Rather than consider the U.S. Pacific fleet’s agglomeration of older aircraft carriers and attack submarines an embarrassing sign of American weakness, the old nuclear combatants of the of Indo-Pacific Fleet deserve recognition for being as dangerous as they have ever been. With little to lose and nothing to prove, the relative combat value of nuclear-powered platforms increases as they age.
America’s aircraft carrier power plants were built to provide around 50 trouble-free years of service, and the lifespan of America’s submarines is similarly fixed. In a rough sense, the combat value of most nuclear combatants is inversely tied to the remaining service-life of each vessel’s nuclear power plant. Any loss of a relatively young nuclear vessel echoes through America’s overall force structure, while older nuclear craft enjoy the freedom to operate under a very different risk calculus—they can be employed far more aggressively.