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Wikipedia

United States Navy

The United States Navy (USN) is the maritime service branch of the United States Armed Forces and one of the eight uniformed services of the United States. It is the largest and most powerful navy in the world, with the estimated tonnage of its active battle fleet alone exceeding the next 13 navies combined, including 11 allies or partner nations of the United States as of 2015.[7][8][9][10] It has the highest combined battle fleet tonnage[11][7] (4,635,628 tonnes as of 2019)[12] and the world's largest aircraft carrier fleet, with eleven in service, two new carriers under construction, and five other carriers planned. With 336,978 personnel on active duty and 101,583 in the Ready Reserve, the United States Navy is the third largest of the United States military service branches in terms of personnel. It has 290 deployable combat vessels and more than 2,623 operational aircraft as of June 2019.[3]

United States Navy
Emblem of the United States Navy
Founded27 March 1794
(228 years, 9 months)
(as current service)

13 October 1775
(247 years, 3 months)
(as Continental Navy)[1]


Country United States
TypeNavy
Role
Size349,593 active duty personnel (As of 2021)[2]
101,583 ready reserve personnel (As of 2018)[3]
279,471 civilian employees (As of 2018)[3]
480 ships total, of which 290 are deployable (As of 2019)[3]
2,623 aircraft (As of 2018)[4]
Part ofUnited States Armed Forces
Department of the Navy
HeadquartersThe Pentagon
Arlington County, Virginia, U.S.
Motto(s)"Semper Fortis" ("Always Courageous"), (unofficial).
"Non sibi sed patriae" ("Not for self but for country") (unofficial).
ColorsBlue and gold[5][6]
   
March"Anchors Aweigh" Play 
Anniversaries13 October
EquipmentList of equipment of the United States Navy
Engagements
See list
Decorations
Presidential Unit Citation

Navy Unit Commendation

Meritorious Unit Commendation
Websitewww.navy.mil
Commanders
Commander-in-Chief President Joe Biden
Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin
Secretary of the Navy Carlos Del Toro
Chief of Naval Operations ADM Michael M. Gilday
Vice Chief of Naval Operations ADM Lisa M. Franchetti
Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy MCPON James Honea
Insignia
Flag
Jack
Pennant
Anchor, Constitution, and Eagle
Logo

The United States Navy traces its origins to the Continental Navy, which was established during the American Revolutionary War and was effectively disbanded as a separate entity shortly thereafter. After suffering significant loss of goods and personnel at the hands of the Barbary pirates from Algiers, the United States Congress passed the Naval Act of 1794 for the construction of six heavy frigates, the first ships of the Navy. The United States Navy played a major role in the American Civil War by blockading the Confederacy and seizing control of its rivers. It played the central role in the World War II defeat of Imperial Japan. The United States Navy emerged from World War II as the most powerful navy in the world. The modern United States Navy maintains a sizable global presence, deploying in strength in such areas as the Western Pacific, the Mediterranean, and the Indian Ocean. It is a blue-water navy with the ability to project force onto the littoral regions of the world, engage in forward deployments during peacetime and rapidly respond to regional crises, making it a frequent actor in American foreign and military policy.

The United States Navy is part of the Department of the Navy, alongside the United States Marine Corps, which is its coequal sister service. The Department of the Navy is headed by the civilian secretary of the Navy. The Department of the Navy is itself a military department of the Department of Defense, which is headed by the secretary of defense. The chief of naval operations (CNO) is the most senior Navy officer serving in the Department of the Navy.[13]

Mission

To recruit, train, equip, and organize to deliver combat ready Naval forces to win conflicts and wars while maintaining security and deterrence through sustained forward presence.

— Mission statement of the United States Navy.[14]

The U.S. Navy is a seaborne branch of the military of the United States. The Navy's three primary areas of responsibility:[15]

  • The preparation of naval forces necessary for the effective prosecution of war.
  • The maintenance of naval aviation, including land-based naval aviation, air transport essential for naval operations, and all air weapons and air techniques involved in the operations and activities of the Navy.
  • The development of aircraft, weapons, military tactics, technique, organization, and equipment of naval combat and service elements.

U.S. Navy training manuals state that the mission of the U.S. Armed Forces is "to be prepared to conduct prompt and sustained combat operations in support of the national interest." The Navy's five enduring functions are: sea control, power projection, deterrence, maritime security, and sealift.[16]

History

Origins

It follows then as certain as that night succeeds the day, that without a decisive naval force we can do nothing definitive, and with it, everything honorable and glorious.

— George Washington 15 November 1781, to Marquis de Lafayette[17]

Would to Heaven we had a navy able to reform those enemies to mankind or crush them into non-existence.

— George Washington 15 August 1786, to Marquis de Lafayette[18]

Naval power . . . is the natural defense of the United States.

The Navy was rooted in the colonial seafaring tradition, which produced a large community of sailors, captains, and shipbuilders.[20] In the early stages of the American Revolutionary War, Massachusetts had its own Massachusetts Naval Militia. The rationale for establishing a national navy was debated in the Second Continental Congress. Supporters argued that a navy would protect shipping, defend the coast, and make it easier to seek support from foreign countries. Detractors countered that challenging the British Royal Navy, then the world's preeminent naval power, was a foolish undertaking. Commander in Chief George Washington resolved the debate when he commissioned the ocean-going schooner USS Hannah to interdict British merchantmen and reported the captures to the Congress. On 13 October 1775, the Continental Congress authorized the purchase of two vessels to be armed for a cruise against British merchantmen; this resolution created the Continental Navy and is considered the first establishment of the U.S. Navy.[21] The Continental Navy achieved mixed results; it was successful in a number of engagements and raided many British merchant vessels, but it lost twenty-four of its vessels[22] and at one point was reduced to two in active service.[23] In August 1785, after the Revolutionary War had drawn to a close, Congress had sold Alliance, the last ship remaining in the Continental Navy due to a lack of funds to maintain the ship or support a navy.[24][25]

In 1972, the Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral Elmo Zumwalt, authorized the Navy to celebrate its birthday on 13 October to honor the establishment of the Continental Navy in 1775.[26][21]

From re-establishment to the Civil War

The United States was without a navy for nearly a decade, a state of affairs that exposed U.S. maritime merchant ships to a series of attacks by the Barbary pirates. The sole armed maritime presence between 1790 and the launching of the U.S. Navy's first warships in 1797 was the U.S. Revenue-Marine, the primary predecessor of the U.S. Coast Guard. Although the United States Revenue Cutter Service conducted operations against the pirates, the pirates' depredations far outstripped its abilities and Congress passed the Naval Act of 1794 that established a permanent standing navy on 27 March 1794.[27] The Naval Act ordered the construction and manning of six frigates and, by October 1797,[22] the first three were brought into service: USS United States, USS Constellation, and USS Constitution. Due to his strong posture on having a strong standing Navy during this period, John Adams is "often called the father of the American Navy".[28] In 1798–99 the Navy was involved in an undeclared Quasi-War with France.[29] From 1801 to 1805, in the First Barbary War, the U.S. Navy defended U.S. ships from the Barbary pirates, blockaded the Barbary ports and executed attacks against the Barbary' fleets.

The U.S. Navy saw substantial action in the War of 1812, where it was victorious in eleven single-ship duels with the Royal Navy. It proved victorious in the Battle of Lake Erie and prevented the region from becoming a threat to American operations in the area. The result was a major victory for the U.S. Army at the Niagara Frontier of the war, and the defeat of the Native American allies of the British at the Battle of the Thames. Despite this, the U.S. Navy could not prevent the British from blockading its ports and landing troops.[30] But after the War of 1812 ended in 1815, the U.S. Navy primarily focused its attention on protecting American shipping assets, sending squadrons to the Caribbean, the Mediterranean, where it participated in the Second Barbary War that ended piracy in the region, South America, Africa, and the Pacific.[22] From 1819 to the outbreak of the Civil War, the Africa Squadron operated to suppress the slave trade, seizing 36 slave ships, although its contribution was smaller than that of the much larger British Royal Navy. After 1840 several secretaries of the navy were southerners who advocated for strengthening southern naval defenses, expanding the fleet, and making naval technological improvements.[31]

During the Mexican–American War the U.S. Navy blockaded Mexican ports, capturing or burning the Mexican fleet in the Gulf of California and capturing all major cities in Baja California peninsula. In 1846–1848 the Navy successfully used the Pacific Squadron under Commodore Robert F. Stockton and its marines and blue-jackets to facilitate the capture of California with large-scale land operations coordinated with the local militia organized in the California Battalion. The Navy conducted the U.S. military's first large-scale amphibious joint operation by successfully landing 12,000 army troops with their equipment in one day at Veracruz, Mexico. When larger guns were needed to bombard Veracruz, Navy volunteers landed large guns and manned them in the successful bombardment and capture of the city. This successful landing and capture of Veracruz opened the way for the capture of Mexico City and the end of the war.[30] The U.S. Navy established itself as a player in United States foreign policy through the actions of Commodore Matthew C. Perry in Japan, which resulted in the Convention of Kanagawa in 1854.

 
A carte de visite of a U.S. Navy lieutenant during the Civil War

Naval power played a significant role during the American Civil War, in which the Union had a distinct advantage over the Confederacy on the seas.[30] A Union blockade on all major ports shut down exports and the coastal trade, but blockade runners provided a thin lifeline. The Brown-water navy components of the U.S. navy control of the river systems made internal travel difficult for Confederates and easy for the Union. The war saw ironclad warships in combat for the first time at the Battle of Hampton Roads in 1862, which pitted USS Monitor against CSS Virginia.[32] For two decades after the war, however, the U.S. Navy's fleet was neglected and became technologically obsolete.[33]

20th century

 
The Great White Fleet demonstrating U.S. naval power in 1907; it was proof that the U.S. Navy had blue-water capability

Our ships are our natural bulwarks.

A modernization program beginning in the 1880s when the first steel-hulled warships stimulated the American steel industry, and "the new steel navy" was born.[34] This rapid expansion of the U.S. Navy and its decisive victory over the outdated Spanish Navy in 1898 brought a new respect for American technical quality. Rapid building of at first pre-dreadnoughts, then dreadnoughts brought the U.S. in line with the navies of countries such as Britain and Germany. In 1907, most of the Navy's battleships, with several support vessels, dubbed the Great White Fleet, were showcased in a 14-month circumnavigation of the world. Ordered by President Theodore Roosevelt, it was a mission designed to demonstrate the Navy's capability to extend to the global theater.[22] By 1911, the U.S. had begun building the super-dreadnoughts at a pace to eventually become competitive with Britain.[35] The 1911 also saw the first naval aircraft with the navy[36] which would lead to the informal establishment of United States Naval Flying Corps to protect shore bases. It was not until 1921 US naval aviation truly commenced.

 
Columbia, personification of the United States, wearing a warship bearing the words "World Power" as her "Easter bonnet" on the cover of Puck, 6 April 1901

World War I and interwar years

During World War I, the U.S. Navy spent much of its resources protecting and shipping hundreds of thousands of soldiers and marines of the American Expeditionary Force and war supplies across the Atlantic in U-boat infested waters with the Cruiser and Transport Force. It also concentrated on laying the North Sea Mine Barrage. Hesitation by the senior command meant that naval forces were not contributed until late 1917. Battleship Division Nine was dispatched to Britain and served as the Sixth Battle Squadron of the British Grand Fleet. Its presence allowed the British to decommission some older ships and reuse the crews on smaller vessels. Destroyers and U.S. Naval Air Force units like the Northern Bombing Group contributed to the anti-submarine operations. The strength of the United States Navy grew under an ambitious ship building program associated with the Naval Act of 1916.

Naval construction, especially of battleships, was limited by the Washington Naval Conference of 1921–22, the first arms control conference in history. The aircraft carriers USS Saratoga (CV-3) and USS Lexington (CV-2) were built on the hulls of partially built battle cruisers that had been canceled by the treaty. The New Deal used Public Works Administration funds to build warships, such as USS Yorktown (CV-5) and USS Enterprise (CV-6). By 1936, with the completion of USS Wasp (CV-7), the U.S. Navy possessed a carrier fleet of 165,000 tonnes displacement, although this figure was nominally recorded as 135,000 tonnes to comply with treaty limitations. Franklin Roosevelt, the number two official in the Navy Department during World War I, appreciated the Navy and gave it strong support. In return, senior leaders were eager for innovation and experimented with new technologies, such as magnetic torpedoes, and developed a strategy called War Plan Orange for victory in the Pacific in a hypothetical war with Japan that would eventually become reality.[37]

World War II

 
Battleship USS Idaho shelling Okinawa on 1 April 1945

The U.S. Navy grew into a formidable force in the years prior to World War II, with battleship production being restarted in 1937, commencing with USS North Carolina (BB-55). Though ultimately unsuccessful, Japan tried to neutralize this strategic threat with the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941. Following American entry into the war, the U.S. Navy grew tremendously as the United States was faced with a two-front war on the seas. It achieved notable acclaim in the Pacific Theater, where it was instrumental to the Allies' successful "island hopping" campaign.[23] The U.S. Navy participated in many significant battles, including the Battle of the Coral Sea, the Battle of Midway, the Solomon Islands Campaign, the Battle of the Philippine Sea, the Battle of Leyte Gulf, and the Battle of Okinawa. By 1943, the navy's size was larger than the combined fleets of all the other combatant nations in World War II.[38] By war's end in 1945, the U.S. Navy had added hundreds of new ships, including 18 aircraft carriers and 8 battleships, and had over 70% of the world's total numbers and total tonnage of naval vessels of 1,000 tons or greater.[39][40] At its peak, the U.S. Navy was operating 6,768 ships on V-J Day in August 1945.[41]

Doctrine had significantly shifted by the end of the war. The U.S. Navy had followed in the footsteps of the navies of Great Britain and Germany which favored concentrated groups of battleships as their main offensive naval weapons.[42] The development of the aircraft carrier and its devastating use by the Japanese against the U.S. at Pearl Harbor, however, shifted U.S. thinking. The Pearl Harbor attack destroyed or took out of action a significant number of U.S. Navy battleships. This placed much of the burden of retaliating against the Japanese on the small number of aircraft carriers.[43] During World War II some 4,000,000 Americans served in the United States Navy.[44]

Cold War and 1990s

 
USS George Washington (SSBN-598), a ballistic missile submarine

The potential for armed conflict with the Soviet Union during the Cold War pushed the U.S. Navy to continue its technological advancement by developing new weapons systems, ships, and aircraft. U.S. naval strategy changed to that of forward deployment in support of U.S. allies with an emphasis on carrier battle groups.[45]

The navy was a major participant in the Vietnam War, blockaded Cuba during the Cuban Missile Crisis, and, through the use of ballistic missile submarines, became an important aspect of the United States' nuclear strategic deterrence policy. The U.S. Navy conducted various combat operations in the Persian Gulf against Iran in 1987 and 1988, most notably Operation Praying Mantis. The Navy was extensively involved in Operation Urgent Fury, Operation Desert Shield, Operation Desert Storm, Operation Deliberate Force, Operation Allied Force, Operation Desert Fox and Operation Southern Watch.

