Sealift 2010 05
Sealift 2010 05
Sealift 2010 05
N av y s M i l i ta ry S e a l i f t C o m m a n d
SEALIFT
May 2010
INSIDE Salvor helps recover sunken South Korean vessel Swift wraps up nine-month APS mission
Commanders perspective
Mark H. Buz Buzby Rear Admiral, U.S. Navy Commander, Military Sealift Command
Rear Adm. Mark H. Buzby, commander, Military Sealift Command, visits with Capt. Allie Milligan, commanding officer, MSC Office Kuwait, and the MSCO Kuwait staff in mid-April.
Sealift is an authorized publication for members and employees of the Navys Military Sealift Command. Contents of this publication are not necessarily the official views of or endorsed by the U.S. government, the Department of Defense or the Department of the Navy. Sealift is published monthly by the Military Sealift Command Office of Public Affairs as authorized under NAVPUBINST 5600.42A. Submission of articles and letters should be addressed to Editor, Sealift, Military Sealift Command, 914 Charles Morris Court, S.E., Washington Navy Yard, D.C. 20398-5540; phone (202) 685-5055 or DSN 3255055; fax (202) 685-5067; or via e-mail to sealift editor@navy.mil. All photographic submissions must be sent via e-mail, express mail or parcel service. COMSC Rear Adm. Mark H. Buzby, USN Timothy Boulay Meghan Patrick Edward Baxter, Singapore Bill Cook, Norfolk, Va. Susan Melow, Norfolk, Va. Laura Seal, Washington Adrian Schulte, Washington Sarah Burford, San Diego Dale Allen, Washington Susan Thomas, Washington
Editor Writers
vessels material readiness and fosters hazard mitigation, said Kevin Kohlmann, MSC safety manager. Kiskas flawless operations resulted in no injuries or accidents, which exemplifies the safety culture found on board. Cable, which won its second consecutive CNO award, aggressively tracks its own mishaps in order to identify trends on board. This resulted in a 27 percent reduction of mishaps in 2009, said Kohlmann. Cables crew credits much of its safety success to the ships training program. All reporting personnel are required to attend training that covers an introduction to Navy occupational, safety and health; operational risk management; safety warning signs and markings; emergency responses and other areas of safety. Buck, which is crewed by commercial mariners working for a company under contract to MSC, has had no lost-time injuries on board since January 2006. In addition, no environmental incidents have occurred in more than six years. Buck submits monthly safety reports to its operating company, and those suggestions are shared with MSCs other T-5 tankers to further promote safety, said Kohlmann. The winners will receive a plaque and a CNO citation, and will compete in the Secretary of the Navy Safety Excellence Awards competition later this year.
Military Sealift Command reports to the Commander, U.S. Transportation Command for defense transportation matters, to the Commander, U.S. Fleet Forces Command for Navy-unique matters and to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Research, Development and Acquisition for procurement policy and oversight matters.
Salvors civil service master, Capt. William Wiggins. Salvor, guidedmissile cruiser USS Shiloh and guided-missile destroyers USS Curtis Wilbur and USS Lassen arrived on scene March 27, joining an armada of 15 South Korean navy ships. The U.S. ships were operating nearby, having just completed Korean peninsula defense Exercise Key Resolve/Foal Eagle, a bilateral, at-sea exercise with the Republic of Korea navy. Amphibious dock-landing ship USS Harpers Ferry, which served as the command and control ship for U.S. support of the search, recovery and salvage operation, arrived on scene April 2. Cheonans bow was located in about 66 feet of water, while the stern was located in 430 feet of water. Smaller pieces of wreckage were moved by strong underwater currents and were scattered throughout a four-mile debris field. On April 7, U.S. and Republic of Korea divers went to work conducting side-scan sonar operations from a rigid-hull inflatable boat and performed surface-supplied dives at nine designated sites in the debris field. Salvors civil service mariners were involved in launching, recov-
ering and operating the embarked RHIBs. Salvor remained on-site throughout the operation to assist wherever needed. We found out that the current was rougher than we expected, but we were well prepared, said Navy Diver 1st Class Quentin Felderman, assistant lead petty officer for MDSU-1. Republic of Korea navy Chief Jong Suk Kang was grateful for the opportunity to work with MDSU-1. I have done many dives, but I have worked with U.S. divers only once before. I am glad to have them help with our diving operations. Salvors civil service mariners conducted ship-to-ship cargo operations with a landing craft unit deployed from Harpers Ferry to ensure that Salvor had enough provisions to support the additional persons on board for the mission.
