During a speech at the Surface Navy Association’s annual conference today, Rear Adm. Derek Trinque ... said ... [the BBG(X) requirements] grew out of the
Navy’s DDG(X) program aimed at building a next-generation destroyer to succeed the Arleigh Burke class.
“We found ourselves in a weird situation” where in order to keep its desired number of vertical launch cells on the new destroyer, “we were going to have to make a choice between a gun weapon system and Conventional Prompt Strike,” the Navy’s soon-to-be fielded hypersonic weapon, Trinque said.
The Navy considered making two different variants of DDG(X) — one with a gun system and another able to launch Conventional Prompt Strike missiles — but Trinque added, “I don’t want to put those kind of limits on a fleet commander.
“And so when national leaders announced that they were interested in building a battleship, this was a great opportunity,” he said.
The battleship will have Conventional Prompt Strike, gun weapon systems, a “large number” of vertical launch systems, power for directed energy weapons — an “incredible amount of offensive strike capability” as well as command and control capacity that the Navy does not have in its current fleet, he said.
The Navy currently believes about 700 people will be needed to man the battleship, he added.