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Navy LX(R) Amphibious Ship Program:
Background and Issues for Congress

Ronald O'Rourke
Specialist in Naval Affairs
March 25, 2015
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R43543

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Navy LX(R) Amphibious Ship Program: Background and Issues for Congress

Summary
The LX(R) program is a program to build a new class of 11 amphibious ships for the Navy. The
Navy wants to procure the first LX(R) in FY2020. LX(R)s are to replace 12 aging Whidbey
Island/Harpers Ferry (LSD-41/49) class amphibious ships, the first of which will reach age 40 in
2025.
The primary function of Navy amphibious ships is to lift (i.e., transport) U.S. Marines and their
equipment and supplies to distant operating areas, and enable Marines to conduct expeditionary
operations ashore in those areas. Although amphibious ships are designed to support Marine
landings against opposing military forces, they are also used for operations in permissive or
benign situations where there are no opposing forces.
An October 20, 2014, press report stated that Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus had signed a
decision memorandum dated October 14 designating a design based on that of the Navy’s San
Antonio (LPD-17) class amphibious ship as the Navy’s preferred alternative for the design of the
LX(R).
The Navy’s proposed FY2016 budget requests $46.5 million in research and development
funding for the LX(R) program, and $550 million to complete the estimated procurement cost of
a 12th LPD-17 class amphibious ship.
Issues for Congress include the following:
• whether to approve, reject, or modify the Navy’s FY2016 requests for research
and development funding for the LX(R) program and procurement funding for a
12th LPD-17 class ship;
• whether, in response to the procurement of a 12th LPD-17 class ship, the LX(R)
program should be reduced from 11 ships to 10 ships;
• whether to approve, reject, or modify the Navy’s proposal to use a combined
solicitation for contract design support for the LX(R) program, the detailed
design and construction of an amphibious assault ship called LHA-8 that the
Navy wants to procure in FY2017, and the detailed design and construction of
the first six TAO(X) oilers, and to limit the bidding in this combined solicitation
to HII/Ingalls and GD/NASSCO; and
• whether to accelerate the procurement of the first LX(R) from FY2020 to an
earlier year.


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Contents
Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 1
Background ...................................................................................................................................... 1
Amphibious Ships in General .................................................................................................... 1
Roles and Missions of Amphibious Ships ........................................................................... 1
Types of Amphibious Ships ................................................................................................. 2
Amphibious Lift Goal ......................................................................................................... 2
Existing Force of LSD-41/49 Class Ships ................................................................................. 3
LX(R) Program .......................................................................................................................... 4
Total of 11 Ships Envisaged ................................................................................................ 4
Program Schedule ............................................................................................................... 4
Program Funding ................................................................................................................. 5
Unit Procurement Cost Target ............................................................................................. 5
Analysis of Alternatives (AoA) ........................................................................................... 5
Design Based on LPD-17 Hull Designated by Navy as Preferred Alternative for
LX(R) ............................................................................................................................... 6
Combined Solicitation Limited to Two Builders ................................................................. 6
Funding for a 12th LPD-17 Class Ship ....................................................................................... 7
Issues for Congress .......................................................................................................................... 7
FY2016 Funding for LX(R) and LPD-17 Programs.................................................................. 7
Total Number of LX(R) Ships ................................................................................................... 8
Navy’s Proposal for Combined Solicitation Limited to Two Builders ...................................... 8
Accelerating Procurement Date for First LX(R) ..................................................................... 10
Legislative Activity for FY2016 .................................................................................................... 11
FY2016 Budget ....................................................................................................................... 11

Figures
Figure 1. LSD-41/49 Class Ship ...................................................................................................... 4

Tables
Table 1. LX(R) Program Funding .................................................................................................... 5

Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 11

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Introduction
This report provides background information and issues for Congress on the LX(R) amphibious
ship program, a Navy program to build a new class of 11 amphibious ships. The Navy wants to
procure the first LX(R) in FY2020.
The LX(R) program raises a number of oversight issues for Congress. Decisions Congress makes
on the LX(R) program will affect Navy capabilities and funding requirements, and the U.S.
shipbuilding industrial base.
Background
Amphibious Ships in General
Roles and Missions of Amphibious Ships
The primary function of Navy amphibious ships is to lift (i.e., transport) U.S. Marines and their
equipment and supplies to distant operating areas, and enable Marines to conduct expeditionary
operations ashore in those areas. Although amphibious ships are designed to support Marine
landings against opposing military forces, they are also used for operations in permissive or
benign situations where there are no opposing forces. Due to their large storage spaces and their
ability to use helicopters and landing craft to transfer people, equipment, and supplies from ship
to shore without need for port facilities,1 amphibious ships are potentially useful for a range of
combat and non-combat operations.2

