| Super Hornets
Strike in Southern Watch;
Navy Command Ship Deploys to Djibouti
By RICHARD R. BURGESS
Managing Editor
The Navy's newest carrier-based aircraft has been used in combat action for
the first time. The F/A-18E Super Hornet participated in strikes against air-defense
sites inside Iraq last month in support of Operation Southern Watch.
The Super Hornets--flown by pilots assigned to Strike Fighter Squadron 115
(VFA-115) from the Nimitz-class nuclear-powered aircraft carrier (CVN) USS Abraham
Lincoln--launched precision-guided Joint Direct-Attack Munitions (JDAMs) to strike
two surface-to-air missile sites and a command-and-control facility near Al Kut,
approximately 100 miles southeast of Baghdad. The strikes were launched in response
to hostile fire directed at coalition aircraft enforcing the no-fly zone over
southern Iraq.
Although the Abraham Lincoln--with Carrier Air Wing 14 (CVW-14) embarked--has
been deployed in support of Operation Enduring Freedom since June and her aircraft
had flown numerous patrols over Afghanistan, the intensity of combat in that country
had declined to such a low level that the squadron's Super Hornets were not required
to fire weapons.
VFA-115 is the first squadron equipped with Super Hornets--which are built
by Boeing--to deploy with the new strike fighter.
Although combat inside Afghanistan has been light in recent months, the United
States has continued to deploy forces in the region to counter al Qaeda terrorist
activity and to pressure Iraq to comply with U.N. resolutions. The Kitty Hawk-class
aircraft carrier USS Constellation--with CVW-2 embarked--departed the U.S. West
Coast with her battle group in early November to relieve the Abraham Lincoln Battle
Group on station in the Middle East.
This deployment is the last scheduled for the Constellation; the 41-year-old
carrier is scheduled to be decommissioned next year and replaced by the Nimitz-class
CVN Ronald Reagan. The Nimitz-class CVN USS Harry S. Truman--with CVW-3 embarked--is
scheduled to deploy in early December to relieve the Nimitz-class CVN USS George
Washington.
In other OEF (Operation Enduring Freedom) Developments:
Air Force Gen. Richard B. Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said
that coalition maritime operations enforcing U.N. sanctions against Iraq have
been extremely successful in recent months. Department of Defense officials estimated
that, as of early November, coalition naval forces had cut off up to 60 percent
of Iraq's smuggling activities. The Canadian-led multinational task force now
serving in the Middle East is scheduled to be joined by the Royal New Zealand
Navy Anzac-class frigate Te Kaha and a Royal New Zealand Air Force P-3K Orion.
U.S. Marine Corps attack aircraft have been staged to Bagram air base--near
Kabul, Afghanistan--for the first time to provide close air support for coalition
forces in the country. Marine Attack Squadron 513 has deployed six AV-8B Harrier
IIs to supplement the Air Force A-10A Thunderbolt IIs already based at Bagram.
In an unusual development, the Blue Ridge-class command ship USS Mount Whitney
has deployed to the Middle East from its homeport in Norfolk, Va. The Mount Whitney
normally serves as the flagship for the commander of the U.S. Second Fleet and,
as such, rarely ventures into waters outside the Atlantic Ocean. Approximately
400 Marines assigned to the headquarters of the 2nd Marine Division also deployed
on the Mount Whitney, which will be used as a command ship off Djibouti to support
OEF operations in the area, which includes countries such as Yemen, Sudan, and
Somalia, all of which are reported to have supported al Qaeda activities in the
past.
Army Gen. Tommy Franks, commander of the U.S. Central Command, has announced
that more than 700 Marines have been deployed to Djibouti to support the global
war on terrorism. The Marines are serving as a component of Combined Joint Task
Force Horn of Africa at Camp Lemonier in Djibouti.
