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Japanese escort ship Okinawa

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Laid down
  
10 December 1943

Draught
  
3 meters

Launched
  
19 June 1944

Weight
  
955.1 tons

Draft
  
3 m

Struck
  
15 September 1945

Construction started
  
10 December 1943

Length
  
79 m

Displacement
  
852,800 kg

Beam
  
9 m

Japanese escort ship Okinawa

Builder
  
Nihon Kokan, Tsurumi (Japan)

Fate
  
Sunk by aircraft on 30 July 1945

Notes
  
Refloated after the war and scrapped in September 1948

Okinawa was an escort ship ("Kaibōkan") of the Imperial Japanese Navy during the Second World War. She belonged to the Ukuru class. The ship is most notable for its possible participation in the sinkings of two submarines.

Contents

Design and building

The Ukuru class escorts were very similar to the preceding Mikuru class. The main difference was a simplified hull form which enabled a shorter building time. Okinawa was built by the Nihon Kokan shipyard at Tsurumi. The building started on 10 December 1943 and some 8 months later the ship was completed. She was named after the island of Okinawa.

In service

During her career Okinawa spent most of the time escorting various ships in convoys. In November 1944 she participated in the Japanese Operation TA, the reinforcement of Leyte, by escorting troop transports. In December of the same year, Okinawa escorted the carrier Kaiyo.

On 14 April 1945, Okinawa together with the escorts CD-8 and CD-32 attacked a submerged submarine with depth charges. Some sources mention the possibility that the submarine USS Snook was sunk in that attack, although the official cause for the loss of Snook remains unknown.

On 27 May 1945, Okinawa and the escort ship Aguni were attacked by American aircraft in the Korea Strait. Okinawa was not damaged but Aguni suffered heavy damage from a radar-guided glide bomb. After that Okinawa returned to escort duties.

On 19 June 1945 the cargo ship Konzan Maru was torpedoed and sunk by the submarine USS Bonefish. Okinawa, the escorts CD-63 and CD-207 counter-attacked the submarine with numerous depth charges until wood chips and oil were observed. The submarine was sunk with all hands.

On 30 July 1945 Okinawa was sunk by aircraft from the carrier USS Independence near Maizuru.

References

Japanese escort ship Okinawa Wikipedia