1 Amphibious ships have berthing spaces for Marines; storage space for their wheeled vehicles, their other combat
equipment, and their supplies; flight decks and hangar decks for their helicopters and vertical take-off and landing
(VTOL) fixed-wing aircraft; and well decks for storing and launching their landing craft. (A well deck is a large,
garage-like space in the stern of the ship. It can be flooded with water so that landing craft can leave or return to the
ship. Access to the well deck is protected by a large stern gate that is somewhat like a garage door.)
2 Amphibious ships and their embarked Marine forces can be used for launching and conducting humanitarian-
assistance and disaster-response (HA/DR) operations; peacetime engagement and partnership-building activities, such
as exercises; other nation-building operations, such as reconstruction operations; operations to train, advise, and assist
foreign military forces; peace-enforcement operations; non-combatant evacuation operations (NEOs); maritime-
security operations, such as anti-piracy operations; smaller-scale strike and counter-terrorism operations; and larger-
scale ground combat operations. Amphibious ships and their embarked Marine forces can also be used for maintaining
forward-deployed naval presence for purposes of deterrence, reassurance, and maintaining regional stability.
Although the Marines have not conducted a large-scale amphibious assault against opposing military forces since the
Korean conflict, Marine Corps officials stated in 2008 that about 85 U.S. amphibious operations of other kinds were
conducted between 1990 and April 2008. (Source: Marine Corps briefing to CRS on April 25, 2008.) In addition,
presenting the potential for conducting an amphibious landing can generate tactical benefits, even if the landing is not
carried out. During the 1991 Persian Gulf conflict, for example, the potential for conducting an amphibious landing by
a force of about 17,000 Marines embarked on amphibious ships in the Persian Gulf tied down several Iraqi divisions in
coastal-defense positions. Those Iraqi divisions’ positions were not available for use against U.S.-coalition ground
forces moving north from Saudi Arabia. (See CRS Report 91-421, Persian Gulf War: Defense Policy Implications for
Congress
, coordinated by Ronald O’Rourke, p. 41. [May 15, 1991; out of print and available directly from the report
coordinator.])
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On any given day, some of the Navy’s amphibious ships, like some of the Navy’s other ships, are
forward-deployed to various overseas operating areas. Forward-deployed U.S. Navy amphibious
ships are often organized into three-ship formations called amphibious ready groups (ARGs).3 On
average, two or perhaps three ARGs might be forward-deployed at any given time. Amphibious
ships are also sometimes forward-deployed on an individual basis to lower-threat operating areas,
particularly for conducting peacetime engagement activities with foreign countries or for
responding to smaller-scale contingencies.
Types of Amphibious Ships
Navy amphibious ships can be divided into two main groups—the so-called “big-deck”
amphibious assault ships, designated LHA and LHD, which look like medium-sized aircraft
carriers, and the smaller (but still sizeable) amphibious ships designated LPD or LSD, which are
sometimes called “small-deck” amphibious ships.
U.S. Navy amphibious ships have designations starting with the letter L, as in amphibious
landing. LHA can be translated as landing ship, helicopter-capable, assault; LHD can be
translated as landing ship, helicopter-capable, well deck; LPD can be translated as landing ship,
helicopter platform, well deck; and LSD can be translated as landing ship, well deck. Whether
noted in the designation or not, almost all these ships have well decks.4 In the designation LX(R),
the X means that the exact design of the ship has not yet been determined, and the R means it is
intended as a replacement for existing ships.
The LHAs and LHDs have large flight decks and hangar decks for embarking and operating
numerous helicopters and vertical or short takeoff and landing (V/STOL) fixed-wing aircraft,
while the LSDs and LPDs have much smaller flight decks and hangar decks for embarking and
operating smaller numbers of helicopters. The LHAs and LHDs, as bigger ships, in general can
individually embark more Marines and equipment than the LSDs and LPDs.
Amphibious Lift Goal
The Navy’s newly revised 308-ship force structure goal calls for achieving and maintaining a 34-
ship amphibious force that includes 11 LHA/LHA-type amphibious assault ships, 12 San Antonio
(LPD-17) class amphibious ships, and 11 LSD/LX(R)-type amphibious ships (11+12+11). Navy
and Marine Corps officials had previously agreed that a 33-ship (11+11+11) force would
minimally meet the Marine Corps’ goal of having an amphibious ship force with enough
combined capacity to lift the assault echelons (AEs) of 2.0 Marine Expeditionary Brigades
(MEBs). A 33-ship force would include 15 amphibious ships for each MEB, plus 3 additional
ships to account for roughly 10% of the amphibious ship force being in overhaul at any given
time. In February and March 2015 testimony, the Navy has explained that the 33-ship (11+11+11)

