Navy CG(X) Cruiser Program: Background, Oversight Issues, and Options for Congress

Navy CG(X) Cruiser Program: Background,
Oversight Issues, and Options for Congress
Updated November 18, 2008
Ronald O’Rourke
Specialist in Naval Affairs
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division



Navy CG(X) Cruiser Program: Background,
Oversight Issues, and Options for Congress
Summary
The Navy is currently developing technologies and studying design options for
a planned new cruiser called the CG(X). The Navy wants to procure 19 CG(X)s as
replacements for its 22 existing Ticonderoga (CG-47) class Aegis cruisers. The Navy
wants the CG(X) to be a highly capable multi-mission ship with an emphasis on air
defense and ballistic missile defense (BMD).
The Navy has not yet announced a preferred design concept for the CG(X).
Observers were expecting the Navy to announce a preferred design concept in late
2007/early 2008, but such an announcement is now expected to occur no earlier than
2009. The Navy originally intended to use the design of its new DDG-1000 destroyer
as the basis for the CG(X) design, but it is no longer clear that this is still the Navy’s
preferred approach. Although the Navy’s FY2009 budget submission called for
procuring the first CG(X) in FY2011, the Navy reportedly now plans to defer
procurement of the first CG(X) to FY2017.
Section 1012 of the FY2008 defense authorization act (H.R. 4986/P.L. 110-181
of January 28, 2008) makes it U.S. policy to construct the major combatant ships of
the Navy, including the CG(X), with integrated nuclear power systems, unless the
Secretary of Defense submits a notification to Congress that the inclusion of an
integrated nuclear power system is not in the national interest. The Navy has studied
nuclear power as a design option for the CG(X), but has not yet announced whether
it would prefer to build the CG(X) as a nuclear-powered ship.
The Navy’s proposed FY2009 budget requested $370 million for research and
development work on the CG(X). The Navy’s proposed FY2009 budget did not
request any advance procurement funding for the first CG(X). The compromise
version of the FY2009 DOD appropriation bill, which became Division C of H.R.
2638/P.L. 110-329 of September 30, 2008, reduces the Navy’s FY2009 research and
development funding request for the CG(X) by $120.8 million. This report will be
updated as events warrant.



Contents
In troduction ......................................................1
Background ......................................................2
Context for CG(X) Program.....................................2
Affordability of Navy Shipbuilding Program....................2
New Navy Mission of Ballistic Missile Defense..................3
Interest in Nuclear Power for Surface Ships.....................3
Concern for Surface Combatant Industrial Base..................4
CG(X) Program in Brief........................................4
Announcement of CG(X) Program............................4
CG(X)s to Replace CG-47s..................................5
Planned CG(X) Procurement Schedule.........................5
CG(X) Mission Orientation..................................5
CG(X) Program Funding....................................6
Potential CG(X) Design Features.............................6
CG(X) Analysis of Alternatives (AOA)........................7
Oversight Issues for Congress.......................................15
Navy Delay in Announcing a Preferred Design Concept...............15
Procurement Date for Lead Ship.................................15
Accuracy of Navy Cost Estimate.................................16
Nuclear Power...............................................17
Technical Risk...............................................18
Hull Design.................................................19
Unit Affordability vs. Unit Capability.............................20
BMD Impact on CG(X) Numbers and Schedule.....................21
Industrial-Base Implications....................................22
Visibility of CG(X) Research and Development Costs................24
Options for Congress..............................................25
Legislative Activity for FY2009.....................................26
FY2009 Defense Authorization Bill (S. 3001/P.L. 110-417)...........26
House ..................................................26
Senate ..................................................26
Compromise .............................................27
FY2009 Defense Appropriations Bill (S. 2638/P.L. 110-329)..........27
House ..................................................27
Senate ..................................................27
Compromise .............................................27
Appendix. FY2008 Defense Authorization Act Bill and Report Language....29
House Report................................................29
Conference Report............................................29



Table 1. CG(X) Program Funding, FY2005-FY2013......................6



Navy CG(X) Cruiser Program: Background,
Oversight Issues, and Options for Congress
Introduction
The Navy is currently developing technologies and studying design options for
a planned new cruiser called the CG(X).1 The Navy wants to procure 19 CG(X)s as
replacements for its 22 existing Ticonderoga (CG-47) class Aegis cruisers. The Navy
wants the CG(X) to be a highly capable multi-mission ship with an emphasis on air
defense and ballistic missile defense (BMD).
The Navy has not yet announced a preferred design concept for the CG(X).
Observers were expecting the Navy to announce a preferred design concept in late
2007/early 2008, but such an announcement is now expected to occur no earlier than

2009. The Navy originally intended to use the design of its new DDG-1000 destroyer2


as the basis for the CG(X) design, but it is no longer clear that this is still the Navy’s
preferred approach. Although the Navy’s FY2009 budget submission called for
procuring the first CG(X) in FY2011, the Navy reportedly now plans to defer
procurement of the first CG(X) to FY2017.3


1 In the designation CG(X), C means cruiser, G means guided missile, and (X) means that
the ship’s design has not yet been determined. For a U.S. Navy surface combatant, the use
of the G in the designation means the that ship is equipped with an area-defense anti-air
warfare (AAW) — an air-defense system whose range is sufficient to defend not only the
ship itself (called point defense), but other ships in the areas as well (called area defense).
2 For more on the DDG-1000 program, see CRS Report RL32109, Navy DDG-1000 and
DDG-51 Destroyer Programs: Background, Oversight Issues, and Options for Congress,
by Ronald O’Rourke.
3 Zachary M. Peterson, “Navy Awards Technology Company $128 Million Contract For
CG(X) Work,” Inside the Navy, October 27, 2008. Another press report (Katherine
McIntire Peters, “Navy’s Top Officer Sees Lessons in Shipbuilding Program Failures,”
GovernmentExecutive.com, September 24, 2008) quoted Admiral Gary Roughead, the Chief
of Naval Operations, as saying: “What we will be able to do is take the technology from the
DDG-1000, the capability and capacity that [will be achieved] as we build more DDG-51s,
and [bring those] together around 2017 in a replacement ship for our cruisers.” (Material
in brackets in the press report.) Another press report (Zachary M. Peterson, “Part One of
Overdue CG(X) AOA Sent to OSD, Second Part Coming Soon,” Inside the Navy, September
29, 2008) quoted Vice Admiral Barry McCullough, the Deputy Chief of Naval Operations
for Integration of Capabilities and Resources, as saying that the Navy did not budget for a
CG(X) hull in its proposal for the Navy’s budget under the FY2010-FY2015 Future Years
Defense Plan (FYDP) to be submitted to Congress in early 2009.
An earlier report (Christopher P. Cavas, “DDG 1000 Destroyer Program Facing Major
(continued...)

Section 1012 of the FY2008 defense authorization act (H.R. 4986/P.L. 110-181
of January 28, 2008) makes it U.S. policy to construct the major combatant ships of
the Navy, including the CG(X), with integrated nuclear power systems, unless the
Secretary of Defense submits a notification to Congress that the inclusion of an
integrated nuclear power system is not in the national interest. The Navy has studied
nuclear power as a design option for the CG(X), but has not yet announced whether
it would prefer to build the CG(X) as a nuclear-powered ship.
The Navy’s proposed FY2009 budget requested $370 million for research and
development work on the CG(X). The Navy’s proposed FY2009 budget did not
request any advance procurement funding for the first CG(X). The compromise
version of the FY2009 DOD appropriation bill, which became Division C of H.R.
2638/P.L. 110-329 of September 30, 2008, reduces the Navy’s FY2009 research and
development funding request for the CG(X) by $120.8 million. This report will be
updated as events warrant.
The issue for Congress is whether to approve, reject, or modify the Navy’s plans
for the CG(X) program. Congress’s decisions on this issue could affect Navy
capabilities and funding requirements, U.S. BMD capabilities, and the U.S.
shipbuilding industrial base.
Background
Context for CG(X) Program
The context for the CG(X) program includes the following:
!concerns about the affordability of the Navy’s shipbuilding program,
!the emergence of the Navy’s new BMD mission,
!interest among some in Congress in having the CG(X) be nuclear-
powered, and
!concerns for the surface combatant industrial base.
Affordability of Navy Shipbuilding Program. The Navy currently faces
challenges in being able to afford all the ships in its shipbuilding program,
particularly in FY2011 and subsequent years.4 Because the designs of most of the


3 (...continued)
Cuts,” DefenseNews.com, July 14, 2008) stated that the CG(X) would be delayed until
FY2015 or later. See also Geoff Fein, “Navy Likely To Change CG(X)’s Procurement
Schedule, Official Says,” Defense Daily, June 24, 2008; Rebekah Gordon, “Navy Agrees
CG(X) By FY-11 Won’t Happen But Reveals Little Else,” Inside the Navy, June 30, 2008.
4 For more on the prospective affordability of the Navy’s shipbuilding program, see CRS
Report RL32665, Navy Force Structure and Shipbuilding Plans: Background and Issues for
(continued...)

ships in the Navy’s shipbuilding program for the next several years are already
determined, the CG(X) is one of the Navy’s relatively few remaining opportunities
to use a new ship design to manage the overall cost of the shipbuilding program.
New Navy Mission of Ballistic Missile Defense. BMD has emerged in
recent years as a significant new mission for the Navy. Navy surface ships in coming
years may face a threat from anti-ship ballistic missiles (ASBMs) — theater-range
ballistic missiles (TBMs) equipped with maneuvering re-entry vehicles (MaRVs) that
are capable of hitting moving ships at sea — a kind of threat the Navy has not
previously faced.5 Navy BMD capabilities could also be used to defend allied or
friendly ports, airfields, cities, or forces ashore against enemy TBMs, or to defend the
United States against enemy intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs).6 The Navy’s
desire for the CG(X) to be a high-capability BMD platform is a principal reason why
the Navy wants the CG(X) to carry a radar that is larger and more powerful than the
SPY-1 radar on the Navy’s current Aegis cruisers and destroyers. The size, weight,
energy requirements, and cooling requirements of this radar may help set a lower
limit for the size and cost of the CG(X).
Interest in Nuclear Power for Surface Ships. Representatives Gene
Taylor and Roscoe Bartlett, the chairman and ranking member, respectively, of the
Seapower and Expeditionary Forces subcommittee of the House Armed Services
Committee, strongly support expanding the use of nuclear power to a wider array of
Navy surface ships, beginning with the CG(X).7 Representative John Murtha, the
chairman of the Defense subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee, has
referred to the CG(X) as a nuclear-powered ship.8 As mentioned earlier, Section
1012 of the FY2008 defense authorization act (H.R. 4986/P.L. 110-181 of January

