Author Archives: Chad Derrington

Navy Live » Blog Archive » Medical Monday: Taking Care of Our Patriots

Navy Live » Blog Archive » Medical Monday: Taking Care of Our Patriots.

 

June 20th, 2011 posted by jfaller

This post was written by Admiral Jonathan Greenert, Vice Chief of Naval Operations.

Admiral Jonathan Greenert answers questions from Sailors in Japan.

For the last two years it’s been a pleasure to be a part of the mission to help improve the care and treatment of our Wounded, Ill, and Injured Warriors. This effort has included visiting treatment and support facilities throughout the country, meeting with Wounded Warriors and their Families to understand what can be done to help, and working side by side with our Navy medical and personnel professionals to ensure the correct programs and benefits are in place.

Meeting these amazing folks at National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Navy Medical Center, Balboa, Tripler Army Hospital, Hawaii and Brooke Army Medical Center, San Antonio you can’t help but be inspired. I remember a sign on the door of a Wounded Warrior at Bethesda warning visitors that “I have no time for pity, sympathy or condolences; I am busy recovering and looking ahead returning to duty (I paraphrase). My first visit to the prosthesis center at Balboa was like visiting an extensive bicycle/triathalon center. The atmosphere was upbeat with a bevy of activity, predominantly centered around sports – running, bicycling, swimming and rock climbing. Soldiers, Sailors and Marines spoke to me about recent accomplishments, and what milestone was next in their recovery. Doctors and health care providers nodded sagely – agreeing. Several years ago Doctors might be shaking their heads, wondering how and when theses Wounded Warriors would admit and come to grips with their “handicaps”. All this has become possible due to the collective and collaborative efforts of a world class medical system, the generosity and passion of numerous benevolent associations and the awesome spirit of our Wounded Warriors. For every story of a combat injury recovery, there are also stories of recovering from training injuries, traffic accidents and even cancers. As LTC Booker King at Brooke Army Medical Center told me recently, “we are accomplishing now in 3 months what took 5 times as long only a few years ago, and was unthinkable 10 years ago. It is one of the few bright spots from a decade of combat. Because of my travels and interactions, I have come to see Wounded Warrior care in the form of a triangle:

• At the top of this triangle is the world class health care provided by the many military and civilian professionals at DoD hospitals and treatment centers like the National Intrepid Center of Excellence (NICoE) onboard Naval Support Activity Bethesda-which will celebrate its one year anniversary this week. NICoE is dedicated to the diagnosis, treatment and research of traumatic brain injury (TBI) and other psychological health conditions among service members, veterans and their families.

• At the second leg of our triangle are DoD facilitators like Navy Safe Harbor which coordinates the non-medical care of Wounded, Ill, and Injured Sailors, Coast Guardsmen, and their families. Their proactive leadership provides a lifetime of individually tailored assistance designed to optimize the success of recovery, rehabilitation, and reintegration activities.

• Finally, the third leg of the triangle is anchored by the many charitable services that are offered by benevolent organizations, private donors and veteran affinity groups nationwide. Their contributions to our Warriors and their families in their time of need recognizes the special sacrifices our service men and women in uniform have made by addressing a humanitarian need beyond that provided by the Departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs.

Why raise this now?
By the end of this summer we will complete the final stages of the Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) mandated changes to the healthcare facilities in the National Capital Region. The BRAC construction projects at Bethesda and Fort Belvoir will provide nearly three million square-feet of new world class clinical and administrative space, cutting-edge technology, and Americans with Disability Act compliant lodging to support the rehabilitation of Wounded, Ill and Injured Service members. Throughout this labor intensive process we have worked closely with the medical community and our sister services to ensure that the triangle of care that we are committed to providing our Wounded, Ill, and Injured will continue to operate uninterrupted. This integration brings together recent combat medical experiences, innovative research and technology and best practices in evidence based patient care. The facilities at Walter Reed-Bethesda and Fort Belvoir will have state of the art facilities to provide Warriors with the very best of inpatient and outpatient care to help them heal in mind, body and spirit.

As with any major move or adjustment, there is always anxiety or concern associated with change. Rest assured no Wounded Warrior or their Family will be overlooked during the integration of these facilities. Caring for our Wounded Warriors is a long-term commitment, a covenant that will last well beyond our operations in Iraq or Afghanistan. Our military members and their Families deserve nothing less than our best effort.

Exercise Northern Edge 2011 blasts into the last frontier

Exercise Northern Edge 2011 blasts into the last frontier.

Alaskan Command


Date: 06.13.2011

FAIRBANKS, Alaska – Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska, began participating in the U.S. Pacific Command’s Northern Edge 2011 exercise June 13.

The exercise runs through June 24 and will focus on strategic capabilities that enable the joint-military world to be adept in detection and tracking in air, land and sea spaces.

About 6,000 active duty, guard and reserve members from the Air Force, Army, Marines and Navy will sharpen their skills through exercise scenarios and improve communication relationships and develop plans and programs that can be exchanged and used between the services.

“A joint-training exercise such as Northern Edge gives us the unique opportunity to provide our country’s soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines a capabilities-based exercise to ensure they are combat ready for worldwide deployment,” said Col. Lynn Scheel, 354th Fighter Wing vice commander. “Northern Edge also allows us to hone our current combat tactics and weapon capabilities, as well as the testing of future applications.”

Although the exercise is headquartered at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska, exercising throughout Alaska’s vast Joint Pacific Alaska Range Complex allows forces to train in an expansive area.

“The JPARC presents excellent training opportunities here in the Pacific region,” Colonel Scheel said. “The strength of the JPARC is its expansive co-located air and land ranges, as well as significant potential for co-located air and sea ranges. Alaska is a true national asset, and we are grateful to the people of Alaska for their continued support as we use our training ranges to conduct these critical joint-training operations.”

One hundred and twelve aircraft and 13 ships will be utilized for NE exercise purposes at both Eielson AFB in the north and JBER in the south. Here, some of the units involved include the 67th Aircraft Maintenance Unit from Kadena Air Base, Japan; U.S. Navy Patrol Squadron One from Whidbey Island, Wash.; and the U.S. Marine Aerial Refueler Transport Squadron 452 from Stewart Air National Guard Base, N.Y.

“We’re here to get a better understanding of how to work with other services,” said U.S. Marine Corps Gunnery Sgt. Griggsby Cowart, KC-130T navigator with the VMGR-452. “Since we’re in a support role, I think the main impact we can have would be to keep our airplanes flying, so we can provide the refueling portion of our mission.”