Meal hours were extended so everyone on board had adequate time to get a hot meal, Wiggins said. The South Korean navy brought in a commercial, heavy-lift 4,000-ton capacity crane to lift large pieces of the wreckage to the surface. Salvor is one of four rescue and salvage ships operated by MSC to render assistance to disabled ships and provide towing, salvage, diving, firefighting and heavy lift capabilities to the fleet. As April drew to a close, the ship continued to act as U.S. 7th fleets rescue and salvage ship while permanently-assigned MSC rescue and salvage ship USNS Safeguard underwent repairs in the Philippines. Safeguards work is expected to be completed in early May. MC2 Byron C. Linder, Navy Public Affairs Support Element Detachment Japan, contributed to this story.
Above: Salvor rests at anchor in the Yellow Sea before starting another day of salvage operations with amphibious dock-landing ship USS Harpers Ferry and guided-missile destroyer USS Curtis Wilbur April 11. A South Korean commercial, heavy-lift, 4,000-ton capacity crane, seen in the background, was used to recover the hull fragments, which spread over a four-mile debris field. Left: Dive tenders recover Jong Suk Kang, a diver assigned to the Republic of Korea Sea Salvage and Rescue Unit, and Navy Lt. Matthew Lindsey, diving officer and company commander of Mobile Diving and Salvage Unit 1, aboard Military Sealift Command rescue and salvage ship USNS Salvor during a joint dive April 9 in the Yellow Sea. U.S. and South Korean divers embarked on Salvor to conduct salvage and recovery operations after South Korean navy patrol boat Cheonan sank in the Yellow Sea near the western sea border with North Korea.
ilitary Sealift Command rescue and salvage ship USNS Grapple was dispatched from Norfolk to recover the wreckage of an F/A-18 Hornet fighter jet assigned to U.S. Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort, S.C., March 22. The jet crashed into the ocean while it was on a training mission approximately 30 miles from the air station March 10. While both of the jets crew members a pilot of-
ficer and a weapons officer were ejected safely, the jet left a large debris field in the nearly 100-foot deep waters, posing a risk for recreational divers. A detachment of divers from the U.S. Navys Mobile Diving and Salvage Unit Two, which is assigned to Naval Amphibious Base Little Creek in Virginia Beach, Va., embarked on Grapple to assist the ship in lifting the debris from the ocean floor. Grapples crew of 26 civil service mariners worked with the Navy divers to locate the jet parts in the debris field March 24. The crew then recovered the
jets two engines, a partial wing, several large pieces of the jets fuselage and many smaller pieces of debris from the ocean floor. It was a routine operation nothing unusual for Grapples crew, said Grapples civil service master, Capt. Curt Smith. Grapple conducts hundreds of rescue and salvage operations each year. Grapples crew offloaded the remains of the jet for delivery back to the Marine Corps in Charleston, S.C., March 26.