28, 2008) makes it U.S. policy to construct the major combatant ships of the Navy,


including the CG(X), with integrated nuclear power systems, unless the Secretary of
Defense submits a notification to Congress that the inclusion of an integrated nuclear
power system is not in the national interest. The conference report on P.L. 110-181
contained extensive report language relating to Section 1012 (see Appendix). The
issue of nuclear power for Navy surface ships is discussed in more detail in another
CRS report.9


4 (...continued)
Congress, by Ronald O’Rourke.
5 For a discussion of potential MaRV-equipped TBMs capable of hitting moving ships at
sea, see CRS Report RL33153, China Naval Modernization: Implications for U.S. Navy
Capabilities — Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O’Rourke.
6 For further discussion of the Navy’s BMD program, see CRS Report RL33745, Sea-Based
Ballistic Missile Defense — Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O’Rourke.
7 See, for example, the remarks of Representatives Taylor and Bartlett at the March 14,
2008, hearing before the Seapower and Expeditionary Forces subcommittee on the Navy’s
FY2009 shipbuilding program.
8 See, for example, Ashley Roque, “Murtha, Young Press Navy on Shipbuilding Plan, Look
To Alter 2009 Budget,” CongressNow, February 27, 2008.
9 CRS Report RL33946, Navy Nuclear-Powered Surface Ships: Background, Issues, and
(continued...)

Concern for Surface Combatant Industrial Base. All cruisers,
destroyers, and frigates procured by the Navy since FY1985 have been built by either
General Dynamics’ Bath Iron Works (GD/BIW) in Bath, ME, or the Ingalls shipyard
in Pascagoula, MS, that forms part of Northrop Grumman Ship Shipbuilding10
(NGSB). The financial health of shipyards that build ships for the Navy, including
these two yards, has been a matter of concern at various points since the early 1990s,
when the rate of Navy shipbuilding was reduced following the end of the Cold War.
The surface combatant industrial base also includes hundreds of additional firms that
supply materials and components, and the financial health of some of these firms has
been a matter of concern in recent years, particularly because some of them are the
sole sources for what they make for Navy surface combatants.
CG(X) Program in Brief
Announcement of CG(X) Program. The CG(X) program was announced
on November 1, 2001, when the Navy stated that it was launching a Future Surface
Combatant Program aimed at acquiring a family of next-generation surface
combatants. This new family of surface combatants, the Navy stated, would include
three new classes of ships:11
!a destroyer called the DD(X) — later renamed the DDG-1000 or
Zumwalt class — for the precision long-range strike and naval12
gunfire mission,
!a cruiser called the CG(X) for the air defense and ballistic missile
defense mission, and


9 (...continued)
Options for Congress, by Ronald O’Rourke.
10 NGSB also includes the Avondale shipyard near New Orleans, LA, Newport News
Shipbuilding of Newport News, VA, and a composite-manufacturing facility at Gulfport,
MS.
11 The Future Surface Combatant Program replaced an earlier Navy surface combatant
acquisition effort, begun in the mid-1990s, called the Surface Combatant for the 21st Century
(SC-21) program. The SC-21 program encompassed a planned destroyer called DD-21 and
a planned cruiser called CG-21. When the Navy announced the Future Surface Combatant
Program in 2001, development work on the DD-21 had been underway for several years, but
the start of development work on the CG-21 was still years in the future. The DD(X)
program, now called the DDG-1000 or Zumwalt-class program, is essentially a restructured
continuation of the DD-21 program. The CG(X) might be considered the successor, in
planning terms, of the CG-21. The acronym SC-21 is still used in the Navy’s research and
development account to designate the line item (i.e., program element) that funds
development work on the DDG-1000 and CG(X).
12 For more on the DDG-1000 program, see CRS Report RL32109, Navy DDG-1000 and
DDG-51 Destroyer Programs: Background, Oversight Issues, and Options for Congress,
by Ronald O’Rourke.

!a smaller combatant called the Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) to
counter submarines, small surface attack craft, and mines in heavily13
contested littoral (near-shore) areas.
CG(X)s to Replace CG-47s. The Navy wants to procure 19 CG(X)s as
replacements for its 22 existing Ticonderoga (CG-47) class Aegis cruisers, which are
projected to reach their retirement age of 35 years between 2021 and 2029.14 The 19
CG(X)s would form part of a planned force of 88 cruisers and destroyers within the
Navy’s planned total fleet of 313 ships.15
Planned CG(X) Procurement Schedule. The FY2009-FY2013 Future
Years Defense Plan (FYDP) submitted to Congress in February 2008 called for
procuring the first CG(X) in FY2011 and the second in FY2013. The FY2009-
FY2038 Navy 30-year shipbuilding plan submitted to Congress in February 2008
called for building 17 more CG(X)s between FY2014 and FY2023, including two
CG(X)s per year for the seven-year period FY2015-FY2021. As mentioned earlier,
although the Navy’s FY2009 budget submission called for procuring the first CG(X)
in FY2011, the Navy reportedly now plans to defer procurement of the first CG(X)
to FY2017.
CG(X) Mission Orientation. The Navy’s Aegis cruisers are highly capable
multi-mission ships with an emphasis on air defense (which the Navy calls anti-air
warfare, or AAW) and, as a more recent addition, BMD. The Navy similarly wants
the CG(X) to be a highly capable multi-mission ship with an emphasis on AAW and
BMD.


13 For more on the LCS program, see CRS Report RL33741, Navy Littoral Combat Ship
(LCS) Program: Background, Oversight Issues, and Options for Congress, by Ronald
O’Rourke.
14 CG-47s are equipped with the Aegis combat system and are therefore referred to as Aegis
cruisers. A total of 27 CG-47s were procured for the Navy between FY1978 and FY1988;
the ships entered service between 1983 and 1994. The first five, which were built to an
earlier technical standard, were judged by the Navy to be too expensive to modernize and
were removed from service in 2004-2005. The Navy is currently modernizing the remaining
22 to maintain their mission effectiveness to age 35; for more information, see CRS Report
RS22595, Navy Aegis Cruiser and Destroyer Modernization: Background and Issues for
Congress, by Ronald O’Rourke.
15 The 88 cruisers and destroyers would include 19 CG(X)s, 7 DDG-1000s, and 62 older
Arleigh Burke (DDG-51) class Aegis destroyers. For more on the proposed 313-ship fleet,
see CRS Report RL32665, Navy Force Structure and Shipbuilding Plans: Background and
Issues for Congress, by Ronald O’Rourke. DDG-51s are equipped with the Aegis combat
system and are therefore referred to as Aegis destroyers. A total of 62 DDG-51s were
procured between FY1985 and FY2005. The first entered service in 1991. By the end of
FY2006, 49 had entered service and the remaining 13 were in various stages of construction,
with the final ships scheduled to be delivered in 2010 or 2011. The Navy plans to
modernize the DDG-51s to maintain their mission effectiveness to age 35; see CRS Report
RS22595, op cit.

CG(X) Program Funding. Table 1 shows actual, requested, and
programmed funding for the CG(X) program through FY2013, as shown in the
FY2009-FY2013 budget submission. The procurement costs shown in the table for
the first two CG(X)s in FY2011 and FY2013 are notional “placeholder” figures,
pending a determination of the design of CG(X), that appear broadly consistent with
a Navy-estimated cost for a CG(X) design based on the DDG-1000 hull design.
Table 1. CG(X) Program Funding, FY2005-FY2013
(millions of then-year dollars, rounded to nearest million)
Total
thru
05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 FY13
Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Navy (RDTEN) account
PE0604300N (DDG-1000 [previously SC-21] Total Ship System Engineering)
Project 3105a0001000001
Project 3106b009305880919395456
Project 3107c04815851722222402452491276
PE0604307N (Aegis Combat System Engineering)
Project 3044d31300000004
PE0604501N (Advanced Above Water Sensors)
Project 3186e000107140149179182186943
Subtotal 3 59 54 223 370 451 510 520 530 2720
Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy (SCN) account
CG(X) 10000003234003234
CG(X) 20000000030643064
TOTAL 3 59 54 223 370 451 3744 520 3594 9018
Source: Navy FY2009, FY2008, and FY2007 budget submissions.
a. Block II Seeker Technology Development.
b. Combat System Integration.
c. CG(X) Development.
d. Solid State SPY Radar. Funding transferred to Project 3186 within PE 0604501N starting in
FY2008.
e. Air and Missile Defense Radar. Funding transferred from Project 3044 within PE 0604307N
starting in FY2008.
Potential CG(X) Design Features. As mentioned earlier, the Navy has not
yet announced a preferred design concept for the CG(X). Observers were expecting
the Navy to announce a preferred design concept in late 2007/early 2008, but such
an announcement is now expected to occur no earlier than 2009.
The CG(X) is expected to feature a radar that is larger and more powerful than
the SPY-1 radar on the Navy’s current Aegis cruisers and destroyers or the dual-band
radar that is to be carried by the DDG-1000. The Navy testified in 2007 that the
power requirement of the CG(X) combat system, including the new radar, could be
about 30 or 31 megawatts, compared with about 5 megawatts for the Aegis combat



system.16 The CG(X) radar’s greater power is intended, among other things, to give
the CG(X) more capability for BMD operations than Navy’s Aegis cruisers and
destroyers (or the DDG-1000, for which BMD is not a principal mission).
The CG(X) is expected to feature more missile-launch tubes than the DDG-1000
(which has 80), and possibly more than the Navy’s current Aegis destroyers (90 or

96 each) or Aegis cruisers (122 each).


