Navy Pushes $43B “Trump-Class” Battleship as Costs Soar and Questions Mount

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THE PENTAGON — The Navy wants to lock in a new class of battleship before the ink dries on the next election.

They’re calling it BBG(X). Around the building, some are already calling it the “Trump-class.” Either way, it’s a 30,000-ton bet that the Navy thinks bigger is better—and Congress won’t flinch at the price tag.

Right now, the ship is penciled in for 2028. But Navy budget officials are trying to move money early so the program gets traction while the current administration is still in charge.

Rear Adm. Ben Reynolds, the Navy’s budget man, brushed off critics who say this isn’t what the fleet needs.

“We’ve been working toward a larger surface combatant for years,” he said.

Translation: we’ve already spent too much to turn back now.

The Navy argues this new ship fills the gap left by retiring cruisers. One hull, more firepower, more capability—fewer tradeoffs than trying to squeeze everything into smaller ships.

That’s the pitch.

Here’s the bill.

  • $1 billion in advance procurement in the FY27 budget
  • $538 million more for research and development
  • Already burning through $134 million in design work
  • Total projected cost: $43.5 billion for three ships

And it ramps fast:

  • $17 billion for the first ship in 2028
  • $13 billion for the second in 2030
  • $11.5 billion for the third in 2031

No incremental funding. No spreading the pain. They want it straight.

Meanwhile, the Navy is still figuring out what this thing actually is. As recently as the FY26 budget documents, there was no finalized acquisition strategy for the program it evolved from—DDG(X), the destroyer replacement that quietly morphed into something bigger.

Now it’s a battleship.

That shift didn’t happen in a vacuum.

In December, President Donald Trump and Navy Secretary John Phelan rolled out the idea as part of a so-called “Golden Fleet.” At the same time, the Navy killed off the Constellation-class frigate program and pivoted to a cheaper design based on the Coast Guard’s National Security Cutter.

So on one end, they’re downsizing. On the other, they’re swinging for the fences.

What’s missing here is the hard question:

Is this the right ship for the kind of war we’re actually heading into?

Because while the Navy is talking about big decks and big guns, the battlefield is filling up with cheap drones, autonomous systems, and swarms that don’t care how thick your armor is or how much you spent.

Forty-three billion dollars buys a lot of smaller, harder-to-kill systems.

But big ships are easier to brief. Easier to sell. And a whole lot easier to name after presidents.

Congress will decide if they want to write that check.

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