Warships from Korea, the United States and Japan participate in an anti-submarine exercise in the East Sea in this Sept. 30, 2022 file photo. Courtesy of ROK Navy
The Pentagon is considering outsourcing warship design and building to Korea and Japan with a proposed $1.85 billion feasibility study into the project, according to U.S. media reports.
The study — included in the 2027 budget — will look at the feasibility of adopting or co-producing advanced hulls such as Japan’s Mogami-class and Korea’s Daegu-class frigates to supplement the U.S. Navy’s overstretched production lines, USNI News reported on Friday.
If the plan goes ahead it will be the first time the U.S. has bought a major surface combatant from a foreign partner since World War II.
It comes as the Donald Trump administration is frustrated by chronic delays, labour shortages and cost overruns within America’s industrial base.
The initiative also aims to bridge a widening shipbuilding capacity gap with China, which is currently producing six to 10 destroyers per year — four to six times the rate of the United States.
Japan’s Mogami-class has a 5,500-tonne stealth hull with a high degree of automation. Korea’s Daegu-class is smaller at 3,600 tonnes and has a silent propulsion system. Both are equipped with U.S.-standard systems, such as the MK-41 vertical launching system.
A basic Mogami-class frigate costs about $500 million and can be completed by manufacturer Mitsubishi within two years. This is significantly faster and cheaper than America’s Constellation-class frigate, which is projected to cost over $1 billion per ship and has fallen years behind schedule.
Australia has ordered 11 upgraded Mogami-class vessels for A$20 billion ($14.4 billion) — the first three to be built in Japan and the remaining eight in Australia. The first ship is expected to be delivered in 2029.
The U.S. Navy needs more ships “right now,” Russ Vought, director of the White House Office of Management and Budget, said on Wednesday at the Navy League symposium. “If we cannot get the ships we need from traditional sources at cost and on time, we will get them from other shipyards,” he added.
Source: Korea Times News