Reloading at sea: US Navy’s answer to China’s missile advantage


Summary

Practice makes perfect

The U.S. Navy is training destroyer crews in the Indo-Pacific to practice expeditionary reloads of vertical launch system (VLS) cells, something traditionally done only in port.

Team TRAM

Recent exercises aboard USS Higgins and other destroyers highlight progress toward at-sea rearming using innovations like the Transferrable Reload At-sea Method (TRAM).

New skills required

The capability is critical for countering adversaries such as China’s missile-heavy Rocket Force and reducing vulnerabilities in sustained conflicts.


Full story

U.S. naval destroyers are among the most powerful surface combatants in the world, but they face a logistical challenge: once they fire their missiles, they typically need to head to port to reload. That’s a vulnerability in any sustained fight, and one the Navy is urgently working to solve.

In late July, the crew of the USS Higgins became the latest group of sailors to practice what the Navy calls ‘enhanced expeditionary logistics capabilities‘ by simulating the reload of a Standard Missile-2 (SM-2) while anchored off the coast of Townsville, Australia.

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The event marked another step in developing the ability to conduct expeditionary vertical launch system (VLS) reloads — a capability Navy leaders say will be vital in any future high-end conflict.

Practicing the process

The July exercise was a simulation only — no missile or training round was actually loaded. Even so, leaders hailed the training as an important milestone.

“This gives our warfighters a tremendous amount of agility to strike from sea, move, reload, reposition, and strike again,” Rear Adm. Eric Anduze, commander of Task Force 70, said. “It represents a lethal tactical advantage that helps us protect the safety and prosperity of the region.”

Chief Warrant Officer 3 Kevin Kodrin, ordnance officer for Task Force 73, emphasized the teamwork required, calling the exercise “the result of exceptional collaboration between the ship’s crew, shore support teams, and technical experts.”

Reloading at sea: not easy

Reloading a VLS cell was traditionally done only in controlled port environments, often with cranes and calm waters. The complexity of the operation historically prevented navies from attempting the task at sea.

But in recent years, the U.S. Navy started experimenting with new methods, including the Transferrable Reload At-sea Method (TRAM). TRAM was first demonstrated aboard the USS Chosin in October 2024, when sailors successfully transferred and lowered a missile canister into the ship’s VLS cells while underway.

Then, Secretary of the Navy Carlos Del Toro called TRAM “game-changing,” adding it would allow warships to stay near the fight and maintain pressure on adversaries instead of sailing long distances to rearm.

Lessons learned

The Navy’s push to master at-sea reloads is informed by recent operational experiences. In the Red Sea, U.S. destroyers expended hundreds of missiles defending commercial shipping from Houthi-launched drones and rockets. Those operations often forced warships to leave the area to reload, creating gaps in coverage.

Analysts warn that a potential fight with China would be far more demanding. The People’s Liberation Army Rocket Force maintains a vast arsenal of ballistic and cruise missiles. Sustaining defenses against a Chinese missile barrage could exhaust U.S. magazines quickly, making the ability to reload at sea a critical factor in survival.

It’s simple math. If the adversary has a lot to shoot, it takes a lot of missiles to defend. Leaving station to reload creates vulnerabilities the U.S can’t afford in a high-end fight.

Building regional readiness

The USS Higgins’ July drill follows other expeditionary reloads in the Indo-Pacific. In 2023, USS Rafael Peralta rearmed in Eden, Australia, after participating in exercise Talisman Sabre. A year later, USS Dewey conducted a similar reload in Darwin after exercise Kakadu.

The Navy says it is now focused on training destroyer crews throughout the region in expeditionary reload techniques. These efforts are part of a larger push to strengthen distributed logistics and sustain combat operations far from U.S. shores.

As Anduze put it, “strengthening these logistics capabilities ensures our ships remain combat-ready whenever and wherever needed.”

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Why this story matters

The U.S. Navy’s efforts to enable missile reloads for destroyers at sea address a critical vulnerability in modern naval combat and aim to improve operational readiness during potential high-intensity conflicts, particularly in the Indo-Pacific region.

Naval logistics innovation

Developing at-sea missile reload capabilities could help the U.S. Navy maintain combat effectiveness in prolonged engagements, as highlighted by recent exercises and statements from Navy leaders.

Operational readiness

Ensuring that warships can reload at sea enhances their ability to defend key regions without leaving their stations, reducing vulnerabilities in ongoing or future conflicts.

Regional security dynamics

The focus on Indo-Pacific drills and the context of tensions with China and actions in the Red Sea emphasize the importance of sustaining U.S. military presence and deterrence in areas with heightened security challenges.

SAN provides
Unbiased. Straight Facts.

Don’t just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

AllSides Certified Balanced May 2025

Transparent and credible

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

Find out more

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