US Navy warship burns for 12 hours off Japan's Okinawa

Fire started on board USS New Orleans, an amphibious transport dock ship

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This handout photo taken on August 20, 2025 and received on August 21, 2025 from the Japan Coast Guard shows smoke coming from the US Navy vessel USS New Orleans as water is sprayed (L) to help put out the fire, off the coast near White Beach on the Japanese southern island of Okinawa.
This handout photo taken on August 20, 2025 and received on August 21, 2025 from the Japan Coast Guard shows smoke coming from the US Navy vessel USS New Orleans as water is sprayed (L) to help put out the fire, off the coast near White Beach on the Japanese southern island of Okinawa.
AFP

The fire started on board USS New Orleans, an amphibious transport dock ship weighing 25,000 tons, around 4 pm local time on Wednesday. It was brought under control only by early Thursday morning, as per NHK.

The cause of the fire is under investigation as per the Navy's statement.

Japanese broadcaster NHK also showed tugboats spraying water at the vessel while firefighting crews from both US and Japanese sides worked through the night.

"A fire has broken out on a US vessel off the coast of White Beach. The crew is currently engaged in firefighting efforts, but we have requested the Japan Coast Guard to provide firefighting assistance," a Coast Guard official said, as per NHK.

The USS New Orleans, which carries more than 360 sailors and has the capacity to transport 800 Marines, was anchored off the White Beach Naval Facility at the time of the incident.

2 sailors treated

The Navy confirmed that two sailors were treated for minor injuries in the ship's medical bay, as CNN reported.

According to CNN, firefighting teams from another American ship, USS San Diego, as well as the Japan Maritime Self-Defence Force and other US Navy units based in Okinawa, joined the effort. The Navy said these reinforcements "provided critical support to the firefighting efforts."

The White Beach facility is a key hub for deploying US Marines and equipment aboard amphibious ships such as the New Orleans, which measures 684 feet in length, as per CNN.

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