Skip to content

Cart

Your cart is empty

Article: US wants Japanese shipyards to help keep warships ready to fight in Asia

US wants Japanese shipyards to help keep warships ready to fight in Asia

US wants Japanese shipyards to help keep warships ready to fight in Asia

PHOTO CAPTION: The Kongo-class guided-missile destroyer JS Kongo (DDG-173) from the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force, front, and the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson (CVN 70) sail together during a trilateral exercise, Jan. 17, 2024. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Isaiah B. Goessl via U.S. Defense Visual Information Distribution Service)

 

 

By John Geddie and Tim Kelly

YOKOSUKA, Japan (Reuters) - The United States and Japan are looking to make a deal for Japanese shipyards to regularly overhaul and maintain U.S. Navy warships so they can stay in Asian waters ready for any potential conflict, U.S. Ambassador to Japan Rahm Emanuel said on Friday.

"China watches what ships are coming in and out. It is not like this is a secret, they know what's happening. So therefore, they take an evaluation of your deterrence," Emanuel told reporters at the Yokosuka naval base near Tokyo.

Unchallenged in Asian waters for decades, the U.S. Navy faces a growing Chinese navy being built in shipyards that are outpacing U.S. warship production.

China has more than 370 ships and submarines, up from the 340 ships they had in 2023, according to an annual report released by the Pentagon in October, making it numerically the largest navy in the world.

Using Japanese dry docks would ease pressure on U.S. yards that are wrestling with maintenance backlogs of up to 4,000 days and allow them to focus on shipbuilding that will allow the U.S. to expand its fleet, Emanuel said.

Washington and Tokyo, he added, had established a council to work out a joint plan for the maintenance work.

U.S. ally Japan hosts the biggest overseas concentration of U.S. military power, including the only forward-deployed carrier strike group, which operates from Yokosuka. That group of warships is part of the Seventh Fleet, which commands up to 70 ships and submarines from its headquarters at the Japanese naval base.

Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, which makes warships and submarines for Japan's Self Defense Forces, operates commercial dockyards in nearby Yokohama, which have done some maintenance work on U.S. Navy ships in the past.



(Reporting by John Geddie and Tim Kelly; Editing by Chang-Ran Kim and Christian Schmollinger)

MORE FROM THE

OAF NATION NEWSROOM

Philippines, Canada sign agreement on defense cooperation

Philippines, Canada sign agreement on defense cooperation

The Philippines and Canada signed a memorandum of understanding on defense cooperation on Friday, a move which Manila's defense minister said could later lead to a troop pact between the two countr...

Read more
Pennsylvania cannot bar adults under 21 from carrying guns, court rules

Pennsylvania cannot bar adults under 21 from carrying guns, court rules

A federal appeals court on Thursday ruled that Pennsylvania laws that ban 18- to 20-year-olds from carrying firearms in public during a state of emergency are unconstitutional, citing a landmark U....

Read more
#3 Liquid error (layout/theme line 179): Could not find asset snippets/back-in-stock-helper.liquid