The squadron brought with them two C-130T refueling aircraft and 30 personnel to help maintain that support role.

“I think the planning part of this is the biggest deal for us — being able to get in, use other equipment, share the same lingo and plan alongside other platforms and services,” continued the gunnery sergeant, who hails from Atlanta. “And, how to integrate our assets with theirs is the most important thing.”

Safety is a top priority for the joint exercise.

“Conducting a large scale exercise such as Northern Edge 2011 is not without risk, but we work extremely hard to identify and mitigate potential risks to all participants,” the colonel said. “Although this is an important exercise for our armed forces, nothing we do in this exercise warrants putting our personnel at unnecessary risk of injury or death. Emphasis on safety, strict adherence to training rules and the professional conduct of our participants significantly lowers this risk.”

Northern Edge is a 10-day exercise held every two years.

Peter S. Guzzo AT2(AC) 1982-86

Guzzo, Peter S., 49, of Spring Hill, FL died on Thursday July 24, 2008. Mr. Guzzo was born in Passaic, NJ, lived in Lyndhurst for 20 years then California for 10 years and he was a Current resident of Spring Hill, FL for the past 19 years. He was a Navy Veteran who served in The Gulf War (1982-92). He worked as a Computer Consultant, a private pilot, and was an avid coin collector. Peter was the beloved son of Salvatore M. Guzzo of Lakewood and the late Florence N. (nee Walz) Guzzo (1997), loving brother of Anthony Guzzo & his wife, Michele of Lyndhurst and Carol Ann Guzzo & her husband, Craig Flug of Oakland, and dear uncle of Anthony, Lauren, Rachel, Mia Guzzo and Christopher Flug. Relatives and friends are invited to attend the funeral from Nazare Memorial Home, Inc., 403 Ridge Road, Lyndhurst on Thursday July 31, 2008 at 8:30 AM then to Our Lady Mount Carmel Church, Lyndhurst where at 9:30 AM a Funeral Mass. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery, North Arlington. Visiting hours Wednesday 2-4 & 7-9 PM. In lieu of Flowers, donations can be made to: V.A. Outpatient Clinic, 9912 Little Road, New Port Richy, FL 34654, Attn. Jeanne R. Botz.

Mad Foxes Are Back in Jacksonville | firstcoastnews.com

Mad Foxes Are Back in Jacksonville | firstcoastnews.com.

 

VP-5 Returns home

 

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — The Mad Foxes have returned to the First Coast.

The Patrol Squadron Five (VP-5) is back at NAS Jax after a six-month deployment.

They flew missions in El Salvador, Djibouti and Italy, and the unit sent detachments to Greece, Spain, Sicily and France as well.

Squadron members participated in operations like Enduring Freedom, Caper Focus, Odyssey Dawn in Libya and Unified Protector, flying more than 3,956 flight hours.

One of the squadron’s biggest achievements was its deployment of an AGM-65F Maverick, the first time a Maverick shot was successfully used against a hostile target in the history of Maritime Patrol and Reconnaissance Aircraft (MPRA).

During seven drug busts, the squadron kept about $850 million worth of drugs from reaching the U. S.

Tonight the group is just happy to be home, and its members get to stay home for about a year before their next deployment.

First Coast News

Wide-ranging experience gained as CARAT 2011 wraps – Pattaya Mail – Pattaya News, Communities, Opinions and much more…

Wide-ranging experience gained as CARAT 2011 wraps – Pattaya Mail – Pattaya News, Communities, Opinions and much more….

Wide-ranging experience gained as CARAT 2011 wraps

Friday, 03 June 2011 From Issue Vol. XIX No. 22By Staff reporters

From amphibious landings to sniper training to tips on flying one of the oldest warplanes still in the air, Thailand’s naval forces gained more useful insight into modern warfare from the U.S. Navy in the two nations’ 17th Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training exercise.

Vice Adm. Surachai Sangkapong, commander of the Royal Thai Fleet, Rear Adm. Chaiyot Sunthornnak, commander of Frigate Squadron 2 and Tomas F. Carney, director of the U.S. CARAT forces, brought the nine-day war games to a close in Sattahip May 20.
The two sides engaged in more than 1,500 training and cultural-exchange exercises with the U.S. sending four ships and 3,500 men to participate. Shore-based activities included engineering and damage control training exchanges, joint medical, dental and civic action projects, and joint community service projects at local schools. The at-sea phase focused on developing maritime security capabilities in areas such as maritime interdiction, information sharing, combined operations at sea, patrols and gunnery exercises, and anti-piracy and anti-smuggling exercises. Ban Chang (May 12, 2011) – Hospital Corpsman 2nd Class Jared Myers (right), attached to Commander Task Force 73, Singapore, assists Lt. Michael Syamken, attached to USS Tortuga (LSD 46), extract an infected tooth from a young Thai dental patient during the Medical Civic Action Program (MEDCAP) at the Somboon Ranaram School. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Jose Lopez, Jr.) Top officers from both sides stressed CARAT is a change to create closer ties, both personally and operationally, between Thai and U.S. navies. That was born out by several of the exercises. Early in the operation, U.S. marine snipers with Landing Force Company instructed Royal Thai Marines on applying the fundamentals of marksmanship to sniper tactics. American instructors discussed windage, trigger control, breathing control and how to effectively work as a sniper team. Ban Chang (May 12, 2011)- Fireman Giovanni Santiago, of USS Tortuga (LSD 46), waits for tools while he and a Royal Thai marine hang a basketball goal at the Wat Sombonaro School. USS Tortuga, USS Ruben James (DDG 57) and USS Howard (DDG 83) sent more than 30 Sailors to the school to help preserve a bathroom and refurbish a playground as a community service project for CARAT Thailand 2011. (U.S. Navy photo by Lt. K. Madison Carter) “The training is very good. It helps me to have more knowledge,” said PFC 1st Class Chaiyoot Moonthongchoon told the media. “I got to train on different equipment and learn more techniques.” Other U.S. instructors schooled Thai naval aviators on best practices when flying and maintaining the P3-C Orion, a Vietnam-era plane still in use by Thai forces. The U.S. brought over one of its old planes to have instructors provide Thai forces information on maintenance, operations, mine-laying and search-and-rescue procedures. Ban Chang (May 12, 2011) – Operations Specialist Seaman Laura Jackson, attached to USS Tortuga (LSD 46), and a Royal Thai navy sailor, paint the inside of a bathroom at the Somboon Ranaram School during a joint community service project. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Jose Lopez, Jr.) “The Thai Navy flies the P-3, so there was a lot of commonality already in our work and procedures,” Lt. Cmdr. Kim DaCosta said in a U.S. 7th Fleet statement. “The Thai aircrews integrated well with our aircrews, and that’s exactly what this exercise is all about – becoming familiar with one another so when we are called to work together, there’s a baseline of understanding and trust already there.” As is customary in recent years, CARAT wrapped with a joint amphibious landing at Had Yao Beach. The exercise was a beach assault using amphibious assault vehicles. U.S. and Thai forces each had an objective on the beach to seize. It was an operation that was beneficial for both Thais and Americans, as many young U.S. Marines have never experienced a full amphibious assault. A Royal Thai Navy sailor monitors a target during a riverine exercise in the Sattahip Harbor Basin. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Christopher S. Johnson) “There is an entire generation of Marines that lack the amphibious assault experience,” Capt. Rudy Cazares, company commander for Landing Force Company, told the press. “This evolution afforded them the opportunity to get that training.” The exercise included nine amphibious-assault vehicles from the U.S. and six from Thailand. A company of Thai Marines and a company of U.S. Marines disembarked the AAVs and assaulted their respective objectives. A Royal Thai Marine shouts orders to his troops as they land ashore during an amphibious assault evolution of CARAT Thailand 2011. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Jose Lopez, Jr.) While the amphibious assault was the culminating event, U.S. and Thai service members conducted extensive training in jungle survival, combat marksmanship, military operations in urban terrain, combat lifesaving skills, martial arts and sniper training. “Despite the language barrier and the use of different equipment, I can confidently say it was a positive experience across the board,” Cazares said. “We gained just as much from this experience from the Thai as they did from us.” U-Tapao – An P-3C Orion assigned to Patrol Squadron (VP) 4 takes off as a Royal Thai Navy P-3C taxis down the runway to join it during a combined mine laying exercise. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Jose Lopez, Jr.)