The U.S. Navy has also been involved in search and rescue/search and salvage operations, sometimes in conjunction with vessels of other countries as well as with U.S. Coast Guard ships. Two examples are the 1966 Palomares B-52 crash incident and the subsequent search for missing hydrogen bombs, and Task Force 71 of the Seventh Fleet's operation in search for Korean Air Lines Flight 007, shot down by the Soviets on 1 September 1983.

21st century

When a crisis confronts the nation, the first question often asked by policymakers is: 'What naval forces are available and how fast can they be on station?'

 
U.S. Navy officers aboard the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln monitor defense systems during early 2010s maritime security operations exercises

The U.S. Navy continues to be a major support to U.S. interests in the 21st century. Since the end of the Cold War, it has shifted its focus from preparations for large-scale war with the Soviet Union to special operations and strike missions in regional conflicts.[47] The navy participated in Operation Enduring Freedom, Operation Iraqi Freedom, and is a major participant in the ongoing War on Terror, largely in this capacity. Development continues on new ships and weapons, including the Gerald R. Ford-class aircraft carrier and the Littoral combat ship. Because of its size, weapons technology, and ability to project force far from U.S. shores, the current U.S. Navy remains an asset for the United States. Moreover, it is the principal means through which the U.S. maintains international global order, namely by safeguarding global trade and protecting allied nations.[48]

In 2007, the U.S. Navy joined with the U.S. Marine Corps and U.S. Coast Guard to adopt a new maritime strategy called A Cooperative Strategy for 21st Century Seapower that raises the notion of prevention of war to the same philosophical level as the conduct of war. The strategy was presented by the Chief of Naval Operations, the Commandant of the Marine Corps, and Commandant of the Coast Guard at the International Sea Power Symposium in Newport, Rhode Island on 17 October 2007.[49]

 
U.S. Navy patrol boat near Kuwait Naval Base in 2009

The strategy recognized the economic links of the global system and how any disruption due to regional crises (man-made or natural) can adversely impact the U.S. economy and quality of life. This new strategy charts a course for the Navy, Coast Guard, and Marine Corps to work collectively with each other and international partners to prevent these crises from occurring or reacting quickly should one occur to prevent negative impacts on the U.S.

In 2010, Admiral Gary Roughead, Chief of Naval Operations, noted that demands on the Navy have grown as the fleet has shrunk and that in the face of declining budgets in the future, the U.S. Navy must rely even more on international partnerships.[50]

 

In its 2013 budget request, the navy focused on retaining all eleven big deck carriers, at the expense of cutting numbers of smaller ships and delaying the SSBN replacement.[51] By the next year the USN found itself unable to maintain eleven aircraft carriers in the face of the expiration of budget relief offered by the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 and CNO Jonathan Greenert said that a ten ship carrier fleet would not be able to sustainably support military requirements.[52] The British First Sea Lord George Zambellas said that[53] the USN had switched from "outcome-led to resource-led" planning.[54]

One significant change in U.S. policymaking that is having a major effect on naval planning is the Pivot to East Asia. In response, the Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus stated in 2015 that 60 percent of the total U.S. fleet will be deployed to the Pacific by 2020.[55] The Navy's most recent 30-year shipbuilding plan, published in 2016, calls for a future fleet of 350 ships to meet the challenges of an increasingly competitive international environment.[53] A provision of the 2018 National Defense Authorization Act called for expanding the naval fleet to 355 ships "as soon as practicable", but did not establish additional funding nor a timeline.[56]

Organization

 
Organization of the United States Navy within the Department of Defense
 
Simplified flowchart of the U.S. Navy command structure

The U.S. Navy falls under the administration of the Department of the Navy, under civilian leadership of the Secretary of the Navy (SECNAV). The most senior naval officer is the Chief of Naval Operations (CNO), a four-star admiral who is immediately under and reports to the Secretary of the Navy. At the same time, the Chief of Naval Operations is a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, which is the second-highest deliberative body of the armed forces after the United States National Security Council, although it plays only an advisory role to the President and does not nominally form part of the chain of command. The Secretary of the Navy and Chief of Naval Operations are responsible for organizing, recruiting, training, and equipping the Navy so that it is ready for operation under the commanders of the unified combatant commands.

Operating forces

 
Areas of responsibility for each of the United States Navy fleets. Tenth Fleet serves as the numbered fleet for U.S. Fleet Cyber Command and therefore is not shown.

There are nine components in the operating forces of the U.S. Navy: the United States Fleet Forces Command (formerly United States Atlantic Fleet), United States Pacific Fleet, United States Naval Forces Central Command, United States Naval Forces Europe, Naval Network Warfare Command, Navy Reserve, United States Naval Special Warfare Command, Operational Test and Evaluation Force, and Military Sealift Command. Fleet Forces Command controls a number of unique capabilities, including Military Sealift Command, Naval Expeditionary Combat Command, and Navy Cyber Forces.

The United States Navy has seven active numbered fleets – Second, Third, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh and Tenth Fleets are each led by a vice admiral, and the Fourth Fleet is led by a rear admiral. These seven fleets are further grouped under Fleet Forces Command (the former Atlantic Fleet), Pacific Fleet, Naval Forces Europe-Africa, and Naval Forces Central Command, whose commander also doubles as Commander Fifth Fleet; the first three commands being led by four-star admirals. The United States First Fleet existed after World War II from 1947, but it was redesignated the Third Fleet in early 1973. The United States Second Fleet was deactivated in September 2011 but reestablished in August 2018 amid heightened tensions with Russia.[57] It is headquartered in Norfolk, Virginia, with responsibility over the East Coast and North Atlantic.[58] In early 2008, the Navy reactivated the United States Fourth Fleet to control operations in the area controlled by Southern Command, which consists of US assets in and around Central and South America.[59] Other number fleets were activated during World War II and later deactivated, renumbered, or merged.

Shore establishments

 
USS Kitty Hawk (CV-63) docking at the U.S. Navy base in Yokosuka, Japan

Shore establishments exist to support the mission of the fleet through the use of facilities on land. Among the commands of the shore establishment, as of April 2011, are the Naval Education and Training Command, the Naval Meteorology and Oceanography Command, the Naval Information Warfare Systems Command, the Naval Facilities Engineering Command, the Naval Supply Systems Command, the Naval Air Systems Command, the Naval Sea Systems Command, the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, the Bureau of Naval Personnel, the United States Naval Academy, the Naval Safety Center, the Naval Aviation Warfighting Development Center (formerly known as the Naval Strike and Air Warfare Center), and the United States Naval Observatory.[60] Official Navy websites list the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations and the Chief of Naval Operations as part of the shore establishment, but these two entities effectively sit superior to the other organizations, playing a coordinating role.[61]

Relationships with other service branches

United States Marine Corps

 
A Marine F/A-18 from VMFA-451 preparing to launch from USS Coral Sea (CV-43)

In 1834, the United States Marine Corps came under the Department of the Navy.[62] Historically, the Navy has had a unique relationship with the USMC, partly because they both specialize in seaborne operations. Together the Navy and Marine Corps form the Department of the Navy and report to the Secretary of the Navy. However, the Marine Corps is a distinct, separate service branch[63] with its own uniformed service chief – the Commandant of the Marine Corps, a four-star general.

The Marine Corps depends on the Navy for medical support (dentists, doctors, nurses, medical technicians known as corpsmen) and religious support (chaplains). Thus, Navy officers and enlisted sailors fulfill these roles. When attached to Marine Corps units deployed to an operational environment they generally wear Marine camouflage uniforms, but otherwise, they wear Navy dress uniforms unless they opt to conform to Marine Corps grooming standards.[61]

In the operational environment, as an expeditionary force specializing in amphibious operations, Marines often embark on Navy ships to conduct operations from beyond territorial waters. Marine units deploying as part of a Marine Air-Ground Task Force (MAGTF) operate under the command of the existing Marine chain of command. Although Marine units routinely operate from amphibious assault ships, the relationship has evolved over the years much as the Commander of the Carrier Air Group/Wing (CAG) does not work for the carrier commanding officer, but coordinates with the ship's CO and staff. Some Marine aviation squadrons, usually fixed-wing assigned to carrier air wings train and operate alongside Navy squadrons; they fly similar missions and often fly sorties together under the cognizance of the CAG. Aviation is where the Navy and Marines share the most common ground since aircrews are guided in their use of aircraft by standard procedures outlined in a series of publications known as NATOPS manuals.

United States Coast Guard

 
A U.S. Coast Guard helicopter preparing to land on the flight deck of the amphibious assault ship USS Wasp (LHD-1)

The United States Coast Guard, in its peacetime role with the Department of Homeland Security, fulfills its law enforcement and rescue role in the maritime environment. It provides Law Enforcement Detachments (LEDETs) to Navy vessels, where they perform arrests and other law enforcement duties during naval boarding and interdiction missions. In times of war, the Coast Guard may be called upon to operate as a service in the Navy.[64] At other times, Coast Guard Port Security Units are sent overseas to guard the security of ports and other assets. The Coast Guard also jointly staffs the Navy's naval coastal warfare groups and squadrons (the latter of which were known as harbor defense commands until late-2004), which oversee defense efforts in foreign littoral combat and inshore areas.

Personnel

 
Navy SEALs at one of the entrances to the Zhawar Kili cave complex

The United States Navy has over 400,000 personnel, approximately a quarter of whom are in ready reserve. Of those on active duty, more than eighty percent are enlisted sailors and around fifteen percent are commissioned officers; the rest are midshipmen of the United States Naval Academy and midshipmen of the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps at over 180 universities around the country and officer candidates at the Navy's Officer Candidate School.[3]

Enlisted sailors complete basic military training at boot camp and then are sent to complete training for their individual careers.[65]

Sailors prove they have mastered skills and deserve responsibilities by completing Personnel Qualification Standards (PQS) tasks and examinations. Among the most important is the "warfare qualification", which denotes a journeyman level of capability in Surface Warfare, Aviation Warfare, Information Dominance Warfare, Naval Aircrew, Special Warfare, Seabee Warfare, Submarine Warfare or Expeditionary Warfare. Many qualifications are denoted on a sailor's uniform with U.S. Navy badges and insignia.

Uniforms

The uniforms of the U.S. Navy have evolved gradually since the first uniform regulations for officers were issued in 1802 on the formation of the Navy Department. The predominant colors of U.S. Navy uniforms are navy blue and white. U.S. Navy uniforms were based on Royal Navy uniforms of the time and have tended to follow that template.[66]

Commissioned officers

US DoD
pay grade
Special grade[a] O-10 O-9 O-8 O-7 O-6 O-5 O-4 O-3 O-2 O-1
NATO code OF-10 OF-9 OF-8 OF-7 OF-6 OF-5 OF-4 OF-3 OF-2 OF-1
Insignia                      
Uniform insignia                                            
Title Fleet admiral Admiral Vice admiral Rear admiral Rear admiral (lower half) Captain Commander Lieutenant commander Lieutenant Lieutenant (junior grade) Ensign
Abbreviation FADM ADM VADM RADM RDML CAPT CDR LCDR LT LTJG ENS
  1. ^ Reserved for wartime use only.

Navy officers serve either as a line officer or as a staff corps officer. Line officers wear an embroidered gold star above their rank of the naval service dress uniform while staff corps officers and commissioned warrant officers wear unique designator insignias that denotes their occupational specialty.[67][68]

Warrant officers

US DoD pay grade W-5 W-4 W-3 W-2 W-1
NATO code WO-5 WO-4 WO-3 WO-2 WO-1
Insignia          
Title Chief warrant officer 5 Chief warrant officer 4 Chief warrant officer 3 Chief warrant officer 2 Warrant officer 1
Abbreviation CWO-5 CWO-4 CWO-3 CWO-2 WO-1
 
U.S. Navy warrant officer specialty insignias

Warrant and chief warrant officer ranks are held by technical specialists who direct specific activities essential to the proper operation of the ship, which also require commissioned officer authority.[69] Navy warrant officers serve in 30 specialties covering five categories. Warrant officers should not be confused with the limited duty officer (LDO) in the Navy. Warrant officers perform duties that are directly related to their previous enlisted service and specialized training. This allows the Navy to capitalize on the experience of warrant officers without having to frequently transition them to other duty assignments for advancement.[70] Most Navy warrant officers are accessed from the chief petty officer pay grades, E-7 through E-9, analogous to a senior non-commissioned officer in the other services, and must have a minimum 14 years in service.[71]

Enlisted

Sailors in pay grades E-1 through E-3 are considered to be in apprenticeships.[72] They are divided into five definable groups, with colored group rate marks designating the group to which they belong: Seaman, Fireman, Airman, Constructionman, and Hospitalman. E-4 to E-6 are non-commissioned officers (NCOs), and are specifically called Petty officers in the Navy.[73] Petty Officers perform not only the duties of their specific career field but also serve as leaders to junior enlisted personnel. E-7 to E-9 are still considered Petty Officers, but are considered a separate community within the Navy. They have separate berthing and dining facilities (where feasible), wear separate uniforms, and perform separate duties.

After attaining the rate of Master Chief Petty Officer, a service member may choose to further their career by becoming a Command Master Chief Petty Officer (CMC). A CMC is considered to be the senior-most enlisted service member within a command, and is the special assistant to the Commanding Officer in all matters pertaining to the health, welfare, job satisfaction, morale, use, advancement and training of the command's enlisted personnel.[74][75] CMCs can be Command level (within a single unit, such as a ship or shore station), Fleet level (squadrons consisting of multiple operational units, headed by a flag officer or commodore), or Force level (consisting of a separate community within the Navy, such as Subsurface, Air, Reserves).[76]

CMC insignia are similar to the insignia for Master Chief, except that the rating symbol is replaced by an inverted five-point star, reflecting a change in their rating from their previous rating (i.e., MMCM) to CMDCM. The stars for Command Master Chief are silver, while stars for Fleet or Force Master Chief are gold. Additionally, CMCs wear a badge, worn on their left breast pocket, denoting their title (Command/Fleet/Force).[75][77]

Badges of the United States Navy

Insignia and badges of the United States Navy are military "badges" issued by the U.S. Department of the Navy to naval service members who achieve certain qualifications and accomplishments while serving on both active and reserve duty in the United States Navy. Most naval aviation insignia are also permitted for wear on uniforms of the United States Marine Corps.

