Alright, now that we have input from some thinkers, I would like to comment on what they had to say.
Seasick wrote:
The Mk23 Target acquisitions system had a 2D radar on the main mast to locate and track targets that were queued from the AN/SPS-40 radar.
While the MK32 TAS was supposed to be installed aboard all 4 battleships in 1993 (hence why the
Wisconsin's main mast was built with a larger platform than the other four while the other 3 ships were to receive a similarly large modification matching the mainmast). Both of those are out of date and are have been replaced by the wonderfully effective SPQ-9B 360 degree radar. They cue up ESSM and provide the platform with 100% radar horizon radar picture.
Seasick wrote:
For ASW the BB needes a lot of passive defense. The ship sould be very quiet. Electrical motors are a must, no reduction gears connected to turbines. A top speed of 22 to 27 knots should be sufficient and the all electric design should be powered by the latest generation of diesel alternators.
I disagree. Carriers are noisy as

and in fact they are twice as noisy as a WWII configured Iowa-class battleship. Like a carrier, a battleship would need to be as fast as possible. Either new construction ship or
Kentucky here would carry half the acoustic signature of a CVN. Super speed (such as 33+ knots) is just as important to the battleship as it is to the aircraft carrier in that it needs to arrive on station as soon as possible, because there are guys waiting for support. That is paramount. The speed of 22-27 knots you describe is a handicap that I would suggest you would wind up criticize by saying "the battleship can only reliably achieve 25 knots, so it is ineffective. By the time it arrives, the decisive engagement will be over". Seeing past this, the faster it goes the better. Since the available power plants will produce 280,000shp the ship should achieve 35knots cruising (without breaks to cool off the turbines) and 39-41 sprinting (with cooling time).
Seasick wrote:
Volume of fire and range outweigh the need for a large bursting charge. In a perfect world a 155mm or 175mm naval gun to fire fin stabilized rounds out to 25 to 30 nautical miles with either IR or GPS guidance. Going after hardened bunkers shouldn't be a high priority for this gun. The rounds need to be optimized for anti-personal and light vehicle targets. Naval Gun fire support is most effective at breaking up enemy infantry movements. A 12 inch self loading mortor should be developed also.
While this is a well thought out point I would disagree. Since the battleship is acting in place of an aircraft carrier in important areas of interest needing more than CGs can provide but not worth a CVN, the ships will need to be able to deliver CVN amounts of ordnance. Remember, the BB is not simply a NGFS/NSFS weapon, it is replacing an aircraft carrier. As a result it needs to deliver a massive amount of ordnance. As the Iowas are, they deliver appro 6 times the ordnance of an CVN. A
Montana would deliver approx. 8-12 times that.
Thus I would disagree with and discard the recommendation for a 155mm or 8" soft ordnance delivery system in place of the 16" Naval Gun System; especially since in this situation the 16" guns and support systems are already in place and ready to be installed on the pre-comUSS
Kentucky. Like Seasick pointed out, however, the latest Sea Sparrow (ESSM) is the paramount defensive missile system for this ship. SM-2 of CGs and DDGs is unnecessary and a drain on the ship's resources.
So, now on to the mission of the configured battleship
Kentucky:
Situation:
The US Navy issued a decree saying that it needs 12 aircraft carriers (ships that can deliver the same ordnance as an aircraft carrier) to protect the United States of America and its allies and 10 aircraft carriers to itself alone.
Well, that has worked out okay, but now the Navy is looking at only having 9 active aircraft carriers. Two of those are in the yards and unavailable for deployment at all times for the foreseeable future. The USS
John F Kennedy (CV-67) was decommissioned 12 years(!!!) ahead of scheduled, because of
horrible maintenance decisions], and the
Enterprise (CVN-65) is being cut early. One could accurately say that the
Kennedy (CV-67) was gang raped like a victimized school girl. USS
Kitty Hawk was decommissioned 5 years before schedule, and
Constellation was decommissioned 8 years before schedule. (So, we are already down 3 aircraft carriers.)
CNO Roughead has said that in order to save money the USS
Enterprise should be decommissioned as soon as possible. He claims this is reasonable, because "the US can do with 10 carriers until the USS
Gerald Ford is put in commission". I super disagree with that. That's taking it down to the situation that we cannot sustain any casualties amongst our carrier force at all (combat or accident causalities). In addition to all of that, as of 2009 President Obama has said the USS
Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72) will not be refueled. That fact alone removes the last straw to the US Navy's ability to defend the United States of America.
This results in a fleet of 9 aircraft carriers by the time the
Enterprise is decommissioned

. This is not just unacceptable but dangerous to the security of the United States of America.
