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U.S. Navy orders 10th Virginia-class submarine
by Ed Adamczyk
Washington DC (UPI) Mar 29, 2021

Shipbuilder Huntington Ingalls Industries announced a contract on Monday to build a 10th Virginia-class submarine for the U.S. Navy.

Its Newport News Shipbuilding division, partnered with General Dynamics Electric Boat, received a $22 billion contract in 2019 to build nine submarines, with an option for a 10th, the company said in a press release.

The contract calls for an additional vessel ordered by the Navy, bringing the total cost of the original contract to $24.1 billion.

"We are pleased that Congress supported the restoration of funding for the 10th Virginia-class boat in Block V," Jason Ward vice president of Virginia-class submarine construction at Newport News Shipbuilding, said Monday.

"We look forward to building and delivering the final boat of the block that maintains production at two submarines per year and continues to stabilize the industrial base," Ward said in the press release.

Construction of the vessel, which has not yet been named, will begin by 2024.

The Virginia, or SSN-774 class, includes nuclear-powered, cruise missile-equipped, fast-attack submarines, and is regarded as the U.S. Navy's foremost undersea platform in stealth, intelligence gathering and weapons systems technology.

The first, the USS Virginia, was commissioned in 2004. Plans call for Virginia-class vessels to be ordered until 2043, with service life extending to the 2070s.

They are designed to replace the Los Angeles class of submarines, first commissioned in 1976. Sixty-two were built, with 28 still active and 30 decommissioned so far.


Related Links
Naval Warfare in the 21st Century


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Former Argentine military chiefs sanctioned over sunk submarine
Buenos Aires (AFP) March 22, 2021
Two former Argentine military chiefs were on Monday sanctioned over the 2017 sinking of a submarine that left 44 people dead. Retired admiral Marcelo Srur was handed "45 days of arrest" for having given an "incomplete" picture to the defense ministry of what happened to the submarine, thus "preventing the family members of the crew from being informed," said a statement by Argentina's war council. Claudio Villamide, the former commander of the Submarine Force, was dismissed after he was found gu ... read more

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