I thought this chart was interesting - part of the "DISTRIBUTED LETHALITY: THE FUTURE OF THE HELICOPTER SEA COMBAT COMMUNITY" -
Current State of HSC
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In fairness, the first time this slide was ever presented to me, it was presented to me by a front office saying "this is our Commodores' argument as to why the SWTP needs to change. We aren't given enough time to practice those mission on the top right; expect more of the overwater missions to be our focus in the future." To this day, our current Commodores do seem to echo that - the desire is that HSC is overwater, Naval combat experts.
@Python1287 - to answer your question and a few others' - HSC also says it doesn't advertise what it does well enough. I couldn't agree more. My squadron did some really neat stuff, but I was surprised to see VFA (rightly!) bragging about our 4 VFA squadrons' accomplisments, but HSC just kind of carried on without any mention of what we did anywhere significant. Even in the last couple weeks of our deployment, the DESRON had questions about video imagery he was watching, he called the HSM CO in, and he was like "oh, uh, that's from the HSC aircraft." He called my CO in and admitted he had no idea we had been providing footage this whole time as well - didn't even know we had an MTS (aka: FLIR). As for what I did? I was a mid-tour JO on cruise who made aircraft commander about halfway through it. I did mostly Plane Guard - but PG isn't making right hand turns - at least around the carrier until the last trap of your assigned cycles. Typically, between the launches and recoveries, you're going to the small boys delivering people and parts, and helping the HSM bubbas ID surface vessels and reporting them to the DESRON module. I honestly found that to be more exciting than the long bags of the MH-60R and ONLY id'ing surface (and possibly subsurface) vessels. We also had a USNS VERTREP detachment I was fortunate enough to be a part of a bit, and we also had a detachment in Kuwait; from what I remember, we got put on a CSAR alert once (we had to recall the USNS det in order to fully support the CVW and that alert). I was fortunate enough to go on both detachments and fly around the boat a lot. Once a week was VERTREP and that was a fun, half day evolution. At night, the plane guard leash is a little tighter, so you'll drop a smoke and do a night GUNEX with your gunners or a wingman, or a TACFORM card with someone, usually an HSM PQM or 2P that needs his form card signed off. A few times I got to do airborne intercepts of both RW and FW assets (think IRGCN coming to mess with the cycle or a random oil platform helicopter who had no idea he just stumbled upon some very busy airspace and needs a nudge to move away). I loved it, and I think that even coming from a time in the HTs when instructors advertised a sexier HSC than exists today, I wasn't jaded about the missions and didn't feel misled about the expectations. What I didn't realize though was when I showed up to the FRS, how many guys were suuuuper opposed to any tactics (I think this is mostly gone nowadays though). With that said, I think where a lot of JO's are worried is the direction HSC is going - seemingly grasping at straws for more missions. I still don't really get what FIRESCOUT brings to the fight, but I wasn't expeditionary and never used one; I also don't get the LCS's current role either for what it's worth.
Why do I think today's students want R's more than they did in the past? A few reasons: when I went through, people wanted Guam. Not the case anymore; it's one of the least competitive selection spots. People absolutely want Hawaii or the option to be stationed there in the future. JAX is attractive for those who want to remain in FL and hate moving. I also think that today's students are a bit nerdier than in the past and definitely can get more behind the idea of being a systems operator than a good stick; not to mention, at the time when I was in flight school, guys were in the NAAD doing air ambulance in Iraq. Today's students are being told 6th and 7th fleets will be their arenas and China, Russia, and North Korea have subs that need finding and that R's are crucial to that mission of the immediate future.