Over a Fifth of Navy Ships Aren’t Ready to Fight

by Spencer Ackerman
July 13, 2011


More than a fifth of the Navy isn’t ready to sail or fight, at a time when demand on the fleet is off the charts. And the number of unready ships is likely to rise as Navy officers try to fix their chronic readiness woes.

According to statistics released by Rep. Randy Forbes, the Virginia Republican who chairs the House Armed Services Readiness Subcommittee, 22 percent of Navy ships didn’t pass their inspections in 2011. http://forbes.house.gov/UploadedPhotos/ ... e4b9da.jpg In 2007, just 8 percent of ships were rated as carrying junk equipment or insufficient spare parts. And more than half the Navy’s deployed aircraft — the F/A-18 Hornets, the jamming EA-18G Growlers, http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/03 ... yan-tanks/ the P-3C Orion surveillance plane — aren’t ready for combat. http://forbes.house.gov/UploadedPhotos/ ... ed40c4.jpg

The Navy’s surface fleet goes into the water banged up. Its aircraft carriers, frigates, destroyers spend nearly 40 percent of their deployment time with “at least one major equipment or systems failure,â€