The CG(X) may be equipped with only one 155mm Advanced Gun System
(AGS), or none at all, compared with two AGSs on the DDG-51, two five-inch
(127mm) guns on the Navy’s Aegis cruisers, and one five-inch gun on the Navy’s
Aegis destroyers.
CG(X) Analysis of Alternatives (AOA). The Navy assessed CG(X) design
options, including the option of nuclear power, in a study called the CG(X) Analysis
of Alternatives (AOA), known more formally as the Maritime Air and Missile
Defense of Joint Forces (MAMDJF) AOA. The CG(X) AOA was begun in mid-
2006 and completed at the end of 2007. As of November 2008, the Navy had not
publicly released the results of the AOA. The Navy testified on March 14, 2008,
that:
The results of the Navy’s Analysis of Alternatives (AOA) for the Maritime
Air and Missile Defense of Joint Forces capability are currently within the Navy
staffing process. Resulting requirements definition and acquisition plans,
including schedule options and associated risks, are being evaluated in
preparation for CG(X) Milestone A, planned to occur in FY 2008. This process
includes recognition of the requirement of the FY 2008 National Defense
Authorization Act, that all major combatant vessels of the Untied States Navy
strike forces be constructed with an integrated nuclear power plant, unless the
Secretary of Defense determines this not to be in the best interest of the United17
States.
Original Preference for CG(X) Design Based on DDG-1000. The Navy
originally intended to use DDG-1000 hull design as the basis for the CG(X) design.18


16 Source: Spoken testimony of Navy officials to the Seapower and Expeditionary Forces
Subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee, March 1, 2007.
17 Statement of Vice Admiral Barry McCullough, Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for
Integration of Capabilities and Resources, and Ms. Allison Stiller, Deputy Assistant
Secretary of the Navy (Ship Programs), before the Subcommittee on Seapower and
Expeditionary Forces of the House Armed Services Committee [hearing] on Navy Force
Structure and Shipbuilding, March 14, 2008, p. 9.
18 For example, at an April 5, 2006, hearing, a Navy admiral in charge of shipbuilding
programs, when asked what percentage of the CG(X) design would be common to that of
the DDG-1000, stated that:
[W]e haven’t defined CG(X) in a way to give you a crisp answer to that
question, because there are variations in weapons systems and sensors to go with
that. But we’re operating under the belief that the hull will fundamentally be —
(continued...)

The potential for reusing the DDG-1000 hull design for the CG(X) was one of the
Navy’s arguments for moving ahead with the DDG-1000 program. It is no longer
clear, however, that reusing the DDG-1000 hull design as the basis for the CG(X) is
still the Navy’s preferred approach:
!A July 2, 2008, letter from John Young, the Department of Defense
(DOD) acquisition executive (the Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition, Technology and Logistics) to Representative Gene
Taylor, the chairman of the Seapower and Expeditionary Forces
subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee, stated: “I
agree that the Navy’s preliminary design analysis for the next-
generation cruiser indicates that, for the most capable radar suites
under consideration [for the CG(X)], the DDG-1000 [hull design]
cannot support the radar.”19
!It is not clear that the DDG-1000 can accommodate one-half of the
twin-reactor plant that the Navy has designed for its new Gerald R.
Ford (CVN-78) class nuclear-powered aircraft carriers.20 If the
DDG-1000 hull cannot accommodate one-half of the Ford-class
plant, then the Navy might face a choice of either designing a new
hull for the CG(X) that can accommodate one-half of the Ford-class
plant or designing a new reactor plant that can fit into the DDG-1000
hull.


18 (...continued)
the hull mechanical and electrical piece of CG(X) will be the same, identical as
DD(X). So the infrastructure that supports radar and communications gear into
the integrated deckhouse would be the same fundamental structure and layout.
I believe to accommodate the kinds of technologies CG(X) is thinking about
arraying, you’d probably get 60 to 70 percent of the DD(X) hull and integrated
(inaudible) common between DD(X) and CG(X), with the variation being in that
last 35 percent for weapons and that sort of [thing]....
The big difference [between CG(X) and DDG-1000] will likely [be] the
size of the arrays for the radars; the numbers of communication apertures in the
integrated deckhouse; a little bit of variation in the CIC [Combat Information
Center — in other words, the] command and control center; [and] likely some
variation in how many launchers of missiles you have versus the guns.
(Source: Transcript of spoken testimony of Rear Admiral Charles Hamilton II,
Program Executive Officer For Ships, Naval Sea Systems Command, before the
Projection Forces Subcommittee of House Armed Services Committee, April 5,
2006. The inaudible comment may have been a reference to the DDG-1000’s
integrated electric-drive propulsion system. Between the two paragraphs quoted
above, the questioner (Representative Gene Taylor) asked: “So the big difference
[between CG(X) and DDG-1000] will be what?”)
19 Letter dated July 2, 2008 from John Young to Representative Taylor, p. 1.
20 For more on the CVN-78 program, see CRS Report RS20643, Navy Ford (CVN-78) Class
Aircraft Carrier Program: Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O’Rourke.

July 2007 Press Report on AOA. A July 23, 2007, defense trade press
report stated that analysts conducting the CG(X) AOA were considering dividing the
CG(X) program into two groups of ships — 14 smaller, conventionally powered
CG(X)s based on the 14,500-ton DDG-1000 hull design for AAW operations, and21

5 larger, nuclear-powered CGN(X)s, displacing 23,000 tons to 25,000 tons each,


for BMD operations. The report stated:
Under pressure from the U.S. Navy to develop a new cruiser based on the
DDG 1000 Zumwalt-class hull form, and from Congress to incorporate nuclear
power, a group of analysts working on the next big surface combatant may
recommend two different ships to form the CG(X) program.
One ship would be a 14,000-ton derivative of the DDG 1000, an “escort
cruiser,” to protect aircraft carrier strike groups. The vessel would keep the22
tumblehome hull of the DDG 1000 and its gas turbine power plant.
The other new cruiser would be a much larger, 25,000-ton nuclear-powered
ship with a more conventional flared bow, optimized for the ballistic missile
defense (BMD) mission.
In all, five large CGN(X) ships and 14 escort cruisers would be built to
fulfill the cruiser requirement in the Navy’s 30-year, 313-ship plan, which calls
for replacing today’s CG 47 Ticonderoga-class Aegis cruisers and adding a
specially designed sea-based missile defense force....
The analysis group is said to be firm in its recommendation for the smaller
escort cruiser. Details are less developed on the nuclear-powered variant,
sources said.
The article also stated:
The anti-missile cruiser also wouldn’t require the high level of stealth
provided by the Zumwalt’s tumblehome hull, analysts said, since the ship would
be radiating its radars to search for missiles. Returning to a more conventional,
flared-bow hull form would free designers from worries about overloading the
untried tumblehome hull.
“There will be great reluctance to use the wave-piercing tumblehome hull
form for the larger ship,” said one experience[d] naval engineer. He noted the
DDG 1000 stealth requirement is necessary for the ship’s ability to operate in
waters near coastlines, but that the open-ocean region where a BMD ship would
operate “means you don’t need to go to the extremes of the tumblehome form.”
Splitting the CG(X) into two designs also makes political sense, sources
said.


21 If the ship is nuclear-powered, its designation would become CGN(X), with the “N”
standing for nuclear power.
22 A tumblehome hull slopes inward as it rises up from the waterline. A tumblehome hull
is thought to be less visible to enemy radars than a conventional flared hull, which slopes
outward as it rises up from the waterline, creating a corner reflector between the water and
the hull that can strongly reflect enemy radar beams.

“There’s a concern that the DDG hull has stability problems and doesn’t
have growth margin,” said a congressional source. A nuclear-powered option, the
source said, also would placate Congress, and “a cash-strapped Navy wouldn’t
be fully committed to a nuclear ship....
The nuclear ship also would need to be larger than the DDG 1000. In
separate statements, Navy officials have been hinting that a 20,000-ton-plus ship
could be in the works.
Sources said early analyses of the CGN(X) showed a 25,000-ton ship,
which the Navy said was too large. More realistic, one source said, would be23
about 23,000 tons.
October 2007 Press Report on AOA. An October 29, 2007, defense trade
press report on the CG(X) AOA stated:
A study refining the definition of the future CG(X) cruiser was recently
completed and will be vetted by Navy officials in the near future, a top
shipbuilding official said here last week.
Rear Adm. Bernard McCullough, the Navy’s director of warfare integration
(N8F), told Inside the Navy on Oct. 24 that the analysis of alternatives (AOA)
for the new cruiser recommends “about four” variants.
One of those options calls for splitting the ship program and building two
different size hulls for the surface combatant, one based on the DDG-1000
destroyer and one that is larger, he confirmed.
“There’s about four options and that’s one of the options,” McCullough
told [Inside the Navy] at an expeditionary warfare conference in Panama City,
FL.
The analysis — conducted by researchers at the Center for Naval Analyses
— will be “briefed out to Navy leadership, starting in about another two weeks,”
McCullough said....


23 Christopher P. Cavas, “U.S. May Build 25,000-Ton Cruiser, Analysis of Alternatives Sees
Nuclear BMD Vessel,” Defense News, July 23, 2007. The article also stated:
According to sources, the AoA looked at two possible nuclear powerplants
based on existing designs: doubling the single-reactor Seawolf SSN 21
submarine plant, and halving two-reactor nuclear carrier plants.
Doubling the 34 megawatts of the Seawolf plant would leave the new ship
far short of power requirements — and not even match the 78 megawatts of the
Zumwalts.
But halving the 209-megawatt plant of current nuclear carriers would yield
a bit more than 100 megawatts, enough juice for power-hungry BMD radars plus
an extra measure for the Navy’s desired future directed-energy weapons and
railguns.

