The Manila Times

Training, maintenanc­e issues beset US ships

- AFP

WASHINGTON, D.C.: Foreign-based US Navy ships are suffering a slew of problems that are raising risks and impacting military readiness, a government watchdog warned Thursday (Friday in Manila) in the wake of two deadly maritime mishaps.

A review by the Government Ac that crews are being overworked and undertrain­ed, just as vital maintenanc­e is not being completed on time.

Problems are particular­ly apparent in vessels ported in Japan, home to the Navy’s Seventh Fleet, from where ships sail from Yokosuka and Sasebo on vital operationa­l missions in the South China Sea and off the Korean Peninsula.

“The Navy has been warning for some time that they have been keeping a pace that is unsustain a director at GAO.

Last month, the USS John S. McCain collided with a tanker as the destroyer was on its way to Singapore, tearing a huge hole in the hull and leaving 10 sailors

In June, the USS Fitzgerald— also a destroyer—smashed into a Japan, leaving seven sailors dead - ing discipline­d.

Two non-deadly incidents occurred this year—in January, the USS Antietam ran aground near its base in Japan and in May, the USS Lake Champlain collided with a

According to an updated GAO review, which began studying naval readiness in 2015, the number of sailors lacking current training just two years.

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