3 An ARG notionally includes three amphibious ships—one LHA or LHD, one LSD, and one LPD. These three
amphibious ships together can embark a Marine expeditionary unit (MEU) consisting of about 2,200 Marines, their
aircraft, their landing craft, their combat equipment, and about 15 days’ worth of supplies. ARGs can operate in
conjunction with carrier strike groups (CSGs) to form larger naval task forces; ARGs can also be broken up into
individual ships that are sent to separate operating areas.
4 The exceptions are LHAs 6 and 7, which do not have well decks and instead have expanded aviation support
capabilities. For an explanation of well decks, see footnote 1.
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requirement has been revised to a 34-ship (11+12+11) requirement to reflect the anticipated
procurement in FY2016 of a 12th LPD-17 class ship.5
Marine Corps and Navy officials also agree that a 38-ship amphibious force would more fully
meet the Marine Corps’ 2.0 MEB AE amphibious lift requirement. Such a force would include 17
amphibious ships for each MEB, plus 4 additional ships to account for ships in overhaul.
Although a 38-ship force would more fully meet the Marine Corps’ lift requirement, the Navy and
Marine Corps agreed to accept the operational risks associated with having a 33-ship (now 34-
ship) force rather than a 38-ship force as a means of living within fiscal constraints.6
The requirement for a force of 34 or 38 amphibious ships relates primarily to meeting wartime
needs for amphibious lift. Navy and Marine Corps officials have also testified that fully meeting
U.S. regional combatant commander (COCOM) requests for day-to-day forward deployments of
amphibious ships would require a force of 50 or more amphibious ships. For example, in
testimony to the Seapower and Projection Forces subcommittee of the House Armed Services
Committee on February 25, 2015, Marine Corps Lieutenant General Kenneth J. Glueck, Jr.,
Deputy Commandant for Combat Development and Integration and Commanding General of the
Marine Corps Combat Development Command, stated that the number needed to fully meet
COCOM demands for forward-deployed amphibious ships is “close to 54.”7
Existing Force of LSD-41/49 Class Ships
The Navy’s existing force of LSD-type ships includes 12 Whidbey Island/Harpers Ferry (LSD-
41/49) class ships (Figure 1).8 These ships were procured between FY1981 and FY1993 and
entered service between 1985 and 1998. They have an expected service life of 40 years; the first
ship will reach that age in 2025. The ships are about 609 feet long and have a full load
displacement of about 16,800 tons. The class includes 12 ships because they were built at a time
when the Navy was planning a 36-ship (12+12+12) amphibious force.
The first three LSD-41/49 class ships were built by Lockheed Shipbuilding of Seattle, WA, a firm
that subsequently exited the Navy shipbuilding business. The final nine ships were built by
Avondale Shipyards of New Orleans, LA, a shipyard that eventually became part of the
shipbuilding firm Huntington Ingalls Industries (HII). HII is currently winding down Navy
shipbuilding operations at Avondale and plans to have Avondale exit the Navy shipbuilding
business. (HII continues to operate two other shipyards that build Navy ships—Ingalls
Shipbuilding in Pascagoula, MS, and Newport News Shipbuilding in Newport News, VA.)

