| Saturday, November 22, 2008 |
USS Virginia Conducts Tomahawk Cruise Missile LaunchesNews >> Sea Power >> Development Released on Friday, September 05, 2008The test launches, the first ever for a Virginia-class submarine, included the launch and extended flight of multiple missiles to demonstrate the Virginia's launch capabilities. "Completing the Tomahawk flight tests is an important milestone in proving the class design and brings us a significant step closer to the program's full rate production decision in 2009," said Rear Adm. (sel.) David Johnson, Virginia Class program manager. "The Virginia Class was conceived and designed as a multi-purpose warship, and these flight tests are another indication of the significant capabilities a Virginia submarine brings to the fight." Capt. Rick McQueen, program manager for Naval Air Systems Command's (NAVAIR) Tomahawk Program Office, noted that the missile launches were the culmination of years of a joint effort between NAVAIR and Naval Sea Systems Command developers and engineers. "Virginia Class submarines provide a brand new flexible, stealthy platform for employment of the Tomahawk Weapon System, while the Tomahawk provides the platform with a long range, accurate and flexible strike capability to support the Navy's warfighting roles," said McQueen. The submarine force has experienced an influx of capability during the past 15 months, according to Rear Adm. William Hilarides, Program Executive Officer Submarines. As examples, he cited the SSGN Strike certification of USS Florida (SSGN 728) in May 2007; USS Ohio's (SSGN 726) participation as a special operations forces command, control and support platform during the Exercise Key Resolve/Foal Eagle in February/March 2008; and the Submarine Rescue Diving and Recompression System's successful debut during the international Exercise Bold Monarch in May/June 2008. "We will keep pushing the boundaries to deliver the capability to the hands of the warfighter," Hilarides concluded. The Virginia Class is currently executing operational evaluation (OPEVAL) testing that is designed to evaluate the submarine's war fighting capabilities in operationally realistic and demanding scenarios across its seven mission areas � anti-submarine; anti-surface ship; strike; naval special warfare; intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance; battle group support; and mine warfare. The OPEVAL testing, conducted by the Commander, Operational Test and Evaluation Force, continues through the fall. The Virginia Class has celebrated three construction milestones so far this year � the April 12 keel authentication of Pre-Commissioning Unit (PCU) New Mexico (SSN 779), USS North Carolina's (SSN 777) commissioning May 3, and the Christening of PCU New Hampshire (SSN 778) June 21. New Hampshire will be commissioned into the Navy Oct. 25 at Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, marking the first time in 12 years the Navy has commissioned two submarines of the same class in the same year. In the coming months the Virginia Class program will also celebrate PCU Missouri's (SSN 780) keel laying Sept. 27 at General Dynamics Electric Boat's Groton, Conn., facility, and PCU New Mexico's christening at Northrop Grumman Shipbuilding's shipyard in Newport News, Va., Dec. 13. NAVAIR - Naval Air Systems OPEVAL - Operational Evaluation PCU - Pre-Commissioning Unit SSGN - Nuclear-powered Guided Missile Submarine SSN - Nuclear-powered Attack Submarine USS - United States Ship |
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