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A US Navy destroyer ran through the kind of critical at-sea weapons reload it would need in a Pacific missile fight

August 25, 2025
in News
A US Navy destroyer ran through the kind of critical at-sea weapons reload it would need in a Pacific missile fight
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The Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Higgins (DDG 76) launches a Standard Missile-2 (SM-2) from the forward vertical launching system while operating in the Philippine Sea, April 5.
USS Higgins launches a Standard Missile-2.

US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Hannah Fry

The US Navy is figuring out how to rearm its warships at sea, a crucial logistics skill it could need in an intense missile fight that doesn’t immediately offer a respite to pull out and reload.

Off the coast of Australia last month, the American destroyer USS Higgins simulated rearming with an SM-2 missile at sea, officials said Saturday, characterizing the reloading capability as “essential” for sustained combat operations in the Indo-Pacific.

US warships have been working on reloading at sea, with this type of exercise becoming more important in recent years. In Navy operations around the Middle East over the past two years, hundreds of missiles have been expended for air defense against Iranian threats and those presented by the Tehran-backed Houthis in Yemen.

During these challenging fights, US warships occasionally had to leave the region to rearm.

US officials and analysts have cautioned that a conflict against China, which maintains a deep arsenal of capable ballistic and cruise missiles, in the Pacific would put a much greater strain on the Navy’s missile stockpiles than in the Middle East.

Sailors aboard the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Higgins (DDG 76) simulate loading ammunition from a barge during Noble Prime 25-3 in the Cleveland Bay, Australia, July 28.
Sailors aboard USS Higgins simulate loading ammunition from a barge.

US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Trevor Hale

The threat of a potential conflict between the US and China makes it critical that the US Navy can reload on the fly at sea rather than force warships to return to a friendly port with the ability to provide rearmament, which takes more time and keeps them out of the fight for longer.

The July exercise is the latest in a string of vertical launching system reloads focused on rearming the missile tubes near Australia. US destroyers also practiced this tactic in September 2023 and September 2024.

In October 2024, the Navy achieved what it called a “breakthrough in combat readiness” by demonstrating the Transferrable Reload At-sea Method (or TRAM) on a warship in the ocean for the first time.

The reload process involved moving a missile canister from a support ship to a cruiser using cables, tilting the canister into an upright position, and then lowering it into one of the cruiser’s many VLS cells. Navy leadership said the service expects to field TRAM in a few years.

Chief Warrant Officer 3 Kevin Kodrin, the ordnance officer for the task force that led the July drill, said in a release that “this successful rearm event was the result of exceptional teamwork between the ship’s crew, shore support teams, and technical experts.”

Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Higgins (DDG 76) pulls away from Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS George Washington (CVN 73) after conducting a fueling-at-sea while underway in the Pacific Ocean, Nov. 7, 2024.
The Arleigh Burke-class destroyer USS Higgins.

US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Lucas J. Hastings

“Exercises like this are critical to validating our ability to safely and effectively reload at sea, ensuring our ships remain combat-ready whenever and wherever needed,” he added.

USS Higgins operates under Task Force 70, the command responsible for forward-deployed surface assets in the Indo-Pacific region. The US 7th Fleet is the Navy’s largest forward-deployed fleet, with 50-70 ships and submarines at any given time.

“We are strengthening distributed logistics capabilities that enhance our collective operational readiness across the Indo-Pacific,” Rear Adm. Eric Anduze, the Task Force 70 commander, said of July’s reload simulation.

“This gives our warfighters a tremendous amount of agility to strike from sea, move, reload, reposition, and strike again,” he said. “It represents a lethal tactical advantage that helps us protect the safety and prosperity of the region.”

The post A US Navy destroyer ran through the kind of critical at-sea weapons reload it would need in a Pacific missile fight appeared first on Business Insider.

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