As described in Chapter 5 of U.S. Navy Uniform Regulations,[79] "badges" are categorized as breast insignia (usually worn immediately above and below ribbons) and identification badges (usually worn at breast pocket level).[80] Breast insignia are further divided between command and warfare and other qualification.[81]

Insignia come in the form of metal "pin-on devices" worn on formal uniforms and embroidered "tape strips" worn on work uniforms. For the purpose of this article, the general term "insignia" shall be used to describe both, as it is done in Navy Uniform Regulations. The term "badge", although used ambiguously in other military branches and in informal speak to describe any pin, patch, or tab, is exclusive to identification badges[82] and authorized marksmanship awards[83] according to the language in Navy Uniform Regulations, Chapter 5. Below are just a few of the many badges maintained by the Navy. The rest can be seen in the article cited at the top of this section:

Bases

 
Map of naval bases in the United States

The size, complexity, and international presence of the United States Navy requires a large number of navy installations to support its operations. While the majority of bases are located inside the United States itself, the Navy maintains a significant number of facilities abroad, either in U.S.-controlled territories or in foreign countries under a Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA).

Eastern United States

The second largest concentration of installations is at Hampton Roads, Virginia, where the navy occupies over 36,000 acres (15,000 ha) of land. Located at Hampton Roads are Naval Station Norfolk, homeport of the Atlantic Fleet; Naval Air Station Oceana, a Master Jet Base; Naval Amphibious Base Little Creek; and Training Support Center Hampton Roads as well as a number of Navy and commercial shipyards that service navy vessels. The Aegis Training and Readiness Center is located at the Naval Support Activity South Potomac in Dahlgren, Virginia. Maryland is home to NAS Patuxent River, which houses the Navy's Test Pilot School. Also located in Maryland is the United States Naval Academy, situated in Annapolis. NS Newport in Newport, Rhode Island is home to many schools and tenant commands, including the Officer Candidate School, Naval Undersea Warfare Center, and more, and also maintains inactive ships.[clarification needed]

There is also a naval base in Charleston, South Carolina. This is home to the Naval Nuclear Power Training Command, under which reside the Nuclear Field "A" Schools (for Machinist Mates (Nuclear), Electrician Mates (Nuclear), and Electronics Technicians (Nuclear)), Nuclear Power School (Officer and Enlisted); and one of two Nuclear Power Training Unit 'Prototype' schools. The state of Florida is the location of three major bases, NS Mayport, the Navy's fourth largest, in Jacksonville, Florida; NAS Jacksonville, a Master Air Anti-submarine Warfare base; and NAS Pensacola; home of the Naval Education and Training Command, the Naval Air Technical Training Center that provides specialty training for enlisted aviation personnel and is the primary flight training base for Navy and Marine Corps Naval Flight Officers and enlisted Naval Aircrewmen. There is also NSA Panama City, Florida which is home to the Center for Explosive Ordnance Disposal and Divising (CENEODIVE) and the Navy Diving and Salvage Training Center and NSA Orlando, Florida, which home to the Naval Air Warfare Center Training Systems Division (NAWCTSD).

The main U.S. Navy submarine bases on the east coast are located in Naval Submarine Base New London in Groton, Connecticut and NSB Kings Bay in Kings Bay, Georgia. The Portsmouth Naval Shipyard near Portsmouth, New Hampshire,[84] which repairs naval submarines.[3] NS Great Lakes, north of Chicago, Illinois is the home of the Navy's boot camp for enlisted sailors.

The Washington Navy Yard in Washington, DC is the Navy's oldest shore establishment and serves as a ceremonial and administrative center for the U.S. Navy, home to the Chief of Naval Operations and numerous commands.

Western United States and Hawaii

 
Underwater Demolition Team members using the casting technique from a speeding boat
 
Combat Camera Underwater Photo Team – A U.S. Navy diver during underwater photography training off the coast of Guantanamo Bay

The U.S. Navy's largest complex is Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake, California, which covers 1.1 million acres (4,500 km2) of land, or approximately one-third of the U.S. Navy's total land holdings.[3]

Naval Base San Diego, California is the main homeport of the Pacific Fleet, although its headquarters is located in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. NAS North Island is located on the north side of Coronado, California, and is home to Headquarters for Naval Air Forces and Naval Air Force Pacific, the bulk of the Pacific Fleet's helicopter squadrons, and part of the West Coast aircraft carrier fleet. NAB Coronado is located on the southern end of the Coronado Island and is home to the navy's west coast SEAL teams and special boat units. NAB Coronado is also home to the Naval Special Warfare Center, the primary training center for SEALs.

The other major collection of naval bases on the west coast is in Puget Sound, Washington. Among them, NS Everett is one of the newer bases and the navy states that it is its most modern facility.[85]

NAS Fallon, Nevada serves as the primary training ground for navy strike aircrews and is home to the Naval Strike Air Warfare Center. Master Jet Bases are also located at NAS Lemoore, California, and NAS Whidbey Island, Washington, while the carrier-based airborne early warning aircraft community and major air test activities are located at NAS Point Mugu, California. The naval presence in Hawaii is centered on NS Pearl Harbor, which hosts the headquarters of the Pacific Fleet and many of its subordinate commands.

United States territories

Guam, an island strategically located in the Western Pacific Ocean, maintains a sizable U.S. Navy presence, including NB Guam. The westernmost U.S. territory, it contains a natural deepwater harbor capable of harboring aircraft carriers in emergencies.[citation needed] Its naval air station was deactivated[citation needed] in 1995 and its flight activities transferred to nearby Andersen Air Force Base.

Puerto Rico in the Caribbean formerly housed NS Roosevelt Roads, which was shut down in 2004 shortly after the controversial closure of the live ordnance training area on nearby Vieques Island.[3]

Foreign countries

The largest overseas base is the United States Fleet Activities Yokosuka, Japan, which serves as the home port for the navy's largest forward-deployed fleet and is a significant base of operations in the Western Pacific.[citation needed]

European operations revolve around facilities in Italy (NAS Sigonella and Naval Computer and Telecommunications Station Naples) with NSA Naples as the homeport for the Sixth Fleet and Command Naval Region Europe, Africa, Southwest Asia (CNREURAFSWA), and additional facilities in nearby Gaeta. There is also NS Rota in Spain and NSA Souda Bay in Greece.

In the Middle East, naval facilities are located almost exclusively in countries bordering the Persian Gulf, with NSA Bahrain serving as the headquarters of U.S. Naval Forces Central Command and U.S. Fifth Fleet.

NS Guantanamo Bay in Cuba is the oldest overseas facility and has become known in recent years as the location of a detention camp for suspected al-Qaeda operatives.[86]

Equipment

As of 2018, the navy operates over 460 ships, including vessels operated by the Military Sealift Command (MSC) crewed by a combination of civilian contractors and a small number of uniformed Naval personnel, 3,650+ aircraft, 50,000 non-combat vehicles and owns 75,200 buildings on 3,300,000 acres (13,000 km2).

Ships

The names of commissioned ships of the U.S. Navy are prefixed with the letters "USS", designating "United States Ship".[87] Non-commissioned, civilian-manned vessels of the navy have names that begin with "USNS", standing for "United States Naval Ship". The names of ships are officially selected by the secretary of the navy, often to honor important people or places.[88] Additionally, each ship is given a letter-based hull classification symbol (for example, CVN or DDG) to indicate the vessel's type and number. All ships in the navy inventory are placed in the Naval Vessel Register, which is part of "the Navy List" (required by article 29 of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea).[dubious ] The register tracks data such as the current status of a ship, the date of its commissioning, and the date of its decommissioning. Vessels that are removed from the register prior to disposal are said to be stricken from the register. The navy also maintains a reserve fleet of inactive vessels that are maintained for reactivation in times of need.

The U.S. Navy was one of the first to install nuclear reactors aboard naval vessels;[citation needed] today, nuclear energy powers all active U.S. aircraft carriers and submarines. In the case of the Nimitz-class carrier, two naval reactors give the ship almost unlimited range and provide enough electrical energy to power a city of 100,000 people.[citation needed] The U.S. Navy previously operated nuclear-powered cruisers, but all have been decommissioned.

In the early 2010, the U.S. Navy had identified a need for 313 combat ships, but could only afford 232 to 243 ships.[89] In March 2014, the Navy started counting self-deployable support ships such as minesweepers, surveillance craft, and tugs in the "battle fleet" to reach a count of 272 as of October 2016,[90][91] and it includes ships that have been put in "shrink wrap".[92] The number of ships generally ranged between 270 and 300 throughout the late 2010s.[93] As of February 2022, the Navy has 296 battle force ships, however analyses state the Navy needs a fleet of more than 500 to meet its commitments.[94][95]

Aircraft carriers

 
Aerial view of USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78), a ship of the new Gerald R. Ford-class, alongside USS Harry S. Truman (CVN-75), a ship of the previous Nimitz class

An aircraft carrier is typically deployed along with a host of additional vessels, forming a carrier strike group. The supporting ships, which usually include three or four Aegis-equipped cruisers and destroyers, a frigate, and two attack submarines, are tasked with protecting the carrier from air, missile, sea, and undersea threats as well as providing additional strike capabilities themselves. Ready logistics support for the group is provided by a combined ammunition, oiler, and supply ship. Modern carriers are named after American admirals and politicians, usually presidents.[96]

The Navy has a statutory requirement for a minimum of 11 aircraft carriers.[97] Currently there are 10 that are deployable and one, USS Gerald R. Ford, that is currently undergoing extensive systems and technologies testing until around 2021.[98] All US aircraft carriers are nuclear-powered; they and submarines are the only nuclear-powered Navy vessels.[93]

Amphibious warfare vessels

Amphibious assault ships are the centerpieces of US amphibious warfare and fulfill the same power projection role as aircraft carriers except that their striking force centers on land forces instead of aircraft. They deliver, command, coordinate, and fully support all elements of a 2,200-strong Marine Expeditionary Unit in an amphibious assault using both air and amphibious vehicles. Resembling small aircraft carriers, amphibious assault ships are capable of V/STOL, STOVL, VTOL, tiltrotor, and rotary wing aircraft operations. They also contain a well deck to support the use of Landing Craft Air Cushion (LCAC) and other amphibious assault watercraft. Recently, amphibious assault ships have begun to be deployed as the core of an expeditionary strike group, which usually consists of an additional amphibious transport dock and dock landing ship for amphibious warfare and an Aegis-equipped cruiser and destroyer, frigate, and attack submarine for group defense. Amphibious assault ships are typically named after World War II aircraft carriers.

Amphibious transport docks are warships that embark, transport, and land Marines, supplies, and equipment in a supporting role during amphibious warfare missions. With a landing platform, amphibious transport docks also have the capability to serve as secondary aviation support for an expeditionary group. All amphibious transport docks can operate helicopters, LCACs, and other conventional amphibious vehicles while the newer San Antonio class of ships has been explicitly designed to operate all three elements of the Marines' "mobility triad": Expeditionary Fighting Vehicles (EFVs), the V-22 Osprey tiltrotor aircraft, and LCACs. Amphibious transport docks are typically named after U.S. cities.

The dock landing ship is a medium amphibious transport that is designed specifically to support and operate LCACs, though it is able to operate other amphibious assault vehicles in the United States inventory as well. Dock landing ships are normally deployed as a component of an expeditionary strike group's amphibious assault contingent, operating as a secondary launch platform for LCACs. All dock landing ships are named after cities or important places in U.S. and U.S. Naval history.[96]

Cruisers

Cruisers are large surface combat vessels that conduct anti-air/anti-missile warfare, surface warfare, anti-submarine warfare, and strike operations independently or as members of a larger task force. Modern guided missile cruisers were developed out of a need to counter the anti-ship missile threat facing the United States Navy. This led to the development of the AN/SPY-1 phased array radar and the Standard missile with the Aegis combat system coordinating the two. Ticonderoga-class cruisers were the first to be equipped with Aegis and were put to use primarily as anti-air and anti-missile defense in a battle force protection role. Later developments of vertical launch systems and the Tomahawk missile gave cruisers additional long-range land and sea strike capability, making them capable of both offensive and defensive battle operations. The Ticonderoga class is the only active class of cruiser. All cruisers in this class are named after battles.[96]

Destroyers

Destroyers are multi-mission medium surface ships capable of sustained performance in anti-air, anti-submarine, anti-ship, and offensive strike operations. Like cruisers, guided missile destroyers are primarily focused on surface strikes using Tomahawk missiles and fleet defense through Aegis and the Standard missile. Destroyers additionally specialize in anti-submarine warfare and are equipped with VLA rockets and LAMPS Mk III Sea Hawk helicopters to deal with underwater threats. When deployed with a carrier strike group or expeditionary strike group, destroyers and their fellow Aegis-equipped cruisers are primarily tasked with defending the fleet while providing secondary strike capabilities. With very few exceptions, destroyers are named after U.S. Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard heroes.[96]

Frigates and Littoral combat ships

Modern U.S. frigates mainly perform anti-submarine warfare for carrier and expeditionary strike groups and provide armed escort for supply convoys and merchant shipping. They are designed to protect friendly ships against hostile submarines in low to medium threat environments, using torpedoes and LAMPS helicopters. Independently, frigates are able to conduct counterdrug missions and other maritime interception operations. As in the case of destroyers, frigates are named after U.S. Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard heroes. As of autumn 2015, the U.S. Navy has retired its most recent class of frigates and expects that by 2020 the Littoral Combat Ships (LCS) will assume many of the duties the frigate had with the fleet.

The LCS is a class of relatively small surface vessels intended for operations in the littoral zone (close to shore). It was "envisioned to be a networked, agile, stealthy surface combatant capable of defeating anti-access and asymmetric threats in the littorals".[citation needed] They have the capabilities of a small assault transport, including a flight deck and hangar for housing two helicopters, a stern ramp for operating small boats, and the cargo volume and payload to deliver a small assault force with fighting vehicles to a roll-on/roll-off port facility. The ship is easy to reconfigure for different roles, including anti-submarine warfare, mine countermeasures, anti-surface warfare, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, homeland defense, maritime intercept, special operations, and logistics, all by swapping mission-specific modules as needed.