Further Navy analysis of the AOA will examine the life-cycle and
acquisition costs of the options, McCullough said. The Navy’s surface warfare
directorate will then make a presentation to officials including Navy Secretary24
Donald Winter, he said.
January 2008 Press Report on AOA. A January 21, 2008, defense trade
press report on the CG(X) AOA stated:
Navy staff members are in the midst of answering Chief of Naval
Operations Adm. Gary Roughead’s questions on a lengthy study of options for
the configuration of the service’s next cruiser, naval officials told Inside the
Navy.
Rear Adm. Victor Guillory, director of surface warfare (N86), described the
analysis of alternatives (AOA) on the future CG(X) as a roughly 500-page
document that includes “a collection of options of analysis from various sources”
into aspects of the next-generation cruiser.
The CG(X) analysis delivered last year by the Center for Naval Analyses
(CNA) — which Navy and industry sources said describes a handful of possible
variants for the ship, including a nuclear-powered vessel — is just part of what
is now the CG(X) AOA, Guillory told ITN [Inside the Navy] Jan. 15 at the
Surface Navy Association’s [SNA’s] annual symposium in Arlington, VA.
Guillory said the current AOA does not include “specific options that this
is one version of the ship, this is another version.”
“The options are the next level down,” he said. “So, what are all the
potential propulsion options for the ship . . . Then you look at the combat systems
level, you look at the weapons level, you look at the manning level, you look at
the shore-infrastructure-support level.”
Roughead “has not made a determination that the analysis satisfies all his
questions, so we’re still answering questions,” Guillory said. A lot of those
questions don’t require CNA’s input, because they are questions Navy staff has
to answer, he added.
“There may be questions related to some other aspect of [the] Navy,”
Guillory said. “For instance, how will CG(X) impact our replenishment ships?
Do we need more oilers? That’s not necessarily a CG(X) question, but it is a
Navy question.”
Vice Adm. Bernard McCullough, deputy chief of naval operations for
integration of capabilities and resources, said there has been one briefing session
on the CG(X) AOA with Roughead in recent weeks.
“We’re briefing the study report to CNO,” McCullough told ITN on Jan.

16 in a brief interview at the SNA conference. “We’ve had one session with him;


I imagine it will take a couple more.”


24 Emelie Rutherford, “Analysis Of Alternatives For Future CG(X) Cruiser Completed,”
Inside the Navy, October 29, 2007.

McCullough added one would expect the service chief to have questions on
an investment of the magnitude of the new cruiser.
The report also stated:
Guillory said Navy staff will continue to answer Roughead’s questions on
the AOA “until further notice . . . until we satisfy all of his questions.”
“There’s no timetable for when he has to be satisfied, he can continue to
ask me questions forever,” Guillory said. “At some point, then, they will be
passed over to the secretary of the Navy, the secretariat side, for their approval
and then forwarding on to [the Office of the Secretary of Defense], who
ultimately is the receiver of the analysis of alternatives.”
Guillory said the AOA is “a lot to read,” and that it is his responsibility “to
make that discussion palatable at every level” for Roughead.
While parts of the AOA are made up of the CNA’s analysis, Guillory said
the document also includes work by Naval Sea Systems Command and other
entities such as laboratories.
“There are a lot of sources of information that [go] into this body of work,”
he said.
Nuclear power is one of many options for the CG(X) propulsion system,
with other alternatives including steam, sail, marine gas turbine and diesel,
Guillory said.
“And then every aspect of that, not only how much it costs to build one but
then to maintain one,” he said. “Does it take more people for a nuclear ship than
it does for a gas turbine ship, what’s the life-cycle cost of that.”...
Roughead told SNA conference attendees on Jan. 15 that nuclear power is
being weighed for the CG(X).
“I believe as we look to the future and you look at CG(X), to go down that
path and not be examining nuclear power, given what that power can produce for
us operationally, but also looking at the realities of the future, we have to take
that into account and put that into our calculus,” Roughead said.
“As we look to the future we have to be considering it,” the CNO added. “If
you look around the country there are a lot of other people that are considering25
nuclear power as well.”
September 2008 Press Report on AOA. A September 29, 2008, press
report states:
The first part of the closely held and long overdue analysis of alternatives
for the Navy’s next-generation cruiser, CG(X), was submitted recently to senior


25 Emelie Rutherford, “Navy Staff Answering CNO’s Questions On Next-Gen Cruiser
Analysis,” Inside the Navy, January 21, 2008.

Pentagon leaders and the second part will be submitted in the next few months,
according to the Navy’s top programmer.
The first part of the study, which examined radar sensitivity analysis, the
number of missiles the ship needs to carry and what various hull forms would
work for these requirements, was submitted to the Office of the Secretary of
Defense earlier this month, Vice Adm. Barry McCullough told Inside the Navy
in an interview last week. The second part, which addresses the propulsion
system, remains under review by Navy Secretary Donald Winter and Chief of
Naval Operations Adm. Gary Roughead, he added.
“The secretary and the CNO continue to review the studies and I would
hope in the next couple of months we would come to the resolution on which
alternative of the many included in the study the Navy will choose,” McCullough
explained.
“That will include the initial radar capability, missile capacity, hull type
and propulsion type, so we would have a recommended material solution,” he
added.
The surface combatant, tailored for integrated air and missile defense, is
intended to replace the CG-47 class cruiser. The Navy’s analysis of alternatives
for the new cruiser was supposed to be completed in fiscal year 2007, but that
deadline slid because service leaders said more time was needed to review
requirements.
The Navy did not budget a CG(X) hull in its current program objective
memorandum 2010 (POM-10), submitted to OSD last month and currently under
review, McCullough said last week.
Originally, the Navy wanted to build the first new cruiser in FY-11, but
recently service leaders have acknowledged that date is no longer feasible to
reach.
“We don’t see [CG(X)] commencing within the current [budget plans
through FY-15],” McCullough said last week. “It’s got to do with technology
development of both the radars and propulsion; and to get the risk to moderate
or below we don’t see how we can bring all those things together within”26
POM-10.
October 2008 Press Report on AOA. An October 27, 2008, press report
states that:
a study that will inform the Navy’s requirements for the [CG(X)] remains under
close wraps with senior Navy and Pentagon leadership....
The Navy’s analysis of alternatives for the new cruiser was supposed to be
completed in fiscal year 2007, but that deadline slid because service leaders said
more time was needed to review requirements....


26 Zachary M. Peterson, “Part One of Overdue CG(X) AOA Sent to OSD; Second Part
Coming Soon,” Inside the Navy, September 29, 2008.

The first part of the CG(X) study, which examined radar sensitivity
analysis, the number of missiles the ship needs to carry and what various hull
forms would work for these requirements, was submitted to the Office of the
Secretary of Defense in September, [Vice Admiral Barry] McCullough told
[Inside the Navy]. The second part, which addresses the propulsion system,
remains under review by Navy Secretary Donald Winter and Chief of Naval
Operations Adm. Gary Roughead, he added. Navy spokesman Lt. Clay Doss
confirmed the status of the document had not changed at press time (Oct. 24).
“The secretary and the CNO continue to review the studies and I would
hope in the next couple of months we would come to the resolution on which
alternative of the many included in the study the Navy will choose,” McCullough
explained.
“That will include the initial radar capability, missile capacity, hull type
and propulsion type, so we would have a recommended material solution,” he27
added.
November 2008 Press Report on AOA. A November 2008 magazine
article states that:
At this time two [CG(X)] designs are being proposed — 6 small [ships] and 13
large ships. The former could be an improved [Arleigh Burke] DDG-51 [class
destroyer] with a [hull] plug inserted for additional vertical-launch missile cells.
The number of hulls being mentioned may indicate that the restarted DDG-51
program could become the CG(X)....
The proposed 13 large ships would be of a new design. Originally, these
were to make use of the ten-year-plus, $13 billion-plus investment in developing
the DDG-1000 design. But the tumblehome hull shape of the DDG-1000 has
been rejected for the large cruisers while Congress has directed that the ships
have nuclear propulsion. A rough [procurement cost] estimate of almost $928
billion for [a nuclear-powered version of] the lead ship has been mentioned....
Another November 2008 Press Report on AOA. A November 17, 2008,
press report states that:
The first half of the tightly-held CG(X) next-generation cruiser analysis of
alternatives remains under review by senior Office of the Secretary of Defense
officials, Navy leaders tell Inside the Navy [ITN]....
The finished portion of the AoA addresses what type of radar the Navy will
require on its future surface combatant. Service officials have stressed the
importance of determining the radar type before moving ahead with deciding
what the best hull type and propulsion system are for the new cruiser.
The radar is a “very significant driver” of the hull requirement, Navy
Secretary Donald Winter told reporters aboard his plane Nov. 8 returning to


27 Zachary M. Peterson, “Navy Awards Technology Company $128 Million Contract For
CG(X) Work,” Inside the Navy, October 27, 2008.
28 Norman Polmar, “Still Adrift,” U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings, November 2008: 88.

Washington after the commissioning ceremony for LCS-1 [the Navy’s first
Littoral Combat Ship] in Milwaukee, WI.
When the decision will be made remains uncertain.
“I wish I did, but I really don’t know” when a decision about the radar on
CG(X) will be made, Allison Stiller, deputy assistant secretary of the Navy
(research, development and acquisition) for ships, told ITN in an interview last
week.
“CG(X) is very important and the most important part of it is the radar,”
Stiller noted. “Then you figure out the ship you’re going to host the radar on.”
“All options” are open for the hull type, she said, but the “critical piece” is
the radar technology.
“I don’t know if it’ll be an existing hull form or a new hull form,” Stiller29
said.
Oversight Issues for Congress
Navy Delay in Announcing a Preferred Design Concept
One potential oversight issue for Congress on the CG(X) program concerns the
Navy’s delay in announcing a preferred design concept for the ship. Potential
oversight questions for Congress include the following:
!Why is the Navy taking so long to announce a preferred design
concept for the CG(X)? What information does the Navy lack at this
point for making a decision on this issue?
!Has the Navy simply decided to defer announcing a preferred design
concept until the change in administration next year? If so, why has
the Navy not stated this openly?
Procurement Date for Lead Ship
A second potential oversight issue for Congress concerns the Navy’s reported
plan to defer the procurement of the lead CG(X) from FY2011 to FY2017. If
procurement of the lead CG(X) is deferred to FY2017, potential oversight questions
for Congress include the following:


29 Zachary M. Peterson, “CG(X) Study Remains Under Wraps, Radar Requirement Being
Reviewed,” Inside the Navy, November 17, 2008.

