U.S. Navy is quietly building a big, secretive special operations ‘mother ship’. HT: theWeek.
The U.S. Navy is quietly converting a 633-foot-long cargo
ship into a secretive helicopter carrier with facilities for supporting a large
contingent of Special Operations forces and all their gear, including jet
skis.
Yes, jet skis.
And here’s the really weird thing: almost nobody is talking about the new
“mothership” vessel, even though it could significantly expand America’s at-sea
commando footprint.
In November, Military Sealift Command —
America’s quasi-civilian fleet of more than 100 specialized but lightly armed
vessels — awarded an initial $73-million contract to shipping giant Maersk to
convert one of its cargo ships to a so-called “Maritime Support Vessel”
standard.
Maersk tapped the 30,000-ton
displacement M/V Cragside, built in
2011. After enduring a legal protest by rival Crowley, in January Maersk
sent Cragside to the Gulf of Mexico for military
modifications, most likely at the BAE shipyard upriver in Alabama.
The contract, extendable for up to four
years, could be worth up to $143 million. The militarized Cragside could deploy as early as November this year.
MSC is adding a bunch of new hardware
to Cragside to allow the vessel to function as a
floating base for up to 200 troops and their weapons plus small boats,
helicopters and the aforementioned jet skis, which the Navy and Air Force have begun
buying and which Navy SEALs could use to sneak along enemy coastlines.
Cragside should
be able to sail 8,000 miles at a time at speeds up to 20 knots and in 20-foot
seas, needing resupply only every 45 days. The shipyard is adding a
highly-secure communications room, a gym and weapons lockers. After all, you
can’t house all those Army Delta Force troopers and SEALs without ample weapons
lockers and gyms.
The sleek, capacious ship — already
fitted with a rear ramp for loading vehicles — is also getting a flight deck big
enough for the largest, heaviest U.S. military helicopter, the Navy’s MH-53E.Cragside will also be able to support Army Apache gunships,
Navy patrol helicopters, Special Operations Command Little Bird attack copters,
and even Marine and Air Force V-22 tiltrotors.
Cragside‘s hangar
must be big enough to hold two Navy helicopters at the same time for maintenance
— and has to have the special, subtle lighting that allows crews to use
night-vision goggles.
Add it all up, and you’ve got a floating
air base, barracks and headquarters — all in a package that, because it looks
just like a civilian cargo ship, should be able to avoid easy identification.
“This is going to be a seriously capable ship,” commented Tim Colton, a maritime consultant.
And a seriously capable ship that many close observers of the Navy don’t even know exists. It’s not the that government is
covering up Cragside — the call for bids went out
through normal public channels. But the vague official descriptions of the
vessel’s purpose have helped her escape wide notice.
Read the full story at The Week
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