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To: LindyBill who wrote (2927)6/30/2003 8:17:31 PM
From: unclewest  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 793850
 
The boys are getting more toys.
uw

European Stars and Stripes

June 28, 2003

By Lisa Burgess, Stars and Stripes

ARLINGTON, Va. - The Navy Sea Systems Command in Annapolis, Md., took

delivery of the first Advanced SEAL Delivery System on Thursday, a

long-awaited event for a SEAL community eager to try out the "Seaquest"-like

mini-submarine that can take them and their combat gear to and from hostile

shores.

Technically known as a "dry submersible," the ASDS is a mini-submarine

designed by Northrop Grumman's Oceanic and Naval Systems division to carry

small groups of SEALs underwater for long distances, at high speeds (the

precise figures are classified).

Calling the ASDS a "first-of-its-kind system," and "a major milestone," Navy

Capt. Joe Fallone, ASDS Program Manager at Naval Sea Systems Command, said

during the delivery ceremony that the sub will provide "a new level of

operational capability to SEAL forces in high-threat areas."

The sub is stored inside the hull of a conventional "mother" submarine,

which acts as both the launch and recover platform for ASDS during missions.

Not for claustrophobics, the ASDS features tight quarters and is driven by a

pilot, who is assisted by a SEAL navigator. Behind the crew, stacked like

sardines in a can, sits a SEAL squad of eight men. Also inside the

pressurized chamber internal chamber is a well. SEALs can simply slide into

the well and swim right out of the sub into the water, and come back in the

same way.

At first, the mini-sub only will be deployable from some modified Los

Angeles-class fast-attack submarines. Eventually, however, four

Trident-class SSBN fleet ballistic missile submarines will be retrofitted to

carry the ASDS, as will Virginia-class attack submarines and the last of the

Seawolf class, the Jimmy Carter (SSN 23).

Like the SEALs themselves, the ASDS belongs to the U.S. Special Operations

Command, the Tampa, Fla., organization tasked with oversight of all the U.S.

military unconventional warfare forces.