Within Striking Range: US Bases Los Angeles-class, Virginia-class Attack Sub in Guam – Reader Submission

The following piece, written by Jim Morris, first appeared on Warrior Maven, a Military Content Group member website.

The US may be sending another message to China by reportedly sending two nuclear-powered submarines  to the western Pacific.

According to Newsweek, official Navy photos show the USS Columbia (SSN-771) and the USS Vermont (SSN-792) visited Guam in January while being deployed with the Seventh Fleet. Neither the Navy nor Beijing are commenting.

Guam is a crucial outpost for US power projection in the Indo-Pacific – it’s America’s westernmost Pacific island territory and is closer to Beijing than to Hawaii. That puts it within striking distance of a number of Chinese military bases including some in the South China Sea.

The US is in the midst of a military buildup on Guam, which includes $10 billion in construction projects through 2028. In 2023, the Marines opened a base there that will eventually house 4,000 troops.

USS Vermont
USS Vermont (SSN 792), a Virginia-class Block IV nuclear-powered attack submarine, in Guam, January 20, 2025. (DVIDS)

In November, the Navy said that for the first time, a Virginia-class fast-attack submarine would be homeported in Guam, which has one of the Navy’s largest fuel and ammunition storage facilities in the region. The sub, the USS Minnesota (SSN-783), arrived there November 26.

One of the subs that visited Guam in January, the Vermont, is a Virginia-class vessel. The Columbia is an older, Los Angeles-class boat. The Virginia-class subs are designed to replace the Los Angeles-class vessels as the older ones are taken out of service.