Morning Briefing - January 07, 2026
Visit Archives | Return to Issue
PDF
Morning Briefing
Article 1 of 6
January 06, 2026

General Dynamics, HII to work on Trump’s new battleship design

By Staff Reports

The Navy plans to award a sole source contract to the service’s two largest shipbuilders, General Dynamics (GD) Bath Iron Works and Huntington Ingalls Industries (HII) Ingalls Shipbuilding, for the Donald Trump administration’s new battleship design.

In December, Trump and senior administration officials announced plans for a new class of battleships named after the president, starting with the future USS Defiant (BBG-1). These battleships are billed as anchoring a new Golden Fleet plan that will replace the Navy’s current 381-ship force structure plan. The Navy has not yet released details of the Golden Fleet plan.

The 30,000 to 40,000 ton battleships – less than half the size of an aircraft carrier – would carry the nuclear-armed, sea-launched cruise missile (SLCM-N) and serve as a command and control platform for drones and other ships, Navy Secretary John Phelan has said. Phelan provided the details when Trump first announced his eponymous Trump-class BBG(X) battleships.

According to a Dec. 22 Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA) notice, it intends to award a contract to the shipbuilders to work together on battleship design and engineering for a six-year period. This was released concurrently with the announcement of plans to award a similar contract to Leidos‘ Gibbs & Cox subsidiary to conduct surface combatant ship design engineering. The GD-HII notice said the design work will include “shipbuilder engineering and design analysis necessary to produce BBG(X) design products in support of Navy-led design for BBG(X). GD and HII both currently produce the Arleigh Burke-class destroyer and were working on the expected future DDG(X) destroyer before the Trump administration announced BBG(X) will supersede those plans.

A Dec. 30 Congressional Research Service (CRS) report underscored that initial plans for the BBG(X) make it larger and more heavily armed than any cruiser or destroyer procured by the Navy since World War II. The report said the two initial ships will reportedly not be procured until the early 2030s, in line with the six year-long development timeline in the awards to Gibbs & Cox, GD and HII. Given the likely timeline of producing such ships, they would likely enter service in the late 2030s or 2040.

Exchange Monitor affiliate Defense Daily first published a version of this story.

Comments are closed.