Thu May
10, 2012 12:23am EDT
http://ca.reuters.com/article/topNews/idCABRE8481IE20120510?sp=true
By Jim Wolf
WASHINGTON (Reuters)
- The first of a new class of U.S.
coastal warships will be sent to Singapore
next spring for a roughly 10-month deployment, the Navy said on Wednesday,
spotlighting a move that may stir China 's
fears of U.S. involvement in
South China Sea disputes.
Deployment of the shallow-draft ship
"Freedom" will help refine crew rotations, logistics and maintenance
processes to maximize the class's value to U.S. combat commanders, Rear
Admiral Thomas Rowden, the Navy's director of surface warfare, told reporters.
"We'll be deploying the ship for about
10 months in the spring of next year" to Singapore , he said in a
teleconference. "In the meantime, we're prepping her for success in the
execution of that deployment."
Singapore is strategically located along the
Strait of Malacca, the chief link between the Indian and Pacific Oceans
through which flows about 40 percent of world trade.
The government has discussed hosting up to
four such U.S.
"Littoral Combat Ships," or LCS, on a rotational basis at its naval
facilities. Both countries have said the deployment stops short of a basing
agreement.
It signals Washington's "commitment to
the region and enhances its ability to train and engage with regional partners,"
U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and his Singapore counterpart, Ng Eng Hen,
said in a joint statement last month after meeting at the Pentagon.
President Barack Obama last year ordered
stepped-up emphasis on the Asia-Pacific region in a "rebalancing" of U.S. national security planning after a decade
of land wars in Iraq and Afghanistan .
Included in the so-called pivot to the
Pacific would be the LCS stationing in Singapore ,
a rotational U.S. Marine Corps presence in northern Australia
and new areas for military cooperation with the Philippines .
NEW BREED
Littoral combat ships are an entirely new
breed of warship. Capable of speeds greater than 40 knots, they are designed
for modular, "plug-and-fight" missions for mine-clearing,
anti-submarine and anti-surface warfare.
Manned by as few as 40 core crew members, the
Freedom will require a relatively small footprint in Singapore for maintenance, Rear
Admiral Jim Murdoch, the program executive officer, said in the teleconference.
"A much smaller" U.S. group than 40 would be permanently deployed
to the city-state, including U.S.
naval and contractor personnel, he said. In addition, teams would have to come
in and out when the ship is docked in Singapore for routine scheduled
maintenance.
Talks on details of arrangements between the Pearl Harbor , Hawaii-headquartered U.S. Pacific Fleet and
the Singaporean authorities were continuing, Murdoch said.
There are two different LCS designs. One,
including the Freedom, was developed by an industry team led by Lockheed Martin
Corp. The other is built by a team led by General Dynamics Corp. The Navy wants
to buy as many as 55 such ships. Twelve have been funded so far, six of each
type.
The Freedom has been dogged by hull cracks
and engine problems, but the admirals voiced confidence that kinks would be ironed
out in time for the Singapore
deployment.
(This story corrected spelling of name of Singapore
official in paragraph 6)
(Editing by Eric Walsh)
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