This article was published in the Pattaya Mail newspaper on Friday June 3, 2011 (Vol. XIX No. 22).

TUCKER, Jimmy Lee AOC VP-4 1958-61 and 1963-66

Mr. Jimmy Lee Tucker, 76, of Daniel Road, died Thursday, Nov. 4, 2010 at Davie County Hospital. He was born May 21, 1934, in Cabarrus County, to the late Robert Cleo and Mary Ann Charlotte Austin Tucker. Mr. Tucker was of the Protestant faith. He was retired from the U.S. Navy. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a brother, Larry Tucker; and a sister, Betty Brown. Survivors include his wife, Hatsuko Tucker of the home; a son, Robert Tucker of Carrboro; two sisters, Frances O’Neal (Leon) of Cooleemee and Edna Lucille Kyles (Henry) of Salisbury; two brothers, Donald E. Tucker (Joy) of Westlake, LA and Lonnie Robert Tucker (Myrtle) of Statesville; and numerous nieces and nephews. A graveside service will be conducted at 10 a.m., Monday, Nov. 8, at Salisbury National Cemetery, with military graveside rites. The family will receive friends from 6 to 8 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 7, at Eaton Funeral Home. Online condolences may be made at www.eatonfuneralservice.com
Thank you 

Larry Hames
VP-4 1975 – 1978
VP-4 Veterans Assn Database Manager
database@vp4association.com

Navy bids adieu to Mid-coast at formal BNAS closing

The Times Record > News > Navy bids adieu to Mid-coast at formal BNAS closing.

‘It was love at first sight’

By Seth Koenig, Times Record Staff
Published: 

Wednesday, June 1, 2011 2:12 PM EDT
BRUNSWICK — The Navy and the town of Brunswick, two cultures woven into a single community for nearly seven decades, exchanged goodbyes Tuesday in a heartfelt disestablishment ceremony for Brunswick Naval Air Station. 

When sailors ceremonially lowered the American flag the final time at the base just after 3 p.m., it marked the end for the air station, first established in 1943 as a training site for British pilots.

After a hiatus following the conclusion of World War II, the base served as one of the U.S. Navy’s key North Atlantic observation posts from 1951 until a federal Base Realignment and Closure commission voted in 2005 to terminate the property’s use as an active military installation. That decision launched a six-year closure process that culminated Tuesday.

For many who cherished the base — which for years introduced sailors from all over the country to Brunswick, repeatedly described Tuesday as a host community unrivaled in terms of warmth and local support — the official disestablishment proved bittersweet.

Retired Rear Adm. Harry Rich, a Harpswell resident who offered the keynote speech Tuesday, helped fight Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) commission efforts to close Brunswick Naval Air Station in 1995 and again in 2005. The first time, Rich and others successfully kept the base off the closure list.

“It’s ironic that I’m speaking here today,” Rich told the crowd of more than 1,000 who gathered for the outdoor ceremony. “I spent four years of my life trying to prevent this day from happening.”

Rich described how neighbors would fix his cars and deliver groceries for his wife and kids when he was deployed overseas, and how those same neighbors refused payment for the help when he got back.

He told tales of local people for whom streets at the air station are named — Adm. Aubrey Fitch, who retired to Maine after a career so decorated the Navy named a Bath Iron Works-built ship after him, and Paul Burbank, a Harpswell native who went on to become a Navy flight instructor in Pensacola, Fla. — and how the base changed the direction of his life.

Rich said his older brothers joined the Army during World War II, and he planned to follow suit until he tagged along with his father on an electric company job 50 miles south of his hometown of Union. He said their Central Maine Power Co. truck rumbled to a stop along the road near where Fat Boy Drive-In is located today, and he watched in awe as Navy Corsair fighter planes swooped down to land at the adjacent base airfield.

“It was love at first sight,” he recalled, and he joined the Navy instead, launching a 35-year career in which he participated in the Berlin Airlift and helped recover the Gemini 9 spacecraft and its astronauts after they returned to Earth and splashed down in the Atlantic Ocean.

Also delivering remarks Tuesday were Gov. Paul LePage; Jackalyne Pfannenstiel, assistant secretary of the Navy, Energy, Installations and Environment; Arthur Mayo, chairman of the Midcoast Regional Redevelopment Authority board of directors; and Capt. William Fitzgerald, the final commanding officer of Brunswick Naval Air Station.

Eleven of the base’s former commanding officers returned for Tuesday’s ceremony.