Charleston to Kandah
HENSON
Military Sealift Command oceanographic survey ship USNS Henson visited Columbia and Brazil in March as part of OceanographicSouthern Partnership Station 2010, an exercise focused on the exchange of information and practices between hydrographic experts from U.S. Southern Command partner navies. Southern Partnership Station is an annual deployment conducted by U.S. Naval Forces Southern Command and U.S. 4th Fleet. The missions primary goal is information sharing with foreign navies, coast guards and civilian services throughout the Caribbean and Latin America. This is the first year that U.S. Southern Command has selected oceanography as the theme for the mission. This new focus allowed for the partner nations to exchange ideas and observe new capabilities in physical oceanographic collection and hydrography. Hydrographic surveys determine water depth, map the sea floor, chart the coastline and identify wrecks and obstructions that are navigational hazards. These surveys also measure tides and currents information routinely used to aid the navigation of navy ships. The aim of O-SPS was to generate long-lasting, positive and strategic relationships between the U.S. Navy and the Colombian and Brazilian navies. The mission paved the way for future engagements and information sharing between the U.S. Naval Oceanographic Office and Fleet Survey Team, and both the Colombian Center of Investigation of Oceanography and Hydrography and Brazils Directorate of Hydography and Navigation. Henson is one of seven MSC oceanographic survey ships operated by MSC for the commander, Naval Meteorology and Oceanography Command. Scentific survey teams from NAVOCEANO conduct the collection and subsequent analysis of
data. The 329-foot ship is equipped with two 34-foot hydrographic survey launches that are capable of surveying in water less than 33 feet deep. For OSPS, Henson was also augmented temporarily with two FST expeditionary survey vehicles, which are specially fitted jet skis used to survey in very shallow water. During O-SPS, the ships survey and data-sharing missions were executed by a combined team of civilian and military surveyors from NAVOCEANO and FST. This embarked rapid-response team can conduct quick-turnaround hydrographic surveys anywhere in the world, ensuring vital supplies or emergency equipment can get into a damaged port. While scientists and sailors from the three participating countries were busy exchanging ideas and fostering a positive maritime relationship, the civilian mariners operating Henson worked behind the scenes to ensure the mission went off without a hitch. Twenty-four U.S. civilian mariners under contract with MSC operate Henson. During O-SPS, they helped conduct the deck operations demonstrations and operated the hydrographic survey launches. The crew has greatly enjoyed having the Colombian and Brazilian nationals aboard for these two exercises, said Hensons master, Capt. Greg Gillotte. Despite any preconceived notions the crew might have, they always discover that they share a lot in common with their seafaring counterparts from other nations.
EXPLORING T
4
har
authorities were notified so that divers could later recover the buoy. FST members spent significant time on expeditionary survey vehicles throughout the week to demonstrate the capabilities of the vehicle to a group of Colombian hydrographers. The white skyline of Cartagena was the backdrop as Aerographers Mate 2nd Class Nicholas Wissler and Aerographers Mate 3rd Class Tonia Boyle conducted a survey in the bays choppy waters, taking along Colombian hydrographers for a close-up look at how the system worked at operational speeds. Our Colombian counterparts jumped right in alongside us to wire the [survey vehicles], put them in the water and survey, said Wissler. When complications or challenges arose, the Columbians didnt criticize or complain, but instead shared examples of challenges they had faced and how they overcame them. Henson, NAVOCEANO and FST personnel departed Cartagena March 13 for Brazil, where they would begin the second leg of the mission.
Army Sgt. 1st Class Craig Collins, 70th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment, and Navy MC2 Lily Daniels, U.S. 4th Fleet Public Affairs, contributed to this story.
THE DEPTHS
5
technician for FST. The language barrier wasnt as difficult as I was expecting it to be. The Brazilians were very receptive to experience firsthand our expeditionary survey capabilities, and it was easy to demonstrate since they have similar software and equipment. Henson hosted a closing ceremony for O-SPS March 30 aboard the ship. The culmination of this weeks engagement with the Brazilian and U.S. Navy hydrographic offices proved to be a successful exchange of hydrographic science and ideas between our two nations, said Navy Capt. Brian Brown, commanding officer, Naval Oceanographic Office. Brazilian navy Capt. Marcos Almeida, director, Brazilian Navys Hydrographic and Meteorological Center added, This engagement demonstrated the strength of our partnership, and I look forward to future cooperation between our navies. The information gathered and discussed was invaluable, said Navy Cmdr. Oscar Monterrosa, mission commander for O-SPS. New data can provide military commanders with detailed descriptions of the environmental conditions they could face while at sea and improve the safety and efficiency of seagoing operations. We value our strong relationship with Colombia and Brazil, and seek to continue to expand our partnership through navy-to-navy, face-to-face, hands-on oceanographic activities, said Monterrosa. On April 12 in Washington, D.C., Brazilian Minister of Defense Nelson Jobim and U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates signed an agreement on defense cooperation between the governments of Brazil and the United States that includes cooperation in the fields of research and development, and combinedmilitary training and education.