The LCS program is still relatively new as of 2018 with only ten active ships, but the navy has announced plans for up to 32 ships. The navy has announced that a further 20 vessels to be built after that will be redesignated as 'frigates'.[99]

A special case is the USS Constitution, commissioned in 1797 as one of the original six frigates of the United States Navy, and which remains in commission at the Charlestown Navy Yard in Boston. She serves as a tribute to the heritage of the Navy, and occasionally sails for commemorative events such as Independence Day and various victories during the War of 1812. Constitution is currently the oldest commissioned warship afloat (HMS Victory, though older and also in common, is in permanent drydock).

Mine countermeasures ships

Mine countermeasures vessels are a combination of minehunters, a naval vessel that actively detects and destroys individual naval mines, and minesweepers, which clear mined areas as a whole, without prior detection of the mines. The navy has approximately a dozen of these in active service, but the mine countermeasure (MCM) role is also being assumed by the incoming classes of littoral combat ships. MCM vessels have mostly legacy names of previous US Navy ships, especially WWII-era minesweepers.

Patrol boats

A patrol boat is a relatively small naval vessel generally designed for coastal defense duties. There have been many designs for patrol boats, though the navy currently has only a single class. They may be operated by a nation's navy or coast guard, and may be intended for marine ("blue water") or estuarine or river ("brown water") environments. The Navy has approximately a dozen in active service, which are mainly used in the littoral regions of the Persian Gulf, but have also been used for home port patrols and drug interdiction missions. The navy's current class of patrol boats have names based on weather phenomena.

Submarines

All current and planned U.S. Navy submarines are nuclear-powered, as only nuclear propulsion allows for the combination of stealth and long duration, high-speed sustained underwater movement that makes modern nuclear submarines quite vital to a modern blue-water navy. The U.S. Navy operates three types: ballistic missile submarines, guided missile submarines, and attack submarines. U.S. Navy (nuclear) ballistic missile submarines carry the stealthiest leg of the U.S. strategic triad (the other legs are the land-based U.S. strategic missile force and the air-based U.S. strategic bomber force). These submarines have only one mission: to carry and, if called upon, to launch the Trident nuclear missile. The primary missions of attack and guided missile submarines in the U.S. Navy are peacetime engagement, surveillance and intelligence, special operations, precision strikes, and control of the seas.[citation needed] To these, attack submarines also add the battlegroup operations mission. Attack and guided missile submarines have several tactical missions, including sinking ships and other subs, launching cruise missiles, gathering intelligence, and assisting in special operations.

As with other classes of naval vessels, most U.S. submarines (or "boats") are named according to specific conventions. The boats of the current U.S. ballistic missile submarine class, Ohio class, are named after U.S. states. As the four current U.S. guided missile submarines are converted Ohio-class boats, they have retained their U.S. state names. The members of the oldest currently-commissioned attack submarine class, the Los Angeles class, are typically named for cities. The follow-on Seawolf class' three submarines—Seawolf, Connecticut and Jimmy Carter—share no consistent naming scheme. With the current Virginia-class attack submarines, the U.S. Navy has extended the Ohio class' state-based naming scheme to these submarines. Attack submarines prior to the Los Angeles class were named for denizens of the deep, while pre-Ohio-class ballistic missile submarines were named for famous Americans and foreigners with notable connections to the United States.

Aircraft

Carrier-based aircraft are able to strike air, sea, and land targets far from a carrier strike group while protecting friendly forces from enemy aircraft, ships, and submarines. In peacetime, aircraft's ability to project the threat of sustained attack from a mobile platform on the seas gives United States leaders significant diplomatic and crisis-management options. Aircraft additionally provide logistics support to maintain the navy's readiness and, through helicopters, supply platforms with which to conduct search and rescue, special operations, anti-submarine warfare (ASW), and anti-surface warfare (ASuW), including the U.S. Navy's premier Maritime Strike and only organic ASW aircraft, the venerable Sikorsky MH-60R operated by Helicopter Maritime Strike Wing.

 
U.S. Navy MH-60R maritime strike helicopter assigned to the HSM-78 Blue Hawks aboard the carrier USS Carl Vinson

The U.S. Navy began to research the use of aircraft at sea in the 1910s, with Lieutenant Theodore G. "Spuds" Ellyson becoming the first naval aviator on 28 January 1911, and commissioned its first aircraft carrier, USS Langley (CV-1), in 1922.[100] United States naval aviation fully came of age in World War II, when it became clear following the Attack on Pearl Harbor, the Battle of the Coral Sea, and the Battle of Midway that aircraft carriers and the planes that they carried had replaced the battleship as the greatest weapon on the seas. Leading navy aircraft in World War II included the Grumman F4F Wildcat, the Grumman F6F Hellcat, the Chance Vought F4U Corsair, the Douglas SBD Dauntless, and the Grumman TBF Avenger. Navy aircraft also played a significant role in conflicts during the following Cold War years, with the F-4 Phantom II and the F-14 Tomcat becoming military icons of the era. The navy's current primary fighter-attack airplane is the multi-mission F/A-18E/F Super Hornet. The F-35C entered service in 2019.[101] The Navy is also looking to eventually replace its F/A-18E/F Super Hornets with the F/A-XX program.

The Aircraft Investment Plan sees naval aviation growing from 30 percent of current aviation forces to half of all procurement funding over the next three decades.[102]

Weapons

Current U.S. Navy shipboard weapons systems are almost entirely focused on missiles, both as a weapon and as a threat. In an offensive role, missiles are intended to strike targets at long distances with accuracy and precision. Because they are unmanned weapons, missiles allow for attacks on heavily defended targets without risk to human pilots. Land strikes are the domain of the BGM-109 Tomahawk, which was first deployed in the 1980s and is continually being updated to increase its capabilities. For anti-ship strikes, the navy's dedicated missile is the Harpoon Missile. To defend against enemy missile attack, the navy operates a number of systems that are all coordinated by the Aegis combat system. Medium-long range defense is provided by the Standard Missile 2, which has been deployed since the 1980s. The Standard missile doubles as the primary shipboard anti-aircraft weapon and is undergoing development for use in theater ballistic missile defense. Short range defense against missiles is provided by the Phalanx CIWS and the more recently developed RIM-162 Evolved Sea Sparrow Missile. In addition to missiles, the navy employs Mark 46 and Mark 50 torpedoes and various types of naval mines.

 
Aviation Ordnancemen loading GBU-12 bombs in 2005

Naval fixed-wing aircraft employ much of the same weapons as the United States Air Force for both air-to-air and air-to-surface combat. Air engagements are handled by the heat-seeking Sidewinder and the radar guided AMRAAM missiles along with the M61 Vulcan cannon for close range dogfighting. For surface strikes, navy aircraft use a combination of missiles, smart bombs, and dumb bombs. On the list of available missiles are the Maverick, SLAM-ER and JSOW. Smart bombs include the GPS-guided JDAM and the laser-guided Paveway series. Unguided munitions such as dumb bombs and cluster bombs make up the rest of the weapons deployed by fixed-wing aircraft.

Rotary aircraft weapons are focused on anti-submarine warfare (ASW) and light to medium surface engagements. To combat submarines, helicopters use Mark 46 and Mark 50 torpedoes. Against small watercraft, they use Hellfire and Penguin air to surface missiles. Helicopters also employ various types of mounted anti-personnel machine guns, including the M60, M240, GAU-16/A, and GAU-17/A.

Nuclear weapons in the U.S. Navy arsenal are deployed through ballistic missile submarines and aircraft. The Ohio-class submarine carries the latest iteration of the Trident missile, a three-stage, submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) with MIRV capability; the current Trident II (D5) version is expected to be in service past 2020.[103] The navy's other nuclear weapon is the air-deployed B61 nuclear bomb. The B61 is a thermonuclear device that can be dropped by strike aircraft such as the F/A-18 Hornet and Super Hornet at high speed from a large range of altitudes. It can be released through free-fall or parachute and can be set to detonate in the air or on the ground.

Naval jack

 
U.S. naval jack
 
First navy jack

The current naval jack of the United States is the Union Jack, a small blue flag emblazoned with the stars of the 50 states. The Union Jack was not flown for the duration of the War on Terror, during which Secretary of the Navy Gordon R. England directed all U.S. naval ships to fly the First Navy Jack. While Secretary England directed the change on 31 May 2002, many ships chose to shift colors later that year in remembrance of the first anniversary of the September 11, 2001 attacks. The Union Jack, however, remained in use with vessels of the U.S. Coast Guard and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. A jack of similar design to the Union Jack was used in 1794, with 13 stars arranged in a 3–2–3–2–3 pattern. When a ship is moored or anchored, the jack is flown from the bow of the ship while the ensign is flown from the stern. When underway, the ensign is raised on the mainmast. Before the decision for all ships to fly the First Navy Jack, it was flown only on the oldest ship in the active American fleet, which is currently USS Blue Ridge (LCC-19). U.S. Navy ships and craft returned to flying the Union Jack effective 4 June 2019. The date for reintroduction of the jack commemorates the Battle of Midway, which began on 4 June 1942.[104]

Notable sailors

Many past and present United States historical figures have served in the U.S. Navy.

Officers

Notable officers include John P. Jones, John Barry (Continental Navy officer and first flag officer of the United States Navy),[105] Edward Preble, James Lawrence (whose last words "don't give up the ship" are memorialized in Bancroft Hall at the United States Naval Academy,[106]) Stephen Decatur Jr., David Farragut, David D. Porter, Oliver H. Perry, Commodore Matthew Perry (who, under the direction of President Millard Fillmore, forced the opening of Japan[107]), George Dewey (the only person in U.S. history to have attained the rank of Admiral of the Navy[108]), and the officers who attained the highest rank of Fleet Admiral during World War II: William D. Leahy, Ernest J. King, Chester W. Nimitz, and William F. Halsey Jr.[109]

Presidents

The first American President who served in the U.S. Navy was John F. Kennedy (who commanded the famous PT-109 in World War II); he was then followed by Lyndon B. Johnson, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, and George H. W. Bush.

Government officials

Some notable former members of the Navy include U.S. Senators, Bob Kerrey, John McCain, and John Kerry, along with Ron DeSantis, Governor of Florida, and Jesse Ventura, Governor of Minnesota.

Others

Notable former members of the U.S. Navy include; astronauts (Alan B. Shepard, Walter M. Schirra, Neil Armstrong, John Young, Michael J. Smith, Scott Kelly), entertainers (Johnny Carson, Mike Douglas, Paul Newman, Robert Stack, Humphrey Bogart, Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon, Don Rickles, Ernest Borgnine, Harry Belafonte, Henry Fonda, Fred Gwynne), authors (Robert Heinlein, Brandon Webb, Marcus Luttrell), musicians, (John Philip Sousa, MC Hammer, John Coltrane, Fred Durst), professional athletes (David Robinson, Bill Sharman, Roger Staubach, Joe Bellino, Alejandro Villanueva, Bob Kuberski, Nile Kinnick, Bob Feller, Yogi Berra, Larry Doby, Stan Musial, Pee Wee Reese, Phil Rizzuto, Jack Taylor), business people (John S. Barry, Jack C. Taylor, Paul A. Sperry), and computer scientists (Grace Hopper).

See also

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External links

  • Official website
  • Lanzendörfer, Tim. "The Pacific War: The U.S. Navy".
  • "Photographic History of The U.S. Navy". Naval History. NavSource.
  • "Naval History and Photography". Haze Gray & Underway – HazeGray.org.
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  • "United States Navy in World War I". World War I at Sea.net. Retrieved 3 February 2007. (includes warship losses)
  • "U.S. Navy in World War II". World War II on the World Wide Web. Hyper War. (includes The Official Chronology of the U.S. Navy in World War II)
  • "Our Fighting Ships". U.S. WW II Newsmap. Army Orientation Course. 1 (10). 29 June 1942.
  • . United States Navy and World War II. Naval-History.net. Archived from the original on 18 November 2006. Retrieved 3 February 2007. (chronology of the lead up of U.S. entry into World War II)
  • "The National Security Strategy of the United States of America". whitehouse.gov. from the original on 28 January 2010 – via National Archives.
  • "U.S. Navy Ships". Federation of American Scientists. Military Analysis Network.
  • . Archived from the original on 23 December 2018. Retrieved 14 January 2013.