Capt. William Fitzgerald is the 36th and final commander of Brunswick Naval Air Station. (Troy R. Bennett / The Times Record)

Command Master Chief Daniel Nicholson salutes the flag as it is lowered at Brunswick Naval Air Station for the final time on Tuesday. Today, the former Navy base is known as Brunswick Landing. (Troy R. Bennett / The Times Record)

Sailors bow their heads in prayer during the invocation at disestablishment ceremonies at the Brunswick Naval Air Station Tuesday. (Troy R. Bennett / The Times Record)

World War II Navy veteran Arnold Wilkie, who was on hand when Brunswick Naval Air Station opened in 1943, receives a standing ovation during disestablishment ceremonies at Brunswick Naval Air Station on Tuesday. (Troy R. Bennett / The Times Record)

 

A place in history

Fitzgerald recalled a history of the site dating back to before the Navy’s arrival, when the location was the first municipal airfield in Maine and, according to one man who spoke to him at a local event, hosted a visit by famed aviator Amelia Earhart.

During the 1960s, he said, pilots used the Brunswick runways to reach new heights. Literally, as Marine Corps Lt. Col. W.C. McGraw and Navy Lt. Cmdr. D.W. Nordberg each set aircraft climb records, with the latter pushing the mark up to 15,000 meters in an F-4 Phantom.

“NAS Brunswick has also bled over the years and mourned the loss of aircraft and aircrew deaths from combat missions, from operational missions and from training accidents, some of which occurred right here in Maine — over Poland Springs and the Gulf of Maine,” Fitzgerald said, “and all along, the community grieved with us. Our Memorial Gardens in the former NAS Brunswick Chapel offers hallowed grounds for reflection of those P-3 airmen who made the ultimate sacrifice.”

Tuesday’s disestablishment ceremony was the last in a long line of Navy closure milestones that have passed with pomp and circumstance since 2009. The departures of the last three patrol squadrons stationed in Brunswick, the disestablishment of the tenant Patrol and Reconnaissance Wing 5, and the closure of the base airfield were among the events to make up the Navy’s long farewell to Brunswick.

Once a base of more than 4,000 military personnel, only 10 active duty sailors were still stationed at Brunswick Naval Air Station on Tuesday, and the only Navy plane on hand was a signature P-3 Orion flown in specially for the ceremony by Patrol Squadron 26.

The Mt. Ararat and Brunswick high school bands filled the musical void left by the drawdown of instrument-playing sailors, while young Sea Cadets from the Bath-based Jason Dunham Division stepped in to handle color guard duties.

“We could either mourn the loss of this great naval air station, lament the BRAC ’05 decision to shut Brunswick down and question the rationale of those who made the decision,” Fitzgerald told those in attendance, “or, in keeping with my Irish heritage, we could make this like an Irish wake and celebrate the life of NAS Brunswick over the years.”

The future of the property

Speakers on Tuesday described visions of the 3,200-acre base property as it opens to civilian reuse — as a home for private technology and manufacturing firms, post secondary educational opportunities and protected natural spaces — to put a positive spin on the occasion.

The Navy transferred 715 acres associated with the base airfield to the Midcoast Regional Redevelopment Authority (MRRA) two months before the official disestablishment, and worked out lease agreements to allow private businesses to begin renovating and moving into vacated Navy buildings early.

Fitzgerald said that more than 30 percent of the base has already been made available to redevelopers, giving MRRA a head start at replacing the 5,000 jobs estimated to be lost as a result of the Navy’s departure.

Speakers on Tuesday described that military-civilian collaboration as groundbreaking in the world of U.S. military base closures, where historically civilian groups have been made to wait at the gates until shuttered bases are completely disestablished.

The accelerated transition process employed in Brunswick, Mayo said Tuesday, has been viewed as a blueprint for how to close military bases nationwide. As of today, the 3,200-acre property will be called Brunswick Landing, while a 74-acre satellite property in Topsham will be known as Topsham Commerce Park.

The early transfers and leases have resulted in the attraction of six companies already hiring employees to work in former base properties. Airplane manufacturer Kestrel Aircraft Co., information technology firm Resilient Communications Corp., Fixed Base Operator FlightLevel Aviation, New England Tent and Awning, and precision machining firm Maine Tool & Machine call Brunswick Landing home, and several others are in negotiations to join them.

Mayo noted that MRRA, the group charged with overseeing the civilian redevelopment of the base, has commitments from companies promising a combined $150 million in private investment and 650 new jobs during the next few years.

In his remarks, Gov. LePage expressed hope that the original motto used by the Navy for the base when it was opened in 1943 will prove prophetic.

“We will renew our Navy’s motto, ‘Built for Business,’” LePage told attendees Tuesday. “A battle cry that was established here nearly 70 years ago will be transformed from a military motto to civilian slogan.”


Commanding officers throughout the history of Brunswick Naval Air Station

  1. Cmdr. J.C. Alderman 1943-44
  2. Cmdr. E.M. Ellis 1944-45
  3. Capt. Joe Taylor 1945-46
  4. Cmdr. W.L. Dawson 1946
  5. Lt. Cmdr. H.G. Pollard 1946-47
  6. Cmdr. F.L. Palmer 1951-52*
  7. Capt. E.G. Price 1952-55
  8. Cmdr. G.H. Duffy 1955
  9. Capt. J.T. Yavorsky 1955-58
  10. Cmdr. D.W. Bowman 1958
  11. Capt. F.R. More 1958-59
  12. Capt. M.T. Thatcher 1959-61
  13. Capt. H.L. Tallman 1961
  14. Capt. W.L. Pack 1961-63
  15. Capt. E.J. Knoche 1963-65
  16. Capt. D.R. Rains 1965-67
  17. Capt. C.L. Wyman 1967-69
  18. Capt. J.D. Collins 1969-71
  19. Capt. R.D. Snyder 1971-74
  20. Capt. R.L. Latta 1974-76
  21. Capt. G.D. Barker 1976-78
  22. Capt. B.T. Hacker 1978-80
  23. Capt. N.E. Koehler III 1980-81
  24. Capt. W.L. Rice 1981-83
  25. Capt. H.L. Midvedt 1983-85
  26. Capt. F.W. Gullett 1985-87
  27. Capt. F.B. Darsey 1987-89
  28. Capt. R.J. Figueras 1989-90
  29. Capt. H.M. Wilson 1990-92
  30. Capt. H.L. Rachor 1992-94
  31. Capt. D.J. Nelson 1994-96
  32. Capt. E.F. Carter 1996-99
  33. Capt. K.F. Koon 1999-2002
  34. Capt. R.S. Winneg 2002-05
  35. Capt. G.G. Womack 2005-08
  36. Capt. W.A. Fitzgerald 2008-11

* Base was reactivated after a five-year closure between the end of World War II and the early years of the Cold War.

skoenig@timesrecord.com

 

Thanks for the memories! A goodbye to NAS Brunswick

The Times Record > Opinion > Editorials > Thanks for the memories!.