Getting Launched
Henson crew members lower a 34-foot hydrographic survey launch, which is capable of surveying in water less than 33-feet deep, into the waters off Cartagena, Columbia. Henson visited Columbia and Brazil as part of Oceanographic-Southern Partnership Station 2010.
CENTRAL CURRENTS
March was another busy month on the front lines of logistics support to the U.S. 5th Fleet. Sealift Logistics Command Central/Commander Task Force 53 said goodbye to one of its outstanding Military Sealift Command contributors to U.S. 5th Fleet readiness, MSC fleet replenishment oiler USNS Pecos. While in theater, Pecos provided support for Navy strike groups centered on aircraft carriers USS Nimitz and USS Ronald Reagan, two amphibious readiness groups centered on amphibious assault ships USS Nassau and USS Bonhomme Richard and numerous coalition naval combatants. Pecos crew safely and efficiently conducted 52 underway replenishments; transferred 4.6 million gallons of F76 fuel and 185,000 gallons of F44 fuel; and delivered 2,224 pallets of cargo and provisions. The crew of USNS Pecos received a Bravo Zulu message from CTF-53 for the crews outstanding efforts. In late March, SEALOGCENT/CTF-53 welcomed MSC fleet replenishment oiler USNS Rappahannock, whose crew continues MSCs tradition of providing crucial services to U.S. and coalition forces in the Central Command area of responsibility. Fair winds and following seas to CTF-53s HSC-26 Detachment One Desert Hawk officer-in-charge Navy Lt. Cmdr. Kevin Zayac and Air Logistics Department Cargo Of-
ficer Navy Lt. Ryan Wodele. Zayac and Wodele were awarded Navy Commendation Medals for their outstanding performance while attached to CTF-53 and SEALOGCENT. Zayac was relieved by Navy Lt. Cmdr. Alan Copeland as the new Desert Hawk office-in-charge, and Wodele was relieved by Navy Lt. j.g. Chaye Kabbelliya. SEALOGCENT/CTF-53 warmly welcomes Navy Cmdr. Tom Fifer, operations officer, who returns to Bahrain after a tour at the Naval War College where he received a masters degree in National Security and Strategic Studies. In late-February, Navy Capt. Don Hodge, commodore, SEALOGCENT/CTF53 and Linda Harman, SEALOGCENT operational support officer, attended the inaugural SEALOGCENT Reserve Integration Conference in Tampa, Fla. The event was hosted by Navy Capt. Jim Leach and Reserve unit SEALOGCENT 101 staff members. Leaders from the four Expeditionary Port Units assigned to SEALOGCENT were also in attendance. The events focus was unifying and strengthening the relationship between the active and Reserve components that encompass SEALOGCENTs team. Discussion topics included developing a monthly communication battle rhythm and aligning EPU commanding officer annual training with SEALOGCENT events. Other topics included a long-range training plan and the operational tempo of the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility. Navy Capt. Sybil Bradley presented an MSC headquarters Reserve overview.
