| IMMEDIATE RELEASE November 1, 2001
 (703)697-5737(public/industry)
 
 NAVY ANNOUNCES DD(X) PROGRAM
 
 The Navy announced today that it will issue a revised Request
 for Proposal (RFP) for the Future Surface Combatant Program.
 Formerly known as DD 21, the program will now be called "DD(X)"
 to more accurately reflect the program purpose, which is to
 produce a family of advanced technology surface combatants, not
 a single ship class.
 
 Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz approved the revised
 program focus and reaffirmed the Department's support for the
 Future Surface Combatant Program.
 
 "President Bush has made transformation of the Department of
 Defense a high priority.  Through DD(X), the Navy has charted a
 course to transformation that will provide capability across the
 full spectrum of naval warfare.  The Navy's strategy supports
 assured access to littoral regions and also develops the
 capability to defeat the air and missile defense threats the
 nation's naval forces will face in the future."
 
 Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and
 Logistics E. C. "Pete" Aldridge stated that "the new program
 focus and new RFP will enable the Navy to fully leverage the
 great work already done by the two industry teams, continue risk
 mitigation measures and permit appropriate spiral development of
 technology and engineering to support a range of future surface
 ships to meet our Nation's maritime requirements well into the
 21st Century," Aldridge said.  "The DD(X) program will be the
 technology driver for the surface fleet of the future."
 
 "With the approval of this strategy, the Navy has defined its
 surface combatant roadmap for the future in a manner which
 ensures all maritime missions can be accomplished.  Through
 DD(X), we are taking a significant step toward providing
 improved combat capability for our Sailors and Marines," said
 Navy Secretary Gordon England.
 
 Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Vern Clark said the DD(X) program
 reflects an awareness that effectively defeating future threats,
 while accomplishing naval missions, will require a range of
 naval capabilities and different surface platforms.
 
 "One size fits all will not work on the future battlefield,"
 Clark said.  "We must continue to exploit the robust R&D effort
 made on DD 21 even as we focus our research and technology
 funding of other approaches such as the Littoral Combat Ship
 concept."
 
 The DD(X) program will provide a baseline for spiral development
 of the DD(X) and the future cruiser or "CG(X)" with emphasis on
 common hullform and technology development.  The Navy will use
 the advanced technology and networking capabilities from DD(X)
 and CG(X) in the development of the Littoral Combat Ship with
 the objective being a survivable, capable near-land platform to
 deal with threats of the 21st century.  The intent is to
 innovatively combine the transformational technologies developed
 in the DD(X) program with the many ongoing R&D efforts involving
 mission focused surface ships to produce a state-of-the art
 surface combatant to defeat adversary attempts to deny access
 for US forces.
 
 The revision of the program is based on the Navy's continued
 careful examination of DD21 as it reached the source selection
 milestone this past spring.  At that time, the Navy delayed the
 down-select decision between the two competing DD21 teams in
 order to take advantage of ongoing reviews being conducted in
 the Department of Defense, including the Quadrennial Defense
 Review.  The Navy expects to issue the revised RFP within the
 next few weeks, and to down-select a single industry team to be
 the design agent and technology developer this Spring.
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