!How might such a deferral affect other Navy program areas, such as
destroyer procurement?30
!How might such a deferral affect the Navy’s ability to meet
projected operational challenges in future years?
Accuracy of Navy Cost Estimate
CBO believes that the Navy is substantially underestimating DDG-1000
procurement costs31 and consequently is also substantially underestimating likely
CG(X) procurement costs. CBO reported in June 2008 that it believes the first two
CG(X)s would cost roughly twice as much as the Navy estimates, and that the
average unit cost for all 19 CG(X)s would be about 40% more than the Navy
estimated in 2007. CBO also believes that its own cost estimates for the CG(X) may
prove to be too low. CBO reported in June 2008 that:
CBO’s estimates for the first two ships of the class are about double the Navy’s
estimates. CBO assumed that the CG(X) would use the same hull as the
DDG-1000. The Navy’s budget estimates for the 2011 and 2013 cruisers are
based on the same assumption; the Navy expects those ships to cost $2.8 billion
and $2.5 billion [in constant FY2009 dollars], respectively. The Navy last year
conducted an Analysis of Alternatives (AoA) to determine what capabilities the
CG(X) should have. Results of that analysis have not yet been released, but a
version of the CG(X) built using the DDG-1000 hull is only one of the options
considered in the AoA. The Navy says that it is studying other options that would
be larger and more capable than a CG(X) built using the DDG-1000 hull,
including ships that use nuclear propulsion.... The Navy does not appear to be
considering a ship smaller than the DDG-1000 as the basis for the CG(X). Any
design that is larger is likely to be substantially more expensive than the
DDG-1000. Using the DDG-51 as an analogy, CBO estimates that the lead
CG(X) would cost $5.2 billion [in constant FY2009 dollars]. The average cost
for each ship in that class would be about $4.2 billion [in constant FY2009
dollars], assuming that the CG(X) is conventionally powered and uses the
DDG-1000 hull. CBO also assumed that, consistent with the DDG-1000
program, two shipyards would build the CG(X)s.
Moreover, CBO’s estimate for the cost of the CG(X) may be optimistic.
The last time the Navy reused a hull design for a new class of surface combatants
was in the 1970s, when the service built the Spruance class destroyers and
Ticonderoga class cruisers. Both ship classes shared the same hull design but
were intended for different missions. The Spruances were general-purpose
destroyers used to escort other Navy ships in the event of war and were designed
in particular for antisubmarine warfare. The Ticonderoga class cruisers
incorporated the Aegis antiair combat system, the SPY-1 radar, and surface-to-air
missiles to counter the threat to Navy carrier battle groups posed by Soviet naval


30 For more on this issue, see CRS Report RL32109, Navy DDG-1000 and DDG-51
Destroyer Programs: Background, Oversight Issues, and Options for Congress, by Ronald
O’Rourke.
31 Congressional Budget Office, Resource Implications of the Navy’s Fiscal Year 2009
Shipbuilding Plan, June 9, 2008, pp. 20-23.

aviation. Reflecting its more complex combat systems, the cost per thousand tons
of the lead Ticonderoga was more than 60 percent higher than the cost of the lead
Spruance, notwithstanding their many common hull features and mechanical32
systems.
CBO also reported that:
Building a future nuclear cruiser, a CGN(X), would probably cost more than the
Congressional Budget Office (or the Navy) has currently estimated for a
conventionally powered CG(X). A Navy report on the cost-effectiveness of
nuclear propulsion estimates that the additional cost to install that capability in
a conventionally powered surface combatant would be approximately $700
million. If a CGN(X) had to be much larger than the DDG-1000, there would
probably be additional costs. Press reports have indicated that a CGN(X) could
displace as much as 23,000 to 25,000 tons, or 60 percent to 70 percent more than
the DDG-1000. A large ship might be necessary, for example, if the Navy were
to use for the CGN(X) one of the reactors now used in the CVN-78 class of
aircraft carrier; according to the Navy, that reactor’s size, weight, and supporting
systems could not be accommodated within a hull the size of the DDG-1000. If
that proved to be the case, the larger, nuclear-powered CGN(X) could cost much33
more than the DDG-1000.
CBO also reported that:
The relatively simple design of the LCS and the substantial cost increases that
have occurred in the program suggest that the Navy may also have trouble
meeting its cost targets for the larger, much more complex surface combatants34
in its shipbuilding plan, such as the DDG-1000 and the CG(X).
Nuclear Power
A major issue for the CG(X) program is whether some or all CG(X)s should be
nuclear-powered. As mentioned in the “Background” section, the chairman and
ranking member of the Seapower and Expeditionary Forces subcommittee of the
House Armed Services Committee strongly support making the CG(X) a nuclear-
powered ship, and the chairman of the Defense subcommittee of the House
Appropriations Committee has referred to the CG(X) as a nuclear-powered ship. As
also mentioned earlier, Section 1012 of the FY2008 defense authorization act (H.R.
4986/P.L. 110-181 of January 28, 2008) makes it U.S. policy to construct the major
combatant ships of the Navy, including the CG(X), with integrated nuclear power
systems, unless the Secretary of Defense submits a notification to Congress that the
inclusion of an integrated nuclear power system in a given class of ship is not in the
national interest. The conference report on P.L. 110-181 contained extensive report
language relating to Section 1012 (see Appendix).


32 Ibid, p. 23.
33 Ibid, p. 24 (Box 1).
34 Ibid, p. 27.

The Navy reported to Congress in January 2007 that equipping a notional ship
broadly like the CG(X) with a nuclear power plant instead of a conventional (i.e.,
fossil-fuel) power plant would, other things held equal, increase the unit procurement
cost of follow-on ships in the class by about $600 million to $700 million in constant
FY2007 dollars. The report concluded that if oil prices in coming years are high,
much or all of the increase in unit procurement cost could be offset over the ship’s
service life by avoided fossil-fuel costs.
A nuclear-powered CG(X) would be more capable than a corresponding
conventionally powered version because of the mobility advantages of nuclear
propulsion, which include, for example, the ability to make long-distance transits at
high speeds in response to distant contingencies without need for refueling. Navy
officials have also stated that a nuclear power plant might be appropriate for the
CG(X) in light of the high energy requirements of the CG(X)’s powerful BMD-
capable radar.35
For more on the issue of nuclear power for Navy surface ships, see CRS Report
RL33946, Navy Nuclear-Powered Surface Ships: Background, Issues, and Options
for Congress, by Ronald O’Rourke.
Technical Risk
The CG(X) is to use many new technologies being developed for the DDG-
1000. The Navy is now working to retire the technical risks associated with these
technologies, so that they will be ready for installation on the two lead DDG-1000s,
which were procured in FY2007.36
A potential key technical risk specific to the CG(X) program concerns its
powerful new BMD-capable radar. The need to reduce technical risk in the CG(X)
radar may be one reason why the Navy reportedly plans to defer procurement of the
lead CG(X) from FY2011 to FY2017. A November 29, 2007, press article reported


35 See, for example, the comments of Rear Admiral Kevin McCoy at a June 25, 2007,
conference in Arlington, VA, sponsored by the American Society of Naval Engineers
(ASNE). A news article reporting McCoy’s remarks stated in part:
McCoy has cautioned that the [Navy’s] alternate propulsion study
[submitted to Congress in January 2007] is not a specific recommendation for
using nuclear propulsion for the CG(X) cruisers, which are intended to perform
missile defense.
“Really the issue I’ll tell you is not so much about the power plant but it’s
about the mission,” McCoy said June 25. “And if you think the mission is sitting
off a hostile coast looking for a BMD type mission for one-beam cycles on the
big high-powered radar, we’re talking the radar is costing in the 30 megawatts
range. Then alternatives like nuclear power start to come in.”
(Emelie Rutherford, “Despite Hill Pressure, Navy Noncommittal On
Nuclear Power For CG(X),” Inside the Navy, July 2, 2007.)
36 For more on technical risks in the DDG-1000 program, see CRS Report RL32109, op cit.

that Rear Admiral Alan Hicks, the director of the Aegis ballistic missile defense
(BMD) program, “cautioned” that
the Navy shouldn’t attempt to go with a radically advanced radar for CG (X), at
least not initially. Rather, he said, it might be wiser to go with incremental
upgrades, steadily improving radar technology on the future cruiser that will take
shape in the next decade, just as the existing Aegis system on cruisers and
destroyers today has been upgraded steadily over two decades.
“Lots of people want to build this incredible radar,” Hicks said. On the one
hand, he sees that as a valid eventual goal. But “I do believe you need to get there
in a stepped function. Jumping to a radar that is three generations ahead in one
leap is going to be terribly challenging, and may drive costs” skyward, imperiling
the need to make CG (X) affordable, he said. “So we need to be very careful how
we get a risk-reduction package to get to that cruiser,” perhaps by using existing
radar technology as a base to help reduce that development risk, he said, pointing37
to the success of the Aegis modernization program.
Hull Design
In addition to the issue of nuclear power, another ship-design issue for the
CG(X) is whether the ship should use the DDG-1000’s tumblehome hull or some
other hull. Potential alternative hulls include existing hulls such as the DDG-51 hull
and the LPD-17 amphibious ship hull, both of which are conventional flared hulls,
or a new flared hull design.
A tumblehome hull, with its reduced radar detectability, is viewed as useful for
accomplishing the DDG-1000’s mission of using its 155mm guns to strike targets
ashore — a mission that could require the DDG-1000 to operate fairly close to enemy
shore-based radars. Some observers believe that a hull with reduced detectability is
less critical for the CG(X), because the CG(X)’s AAW and BMD missions might not
require it to approach enemy shores as closely, and because the energy radiating from
the ship’s powerful BMD-capable radar will in any event provide enemy sensors with
an indication of the ship’s location. Other observers might argue that even if a ship’s
location is known, a hull with reduced detectability can improve the ship’s ability to
evade (or to use decoys to confuse) the homing devices in enemy anti-ship cruise
missile and torpedoes, or the fusing mechanisms in enemy mines.
Even if the CG(X) does not require the reduced radar detectability of a
tumblehome hull, reusing the DDG-1000’s tumblehome hull for the CG(X) might
still have economic advantages in terms of avoiding the cost of designing a new hull
(which could easily be in the hundreds of millions of dollars) and taking advantage
of production learning-curve efficiencies achieved from earlier construction of DDG-
1000s. Designing a new hull would incur hull-design costs and sacrifice the
opportunity to take advantage of DDG-1000 production learning-curve benefits. On
the other hand, a new-design hull might more easily accommodate the power plant


