אמעריקע ארבעט ארבעט אוחף רעטונג אקציעס אין פאסיפיק
The U.S. Pentagon is dusting off a long-forgotten tool of war: seaplanes. After decades without maintaining amphibious aircraft, Washington is now leasing commercial seaplanes to tackle the vast Pacific Ocean, where downed pilots or stranded personnel could face days in the water without immediate rescue.
A December 2025 provision in the National Defense Authorization Act authorizes the Pentagon to lease commercial amphibious aircraft, including firefighting CL-415 planes and Japanese ShinMaywa US-2 models, for rescue, logistics, and support missions across the Pacific. The measure addresses decades of U.S. neglect since Vietnam-era operations, when seaplanes played a critical role in maritime search and rescue.
Meanwhile, regional competitors have continued investing in this capability. Japan operates purpose-built seaplanes, China runs multiple amphibious programs, and Russia has never abandoned the technology. Analysts warn that the U.S.’s delay has ceded a strategic edge to these nations, forcing the Pentagon to catch up quickly by borrowing foreign platforms and even adapting civilian firefighting aircraft.
The revival underscores the unique operational advantages of seaplanes: the ability to land on open water in areas without runways, providing rapid evacuation, refueling, and logistics support in islands and remote maritime zones. For a region as vast as the Pacific, the capability is not merely tactical but essential for safeguarding personnel and projecting presence.
While the leased aircraft are a stopgap, the initiative reflects a renewed recognition within the Pentagon that maintaining versatile, amphibious capabilities is critical for modern military operations, especially in contested or remote maritime environments. As Washington races to restore a capability long neglected, the move signals both the urgency of strategic planning and the enduring value of technologies once considered obsolete.