190 191 196 202 195 203 211
TOTAL ACTIVE 533 530 521* 555 533 557 571
 
EVENTS

•  Grenada operation 1983.

•  Attempted peacekeeping in Lebanon 1983.

 
NOTES

*     Post-Vietnam War low (total active ships).

U.S. Navy Active Ship Force Levels, 1986-1992

DATE 9/30/86 9/30/87 9/30/88 9/30/89 9/30/90 9/30/91 9/30/92
BATTLESHIPS 3 3 3 4 4 1 -
CARRIERS 14 14 14 14 13 15 14
CRUISERS 32 36 38 40 43 47 49
DESTROYERS 69 69 69 68 57 47 40
FRIGATES 113 115 107 100 99 93 67
SUBMARINES 101 102 100 99 93 87 85
SSBNS 39 37 37 36 33 34 30
COMMAND SHIPS 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
MINE WARFARE 21 22 22 23 22 22 16
PATROL 6 6 6 6 6 6 6
AMPHIBIOUS 58 59 59 61 59 61 58
AUXILIARY 23 127 114 137 137 112 102
SURFACE WARSHIPS 217 223^ 217 212 203 188 156
TOTAL ACTIVE 583 594* 573 592 570 529 471
 
EVENTS

•  Fall of the Berlin Wall and many East European communist governments, 1989-1990.

•  Gulf mobilization and war, 1990-1991.

•  Dissolution of the Soviet Union and end of the Cold War, 1991.

 
EVENTS

^     1980s high for surface warships.

*     1980s high for total active ships.

A rapid decline in force level is evident after the anticommunist revolutions in Eastern Europe and the collapse of the Soviet Union, 1989-1991.

U.S. Navy Active Ship Force Levels, 1993-1999

DATE 9/30/93 9/30/94 9/30/95 9/30/96 9/30/97 9/30/98 8/17/99
BATTLESHIPS - - - - - - -
CARRIERS 13 12 12 12 12 12 12
CRUISERS 52 35 32 31 30 29 27
DESTROYERS 37 41 47 51 56 50 52
FRIGATES 59 51 49 43 42 38 37
SUBMARINES 88 88 83 79 73 65 57
SSBNS 22 18 16 17 18 18 18
COMMAND SHIPS 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
MINE WARFARE 15 16 18 18 18 18 18
PATROL 2 7 12 13 13 13 13
AMPHIBIOUS 52 38 39 40 41 40 41
AUXILIARY 110 94 80 67 52 57 57
SURFACE WARSHIPS 148 127 128 123 122 109 106
TOTAL ACTIVE 454 404 392 375 359 344 337
 
NOTES

End of the Cold War 'peace dividend' leads to decommissioning of many older ships, especially cruisers and auxiliaries, in a manner similar to downsizing at the end of the Vietnam war.

U.S. Navy Active Ship Force Levels, 2000 - 2006

DATE 9/30/00 9/30/01 9/30/02 9/30/03 9/30/04 9/30/05 9/30/06
CARRIERS 12 12 12 12 12 12 12
CRUISERS 27 27 27 27 25 23 22
DESTROYERS 54 53 55 49 48 46 50
FRIGATES 35 35 33 30 30 30 30
SUBMARINES 56 55 54 54 54 54 54
SSBN 18 18 18 16 14 14 14
SSGN 0 0 0 2 4 4 4
MINE WARFARE 18 18 17 17 17 17 16
AMPHIBIOUS 41 41 41 38 37 37 35
AUXILIARY 57 57 56 52 51 45 44
SURFACE WARSHIPS 128 127 127 118 115 111* 114
TOTAL ACTIVE 318 316 313 297 292 282 281
 
NOTES

•  9/11 and the GWOT does not increase Navy ship force levels.

•  START treaty limits encourage creation of SSGN class, fleet ballistic missile submarines converted to carry conventional strike cruise missiles. Older surface warships continue to be replaced at a less than one-to-one ratio.

*     Low since 1921

•    To clarify the ship numbers included in this table, the year 2000 entries include active commissioned ships, those in the Naval Reserve Force (NRF) and ships operated by the Military Sealift Command (MSC).  Row entries are self-explanatory, with the auxiliary category including combat logistic ships (such as oilers, ammunition, combat store ships), mobile logistics ships (such as submarine tenders) and support ships (such as command, salvage, tugs and research ships).  Command ships have been subsumed into that category and the separate line entry removed.  A new row has been added for guided missile submarines (SSGN).

