Details of the $11 billion (with a B) Saudi Naval Expansion Program II (SNEP II) are trickling out and it looks like the big spender of the Persian Gulf is looking to get 4 (maybe 5 judging from the number of weapons systems) of Lockheed’s Freedom-class LCS hulls– only with real teeth.
Rather than be marginal and modular, the Saudis are going for a 76mm Oto Melara MK-75 gun over the 57mm Mk110, adding two 8-cell VLS MK41s (which can also launch Standard missiles) for quad packed Enhanced Sea Sparrows (giving each ship 64 of these missiles, of which the Saudis are buying more than 500), 128 RIM-116C Block II Rolling Airframe Missiles for five MK-15 Mod 3 SeaRAM air defense systems and 48 Block II Harpoon anti-ship missiles along with eight quad launchers and five control systems.
Sure Harpoon is dated, but its all we are selling right now and is still good enough to smoke anything the Iranians have afloat– plus Sea Sparrows and SeaRam have a surface-to-surface mode which means they can put the hard goodbye on small craft as needed. To deal with sneaky subs, they will also have anti-submarine warfare (ASW) sonar suites and torpedoes.
Also in the package are 10 MH-60Rs.
Overall, the LCS when so equipped looks like a decent little guided missile frigate and a worthy successor to the old Perry class. Hopefully the USN will take an interest.
That reminds me of the time…
It shouldn’t be surprising that a Persian Gulf state picked up a fully-fleshed naval combatant from the U.S. while the Navy looks on with a sigh. The same thing happened in the late 1970s.
In 1978, Ingalls Shipbuilding laid down His Iranian Majesty’s Ship Kouroush, a 9,700-ton variant of the Spruance-class destroyer, which Ingalls was also cranking out. However instead of the modest arms of the Spru-can, Kouroush had a pair of Mk 26 missile launchers for the Standard Missile SM-2MR with magazines for 80 missiles– making it one of the best DDGs in the world. Basically, a Ticonderoga-class cruiser but without the Aegis system.
Well Kouroush and her three sisters, Daryush, Nader, and Anoshirvan never made it to the Shah’s Navy, being embargoed after the Ayatollah came to power.
Instead the USN picked them up for a bargain and commissioned them as USS Kidd (DDG-993), Callaghan, Scott and Chandler and they served through the 80s and 90s (often, ironically, in the Persian Gulf).
Taiwan picked them up in 2005 as Tso Ying, Su Ao, Kee Lung, and Ma Kong respectively where they continue to serve, their Standard missiles replaced with the locally made Tien Kung (Sky Bow) system.