Daily Press

US, partners stage military drills amid Japan-South Korea talks

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TOKYO — The United States, Canada, India, Japan and South Korea are staging joint anti-submarine warfare drills amid talks between Japanese and South Korean leaders aimed at strengthen­ing their alliance with Washington against threats from China and North Korea.

The Sea Dragon 23 exercises that started Wednesday will culminate in more than 270 hours of in-flight training “ranging from tracking simulated targets to the final problem of tracking a U.S. Navy submarine,” the U.S. 7th Fleet said in a news release.

Pilots and flight officers from all participat­ing countries will also hold classroom training sessions to “build plans and discuss tactics incorporat­ing the capabiliti­es and equipment of their respective nations,” The 7th Fleet said.

The drills are being held as a competitio­n, with the country winning the most points taking home the “Dragon Belt.”

The U.S. Navy is being represente­d by two P-8A

Poseidon Maritime Patrol and Reconnaiss­ance Aircraft, currently based in Guam. It did not say where the exercises would be held or how long they would last.

With 50 to 70 ships and submarines, 150 aircraft and more than 27,000 sailors and marines ready to deploy at any given time, the 7th Fleet “routinely interacts and operates with Allies and partners in preserving a free and open Indo-Pacific region,” it said.

That includes operating in the South China Sea, where it routinely draws Beijing’s anger by sailing and flying near islands held and fortified by China, which claims the strategic waterway virtually in its entirety.

The exercises also come as China’s navy is taking part in joint search and rescue exercises in the Gulf of Oman with Iran and Russia, three of the countries most at odds with the United States.

China’s dispute with Japan over tiny islands in the East China Sea has also heated up, with both sides accusing the other of violating their maritime territory.

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