$120,000,000,000: The Ford-Class Aircraft Carrier Navy Nightmare

Ford-Class Aircraft Carrier
September 5, 2024 Topic: Security Region: Americas Blog Brand: The Buzz Tags: U.S. NavyNavyFord-ClassAircraft CarrierMilitaryDefenseChina

$120,000,000,000: The Ford-Class Aircraft Carrier Navy Nightmare

The aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford, the most advanced and expensive warship in the U.S. Navy, is a technological marvel carrying 90 aircraft and equipped with a nuclear power plant. However, its $13 billion price tag and susceptibility to modern anti-access/area-denial (A2/AD) systems, particularly from China, raise concerns about its effectiveness in future conflicts.

 

Summary and Key Points You Need to Know: The aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford, the most advanced and expensive warship in the U.S. Navy, is a technological marvel carrying 90 aircraft and equipped with a nuclear power plant. However, its $13 billion price tag and susceptibility to modern anti-access/area-denial (A2/AD) systems, particularly from China, raise concerns about its effectiveness in future conflicts.

-Critics argue that the U.S. should invest in smaller, stealthier, and faster platforms like submarines, drones, hypersonic missiles, and space-based weapons instead of relying on expensive carriers that are increasingly vulnerable to modern threats.

 

USS Gerald R. Ford: A $13 Billion Marvel Facing Modern Warfare Obsolescence

It's one of the most beautiful, technologically sophisticated weapons platform ever devised by Man. Carrying a whopping 90 fixed wing aircraft, including the Boeing F/A-18E/F Super Hornet, the Boeing EA-18G Growler, the Grumman C-2 Greyhound, the Northrop-Grumman E-2 Hawkeye, Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II fighter craft, as well as an assortment of helicopters as well as unmanned vehicles, the U.S.S Gerald R. Ford, the first of its class, is a modern marvel. The leviathan can carry a crew complement of more than 4,500 people. It has a nuclear power plant that can allow for the ship to enjoy extended deployments. 

And, when compared to older models of the US Navy's ubiquitous aircraft carriers, the Ford-class aircraft carrier has a far stealthier cross-section, allowing for it to operate for longer periods of time in a contested battlespace. 

The downside is the cost--and time--it takes to build or even repair the Ford-class carrier. The Ford-class costs around $13 billion to build. From there, it will cost around $700 million just to maintain a single Ford-class carrier. Although, according to US Navy Captain Brian Metcalf, future versions of the Ford-class carrier are slated to cost $5 billion less than the prototype, the USS Gerald R. Ford, cost (at least, according to Metcalf). 

Nevertheless, this is the most expensive warship in the US Navy's fleet. The total cost for the Ford-class program is around $120 billion. 

The Wrong System for the Wrong War

At a time when the US military is subject to increasing public and political skepticism about the cost of its operations, with multiple new threats arising around the world to strain and drain the US military, the staggering level of money being thrown at a single weapons system, like the Ford-class carrier, demands reappraisal. Yes, it's an incredible weapon. No, it is not the weapon we need for today's--or even tomorrow's--war.

In the age of the anti-access/area-denial (A2/AD) strategy that America's rivals have readily embraced, the $13 billion Ford-class carriers are, if you'll pardon the expression, a sunk cost for the US Navy. For the first time in years, the US Navy is no longer the largest naval force in the world. That distinction belongs to China. Now, defenders of the US Navy will rightly acknowledge that China merely favors quantity over quality. But as the communists so often remind us, "quantity has a quality of its own." What's more, these were the same arguments that the British Royal Navy made when, in the 1940s, the US Navy surpassed them in size. 

The A2/AD systems that China, Russia, and a bevy of other US rivals, both state actors and non state actors alike, are significantly cheaper than the Ford-class and can basically render the Ford-class combat-ineffective. That's to say nothing of the fact that no other Ford-class exists or that it will take at least five years to build (it took 12 years for the Gerald R. Ford to be built). Therefore, the risk of losing the Ford in combat to one of China's numerous antiship missiles is far greater than whatever benefits in terms of offensive capabilities against a rival nation-state, like China, the Ford-class offers. 

Future Wars: Be Nimbler, Stealthier, and Faster

What's needed in today's conflicts (and tomorrow's) will be smaller, speedier, and stealthier warships. A greater emphasis on submarines will be needed rather than unwieldy and expensive legacy systems, like the aircraft carrier. Submarines could also be outfitted with drones that could be launched from the missile launches on submarines to augment maritime-based aircraft capabilities. Beyond that, the US military needs to spend the money it has been spending on cumbersome aircraft carriers instead on hypersonic missiles and space-based weapons. 

The bottom-line is that, as amazing and beautiful as the new Ford-class aircraft carriers are, they are not worth the money that's been invested. This is especially so simply because modern warfare has changed and has effectively made these elephantine weapons platforms obsolete.

Regardless of how much stealth technology has been integrated into the USS Gerald R. Ford, the great ship can still be detected, tracked by China, targeted by Chinese missiles or hypersonic glide vehicles, and destroyed--all for a fraction of the cost that it takes for the US to maintain the warship. 

America could find itself in a similar position that the French found themselves in at the outset of the First World War: a beautiful looking force that was completely outmatched by their rivals because they had made the wrong strategic investments--and their people paid for those bad investments. 

Author Experience and Expertise: Brandon J. Weichert

Brandon J. Weichert, a National Interest national security analyst, is a former Congressional staffer and geopolitical analyst who is a contributor at The Washington Times, the Asia Times, and The-Pipeline. He is the author of Winning Space: How America Remains a Superpower, Biohacked: China’s Race to Control Life, and The Shadow War: Iran’s Quest for Supremacy. His next book, A Disaster of Our Own Making: How the West Lost Ukraine, is due October 22 from Encounter Books. Weichert can be followed via Twitter @WeTheBrandon.

All images are Creative Commons or Shutterstock.

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