ATLANTIC LINES
Military Sealift Command rescue and salvage ship USNS Grasp departed Haiti March 29 after completing its humanitarian and disaster relief efforts in the area. U.S. Army divers embarked on Grasp completed reconstruction of the south pier at Port-au-Prince, ending the mission that began shortly after the January earthquake struck. Maritime Prepositioning Ship USNS PFC Dewayne T. Williams, which was instrumental in the early support and relief efforts in Haiti, departed the Sealift Logistics Command Atlantic area of responsibility April 1, to return to U.S. Marine Corps prepositioning support in Guam. MSC rescue and salvage ship USNS Grapple returned to Norfolk March 18 after a nearly six-month deployment in support of U.S. Central and Europe Sealift Logistics Commands. While deployed, Grapple participated in training exercises with partner nations. In addition, Grapple provided a platform for diver training and dive capability assessment tests in Kenya, Tanzania, Seychelles and Tunisia. The ship also quickly responded to recovery efforts following the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 409. When MSC hospital ship USNS Comfort concluded its humanitarian mission in Haiti March 10, Navy Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Gary Roughead lauded Comforts medical teams and civil service mariners for their efforts helping Haitis stricken residents. The tragedy that struck Haiti mobilized a worldwide response to relieve the suffering of the Haitian people, said Roughead. Our Navy stepped in from the outset, delivering assistance in many forms. During your time on station, you were the face of America to the grateful Haitian people. Your actions made our entire nation proud and showcased Navy flexibility and responsiveness in the best possible way. Tom DAgostino, SEALOGLANT senior marine transportation specialist in Charleston, S. C., assisted with cargo operations for five ships in March. MSC cable laying/ repair ship USNS Zeus and MSC oceanographic survey ship USNS Sumner arrived March15, joining MSC fleet replenishment oiler USNS John Lenthall, MPS USNS 1st LT Jack Lummus and MPS USNS 2nd LT John P. Bobo at Detyens Shipyard for repairs. Mary Ann Nobles, also a marine transportation specialist in the SEALOGLANT Charleston office, coordinated the port calls. MSC tanker USNS Paul Buck discharged a total of 364,000 barrels of fuel during two port visits March 20 and 27. Large, medium-speed, roll-on/roll-off ship USNS Watson arrived March 23 to receive almost 252,000 square feet of prepositioning cargo. On March 26, Army Lt. Gen. Mitchell Stevenson, U.S. Army deputy chief of staff for logistics, received a tour of Watson by ships master Capt. Chris Larkin. Richard Bolduc, senior marine transportation specialist at the SEALOGLANT office in Jacksonville, Fla., assisted with cargo operations for five ships in March. MPS USNS PFC Dewayne T. Williams offloaded nearly 18,000 square feet of returning Haitian disaster relief cargo February to March 2. More than 174,000 square feet of prepositioning cargo was loaded onto the ship March 15-24. MPS USNS 2nd LT John P. Bobo offloaded more than 202,000 square feet of cargo March 3-13. MSC-chartered tug Dublin Sea discharged more than 90,000 barrels of fuel March 13-14. Bolduc oversaw the loading of more than 800 pallets of goods onto MSC dry cargo/ammunition ship USNS Lewis and Clark March 4-6. The ship took on more than 15,000 barrels of fuel in Jacksonville, which was destined for relief operations in Haiti March 13-17.
COMPASS HEADING
March saw the start of renovation work on three Breezy Point buildings destined to become offices for Military Sealift Fleet Support Command as the command phases out its presence at the Virginia State Military Reservation at Camp Pendleton in Virginia Beach, Va. Buildings 15, 16 and 30, which are immediately north of MSFSCs headquarters complex, are currently scheduled for occupancy early next year. Military Sealift Command hospital ship USNS Comfort arrived at her Baltimore layberth March 19 after a successful humanitarian relief mission in Haiti. Comforts civil service mariners were busy in the days immediately following the ships return. They supported U.S. Coast Guard and American Bureau of Shipping annual inspections, removed temporary package generators and secured the ships propulsion and auxiliary generators as Comfort prepared to return to reduced operating status March 28. MSC hospital ship USNS Mercy arrived back at its layberth in San Diego, Calif., in late March. As of April, the ship was undergoing preparations for deployment in support of