The Ohio-class ballistic-missile submarine USS Alaska returns to Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay following a patrol, in Kings Bay, Georgia, in May 2014. | U.S. NAVY / VIA REUTERS
Japan Times/Bloomberg: U.S. submarines are popping up more often and it's not clear why
A U.S. nuclear-armed submarine will make a publicly announced visit to South Korea within months, prompting debate about the wisdom of a heightened public role for what’s long been known as the Navy’s “silent service.”
Pentagon officials confirmed that one of the Navy’s 14 Ohio-class vessels will visit, as President Joe Biden signaled in announcing a “Nuclear Consultative Group” during last month’s White House visit by South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol.
The submarines, nicknamed Boomers, gained the silent service description because they are designed to glide undetected, and their port calls have seldom been disclosed — much less trumpeted — by their usually taciturn commanders. Each of the subs carries up to 20 D-5 Trident ballistic missiles.
The U.S. has occasionally showcased its submarines in the past, but the pace picked up in the last year with publicized port visits by nuclear-armed Ohio-class submarines as well as Los Angeles-class subs carrying conventional Tomahawk cruise missiles. The Biden administration’s Nuclear Posture Review endorsed such demonstrations last year.
Read more ....
WNU Editor: Its all about sending a message .... The US Navy is putting its submarines on rare public display in a message to Russia's growing undersea force (Insider).
2 comments:
A lot of captured/abandoned Russian tanks' ERA bricks were found by Ukrainians to be empty of explosive filler, perhaps removed then sold off or never inserted by corrupt manufacturers. That may well be the case here.
WNJ: what is the red line for the day? Is there any redline today?
Post a Comment