All of these decisions have been made as a result of extremely restricted (and some would say irresponsible) budget choices. These choices have been made by pursuing the DDX/DDG-1000 and LCS programs as aggressively as the Navy has. This has resulted in a national security crisis of a falling of capital ship levels to a pre-WWI level.
The reaction to this must be immediate, economical, and swift. The way to accomplish the task of bringing the force level back up to 12 capital ships (ships capable of delivering aircraft carrier levels of ordinance) in as little time at the greatest economy is the immediate modernization and reactivation of the Iowa-class battleships. We have already established that the battleships are extremely economical and cost effective.
In Russ's scenario, the (pre-USS)
Kentucky's hull has been preserved and is ready for completion upon a modern weapons system and configuration is decided upon. Because of its WWII protection methods and planning for sustaining attack, unlike modern warship design, this super-survivable Iowa-class hull is a perfect vessel for 21st century technology in a ship actually meant to go into "harm's way" in the modern combat environment.
The USS
Kentucky's (as well as any battleship in a modern environment) purpose and missions would be as follows:
Purpose:
Replace lost aircraft carrier numbers (hulls) without costly reactivation and yearly costs of decommissioned CVs or the costly refuel of the USS
Enterprise in addition to that of the USS
Abraham Lincoln.
Missions:
Operate as the centerpiece of a battleship strike group (BSG) independent of aircraft carriers.
1. Operate offensively in areas of interest.
2. Operate as a sea-domination force (destroy up to 5 surface targets up to 80nm)
3. Operate in areas inaccessible/undesirable to aircraft carriers
4. Operate in areas of high priority to free aircraft carriers for more important areas of interst
5. Destroy shore targets at short or long range with massive amounts ordnance
6. Provide Naval Gunfire Support (NGFS/NSFS)
7. Support amphibious operations (invasion and on-ooing operations)
8. Perform surgical low-cost/high effect 16" strikes
9. Perform surgical or "alpha" level strikes up to 1000nm inland with TLAM
10. Provide NSFS to on-ground elements
11. Blockade
12. Air control for ASW, SAR, and patrol
13. Host and support SOF
14. UAV intelligence gathering
15. Electronic intelligence collection and tactical deception
16. Refuel accompanying ships in group
17. Influence other nations' political/military decisions
18. Show the flag in foreign waters and ports
19. Operate and fuel all types of helos used by the USN (SH-60, CH-53, V-22)
20. Flag Support
21. Defend itself against air threats (missile or aircraft)
22. Provide itself with point defense systems
In order to accomplish these missions we would have the following:
ASuW: 16" guns - a precision (laser/GPSGPS-guided) capability currently out to 47nm
. 8" guns - a precision (laser/GPS-guided) capability currently out to 21nm
. Harpoon ASM - 60-80 nm anti-ship missile capability
. Mk110 57mm rapid-fire horizon anti-small boat gun
AAW: ESSM (Evolved Sea Sparrow Missile)
ASW: None
Armament:
9x 16"/50caliber Mk7 Mod1 naval guns
4x 8"/60caliber Mk71 Mod2 guns
4x 57mm Mk110 super rapid-fire guns
128 x Strike Length Mk-41 VLS tubes for 120 TLAM (Alpha-Strike capbility) and 8 for 32 ESSM
64 x Tactical Length Mk-41 VLS tubes for 64 Harpoon CIII ASM
Total:
192 Mk-41 VLS tubes
Defensive close in weapon systems:
4x Mk15 Block1B Phalanx CIWS
2x RAM
4x Mk38 Mod2 25mm remotely controlled guns
Electronics:
SPS-49(v)5
SPS-48G
SPS-67
SPQ-9B
SLQ-32(v)
3x SPG-62 Mod1(with track and scan capbility), or SPG-51D/E, or Mk95 bug-eyes
Standard electronics package such as SATCOM, etc.
OUTBOARD AN/SSQ-108(V)
NIXIE
Cooperative OUTBOARD Logistics Update (COBLU)
...and a bunch of other incidental stuff like TACAN, etc.
Aircraft:
2x SH-60B LAMPSIII helicopters in below-deck hanger aft of Turret 3
8-12 UAV (Pioneer BlockIII and/or SCANEAGLE) for gunfire spotting, laser designation, and intelligence gathering
Power plant:
8× 35,000 hp gas turbines (GE - LM 2500+) 280,000shp
6 × 4,000 kW diesel generators (Fairbanks Morse Engines) as just-in-case generators
Do we have any more inputs?