37 Dave Ahearn, “Large Number of Aegis Ships Would Be Needed To Shield Europe:
Admiral,” Defense Daily, November 29, 2007.

and combat system desired for the CG(X), and be designed with the latest features
for reducing its production cost.
One option for making the CG(X) a nuclear-powered ship would be to equip it
with one-half of the new twin-reactor plant that the Navy has designed for its new
Ford (CVN-78) class aircraft carriers.38 Reusing the Ford-class reactor plant would
avoid the costs of developing a new reactor plant for the CG(X) — a cost that could
exceed $1 billion.39 As mentioned earlier, the DDG-1000 hull (or an enlarged
version of the DDG-51 hull) might be too small to easily accommodate one-half of
a Ford-class plant, at least not without making changes to the plant. Using one-half
of the Ford-class plant without making changes to it might require designing a new
hull that is larger than the DDG-1000 hull. If so, then using one-half of the Ford-
class plant would pose a tradeoff between avoided reactor plant design costs and
additional hull-design costs.
Unit Affordability vs. Unit Capability
Issues such as the question of nuclear power and the ship’s hull design form part
of a more general potential general oversight issue for Congress concerning whether
the Navy has achieved the best balance in the CG(X) design between unit
affordability and unit capability. As mentioned in the “Background” section, the
CG(X) is one of the Navy’s relatively few remaining opportunities to use a new ship
design to manage the overall cost of the Navy’s shipbuilding program. Navy officials
are aware of this, but they also want the CG(X) to be capable of performing certain
intended missions, including the BMD mission that drives the need for the CG(X)
to carry a large and powerful new radar. Navy officials are seeking a design solution
for the CG(X) that represents the best balance between unit affordability and unit
capability. Achieving such a balance is a long-standing challenge in ship design.
Concerns about the potential affordability of the CG(X) have been reinforced
by the experience with DDG-1000, which turned out to be much more expensive than
originally envisaged. The Navy originally planned a total of 16 to 24 DDG-1000s
and a sustaining procurement rate of two DDG-1000s per year. Due in part to the
ship’s cost, this was reduced to a total of 7 DDG-1000s to be procured at a rate of
about one ship per year. Subsequently, on July 31, 2008, Navy officials testified that
the service wants to stop DDG-1000 procurement ships and restart DDG-51
procurement. Affordability considerations may have played a role in the Navy’s
decision.40
A dual-design solution for the CG(X) program, such as the one reportedly
considered in the CG(X) AOA (see “Background” section), is one possible strategy
for striking a balance between affordability and capability in the CG(X) program. A


38 For more on the Ford-class program, see CRS Report RS20643, Navy Ford (CVN-78)
Class (CVN-21) Aircraft Carrier Program: Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald
O’Rourke.
39 The estimated development cost of the Ford-class plant is roughly $1.5 billion.
40 For a discussion, see CRS Report RL32109, op cit.

dual-design solution could permit the Navy and Congress to respond to changes in
the strategic or budgetary environment by altering the numbers of smaller and larger
CG(X)s to be procured.41
BMD Impact on CG(X) Numbers and Schedule
An additional potential oversight issue for Congress concerns the possible effect
of the BMD mission on the required number of CG(X)s and the schedule for
procuring CG(X)s. The currently planned total of 19 CG(X)s reflects, in part, certain
assumptions about the Navy’s future role in U.S. BMD operations. The Navy’s
future in U.S. BMD operations, however, has not yet been fully defined. It is
possible that as the role becomes better defined, the total required number of CG(X)s
could change.42
A related question is whether the schedule for procuring CG(X)s is properly
aligned with foreign-country ballistic missile development programs. A 2005
defense trade press report, for example, states that “navy officials project” that China
could field TBMs capable of hitting moving ships at sea by about 2015.43 Once
CG(X) procurement were to begin, it might be possible to accelerate the procurement
dates of later ships in the program, so as to get more of the ships in service sooner.
In a situation of constrained Navy funding, however, accelerating procurement of
CG(X)s to earlier years could leave less funding available in those years for meeting
other Navy needs.


41 A dual-design solution might also be viewed as reminiscent of the so-called high-low mix
approach that was adopted in the 1970s and 1980s for the procurement of Navy surface
combatants and Air Force fighters. The high-low mix approach involved procuring a mix
of more-capable, more-expensive platforms (the “high” end of the mix) and less-capable,
less-expensive platforms (the “low” end). In the 1970s and 1980s, the Navy procured
nuclear-powered cruisers and Aegis cruisers as its high-end ships and Spruance (DD-963)
class destroyers and Oliver Hazard Perry (FFG-7) class frigates as its low-end ships. The
Air Force procured F-15s as its high-end fighters and F-16s as its low-end fighters. The Air
Force today might be viewed as again implementing a high-low mix approach through its
planned procurement of a combination of high-end F-22 fighters and more-affordable F-35
Joint Strike Fighters (JSFs). The capability ratio of a 23,000- to 25,000-ton, nuclear-
powered CG(X) relative to that of a 14,000-ton, conventionally powered CG(X) might not
necessarily be the same as that of the 1970s/1980s high-end surface combatants relative to
the 1970s/1980s low-end surface combatants, or of the F-15 relative to the F-16, or of the
F-22 relative to the F-35. The merits of the high-low mix approach as a strategy for
balancing unit capability against unit affordability have been debated on and off for years.
42 For more on this issue, see CRS Report RL33745, Sea-Based Ballistic Missile Defense
— Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O’Rourke.
43 Yihong Chang and Andrew Koch, “Is China Building A Carrier?” Jane’s Defence Weekly,
August 17, 2005. The article states that “navy officials project [that such missiles] could
be capable of targeting US warships from sometime around 2015.” A 2007 press report
states that another observer believes that a MARV-equipped version of China’s CSS-6 TBM
may be close to initial operational status. (Bill Gertz, “Inside the Ring,” Washington Times,
July 20, 2007: 6. [Item entitled “New Chinese Missiles”]. The article stated that it was
reporting information from forthcoming report on China’s military from the International
Assessment and Strategy Center authored by Richard Fisher.)

Industrial-Base Implications
The question of whether some or all CG(X)s should be nuclear-powered has
significant potential implications for the surface combatant industrial base because
the two shipyards that have built all the Navy’s cruisers and destroyers in recent years
— GD/BIW and the Ingalls yard that forms part of NGSB — are not licensed to
build nuclear-powered ships.44
The only two U.S. shipyards currently licensed to build nuclear-powered ships
for the Navy are Newport News Shipbuilding of Newport News, VA, a part of
NGSB, which builds nuclear-powered surface ships and submarines, and General
Dynamics’ Electric Boat Division (GD/EB) of Groton, CT, and Quonset Point, RI,
which builds nuclear-powered submarines. These two yards have built every
nuclear-powered ship procured for the Navy since FY1969.
There are at least three potential approaches for building nuclear-powered
CG(X)s:
!Build them at Newport News, with GD/EB possibly contributing to
the construction of the ships’ nuclear portions.
!License GD/BIW and/or Ingalls to build nuclear-powered ships, and
then build the CG(X)s at those yards.
!Build the nuclear portions of the CG(X)s at Newport News and/or
GD/EB, the non-nuclear portions at GD/BIW and/or Ingalls, and
perform final assembly, integration, and test work for the ships at
either
!Newport News and/or
GD/EB, or
!GD/BIW and/or Ingalls.
These options have significant potential implications for workloads and
employment levels at each of these shipyards.
On the question of what would be needed to license Ingalls and/or GD/BIW to
build nuclear-powered ships, the director of Naval Reactors (NR) — the office in
charge of the Navy’s nuclear propulsion program — testified in March 2007 that
Just the basics of what it takes to have a nuclear-certified yard, to build one
from scratch, or even if one existed once upon a time as it did at Pascagoula, and
we shut it down, first and foremost you have to have the facilities to do that.


44 GD/BIW has never built nuclear-powered ships, and has never been licensed to do so.
The Ingalls yard within NGSS built nuclear-powered submarines until the early 1970s but
is no longer licensed to build nuclear-powered ships. (Ingalls built 12 nuclear-powered
submarines, the last being the Parche [SSN-683], which was procured in FY1968, entered
service in 1974, and retired in 2005. Ingalls also overhauled or refueled 11 nuclear-powered
submarines. Ingalls’s nuclear facility was decommissioned in 1980.)

