USS Maine with 20 Trident II nuclear-powered missiles with a launch range of 12,000km has arrived in Guam and could become the first Ohio-class submarine to visit South Korea
![USS Maine with 20 Trident II nuclear-powered missiles with a launch range of 12,000km has arrived in Guam and could become the first Ohio-class submarine to visit South Korea USS Maine with 20 Trident II nuclear-powered missiles with a launch range of 12,000km has arrived in Guam and could become the first Ohio-class submarine to visit South Korea](/media/post_big/0_vfXb1Jd.jpg)
On Wednesday, the Republic of Korea and the US signed the "Washington Declaration". One of the points of the agreement is to send US nuclear-powered submarines to South Korea. The first candidate is the Ohio-class submarine USS Maine (SSBN-741).
Here's What We Know
The nuclear-powered submarine arrived in the western Pacific last month. It called at a port on the island of Guam in the Indo-Pacific Command's area of responsibility. US Navy officials said the arrival of USS Maine (SSBN-741) was a demonstration of deterrence capabilities.
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The strategic missile cruiser was commissioned in 1995. Its home base is USS Bangor, Washington.
The nuclear-powered sub carries 20 Trident II (D5) intercontinental ballistic missiles with a maximum launch range of 12,000 km. Each missile can carry eight nuclear warheads. In addition to USS Maine (SSBN-741), the US Navy has 13 more Ohio-class Trident II submarines:
- USS Louisiana (SSBN-743).
- USS Wyoming (SSBN-742);
- USS Rhode Island (SSBN-740);
- USS Nebraska (SSBN-739);
- USS Maryland (SSBN-738);
- USS Kentucky (SSBN-737);
- USS West Virginia (SSBN-736);
- USS Pennsylvania (SSBN-735);
- USS Tennessee (SSBN-734);
- USS Nevada (SSBN-733);
- USS Alaska (SSBN-732);
- USS Alabama (SSBN-731);
- USS Henry M. Jackson (SSBN-730);
In the 1970s, Ohio-class submarines felt at home in South Korea, visiting the country 2-3 times a month. In the 1980s, the U.S. stopped stationing its nuclear warheads in the republic. After that, the visits ceased. Although submarines carrying Trident II missiles will return to South Korea after a 40-year break, there is no talk of deploying nuclear weapons in the country.
Source: The Washington Times