The U.S. Navy’s USS Sioux City, a littoral combat ship (LCS) valued at $362 million, was decommissioned on August 2023 after less than five years of service in a ceremony aboard Naval Station Mayport, Florida.
Once billed as the future of the fleet, the LCS program has been hindered by mission modules that haven’t materialized, as well as class-wide propulsion and hull crack issues that have plagued the Freedom and Independence LCS classes, respectively. Furthermore, officials now admit to stand little chance of surviving a conventional battle against China or another nation’s navy.
Naval Surface Force Atlantic spokesman Lt. Cmdr. David Carter said Wednesday that the decision to decommission the ship “was not about the material condition.”
“Ultimately, the Navy has to make difficult decisions on how to invest in the future,” Carter said in an email. “To maintain our strategic advantage, particularly under fiscal constraints, it is important for the Navy to carefully review our force structure regularly and divest of legacy capabilities that no longer bring sufficient lethality to maximize our effectiveness in deterring and defeating potential adversaries.”
The Sioux City’s history was not entirely devoid of achievement. During its brief tenure, it completed four deployments between December 2020 and October 2022, including operations within the U.S. 5th and 6th Fleet’s areas of responsibility.
During a hearing last summer, Rep. Jackie Speier, D-Calif., displayed a floor chart titled “Leaking Cracked Ships” that contained a picture of each LCS with a lemon, playing on the slang for a defective vehicle.
“We all know what lemon cars are. We have a fleet of lemon LCS ships,” she said at the time. “We have spent billions of dollars on this fleet when they have no capability to help us deal with our largest threat, which is that of China and Russia. The only winners have been the contractors on which the Navy relies for sustaining these ships.”
As the last commanding officer of the Sioux City, Cmdr. Michael Gossett, noted during the decommissioning ceremony, the focus should be on the collective memories, culture, and successes forged during the ship’s service—a legacy that will endure beyond its premature retirement.