united, states, navy, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, civilian, military, department, naval, forces, united, states, department, navy, maritime, service, branch, united, states, armed, forces, eight, uniformed, services, united, states, largest, . USN redirects here For other uses see USN disambiguation For civilian military department for naval forces see United States Department of the Navy The United States Navy USN is the maritime service branch of the United States Armed Forces and one of the eight uniformed services of the United States It is the largest and most powerful navy in the world with the estimated tonnage of its active battle fleet alone exceeding the next 13 navies combined including 11 allies or partner nations of the United States as of 2015 7 8 9 10 It has the highest combined battle fleet tonnage 11 7 4 635 628 tonnes as of 2019 12 and the world s largest aircraft carrier fleet with eleven in service two new carriers under construction and five other carriers planned With 336 978 personnel on active duty and 101 583 in the Ready Reserve the United States Navy is the third largest of the United States military service branches in terms of personnel It has 290 deployable combat vessels and more than 2 623 operational aircraft as of June 2019 update 3 United States NavyEmblem of the United States NavyFounded27 March 1794 228 years 9 months as current service 13 October 1775 247 years 3 months as Continental Navy 1 Country United StatesTypeNavyRoleSea control Power projection Deterrence Maritime security SealiftSize349 593 active duty personnel As of 2021 update 2 101 583 ready reserve personnel As of 2018 update 3 279 471 civilian employees As of 2018 update 3 480 ships total of which 290 are deployable As of 2019 update 3 2 623 aircraft As of 2018 update 4 Part ofUnited States Armed ForcesDepartment of the NavyHeadquartersThe PentagonArlington County Virginia U S Motto s Semper Fortis Always Courageous unofficial Non sibi sed patriae Not for self but for country unofficial ColorsBlue and gold 5 6 March Anchors Aweigh Play help info Anniversaries13 OctoberEquipmentList of equipment of the United States NavyEngagementsSee list American Revolutionary WarQuasi WarFirst Barbary WarWar of 1812Second Barbary WarWest Indies Anti Piracy OperationsSeminole WarsAfrican Anti Slavery OperationsAegean Sea Anti Piracy OperationsFirst Sumatran expeditionUnited States exploration expeditionPatriot WarSecond Sumatran expeditionIvory Coast ExpeditionCapture of MontereyMexican American WarBombardment of GreytownBattle of Ty ho BayFirst Fiji ExpeditionFilibuster WarSecond Opium WarSecond Fiji ExpeditionReform WarParaguay expeditionAmerican Civil WarBombardment of Qui NhonShimonoseki CampaignFormosa ExpeditionUnited States expedition to KoreaEgyptian Expedition 1882 Bering Sea Anti Poaching OperationsKingdom of Hawaii overthrowalSecond Samoan Civil WarBanana Wars Spanish American War Negro Rebellion Occupation of Nicaragua Occupation of Haiti Occupation of the Dominican Republic 1916 Philippine American WarBoxer RebellionWorld War IBombardment of SamsunWorld War IIKorean WarFirst Taiwan Strait Crisis1958 Lebanon crisis1958 Taiwan Strait CrisisVietnam WarOccupation of the Dominican Republic 1965 Iranian Hostage RescueMultinational Force in LebanonInvasion of GrenadaBombing of Libya 1986 Tanker War Earnest Will Prime Chance Eager Glacier Nimble Archer Praying MantisInvasion of PanamaGulf WarIraqi no fly zonesSomali Civil WarBosnian WarThird Taiwan Strait CrisisKosovo WarInternational Force for East TimorOperation Enduring Freedom Afghanistan 2001 2014 Philippines Horn of Africa Pankisi Gorge Trans Sahara Caribbean and Central AmericaIraq WarOperation Burnt FrostOperation Odyssey Dawn2014 Intervention against ISILOperation Inherent ResolveWar in Afghanistan 2015 2021 2017 Shayrat missile strikeDecorationsPresidential Unit CitationNavy Unit CommendationMeritorious Unit CommendationWebsitewww wbr navy wbr milCommandersCommander in ChiefPresident Joe BidenSecretary of DefenseLloyd AustinSecretary of the NavyCarlos Del ToroChief of Naval OperationsADM Michael M GildayVice Chief of Naval OperationsADM Lisa M FranchettiMaster Chief Petty Officer of the NavyMCPON James HoneaInsigniaFlagJackPennantAnchor Constitution and EagleLogo The United States Navy traces its origins to the Continental Navy which was established during the American Revolutionary War and was effectively disbanded as a separate entity shortly thereafter After suffering significant loss of goods and personnel at the hands of the Barbary pirates from Algiers the United States Congress passed the Naval Act of 1794 for the construction of six heavy frigates the first ships of the Navy The United States Navy played a major role in the American Civil War by blockading the Confederacy and seizing control of its rivers It played the central role in the World War II defeat of Imperial Japan The United States Navy emerged from World War II as the most powerful navy in the world The modern United States Navy maintains a sizable global presence deploying in strength in such areas as the Western Pacific the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean It is a blue water navy with the ability to project force onto the littoral regions of the world engage in forward deployments during peacetime and rapidly respond to regional crises making it a frequent actor in American foreign and military policy The United States Navy is part of the Department of the Navy alongside the United States Marine Corps which is its coequal sister service The Department of the Navy is headed by the civilian secretary of the Navy The Department of the Navy is itself a military department of the Department of Defense which is headed by the secretary of defense The chief of naval operations CNO is the most senior Navy officer serving in the Department of the Navy 13 Contents 1 Mission 2 History 2 1 Origins 2 2 From re establishment to the Civil War 2 3 20th century 2 3 1 World War I and interwar years 2 3 2 World War II 2 3 3 Cold War and 1990s 2 4 21st century 3 Organization 3 1 Operating forces 3 2 Shore establishments 3 3 Relationships with other service branches 3 3 1 United States Marine Corps 3 3 2 United States Coast Guard 4 Personnel 4 1 Uniforms 4 1 1 Commissioned officers 4 1 2 Warrant officers 4 1 3 Enlisted 4 1 4 Badges of the United States Navy 5 Bases 5 1 Eastern United States 5 2 Western United States and Hawaii 5 3 United States territories 5 4 Foreign countries 6 Equipment 6 1 Ships 6 1 1 Aircraft carriers 6 1 2 Amphibious warfare vessels 6 1 3 Cruisers 6 1 4 Destroyers 6 1 5 Frigates and Littoral combat ships 6 1 6 Mine countermeasures ships 6 1 7 Patrol boats 6 1 8 Submarines 6 2 Aircraft 6 3 Weapons 7 Naval jack 8 Notable sailors 8 1 Officers 8 2 Presidents 8 3 Government officials 8 4 Others 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksMission EditTo recruit train equip and organize to deliver combat ready Naval forces to win conflicts and wars while maintaining security and deterrence through sustained forward presence Mission statement of the United States Navy 14 The U S Navy is a seaborne branch of the military of the United States The Navy s three primary areas of responsibility 15 The preparation of naval forces necessary for the effective prosecution of war The maintenance of naval aviation including land based naval aviation air transport essential for naval operations and all air weapons and air techniques involved in the operations and activities of the Navy The development of aircraft weapons military tactics technique organization and equipment of naval combat and service elements U S Navy training manuals state that the mission of the U S Armed Forces is to be prepared to conduct prompt and sustained combat operations in support of the national interest The Navy s five enduring functions are sea control power projection deterrence maritime security and sealift 16 History EditMain article History of the United States Navy Origins Edit It follows then as certain as that night succeeds the day that without a decisive naval force we can do nothing definitive and with it everything honorable and glorious George Washington 15 November 1781 to Marquis de Lafayette 17 Would to Heaven we had a navy able to reform those enemies to mankind or crush them into non existence George Washington 15 August 1786 to Marquis de Lafayette 18 Naval power is the natural defense of the United States John Adams 19 The Navy was rooted in the colonial seafaring tradition which produced a large community of sailors captains and shipbuilders 20 In the early stages of the American Revolutionary War Massachusetts had its own Massachusetts Naval Militia The rationale for establishing a national navy was debated in the Second Continental Congress Supporters argued that a navy would protect shipping defend the coast and make it easier to seek support from foreign countries Detractors countered that challenging the British Royal Navy then the world s preeminent naval power was a foolish undertaking Commander in Chief George Washington resolved the debate when he commissioned the ocean going schooner USS Hannah to interdict British merchantmen and reported the captures to the Congress On 13 October 1775 the Continental Congress authorized the purchase of two vessels to be armed for a cruise against British merchantmen this resolution created the Continental Navy and is considered the first establishment of the U S Navy 21 The Continental Navy achieved mixed results it was successful in a number of engagements and raided many British merchant vessels but it lost twenty four of its vessels 22 and at one point was reduced to two in active service 23 In August 1785 after the Revolutionary War had drawn to a close Congress had sold Alliance the last ship remaining in the Continental Navy due to a lack of funds to maintain the ship or support a navy 24 25 In 1972 the Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Elmo Zumwalt authorized the Navy to celebrate its birthday on 13 October to honor the establishment of the Continental Navy in 1775 26 21 From re establishment to the Civil War Edit See also Union Navy USS Constellation vs L Insurgente during the Quasi War The United States was without a navy for nearly a decade a state of affairs that exposed U S maritime merchant ships to a series of attacks by the Barbary pirates The sole armed maritime presence between 1790 and the launching of the U S Navy s first warships in 1797 was the U S Revenue Marine the primary predecessor of the U S Coast Guard Although the United States Revenue Cutter Service conducted operations against the pirates the pirates depredations far outstripped its abilities and Congress passed the Naval Act of 1794 that established a permanent standing navy on 27 March 1794 27 The Naval Act ordered the construction and manning of six frigates and by October 1797 22 the first three were brought into service USS United States USS Constellation and USS Constitution Due to his strong posture on having a strong standing Navy during this period John Adams is often called the father of the American Navy 28 In 1798 99 the Navy was involved in an undeclared Quasi War with France 29 From 1801 to 1805 in the First Barbary War the U S Navy defended U S ships from the Barbary pirates blockaded the Barbary ports and executed attacks against the Barbary fleets The U S Navy saw substantial action in the War of 1812 where it was victorious in eleven single ship duels with the Royal Navy It proved victorious in the Battle of Lake Erie and prevented the region from becoming a threat to American operations in the area The result was a major victory for the U S Army at the Niagara Frontier of the war and the defeat of the Native American allies of the British at the Battle of the Thames Despite this the U S Navy could not prevent the British from blockading its ports and landing troops 30 But after the War of 1812 ended in 1815 the U S Navy primarily focused its attention on protecting American shipping assets sending squadrons to the Caribbean the Mediterranean where it participated in the Second Barbary War that ended piracy in the region South America Africa and the Pacific 22 From 1819 to the outbreak of the Civil War the Africa Squadron operated to suppress the slave trade seizing 36 slave ships although its contribution was smaller than that of the much larger British Royal Navy After 1840 several secretaries of the navy were southerners who advocated for strengthening southern naval defenses expanding the fleet and making naval technological improvements 31 USS Constitution vs HMS Guerriere during the War of 1812 During the Mexican American War the U S Navy blockaded Mexican ports capturing or burning the Mexican fleet in the Gulf of California and capturing all major cities in Baja California peninsula In 1846 1848 the Navy successfully used the Pacific Squadron under Commodore Robert F Stockton and its marines and blue jackets to facilitate the capture of California with large scale land operations coordinated with the local militia organized in the California Battalion The Navy conducted the U S military s first large scale amphibious joint operation by successfully landing 12 000 army troops with their equipment in one day at Veracruz Mexico When larger guns were needed to bombard Veracruz Navy volunteers landed large guns and manned them in the successful bombardment and capture of the city This successful landing and capture of Veracruz opened the way for the capture of Mexico City and the end of the war 30 The U S Navy established itself as a player in United States foreign policy through the actions of Commodore Matthew C Perry in Japan which resulted in the Convention of Kanagawa in 1854 A carte de visite code fra promoted to code fr of a U S Navy lieutenant during the Civil War Naval power played a significant role during the American Civil War in which the Union had a distinct advantage over the Confederacy on the seas 30 A Union blockade on all major ports shut down exports and the coastal trade but blockade runners provided a thin lifeline The Brown water navy components of the U S navy control of the river systems made internal travel difficult for Confederates and easy for the Union The war saw ironclad warships in combat for the first time at the Battle of Hampton Roads in 1862 which pitted USS Monitor against CSS Virginia 32 For two decades after the war however the U S Navy s fleet was neglected and became technologically obsolete 33 20th century Edit The Great White Fleet demonstrating U S naval power in 1907 it was proof that the U S Navy had blue water capability Our ships are our natural bulwarks Woodrow Wilson 17 A modernization program beginning in the 1880s when the first steel hulled warships stimulated the American steel industry and the new steel navy was born 34 This rapid expansion of the U S Navy and its decisive victory over the outdated Spanish Navy in 1898 brought a new respect for American technical quality Rapid building of at first pre dreadnoughts then dreadnoughts brought the U S in line with the navies of countries such as Britain and Germany In 1907 most of the Navy s battleships with several support vessels dubbed the Great White Fleet were showcased in a 14 month circumnavigation of the world Ordered by President Theodore Roosevelt it was a mission designed to demonstrate the Navy s capability to extend to the global theater 22 By 1911 the U S had begun building the super dreadnoughts at a pace to eventually become competitive with Britain 35 The 1911 also saw the first naval aircraft with the navy 36 which would lead to the informal establishment of United States Naval Flying Corps to protect shore bases It was not until 1921 US naval aviation truly commenced Columbia personification of the United States wearing a warship bearing the words World Power as her Easter bonnet on the cover of Puck 6 April 1901 World War I and interwar years Edit During World War I the U S Navy spent much of its resources protecting and shipping hundreds of thousands of soldiers and marines of the American Expeditionary Force and war supplies across the Atlantic in U boat infested waters with the Cruiser and Transport Force It also concentrated on laying the North Sea Mine Barrage Hesitation by the senior command meant that naval forces were not contributed until late 1917 Battleship Division Nine was dispatched to Britain and served as the Sixth Battle Squadron of the British Grand Fleet Its presence allowed the British to decommission some older ships and reuse the crews on smaller vessels Destroyers and U S Naval Air Force units like the Northern Bombing Group contributed to the anti submarine operations The strength of the United States Navy grew under an ambitious ship building program associated with the Naval Act of 1916 Naval construction especially of battleships was limited by the Washington Naval Conference of 1921 22 the first arms control conference in history The aircraft carriers USS Saratoga CV 3 and USS Lexington CV 2 were built on the hulls of partially built battle cruisers that had been canceled by the treaty The New Deal used Public Works Administration funds to build warships such as USS Yorktown CV 5 and USS Enterprise CV 6 By 1936 with the completion of USS Wasp CV 7 the U S Navy possessed a carrier fleet of 165 000 tonnes displacement although this figure was nominally recorded as 135 000 tonnes to comply with treaty limitations Franklin Roosevelt the number two official in the Navy Department during World War I appreciated the Navy and gave it strong support In return senior leaders were eager for innovation and experimented with new technologies such as magnetic torpedoes and developed a strategy called War Plan Orange for victory in the Pacific in a hypothetical war with Japan that would eventually become reality 37 World War II Edit Main articles United States Navy in World War II and Naval history of World