The long good-bye is almost completed.

Published:

Friday, May 27, 2011 3:13 PM EDT
We’ve moved from the shock of OUR Navy base being among those listed for closure by the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure Commission to a sad acceptance of the reality that after this coming Tuesday the Brunswick Naval Air Station is no more.

We’ve watched from outside the fence as one by one the last squadrons stationed here departed for their new home port of Jacksonville, Fla., or on deployments that would be followed by “welcome home” celebrations “elsewhere.”

The Tigers of Patrol Squadron 8 were the first to leave, in November 2008. They were followed by the Red Lancers of Patrol Squadron 10 in June 2009, and the Special Projects Squadron Unit 1 and Fleet Logistics Support Squadron 62 the following month. The Tridents of Patrol Squadron 26 were the last to leave, departing in late November 2009.

The base became silent. The engine drone sound of P3 Orions waiting on the tarmac for takeoff, or the propeller roar of a P3 coming in for a landing, are now a sonic memory.

After the squadrons fully departed the BNAS airfield officially closed in January 2010. A fast-dwindling crew of sailors stayed on to finish the job of closing the base for good.

It should be apparent to everyone by now just how fortunate we’ve been in the Navy’s selection of Capt. Will Fitzgerald as the final commanding officer of the air station. His outreach efforts to the civilian community have consistently made the massive job of transitioning the base to its new identity as “Brunswick Landing” far easier and more successful than anyone could have expected. His selection as last year’s Joshua Chamberlain Award recipient was well-deserved, and a fitting reminder of how closely the civilian and Navy communities have worked together over the 60-plus-year history of BNAS.

Capt. Fitzgerald would be the first to acknowledge he didn’t do it alone. He’d be right, of course, so we hereby give thanks to the team of sailors who’ve been working behind the scenes night and day to close the base as scheduled on Tuesday.

We give thanks, too, to all the Navy higher-ups who have facilitated the unprecedented initiatives that have allowed private companies to begin leasing vacated Navy buildings before BNAS was officially closed. While the lobbying efforts of our congressional delegation in Washington, former Gov. John Baldacci, local town officials and the Midcoast Regional Redevelopment Authority certainly helped, the fact remains that the Navy bent over backwards to be a “good neighbor” in its final months of command at BNAS.

In doing so, it gave the Mid-coast region a tremendous head start of rebuilding our local economy over other communities that also lost military bases during the 2005 BRAC closure round.

And so, our Memorial Day parade this year has a double meaning this year.

Its “Never Forget” theme, first and foremost, pays homage to the men and women who gave their lives defending our country. But no one should be faulted for also holding the 60-year history of Brunswick Naval Air Station in their hearts and minds as the parade marchers head down Topsham’s Main Street, cross the Frank J. Wood Bridge over the Androscoggin and then move solemnly down Brunswick’s Maine Street.

We’ll always remember the vigilant P-3 squadrons that patrolled the high seas during the Cold War in search of Soviet submarines — a key link in our country’s defense against a potential nuclear attack.

We’ll always remember the countless ways in which Navy sailors assigned to BNAS, and their families, enriched our communities. They volunteered in our schools, helped build playgrounds, collected bottles for their deposits to raise money for school programs, supported local businesses … in so many ways they’ve been “good neighbors” who’ve helped make the Mid-coast region such a wonderful place to live in and raise a family.

Thanks for the memories!

letters@timesrecord.com

Pakistan to ask US for two more Orion planes

Pakistan to ask US for two more Orion planes.

Muhammad Saleh Zaafir
Tuesday, May 24, 2011
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will ask the United States to supply it two additional PC-3 Orion planes for its Navy to make up the deficiency of the loss of two planes which were destroyed by the terrorists on Sunday evening at Mehran Air Base Karachi in an act of terrorism.

Pakistan being an ally of the US in the so-called war on terrorism reserves the right for making such demand. The Defence Committee of the Cabinet (DCC) that will discuss various aspects of the matter in its meeting on Wednesday could take a position about the demand.

Pakistan’s plea has strong backing in view of the act of terrorism that caused the destruction of the two planes. Pakistan Naval Aviation is an important arm of the Pakistan Navy and assists in the surface and submarine flights to guarantee the safety of Pakistan sea borders. The loss of the planes could weaken the capacity of the Navy in actions against the terror activities across the sea. The US is supposed to provide two such planes by the end of the year according to earlier agreed schedule.

Well placed sources told The News here Monday evening that Prime Minister Gilani has asked Defence Secretary Lt Gen (r) Syed Athar Ali to proceed to Karachi to make an assessment on ground at the Mehran Base so that he should put up detailed preliminary report about the gory incident at the DCC. General Athar who is uncle in relationship of late Lieutenant Yasser Abbas who laid down his life in fighting with the terrorists at Mehran Base, has gone to Lahore to receive the dead-body of the martyred and he will be proceeding to Karachi from Lahore after attending his Namaz-e-Janaza.

The deceased was six feet and two inches tall young man whose father Dr Jaffar Abbas belonged to Medical Corps of the Army and retired as colonel. Chief of Naval Staff (CNS) Admiral Noman Bashir who spent his whole night at the Naval Headquarters here after the initiation of the act of terror on Sunday night at Mehran Base, got in touch with the local command in Karachi and kept on guiding it regularly. He left for Karachi in the following morning from the Naval Headquarters.

The headquarters remained on its toes the whole night. The CNS will submit detailed technical report about the whole terrible episode in the DCC, the sources said. The sources pointed out that Pakistan Navy’s aviation force currently consists of three Westland Lynx – anti-ship/anti-submarine/transport helicopters, six Westland Sea King Mk45 – Anti Submarine/ Anti Surface Warfare helicopters (Based at Karachi), eight Aerospatiale SA-319B Alouette III – transport/anti-ship helicopters, seven Lockheed P-3C Orion – maritime surveillance/ anti-submarine warfare aircraft/airborne early warning. Future supply of seven more under an agreement with Lockheed Martin signed in 2006; two upgraded P-3C Orion delivered on 7th Jan 2010 while one was delivered in Nov 2009. Another two advanced P-3C Orion aircraft to be delivered soon (Two of the upgraded version have been destroyed overnight terrorism action), seven Fokker F27-200 Friendship – maritime surveillance aircraft, four Hawker 850 – VIP transport aircraft, two Breguet Atlantique, one maritime surveillance/anti-submarine warfare aircraft, thirty two Dassault Mirage V – anti-ship attack aircraft flown by PAF which are based at PAF base Masroor in Karachi, (operated by the PAF), Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, twelve Harbin Z-9EC anti-submarine warfare helicopters equipped with a surface-search radar, low frequency dipping sonar, radar warning receiver, Doppler navigation system and armed with torpedoes.

