James Stavridis, Columnist

Where There’s Smoke, the U.S. Navy’s on Fire

The inferno on the USS Bonhomme Richard caps off a dismal run for the service.

A $4 billion inferno.

Photographer: Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images

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The fire that tore through amphibious assault ship Bonhomme Richard for more than four days starting July 12 devastated a $4 billion ship and injured more than 70 sailors and civilian firefighters. The resultant smoke that covered San Diego's harbor and downtown for days afterward seemed a visible symbol of the condition the U.S. Navy finds itself in around the globe.

It also brings to mind a history lesson. In many of the offices I occupied during my Navy career, I kept a painting of the USS Maine on the wall. It shows the battleship in early 1898, in Havana harbor — just before it blew up at anchor and sank, killing hundreds of sailors. The event was a cause celebre that put into motion the Spanish-American War.