5 See, for example, the spoken remarks of Vice Admiral Joseph P. Mulloy, Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for
Integration of Capabilities and Resources, at a February 25, 2015, hearing on Department of the Navy acquisition
programs before the Seapower and Projection Forces subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee, and at a
March 18, 2015, hearing on Navy shipbuilding issues before the Seapower subcommittee of the Senate Armed Services
Committee, as reflected in the transcripts of the hearings.
6 For a more detailed review of the 33- and 38-ship force structure requirements, see Appendix A of CRS Report
RL34476, Navy LPD-17 Amphibious Ship Procurement: Background, Issues, and Options for Congress, by Ronald
O'Rourke, which is an archived report.
7 Source: Spoken testimony of Lieutenant General Glueck, as reflected in transcript of hearing.
8 The class was initially known as the Whidbey Island (LSD-41) class. The final four ships in the class, beginning with
Harpers Ferry (LSD-49), were built to a modified version of the original LSD-41 design, prompting the name of the
class to be changed to the Harpers Ferry/Whidbey Island (LSD-41/49) class. Some sources refer to these 12 ships as
two separate classes.
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Figure 1. LSD-41/49 Class Ship

Source: U.S. Navy photo accessed May 7, 2014, at http://www.navy.mil/gallery_search_results.asp?terms=
lsd+52&page=4&r=4. The Navy’s caption for the photo states that the photo is dated July 13, 2013, and that it
shows the Pearl Harbor (LSD-52) anchored off Majuro atoll in the Republic of the Marshall Islands during an
exercise called Pacific Partnership 2013.
LX(R) Program9
Total of 11 Ships Envisaged
Consistent with the newly revised 34-ship amphibious force level goal, the Navy envisages
building 11 new LX(R)s as replacements for the 12 LSD-41/49 class ships.
Program Schedule
The Navy wants to procure the first LX(R) in FY202 and the remaining 10 at a rate of one per
year from FY2022 through FY2031.
The Navy’s FY2012 budget submission scheduled the procurement of the first LX(R) for
FY2017. The Navy’s FY2013, FY2014, and FY2015 budget submissions deferred the scheduled
procurement of the first LX(R) progressively, to FY2018, FY2019, and FY2020, respectively.
The Navy’s FY2016 budget submission, like the Navy’s FY2015 budget submission, schedules it
for FY2020.

9 The LX(R) program was previously referred to as the LSD(X) program; the designation was changed to LX(R) in
2012 to signal that the replacement for the existing LSD-41/49 class ships would be an amphibious ship that would best
meet future Navy and Marine Corps needs, regardless of whether that turns out to be a ship that one might refer to as an
LSD. For an article discussing the change in the program’s designation, see Christopher P. Cavas, “Different Missions
Might Await New USN Amphib,” DefenseNews.com, November 12, 2012.
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Program Funding
Table 1 shows LX(R) program funding for FY2015-FY2020. The procurement funding shown
for FY2019 is advance procurement (AP) funding for the first ship in the class.
Table 1. LX(R) Program Funding
Millions of dollars, rounded to nearest tenth
FY16
FY17
FY18
FY19
FY20
FY15
(req.)
(proj.)
(proj.)
(proj.)
(proj.)
Research and development
36.9
46.5
28.7
12.4
9.5
9.7
Procurement 0
0
0
0
170.8
1,624.1
TOTAL 36.9
46.5
28.7
12.4
180.3
1,633.8
Source: Navy FY2016 budget submission.
Notes: Research and development funding is Project 2474 (LX(R) Design and Total Ship Integration) within PE
(Program Element) 0604454N (LX(R)). Procurement funding in FY2019 is advance procurement (AP) funding for
the first ship in the class, which is scheduled for procurement in FY2020.
Unit Procurement Cost Target
The Navy’s unit procurement cost targets for the LX(R) program are $1,643 million in constant
FY2014 dollars for the lead ship, and an average of $1,400 million in constant FY2014 dollars for
ships 2 through 11.10
Analysis of Alternatives (AoA)
From the first quarter of FY2013 through March 2014, the Navy conducted an Analysis of
Alternatives (AoA) to evaluate alternative design concepts for the LX(R). Concepts evaluated
included the existing LPD-17 design (which apparently was included primarily as a baseline or
reference design for helping the Navy to evaluate other LX(R) design concepts, because the Navy
considers the existing LPD-17 design to be unaffordable for the purposes of the LX(R)
program),11 a modified (reduced capability/reduced-cost) version of the LPD-17 design, brand
new (i.e., “clean-sheet”) designs, and foreign designs. A June 1, 2014, press report stated that the
Navy, as part of the AoA, considered incorporating commercial-ship components into the LX(R)
design as a means of helping to minimize the ship’s procurement cost.12 The Navy used the
results of the AoA to inform its decision on a preferred design solution for the LX(R).

