Saturday, September 21, 2024

Hicks Named Sponsor of Newly Named Nuclear Submarine

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Hicks Named Sponsor of Newly Named Nuclear Submarine
Sept. 20, 2024 | By C. Todd Lopez

The Navy today revealed that its next Virginia-class, nuclear-powered submarine, SSN-812, will be called the USS Baltimore. The service also announced that Deputy Defense Secretary Kathleen Hicks would serve as the vessel's sponsor. 

During a naming ceremony today aboard the historic USS Constellation, a Navy warship built in 1854 that now serves as a museum ship in Baltimore Harbor, Carlos Del Toro, the secretary of the Navy, announced the name of the new submarine and that Hicks would serve as sponsor once it was constructed. 

"The ship's sponsor fills a critical role throughout the life of a warship, serving as the bond between the ship, her crew and the nation they serve," Del Toro said.  "I can think of no one more fitting to take on this vital role, no one with more resilience and grit and whose spirit embodies that of Baltimore than Deputy Secretary Hicks." 

Growing up in a Navy family, Hicks was exposed to the world of submarines early on.  Her father, retired Rear Adm. William J. Holland, was a submariner who served on a variety of nuclear-powered submarines. 

"Like all prospective nuclear submariners in those days, he was personally interviewed by Adm. Rickover, the father of the nuclear navy," Hicks said.  "Throughout career, the submarine community was more than just his professional home. It was a family support system; one in which my mother, Anne Holland, was a leader. One that played an important role for me and my six older brothers and sisters. It was the community I was born into." 

Hicks said her family history would play an important role in her responsibility as the USS Baltimore sponsor. 

"As sponsor of the future USS Baltimore, SSN-812, I will continue to carry on our family's legacy of service and commitment to the submarine force," she said.

The USS Baltimore, not yet constructed, will be a Block V, Virginia-class, nuclear-powered submarine. So far, more than 20 Virginia-class submarines have been constructed and are now home-ported with the Navy in Hawaii, Connecticut, and Virginia. The new subs replace retiring Los Angeles-class submarines and include several innovations that enhance warfighting capabilities.   

According to a U.S. Navy fact sheet, the Virginia-class submarine has special features to support special operations forces, including a reconfigurable torpedo room that can accommodate a large number of personnel and their equipment. Also, in the Virginia-class, traditional periscopes have been replaced with photonics masts that host visible and infrared digital cameras atop telescoping arms. With this change, the submarine's control room has been moved and now provides more space and an improved layout. 

"When Baltimore joins the fleet with a world-class crew, it will be among the most agile, lethal, resilient and capable conventional nuclear-powered submarines we've ever made," Hicks said. "The Baltimore belongs to a continuously modernized class of attack submarines that are not only larger, more powerful, and more lethal, they also run quieter, deeper and faster." 

Hicks described the new Virginia-class subs as a "Swiss Army knife of naval capabilities" and said they support anti-surface and strike missions, anti-submarine warfare and special operations capabilities. She also said they provide more inputs into multi-domain awareness, are interoperable with U.S. ally and partner forces, and are built to be upgraded with future technology and capability. 

The biggest asset of the USS Baltimore and other Virginia-class subs, she said, will be their deterrence capability. 

"Like all of our submarines, conventional and otherwise, we build them not to provoke war, but rather to prevent wars through deterrence," she said. "Whenever our would-be adversaries consider the risks of aggression, sometimes they will see the 'big stick' of U.S. and allied military assets, like the USS Theodore Roosevelt and our other aircraft carriers. They certainly send a signal and have the firepower to back it up." 

Other times, she said, it's not necessary to put that kind of capability on display; it's enough that adversaries know it exists. 

" USS Baltimore — with its stealth, endurance, lethality and speed — will be just such an asset, part of our unseen advantage," Hicks said. "And the only thing the adversary will hear is the sound of silence." 

The USS Baltimore will be a Block V submarine equipped with the Virginia payload module. It will be 461 feet long, have a displacement of 10,200 tons, a speed of greater than 25 knots, and carry a crew of 132. With the Virginia payload module, the USS Baltimore will incorporate four additional large-diameter payload tubes, each capable of carrying seven Tomahawk cruise missiles.

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Alert: Youth lead the way ahead of UN Summit of the Future

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Alert 20 September 2024
Youth lead the way ahead of UN Summit of the Future
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Young people took centre stage at UN Headquarters on Friday in the lead-up to the Summit of the Future – an unprecedented opportunity for world leaders to address current and emerging global challenges, and reform outdated international institutions.  

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Transition of Operation Inherent Resolve to U.S.-Iraq Bilateral Security Partnership to be Announced Next Week, Officials Say

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Transition of Operation Inherent Resolve to U.S.-Iraq Bilateral Security Partnership to be Announced Next Week, Officials Say
Sept. 20, 2024 | By Matthew Olay

The United States is on track to announce next week the transition of the military's anti-ISIS mission in Iraq to a bilateral defense partnership between the two countries, a pair of officials close to the matter told the media today. 

The announcement would come 10 years after the U.S.' establishment of the multi-national Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS and its military component, Combined Joint Task Force — Operation Inherent Resolve.

Talks about transitioning the military mission to a bilateral defense partnership began between the U.S. and Iraq in April. Although specific details concerning transitioning from CJTF-OIR to a bilateral partnership are still evolving, a senior administration official said that there is a broad consensus between all coalition members that the coalition will continue with its work well into the future. 

"[The commission does] extraordinary work in terms of counter-terrorist financing, counter-foreign fighter flow … sharing information sharing intelligence," the official said, adding that the transition to a bilateral partnership is a way to deepen and enhance the coalition and cooperation between its member countries, as well as a means of strengthening the U.S.' relationship with Iraq. 

The official also made clear that, no matter what shape the future bilateral agreement takes — and regardless of whether other coalition countries move on from Iraq after 10 years — the U.S. remains committed to defeating ISIS. 

"I think it's fair to say we've had great success in territorially defeating ISIS in the core regions of Iraq and Syria. However, we are all very aware that with ISIS, you can say down, but they're never quite out," the official said.  

"We remain fully committed to the defeat of ISIS … That is what we're working on in Iraq and northeast Syria," the official continued. " something that is ongoing every day, and that will very much continue in the future."  

As one example of that, the Pentagon announced yesterday that U.S. and Syrian Democratic Forces launched a raid in Syria that killed four ISIS operatives.

The raid was designed to disrupt and degrade the terrorist organization's ability "to organize and conduct attacks against civilians as well as U.S. citizens, allies and partners throughout the region and beyond," Deputy Pentagon Press Secretary Sabrina Singh said. 

"The United States is the core , and we very much intend to continue to prosecute this mission against ISIS over the coming years," the senior administration official said. 

As the announcement of the transition of the coalition's military mission in Iraq draws closer, one senior defense official said the U.S. will be "deepening the conversation" with Iraq regarding the nature of the bilateral security partnership. 

"We believe will be quite deep and quite intense because that's what both sides want," the official told reporters, adding that the Iraqis have made clear that they are committed to continuing to work to shape a strong bilateral security agreement with the U.S. and to ensure the enduring defeat of ISIS. 

"We already have gotten fairly advanced into those discussions about what that looks like in terms of the kinds of trainings, the kinds of presence the kinds of support for capabilities," the official said. 

"But this is an iterative conversation that will continue through and beyond the announcement that we hope we'll be in a position to make at the end of next week," he added.

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