So CNN decided to be very dumb with its defense analysis. Their idea is that since US shipyards and US-made destroyers cost so much let's use foreign build destroyers in SK(South Korea), and Japan.
There is only one problem, those destroyers they mentioned; theKongo Maya and the Sejong the Great were outdated. They had PESA radars, and their Aegis systems were a couple of iterations old. But of course, Sejong the Great has 128 missiles in the VLS cells vs China's 112(Also larger) so let's run with that story(likely funded by SK and Japan's military shipbuilding companies). Now the Jones Act in my opinion is nationalist trash due to driving up the cost of merchant vessels in the US, but don't use less capable destroyers to maintain your interest. The US Flight 3 Burke Destroyers have better internal systems than both of them and of course, cost more. This is what you want in a future destroyer, not older PESA radar destroyers.
Now as for building them in Japan and SK, I would argue that's a better idea, but you would be giving away shipbuilding know-how to your shipbuilding competitors for only monetary gain which is a crap idea. Shipbuilding and experience are long-term goods, money is short-term, liquid, and easily spent.
A better idea would be to make the DDG(X) an F-35-like idea where nations share in the production of it via I make this you make that, and past the legal hurdles to do so. (While retaining the full knowhow in the US)
There is only one problem, those destroyers they mentioned; the
DDG(X) - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Now as for building them in Japan and SK, I would argue that's a better idea, but you would be giving away shipbuilding know-how to your shipbuilding competitors for only monetary gain which is a crap idea. Shipbuilding and experience are long-term goods, money is short-term, liquid, and easily spent.
A better idea would be to make the DDG(X) an F-35-like idea where nations share in the production of it via I make this you make that, and past the legal hurdles to do so. (While retaining the full knowhow in the US)