Daily Press

Luria sees lessons from Suez ordeal

Says stuck ship shows need for Navy focus on maritime chokepoint­s

- By Dave Ress Staff Writer

As Rep. Elaine Luria, D-Norfolk, watched the struggle to refloat a giant container ship in the Suez Canal — a waterway she transited a half-dozen times in her Navy career — she kept thinking about the cold of the Arctic and the coral lagoons of the South China Sea.

Both have the potential to be the same kind of chokepoint­s that could become multibilli­on-dollar problems for the global economy.

“It looks like something for a meme, but we’ll see a significan­t impact in the next weeks and years” from the shutdown of the Suez Canal, she said. “And our adversarie­s are looking to create new chokepoint­s.”

For one, China is building airfields and missile sites in the disputed waters of the South China Sea, through which traffic to and from Japan, Taiwan and South Korea flows, she said. And as climate change opens an ice-free route in the Arctic between Europe and Asia, with more and more ships trying that route, Russia is poised to assert control.

Keeping chokepoint­s open is a key Navy mission — it is why the Norfolkbas­ed USS Dwight D. Eisenhower strike group conducted an exercise with Morocco’s navy and air force earlier this month, since that nation guards the approaches to Gibraltar.

It’s why a key part of Norfolkbas­ed USS Winston S. Churchill’s recent deployment involved

escorting merchant ships through the Persian Gulf ’s Strait of Hormuz and the Bab-el-Mandeb at the southern end of the Red Sea.

Luria said making sure nobody can choke off a chokepoint is why she’d like to see more smaller ships that can battle pirates, such as frigates for the Navy or Coast Guard cutters. The waters near the Bab-el-Mandeb and the heavily trafficked Straits of Malacca between Indonesia and Malaysia have long been plagued by piracy.

In addition, the House Armed Services Committee, of which Luria is vice chair, is pushing to expand the U.S. fleet of ice-breakers to step up U.S. presence in the Arctic, where shipping, mineral exploratio­n and fisheries issues are a growing concern. Only two aging Coast Guard cutters are reinforced enough to cope with Arctic ice.

Luria and the rest of Virginia’s congressio­nal delegation are also trying to make widening the Port of Virginia main channel an Army Corps of Engineers priority. The state is funding its share of the project and work is underway, but a priority rating would expedite the work.

The channel is now subject to one-way traffic restrictio­ns when large ships like the Ever Given call here — as the Suez Canal is for all traffic.

The Ever Given’s grounding in the Suez Canal trapped 10 container ships scheduled to call at Hampton Roads in April, Port of Virginia spokesman Joe Harris told WAVY this week. Harris said the ships would arrive here late, probably toward the end of April or in early May.

 ?? AP ?? A tugboat drags the Panama- flagged ship Ever Given in the Suez Canal after the ship was successful­ly freed and refloated March 29.
AP A tugboat drags the Panama- flagged ship Ever Given in the Suez Canal after the ship was successful­ly freed and refloated March 29.
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