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446905


Date: March 17, 2025 at 13:57:09
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: In 15 months Navy fired more air def. missiles than in last 30 years

URL: https://taskandpurpose.com/news/navy-missiles-red-sea/


NEWS • MILITARY BRANCHES • NAVY

In 15 months, the Navy fired more air defense missiles than it did in the last 30
years

"During combat operations in the Red Sea, the Navy fired so many air defense
missiles that it drained the service’s stockpile of munitions. So, it turned to 5-
inch gun rounds to down drones.
JEFF SCHOGOL
MAR 5, 2025

The U.S. Navy has used more missiles for air defense since combat operations
in the Red Sea began in October 2023 than the service used in all the years
since Operation Desert Storm in the 1990s, said retired Navy Cmdr. Bryan
Clark, of the Hudson Institute.

Over that 15-month-period, which ran from Oct. 19, 2023 to Jan. 19, 2025, the
Navy saw the most combat at sea since World War II, Clark told Task &
Purpose.

“It’s kind of amazing how the Navy has held up with no losses, but the cost has
been pretty enormous,” Clark said. “The estimates are the Navy has used up $1
billion-plus worth of interceptors to shoot down these drone and missile
threats.”

For now, the conflict appears to be on pause, possibly due to the ceasefire
between Israel and Hamas that was announced on Jan. 19. But the Navy will
need years to replenish its supply of missiles, and that puts the service in a bad
position if the United States and China went to war today, Clark said.

“I think most estimates are within a few days of combat, if there was an invasion
of Taiwan, that the U.S. — the Navy in particular — would run out of weapons,”
Clark said. “That’s the problem: The weapons we’ve designed are too difficult
to build for the industrial base, because they’re too specialized; they have too
bespoke a supply chain, and they’re manufactured by hand, at low-rate
productions.”

‘We had never done anything like this before’

Shortly after Hamas launched its Oct. 7, 2023 terror attack on Israel, Houthi
rebels in Yemen began attacking ships in the Red Sea with cruise missiles,
ballistic missiles, drones, and unmanned boats. On Oct. 19, 2023, the destroyer
USS Carney spent 10 hours shooting down 15 Houthi drones and four cruise
missiles in what the Navy described as “the most intense combat engagement
by a U.S. Navy warship since WWII.”

Fire Controlman (AEGIS) 2nd Class Justin Parker later recalled that he and
other members of the ship’s crew were in their berthing when they heard an
announcement over the Carney’s intercom system: “Clear the weatherdecks.”
Soon, they heard the Carney fire missiles along with its main gun. They instantly
knew this was not a drill.

The Navy USS Carney defeats a combination of Houthi missiles and drones in
the Red Sea, Oct. 19. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class
Aaron Lau.

This Oct. 19, 2023 file photo shows the Navy USS Carney interdicting Houthi
missiles and drones in the Red Sea. Navy photo by Mass Communication
Specialist 2nd Class Aaron Lau.

“We had never done anything like this before — we had only trained to it,”
Gunner’s Mate 1st Class Charles Currie said in a Navy News release. “There
was a lot of adrenaline going on. This was real-world now.”

This was the start of the undeclared shooting war against the Houthis. The
Carney would go on to face a total of 51 engagements during its deployment.
The ship’s entire crew received the Combat Action Ribbon when it returned to
its homeport.

“Every single training experience we did before deployment — that’s what we
fell back on,” said Lt. j.g. Haven Vickers said in the Navy news release.
The Red Sea boils over

The situation in the Red Sea quickly escalated as the Houthis ramped up their
attacks against commercial vessels and warships and Iran launched two
attacks against Israel. But the Navy came to stay for the fight.

In December 2023, the Defense Department announced that the Navy would
be part of Operation Prosperity Guardian, an international effort to protect
commercial shipping in the Red Sea.

231221-N-CK669-1045 RED SEA (Dec. 21, 2023) Sailors assigned to the
Arleigh Burk-class guided-missile destroyer USS Mason (DDG 87) holds a
phone and distance line during a replenishment-at-sea with the Henry J.
Kaiser-class fleet replenishment oiler USNS Kanawha (T-AO 196) in the Red
Sea while Mason operates in support of Operation Prosperity Guardian (OPG),
Dec. 21. Led by Combined Task Force 153 of Combined Maritime Forces, OPG
represents a focused, international effort to address maritime security
challenges in the southern Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, with the goal of
ensuring freedom of navigation for all countries and bolstering regional security.
More than 20 countries are taking part in the operation. (U.S. Navy photo by
Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Chris Krucke)

Sailors assigned USS Mason during a replenishment-at-sea while the ship
operates in support of Operation Prosperity Guardian Dec. 21, 2023. (U.S. Navy
photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Chris Krucke. Petty Officer
1st Class Christopher J Krucke

Separately, U.S. and British forces began air and missile strikes against Houthi
targets in Yemen the following month. Eventually, these strikes involved B-2
Spirit bombers and Marine Corps F-35C Joint Strike Fighters. In November
2024, the Houthis attacked two Navy destroyers, USS Stockdale and USS
Spruance, with drones, ballistic missiles, and cruise missiles. Neither ship was
damaged, and no sailors were hurt.

