| EDITOR'S
NOTE
Once there was a time when the Coast Guard was akin to the cop
on the beat: People rarely thought of the sea service until they had
been
washed overboard and were screaming for help. And the Coast Guard was
usually there, its great orange slash piercing through the gloom of
tidal waves, port fires, and tempests at sea.
But few have fully understood the Coast Guard's role in protecting
the environment, chasing down pirate fishing vessels, or training other
coast
guards and navies around the world. South American drug smugglers inadvertently
helped shape the modern image of the Coast Guard in the minds of many,
as they raced across the Florida Straits with the Coasties in hot pursuit.
During the tragedies of 9/11 and the wars that followed, the nation
witnessed how much it had come to rely on the 39,000 men and women of
the Coast
Guard, who threw a defense perimeter around New York Harbor, deployed
to Iraq, and now face the mammoth task of tightening security at the
nation's 361 ports.
In this issue, we examine the need to accelerate the biggest purchase
of ships, planes, and sensors in Coast Guard history (p. 23), and talk
with Adm. Thomas H. Collins, Coast Guard commandant, about his efforts
to balance priorities in an ever-shifting political environment (p. 19).
Correspondent David Brown, who covered the Coast Guard during Operation
Iraqi Freedom, takes a look at the service in action from the Strait
of Gibraltar to the Iraqi port city of Umm Qasr (p. 27).
Elsewhere in this issue, Sheila M. McNeill, the Navy League's new national
president, offers a powerful commentary on the need to rebalance the
nation's security requirements with its environmental laws (p. 3), and
Correspondent Patricia Kime reports that the Navy's Cyclone-class patrol
ships may find new life during the war on terrorism (p. 13).
This month, Hunter Keeter joins the Sea Power staff as associate editor.
Well known in Washington's naval circles, Hunter comes to us after five
years as a reporter with the Washington-based newsletter Defense Daily.
Readers will find him knowledgeable, tenacious, and straightforward.
Another addition is found on page 56. "In My Own Words" is
a new department about the nation's greatest national security resource:
its people. Each month, individuals from the sea services, government,
or industry will communicate directly with you about their lives, their
jobs, and how they make a difference in the world around them. In this
issue, Cdr. Doug Denneny tells us about the last deployment aboard the
carrier USS Constellation and the approach to Baghdad, as he led his
fighter squadron on one of the first air attacks of the war. Good defense
is possible only with good people. And they now have a special place
on the pages of Sea Power.
Rick Barnard
Editor in Chief
We are eager to get your feedback. Contact me at rbarnard@navyleague.org or by mail at Sea Power, 2300 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, Va. 22201-3308. |