In a letter
to House and Senate armed services
committee members
Thursday, 3 Oct Navy Secretary Carlos Del Toro said impacted ships include the
recently-revamped aircraft carrier George Washington and the brand-new attack
submarines Hyman G. Rickover and New Jersey.
Citing shipyard officials, Del Toro wrote that the
issue involved "welders who did not follow welding procedures
properly." "Importantly, the Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA) has
assessed that the welds were not on components or systems that affect ship
safety or operations," he wrote. "NAVSEA,
as the technical warrant holder, has determined the ships are safe to
operate." Del Toro wrote that he first became aware of the issue on
Sept. 24.
The Navy had identified those three vessels as having
been impacted as of Thursday, and Del Toro's memo states that the sea service
is examining welds on 23 ships under construction or in maintenance to see if
faulty welds there may impact future operations. Lawmakers demand answers over
reports of faulty Navy ship welding
Last week, officials with HII, the company that owns
Newport News Shipbuilding, acknowledged that "some welders knowingly
circumvented certain welding procedures" while working on military
vessels.
"Malicious
intent" was ruled out as a the source of the problem, HII said in a
statement.
The Department of
Justice is investigating the matter, lawmakers confirmed this week. Del Toro promised to cooperate with that
probe and wrote Thursday that the Navy "is evaluating all legal options,
and reserving our rights accordingly."
Congressional leaders
have pushed the Navy this week for more answers on the scope of the problem and
how it was allowed to happen.
"These vessels
are critical to U.S. defense," House Armed Services Committee members
wrote to Del Toro this week. "We must ensure that these vessels are
protected against any bad actors seeking to put U.S. national security or our
service members at risk."
The Newport News yard is one of two in the United
States focused on the nuclear fleet. The yard constructs parts of several submarine
classes, as well as Ford-class aircraft carriers.
While the timeframe of the faulty welds has not been
disclosed, George Washington left the Newport News yard in May 2023 following
its midlife maintenance overhaul that began in 2017 and was originally supposed
to wrap in 2021. Officials blamed the delays on extra unanticipated work during
the so-called refueling and complex overhaul, or RCOH.
The carrier is currently underway in the Pacific Ocean
and on its way to its new home port in Japan. The submarine Hyman G. Rickover
was commissioned in October 2023, while New Jersey was just commissioned on
Sept. 14.
In the memo, Del
Toro promised a full review of operations at the shipyard to ensure the welding
problems do not occur again.
"The safety of
our sailors and ships is of paramount importance," he wrote. "We
have given top priority to the task of defining and examining the scope of
improper welds conducted on operational in-service ships, and I have directed
my Navy technical experts to co-locate with the shipyard immediately to support
a thorough review."