The USS Nassau Amphibious Ready Group (ARG)--with the 24th Marine Expeditionary
Unit embarked--transited the Suez Canal from the Mediterranean in late October
to join other U.S. and coalition forces in the U.S. Central Command region. The
USS Tarawa ARG is scheduled to deploy from the U.S. West Coast in December; the
USCGC Boutwell--a Hamilton-class high-endurance cutter--will be assigned to the
ARG, marking the first time since 1999 that any of the Coast Guard's 378-foot
cutters has deployed with a Navy battle group.
In the Philippines, 80 Marines--joining more than 220 other U.S. troops--have
been deployed to provide security for Operation Bayanihan, a joint Filipino-U.S.
humanitarian effort in Zamboanga and Basilan that is being closely coordinated
with the Filipino government's counterterrorism efforts.
Sea-service reservists mobilized for active duty as of 30 October 2002 included
5,594 Navy, 3,718 Marine Corps, and 698 Coast Guard reservists.
Preble Commissioned in Boston With Constitution Bow-to-Bow
The Navy's oldest commissioned ship, the three-masted USS Constitution, was
a special guest of honor at the commissioning ceremonies for a warship named for
her most famous commanding officer.
The Flight IIA Arleigh Burke-class Aegis guided-missile destroyer (DDG) USS
Preble (DDG 88) joined the fleet in ceremonies held at the World Trade Center
Pier in Boston, Mass. The 509.5-foot DDG is named for Commodore Edward Preble,
commanding officer of the Constitution during combat action against the Barbary
pirates in 1803. Preble, a pioneer in U.S. naval and merchant marine service,
also served in the American Revolution. The new DDG is the sixth U.S. Navy ship
named for Preble.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) was the principal speaker at the commissioning
ceremonies for the Preble. Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Vern Clark--whose wife,
Connie Rae Clark, is the ship's sponsor--also spoke at the 9 November ceremonies.
Mrs. Clark gave the traditional order to "man our ship and bring her to life."
The commissioning ceremonies--chaired by Ivan R. Samuels--were sponsored by the
Massachusetts Bay Council of the Navy League.
"Commodore Preble would be honored that his fighting legacy will live
on in yet another namesake ship with a special place in the battle line for the
pirates of old who have their own successors in the terrorists of today, who are
within reach of this ship even when they hide 700 miles inland," said Philip
A. Dur, president of Northrop Grumman Ship Systems (NGSS).
The Constitution, based at the Charlestown Navy Yard in Boston as a tourist
attraction, was towed to the World Trade Center pier for the commissioning ceremonies.
The Preble is the 38th Arleigh Burke DDG of 62 planned to enter service in
the fleet. DDG 88 is the 17th Arleigh Burke-class DDG to be built by the NGSS
Ingalls Operations yard in Pascagoula, Miss.
Cdr. Timothy Batzler is the first commanding officer of the 383 crew members
of the 9,300-ton Preble, which is homeported at Naval Station San Diego, Calif.
CINC Designation Reserved For Presidential Use
Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld has directed that the term "commander
in chief" (CINC) will apply only to the President of the United States. The
CINC designation therefore will be replaced by the term "commander"
when referring to the chiefs of the U.S. joint combatant commands. The Chief of
Naval Operations, Adm. Vern Clark, has directed that the heads of the Atlantic
and Pacific Fleets and of U.S. Naval Forces Europe also be designated "commanders"
rather than "commanders in chief."
Sea Service Notes
The Navy's last tank landing ship (LST), the Newport-class LST USS Frederick,
has been decommissioned at Naval Station Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. The Naval Reserve
Force ship--retired on 5 October--completed more than 13 major deployments in
her 33 years of service, which included deployments during the Vietnam War and
Operation Desert Storm.
Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Vern Clark has directed that U.S. Fleet Forces
Command--headquartered in Norfolk, Va., serve as the Navy's executive agent for
all fleet experimentation. Under the new Sea Trial concept, Fleet Forces Command
will play an increasingly important role in shaping Navy force structure and technology
acquisition requirements.
The Navy has authorized a new rank--Chief Warrant Officer 5--beginning in fiscal
year 2004. The new rank--with its associated pay raise--is intended to retain
highly skilled technical personnel in the Navy. *
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