In a powerful display of military might, Japanese and South Korean warships separately trained with three U. S. aircraft carriers on Sunday as the allies presented a united front against nuclear-armed North Korea.
In a powerful display of military might, Japanese and South Korean warships separately trained with three U. S. aircraft carriers on Sunday as the allies presented a united front against nuclear-armed North Korea.
Japan sent its massive Ise helicopter destroyer — one of the largest warships in its fleet — as well as the Inazuma and Makinami destroyers, for the joint military exercises in the waters near the Korean Peninsula. They joined the Yokosuka, Kanagawa Prefecture-based USS Ronald Reagan and the USS Nimitz and USS Theodore Roosevelt aircraft carrier strike groups. It was the first time the Maritime Self-Defense Force had drilled with so many carriers. The MSDF said it was «using every opportunity» to strengthen the two navies’ ties, and joining the three-carrier flotilla for drills was «natural» as part of efforts «to «stabilize» the regional security situation.