【Comment】
3月4日美駐日大使與日本外務大臣會面後宣布,兩國國防部將共同研發輕型(稍低於3,000噸級)搭載反潛、反水雷直升機的高速近岸戰艦LCS。
美國的LCS從52艘降到32艘,日本則在2014到2019,則建造14艘。
US, Japan to Jointly Develop Littoral Combat Ship○The Diplomat(2014.03.07)http://thediplomat.com/2014/03/us-japan-to-jointly-develop-littoral-combat-ship/
The U.S. and Japan will jointly develop a littoral combat ship (LCS) for
quick intervention in shallow waters.
Amid escalating tensions between Japan and China, a 12.2 percent budget
increase in China’s defense spending, and fears that budget cuts for the
U.S. military could have a negative
impact on the United States’ ability to “pivot” to Asia, U.S. and Japanese
officials have announced plans to co-develop a new high-speed vessel capable of carrying
helicopters.
Following a meeting between U.S.
Ambassador to Japan Caroline Kennedy and Japanese Foreign
Minister Fumio Kishida
on March 4, the two governments announced that the Japanese Defense Ministry
and the U.S. Department of Defense would hold studies for the joint development
of the vessel under the bilateral Mutual Defense
Assistance (MDA) agreement.
Although very little information has been released about the project,
analysts contend that the trimaran would likely be a lighter
variant of the U.S. Navy’s 3,000-tonne
littoral combat ship (LCS), a platform designed primarily for missions in
shallow coastal waters.
According to reports in Japanese media, the high-speed J-LCS would give
the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF) the ability to quickly intervene during incursions by Chinese vessels
near the Senkaku/Diaoyu islets and other contested areas of the East China Sea.
Chinese analysts speculate
that the J-LCS could be intended as a counter to the PLA Navy’s (PLAN) Type
056 corvettes and Type
022 fast-attack boats, two types of vessels that could be deployed to the
region should relations continue to deteriorate. Furthermore, early reports indicate that the
slightly enlarged hull of the 1,000-tonne-plus vessels could accommodate SH-60K
anti-submarine helicopters and MCH-101
airborne mine countermeasures (AMCM)
helicopters.
Coincidentally, the announcement came as the U.S. Navy unveiled a substantial
reduction in the number of LCSs it will acquire, from 52 as initially planned to 32. A total of US$1.5 billion was set aside to buy
three LCS during FY2015 (down one from a
planned four), for a total of 14 through 2019 (twenty LCSs have been funded through FY2014). As a large share of the LCSs in the U.S. Navy
was expected to be deployed to the Asia-Pacific, the
joint project with Japan could serve as a much-needed
supplement to compensate for a trimmed U.S. force deployment, both in
terms of reduced production costs and an increased number of surface combatants
that, through burden sharing, the U.S. Navy and JMSDF could bring into play
during hostilities.
Additionally, the outcome of this project could lead to the development
of an alternative version to the current (and
expensive) LCS. The U.S. Navy is
reportedly seeking such an alternative amid criticism that the platform,
sometimes referred to as an “undergunned corvette,” doesn’t
pack enough firepower and would be no match against the better-armed — and
cheaper — surface combatants (including the PLAN’s 220-tonne Type 022 and
1,800-tonne Type 056) that would see action during combat operations in the
Asia-Pacific.
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