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First ships of each class of littoral combat ships, USS Freedom and USS Independence, maneuver together during an exercise off the coast of Southern California, 2011 As of December 2019 [update] , a total of 35 littoral combat ships is planned, including 16 Freedom -class ships and 19 Independence -class ships. [ 184 ]
The Freedom class is one of two classes of the littoral combat ship program, built for the United States Navy. [20]The Freedom class was proposed by a consortium formed by Lockheed Martin as "prime contractor" and by Fincantieri (project) through the subsidiary Marinette Marine (manufacturer) as a contender for a fleet of small, multipurpose warships to operate in the littoral zone.
RHIB deployed from a US Navy destroyer operating in a littoral area. In military and naval warfare, littoral warfare is operations in and around the littoral zone, within a certain distance of shore, including surveillance, mine-clearing and support for landing operations and other types of combat shifting from water to ground, and back.
USS Independence (LCS-2) is the lead ship of the Independence-class of littoral combat ships. She is the sixth ship of the United States Navy to be named for the concept of independence. The design was produced by the General Dynamics consortium for the Navy's LCS program, and competes with the Lockheed Martin–designed Freedom variant. [10]
The U.S. Navy's newest combat ship, the future USS Beloit (LCS 29), at Veterans Park in Milwaukee on Thursday, Nov. 21, 2024. The 387-foot-long Freedom-variant littoral combat ship will officially ...
Commission date: August 8, 2020 Unit type: Littoral combat ship Class: Freedom-class 22. USS Delbert D. Black (DDG-119)
The U.S. Navy has just unveiled one of its latest ships: the Kansas City LCS 22, an Independence-Class Littoral combat ship, in San Diego.
Independence under construction, 2007.. Planning for a class of smaller, agile, multipurpose warships to operate in the littoral zone began in the early 2000s. In July 2003, a proposal by General Dynamics (partnering with Austal USA, the American subsidiary of Australian shipbuilder Austal) was approved by the Navy, with a contract for two vessels. [24]