In the escalating competition between the United States and China, the U.S. Navy is facing a significant challenge as China’s fleet of warships surpasses its own. China has now emerged as the top global shipmaker, outpacing the U.S. by a wide margin. As tensions with Beijing continue to rise, the U.S. is looking to South Korea, one of its key allies in Asia, to help bolster its battleship supply.
Hyundai Heavy Industries, a leading shipbuilder in South Korea, is set to play a crucial role in this effort. The company will soon begin training engineers in the U.S. with the goal of building ships more affordably and efficiently. By leveraging South Korea’s expertise in shipbuilding, the U.S. is hoping to close the gap with China in naval capabilities.
The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) dives into the reasons behind China’s ascendance in shipbuilding and explores why the U.S. is enlisting the help of South Korea. The video sheds light on South Korea’s strong track record in shipbuilding and the potential benefits of collaboration between the two countries.
One of the key challenges highlighted in the video is the disparity in shipbuilding capabilities between the U.S. and China. By seeking assistance from South Korea, the U.S. aims to boost its own shipbuilding prowess and enhance its military capabilities in the face of growing competition from Beijing.
Furthermore, the video touches on the diplomatic complexities involved in courting foreign shipbuilders such as South Korea. As tensions over issues like Taiwan continue to simmer, the U.S. faces strategic considerations in how it engages with its allies in East Asia.
In a rapidly changing geopolitical landscape, initiatives like the collaboration between the U.S. and South Korea in shipbuilding could have far-reaching implications for military capabilities and regional power dynamics. As the race for naval supremacy heats up, the partnership between these two countries may prove pivotal in shaping the future balance of power in the Asia-Pacific region.
Watch the video by The Wall Street Journal
Video “Inside the Military Shipyard Helping the U.S. Catch up to China’s Navy | WSJ” was uploaded on 09/23/2024 to Youtube Channel The Wall Street Journal
I'm sure the naval shipyards in the US will take a financial hit to help restore America's Navy… you know the same Country and Navy that is the sole purpose for their current existence… and for Patriotism of course… right… right…?
U.S universe top 1 country
China still developing
South korea the origin of all things!!!!
Most American citizens don't want to be engineers or fabricators, they want to be fairies and identify themselves as whatever they want.
Please use gross fleet tonnage when comparing navies. Total number of hulls is a useless measure.
"If we have to use force, it is because we are America. We are the indispensable nation. We stand tall. We see further into the future."
Madeleine Albright
You could build a 1000 Navy ships, but no one to crew them. This generation just wants to be Content Creators.
Wilson David Young Kevin Young Timothy
Vote for Trump, we need Trump to bring every kind of manufacturing back to the US.
Hmm, watching this about US ship building and at 03:57, I think “hey, I know that naval base… but how could I???” Then I realised it’s HMNB Portsmouth, UK, I guess someone from WSJ got lost when looking for a US base to film 😂
I don't think relying on other country to build our warship is good for national security, not to mention that it is just sad.
One Word: UNIONS…
We moved all our industry overseas
It's that when anything computer science or AI would pay easily over $100000, and with many sources of revenue generating platforms these days such as Youtube, manufacturing in general seems it fell out of favor. It's almost impossible for US ship building to be as competitive as one in China. Let our allies build the ship for now so we can stay in the lead in the future
The chinese are laughing so loud I can't sleep.
Even when the US utilizes an existing, proven warship from a foreign shipbuilder, the US f*cks it up. Look up the Constellation-class frigate for a recent and ongoing example.
We can’t build anything because American companies don’t build for American they build to bilk/Over charge the American government/People
Wake up people, the United States IS behind.
China: I was like, why you so obsessed with me?
Is the US Navy a jobs program or a defense program? If the latter, at minimum buy their ships until the US bureaucratic processes are solved to build our own at a competitive cost.
china can build for US navy. cheaper than korean
Our greedy politicians have been bought out by a few deep pocketed defense contractors and given away our military building capacity. Many proud shipbuilders are have been absorbed by the likes of Northrup Grumman, Lockheed Martin, and General Dynamics. Costs cutting, closing shipyards, and laying off workers while churning out subpar, over-budget systems to "drive shareholder value" is all they care about. Gut our defense capabilities to earn that extra penny per share every quarter.
