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  2. United States Fleet Activities Sasebo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Fleet...

    Sasebo has been a naval base since 1883, when Lieutenant Commander Tōgō Heihachirō nominated the small fishing village to form the nucleus of a base for the Imperial Japanese Navy. In 1905, ships of the Japanese Navy under Admiral Togo sailed from Sasebo to combat the Russian Baltic Fleet , leading to victory for Togo at the Battle of Tsushima .

  3. JMSDF Sasebo Naval Base - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JMSDF_Sasebo_Naval_Base

    On September 16, 1953, it was newly reorganized by the National Safety Agency's Coastal Safety Force with the mission of protecting the West Sea. When the Sasebo District Force was reorganized, the Coastal Security Force had nominated Sasebo from the beginning, but after the Pacific War, Sasebo City planned to transform into a peaceful industrial city under the Former Military Port City ...

  4. Naval Computer and Telecommunications Station, Far East

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naval_Computer_and...

    Also in 1991, NTCCs Atsugi and Sasebo and NAVCOMM Dets Okinawa and Misawa were functionally transferred to NAVCOMTELSTA Japan. 1993 saw the transfer of Base Communications Offices (BCOs) at Atsugi, Sasebo and Yokosuka to NAVCOMTELSTA Japan. In 1995 another name change to U.S. Naval Computer and Telecommunications Station, Far East occurred ...

  5. Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japan_Maritime_Self...

    The Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force participates in the United States Navy's Personnel Exchange Program (PEP) in which officers and enlisted personnel from each country serve fully integrated into the other country's navy for two years. Keen Sword is the biggest biennial military exercise around Japan.

  6. Sasebo Naval Arsenal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sasebo_Naval_Arsenal

    After the surrender of Japan, On September 22, 1945, the 5th Marine Division landed at Sasebo, and in June 1946, United States Fleet Activities Sasebo was formally established on a portion of the former Sasebo Naval Arsenal. The remaining portion of the shipyards was given into civilian hands with the establishment of Sasebo Heavy Industries in ...

  7. Sasebo Naval District - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sasebo_Naval_District

    Sasebo Naval District (佐世保鎮守府, Sasebo chinjufu) was the third of five main administrative districts of the pre-war Imperial Japanese Navy. Its territory included the western and southern coastline of Kyūshū , the Ryukyu Islands , Taiwan and Korea , as well as patrols in the East China Sea and the Pacific

  8. Sugar Grove Station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sugar_Grove_Station

    Activities at the site previously involved the Navy Information Operations Command (NAVIOCOM). [ citation needed ] [ 2 ] In April 2013, the Chief of Naval Operations ordered that the NAVIOCOM support base be closed by September 30, 2015, as "a result of the determination by the resource sponsor National Security Agency to relocate the command's ...

  9. Ernest J. King Middle High School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernest_J._King_Middle_High...

    E.J. King was founded in 1948 by the name of Dragon School in a small wooden building at the heart of the Dragon Gulch residential military base of the southern Japanese city of Sasebo. Despite the strong naval presence in the port city, the U.S. Army handled most of the establishment and construction of the officially named Sasebo (American ...