By Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Sara B. Sexton, Task Force
70
APRA HARBOR, Guam, March 7, 2018 — Units and personnel from
the U.S. Navy and the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force are scheduled to
participate in the annual bilateral training exercise MultiSail 2018, March
8-14.
MultiSail is an annual bilateral training exercise that
improves interoperability between U.S. and Japanese forces. In 2018, the focus
of the exercise will be on improving fundamental skills such as tracking and
defeating submarines, combating other surface forces, live-fire training and
interoperability with U.S. and JMSDF units.
Boosting Combat Effectiveness at Sea
"MultiSail is an opportunity for our ships to increase
our combat proficiency at sea," said Navy Capt. Jon Duffy, commander,
Destroyer Squadron 15. "We have designed MultiSail to exercise how we
detect, locate, track and engage simulated units at sea, in the air, on land,
and underwater with our Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force allies to help us
increase our interoperability in a range of mission areas."
Participants include USS Antietam, USS Curtis Wilbur, USS
Benfold, USS Mustin, JS Fuyuzuki, and a number of subsurface and other special
units.
"MultiSail 2018 provides us a valuable opportunity to
increase JMSDF tactical capabilities and to strengthen our interoperability
with our U.S. Navy allies," said Cmdr. Kazuteru Hirano, JS Fuyuzuki's
commanding officer. "The Japan-U.S. alliance is stronger than it has ever
been, and it is growing stronger."
The participating forces will exercise a wide range of
capabilities and demonstrate the inherent flexibility of our combined forces,
officials said. These capabilities range from maritime security operations to
more complex anti-submarine and air defense exercises.
The lessons learned from exercises like MultiSail 2018 will
assist the U.S. Navy and the JMSDF to develop regional capabilities that
provide a full range of options in defense of their interests and those of
their allies and partners around the world.
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