10 Source: Navy briefing on the LX(R) program to CRS and Congressional Budget Office (CBO), March 23, 2015.
11 A May 29, 2014, press report quotes Vice Admiral William Hilarides, the Commander of the Naval Sea Systems
Command (NAVSEA), as stating, in connection with the AoA, that “an LPD-17 variant that’s built exactly like the
current LPD-17 is off the table. It is unaffordable in the context of the ship we need to replace.” (As quoted in Sam
LaGrone, “NAVSEA: Affordability Prompted Second Look at LX(R),” USNI News (http://news.usni.org), May 29,
2014. The same quote (without the final two words) appears in Kris Osborn, “Navy Considers Commercial Technology
for New Amphib,” DOD Buzz (www.dodbuzz.com), June 1, 2014.)
12 Kris Osborn, “Navy Considers Commercial Technology for New Amphib,” DOD Buzz (www.dodbuzz.com), June 1,
2014.
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HII, the builder of LPD-17 class ships, promoted a modified LPD-17 as the design solution for
the LX(R) program, citing the capabilities of the LPD-17 hull design, the reduced up-front design
costs of modifying an existing design compared to those of developing an entirely new design,
and the potential benefits in terms of life-cycle operation and support (O&S) costs of building the
LX(R) to a design that uses the same basic hull and many of the same components as the LPD-17
design. Marine Corps leaders, citing their satisfaction with the LPD-17 design, expressed support
for a modified LPD-17 design as the design solution for the LX(R) program.13 Other observers,
noting that the LPD-17, with a full load displacement of about 25,000 tons, is considerably larger
than the LSD-41/49 class ships, questioned whether a modified LPD-17 could meet the Navy’s
reported unit procurement cost target for the LX(R) program.
Design Based on LPD-17 Hull Designated by Navy as Preferred Alternative for
LX(R)

An October 20, 2014, press report stated that Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus had signed a
decision memorandum dated October 14 designating a design based on that of the Navy’s San
Antonio (LPD-17) class amphibious ship as the Navy’s preferred alternative for the design of the
LX(R). According to the press report, the decision memorandum had been previously signed by
Admiral Jonathan Greenert, the Chief of Naval Operations (CNO), General Joseph Dunford,
Commandant of the Marine Corps, General James Amos, former Commandant of the Marine
Corps, and Sean Stackley, Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Research, Development and
Acquisition. According to the press report, the decision memorandum stated that preliminary
design efforts for the LX(R) would begin “immediately.”14
Combined Solicitation Limited to Two Builders15
The Navy, as part of its acquisition strategy for LX(R) program, wants to issue a combined
solicitation consisting of separate Requests for Proposals (RFPs) for the detailed design and
construction (DD&C) of the first six ships in the TAO(X) oiler program,16 the detailed design and
construction in FY2017 (and also procurement of long lead-time materials in FY2016) for an
amphibious assault ship called LHA-8 that the Navy wants to procure in FY2017, and contract

