I don’t have live access to the latest news right now, but I can summarize what’s historically known about the Montana-class battleships and point you to where you can check the most recent developments.
Direct answer
- There is no active Montana-class battleship construction underway in the U.S. Navy as of my last update. The Montana-class ships were planned during World War II but were canceled before keel laying as priorities shifted to aircraft carriers and other vessels. For the latest news, please check current defense and naval history outlets.
Context and background
- What the Montana-class was: A proposed class intended to be the next generation of U.S. battleships, larger and more heavily armed than the Iowa class, featuring twelve 16-inch guns and increased armor. They were designed to be the pinnacle of U.S. battleship design and would have been among the largest warships afloat at the time. This remains a key point in naval history discussions.[5][6]
- Why they were canceled: In 1943, the Navy canceled the Montana-class program as combat experience in World War II (such as Carrier Warfare) demonstrated that concentration on aircraft carriers and anti-submarine capabilities would yield greater military effectiveness than battleships, so funds and yards were redirected accordingly.[5]
How to find the latest information
- Look for post-2020 analysis from reputable defense journals (e.g., National Interest, The National Security Journal) and naval history sites that reassess the Montana-class in light of modern naval strategy. Some recent articles emphasize that the Montana-class remained a “what if” and discuss its potential capabilities and why it never sailed.[2][4][5]
- For the most current status, search for: “Montana-class battleship latest news,” “Montana-class 1940s canceled ships status,” and “US Navy last battleships what-if” in trusted defense news sources and maritime history outlets.
Illustrative note
- If you’re evaluating whether a Montana-class revival is plausible today, the key constraints would be evolving naval doctrine, budget priorities, and the effectiveness of carrier strike groups versus standalone battleships in modern warfare. Many modern analyses frame the Montana-class as a historical curiosity rather than a feasible contemporary program.[10][5]
If you’d like, I can pull together a brief, sourced timeline of the Montana-class discussions and cancellations, or compile a compare-and-contrast table between the Montana-class concept and the actual Iowa-class lifecycle to help visualize why the program never progressed. I can also fetch the most recent specific articles you’re interested in.
Sources
In September 2020, the future Virginia-class fast-attack submarine USS Montana (SSN-794) was christened in a ceremony at Huntington Ingalls Industries (HII) Newport News Shipbuilding Division. Construction of the boat began in 2015, and the submarine is on schedule to be delivered to the U.S. Navy by the end of 2021. The submarine will be only […]
nationalinterest.orgIn 1941, by the US Navy, which tested new main guns and power en
en.namu.wikiThe Montana-class battleships sit at the center of a lasting naval “what-if”: a larger successor to the Iowa class with heavier armor, a bigger hull, and a 12-gun 16-inch main battery. They were authorized as the Navy’s final battleship order, but the logic of sea power shifted fast. Carrier aviation proved decisive, and the Montanas’ slower speed made them ill-suited to operate with fast carrier task forces.
www.19fortyfive.comBattleship Montana: The Super Battleships Never Built – In September 2020, the future Virginia-class fast-attack submarine USS Montana (SSN-794) was christened in a ceremony at Huntington Ingalls Industries (HII) Newport News Shipbuilding Division. Construction of the boat began in 2015, and the submarine is on schedule to be delivered to the U.S. Navy by the end of 2021. The submarine will be […]
www.19fortyfive.comThe Montana-class would have been the largest, most heavily armed, and best-protected battleship the United States Navy ever put to sea. As one U.S. naval historian told me: “Nothing would have been more powerful. This would have been the ultimate battleship to ever sail.” Five hulls were authorized. Names were chosen. Yards were assigned. And […]
www.19fortyfive.comKey points and Summary – The Montana-class represents the U.S. Navy battleships that never sailed. Authorized in 1940 as America’s answer to Japan’s Yamato-class superbattleships, the five planned ships were designed to be the largest, most heavily armed, and best-protected battleships ever built by the United States, featuring twelve 16-inch guns. -However, the program was […]
nationalsecurityjournal.orgKey Points and Summary – The Montana-class battleships were meant to be the apex of US naval gunpower: 60,000-ton giants with twelve 16-inch guns, massive armor, and protection tailored to withstand Japan’s Yamato-class shells. -Freed from treaty limits, they traded Iowa-class speed for heavier guns and protection, even at the cost of being too wide […]
www.19fortyfive.com