US seeks shipbuilding expertise from South Korea and Japan to counter China [View all]
Source: AP
Updated 8:17 AM EDT, August 17, 2025
WASHINGTON (AP) American lawmakers are using a trip to South Korea and Japan to explore how the United States can tap those allies shipbuilding expertise and capacity to help boost its own capabilities, which are dwarfed by those of China.
Sens. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., and Andy Kim, D-N.J., who are scheduled to land in Seoul on Sunday before traveling to Japan, plan to meet top shipbuilders from the worlds second- and third-largest shipbuilding countries. The senators want to examine the possibilities of forming joint ventures to construct and repair noncombatant vessels for the U.S. Navy in the Indo-Pacific and bring investments to American shipyards.
We already have fewer capacity now than we did during Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003, Duckworth told The Associated Press. We have to rebuild the capacity. At the same time, what capacity we have is aging and breaking down and taking longer and more expensive to fix.
Their trip comes as President Donald Trump demands a plan to revive U.S. shipyards and engage foreign partners. The Pentagon is seeking $47 billion for shipbuilding in its annual budget. The urgency stems from the fact that Washington severely lags behind China in building naval ships, a situation raising alarms among policymakers who worry the maritime balance of power could shift to China, now the worlds No. 1 shipbuilder.
Read more: https://apnews.com/article/shipbuilding-south-korea-japan-china-us-a3cf2579ca24a02b1744b9cf74b7a95a