13 A group of 20 Marine Corps generals expressed support for the LPD-17 hull form as the design solution for the
LX(R) program in a letter to the Senate Armed Services Committee dated March 25, 2014. See Lara Seligman,
“Officials On LX(R): LPD-17 Design Is Best Fit For Marine Lift Requirements,” Inside the Navy, April 7, 2014. See
also Megan Eckstein, “Amos: LPD Hull Production Should Continue, Serve As LSD Replacement,” Inside the Navy,
April 15, 2013.
14 Lara Seligman, “Mabus Signs Decision Memo: LPD-17 Variant Preferred Platform For LX(R),” Inside the Navy,
October 20, 2014. See also Sam LaGrone, “Memo: Hull Based On San Antonio Design Is Navy’s Preferred Option For
Next Generation Amphib,” USNI News, October 20, 2014; Lara Seligman, “Senior Navy Officials Tell Mabus LPD-17
Variant Is Best Option For LX(R),” Inside the Navy, October 13, 2014; Lara Seligman, “Senior Leadership Get
Decision Brief On LX(R); MOA Expected This Month,” Inside the Navy, October 6, 2014; Lara Seligman, “Navy
Moving Forward With ‘Paper Review’ Of LX(R) Amphibious Program,” Inside the Navy, September 22, 1014; Lara
Seligman, “Navy: LX(R) Will Either Be Modified LPD-17 Or ‘Completely New’ Design,” Inside the Navy, August 18,
2014.
15 Source for this section: Navy briefing for CRS and Congressional Budget Office (CBO), March 23, 2015.
16 The TAO(X) program is a Navy program to procure a class of 17 new oilers. The Navy wants to procure the first
TAO(X) in FY2016. For more on the TAO(X) program, see CRS Report R43546, Navy TAO(X) Oiler Shipbuilding
Program: Background and Issues for Congress
, by Ronald O'Rourke.
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design support for the LX(R) program.17 The Navy wants to limit bidding in this combined
solicitation to two bidders—Ingalls Shipbuilding of Huntington Ingalls Industries (HII/Ingalls)
and National Steel and Shipbuilding Company of General Dynamics (GD/NASSCO)—on the
grounds that these are the only two shipbuilders that have the capability to build both TAO(X)s
and LHA-8. Under the Navy’s plan for the combined solicitation, one of these two yards would
be awarded the DD&C contract for the first six TAO(X)s, the other yard would be awarded the
DD&C contract (and procurement of long lead-time materials) for LHA-8, and the shipyard with
the lowest combined evaluated price will receive a higher profit on its DD&C contract18 and will
be awarded the majority of the LX(R) contract design engineering man-hours.
Funding for a 12th LPD-17 Class Ship
Although the Navy, consistent with the previous 33-ship (11+11+11) amphibious ship force-level
goal, had wanted the 11th LPD-17 class ship to be the final ship in the LPD-17 program, Congress
has supported the procurement of a 12th LPD-17 class ship, which would be designated LPD-28.
Congress provided $263.3 million in unrequested advance procurement (AP) funding for a 12th
LPD-17 class ship in FY2013 (this funding figure was later reduced to $243.0 million by the
sequester of March 1, 2013), and an additional $1.0 billion in unrequested procurement funding
for a 12th LPD-17 class ship in FY2015.
In response to Congress’s FY2013 and FY2015 funding actions, the Navy, as a part of its FY2016
budget submission, has inserted a 12th LPD-17 class ship into its shipbuilding program, and is
requesting $550 million in FY2016 procurement funding to complete the ship’s estimated
procurement cost of $1,793.0 million. This estimated procurement cost is $286.2 million less than
that of the 11th LPD-17 class ship, which was procured in FY2012 and has an estimated
procurement cost of $2,079.2 million. The Navy states that it plans to achieve the lower estimated
cost of the 12th LPD-17 class ship by incorporating design innovations and cost-reduction
strategies intended for the LX(R).19 This will make LPD-28, to some degree, a transitional ship
between the baseline LPD-17 design and the LX(R) design.
Issues for Congress
FY2016 Funding for LX(R) and LPD-17 Programs
One issue for Congress is whether to approve, reject, or modify the Navy’s FY2016 requests for
research and development funding for the LX(R) program and procurement funding for a 12th
LPD-17 class ship. Potential matters to consider include whether the Navy has accurately

17 Contract design work is intended to develop the design of a ship enough so that a contract can then be awarded for
the detailed design of the ship.
18 The Navy is planning to employ a Profit Related to Offer (PRO) contracting approach within this combined
solicitation strategy to encourage competitive pricing by the shipyards. Under PRO bidding, both bidders are granted
work, but the bidder with the lower price is given a high profit margin. PRO bidding has been used in other Navy
shipbuilding programs, particularly the DDG-51 destroyer program, where it has been used since the 1990s.
19 Lara Seligman, “Navy: To Stay Under $1.8 Billion, LPD-28 Will Exploit LX(R) Development Efforts,” Inside the
Navy
, February 16, 2015; and Megan Eckstein, “Marines Will Use LPD-28 to Begin Transitioning to LX(R) Ship
Systems,” Defense Daily, February 4, 2015: 3-4.
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estimated the procurement cost of the 12th LPD-17, which, as noted above, is to incorporate
design innovations and cost-reduction strategies intended for the LX(R).
Total Number of LX(R) Ships
Another issue for Congress is whether, in response to the procurement of a 12th LPD-17 class
ship, the LX(R) program should be reduced from 11 ships to 10 ships. A 12th LPD-17 could be
built in addition to the 11 planned LX(R)s, which would make for an eventual amphibious force
of 34 rather than 33 ships, or could become one of a force of 33 amphibious ships, perhaps taking
the place of one of the 11 planned LX(R)s. As stated earlier (see “Amphibious Lift Goal” in
“Background”), the Navy is referring to the 12th LPD-17 as a required 34th amphibious ship.
Navy’s Proposal for Combined Solicitation Limited to
Two Builders

