Navy Secretary to depart Trump administration ‘immediately’

Guno צְבִי

We fight, We win, Am Yisrael Chai
Navy Secretary John Phelan has departed the Trump administration, the Pentagon announced. The shakeup comes just weeks after Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth ousted the Army’s top general during the ongoing Iran war.

Phelan is leaving “effective immediately,” Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell wrote on X on Wednesday afternoon.

 
You do know that Lincoln fired like half-a-dozen top generals during the early years of the Civil War because they were fuck ups before getting one that worked... Grant.

Truman fired MacArthur over his handling of the Korean war.

LBJ and Nixon sacked a number of generals over their inept handling of Vietnam.

So, what's so special about Trump doing likewise?
 
You do know that Lincoln fired like half-a-dozen top generals during the early years of the Civil War because they were fuck ups before getting one that worked... Grant.

Truman fired MacArthur over his handling of the Korean war.

LBJ and Nixon sacked a number of generals over their inept handling of Vietnam.

So, what's so special about Trump doing likewise?
LBJ and Nixon were 1960s war profiters who made a few million dollars to keep the Vietnam war going. The Trump crime family is making 100s of billions of dollars for themselves, and trillions of dollars for the oligarchs.

Our overlords are making so much money they make it impossible to end our forever wars.
 
LBJ and Nixon were 1960s war profiters who made a few million dollars to keep the Vietnam war going. The Trump crime family is making 100s of billions of dollars for themselves, and trillions of dollars for the oligarchs.

Our overlords are making so much money they make it impossible to end our forever wars.
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You do know that Lincoln fired like half-a-dozen top generals during the early years of the Civil War
He didn't fire McClellan or Halleck after only 60 days.
because they were fuck ups before getting one that worked...
What fuck up? Your bloated Messiah and his cheerleaders on this forum claim Iran has been defeated and this was a brilliant use of American military power.
 
He didn't fire McClellan or Halleck after only 60 days.

What fuck up? Your bloated Messiah and his cheerleaders on this forum claim Iran has been defeated and this was a brilliant use of American military power.
Really? So, tell me, who exactly is building ships for the US Navy now?
 
America's steel production has significantly declined since its peak in 1973, with production collapsing to just 70 million tons by 1984 and remaining lower than in the 1950s. This decline has been attributed to factors such as outdated technology, foreign competition, and a shift in industrial focus.

Phelan knows the US cannot sustain any significant industrial effort.

China, South Korea, and Japan have significantly more shipbuilding capabilities than the USA in 2026, with China alone possessing 232 times the shipbuilding capacity of the US.

These three countries account for 95% of the global shipbuilding industry.
 
You do know that Lincoln fired like half-a-dozen top generals during the early years of the Civil War because they were fuck ups before getting one that worked... Grant.

Truman fired MacArthur over his handling of the Korean war.

LBJ and Nixon sacked a number of generals over their inept handling of Vietnam.

So, what's so special about Trump doing likewise?
This time, a fuck up is doing the firing.
 

If a war erupts over Taiwan, what will sink the US Navy first: Chinese missiles or American shipyards?

The maritime balance in the Indo-Pacific is no longer calculated by how many ships sail today, but by how many can be built, repaired, and regenerated tomorrow.

Platforms matter; industrial endurance matters more.

China entered this decade as the pacing naval challenge. It now holds a decisive and widening lead in shipbuilding capacity.

The United States cannot close that gap through domestic shipbuilding within the timeframe deterrence requires.

The US Shipbuilding Shortfall


The US Navy fields roughly 290 ships, compared with China’s 331.

But even that arithmetic understates the imbalance.

China’s maritime strength extends beyond the People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) to the China Coast Guard, People’s Armed Forces Maritime Militia, merchant fleet, and dual-use commercial shipping.

These maritime forces can be mobilized for logistics, refueling, gray-zone coercion, and surge operations.

The United States, by contrast, has limited coast guard presence in the Western Pacific and a modest auxiliary and sealift fleet. The disparity is structural.

