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Navy awards $80.5M in contracts for global readiness initiative
by Sam Howard
Washington (UPI) Mar 11, 2018

Lockheed to support construction of MMSC ships for Saudi Arabia
Washington (UPI) Mar 6, 2018 - Lockheed Martin has been awarded a contract for services in support of the construction of four Multi-Mission Surface Combatant ships for Saudi Arabia.

The deal, announced Monday by the Department of Defense, is valued at more than $481.1 million under an undefinitized contract action for long-lead-time material.

The Pentagon says that Multi-Mission Surface Combatant, or MMSC ships, are "lethal and highly-maneuverable surface combatant capable of littoral and open-ocean operation."

The deal dates to a multi-billion-dollar negotiation that started in 2015 for construction of the ships, which was finalized in 2017 as part of a larger $110 billion defense deal between the United States and Saudi Arabia.

Work on the contract will occur in multiple locations in the United States, as well as Canada, Germany and Sweden. The project is expected to be complete in October 2024.

More than $240.5 million will be obligated to Lockheed Martin at time of award from foreign military sales funds for the kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The Defense Department said the obligated funds will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year.

The U.S. Navy has awarded three contracts in support of the Global Readiness and Force Management Enterprise.

The Defense Department announced Friday it had awarded contracts to Sotera Defense Solutions, Booz Allen Hamilton and InnovaSystems International.

The contracts each pay for work on software development, systems engineering, training and other support for GRFME, the military's global response and readiness infrastructure.

Sotera, under a $29.3 million contract, will conduct work in Herndon, Va., and Norfolk, Va. Booz Allen Hamilton will work on its $25.8 million contract from McLean, Va., and Norfolk. InnovaSystems International will split work on the $25.4 million contract between San Diego and Norfolk.

The three companies will compete for specific jobs on on an order-by-order basis, which the Defense Department will fund using money from the Navy's operations and maintenance and research, development, test and evaluation funds.

Work on all three contracts is scheduled to expire in March 2020, but there are options available to continue work until 2023.

'Sudden turn' by US warship led to collision off Singapore: report
Singapore (AFP) March 8, 2018 - A "sudden turn" by the American warship USS John S. McCain led to a collision with a tanker last year off Singapore that left 10 sailors dead, a report by the city-state's government said Thursday.

Singapore's transport ministry, releasing the results of its investigation into the incident, said a "series of missteps" by the destroyer's crew and insufficient action by those of the tanker, the Alnic MC, contributed to the accident.

The vessels smashed into each other in the predawn hours of August 21, 2017 in the busy shipping lanes around the Strait of Malacca. There were no casualties among the tanker's crew.

The commander of the John S. McCain is facing charges including negligent homicide and dereliction of duty, the US Navy said in January, after its own investigation into the incident found "multiple failures" by the ship's crew.

Singapore said its 35-page report did not blame any organisation or individual for the fatal crash, but found the warship made an abrupt turn after a transfer of controls caused confusion among the crew.

"The collision... happened because of a sudden turn to port (left) by JSM (John S. McCain), which caused it to head into the path of the (tanker)," the report said.

It also noted that several sailors on watch at the John S. McCain during the collision had been assigned from another warship with steering control systems that were "significantly different".

"These differences were not compensated for. Inadequacies in training and familiarisation before the task allocation may have contributed to the actions on John S. McCain," it said.

The collision took place within three minutes of the warship's sudden turn, it said, adding however that the actions taken by the tanker's crew "were insufficient to avoid" the smashup.

"When the bridge team of Alnic MC saw the USS John S. McCain turning, it presumed that the (warship) would be able to safely pass ahead," it said.

The incident came after another destroyer, the USS Fitzgerald, smashed into a Philippine-flagged cargo ship off Japan in June 2017, leaving seven sailors dead.

In a report on the two separate collisions, US Chief of Naval Operations Admiral John Richardson said both were "preventable and the respective investigations found multiple failures by watch standers that contributed to the incidents".

The US Navy said in November that the John S. McCain collision "resulted primarily from complacency, over-confidence and lack of procedural compliance".

"In particular, McCain's commanding officer disregarded recommendations from his executive officer, navigator and senior watch officer to set sea and anchor watch teams in a timely fashion," it said.


Related Links
Naval Warfare in the 21st Century


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BAE Australia grows with 42 new graduates for defense, security business
Washington (UPI) Mar 5, 2018
BAE Systems Australia said last week that they have accepted 42 new graduates its national defense and security business, continuing to grow its presence there. BAE Systems announced a ream of initiatives in 2017 to grow it's business in Australia, positioning itself to take a lead in development of the Royal Australian Navy and consolidating its business there with the development of a defense hub that includes manufacturing, simulation, training and test facilities. The new graduates a ... read more

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