JS Harusame

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DD102 HARUSAME.jpg
JS Harusame on 19 June 2020.
History
Japan
Name
  • Harusame
  • (はるさめ)
NamesakeHarusame (1959)
Ordered1992
BuilderMitsui, Tamano
Laid down11 August 1994
Launched16 October 1995
Commissioned24 March 1997
HomeportSasebo
Identification
StatusActive
General characteristics
Class and typeMurasame-class destroyer
Displacement
  • 4,550 tons standard,
  • 6,200 tons hull load
Length151 m (495 ft 5 in)
Beam17.4 m (57 ft 1 in)
Draft5.2 m (17 ft 1 in)
Propulsion
Speed30 knots (35 mph; 56 km/h)
Complement165
Sensors and
processing systems
Electronic warfare
& decoys
Armament
Aircraft carried1 × SH-60J/K anti-submarine helicopter

JS Harusame (DD-102) is the second ship of Murasame-class destroyers. She was commissioned on 24 March 1997.[1]

Construction and career[]

Harusame was laid down on August 11, 1994 at Mitsui Engineering and Shipbuilding Tamano as the 1992 plan and launched on October 16, 1995. Commissioned on March 24, 1997, was incorporated into the 8th Escort Corps of the 4th Escort Corps and deployed to Sasebo.

From September 17th to 29th and October 15th to October 23rd, 2019, Japan-Australia joint training (Japan-Australia Trident) will be held in the sea and airspace from the south of Kanto to the west of Kyushu via the area around Okinawa. To do. In addition to this ship from the JMSDF, escort vessels JS Teruzuki, JS Asahi, JS Atago, supply ship JS Mashu and P-1 patrol aircraft or P-3C patrol aircraft and submarines, and ships from the Royal Australian Navy. And submarines participated and conducted various tactical training.[2]

On November 24, the same year, she departed from Sasebo for the Gulf of Aden off the coast of Somalia as the 35th Expeditionary Piracy Action Water Corps. Due to the fact that some members of the ship completed their mission in late May 2020 and developed symptoms of suspected acute cholecystitis or acute cholangitis on their way back to Japan, they plan to return to Japan on June 20th, one day earlier. Return to port on June 19.[3][4]

Gallery[]

Citations[]

  1. ^ "DD-101 Murasame Class". www.globalsecurity.org. Retrieved 1 November 2020.
  2. ^ https://www.mod.go.jp/msdf/release/201909/20190910.pdf
  3. ^ https://www.mod.go.jp/js/Press/press2020/press_pdf/p20200608_01.pdf
  4. ^ https://www.mod.go.jp/js/Press/press2020/press_pdf/p20200616_02.pdf

References

  • Saunders, Stephen. IHS Jane's Fighting Ships 2013-2014. Jane's Information Group (2003). ISBN 0710630484
  • Heihachiro Fujiki (August 2003). "Development of multi-purpose DDs for "8-8 escort flotilla". Ships of the World (in Japanese). Kaijinn-sha (614): 94–99.


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