Post-1999 data provided by N8F.

U.S.Navy Active Ship Force Levels, 2007 to 2010

DATE 9/30/07 9/30/08 9/30/09 9/30/10
CARRIERS 11 11 11  11
CRUISERS 22 22 22  22
DESTROYERS 52 54 57 59
FRIGATES 30 30 30 29
LCS   1 1 2
PATROL COASTAL 0 0 0 0
 SSN 53 53 53  53
SSBN 14 14 14 14
SSGN 4 4 4
MINE WARFARE 14 14 14  14
AMPHIBIOUS 33 34 33 33
AUXILIARY 46 45 46 47
SURFACE WARSHIPS 115 118  121  123
TOTAL ACTIVE 278 282 285  288 

U.S.Navy Active Ship Force Levels, 2011 to 2016

  9/30/11 9/30/12 9/30/13 9/30/14 9/30/15 9/30/16
  Combatant (Warship)    221   222   217   222   201   204
     Aircraft Carrier (CVN) 11 11 10 10 10 10
     Cruiser (CG) 22 22 22 22 22 22
     Destroyer (DDG) 61 62 62 62 62 62
     Destroyer (DDG 1000) - - - - - 1
     Frigate (FFG) 26 23 17 10 - -
     Littoral (LCS) 2 3 4 4 5 8
     Patrol Coastal (PC) - - - 10^ - -
     Attack Submarine (SSN) 53 54 54 55 54 52
     Ballistic Missile Submarine (SSBN) 14 14 14 14 14 14
     Guided Missile Submarine (SSGN) 4 4 4 4 4 4
     Amphibious Assault Ship [General] (LHA) 1 1 1 2 1 1
     Amphibious Transport Dock (LHD) 8 8 8 8 8 8
     Amphibious Assault Ship [Multi] (LPD) 7 8 9 9 9 10
     Landing Dock Ship (LSD) 12 12 12 12 12 12
  Combatant (Other)    63   65   68   67   70   71
     Mine Countermeasures Ship (MCM) 14 14 13 8 11 11
     Ammunition Ship (T-AE) 1 1 1 - - 0
     Fleet Replenishment Oiler (T-AO) 15 15 15 15 15 15
     Fast Combat Support Ship (T-AOE) 4 4 4 3 3 2
     Dry Cargo & Ammunition Ship (T-AKE) 11 11 12 12 12 12
     Command Ship (LCC) 2 2 2 2 2 2
     Submarine Tender (AS) 2 2 2 2 2 2
     *Joint High Speed Vessel (JHSV)
     Expeditionary Fast Transport (T-EPF)
- - 2 4 5 7
     Surveillance Ship (T-AGOS) 5 5 5 5 5 5
     Salvage Ship (T-ARS) 4 4 4 4 4 4
     Fleet Ocean Tug (T-ATF) 4 4 4 4 4 4
     (MPS T-AKE) 1 2 2 2 2 2
     Afloat Forward Staging Base (AFSB) - 1 1 1 1 1
     *Afloat Forward Staging Base/
        Expeditionary Sea Base (T-ESB)
- - - - - 1
     *Mobile Landing Platform (MLP)
     Expeditionary Transfer Dock (T-ESD)
- - 1 2 3 2
     Hospital Ship (T-AH) - - - 2 - -
     High Speed Transport (T-HST) - - - 1 1 1
TOTAL BATTLE FORCE LEVEL 284 287 285 289 271 275 

^ Patrol Coastal (PC) were counted in the battle force level only for FY 2014.

*JHSV and MLP classifications changed to T-EPF and T-ESD in August 2015.  Additionally, the classification T-ESB was created for AFSBs used for expeditionary support. 

Published:Tue Dec 06 14:17:14 EST 2016

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I'm 100% wrong , you're are 100% correct, Obama had absolutely nothing to do with it in fact he tried to save them all.  So Sorry for my mispost. .Five were reserve carriers that I did not think being moth balled counted as active ships. Navy Time is apparently also misinformed with their article too.

When a crisis break out, the first question the President of the United States asks is, “Where are the carriers?” It’s very understandable. Since December, 1941, the aircraft carrier has been America’s first responder to war and crises short of war. The nuclear-powered carriers (CVNs) in service displace about 100,000 tons of water, can reach speeds of over 30 knots, and can deliver several squadrons of aircraft to a crisis spot.