War II Further information Pacific Crucible War at Sea in the Pacific 1941 1942 The Conquering Tide War in the Pacific Islands 1942 1944 and Twilight of the Gods War in the Western Pacific 1944 1945 Battleship USS Idaho shelling Okinawa on 1 April 1945 The U S Navy grew into a formidable force in the years prior to World War II with battleship production being restarted in 1937 commencing with USS North Carolina BB 55 Though ultimately unsuccessful Japan tried to neutralize this strategic threat with the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941 Following American entry into the war the U S Navy grew tremendously as the United States was faced with a two front war on the seas It achieved notable acclaim in the Pacific Theater where it was instrumental to the Allies successful island hopping campaign 23 The U S Navy participated in many significant battles including the Battle of the Coral Sea the Battle of Midway the Solomon Islands Campaign the Battle of the Philippine Sea the Battle of Leyte Gulf and the Battle of Okinawa By 1943 the navy s size was larger than the combined fleets of all the other combatant nations in World War II 38 By war s end in 1945 the U S Navy had added hundreds of new ships including 18 aircraft carriers and 8 battleships and had over 70 of the world s total numbers and total tonnage of naval vessels of 1 000 tons or greater 39 40 At its peak the U S Navy was operating 6 768 ships on V J Day in August 1945 41 Doctrine had significantly shifted by the end of the war The U S Navy had followed in the footsteps of the navies of Great Britain and Germany which favored concentrated groups of battleships as their main offensive naval weapons 42 The development of the aircraft carrier and its devastating use by the Japanese against the U S at Pearl Harbor however shifted U S thinking The Pearl Harbor attack destroyed or took out of action a significant number of U S Navy battleships This placed much of the burden of retaliating against the Japanese on the small number of aircraft carriers 43 During World War II some 4 000 000 Americans served in the United States Navy 44 Cold War and 1990s Edit See also 1989 United States Navy order of battle USS George Washington SSBN 598 a ballistic missile submarine The potential for armed conflict with the Soviet Union during the Cold War pushed the U S Navy to continue its technological advancement by developing new weapons systems ships and aircraft U S naval strategy changed to that of forward deployment in support of U S allies with an emphasis on carrier battle groups 45 The navy was a major participant in the Vietnam War blockaded Cuba during the Cuban Missile Crisis and through the use of ballistic missile submarines became an important aspect of the United States nuclear strategic deterrence policy The U S Navy conducted various combat operations in the Persian Gulf against Iran in 1987 and 1988 most notably Operation Praying Mantis The Navy was extensively involved in Operation Urgent Fury Operation Desert Shield Operation Desert Storm Operation Deliberate Force Operation Allied Force Operation Desert Fox and Operation Southern Watch The U S Navy has also been involved in search and rescue search and salvage operations sometimes in conjunction with vessels of other countries as well as with U S Coast Guard ships Two examples are the 1966 Palomares B 52 crash incident and the subsequent search for missing hydrogen bombs and Task Force 71 of the Seventh Fleet s operation in search for Korean Air Lines Flight 007 shot down by the Soviets on 1 September 1983 21st century Edit When a crisis confronts the nation the first question often asked by policymakers is What naval forces are available and how fast can they be on station Admiral Carlisle A H Trost 46 U S Navy officers aboard the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln monitor defense systems during early 2010s maritime security operations exercises The U S Navy continues to be a major support to U S interests in the 21st century Since the end of the Cold War it has shifted its focus from preparations for large scale war with the Soviet Union to special operations and strike missions in regional conflicts 47 The navy participated in Operation Enduring Freedom Operation Iraqi Freedom and is a major participant in the ongoing War on Terror largely in this capacity Development continues on new ships and weapons including the Gerald R Ford class aircraft carrier and the Littoral combat ship Because of its size weapons technology and ability to project force far from U S shores the current U S Navy remains an asset for the United States Moreover it is the principal means through which the U S maintains international global order namely by safeguarding global trade and protecting allied nations 48 In 2007 the U S Navy joined with the U S Marine Corps and U S Coast Guard to adopt a new maritime strategy called A Cooperative Strategy for 21st Century Seapower that raises the notion of prevention of war to the same philosophical level as the conduct of war The strategy was presented by the Chief of Naval Operations the Commandant of the Marine Corps and Commandant of the Coast Guard at the International Sea Power Symposium in Newport Rhode Island on 17 October 2007 49 U S Navy patrol boat near Kuwait Naval Base in 2009 The strategy recognized the economic links of the global system and how any disruption due to regional crises man made or natural can adversely impact the U S economy and quality of life This new strategy charts a course for the Navy Coast Guard and Marine Corps to work collectively with each other and international partners to prevent these crises from occurring or reacting quickly should one occur to prevent negative impacts on the U S In 2010 Admiral Gary Roughead Chief of Naval Operations noted that demands on the Navy have grown as the fleet has shrunk and that in the face of declining budgets in the future the U S Navy must rely even more on international partnerships 50 The amphibious assault ship USS America launched in 2012 In its 2013 budget request the navy focused on retaining all eleven big deck carriers at the expense of cutting numbers of smaller ships and delaying the SSBN replacement 51 By the next year the USN found itself unable to maintain eleven aircraft carriers in the face of the expiration of budget relief offered by the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 and CNO Jonathan Greenert said that a ten ship carrier fleet would not be able to sustainably support military requirements 52 The British First Sea Lord George Zambellas said that 53 the USN had switched from outcome led to resource led planning 54 One significant change in U S policymaking that is having a major effect on naval planning is the Pivot to East Asia In response the Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus stated in 2015 that 60 percent of the total U S fleet will be deployed to the Pacific by 2020 55 The Navy s most recent 30 year shipbuilding plan published in 2016 calls for a future fleet of 350 ships to meet the challenges of an increasingly competitive international environment 53 A provision of the 2018 National Defense Authorization Act called for expanding the naval fleet to 355 ships as soon as practicable but did not establish additional funding nor a timeline 56 Organization EditMain article Structure of the United States Navy Organization of the United States Navy within the Department of Defense Simplified flowchart of the U S Navy command structure The U S Navy falls under the administration of the Department of the Navy under civilian leadership of the Secretary of the Navy SECNAV The most senior naval officer is the Chief of Naval Operations CNO a four star admiral who is immediately under and reports to the Secretary of the Navy At the same time the Chief of Naval Operations is a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff which is the second highest deliberative body of the armed forces after the United States National Security Council although it plays only an advisory role to the President and does not nominally form part of the chain of command The Secretary of the Navy and Chief of Naval Operations are responsible for organizing recruiting training and equipping the Navy so that it is ready for operation under the commanders of the unified combatant commands Operating forces Edit Main article List of units of the United States Navy Further information Structure of the United States Navy Numbered fleets Areas of responsibility for each of the United States Navy fleets Tenth Fleet serves as the numbered fleet for U S Fleet Cyber Command and therefore is not shown There are nine components in the operating forces of the U S Navy the United States Fleet Forces Command formerly United States Atlantic Fleet United States Pacific Fleet United States Naval Forces Central Command United States Naval Forces Europe Naval Network Warfare Command Navy Reserve United States Naval Special Warfare Command Operational Test and Evaluation Force and Military Sealift Command Fleet Forces Command controls a number of unique capabilities including Military Sealift Command Naval Expeditionary Combat Command and Navy Cyber Forces The United States Navy has seven active numbered fleets Second Third Fifth Sixth Seventh and Tenth Fleets are each led by a vice admiral and the Fourth Fleet is led by a rear admiral These seven fleets are further grouped under Fleet Forces Command the former Atlantic Fleet Pacific Fleet Naval Forces Europe Africa and Naval Forces Central Command whose commander also doubles as Commander Fifth Fleet the first three commands being led by four star admirals The United States First Fleet existed after World War II from 1947 but it was redesignated the Third Fleet in early 1973 The United States Second Fleet was deactivated in September 2011 but reestablished in August 2018 amid heightened tensions with Russia 57 It is headquartered in Norfolk Virginia with responsibility over the East Coast and North Atlantic 58 In early 2008 the Navy reactivated the United States Fourth Fleet to control operations in the area controlled by Southern Command which consists of US assets in and around Central and South America 59 Other number fleets were activated during World War II and later deactivated renumbered or merged Shore establishments Edit USS Kitty Hawk CV 63 docking at the U S Navy base in Yokosuka Japan Shore establishments exist to support the mission of the fleet through the use of facilities on land Among the commands of the shore establishment as of April 2011 update are the Naval Education and Training Command the Naval Meteorology and Oceanography Command the Naval Information Warfare Systems Command the Naval Facilities Engineering Command the Naval Supply Systems Command the Naval Air Systems Command the Naval Sea Systems Command the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery the Bureau of Naval Personnel the United States Naval Academy the Naval Safety Center the Naval Aviation Warfighting Development Center formerly known as the Naval Strike and Air Warfare Center and the United States Naval Observatory 60 Official Navy websites list the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations and the Chief of Naval Operations as part of the shore establishment but these two entities effectively sit superior to the other organizations playing a coordinating role 61 Relationships with other service branches Edit United States Marine Corps Edit Main article United States Marine Corps A Marine F A 18 from VMFA 451 preparing to launch from USS Coral Sea CV 43 In 1834 the United States Marine Corps came under the Department of the Navy 62 Historically the Navy has had a unique relationship with the USMC partly because they both specialize in seaborne operations Together the Navy and Marine Corps form the Department of the Navy and report to the Secretary of the Navy However the Marine Corps is a distinct separate service branch 63 with its own uniformed service chief the Commandant of the Marine Corps a four star general The Marine Corps depends on the Navy for medical support dentists doctors nurses medical technicians known as corpsmen and religious support chaplains Thus Navy officers and enlisted sailors fulfill these roles When attached to Marine Corps units deployed to an operational environment they generally wear Marine camouflage uniforms but otherwise they wear Navy dress uniforms unless they opt to conform to Marine Corps grooming standards 61 In the operational environment as an expeditionary force specializing in amphibious operations Marines often embark on Navy ships to conduct operations from beyond territorial waters Marine units deploying as part of a Marine Air Ground Task Force MAGTF operate under the command of the existing Marine chain of command Although Marine units routinely operate from amphibious assault ships the relationship has evolved over the years much as the Commander of the Carrier Air Group Wing CAG does not work for the carrier commanding officer but coordinates with the ship s CO and staff Some Marine aviation squadrons usually fixed wing assigned to carrier air wings train and operate alongside Navy squadrons they fly similar missions and often fly sorties together under the cognizance of the CAG Aviation is where the Navy and Marines share the most common ground since aircrews are guided in their use of aircraft by standard procedures outlined in a series of publications known as NATOPS manuals United States Coast Guard Edit Main article United States Coast Guard A U S Coast Guard helicopter preparing to land on the flight deck of the amphibious assault ship USS Wasp LHD 1 The United States Coast Guard in its peacetime role with the Department of Homeland Security fulfills its law enforcement and rescue role in the maritime environment It provides Law Enforcement Detachments LEDETs to Navy vessels where they perform arrests and other law enforcement duties during naval boarding and interdiction missions In times of war the Coast Guard may be called upon to operate as a service in the Navy 64 At other times Coast Guard Port Security Units are sent overseas to guard the security of ports and other assets The Coast Guard also jointly staffs the Navy s naval coastal warfare groups and squadrons the latter of which were known as harbor defense commands until late 2004 which oversee defense efforts in foreign littoral combat and inshore areas Personnel EditMain article Personnel of the United States Navy Navy SEALs at one of the entrances to the Zhawar Kili cave complex The United States Navy has over 400 000 personnel approximately a quarter of whom are in ready reserve Of those on active duty more than eighty percent are enlisted sailors and around fifteen percent are commissioned officers the rest are midshipmen of the United States Naval Academy and midshipmen of the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps at over 180 universities around the country and officer candidates at the Navy s Officer Candidate School 3 Enlisted sailors complete basic military training at boot camp and then are sent to complete training for their individual careers 65 Sailors prove they have mastered skills and deserve responsibilities by completing Personnel Qualification Standards PQS tasks and examinations Among the most important is the warfare qualification which denotes a journeyman level of capability in Surface Warfare Aviation Warfare Information Dominance Warfare Naval Aircrew Special Warfare Seabee Warfare Submarine Warfare or Expeditionary Warfare Many qualifications are denoted on a sailor s uniform with U S Navy badges and insignia Uniforms Edit See also Uniforms of the United States Navy The uniforms of the U S Navy have evolved gradually since the first uniform regulations for officers were issued in 1802 on the formation of the Navy Department The predominant colors of U S Navy uniforms are navy blue and white U S Navy uniforms were based on Royal Navy uniforms of the time and have tended to follow that template 66 Commissioned officers Edit Main article United States Navy officer rank insignia US DoDpay grade Special grade a O 10 O 9 O 8 O 7 O 6 O 5 O 4 O 3 O 2 O 1NATO code OF 10 OF 9 OF 8 OF 7 OF 6 OF 5 OF 4 OF 3 OF 2 OF 1Insignia Uniform insignia Title Fleet admiral Admiral Vice admiral Rear admiral Rear admiral lower half Captain Commander Lieutenant commander Lieutenant Lieutenant junior grade EnsignAbbreviation FADM ADM VADM RADM RDML CAPT CDR LCDR LT LTJG ENS Reserved for wartime use only Navy officers serve either as a line officer or as a staff corps officer Line officers wear an embroidered gold star above their rank of the naval service dress uniform while staff corps officers and commissioned warrant officers wear unique designator insignias that denotes their occupational specialty 67 68 Type Line officer Medical Corps Dental Corps Nurse Corps Medical Service Corps Judge Advocate General s CorpsInsignia Designator1 1XXX 210X 220X 290X 230X 250XChaplain Corps Christian Faith Chaplain Corps Jewish Faith Chaplain Corps Muslim Faith Chaplain Corps Buddhist Faith Supply Corps Civil Engineer Corps Law Community Limited Duty Officer 410X 410X 410X 410X 310X 510X 655XWarrant officers Edit Main article Warrant officer United States US DoD pay grade W 5 W 4 W 3 W 2 W 1NATO code WO 5 WO 4 WO 3 WO 2 WO 1Insignia Title Chief warrant officer 5 Chief warrant officer 4 Chief warrant officer 3 Chief warrant officer 2 Warrant officer 1Abbreviation CWO 5 CWO 4 CWO 3 CWO 2 WO 1 U S Navy warrant officer specialty insignias Warrant and chief warrant officer ranks are held by technical specialists who direct specific activities essential to the proper operation of the ship which also require commissioned officer authority 69 Navy warrant officers serve in 30 specialties covering five categories Warrant officers should not be confused with the limited duty officer LDO in the Navy Warrant officers perform duties that are