What that includes, and I have just some notes here, but such things as you have
to have the docks and the dry-docks and the pier capability to support nuclear
ships, whatever that would entail. You would have to have lifting and handling
equipment, cranes, that type of thing; construction facilities to build the special
nuclear components, and to store those components and protect them in the way
that would be required.
The construction facilities would be necessary for handling fuel and doing
the fueling operations that would be necessary on the ship — those types of
things. And then the second piece is, and probably the harder piece other than
just kind of the brick-and-mortar type, is building the structures, the
organizations in place to do that work, for instance, nuclear testing, specialized
nuclear engineering, nuclear production work. If you look, for instance, at
Northrop Grumman Newport News, right now, just to give you a perspective of
the people you are talking about in those departments, it is on the order of 769
people in nuclear engineering; 308 people in the major lines of control
department; 225 in nuclear quality assurance; and then almost 2,500 people who
do nuclear production work. So all of those would have to be, you would have45
to find that workforce, certify and qualify them, to be able to do that.
The director of NR testified that Newport News and GD/EB “have sufficient
capacity to accommodate nuclear-powered surface ship construction, and therefore
there is no need to make the substantial investment in time and dollars necessary to
generate additional excess capacity.”46 In light of this, the Navy testified, only the
first and third options above are “viable.”47 The director of NR testified that:
my view of this is we have some additional capacity at both Electric Boat and at
Northrop Grumman Newport News. My primary concern is if we are serious
about building another nuclear-powered warship, a new class of warship, cost is
obviously going to be some degree of concern, and certainly this additional costs,
which would be — and I don’t have a number to give you right now, but I think
you can see it would be substantial to do it even if you could. It probably doesn’t
help our case to move down the path toward building another nuclear-powered48
case, when we have the capability existing already in those existing yards.
With regard to the third option of building the nuclear portions of the ships at
Newport News and/or GD/EB, and the non-nuclear portions at Ingalls and/or
GD/BIW, the Navy testified that the “[l]ocation of final ship erection would require
additional analysis.” One Navy official, however, expressed a potential preference


45 Spoken testimony of Admiral Kirkland Donald before the Seapower and Expeditionary
Forces Subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee, March 1, 2007.
46 Statement of Admiral Kirkland H. Donald, U.S. Navy, Director, Naval Nuclear Propulsion
Program, before the House Armed Services Committee Seapower and Expeditionary Forces
Subcommittee on Nuclear Propulsion For Surface Ships, 1 March 2007, p. 13.
47 Source: Statement of The Honorable Dr. Delores M. Etter, Assistant Secretary of the Navy
(Research, Development and Acquisition), et al., before the Seapower and Expeditionary
Forces Subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee on Integrated Nuclear Power
Systems for Future Naval Surface Combatants, March 1, 2007, p. 7.
48 Spoken testimony of Admiral Kirkland Donald before the Seapower and Expeditionary
Forces Subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee, March 1, 2007.

for performing final assembly, integration, and test work at Newport News or
GD/EB, stating that:
we are building warships in modular sections now. So if we were going to [ask],
“Could you assemble this [ship], could you build modules of this ship in different
yards and put it together in a nuclear-certified yard?”, the answer is yes,
definitely, and we do that today with the Virginia Class [submarine program].
As you know, we are barging modules of [that type of] submarine up and down
the coast.
What I would want is, and sort of following along with what [NR director]
Admiral [Kirkland] Donald said, you would want the delivering yard to be the
yard where the reactor plant was built, tooled, and tested, because they have the
expertise to run through all of that nuclear work and test and certify the ship and
take it out on sea trials.
But the modules of the non-reactor plant, which is the rest of the ship, could
be built theoretically at other yards and barged or transported in other fashion to
the delivering shipyard. If I had to do it ideally, that is where I would probably
start talking to my industry partners, because although we have six [large]
shipyards [for building large navy ships], it is really two corporations [that own
them], and those two corporations each own what is now a surface combatant
shipyard and they each own a nuclear-capable shipyard. I would say if we were
going to go do this, we would sit down with them and say, you know, from a
corporation standpoint, what would be the best work flow? What would be the
best place to construct modules? And how would you do the final assembly and49
testing of a nuclear-powered warship?
For further discussion of the issue, see CRS Report RL33946, Navy
Nuclear-Powered Surface Ships: Background, Issues, and Options for Congress, by
Ronald O’Rourke.
Visibility of CG(X) Research and Development Costs
Another potential oversight issue for Congress is whether CG(X) research and
development costs are sufficiently visible in Navy budget-justification documents.
As indicated in Table 1, CG(X) research and development costs are currently found
in the Research, Development, Test and Evaluation, Navy (RDTEN) appropriation
account in:
!Projects 3105, 3106, and 3107 of Program Element (PE)
PE0604300N (DDG-1000 Total Ship System Engineering;
Previously SC-21 Total Ship System Engineering); and
!Project 3186 of PE0604501N (Advanced Above Water Sensors).


49 Spoken testimony of Vice Admiral Paul E. Sullivan, Commander, Naval Sea Systems
Command, to the Seapower and Expeditionary Forces Subcommittee of the House Armed
Services Committee, March 1, 2007.

As shown in the notes to Table 1, neither PE 0604300N nor PE 0604501N
includes the term CG(X) in its name, and while the name for Project 3107 includes
the term CG(X), the names for Projects 3105, 3106, and 3186 do not, making it
potentially more difficult to recognize that funding for the CG(X) program might be
contained in these projects. This could make it more difficult to identify and track
the total amount of CG(X) research and development funding in the Navy’s budget.
Options for Congress
Potential options for Congress for the CG(X) program, some of which could be
combined, include but are not limited to the following:
!approve the CG(X) program as proposed by the Navy;
!direct the Navy to alter the names of CG(X)-related research and
development PEs and projects so that CG(X)-related research and
development funding can be more easily identified and tracked;
!institute increased requirements for the Navy to report to Congress
on the goals and status of the CG(X) program;
!request independent analyses of the CG(X) program by GAO or
CBO;
!modify the CG(X) program’s proposed research and development
funding request;
!pass legislation, or include report language, on questions such as the
following:
!a potential target procurement cost of the CG(X), or
!other aspects of the CG(X) acquisition strategy, such as
the use of competition in the awarding of construction
contracts for the ships;
!defer or reject the CG(X) program in favor of potential alternatives,
such as a service-life extension program (SLEP) for the Navy’s 22
Aegis cruisers that would include a more robust upgrading of the
ships’ AAW and BMD capabilities than currently planned.50


50 An October 2006 journal article by a two retired Navy admirals (including a former Vice
Chief of Naval Operations) proposed modernizing and extending the service lives of the
Navy’s Aegis cruisers and destroyers through a service life extension program (SLEP).
Robert J. Natter and Donald Pilling, “Achieving the Right Mix,” U.S. Naval Institute
Proceedings, October 2006: 14-16. The authors state that five to eight Aegis ships per year
might be modernized under such a program, at a cost of about $300 million to $500 million
per ship. The article suggests that the program could be a part of a scenario in which
constraints on Navy shipbuilding funding limit, for a time at least, procurement of
(continued...)

Legislative Activity for FY2009
FY2009 Defense Authorization Bill (S. 3001/P.L. 110-417)
House. The House Armed Services Committee, in its report (H.Rept. 110-

652 of May 16, 2008) on the FY2009 defense authorization bill (H.R. 5658),


recommended approval of the Navy’s FY2009 funding request for research and
development work on the CG(X). (Page 186, lines 97, 98, and 104)
Senate. The Senate Armed Services Committee, in its report (S.Rept. 110-

335 of May 12, 2008) on the FY2009 defense authorization bill (S. 3001),


recommended reducing the Navy’s FY2009 funding request for research and
development work on the CG(X) by $120.8 million. (Page 181, lines 97 and 98, and
page 182, line 104) The report stated:
The John Warner National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2007
(Public Law 109 — 364) required that the Navy include nuclear power in its
Analysis of Alternatives (AoA) for the CG(X) propulsion system.
Section 1012 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year

2008 (Public Law 110 — 181) further requires that CG(X) be nuclear powered,


unless the Secretary of Defense submits a notification that inclusion of an
integrated nuclear power system is not in the national interest. The statement of
managers accompanying that act directed the Secretary of the Navy to submit a
report with the budget request for fiscal year 2009 providing information
regarding CG(X) design, cost, schedule, industrial base considerations, and risk
assessment; that would reflect the results of the CG(X) AoA and provide
evidence that the Navy is on schedule for procuring the first ship of the class in

2011.


The Secretary of the Navy has delayed submission of the CG(X) report
because the CG(X) AoA, which was scheduled to be complete by third quarter
fiscal year 2007, remains under review by the Navy. Fundamental considerations


50 (...continued)
DDG-1000s and CG(X)s to combined rate of one per year. The article provides no figures
on the service lives of the Aegis ships before or after the extension, so it is unclear whether
the authors are proposing to extend their lives from 35 years (or some lower figure) to 40
years (or some other figure).
Whether it would be feasible or cost effective today to extend the lives of the Aegis cruisers
is unclear. Depending on how intensively they are used in coming years, the Aegis cruisers
might be worn out in terms of their basic structural or mechanical condition by age 35.
(Some observers believe they might be worn out by age 30.) If the Aegis cruisers are in
good enough structural and mechanical condition to permit operation beyond age 35,
experience with past surface combatant designs suggests that the ships might have
insufficient space, weight-carrying ability, or electrical power to accommodate the new
sensors and weapons that could be needed at that point to keep them mission-effective
beyond age 35. The Navy has limited experience operating modern cruisers and destroyers
beyond age 35, and thus limited experience with the engineering issues that might arise from
attempting to operate such ships to age 40.

regarding the cruiser’s requirements, characteristics, technology readiness levels,
and affordability continue to be studied, making it likely that milestone A, which
was targeted for September 2007, will slip into 2009. By all measures, there is
no reasonable path for the next-generation cruiser to meet the current schedule
for milestone B and award of a ship construction contract in 2011.
Pending completion of the AoA, determination of radar requirements, ship
characteristics, propulsion system, and an executable program schedule, and in
view of the delay to program major milestones, the activities planned for fiscal
years 2008 and 2009 cannot be executed per the schedule reflected in the fiscal
year 2009 budget request. Therefore, the committee recommends a decrease of
$87.2 million in PE 64300N and a decrease of $33.6 million in PE 64501N.
These recommended decreases would maintain the cruiser development activities
at the same level as was funded in fiscal year 2008. (Page 195)
Compromise. In lieu of a conference report, there was compromise version
of S. 3001 that was accompanied by a joint explanatory statement. Section 4 of S.
3001/P.L. 110-417 of October 14, 2008, states that the joint explanatory statement
“shall have the same effect with respect to the implementation of this Act as if it were
a joint explanatory statement of a committee of conference.” The funding tables
accompanying the joint explanatory statement recommend approval of the Navy’s
FY2009 funding request for research and development work on the CG(X).
FY2009 Defense Appropriations Bill (S. 2638/P.L. 110-329)
House. The House Appropriations Committee did not file a report on the
FY2009 defense appropriations bill. On July 30, 2008, Representative John Murtha,
the chairman of the Defense subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee,51
issued a press release summarizing the subcommittee’s markup of the bill. The
press release does not mention the CG(X).
Senate. The Senate Appropriations Committee did not file a report on the
FY2009 defense appropriations bill. On September 10, 2008, the committee issued
a press release summarizing the markup of the bill that day by its Defense
subcommittee. The press release stated that the markup recommended reducing
development funding for the CG(X) by $121 million “due to delay in analysis of
alternatives .”52
Compromise. In lieu of a conference report, there was a compromise version
of the FY2009 defense appropriations bill that was incorporated as Division C of
H.R. 2638/P.L. 110-329 of September 30, 2008. (H.R. 2638, introduced as the
FY2008 Department of Homeland Security appropriations bill, was later amended
to become an FY2009 consolidated appropriations bill that includes, among other
things, the FY2009 defense appropriations bill.) The compromise version of H.R.


