From Commander Task Force 70 Public Affairs
WESTERN PACIFIC OCEAN (NNS) -- The Arleigh Burke-class
guided-missile destroyer USS
Benfold (DDG 65) entered 7th Fleet's area of responsibility
(AOR), Oct. 13, in support of security and stability to the Indo-Asia-Pacific
region.
Benfold will enhance presence in the 7th Fleet as part of
the U.S. Navy's long range plan to send the most advanced and capable units to
the Indo-Asia-Pacific region, while also adding to the Ballistic Missile
Defense (BMD) capable ships in the AOR.
BMD is one of the many missions the U.S. and Japan train for
together. U.S. BMD-capable forces, combined with the sea-based missile defense
systems operated by their counterparts in the Japan Maritime Self-Defense
Force, provide the U.S.-Japan alliance a regionally responsive missile defense
capability.
"We are proud to join the Forward Deployed Forces
family in Japan," said Cmdr. Michele Day, Benfold's commanding officer.
"After a demanding shipyard period and training cycle, our Sailors are
anxious to have an opportunity to prove their abilities among some of the most
capable ships in our Navy. We look forward to the waterfront camaraderie and
sense of community in Yokosuka."
7th Fleet's AOR encompasses more than 48 million square
miles (more than 124 million square kilometers) from the Kuril Islands in the
north to the Antarctic in the south, and from the International Date Line to
the 68th meridian east, which runs down from the India-Pakistan border. The
area includes 36 maritime countries and the world's five largest foreign armed
forces, People's Republic of China, Russia, India, North Korea and Republic of
Korea. Five of the seven U.S. Mutual Defense Treaties are with countries in the
area, Republic of the Philippines, Australia and New Zealand, Republic of
Korea, Japan, and Thailand.
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