directly related to their previous enlisted service and specialized training This allows the Navy to capitalize on the experience of warrant officers without having to frequently transition them to other duty assignments for advancement 70 Most Navy warrant officers are accessed from the chief petty officer pay grades E 7 through E 9 analogous to a senior non commissioned officer in the other services and must have a minimum 14 years in service 71 Enlisted Edit See also List of United States Navy enlisted rates Ranks and insignia of NATO navies enlisted and List of United States Navy ratings Sailors in pay grades E 1 through E 3 are considered to be in apprenticeships 72 They are divided into five definable groups with colored group rate marks designating the group to which they belong Seaman Fireman Airman Constructionman and Hospitalman E 4 to E 6 are non commissioned officers NCOs and are specifically called Petty officers in the Navy 73 Petty Officers perform not only the duties of their specific career field but also serve as leaders to junior enlisted personnel E 7 to E 9 are still considered Petty Officers but are considered a separate community within the Navy They have separate berthing and dining facilities where feasible wear separate uniforms and perform separate duties After attaining the rate of Master Chief Petty Officer a service member may choose to further their career by becoming a Command Master Chief Petty Officer CMC A CMC is considered to be the senior most enlisted service member within a command and is the special assistant to the Commanding Officer in all matters pertaining to the health welfare job satisfaction morale use advancement and training of the command s enlisted personnel 74 75 CMCs can be Command level within a single unit such as a ship or shore station Fleet level squadrons consisting of multiple operational units headed by a flag officer or commodore or Force level consisting of a separate community within the Navy such as Subsurface Air Reserves 76 CMC insignia are similar to the insignia for Master Chief except that the rating symbol is replaced by an inverted five point star reflecting a change in their rating from their previous rating i e MMCM to CMDCM The stars for Command Master Chief are silver while stars for Fleet or Force Master Chief are gold Additionally CMCs wear a badge worn on their left breast pocket denoting their title Command Fleet Force 75 77 US DoDpay grade Special E 9 E 8 E 7 E 6 E 5 E 4 E 3 E 2 E 1NATO code OR 9 OR 8 OR 7 OR 6 OR 5 OR 4 OR 3 OR 2 OR 1Sleve insignia No insigniaTitle Senior Enlisted Advisor to the Chairman 78 Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy Fleet force master chief petty officer Command master chief petty officer Master chief petty officer Command senior chief petty officer Senior chief petty officer Chief petty officer Petty officer first class Petty officer second class Petty officer third class Seaman Seaman apprentice Seaman recruitAbbreviation SEAC MCPON FLTCM FORCM CMDCM MCPO CMDCS SCPO CPO PO1 PO2 PO3 SN SA SR Badges of the United States Navy Edit See also Badges of the United States Navy Insignia and badges of the United States Navy are military badges issued by the U S Department of the Navy to naval service members who achieve certain qualifications and accomplishments while serving on both active and reserve duty in the United States Navy Most naval aviation insignia are also permitted for wear on uniforms of the United States Marine Corps As described in Chapter 5 of U S Navy Uniform Regulations 79 badges are categorized as breast insignia usually worn immediately above and below ribbons and identification badges usually worn at breast pocket level 80 Breast insignia are further divided between command and warfare and other qualification 81 Insignia come in the form of metal pin on devices worn on formal uniforms and embroidered tape strips worn on work uniforms For the purpose of this article the general term insignia shall be used to describe both as it is done in Navy Uniform Regulations The term badge although used ambiguously in other military branches and in informal speak to describe any pin patch or tab is exclusive to identification badges 82 and authorized marksmanship awards 83 according to the language in Navy Uniform Regulations Chapter 5 Below are just a few of the many badges maintained by the Navy The rest can be seen in the article cited at the top of this section Naval Aviator Badge Submarine Officer badge Surface Warfare Officer InsigniaBases EditMain article List of United States Navy installations Map of naval bases in the United States The size complexity and international presence of the United States Navy requires a large number of navy installations to support its operations While the majority of bases are located inside the United States itself the Navy maintains a significant number of facilities abroad either in U S controlled territories or in foreign countries under a Status of Forces Agreement SOFA Eastern United States Edit The second largest concentration of installations is at Hampton Roads Virginia where the navy occupies over 36 000 acres 15 000 ha of land Located at Hampton Roads are Naval Station Norfolk homeport of the Atlantic Fleet Naval Air Station Oceana a Master Jet Base Naval Amphibious Base Little Creek and Training Support Center Hampton Roads as well as a number of Navy and commercial shipyards that service navy vessels The Aegis Training and Readiness Center is located at the Naval Support Activity South Potomac in Dahlgren Virginia Maryland is home to NAS Patuxent River which houses the Navy s Test Pilot School Also located in Maryland is the United States Naval Academy situated in Annapolis NS Newport in Newport Rhode Island is home to many schools and tenant commands including the Officer Candidate School Naval Undersea Warfare Center and more and also maintains inactive ships clarification needed There is also a naval base in Charleston South Carolina This is home to the Naval Nuclear Power Training Command under which reside the Nuclear Field A Schools for Machinist Mates Nuclear Electrician Mates Nuclear and Electronics Technicians Nuclear Nuclear Power School Officer and Enlisted and one of two Nuclear Power Training Unit Prototype schools The state of Florida is the location of three major bases NS Mayport the Navy s fourth largest in Jacksonville Florida NAS Jacksonville a Master Air Anti submarine Warfare base and NAS Pensacola home of the Naval Education and Training Command the Naval Air Technical Training Center that provides specialty training for enlisted aviation personnel and is the primary flight training base for Navy and Marine Corps Naval Flight Officers and enlisted Naval Aircrewmen There is also NSA Panama City Florida which is home to the Center for Explosive Ordnance Disposal and Divising CENEODIVE and the Navy Diving and Salvage Training Center and NSA Orlando Florida which home to the Naval Air Warfare Center Training Systems Division NAWCTSD The main U S Navy submarine bases on the east coast are located in Naval Submarine Base New London in Groton Connecticut and NSB Kings Bay in Kings Bay Georgia The Portsmouth Naval Shipyard near Portsmouth New Hampshire 84 which repairs naval submarines 3 NS Great Lakes north of Chicago Illinois is the home of the Navy s boot camp for enlisted sailors The Washington Navy Yard in Washington DC is the Navy s oldest shore establishment and serves as a ceremonial and administrative center for the U S Navy home to the Chief of Naval Operations and numerous commands Western United States and Hawaii Edit Underwater Demolition Team members using the casting technique from a speeding boat Combat Camera Underwater Photo Team A U S Navy diver during underwater photography training off the coast of Guantanamo Bay The U S Navy s largest complex is Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake California which covers 1 1 million acres 4 500 km2 of land or approximately one third of the U S Navy s total land holdings 3 Naval Base San Diego California is the main homeport of the Pacific Fleet although its headquarters is located in Pearl Harbor Hawaii NAS North Island is located on the north side of Coronado California and is home to Headquarters for Naval Air Forces and Naval Air Force Pacific the bulk of the Pacific Fleet s helicopter squadrons and part of the West Coast aircraft carrier fleet NAB Coronado is located on the southern end of the Coronado Island and is home to the navy s west coast SEAL teams and special boat units NAB Coronado is also home to the Naval Special Warfare Center the primary training center for SEALs The other major collection of naval bases on the west coast is in Puget Sound Washington Among them NS Everett is one of the newer bases and the navy states that it is its most modern facility 85 NAS Fallon Nevada serves as the primary training ground for navy strike aircrews and is home to the Naval Strike Air Warfare Center Master Jet Bases are also located at NAS Lemoore California and NAS Whidbey Island Washington while the carrier based airborne early warning aircraft community and major air test activities are located at NAS Point Mugu California The naval presence in Hawaii is centered on NS Pearl Harbor which hosts the headquarters of the Pacific Fleet and many of its subordinate commands United States territories Edit USS Carl Vinson CVN 70 pier side in Apra Harbor Guam Guam an island strategically located in the Western Pacific Ocean maintains a sizable U S Navy presence including NB Guam The westernmost U S territory it contains a natural deepwater harbor capable of harboring aircraft carriers in emergencies citation needed Its naval air station was deactivated citation needed in 1995 and its flight activities transferred to nearby Andersen Air Force Base Puerto Rico in the Caribbean formerly housed NS Roosevelt Roads which was shut down in 2004 shortly after the controversial closure of the live ordnance training area on nearby Vieques Island 3 Foreign countries Edit The largest overseas base is the United States Fleet Activities Yokosuka Japan which serves as the home port for the navy s largest forward deployed fleet and is a significant base of operations in the Western Pacific citation needed European operations revolve around facilities in Italy NAS Sigonella and Naval Computer and Telecommunications Station Naples with NSA Naples as the homeport for the Sixth Fleet and Command Naval Region Europe Africa Southwest Asia CNREURAFSWA and additional facilities in nearby Gaeta There is also NS Rota in Spain and NSA Souda Bay in Greece In the Middle East naval facilities are located almost exclusively in countries bordering the Persian Gulf with NSA Bahrain serving as the headquarters of U S Naval Forces Central Command and U S Fifth Fleet NS Guantanamo Bay in Cuba is the oldest overseas facility and has become known in recent years as the location of a detention camp for suspected al Qaeda operatives 86 Equipment EditMain article Equipment of the United States Navy As of 2018 update the navy operates over 460 ships including vessels operated by the Military Sealift Command MSC crewed by a combination of civilian contractors and a small number of uniformed Naval personnel 3 650 aircraft 50 000 non combat vehicles and owns 75 200 buildings on 3 300 000 acres 13 000 km2 Ships Edit Main article United States Navy ships See also List of current ships of the United States Navy List of currently active United States military watercraft and United States ship naming conventions The names of commissioned ships of the U S Navy are prefixed with the letters USS designating United States Ship 87 Non commissioned civilian manned vessels of the navy have names that begin with USNS standing for United States Naval Ship The names of ships are officially selected by the secretary of the navy often to honor important people or places 88 Additionally each ship is given a letter based hull classification symbol for example CVN or DDG to indicate the vessel s type and number All ships in the navy inventory are placed in the Naval Vessel Register which is part of the Navy List required by article 29 of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea dubious discuss The register tracks data such as the current status of a ship the date of its commissioning and the date of its decommissioning Vessels that are removed from the register prior to disposal are said to be stricken from the register The navy also maintains a reserve fleet of inactive vessels that are maintained for reactivation in times of need The U S Navy was one of the first to install nuclear reactors aboard naval vessels citation needed today nuclear energy powers all active U S aircraft carriers and submarines In the case of the Nimitz class carrier two naval reactors give the ship almost unlimited range and provide enough electrical energy to power a city of 100 000 people citation needed The U S Navy previously operated nuclear powered cruisers but all have been decommissioned In the early 2010 the U S Navy had identified a need for 313 combat ships but could only afford 232 to 243 ships 89 In March 2014 the Navy started counting self deployable support ships such as minesweepers surveillance craft and tugs in the battle fleet to reach a count of 272 as of October 2016 90 91 and it includes ships that have been put in shrink wrap 92 The number of ships generally ranged between 270 and 300 throughout the late 2010s 93 As of February 2022 the Navy has 296 battle force ships however analyses state the Navy needs a fleet of more than 500 to meet its commitments 94 95 Aircraft carriers Edit Aerial view of USS Gerald R Ford CVN 78 a ship of the new Gerald R Ford class alongside USS Harry S Truman CVN 75 a ship of the previous Nimitz class Main article List of aircraft carriers of the United States Navy An aircraft carrier is typically deployed along with a host of additional vessels forming a carrier strike group The supporting ships which usually include three or four Aegis equipped cruisers and destroyers a frigate and two attack submarines are tasked with protecting the carrier from air missile sea and undersea threats as well as providing additional strike capabilities themselves Ready logistics support for the group is provided by a combined ammunition oiler and supply ship Modern carriers are named after American admirals and politicians usually presidents 96 The Navy has a statutory requirement for a minimum of 11 aircraft carriers 97 Currently there are 10 that are deployable and one USS Gerald R Ford that is currently undergoing extensive systems and technologies testing until around 2021 98 All US aircraft carriers are nuclear powered they and submarines are the only nuclear powered Navy vessels 93 Amphibious warfare vessels Edit USS Bataan a Wasp class amphibious assault ship USS San Antonio a San Antonio class amphibious transport dock Main article List of United States Navy amphibious warfare ships Amphibious assault ships are the centerpieces of US amphibious warfare and fulfill the same power projection role as aircraft carriers except that their striking force centers on land forces instead of aircraft They deliver command coordinate and fully support all elements of a 2 200 strong Marine Expeditionary Unit in an amphibious assault using both air and amphibious vehicles Resembling small aircraft carriers amphibious assault ships are capable of V STOL STOVL VTOL tiltrotor and rotary wing aircraft operations They also contain a well deck to support the use of Landing Craft Air Cushion LCAC and other amphibious assault watercraft Recently amphibious assault ships have begun to be deployed as the core of an expeditionary strike group which usually consists of an additional amphibious transport dock and dock landing ship for amphibious warfare and an Aegis equipped cruiser and destroyer frigate and attack submarine for group defense Amphibious assault ships are typically named after World War II aircraft carriers Amphibious transport docks are warships that embark transport and land Marines supplies and equipment in a supporting role during amphibious warfare missions With a landing platform amphibious transport docks also have the capability to serve as secondary aviation support for an expeditionary group All amphibious transport docks can operate helicopters LCACs and other conventional amphibious vehicles while the newer San Antonio class of ships has been explicitly designed to operate all three elements of the Marines mobility triad Expeditionary Fighting Vehicles EFVs the V 22 Osprey tiltrotor aircraft and LCACs Amphibious transport docks are typically named after U S cities The dock landing ship is a medium amphibious transport that is designed specifically to support and operate LCACs though it is able to operate other amphibious assault vehicles in the United States inventory as well Dock landing ships are normally deployed as a component of an expeditionary strike group s amphibious assault contingent operating as a secondary launch platform for LCACs All dock landing ships are named after cities or important places in U S and U S Naval history 96 Cruisers Edit Main article List of cruisers of the United States Navy USS Port Royal a Ticonderoga class cruiser Cruisers are large surface combat vessels that conduct anti air anti missile warfare surface warfare anti submarine warfare and strike operations independently or as members of a larger task force Modern guided missile cruisers were developed out of a need to counter the anti ship missile threat facing the United States Navy This led to the development of the AN SPY 1 phased array radar and the Standard missile with the Aegis combat system coordinating the two Ticonderoga class cruisers were the first to be equipped with Aegis and were put to use primarily as anti air and anti missile defense in a battle force protection role Later developments of vertical launch systems and the Tomahawk missile