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‼️‼️🇯🇵 Japan Maritime Self‑Defense Force has launched the twelfth and final Mogami-class stealth frigate, marking the culmination of one of its most advanced surface combatant programs. This new class of frigates blends stealth design, modular mission capability, and cutting-edge sensors, significantly enhancing Japan’s maritime defense posture in the Indo-Pacific....

263,869 views • 6 months ago •via X (Twitter)

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🇹🇷 Ottoman Empire at Sea? Turkey’s 50 Warship + Carrier Mega Build Signals a New Mediterranean Superpower Era Turkey is in the middle of one of the most aggressive naval expansions in modern military history, with around 50 warships under construction simultaneously across multiple shipyards. But this isn’t just a fleet expansion, it’s a full spectrum maritime transformation. From stealth capable frigates and corvettes to amphibious assault ships, submarines, support vessels, and a future aircraft carrier program, Ankara is rapidly pushing its navy toward true blue water capability, designed to operate far beyond its own coastline. Defense analysts say the scale and speed of this buildup is not about defense alone, but about long term regional power projection across the Eastern Mediterranean, Black Sea, and wider strategic waterways. The comparison with Israel is increasingly unavoidable. Israel maintains one of the most advanced and combat proven air forces in the Middle East, giving it a dominant edge in airpower and precision strike capability. However, Turkey’s strategy appears focused on balancing that advantage through overwhelming maritime expansion, naval aviation development, and indigenous defense production. At the same time, Ankara is accelerating development of its own next generation fighter programs and expanding domestic aerospace capacity, signaling an ambition to control not just the seas, but also the skies over future conflict zones. The debate inside strategic circles is intensifying. Supporters call it sovereign military independence. Critics see a long term geopolitical project aimed at restoring influence across former Ottoman spheres of power. With aircraft carrier ambitions, mass shipbuilding output, and a rapidly expanding defense industry, Turkey is no longer just upgrading its navy, it is rewriting its strategic identity. The question now is no longer whether Turkey is rising… but how far it intends to go.

War Radar

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Admiral Steve Koehler, Commander of the U.S. Pacific Fleet, has arrived in Sri Lanka for his official visit. 🇺🇸🇱🇰 His visit underscores the strong U.S.–Sri Lanka security partnership and our shared commitment to maritime security, regional stability, and a free and open Indo-Pacific. Admiral Steve Koehler, Commander of the U.S. Pacific Fleet, visited Sri Lanka from February 19 to 21, 2026. During his visit, Admiral Koehler will engage with Sri Lankan government officials and military counterparts to discuss shared values of advancing cooperation in maritime security, regional stability, and to enhance collaboration and interoperability. The U.S. Pacific Fleet—the largest naval fleet command in the world—operates across half the globe, protecting vital sea lanes and connecting partners throughout the Indo-Pacific. Admiral Koehler’s second visit to Sri Lanka highlights the strategic importance the United States places on Sri Lanka’s role at the crossroads of global maritime routes and underscores our shared long-term commitment to a free, open, and prosperous Indo-Pacific. Admiral Koehler’s visit reaffirms the strong U.S.-Sri Lanka security partnership and our confidence in the professionalism and capability of our partners. As we stand with Sri Lanka in facing shared security challenges—from maritime domain awareness to countering transnational threats—our support is focused on building transparent, long-term, mutually beneficial security partnerships that protect sovereignty and advance a free and open Indo-Pacific. U.S. Embassy in Sri Lanka

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11,195 views • 4 months ago

‼️‼️🇷🇺🇨🇳 BIG | Beijing and Moscow are taking their "no-limits" partnership deep into the Yellow Sea, flashing serious naval muscle right on Washington’s doorstep. The Chinese and Russian militaries have officially launched their massive "Joint Sea-2026" bilateral naval drills in the waters and airspace off the strategic port of Qingdao. Russia's Pacific Fleet deployment features high-value assets, including the guided-missile cruiser *Varyag*, the corvette *Rezkiy*, the diesel-electric submarine *Ufa*, and the specialized rescue vessel *Igor Belousov*. Mirroring this force, China's People's Liberation Army Navy has committed the advanced destroyers *Kaifeng* and *Anshan*, the frigate *Wuhu*, the comprehensive supply ship *Kekexili*, and a submarine rescue ship, all supported by shipborne helicopter units. Running until July 13, the high-stakes maneuvers will focus on aggressive joint operations, including anti-submarine warfare, coordinated air and missile defense, and joint artillery strikes, to be immediately followed by combined maritime patrols across the wider Pacific Ocean. This deployment isn't just a routine training exercise; it is a calculated geopolitical message aimed directly at the U.S. and its regional allies, coming just days ahead of the NATO summit. By conducting sophisticated multi-domain warfare drills in the highly sensitive Yellow Sea, Beijing and Moscow are signaling that their strategic alignment is actively hardening into an operational military axis capable of challenging Western maritime dominance in the Indo-Pacific. See the latest updates with us: Visioner

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14,338 views • 8 days ago

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Armed Forces of the Philippines

17,017 views • 1 year ago