Another article on VP-40 change of command

New Leadership for Patrol Squadron FORTY « VP-40 News.

This article is from Patrol Squadron 40 and is additional information to this post

New Leadership for Patrol Squadron FORTY

by LTJG Daniel Buccola

Whidbey Island, WA – The Fighting Marlins of Patrol Squadron FORTY (VP-40) held its change of command ceremony May 6, 2011, as CDR John M. Maxwell handed the reins to CDR Brett W. Mietus.

The ceremony marked VP-40’s 60th change of command since its commissioning on January 20, 1951. The squadron was joined by guest of honor, Navy CAPT Doug Morgan, former CPRW-10 Commodore, as well as family, friends, and other distinguished visitors at Naval Air Station Whidbey Island.

Skipper Maxwell took command May 7, 2010 after VP-40 returned from its Fifth Fleet and Sixth Fleet deployments. The Inter Deployment Readiness Cycle (IDRC) has proved many accomplishments. The Fighting Marlins flew 3422.6 flight hours, adding to the squadron’s 272,442 hours of mishap-free flight. More impressively, VP-40 is prepared to go out the door to Seventh Fleet with eleven crews qualified in Anti-Submarine warfare, and twelve crews qualified in Anti-Surface warfare, and Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance readiness.

”The Officers, Chiefs, and Sailors in VP-40 have done amazing things this home cycle. They have responded so well to every challenge. I am particularly honored to have been their Skipper.” CDR Maxwell’s next assignment will take him and his family to Norfolk, Virginia.

As the Marlins prepare for the approaching deployment, CDR Mietus is determined to continue VP-40’s home-cycle achievements. ”There is no better deployment for a P-3 squadron than the one we’re about to experience,” said CDR Mietus. “Our daily efforts make clear that the squadron is ready to deploy. I look forward to seeing what our Sailors are able to accomplish.“

CDR Brett Mietus is a native of Richmond, Virginia, and graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy. Mietus began his naval officer career with VP-9 in 1995. After several Fifth Fleet deployments and a Seventh Fleet deployment, Mietus returned to Jacksonville, Florida to lead the Aircraft Improvement Program (AIP) fleet introduction and be a plankowner for the community’s first Weapons and Tactics Instructor (WTI) class.

Following CDR Mietus’s tour onboard the USS JOHN C STENNIS as the Flag Secretary for Commander, Carrier Group SEVEN in 2001, Mietus earned a Masters of Arts degree with Highest Distinction in National Security and Strategic Studies at the Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island. In December 2003, Mietus served with VP-4 and lead a five-site deployment in support of IRAQI FREEDOM and ENDURING FREEDOM.

In 2005, CDR Mietus served on the OPNAV Staff as the Deputy Executive Assistant to the Director, Air Warfare, at the Pentagon. Two years later, he transferred to the Eastern Europe and Eurasia division of the Strategic Plans and Policy directorate on the Joint Staff where he led Russian and Baltic policy efforts

In 2010, CDR Mietus joined his third operational P-3 squadron in Whidbey Island as the Executive Officer. Mietus brings motivation and the fortitude to lead the Fighting Marlins through a rewarding Seventh Fleet deployment.

”Over our training cycle, the Fighting Marlins have been tested and hardened. They are ready to represent our great nation with pride and excellence as we forward deploy.”

 

 

When the Navy goes, so will he

The Times Record > News > When the Navy goes, so will he.

Denny Barrett reflects on nearly half a century of service at BNAS

By Seth Koenig, Times Record Staff
Published: 

Tuesday, May 24, 2011 4:57 PM EDT
BRUNSWICK — Brunswick Naval Air Station reopened after a five-year hiatus in 1951 as relations between the United States and the Soviet Union chilled into decades of Cold War. Just more than a decade later, in 1962, Denny Barrett arrived for duty with Patrol Squadron 26. 

Both will head into retirement together. When the base is decommissioned as a military installation a week from today, Barrett will work his last day there.

The Springfield, Ill.-born Barrett spent 20 years as a Navy sailor stationed in Brunswick. Since retiring from the Navy, he stayed at the air station in civilian jobs, with the exception of a brief stint working for a driving school during the early 1980s.

Barrett has been working in one capacity or another at Brunswick Naval Air Station for nearly 50 years of the base’s 60-year Cold War life.

 

“There was no question I was going to stay here,” Barrett, now 68, recalled of his first impression of the Brunswick base. “It was small. There weren’t a whole lot of people around, and I just felt very, very comfortable.

“Everybody seemed to know what everybody else in the community was doing,” he continued with a laugh. “They only read the papers to see who got caught.”

When the time would come, every three years or so, for Barrett to get new orders and potentially be relocated somewhere new, he would finagle ways to stay at Brunswick Naval Air Station. He went from shore duties assigned to the base to sea duties assigned to squadrons located at the base, trading billets as necessary to remain at his beloved Brunswick site.

Once, when his squadron prepared for deployment, he broke his leg skiing and was grounded back at the base while the surveillance planes took off without him.

Though he did log thousands of flight hours in the old P-2 Neptune reconnaissance planes and then the base’s signature P-3 Orions, Barrett’s wife, Mary Jo, said fellow sailors joked that her husband had “never set his big toe in the water” in all of his years in the Navy.

“They’d say, ‘With Denny, the only time he got sea duty was when he crossed the bridge over to Topsham,’” Barrett acknowledged with a laugh.

 

During his almost half-century associated with the base, he said he’s seen a lot change.

“The barracks that I lived in are gone,” he said. “Three hangars are gone. A new fuel farm was built to replace one that had been there for more than 40 years.”

The base’s fuel farm, which supplied fuel for planes using the airfield, is where Barrett spent most of his civilian work life. From 1989 until last year, he worked at the site, most recently overseeing the subcontractors who managed the operation.

In that capacity, he had a unique view of regular air shows, as well as the government VIPs who would use the Navy landing strips in Brunswick, including three former U.S. presidents during the past two decades: George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush.