As Brent Sadler argues in Naval Power in Action, Beijing has “out-Mahaned” (a reference to the admiral and naval strategist Alfred Thayer Mahan)

America’s shipbuilding sector, meanwhile, has grown brittle.

Commercial construction has collapsed, corporate consolidation has reduced competition, skilled labor has thinned, and erratic procurement has exacted a high cost.

Major combatant ships are built in only a handful of yards, dominated by two prime contractors.

Concentration preserves expertise, but creates vulnerability.

As a result, production delays have become endemic.

Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Daryl Caudle captured the Navy’s problems with its contractors bluntly: “When I have a contract with you, you deliver it on time…I need my stuff on time.”

Donald Trump’s America’s Maritime Action Plan recognizes this shortcoming.

Training new workers, cutting regulations, and providing multi-year funding are necessary steps in the right direction.

But even successful domestic reform will take years, and the job of deterring China will not wait.

If endurance defines deterrence along the First Island Chain, then industrial integration with trusted maritime allies such as South Korea and Japan is indispensable.

The National Security Strategy identifies China’s bid for dominance inside and beyond the First Island Chain as a central challenge.

The National Defense Strategy calls for defense by denial. But denial does not only entail forward presence and dispersal but also staying power.

Chinese President Xi Jinping appears to grasp the risks of an outright invasion of Taiwan.

Instead, Beijing has developed an escalation ladder short of war: cyber pressure, maritime harassment, quarantine, blockade, and economic strangulation.

The objective is exhaustion.

China operates on interior lines with proximate shipyards, shorter logistics, and faster repair cycles.

It can absorb losses and regenerate maritime forces more quickly in its near seas.

History reinforces the point. In World War II, 24 Essex-class carriers were commissioned between mid-1943 and the war’s end.

The United States today lacks sufficient industrial depth to meet this challenge.

China has dramatically expanded its shipbuilding capacity, while the US Navy struggles to maintain its fleet size amid global commitments.

China launches modern frigates in months. The US Constellation-class program has yet to deliver an operational hull, despite years of delays and design instability.

The imbalance extends beyond the battle fleet. China integrates naval, coast guard, militia, and commercial shipping into a unified maritime ecosystem.

The United States faces persistent shortfalls in auxiliaries, sealift, and maintenance capacity. Even under ideal conditions, expanding domestic capacity by building new yards and training welders will take years.

China’s state-backed ecosystem has matured over decades.

Attempting to outbuild China alone will heighten the risk that deterrence will fail over the next decade.

US deterrence in this environment erodes through steady constriction.

Countering that strategy requires endurance backed by willing and able allies, but Trump has sacrificed America's alliances on the altar of his ego.
 

Ed Krassenstein



@EdKrassen




BREAKING: Fox News just reported that Pete Hegseth fired United States Secretary of the Navy John Phelan because Phelan would not ignore a federal judge's orders!"Hegseth and Phelan reportedly butted heads when Phelan refused to ignore a recent federal judge’s ruling that said punishing Senator Mark Kelly for making a video which he reminded military officers of their constitutional duty to not to not follow illegal orders would violate his First Amendment rights."
 
Navy Secretary John Phelan has departed the Trump administration, the Pentagon announced. The shakeup comes just weeks after Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth ousted the Army’s top general during the ongoing Iran war.

Phelan is leaving “effective immediately,” Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell wrote on X on Wednesday afternoon.

He didn;t want to shut down the "tRump class" battleship program and Whisky Leaks Pete does.

I'm waiting for tRump to figure that out.

As an aside, in the case the DI hire is correct for once. We don't need battleships. The drone program will go a lot futher.
 
Another theory.....is a functioning democracy we would be told the reason, and would be told the truth:

David Pyne: US Navy Secretary Fired for Refusing to Sail Into Iranian Missiles​

 





Nick Sortor

@nicksortor



JUST IN: President Trump gives more details on WHY Navy Secretary John Phelan was fired yesterday"He's a very good man.. He's a hard charger, and he had some conflicts with some other people, mostly as to building and buying new ships.I'm very aggressive in the new shipbuilding, amd somehow he just didn't get along with them.""You gotta get along, especially in the military!"
 
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