U.S. Navy Ship ‘USS Canberra’ To Be Commissioned For First Time In Allied Foreign Country

The United States Navy will be commissioning a vessel, the USS Canberra, in an allied country for the first time in history. The ship is an Independence-variant littoral combat ship, and once commissioned will hold the designation USS Canberra (LCS 30), with its homeport in Naval Base San Diego, California, USA.

The USS Canberra is named after the previous USS Canberra (CA-7/CAG-2) and the capital of Australia, Canberra. The ship was laid down on the 10 March 2020, and launched on the 30 March 2021. The ship will be commissioned at the Royal Australian Navy Fleet Base East, in Sydney on July 22.

The Hon Richard Marles MP, Deputy Prime Minister, Minister for Defence

It is the second ship in the history of the United States Navy that has held the name ‘Canberra’, the first being a Baltimore class heavy cruiser (CA-7/CAG-2) renamed from the USS Pittsburgh in 1942, per the order of wartime President Franklin D. Roosevelt to honour the courage of the HMAS Canberra, a heavy cruiser in the Royal Australian Navy in the Battle of Savo during the Second World War. 

The act signifies a strong and “enduring partnership with Australia” said Carlos Del Toro, U.S. Secretary of the Navy. 

Vice Admiral Mark Hammond, Australian Chief of Navy called it a demonstration of “respect by the U.S. for the Officers and Sailors of the Royal Australian Navy” and an opportunity to reflect on “a friendship forged while fighting side-by-side”, referring to their close military alliance during the Second World War, fighting in Europe and the Pacific against the Axis powers, which lasts to this day.

The Independence-variant Littoral Combat Ship is a “fast, manoeuvrable and networked surface combatant”, which “provides the warfighting capabilities and operational flexibility to accomplish multiple, critical missions including mine warfare, anti-submarine warfare and surface warfare with inherent capabilities that also support missions such as special operations and maritime interdiction.” via Austal

The ship has begun its transit soon and will make its way through the Indo-Pacific, visiting countries in the region, before its final stop in Sydney.