The fundamental issue is why USA want to be the only superpower in this world and can’t tolerate the other superpower at the same time 😂😅
THE U.S NEEDS TO STOP BEING THIS OBSESSED WITH CHINA .THE CHINESE ARE NOT BUILDING THEIR NAVE TO INVADE OTHER NATIONS. THEY ARE ENCIRCLED BY AMERICAN MILITARY BASES AND AMERICA IS PREPARING FOR WAR AGAINST CHINA. THEY ARE BUILDING THEIR NAVY TO PROTECT THEIR NATON. NO NATION CAN BECOME A GLOBAL SUPER POWER WITHOUT ECONOMIC MIGHT. WE ARE IN DEBT AT 35 TRILLION DOLLARS. WE DO NOT HAVE THE MONEY TO CONTINUE THIS INSANE MILITARISM AND MILITARY SPENDING..WE ARE GOING TO END UP BANCRUPT LIKE THE USSR. WE NEED TO FOCUS ON SOLVING OUR DOMESTIC PROBLEMS NOT THIS OBSESSION WITH GLOBAL DOMINATION ANS CHINA.
Wall Street is solely responsible for shipping these jobs overseas and compromising our national security
The era of US hegemony is far over. Western countries and cultures are now more focused on cultural wars and virtue signalling (wars, economy) than cost effectiveness and efficiency. This is nothing and won't stop China at all.
WE AMERICANS ARE TOTALLY CLUELESS ABOUT CHINESE MANUFACTURING..IN OUR MINDS WE STILL THINK OF CHINA AS THIS TECHNOLOGICALLY BACK WARD COUNTRY THAT HAS AN ABUNDANT OF CHEAP LABOR..THE CHINESE ARE TECHNOLOGICALLY MORE ADVANCED THAN AMERICA..THEY ARE LEADING IN AUTONOMOUS SMART FACTORIES, MINES,SEA PORTS AND LEAD THE WORLD IN VERTICAL INTEGRATION..THEY LEAD THE WORLD IN FACTORY AUTOMATION AND 5 G INTEGRATED CLOUD COMPUTING. THEY GRADUATE OVER 4 MILLION STEM GRADES EVER YEAR. THIS MEANS THEY HAVE THE TECHNICALLY ADVANCED SKILLED LABOR FORCE..AS AN AMERICAN BUSINESS MAN WHO HAVE TRAVELLED GLOBALLY AND HAVE BEEN TO CHINA I AM OFTEN EMBARRASSED BY OUR COLLECTIVE IGNORANCE OF CHINA AND THE REST OF THE WORLD .
now, that's how you ensure US "national security". by using Asian sources to produce military vessels to combat Asians.
WHEN ELON MUSK SAYS CHINA IS THE FEATURE, HE KNOWS WHAT HE IS TALKING ABOUT.. WE SIMPLY DO NOT HAVE THE MONEY TO CONTINUE OUR GLOBAL MILITARISM AND RECKLESS MILITARY SPENDING.
That's what corruption, payoffs and unions due to one's reliance on made in USA
Make America great again 🤪
Us to catch up???😂😂😂 No need! US navy is experienced in battlefield.. china knows only bullying
China has advantage as they can focus their whole navy in one theater where as US navy is too stretch as they have multiple places to protect can only bring limited amount of ships to china
Those shipyards are also in range of short and medium range Chinese missiles . Building in Asia sounds great on paper but you never position your sensitive industry within quick striking range of your future enemy. This analysis lacks any sense staretegic sense .
China produces the most steel on earth, so building ships are no questions for the Chinese.
Regan nailed it
The US should just stop wasting money with LCS and Zumwalt class nightmare.
Bread and butter frigates like MEKOs and evolutionary improvements of the Aleigh Burkes would free an great amount of money
At the world’s largest shipyard, U.S. courts an ally to face up to China: https://on.wsj.com/4eeERfk