U.S. Pacific Commands Pacific Partnership 2010. Congratulations to MSFSC employees who participated in the commands annual Crews into Shape challenge, which was sponsored by the Navy and Marine Corps Public Health Center in conjunction with National Nutrition Month. MSFSCs public health educator Christine McGrath administered the voluntary program, which promoted workplace-focused, team-oriented physical activity and increased fruit and vegetable intake. McGrath was recognized for her leadership and commitment to encouraging command-wide good health in conjunction with the Navy Surgeon Generals Blue H health-promotion and wellness award. MSC fleet replenishment oiler USNS Joshua Humphreys was transferred from Naval Inactive Ship Maintenance Facility Philadelphia to MSC March 18. The ships primary mission is to provide fuel to U.S. Navy ships at sea and jet fuel to aircraft. The ships short-fused reactivation is in support of U.S. 5th Fleet operations. The ship was deactivated in October 2006 after nearly 10 years of service to MSC. Humphreys reactivated one other time in 2005-2006. MSFSC welcomes Wanda WatsonMays, deputy equal employment opportunity officer, who replaced Laudess Scales March 29. Previously, Mays served as EEO officer at MSC headquarters from 1991 to 1997, and again from 2000 to 2006. Fair winds and following seas to several retirees, including Boatswains Mate Chester Blue, who is retiring after 48 years of government service; Purser Reynaldo Calderon; Chief Engineer Terrance Campbell; Able Seaman Stephen Forest, Boatswains Mate Frank Gray Jr.; Engine Utilityman Ramon Josue; Utilityman Edwin Norman Jr.; Second Electrician Alan Pancipanci; Purser Honesto Ramos; Assistant Cooks James Actipis and Phillip Williams; Logistics Management Specialist Raymond Hieber; and Comptroller Joyce Jurkowski. Thank you for your service. MSFSC sends its condolences to the family of 3rd Assistant Engineer James Bradshaw, who passed away March 7. For more MSFSC and civil service mariner news, view the online newsletter at www.msc.navy.mil/msfsc/newsletter.
HQ HIGHLIGHTS
Navy Adm. John C. Harvey, commander, U.S. Fleet Forces Command, commended MSC hospital ship USNS Comfort in a Bravo Zulu message that highlighted the ships outstanding contributions to the Haiti relief effort during the ships seven-week deployment there following the devastating earthquake in January. USNS Comfort getting underway just three days from a reduced operating status was in the finest traditions of our Navy, Harvey said to the Bravo Zulu recipients. You had an immediate impact. You made a real difference in the lives of thousands, and while you delivered much food, water and aid, you gave the people of Haiti the most important gift of all, hope. Military Sealift Command headquarters marked Womens History Month March 17 with a special observance that included remarks by Eileen Roberson, MSC Naval Fleet Auxiliary Force and Special Mission director. Roberson spoke about the influence of strong women in all positions in society and thanked the women who have impacted her own life. MSCs command newspaper Sealift, produced by the MSC public affairs office, received an honorable mention for being one of the Navys best tabloid-format newspapers in the 2009 Chief of Information Merit Awards competition. Navy Capt. Jim Romano replaces Navy Capt. David Wright as MSC chief of staff in early May. Romano comes to MSC headquarters from Sealift Logistics Command Far East, where he served as commodore. MSC bids farewell to Zophie Burnett, maritime forces, manpower and management; Chantal Rosales, contracts and business management; and Glenn Marshall, Naval Fleet Auxiliary Force. MSC welcomes Doris Hughes, office of the comptroller; Robert Walz, command, control, communication and computer systems; and Jonathan Berman, engineering.
7
PACIFIC BRIEFS
Navy Rear Adm. Mark Buzby, commander, Military Sealift Command, visited the MSC Office Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, March 19-20. Buzby toured MSC fleet ocean tugs USNS Navajo and USNS Sioux, MSC fleet replenishment oiler USNS Yukon and MSC-chartered submarine and special warfare support ship MV C-Commando while he was in Pearl Harbor. Sealift Logistics Command Pacific recognized two members of its workforce in March for their length of government service. Thomas M. Brown, marine transportation specialist, SEALOGPAC Operations Department, received recognition for 40 years of government service. Francisco N. Villarin, management assistant, Ship Support Unit San Diego Manpower Department, received recognition for 30 years of government service.