WHY CHINA AND NORTH KOREA FEAR JAPAN’S DEADLY SORYU-CLASS SUBMARINE

130412-N-LS794-166 APRA HARBOR, Guam (April 12, 2013) Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF) submarine Hakuryu (SS 503) visits Guam for a scheduled port visit. Hakuryu will conduct various training evolutions and liberty while in port. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Jeffrey Jay Price/Released)

Source: The National Interest

By Kyle Mizokami

At 4,200 tons submerged, the nine Soryu-class submarines are the largest submarines built by postwar Japan. Each is 275 feet long and nearly twenty-eight feet wide. They have a range of 6,100 nautical miles and can reportedly dive to a depth of 2,132 feet, or two-fifths of a mile.

The Soryu class features an X-shaped tail, reportedly for increased maneuverability in approaching the seabed. This maximizes the sub’s maneuvering room in shallow and littoral waters, particularly the straits in and around Japan that mark key invasion routes.

The Second World War taught Japan valuable lessons. The first—don’t start wars—is an obvious conclusion that has been taken to heart.

Other lessons were the result of the wartime Allied air and naval blockade of the country, which brought it to the brink of starvation.

For Japan, poor in resources and arable land, to survive the next war, the air and sea lanes must stay open, and for that to happen, Japan must have top-flight air and naval forces.

Image Sourced: US Navy

Read more at: http://nationalinterest.org/blog/the-buzz/why-china-north-korea-fear-japans-deadly-soryu-class-26015

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