The elder Bush, he recalled, was particularly low-key. The Bush family keeps a vacation home in Kennebunkport.

“He wasn’t pushy,” Barrett said. “He didn’t say, ‘I want this’ or ‘I want that.’ He just liked coming in, going on his fishing trips and leaving.”

Barrett said he never met one of the visiting presidents in person, but oversaw their refueling needs, and said their Secret Service details were professional and courteous.

Looking back on his days as an active-duty sailor, Barrett said the tragedies have stuck with him all these years. During the war in Vietnam, in separate incidents over the Gulf of Thailand in February and in April of 1968, two Patrol Squadron 26 aircraft were shot down. The entire crew of each plane perished.

Barrett said he was picked to lead the prayers during the memorial services held for his lost squadron mates.

“That was an emotional moment for me,” he said. “It was a privilege to be able to stand up there in front of the squadron and do that.”

Like many sailors and Navy retirees living in the Mid-coast, Barrett has become a fixture in the community — in his case, through decades of officiating high school sporting events, and memberships with American Legion Post 202 and the Knights of Columbus. Barrett said the closure of the base saddens him, in part, because that pipeline to diverse and volunteer-oriented Navy personnel will close as well.

Barrett has two sons and a daughter living in the Mid-coast region — Denny Jr., Jonathan and Kelly — and another son, Michael, living in Virginia.

“I’ve been very happy here, and I’m sad to see the base go,” he said. “I’m sad about it because it’s been my home away from home. I’m sad for the people in town, who will lose that relationship between the Navy and the community. There were a lot of Navy people who did a lot for the community, and there were a lot of people from the community who did a lot for the Navy.”

He said he enjoyed his job at the fuel farm and would have been happy to continue working there if the federal Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) commission didn’t choose in 2005 to close the Brunswick base.

“What am I going to do in retirement? I’m just going to say, ‘I don’t have to get up in the morning,’” Barrett said. “I may do that for a month, or I may do that for a week. I’m kind of looking forward to it.

“But I really don’t think I worked with a bad person at the base,” he continued. “I got along with all of them. If it hadn’t been picked to close, I could’ve gone forever.”

skoenig@timesrecord.com

 

 

DVIDS – News – Patrol Squadron 9 changes commanders

DVIDS – News – Patrol Squadron 9 changes commanders.

 

Cmdr. Richard W. Prest, incoming commanding officer, Patrol Squadron 9, receives his Command-At-Sea pin from his wife during a change of command ceremony May 12 at Hangar 104. Prest will wear the badge during his term as commanding officer. Prest replaced Cmdr. David G. Whitehead, outgoing commanding officer, VP-9. (Photo courtesy of Mindy Clepper)

MARINE CORPS BASE HAWAII – Cmdr. Richard W. Prest relieved Cmdr. David G. Whitehead as commanding officer of Patrol Squadron 9 during a ceremony held in Hangar 104 here, May 12.

Whitehead departed after serving as commanding officer since May 2010.

Under his leadership, the squadron enjoyed a successful deployment to 5th and 7th Fleets, where they earned several accolades, including the 2010 Arnold Jay Isbell Trophy for Anti-Submarine Warfare Excellence, and the 2010 Retention Excellence Award.

His leadership was the catalyst for furthering fleet security cooperation efforts through the completion of fifteen detachments supporting key regional partners. Additionally, VP-9 supported prosecutions on a multitude of high priority sub-surface targets and participated in the establishment of expeditionary maritime patrol and reconnaissance operations at Sheik Isa Air Base, Bahrain. His leadership also played a vital role in continuing the squadron’s safety record of 188,000 mishap-free hours over 32 years.

He successfully led his aircrew and maintenance departments thorough numerous missions and detachments, enabling them to attain a 92 percent mission completion rate for over 500 sorties. Whitehead is slated to take up duties at the Bureau of Naval Personnel in Millington, Tennessee.

Prest assumed command of VP-9 after serving as squadron executive officer for the past year. He began his career upon graduation from the United States Naval Academy in 1992 with a Bachelor of Science degree in economics, and earned his “wings of gold” in April 1995 at Naval Air Station Corpus Christi, Texas.

Prest completed a tour at the Pentagon, serving in the J-3 Operations Directorate of the Joint Staff, before reporting to VP-9 as the squadron executive officer.

Cmdr. Craig Mattingly joined VP-9 as the squadron’s new executive officer. He arrived from a tour at the Naval Air Systems Command.

 

Transitioning from the P3 to the P8 | SLDInfo

Transitioning from the P3 to the P8 | SLDInfo.

05/24/2011 Transitioning from the P3 to the P8: A Sea Change in Maritime Surveillance

During the visit in San Diego in late March 2011 to the Naval Air Force, U.S. Pacific Fleet, Second Line of Defense sat down with Commander Jake Johansson to discuss the evolution of maritime surveillance. Johansson discussed the transition from the P3 to the P8 and the evolution of the maritime surveillance mission area. As a lifelong maritime surveillance professional, Johansson provided a sweeping review of where the USN has come and where it is going in this vital mission area. Commander Johansson is CNAF Maritime Readiness/CNAP Deputy Operations.


Commander Johansson Druing the SLD Interview

Credit: SLD 2011

SLD: Can you provide us with an overview of the evolution of the mission area for maritime surveillance platforms?

Johansson: When I started on the P3s, there was definitely an ASW threat; 98-percent of the flights I flew where maritime missions. We tracked other nation’s submarines just as often as we tracked our own when I first started out in the community in the early 80s.With the end of the Cold War, this changed and we re-focused our mission to remain relevant in the fight. We updated our aircraft with the AIP suite and began flying over land more than flying in the maritime eventually supporting the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan quite extensively.

As I said, during my first tour, 98-percent of my flights were over water, and about 50 to 60 to 70-percent of those we’re doing ASW, whether it was search, localize or tracking other world submarines. During my last deployment, with few exceptions our squadron never flew over water except for transits. Most of my tactical flights were over land supporting OIF. This is not true of all deployed squadrons but it happened to be true for my squadron and was representative of the last 4 or so squadrons that preceded ours in Iraq.

Even though we had migrated over land somewhat, our primary mission area has always been and will always be focused in the maritime environment. We are always striving to get back to the basics of our primary mission area, which is ASW. Our community feels that if you can grasp the complexity of ASW as a whole, then you can use those tactical and crew resource management skills over in our other mission areas of anti-surface warfare as well as intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance.

SLD: The P8 is not a simple replacement for the P3. Could you talk to the replacement approach and process?