51 July 30, 2008, press release from The Honorable John P. Murtha, entitled “Murtha
Summary of the FY09 Defense Appropriations Bill.”
52 September 10, 2008, press release from Senate Appropriations Committee, entitled
“Senate Defense Appropriations Subcommittee Approves Fiscal Year 2009 Defense
Appropriations Bill,” p. 3.

2638 was accompanied by an explanatory statement. Section 4 of H.R. 2638 states
that the explanatory statement “shall have the same effect with respect to the
allocation of funds and implementation of this Act as if it were a joint explanatory
statement of a committee of conference.”
The explanatory statement reduces the Navy’s FY2009 research and
development funding request for the CG(X) by $120.8 million, including a reduction
of $87.2 million in PE0604300N (DDG-1000 [aka SC-21] Total Ship System
Engineering) for “CG(X) Program Delay,” and a reduction of $33.6 million in
PE0604501N (Advanced Above Water Sensors), also for “CG(X) Program Delay.”



Appendix. FY2008 Defense Authorization Act Bill
and Report Language
The FY2008 defense authorization bill was first reported by the House and
Senate Armed Services Committees as H.R. 1585 and S. 1547, respectively. The
president vetoed H.R. 1585 on December 28, 2007, citing to objections unrelated to
the matters discussed in this CRS report. H.R. 1585 was succeeded by H.R. 4986,
a bill that modified certain provisions of H.R. 1585 as to take into account the
president’s objections. H.R. 4986 was signed into law as P.L. 110-181 on January
28, 2008. For the parts of H.R. 4986 that are the same as H.R. 1585, including the
matters discussed in this CRS report, the conference report on H.R. 1585 (H.Rept.

110-477 of December 6, 2008 in effect serves as the conference report for H.R. 4986.


House Report
The House Armed Services Committee, in its report (H.Rept. 110-146 of May

11, 2007) on H.R 1585 stated the following:


The committee believes that the mobility, endurance, and electric power
generation capability of nuclear powered warships is essential to the next
generation of Navy cruisers. The Navy’s report to Congress on alternative
propulsion methods for surface combatants and amphibious warfare ships,
required by section 130 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2006 (Public Law 109-163), indicated that the total lifecycle cost for
medium-sized nuclear surface combatants is equivalent to conventionally
powered ships. The committee notes that this study only compared acquisition
and maintenance costs and did not analyze the increased speed and endurance
capability of nuclear powered vessels.
The committee believes that the primary escort vessels for the Navy’s fleet
of aircraft carriers should have the same speed and endurance capability as the
aircraft carrier. The committee also notes that surface combatants with nuclear
propulsion systems would be more capable during independent operations
because there would be no need for underway fuel replenishment. (Page 387)
Conference Report
Section 1012 of the conference report (H.Rept. 110-477 of December 6, 2007)
on H.R. 1585 stated:
SEC. 1012. POLICY RELATING TO MAJOR COMBATANT VESSELS
OF THE STRIKE FORCES OF THE UNITED STATES NAVY.
(a) INTEGRATED NUCLEAR POWER SYSTEMS. — It is the policy of
the United States to construct the major combatant vessels of the strike forces of
the United States Navy, including all new classes of such vessels, with integrated
nuclear power systems.
(b) REQUIREMENT TO REQUEST NUCLEAR VESSELS. — If a request
is submitted to Congress in the budget for a fiscal year for construction of a new
class of major combatant vessel for the strike forces of the United States, the



request shall be for such a vessel with an integrated nuclear power system, unless
the Secretary of Defense submits with the request a notification to Congress that
the inclusion of an integrated nuclear power system in such vessel is not in the
national interest.
(c) DEFINITIONS. — In this section:
(1) MAJOR COMBATANT VESSELS OF THE STRIKE FORCES OF
THE UNITED STATES NAVY. — The term “major combatant vessels of the
strike forces of the United States Navy” means the following:
(A) Submarines.
(B) Aircraft carriers.
(C) Cruisers, battleships, or other large surface combatants whose primary
mission includes protection of carrier strike groups, expeditionary strike groups,
and vessels comprising a sea base.
(2) INTEGRATED NUCLEAR POWER SYSTEM. — The term
“integrated nuclear power system” means a ship engineering system that uses a
naval nuclear reactor as its energy source and generates sufficient electric energy
to provide power to the ship’s electrical loads, including its combat systems and
propulsion motors.
(3) BUDGET. — The term “budget” means the budget that is submitted to
Congress by the President under section 1105(a) of title 31, United States Code.
Regarding Section 1012, the conference report stated:
The Navy’s next opportunity to apply this guidance will be the next
generation cruiser, or “CG(X)”. Under the current future-years defense program
(FYDP), the Navy plans to award the construction contract for CG(X) in fiscal
year 2011. Under this provision, the next cruiser would be identified as
“CGN(X)” to designate the ship as nuclear powered. Under the Navy’s normal
shipbuilding schedule for the two programs that already have nuclear power
systems (aircraft carriers and submarines), the Navy seeks authorization and
appropriations for long lead time nuclear components for ships 2 years prior to
full authorization and appropriation for construction.
The conferees recognize that the milestone decision for the Navy’s CG(X)
is only months away. After that milestone decision, the Navy and its contractors
will begin a significant design effort, and, in that process, will be making
significant tradeoff decisions and discarding major options (such as propulsion
alternatives). This is the normal process for the Navy and the Department of
Defense (DOD) to make choices that will lead to producing a contract design that
will be the basis for awarding the construction contract for the lead ship in 2011.
In order for the Navy to live by the spirit of this guidance, the conferees
agree that:
(1) the Navy would be required to proceed through the contract design
phase of the program with a comprehensive effort to design a CGN(X)
independent of the outcome of decisions that the Navy regarding any preferred
propulsion system for the next generation cruiser;



(2) if the Navy intends to maintain the schedule in the current FYDP and
award a vessel in fiscal year 2011, the Navy would need to request advance
procurement for nuclear components in the fiscal year 2009 budget request; and
(3) the Navy must consider options for:
(a) maintaining the segment of the industrial base that currently produces
the conventionally powered destroyer and amphibious forces of the Navy;
(b) certifying yards which comprise that segment of the industrial base to
build nuclear-powered vessels; or
(c) seeking other alternatives for building non-nuclear ships in the future
if the Navy is only building nuclear-powered surface combatant ships for some
period of time as it builds CGN(X) vessels; and
(d) identifying sources of funds to pay for the additional near-term costs of
the integrated nuclear power system, either from offsets within the Navy’s
budget, from elsewhere within the Department’s resources, or from gaining
additional funds for DOD overall.
The conferees recognize that these considerations will require significant
additional near-term investment by the Navy. Some in the Navy have asserted
that, despite such added investment, the Navy would not be ready to award a
shipbuilding contract for a CGN(X) in fiscal year 2011 as in the current FYDP.
Section 128 of the John Warner National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2007 (Public Law 109-364) required that the Navy include nuclear
power in its Analysis of Alternatives (AOA) for the CG(X) propulsion system.
The conferees are aware that the CG(X) AOA is nearing completion, in which
case the Navy should have some indications of what it will require to design and
construct a CGN(X) class.
Accordingly, the conferees direct the Secretary of the Navy to submit a
report to the congressional defense committees with the budget request for fiscal
year 2009 providing the following information:
(1) the set of next generation cruiser characteristics, such as displacement
and manning, which would be affected by the requirement for including an
integrated nuclear power system;
(2) the Navy’s estimate for additional costs to develop, design, and
construct a CGN(X) to fill the requirement for the next generation cruiser, and
the optimal phasing of those costs in order to deliver CGN(X) most affordably;
(3) the Navy’s assessment of any effects on the delivery schedule for the
first ship of the next generation cruiser class that would be associated with
shifting the design to incorporate an integrated nuclear propulsion system,
options for reducing or eliminating those schedule effects, and alternatives for
meeting next generation cruiser requirements during any intervening period if the
cruiser’s full operational capability were delayed;



(4) the Navy’s estimate for the cost associated with certifying those
shipyards that currently produce conventionally powered surface combatants, to
be capable of constructing and integrating a nuclear-powered combatant;
(5) any other potential effects on the Navy’s 30-year shipbuilding plan as
a result of implementing these factors;
(6) such other considerations that would need to be addressed in parallel
with design and construction of a CGN(X) class, including any unique test and
training facilities, facilities and infrastructure requirements for potential CGN(X)
homeports, and environmental assessments that may require long-term
coordination and planning; and
(7) an assessment of the highest risk areas associated with meeting this
requirement, and the Navy’s alternatives for mitigating such risk. (Pages 984-

986)