Trice up your rack. Attend morning quarters. Stand watch. Oh, and shoot the guns.

Every day underway, the top surface warfare officer expects ships to release their batteries .

The top surface warfare officer want's ships to shoot and shoot often – every day, in fact.

The head of Naval Surface Forces , Vice Adm. Tom Rowden, ordered all his ships to fire their guns every day. Shoot anything, from 5-inch deck guns to crew-served .50-caliber machine guns or the close-in weapons system, but shoot every day. Or else.

"All SURFOR ships are required to conduct live fire exercises daily while underway unless for safety, operational or environmental reasons you are not able to fire," Rowden wrote in the Feb. 5 message, the authenticity of which was confirmed by Navy Times.

The message also directed ships to use their towed array sonars to track subsurface and surface contacts "at every available opportunity," as well as streaming ship' anti-torpedo decoy known as Nixie. The message signals Rowden's renewed insistence on weapons training and SWO fundamentals, yet it was met with some sniping that this is one more requirement heaped onto busy crews.

Rowden said the directive to shoot every day applies to crew-served weapons, such as the .50 caliber machine guns on ship's main decks, primarily used for force protection.

The message to skippers : You will shoot ever day or you will need to explain to your superiors why you didn't.

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"Short of the reasons listed above, I will assume if you are not shooting every day while underway it is because your weapon systems are broken or there are special circumstances on which you have pre-briefed your [immediate superior in charge] and, in turn, your ISIC has briefed my chief of staff and force gunner."

Rowden said that getting good at shooting was part of his effort to inculcate a warfighting spirit and increase proficiency in the force, and that those needs outweighed the inevitable broken CIWS and 5-inch guns that will result .

"The tactical proficiency developed through repeated live fire exercises far outweighs any potential material challenges associated with increased use of your main battery, crew-served weapons, and ship/area defense weapons," he wrote.

141009-N-NE138-087 YOKOSUKA, Japan (Oct. 9, 2014) - Vice Adm. Thomas Rowden, commander, Naval Surface Forces, U.S. Pacific Fleet, conducts and interview with an Armed Forces Network correspondent during a tour aboard the Ticonderoga-class guided-missile cruiser USS Shiloh (CG 67). Shiloh is assigned to Commander, Task Force 70, and is forward deployed in Yokosuka, Japan, in support of security and stability of the Indo-Asia-Pacific region. (U.S. Navy photo by Fire Controlman First Class Kristopher Horton/Released)

Vice Adm. Tom Rowden said feedback from the fleet regarding daily live fire exercises has been positive.

Photo Credit: Navy

Rowden said in a Feb. 24 email to Navy Times that the feedback he's gotten has been positive, and that "leadership in the surface force understands that shooting more will ultimately develop more competent and confident watchstanders who are able to engage the enemy if called upon."

Some have wondered what led to the 3-star's order; commentator CDR Salamander speculated that there might be a cultural issue.

"Are we selecting personality types and have a culture at sea such that it requires such detail from a Vice Admiral in order to have your warships ready for action?" he wrote.

One reader commented that the message came after a recent live fire on a littoral combat ship had to be aborted at the last minute because of software issues that Rowden had known about.

When asked, Rowden said he sent off the message "for consistency purposes so all Surface Forces operate under the same guidance."

Others speculated that such guidance would cause SWOs to cut corners in an effort to comply .

But SURFOR spokesman Lt. Rick Chernitzer said there are plenty of "valid reasons" why a ship might not be able to shoot every day. Maybe there is too much traffic, they are in the middle of a training exercise and can't break away, or they are deployed to an area that isn't conducive to getting hot .