There is a price for this capability. Carriers are expensive – a Nimitz-class carrier costs $4.5 billion to build. The new Gerald R. Ford-class carrier will cost almost $10.5 billion per ship, not counting the R&D costs. They also take a long time to build. It takes at least four years, and in some cases as many as seven to build a nuclear-powered carrier, from laying the keel to commissioning. The Navy had kept all four Forrestal-class carriers and three of the four Kitty Hawk-class carriers (CVs) in reserve. USS America (CV 66) was sunk as a target to acquire data on the effects of combat damage on supercarriers, data used in the design of the Gerald R. Ford-class carriers.

These seven carriers were oil-burning ships, with less endurance than the CVNs, but still able to deliver hurt to the bad guys. So, they were mothballed, ready to be reactivated in a time of crisis. That was the case until 2013.

Since the start of 2014, the Obama Administration has been rushing these conventional-fuelled ships to Brownsville, Texas, where they are being scrapped. Four of these ships, USS Forrestal (CV 59), USS Saratoga (CV 60), USS Ranger (CV 61), and USS Constellation (CV 64) have been towed to Brownsville, the USS Independence (CV 62), was added in 2015. That is bad enough, but a sixth carrier, USS Enterprise (CVN 65), was also slated to the scrap yard by 2017.

 
Edited by 41chevy

"OPERTUNITY IS MISSED BY MOST PEOPLE BECAUSE IT IS DRESSED IN OVERALLS AND LOOKS LIKE WORK"  Thomas Edison

 “Life’s journey is not to arrive at the grave safely, in a well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, totally worn out, shouting ‘Holy shit, what a ride!’

P.T.CHESHIRE

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In 1972, the United States had 17 aircraft carriers. Stop and think of that global footprint for a moment.

But by 1976, we were down to 13.

We had 13 from 1986 to 1994.

And then, the new reduced capability standard of 12 from 1994 to 2006.

11, from 2007 to 2012.

And then 10 from 2013 to the present.

Every President from Ford on has been under-funding the U.S. Navy, and today a review of our naval bases will quickly tell you that it is a mere shell of its former self. Newport News Shipbuilding, the carrier "factory", is less than half as busy as it once was (I've long been troubled that in modern times, NNS is the "only" designer, builder and refueler of the nuclear carriers........never put all your eggs in one basket.).

It says something that the U.S. Marines can be the world's most formidable fighting force even though they have been under-funded for decades as well. And we all know how under-funded the Coast Guard has long been.

The scrapped carriers, though legendary (e.g. Forrestal), were old. Of course, who doesn't have a warm place in their heart for the "Big E".

I rode the Nimitz out on its first cruise.

The Exocet cruise missile that sunk the HMS Sheffield during the Falklands war though opened everyone's eyes once and for all to the modern day vulnerability of the aircraft carrier. Nothing like having forces forward positioned, but if they can so easily be taken out..............

I don't see the Ford-Class carriers as being any less vulnerable.

Based on what we read, it's puzzling how we allow our defense contractors to be hacked, placing our current and next generation defense systems into the hands of our would-be adversaries.

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You guys sound like your building your fantasy navy to fight World War Two again. Now that most any country or terrorist group can build or acquire their own drones, weaponize civilian vehicles and craft, and even stash suitcase sized nuclear weapons for remote activation... Your whole "big navy" strategy is obsolete.

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5 minutes ago, TeamsterGrrrl said:

You guys sound like your building your fantasy navy to fight World War Two again. Now that most any country or terrorist group can build or acquire their own drones, weaponize civilian vehicles and craft, and even stash suitcase sized nuclear weapons for remote activation... Your whole "big navy" strategy is obsolete.

I didn't mean to imply that. My principal point is that our armed forced have been underfunded for decades.

The Navy, Marines and Coast Guard need a massive funding boost to reach what I'll define as "normal"...........or today's threats (ect. DF-21 cruise missile).

If I had my way, I'd put the Air Force back under the Army. 

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16 minutes ago, TeamsterGrrrl said:

Underfunded? We spend over half the federal discretionary budget on the military. We spend more on our military than the rest of the world combined.

My personal opinion, from an "up close" perspective, is that our Navy, Marines and Coast Guard are seriously underfunded.

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5 minutes ago, TeamsterGrrrl said:

So how are the rest of the world's countries managing to defend themselves for a fraction of what we spend?

Our traditional allies, with the exception of Japan, are not managing well at all to defend themselves.

http://www.bigmacktrucks.com/topic/46404-what-the-us-should-learn-from-britain’s-dying-navy/#comment-341940

 

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