The Navy also helped shoot down Iranian missiles fired at Israel in April, and the
destroyers USS Cole and USS Bulkeley fired interceptors in October when Iran
again launched missiles at Israel.

Then, in late January, the Houthis announced a partial halt to attacks in the Red
Sea following the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas. U.S. Central Command’s
last announcement of strikes against Houthi targets in Yemen was on Jan. 8. A
defense official had nothing to add to the news release when Task & Purpose
asked if there had been any further airstrikes against Houthi targets, or if U.S.
Navy ships have destroyed Houthi missiles, drones, or boats since then.
Too close for missiles, switching to guns

The Navy also revealed in January that it had fired 160 rounds from ships’ five-
inch main guns as part of combat operations in the Red Sea. Those main gun
rounds have been used to destroy Houthi drones, Clark said.

Navy ship fires its main gun
USS Rafael Peralta fires a Mark 45 5-inch gun during a live fire exercise in June
2023. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Colby A.
Mothershead
“They have been using guns to shoot down drones lately,” Clark said.

Not only are the 5-inch rounds less expensive than missiles, but the Houthi
drones often fly too low or too close to the ship to be hit with missiles, Clark
said.

“What often happens is these really small drones get close enough to where
the missile can’t really engage in time, because the missile has a minimum
range, also,” Clark said.

‘Dangerously low level’ of munitions

The combat operations in the Red Sea have pitted U.S. Navy ships and sailors
against an unprecedented number of enemy drone attacks. “Absolutely nobody
thought they might see unmanned [threats] at this scale,” Rear Adm Kavon
Hakimzadeh, then commander of US Carrier Strike Group 2, told Janes, an
open-source defense intelligence provider, for a November 2024 news story.

Navy ship firing a missile
USS Shiloh fires a standard missile during a live-fire exercise in the Philippine
Sea, Jan. 23, 2023. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class
Santiago Navarro.

In January, the Navy revealed that it had fired nearly 400 munitions since
October 2023 as part of combat operations in the Red Sea, including 120 SM-2
missiles, 80 SM-6 missiles, and a combined total of 20 Evolved Sea Sparrow
Missiles (ESSM) and SM-3 missiles. The per unit cost for these missiles is
between $12.5 and $28.7 million for SM-3s, about $4.3 million per SM-6, and
up to $2.5 million per SM-2, according to The War Zone.

But by mid 2024, the Navy shifted to using less expensive Sidewinders and
Hellfire missiles to shoot down Houthi drones, according to Janes. Each of the
Sidewinder and Hellfire typically cost about half a million dollars and about
$150,000 respectively.

During his confirmation hearing to serve as Navy secretary, John Phelan
acknowledged that the Navy faces a shortage of munitions.

“So, if confirmed, I intend to focus on this very quickly and get that resolved
because I think we’re at a dangerously low level from a stockpile perspective,
and as well as new,” Phelan said at the Feb. 27 hearing.

In written answers to lawmakers’ questions submitted prior to the hearing,
Phelan also vowed to give commanding officers more options to defend their
ships “including guns, directed energy, loitering munitions, and other innovative
technologies.”

CORRECTION: 03/10/2025; An earlier version of this story inaccurately
reported that the Navy had used Hypervelocity Projectiles to shoot down
drones in the Red Sea."


Responses:
[446906]


446906


Date: March 17, 2025 at 14:08:57
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: per unit cost for these missiles is between $12.5 & $28.7 million ...

URL: https://taskandpurpose.com/news/navy-missiles-red-sea/


"In January, the Navy revealed that it had fired nearly 400 munitions since
October 2023 as part of combat operations in the Red Sea, including 120 SM-2
missiles, 80 SM-6 missiles, and a combined total of 20 Evolved Sea Sparrow
Missiles (ESSM) and SM-3 missiles. The per unit cost for these missiles is
between $12.5 and $28.7 million for SM-3s, about $4.3 million per SM-6, and
up to $2.5 million per SM-2, according to The War Zone.

But by mid 2024, the Navy shifted to using less expensive Sidewinders and
Hellfire missiles to shoot down Houthi drones, according to Janes. Each of the
Sidewinder and Hellfire typically cost about half a million dollars and about
$150,000 respectively.

During his confirmation hearing to serve as Navy secretary, John Phelan
acknowledged that the Navy faces a shortage of munitions."


Responses:
None


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