http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/pentagon-wants-commando-mother-ship/2012/01/27/gIQA66rGWQ_print.html

Navy wants commando ‘mothership’ in Middle East

By Craig Whitlock, Friday, January 27, 5:57 PM

The Pentagon is rushing to send a large floating base for commando teams to the 
Middle East as tensions rise with Iran, al-Qaeda in Yemen and Somali pirates, 
among other threats.

In response to requests from the U.S. Central Command, which oversees military 
operations in the Middle East, the Navy is converting an aging warship it had 
planned to decommission into a makeshift staging base for the commandos. 
Unofficially dubbed a “mothership,” the floating base could accommodate smaller 
high-speed boats and helicopters commonly used by Navy SEALs, procurement 
documents show.

Special Operations Forces are a key part of the Obama administration's strategy 
to make the military leaner and more agile as the Pentagon confronts at least 
$487 billion in spending cuts over the next decade.
Lt. Cmdr. Mike Kafka, a spokesman for the Navy’s Fleet Forces Command, declined 
to elaborate on the floating base’s purpose or to say where, exactly, it will 
be deployed in the Middle East. Other Navy officials acknowledged that they 
were moving with unusual haste to complete the conversion and send the 
mothership to the region by early summer.

Navy documents indicate that it could be headed to the Persian Gulf, where Iran 
has threatened to block the Strait of Hormuz, a crucial shipping route for much 
of the world’s oil supply. A market survey proposal from the Military Sealift 
Command, dated Dec. 22 and posted online, states that the floating base needed 
to be delivered to the Persian Gulf.

Other contract documents do not specify a location but say the mothership would 
be used to “support mine countermeasure” missions. Defense officials have said 
that if Iran did attempt to close the Strait of Hormuz, it would rely on mines 
to obstruct the waterway.

With a large naval base in Bahrain, and one or two aircraft carrier groups 
usually assigned to the region, the Navy already has a substantial presence in 
the Persian Gulf and surrounding waters. Adding the mothership ship would do 
relatively little to bolster U.S. maritime power overall, but it could play an 
instrumental role in secretive commando missions offshore.

The deployment of the floating base could also mark a return to maritime 
missions for SEAL teams, which for the last decade have spent most of their 
time on land in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Other details of the project became public Tuesday when the Military Sealift 
Command posted a bid request to retrofit the USS Ponce, an amphibious transport 
docking ship, on a rush-order basis.

Until December, the Navy had planned to retire the Ponce and decommission it in 
March after 41 years of service. Among other missions, it was deployed to the 
Mediterranean Sea last year in support of NATO’s air war over Libya.

Instead, the ship will be modified into what the military terms an Afloat 
Forward Staging Base. Kafka, the Fleet Forces command spokesman, said it would 
be used to support mine-clearance ships, smaller patrol ships and aircraft.

The documents posted by the Military Sealift Command in December, however, 
specify that the mothership will be rebuilt so that it can also serve as a 
docking station for several small high-speed boats and helicopters commonly 
used by Navy SEAL teams.

Among the vessels listed are Mark 5 Zodiacs, an inflatable boat that can carry 
up to 15 passengers but roll up into a bag, and 7-meter-long Rigid Hull 
Inflatable Boats, which can carry an entire SEAL squad.

SEAL teams also deploy from regular warships, but most vessels in the Navy’s 
fleet must patrol or move around on a regular basis. A mothership can stay in 
one spot for weeks or months, effectively serving as a floating base for 
commandos as they monitor coastal areas or prepare for amphibious operations.

The U.S. Special Operations Command has sought a transportable floating base 
for several years, saying that a mothership would expand the range of commando 
squads operating from small speedboats, particularly in remote coastal areas.

Defense officials said the Ponce will serve as a stopgap measure until the Navy 
can build a new Afloat Forward Staging Base from scratch. In budget documents 
released Thursday, the Pentagon said it would fund that project starting next 
year.

The floating base also could be suited to the coast of Somalia, a failed state 
that is home to an al-Qaeda affiliate and gangs of pirates. A mothership there 
would give SEALs or other commandos more flexibility in missions such as 
Wednesday’s rescue a pair of American and Danish hostages who had been held for 
months by Somali pirates.

Ironically, the term “mothership” is also commonly used to describe a vessel 
used by Somali pirates. After hijacking a large container or cargo vessel, 
pirate crews often turn it into a floating base to extend the range of their 
skiffs or speedboats far into the Indian Ocean, Gulf of Aden and Arabian Gulf.

U.S. military officials declined to say what prompted them to give the Ponce a 
sudden new lease on life. But contract and bidding documents underscore the 
urgency of the project.

One no-bid contract for engineering work states that the military was waiving 
normal procurement rules because any delay presented a “national security 
risk.” Other contract bids are due Feb. 3. The Navy wants the conversion work 
to begin 10 days later on the Ponce, which is docked in Virginia Beach.


© The Washington Post Company


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Just because i'm near the punchbowl doesn't mean I'm also drinking from it.

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