According to www.defensenews.com, a Center for Maritime Strategy report released April 13, 2026, urges the U.S. Navy to rely on naval allies—including the Republic of Korea, Italy, Canada, Sweden, and the United Kingdom—to rebuild its atrophying maritime industrial base amid heightened operational demands in the Iran war.
Strategic Context and Operational Strain
The Navy is currently engaged in sustained operations in the Strait of Hormuz as part of Operation Epic Fury, supporting the ongoing U.S.-led conflict in Iran. This deployment includes the Tripoli Amphibious Ready Group—comprising the USS Tripoli, USS New Orleans, and USS San Diego—with approximately 5,000 personnel. The force’s amphibious assault ships’ readiness rate has dropped to 41%, according to a 2025 Military Times report, attributed to competing missions including counternarcotics operations in Latin America and the Caribbean.
Budget and Production Targets
President Donald Trump’s fiscal 2027 budget request allocates $65.8 billion for shipbuilding—the largest such allocation cited in the source—to produce 18 battle force ships and 16 nonbattle force ships. That represents a doubling of ship production compared to fiscal 2026. The increase prioritizes simpler vessels lacking radar systems and nuclear propulsion to accelerate output and reduce complexity.
Industrial Base Challenges
The Navy’s current fleet stands at approximately 295 ships, yet the service expects that number to decline as retirements outpace commissions. Its long-term goal remains 381 ships over the next 30 years to counter global threats. According to the report, the U.S. maritime industrial base suffers from “atrophy” and must be “reconstituted quickly, utilizing the most modern equipment and procedures.”
Key Recommendations and Allied Integration
The Center for Maritime Strategy outlines seven objectives to strengthen the industrial base, with allied collaboration emphasized above all others. The report specifically recommends:
- Modeling existing frameworks from allied nations
- Using allied ports for maintenance, logistics, and forward basing
- Supplementing the domestic shipbuilding labor pool with skilled migrants from partner countries
The report’s foreword features a statement from Kenneth Braithwaite, the 77th Navy secretary:
“For the Navy to meet the challenges it faces in the coming decades, the United States must take advantage of its strong partnerships with naval allies to support a collective revitalization of the allied maritime industrial base.”
Workforce and Cost Realities
At the WEST Conference in February 2026, Commandant of the Marine Corps Gen. Eric Smith underscored human capital as central to industrial capacity:
“Everything costs what it costs,” Smith said at the conference. “I don’t want to pay $4 billion for a ship, neither does my shipmate [Chief of Naval Operations Adm.] Daryl Caudle. But that’s what it costs to have pipefitters, steamfitters, welders, electricians build the ship.”
This reflects a broader practitioner reality: supply chain professionals in defense manufacturing face acute labor shortages—not just in procurement or logistics planning, but in frontline trades essential to vessel construction, maintenance, and sustainment. Leveraging allied labor pools and standardizing training pathways across partner nations could ease bottlenecks in skilled labor availability, reduce lead times for critical components, and diversify sourcing dependencies away from single geographies.
Source: www.defensenews.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.









