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Pilot Program Previews Future of Surface Warfare Tactical Training
by Staff Writers
San Diego CA (SPX) Feb 09, 2021

PACIFIC OCEAN (Jan. 13, 2021) Naval Surface and Mine Warfighting Development Center's (SMWDC's) Lt. Cmdr. Chris Rakoski, an Anti-Submarine Warfare/Surface Warfare (ASW/SUW) Warfare Tactics Instructor (WTI), from Montesano, Wash., advises Combat Information Center (CIC) watchstanders aboard the Wasp-class amphibious assault ship USS Essex (LHD 2). Essex is underway conducting routine operations in the U.S. Third Fleet area of operations. (U.S. Navy Photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Devin Alexondra Lowe) Photo By Petty Officer 2nd Class Devin Lowe

The U.S. Navy Surface Force kicked off the New Year with a six-month pilot program designed to align and standardize Surface Warfare training from a knowledge-based to a skills-based approach. The Surface Warfare Combat Training Continuum (SWCTC), developed as the central Surface Warfare Tactical Training Strategy, commenced aboard USS Spruance (DDG 111) in San Diego and USS Forrest Sherman (DDG 98) in Norfolk.

The Surface Warfare Combat Training Continuum (SWCTC) Task Force - comprised of Naval Surface and Mine Warfighting Development Center (SMWDC), Center for Surface Combat Systems, Surface Warfare Schools Command, and Afloat Training Group Pacific, worked together to deliver more efficient Surface tactical watchstander training and implement a High-End Fight Training Continuum.

"Leaders across the surface warfare training enterprise have reviewed every surface warfare tactical watch station qualification and gleaned the attributes, roughly 1,200, that are necessary to be competent and successful warriors," said Vice Adm.

Roy Kitchener, Commander, Naval Surface Forces. "From those identified attributes, we acknowledged the commonalities and distilled them to a list of nearly 150 vital skills and 10 core competencies. This pilot program will assess the feasibility of implementing SWCTC aboard ships, and evaluate the efficacy of the training approach in achieving basic, advanced, and High-End Fight Training proficiency."

SWCTC, informed by an extensive review of surface warfighting qualifications conducted by the SWCTC Executive Steering Committee, will also include an automated system that tracks a tactical watchstander's career qualifications, currency, proficiency, and experience. SWCTC will provide the framework for delivering schoolhouse and at sea training and support to sustain mariner and warfighting skills throughout careers.

The crews aboard Forrest Sherman and Spruance will receive segments of SWCTC data-based policy relating to DDG 51 class/platform Surface Tactical Training Syllabus and Tactical Action Officer grading criteria.

SMWDC Task Force leads and Warfare Tactics Instructors (WTIs) will visit the warships and serve as advisors, analyze data, and collect feedback from the units that will aide in the development of follow-on implementation policies.

"The grand design is for a training system of systems that will track the skills attainment and currency of Surface Warfare Officers and enlisted Sailors as they progress from accession throughout their entire career," said Cmdr.

William Blodgett, SWCTC Task Force West Coast Lead. "This improved system will enable tracking of individual qualifications and will better enable the community to ensure warships have fully qualified watch team members when they are ready to deploy, independent of whether or not the team member completed the OFRP training cycle with the warship."

SMWDC and the WTI program are critical enablers that help standardize, implement, and deliver tactical training. Through SWCTC, tactical watchstanders will maintain proficiency in a series of tactical tasks that will increase with complexity as warfighting competencies improve. This will result in higher levels of training readiness, warfighting capability, and tools for career-long tactical development of Surface Warriors.

The overall goal of SWCTC is to track performance and experience in a wide-array of tactical environments, very similar to a mariner skills log book for combat information center watchstanders. The end state is better understanding of whether watchstanders and watch teams either possess the requisite skills or need more experience in a particular area in order to perform the task at hand.


Related Links
Naval Surface and Mine Warfighting Development Center (SMWDC)
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics


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WATER WORLD
DARPA selects performers to advance unmanned underwater vehicle project
Washington DC (SPX) Feb 08, 2021
DARPA has executed contract options to continue the Manta Ray project that began in 2020. The effort seeks to demonstrate innovative technologies allowing payload-capable unmanned underwater vehicles (UUVs) to operate on long-duration, long-range missions in ocean environments. The three prime contractors will be Northrop Grumman Systems Corporation, Martin Defense Group, LLC (formerly Navatek, LLC), and Metron, Inc. The Manta Ray project seeks to develop UUVs that operate for extended durations w ... read more

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