A third issue for Congress is whether to approve, reject, or modify the Navy’s proposal to use a
combined solicitation consisting of separate Requests for Proposals (RFPs) for the detailed design
and construction of the first six TAO(X) oilers, the detailed design and construction of LHA-8,
and contract design support for the LX(R) program, and to limit bidding in this combined
solicitation to HII/Ingalls and GD/NASSCO. Potential matters to consider include the Navy’s
rationale for using the combined solicitation and the potential impact on various shipyards of the
Navy’s proposal to limit bidding to HII/Ingalls and GD/NASSCO.
At a March 18, 2015, hearing on Navy shipbuilding programs before the Seapower subcommittee
of the Senate Armed Services subcommittee, the following exchange occurred:
SENATOR MAZIE K. HIRONO, RANKING MEMBER (continuing):
For you again, Mr. Secretary, the Navy announced the intention to complete a package of
ship contracts including the TAO(X) oiler, the LHA(R)20 (ph)—I just love all these
acronyms, amphibious assault ship and the LX(R) dock landing ship replacement, all in one
package.
The Navy also said that it would restrict competition for that package or contract to only two
shipyards. What is the Navy's strategy for awarding these contracts? And why is it in the
taxpayers' best interest to restrict competition for these ships?
SEAN J. STACKLEY, ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY FOR RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT, AND ACQUISITION:
Thanks for the question, Ma'am. We're trying to balance a couple of things. First, our
requirements, so we have a requirement to replace our fleet oilers and that's the, that first of
class ship for the TAO(X) as the replacement for our fleet oilers is in the [FY]2016 budget
year.
We also have a requirement for a new big deck amphib, the LHA-8, which is a[n] [FY]2017
ship with advance procurement in [FY]2016. And we've talked about the LX(R), which is the

20 LHA(R) means LHA replacement; it is an alternative term for the Navy’s new LHA-type ships, including LHA-8.
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replacement amphibious ship for our LSD 41 class, which we have in the budget in
[FY]2020 with advance procurement the year prior.
So when we look ahead at those three major programs across our industrial base, a couple of
things become immediately apparent. First, we talked about the fragility of the industrial
base, what we want to do is add stability to the industrial base.
Second, we've talked about affordability of our shipbuilding programs, so what we want to
do is figure out how to drive affordability into those programs to the extent possible. And
then third is competition, which couples the industrial base in the element of affordability.
The strategy that we had put forward does a couple of things. First, it sends—it sends a
signal to our industrial base, so we're going to limit competition to the two shipbuilders that
we believe are absolutely essential to our industrial base.
HIRONO:
By the way, what are the two shipbuilders?
STACKLEY:
Ingalls Shipbuilding and ...
HIRONO:
In Mississippi.
STACKLEY:
In Mississippi. And NASSCO in San Diego. Today, Ingalls builds four different ship classes.
Today, NASSCO builds one Navy ship class in commercial work. We view them, both
critical to our industrial base.
And if we were to go down a path of open competition, and soliciting these one at a time,
there is tremendous uncertainty in terms of what the outcome would be in terms of our
industrial base and our—the affordability of those programs.
So what we've—what we've elected to do is—one, limit the competition to those two
builders. Two, we're soliciting each of these programs separately but together and requiring
bids on each from both shipbuilders, so that we can get competition inside of each as
opposed to either allocating or awarding one at a time which puts one of the shipbuilders at
risk.
So in order to preserve the industrial base, leverage competition, bring affordability and
stability to that industrial base, we've elected to limit the competition, go out with a single
solicitation that contains both the LHA-8 and the TAO(X).
Size them what we believe to be about the same in terms of man hours of work and also
about the same in terms of horizon of time, so that the industry has some surety that, “OK,
we understand how much work is coming our way. We can build that in our business base.”
We're sharpening our pencils in terms of competition.21