gave cruisers additional long range land and sea strike capability making them capable of both offensive and defensive battle operations The Ticonderoga class is the only active class of cruiser All cruisers in this class are named after battles 96 Destroyers Edit Main article List of destroyers of the United States Navy USS Zumwalt a Zumwalt class stealth guided missile destroyer Destroyers are multi mission medium surface ships capable of sustained performance in anti air anti submarine anti ship and offensive strike operations Like cruisers guided missile destroyers are primarily focused on surface strikes using Tomahawk missiles and fleet defense through Aegis and the Standard missile Destroyers additionally specialize in anti submarine warfare and are equipped with VLA rockets and LAMPS Mk III Sea Hawk helicopters to deal with underwater threats When deployed with a carrier strike group or expeditionary strike group destroyers and their fellow Aegis equipped cruisers are primarily tasked with defending the fleet while providing secondary strike capabilities With very few exceptions destroyers are named after U S Navy Marine Corps and Coast Guard heroes 96 Frigates and Littoral combat ships Edit Main article List of frigates of the United States Navy See also Littoral combat ship USS Independence LCS 2 a Littoral combat ship USS Freedom LCS 1 underway in special naval camouflage Modern U S frigates mainly perform anti submarine warfare for carrier and expeditionary strike groups and provide armed escort for supply convoys and merchant shipping They are designed to protect friendly ships against hostile submarines in low to medium threat environments using torpedoes and LAMPS helicopters Independently frigates are able to conduct counterdrug missions and other maritime interception operations As in the case of destroyers frigates are named after U S Navy Marine Corps and Coast Guard heroes As of autumn 2015 the U S Navy has retired its most recent class of frigates and expects that by 2020 the Littoral Combat Ships LCS will assume many of the duties the frigate had with the fleet The LCS is a class of relatively small surface vessels intended for operations in the littoral zone close to shore It was envisioned to be a networked agile stealthy surface combatant capable of defeating anti access and asymmetric threats in the littorals citation needed They have the capabilities of a small assault transport including a flight deck and hangar for housing two helicopters a stern ramp for operating small boats and the cargo volume and payload to deliver a small assault force with fighting vehicles to a roll on roll off port facility The ship is easy to reconfigure for different roles including anti submarine warfare mine countermeasures anti surface warfare intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance homeland defense maritime intercept special operations and logistics all by swapping mission specific modules as needed The LCS program is still relatively new as of 2018 with only ten active ships but the navy has announced plans for up to 32 ships The navy has announced that a further 20 vessels to be built after that will be redesignated as frigates 99 A special case is the USS Constitution commissioned in 1797 as one of the original six frigates of the United States Navy and which remains in commission at the Charlestown Navy Yard in Boston She serves as a tribute to the heritage of the Navy and occasionally sails for commemorative events such as Independence Day and various victories during the War of 1812 Constitution is currently the oldest commissioned warship afloat HMS Victory though older and also in common is in permanent drydock Mine countermeasures ships Edit Main article List of mine warfare vessels of the United States Navy USS Warrior MCM 10 in port Mine countermeasures vessels are a combination of minehunters a naval vessel that actively detects and destroys individual naval mines and minesweepers which clear mined areas as a whole without prior detection of the mines The navy has approximately a dozen of these in active service but the mine countermeasure MCM role is also being assumed by the incoming classes of littoral combat ships MCM vessels have mostly legacy names of previous US Navy ships especially WWII era minesweepers Patrol boats Edit Main article List of patrol vessels of the United States Navy USS Typhoon PC 5 departing Naval Amphibious Base Little Creek in Virginia A patrol boat is a relatively small naval vessel generally designed for coastal defense duties There have been many designs for patrol boats though the navy currently has only a single class They may be operated by a nation s navy or coast guard and may be intended for marine blue water or estuarine or river brown water environments The Navy has approximately a dozen in active service which are mainly used in the littoral regions of the Persian Gulf but have also been used for home port patrols and drug interdiction missions The navy s current class of patrol boats have names based on weather phenomena Submarines Edit Main article Submarines in the United States Navy USS Kentucky SSBN 737 an Ohio class ballistic missile submarine USS Virginia SSN 774 a Virginia class attack submarine All current and planned U S Navy submarines are nuclear powered as only nuclear propulsion allows for the combination of stealth and long duration high speed sustained underwater movement that makes modern nuclear submarines quite vital to a modern blue water navy The U S Navy operates three types ballistic missile submarines guided missile submarines and attack submarines U S Navy nuclear ballistic missile submarines carry the stealthiest leg of the U S strategic triad the other legs are the land based U S strategic missile force and the air based U S strategic bomber force These submarines have only one mission to carry and if called upon to launch the Trident nuclear missile The primary missions of attack and guided missile submarines in the U S Navy are peacetime engagement surveillance and intelligence special operations precision strikes and control of the seas citation needed To these attack submarines also add the battlegroup operations mission Attack and guided missile submarines have several tactical missions including sinking ships and other subs launching cruise missiles gathering intelligence and assisting in special operations As with other classes of naval vessels most U S submarines or boats are named according to specific conventions The boats of the current U S ballistic missile submarine class Ohio class are named after U S states As the four current U S guided missile submarines are converted Ohio class boats they have retained their U S state names The members of the oldest currently commissioned attack submarine class the Los Angeles class are typically named for cities The follow on Seawolf class three submarines Seawolf Connecticut and Jimmy Carter share no consistent naming scheme With the current Virginia class attack submarines the U S Navy has extended the Ohio class state based naming scheme to these submarines Attack submarines prior to the Los Angeles class were named for denizens of the deep while pre Ohio class ballistic missile submarines were named for famous Americans and foreigners with notable connections to the United States Aircraft Edit Four Navy F A 18F Super Hornets Main article List of currently active United States naval aircraft See also List of United States Navy aircraft squadrons and List of United States Navy aircraft designations pre 1962 Carrier based aircraft are able to strike air sea and land targets far from a carrier strike group while protecting friendly forces from enemy aircraft ships and submarines In peacetime aircraft s ability to project the threat of sustained attack from a mobile platform on the seas gives United States leaders significant diplomatic and crisis management options Aircraft additionally provide logistics support to maintain the navy s readiness and through helicopters supply platforms with which to conduct search and rescue special operations anti submarine warfare ASW and anti surface warfare ASuW including the U S Navy s premier Maritime Strike and only organic ASW aircraft the venerable Sikorsky MH 60R operated by Helicopter Maritime Strike Wing U S Navy MH 60R maritime strike helicopter assigned to the HSM 78 Blue Hawks aboard the carrier USS Carl Vinson The U S Navy began to research the use of aircraft at sea in the 1910s with Lieutenant Theodore G Spuds Ellyson becoming the first naval aviator on 28 January 1911 and commissioned its first aircraft carrier USS Langley CV 1 in 1922 100 United States naval aviation fully came of age in World War II when it became clear following the Attack on Pearl Harbor the Battle of the Coral Sea and the Battle of Midway that aircraft carriers and the planes that they carried had replaced the battleship as the greatest weapon on the seas Leading navy aircraft in World War II included the Grumman F4F Wildcat the Grumman F6F Hellcat the Chance Vought F4U Corsair the Douglas SBD Dauntless and the Grumman TBF Avenger Navy aircraft also played a significant role in conflicts during the following Cold War years with the F 4 Phantom II and the F 14 Tomcat becoming military icons of the era The navy s current primary fighter attack airplane is the multi mission F A 18E F Super Hornet The F 35C entered service in 2019 101 The Navy is also looking to eventually replace its F A 18E F Super Hornets with the F A XX program The Aircraft Investment Plan sees naval aviation growing from 30 percent of current aviation forces to half of all procurement funding over the next three decades 102 Weapons Edit Main article List of United States Navy weapons Current U S Navy shipboard weapons systems are almost entirely focused on missiles both as a weapon and as a threat In an offensive role missiles are intended to strike targets at long distances with accuracy and precision Because they are unmanned weapons missiles allow for attacks on heavily defended targets without risk to human pilots Land strikes are the domain of the BGM 109 Tomahawk which was first deployed in the 1980s and is continually being updated to increase its capabilities For anti ship strikes the navy s dedicated missile is the Harpoon Missile To defend against enemy missile attack the navy operates a number of systems that are all coordinated by the Aegis combat system Medium long range defense is provided by the Standard Missile 2 which has been deployed since the 1980s The Standard missile doubles as the primary shipboard anti aircraft weapon and is undergoing development for use in theater ballistic missile defense Short range defense against missiles is provided by the Phalanx CIWS and the more recently developed RIM 162 Evolved Sea Sparrow Missile In addition to missiles the navy employs Mark 46 and Mark 50 torpedoes and various types of naval mines Aviation Ordnancemen loading GBU 12 bombs in 2005 Naval fixed wing aircraft employ much of the same weapons as the United States Air Force for both air to air and air to surface combat Air engagements are handled by the heat seeking Sidewinder and the radar guided AMRAAM missiles along with the M61 Vulcan cannon for close range dogfighting For surface strikes navy aircraft use a combination of missiles smart bombs and dumb bombs On the list of available missiles are the Maverick SLAM ER and JSOW Smart bombs include the GPS guided JDAM and the laser guided Paveway series Unguided munitions such as dumb bombs and cluster bombs make up the rest of the weapons deployed by fixed wing aircraft Rotary aircraft weapons are focused on anti submarine warfare ASW and light to medium surface engagements To combat submarines helicopters use Mark 46 and Mark 50 torpedoes Against small watercraft they use Hellfire and Penguin air to surface missiles Helicopters also employ various types of mounted anti personnel machine guns including the M60 M240 GAU 16 A and GAU 17 A Nuclear weapons in the U S Navy arsenal are deployed through ballistic missile submarines and aircraft The Ohio class submarine carries the latest iteration of the Trident missile a three stage submarine launched ballistic missile SLBM with MIRV capability the current Trident II D5 version is expected to be in service past 2020 103 The navy s other nuclear weapon is the air deployed B61 nuclear bomb The B61 is a thermonuclear device that can be dropped by strike aircraft such as the F A 18 Hornet and Super Hornet at high speed from a large range of altitudes It can be released through free fall or parachute and can be set to detonate in the air or on the ground Naval jack Edit U S naval jack First navy jack The current naval jack of the United States is the Union Jack a small blue flag emblazoned with the stars of the 50 states The Union Jack was not flown for the duration of the War on Terror during which Secretary of the Navy Gordon R England directed all U S naval ships to fly the First Navy Jack While Secretary England directed the change on 31 May 2002 many ships chose to shift colors later that year in remembrance of the first anniversary of the September 11 2001 attacks The Union Jack however remained in use with vessels of the U S Coast Guard and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration A jack of similar design to the Union Jack was used in 1794 with 13 stars arranged in a 3 2 3 2 3 pattern When a ship is moored or anchored the jack is flown from the bow of the ship while the ensign is flown from the stern When underway the ensign is raised on the mainmast Before the decision for all ships to fly the First Navy Jack it was flown only on the oldest ship in the active American fleet which is currently USS Blue Ridge LCC 19 U S Navy ships and craft returned to flying the Union Jack effective 4 June 2019 The date for reintroduction of the jack commemorates the Battle of Midway which began on 4 June 1942 104 Notable sailors EditFor a more comprehensive list see List of United States Navy people Many past and present United States historical figures have served in the U S Navy Officers Edit Notable officers include John P Jones John Barry Continental Navy officer and first flag officer of the United States Navy 105 Edward Preble James Lawrence whose last words don t give up the ship are memorialized in Bancroft Hall at the United States Naval Academy 106 Stephen Decatur Jr David Farragut David D Porter Oliver H Perry Commodore Matthew Perry who under the direction of President Millard Fillmore forced the opening of Japan 107 George Dewey the only person in U S history to have attained the rank of Admiral of the Navy 108 and the officers who attained the highest rank of Fleet Admiral during World War II William D Leahy Ernest J King Chester W Nimitz and William F Halsey Jr 109 Presidents Edit The first American President who served in the U S Navy was John F Kennedy who commanded the famous PT 109 in World War II he was then followed by Lyndon B Johnson Richard Nixon Gerald Ford Jimmy Carter and George H W Bush Government officials Edit Some notable former members of the Navy include U S Senators Bob Kerrey John McCain and John Kerry along with Ron DeSantis Governor of Florida and Jesse Ventura Governor of Minnesota Others Edit Notable former members of the U S Navy include astronauts Alan B Shepard Walter M Schirra Neil Armstrong John Young Michael J Smith Scott Kelly entertainers Johnny Carson Mike Douglas Paul Newman Robert Stack Humphrey Bogart Tony Curtis Jack Lemmon Don Rickles Ernest Borgnine Harry Belafonte Henry Fonda Fred Gwynne authors Robert Heinlein Brandon Webb Marcus Luttrell musicians John Philip Sousa MC Hammer John Coltrane Fred Durst professional athletes David Robinson Bill Sharman Roger Staubach Joe Bellino Alejandro Villanueva Bob Kuberski Nile Kinnick Bob Feller Yogi Berra Larry Doby Stan Musial Pee Wee Reese Phil Rizzuto Jack Taylor business people John S Barry Jack C Taylor Paul A Sperry and computer scientists Grace Hopper See also Edit Military portal United States portalBibliography of early American naval history List of United States Navy ships List of United States Navy aircraft designations pre 1962 List of military aircraft of the United States List of undesignated military aircraft of the United States List of United States naval aircraft Columbia class submarine Spearhead class expeditionary fast transport Modern United States Navy carrier air operations Naval militia United States Merchant Marine Academy Women in the United States NavyReferences Edit Establishment of the Navy 13 October 1775 Naval History and Heritage Command Archived from the original on 28 April 2017 Retrieved 6 July 2017 ARMED FORCES STRENGTH FIGURES FOR AUGUST 31 2021 dwp dmdc osd mil Retrieved 1 May 2022 vague further explanation needed a b c d e f g h Current Navy Demographics Quarterly Report navy mil 14 June 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Affairs Digital Archives United States Navy in World War I World War I at Sea net Retrieved 3 February 2007 includes warship losses U S Navy in World War II World War II on the World Wide Web Hyper War includes The Official Chronology of the U S Navy in World War II Our Fighting Ships U S WW II Newsmap Army Orientation Course 1 10 29 June 1942 Strict Neutrality Britain amp France at War with Germany September 1939 May 1940 United States Navy and World War II Naval History net Archived from the original on 18 November 2006 Retrieved 3 February 2007 chronology of the lead up of U S entry into World War II The National Security Strategy of the United States of America whitehouse gov Archived from the original on 28 January 2010 via National Archives U S Navy Ships Federation of American Scientists Military Analysis Network Naval recognition Grand Valley State University Archives and Special Collections Archived from the original on 23 December 2018 Retrieved 14 January 2013 Retrieved from 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