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ROCS Kee Lung

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kee Lung in 2007
History
Taiwan
Builder
Laid down12 February 1979
Launched1 March 1980 as USS Scott (DDG-995)
Acquired30 May 2003
NameROCS Kee Lung (DDG-1801)
NamesakeKeelung
Commissioned17 December 2005
Statusin active service
General characteristics
Class & typeKee Lung-class destroyer
Displacement
  • Light: 6,950 t (6,840 long tons; 7,660 short tons)
  • Full: 9,574 t (9,423 long tons; 10,554 short tons)
  • Dead Weight: 2,624 t (2,583 long tons; 2,892 short tons)
Length171.6 m (563 ft)
Beam16.8 m (55 ft)
Draft10.1 m (33.1 ft)
Propulsion4 × General Electric LM2500-30 gas turbines, 80,000 shp total (60 MW)
Speed33 knots (61 km/h)
Sensors &
processing systems
Electronic warfare
& decoys
Armament
Aircraft carried2 × Sikorsky S-70C(M)1/2 Seahawk

ROCS Kee Lung (基隆; DDG-1801) is the lead ship of her class of guided-missile destroyers currently in active service of Republic of China Navy.

History

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While Kee Lung is the lead ship of her class, she was actually not the first ship in her class built. Kee Lung was formerly the American Kidd-class destroyer USS Scott (DDG-995), which was decommissioned by the United States Navy in 1998. Scott was sold to the Republic of China Navy along with the other three Kidd-class destroyers in 2001. Scott was then renamed to Kee Long was the first of the four ships to be commissioned in the Republic of China Navy which made her the lead ship in the Republic of China Navy. Ironically, the USS Kidd (DDG-993), which was the original lead ship of the class, was also sold to the Republic of China Navy in 2006 and was renamed ROCS Tso Ying (DDG-1803). For a period of time Kee Lung was tentatively named Chi Teh (紀德), a transliteration of Kidd into Chinese. But it was later decided to name her after the port of Keelung, a major naval port in northern Taiwan.

Kee Lung, along with her three sister ships, is the largest destroyer and second largest ship in displacement ever in Republic of China Navy service, only smaller than ROCS Hsu Hai (LSD-193), a dock landing ship. Kee Lung was re-fitted for service in the ROCN at Detyen's Shipyard in North Charleston, South Carolina. She was formally commissioned on 17 December 2005 along with sister ship ROCS Su Ao (DDG-1802).

ROCS Keelung (DDG-1801) shadows PLANS Shandong (CV-17) in the Philippine Sea.

In May 2022, during the Han Kuang Exercise "Joint Intercept Operation Live-Fire Exercise", President Tsai Ing-wen specially boarded the Keelung ship to go out to sea to supervise the "actual combat" exercises from emergency port departure, anti-mine warfare, fleet air defense, joint sea and air anti-submarine warfare, anti-surface warfare and air control operations, and combined the three armed forces and the coast guard to use firepower to block the enemy's invasion. [1]

On September 13, 2023, the Ministry of National Defense released footage of the ship monitoring the Chinese aircraft carrier Shandong.[2]

On May 23, 2024, the ship monitored the PLA's 052C Xi'an conducting the "Joint Sword 2024A" exercise.[3]

Specifications

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Kee Lung is the only one of her sister ships to be equipped with LAMPS III system and flight deck strengthened. This enables Kee Lung to carry up to two of the more capable Sikorsky S-70(M)-1/2 Seahawk helicopters for anti-submarine warfare, compared to her sister ships.

References

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  1. ^ Zhu Ming, Zhang Zhewei (2022-07-26). "【Photos】Han Kuang Exercise Live-fire Exercise at Sea and Air, Tsai Ing-wen Boarded the Ship to Sea for Inspection". Shangbao (in Traditional Chinese). Generation Media. Archived from the original on 2022-07-27. Retrieved 2022-07-29.
  2. ^ 叶庭欣 (2023-09-13). "The footage of monitoring the Shandong aircraft carrier was first exposed! Our Keelung ship closely follows" (in Traditional Chinese). Archived from the original on 2023-09-13.
  3. ^ Chen Zhicheng (2024-05-24). "Chinese Navy's Chenggong, Kangding, and Keelung class ships are deployed to keep a close eye on Chinese ships in the Taiwan Circumnavigation Exercise" (in Traditional Chinese). Archived from the original on 2024-07-22. Retrieved 2025-02-27.
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