21 Transcript of hearing.
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A March 23, 2015, press report states:
Decisions are looming on two major new US Navy shipbuilding programs, and while the
service wants to get the best deal for the ships, it's also concerned about preserving its
industrial base.
To that end, acquisition chief Sean Stackley is structuring the competition to build the new
T-AO(X) fleet oiler and LHA 8 amphibious assault ship so that San Diego-based General
Dynamics National Steel and Shipbuilding Co. (NASSCO) and the Huntington Ingalls
Industries' yard in Mississippi—each of which plan to bid for the ships—both get enough
work to remain viable.
The ships “are key to our core structure. And they're also key to our industrial base,”
Stackley said March 18 in an interview. “So when we try to balance requirements and
affordability in the industrial base, a couple of things come to mind. First and foremost is, we
have two major builders for these types of ships, Ingalls and NASSCO. And each of them are
in a position where they have to win one of the programs. However, if we go down the path
of competing them one at a time, it's easy to envision a scenario where either one of them
sweeps the table.”
A decision on the T-AO(X) is expected in 2016, with the LHA 8 to come in 2017. Stackley
noted that the yard that does not win the oiler “will be in a very difficult position to compete
head-to-head for the next program, the LHA 8, because of the imbalance of workload that
was just created between the two. So to keep them head-to-head in terms of competiveness,
we have determined that first, we're going to limit the competition to those two shipyards,
because each needs to win one of those first two contracts” to remain viable.
In return for limiting the competition to Ingalls and NASSCO, Stackley said, “we are going
to require that they both bid on both programs, with a commitment that each of them will
win one of the contracts, as long as their bids are responsible.”
That approach, he said, “gives us the stability we're looking for in the industrial base. It gives
us the advantages of competition across the programs.”...
To many observers, it appears as if the Navy's bidding strategy concedes that Ingalls will win
the assault ship and NASSCO the oiler.
“No. There's no predetermination whatsoever here,” Stackley insisted. “We've determined
that both shipyards are capable of building both ship classes—and we spent a lot of time
doing that evaluation before we went forward with this acquisition strategy. We've also
sized, as best as we reasonably can, the awards so they're about equal in terms of the amount
of work going into the winner of each of these—six T-AO(X)s on one hand and LHA 8 on
the other. We think that, in terms of the shipyards' capabilities and in terms of the size and
shape of the workload, we've got parity here for a very healthy competition.”
Accelerating Procurement Date for First LX(R)
Another issue for Congress is whether to accelerate the procurement of the first LX(R) from
FY2020 to an earlier year. As noted earlier, the Navy’s FY2012, FY2013, and FY2014 budget
submissions scheduled the procurement of the first LX(R) in FY2017, FY2018, and FY2019,
respectively.
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Supporters of accelerating the procurement of the first LX(R) to an earlier year could argue that it
would restore the procurement date shown in an earlier Navy budget submission, and that it
would close the gap between the end of LPD-17 procurement and the start of LX(R) procurement,
which would increase production learning curve benefits in shifting from LPD-17 production to
LX(R) production, should HII/Ingalls be selected as the builder of the first LX(R). They could
also argue that it would move funding requirements for the first LX(R) away from those of the
first Ohio replacement (SSBN[X]) ballistic missile submarine, which is scheduled to be procured
in FY2021.22
Opponents of accelerating the procurement of the first LX(R) to an earlier year could argue that
the builder of the first LX(R) has not yet been selected, making the production learning curve
benefits of bringing the start of LX(R) procurement close to the end of LPD-17 procurement
uncertain. They could also argue that it would add a funding requirement to the Navy’s budget in
a year prior to FY2020, potentially making it harder for the Navy to fund other programs in that
earlier year, and that procuring the ship prior to FY2020 would be ahead of need (i.e., earlier than
needed to replace the first retiring LSD-41/49 class ship).
Legislative Activity for FY2016
FY2016 Budget
The Navy’s proposed FY2016 budget was submitted to Congress on February 2, 2015. As shown
in Table 1, the budget requests $46.5 million in research and development funding for the LX(R)
program. The funding is requested in Program Element (PE) 0604454N, entitled LX(R), which is
line 79 in the Navy’s FY2016 research and development account. The Navy’s proposed FY2016
budget also requests $550.0 million in the Navy’s shipbuilding account to complete the
procurement cost of a 12th LPD-17 class ship.

Author Contact Information
Ronald O'Rourke
Specialist in Naval Affairs
rorourke@crs.loc.gov, 7-7610


22 Observers are concerned about the pressure that the Ohio replacement program might place on the Navy’s ability to
fund other shipbuilding programs. For a discussion, see CRS Report R41129, Navy Ohio Replacement (SSBN[X])
Ballistic Missile Submarine Program: Background and Issues for Congress
, by Ronald O'Rourke.
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