Sub officers objected to closing base in Groton
By Bryan Bender, Globe Staff | July 22, 2005
WASHINGTON -- The Navy's top submarine officers disagreed with the
study used to justify closing the base in Groton, Conn., raising
questions about the Pentagon's military rationale for shuttering Naval
Submarine Base New London, according to previously undisclosed documents.
Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Vernon Clark, who is set to step
down from his post today, said in a July 18 response to congressional
inquiries that the submarine division at Navy headquarters did not
sign off on the findings of the Navy's 2004 Force Structure
Assessment. That evaluation of future needs was used as a key
foundation for the Pentagon plan to close or realign dozens of bases
across the country, including Groton -- the largest base in New
England that is set to close.
The Navy study concluded that the service will need from 37 to 41
attack submarines over the next two decades -- versus the current 51
-- despite the concerns expressed by the submarine community that
those numbers would not be enough to meet the growing demands for
submarines both in peacetime and during conflicts, according to
Clark's letter and interviews with others knowledgeable about the
internal Navy deliberations.
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2005/07/22/sub_officers_objected_to_closing_base_in_groton/