JS Ōnami

JS Ōnami in port
History
Name: JS Ōnami
Builder: Mitsubishi
Laid down: 17 May 2000
Launched: 20 September 2001
Commissioned: 13 March 2003
Homeport: Yokosuka
Status: in active service
General characteristics
Class and type: Takanami-class destroyer
Displacement: 4,650 long tons (4,725 t) standard 6,300 long tons (6,401 t) full load
Length: 151 m (495 ft)
Beam: 17.4 m (57 ft)
Height: 10.9 m (36 ft)
Draft: 5.3 m (17 ft)
Propulsion:
Speed: 30 knots (35 mph; 56 km/h)
Complement: 175
Sensors and
processing systems:
  • OPS-25B Radar
  • OPS-28D Surface Search Radar
  • OPS-20 Navigational Radar
  • OQS-5 Sonar
  • UQR-2 Towed Sonar
  • Type 81 Fire Control SYystem
Electronic warfare
& decoys:
  • NOLQ-3 ECM system
  • 4 × Mk137 Chaff Dispensers
Armament:
Aircraft carried: 1 × SH-60J(K) anti-submarine helicopter [1]

JS Ōnami (DD-111) (おおなみ, Ooname) is the second vessel of the Takanami-class destroyers of the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF).

Ōnami was authorized under the Medium-term Defense Buildup Plan of 1996, and was built by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries shipyards in Nagasaki. She was laid down on 17 May 2000, launched on 20 September 2001. She was commissioned into service on 13 March 2003.[2] and was initially assigned to the JMSDF Escort Flotilla 1 based at Yokosuka.

Service

Ōnami, along with the destroyer Chōkai and supply ship Hamana were assigned to the Indian Ocean in November 2004 to provide assistance to the Japanese Iraq Reconstruction and Support Group. She returned to Japan in March 2005.

Ōnami participated in the Malabar 2007 joint naval exercises in the Bay of Bengal in September 2007 together with the destroyer Yudachi. In July 2009, she participated in joint naval exercises in the Sea of Japan together with a number of warships from the Republic of Korea Navy.

On 4 December 2009, Ōnami was involved in a collision with the destroyer Sawagiri off the coast of Kōchi Prefecture, but was able to return to port under her own power.

In January 2010, Ōnami, along with Sawagiri, was dispatched to Aden, Yemen to participate in anti-piracy escort operations off the coast of Somalia. Approximately 2,000 merchant ships with ties to Japan, Japan-flagged or operated by Japanese firms pass through the busy shipping zone each year.[3] The destroyer was part of the fourth rotation of JMSDF vessels patrolling in this region.[4] She undertook 32 sorties, escorting 283 commercial vessels, and returned to Japan on 2 July 2010.

This ship was one of several in the JMSDF fleet participating in disaster relief after the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami.[5]

On 11 October 2011 she was dispatched to Aden again, together with her sister ship Takanami, to resume anti-piracy escort operations off the coast of Somalia. The context for this extended deployment off the Horn of Africa was the "Law on the Penalization of Acts of Piracy and Measures Against Acts of Piracy (Anti-Piracy Measures Law)".[6] She returned to Yokosuka on 12 March 2012

On 9 June 2012, Ōnami participated in JIMEX 12, the first naval exercise between the JMSDF and the Indian Navy, held in Sagami Bay, which commemorated 60 years of diplomatic relations between India and Japan.[7]

References

Notes

  1. Helis.com, DD 112 JDS Makinami
  2. GlobalSecurity.org, DD-110 Takanami Class
  3. "Japanese ships leave after visit," The Hindu (India). September 29, 2010.
  4. Mizokami, Kyle. "The MSDF and the Horn of Africa," Japan Security Watch. January 15, 2011.
  5. Seawaves,"Warships Supporting Earthquake in Japan" Archived 2011-03-23 at the Wayback Machine.
  6. "Anti-Piracy Operations off the Coast of Somalia and in the Gulf of Aden," Japan Defense Focus (Ministry of Defense or MOD), No. ), No. 19. November 2010.
  7. IDR News Network, 08 Jun , 2012
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