Johansson: What the Maritime Patrol and Reconnaissance Force is moving toward is a family of systems that include the P8, the systems that are in our other variants of aircraft and the broad air and maritime surveillance UAV, or BAMS. Those platforms, supported by the Tactical Operations Centers and Mobile Tactical Operations Centers can provide 24/7/365 Maritime Domain Awareness if required. We have two variants of the baseline P-3 right now in addition to our P-3 AIP platform. The vision is to migrate the capabilities from those two variants into the Family of Systems offloading capabilities to BAMS and the P-8. The P-8s open architecture lends itself to the migration of some of these systems from the current platforms and we hope to do that in future increments of the P-8.

SLD: What is the planned fleet size?

Johansson: The current thinking is we need 12 squadrons, 7 aircraft each, and so the total would be around 120. The budget is tight so we will see what the final number in the future but 120 is what we would like to see. The initial operational capability (IOC) is in 2013 and FOC is in 2020, for all increments.

SLD: How will you handle littoral operations, which are very challenging for maritime surveillance?

Johansson : First of all, the littoral is challenging for everyone, friend and foe and the MPRF will not be alone in the littoral accomplishing maritime surveillance. Our community can bring quite a few sensors to the fight in the littoral and we continue to develop capabilities that can withstand the harsh littoral environment. The Family of Systems, P-8 and BAMS would be able to support the Maritime Component Commander in the Littoral within all our mission areas. We will have the ability to off-load the tactical information we are receiving via multiple communication paths keeping the CSG/ESG/JFMCC/COCOM aware of what we are doing as well. Obviously, queuing will go a long way to getting the MPRF where we are wanted and results in more time on the targets our warfare commanders are interested in.

I think as we migrate, and there are unresolved operational issues with working in the littoral with P8. The P8 is envisioned by some as being a higher altitude ASW platform. I don’t foresee the P-8 primarily operating at higher altitudes in all tactical phases of flight and in fact, the P-8 is designed to fly through the entire range of the P-3 flight envelope. This will be a process of education as we start fielding the P-8. How do we work in littoral with at a higher altitude with other players in the mix? In the past during the Cold War in a blue water environment, we used to drop buoys from high altitude all the time, there was nobody else out there. In a littoral, I envision multiple friendly surface and low flying aircraft below you, and all these surface warriors and aviators below you are a little concerned about you dropping sonobuoys from high altitude. As our CONOPS matures we will have to work to ensure deconfiction and the safety of those below us.

SLD: What advantages does the P-8 bring to the overall maritime surveillance effort?

Johansson: The P8 gives you a range of capabilities that could be flexibly used in different ways. They will allow you the ability to fly from different bases farther from the fight. The ability to reach more distant operational areas may impact our onstation time but the increased reliability of the aircraft and the inflight refueling capability will ultimately result in a force with increased responsiveness as well as more capability and flexibility for Combatant Commanders. We can protect our P8 fleet a little bit better by having a little bit of distance between us and the fight as well. We will also be able to rapidly get into theater or into that area of responsibility that we need to be in, do our business and come back.



A Boeing P-8A Poseidon test conducts a test flight June 5, 2009.

Credit: USN Visual News Service 06/05/09

SLD: What about the challenge of transition?

Johansson: The crews will experience a challenging transition. Most squadrons come home from deployment as a P3 crew, take their leave, and start the P8 transition. Six months later, they will be P8 crews. It’s a very compressed transition. We envision a squadron taking 18 months between deployments to transition and redeploy.

SLD: One advantage of a manned versus unmanned platform is the ability of the crews to communicate with ground forces. Could you comment on your judgments in this area?

Johansson: Some of our most rewarding missions have been when a General from a ground force calls you directly on the radio and tells you what he needs. You provide him with the surveillance or reconnaissance he required and a short time later you see Marines or soldiers taking care of the issue.BAMS is designed as a tactical adjunct to the P-8. As long as BAMS remains in that role, the combined capability of the P-8/BAMS aircraft actually offers ground forces far more capacity and capability. However, if BAMS becomes more of a strategic asset, it may be more difficult for a war fighter on the ground to get it in a position where it will do him some good tactically. The operators are not within line of sight of the ground forces so the command and control to move UAVs around gets a little tricky, especially if they are being employed strategically but are required tactically. I think the P-8 will continue to be used tactically and provide a little more flexibility for the ground forces to utilize tactically. Persistence may not be as good as the BAMS with its long dwell time but there is some merit to having a man in the cockpit with eyes on overhead. I point out that you concentrated on ground forces. I would like to mention again that our interest is getting back to the maritime environment where we would be able to provide maritime domain awareness for the Fleet with the persistence of BAMS and the capabilities of the P-8 Poseidon.

SLD: And these are really not unmanned, except airborne?

Johansson: I’m not a big fan of calling them unmanned anymore. I call them remotely-piloted, because it takes a lot of people to operate these systems. We moved to the family of systems (BAMS and P-8) because we felt that we could move some of the persistent ISR capabilities to a more capable platform, BAMS. BAMS long dwell time can provide the persistence necessary more efficiently than a rotation of P-8 24/7/365. Also, if we used P-8 to do that we would have to increase squadron manpower to give them the necessary crews to fly 24/7 MDA in addition to the ASW/ASUW missions. We hope to have 5 orbits flying 24/7/365 to cover the maritime picture were required. The great thing about BAMS and P-8 is that they can work together to meet the COCOMS requirements. BAMS can provide the persistence and the P-8 can be used to conduct the specialized skill-sets that the BAMS cannot. BAMS can provide you the maritime picture while the P-8 either responds to BAMS intelligence or conducts ASW/ASUW. This Family of Systems concept can become quite a lethal combination if we employ it correctly.

P-3C Shines as Flexible CARAT Thailand Platform

P-3C Shines as Flexible CARAT Thailand Platform.

P-3C Shines as Flexible CARAT Thailand Platform

By Commander Task Force 73 Public Affairs

Posted: May 18, 2011

UTAPAO, Thailand – One of the oldest aircraft types in the U.S. Navy’s inventory has adapted to fill a variety of missions in recent years. This adaptability, and the fact that dozens of Navies around the world fly it or some variant of the airframe, made the P-3C Orion the ideal aircraft to participate in Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training (CARAT) Thailand 2011.

UTAPAO, Thailand (May 14, 2011) – A crew member assigned to Patrol Squadron (VP) 4, attaches a cover over the number two engine after returning from a U.S. / Thai mine-laying mission for Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training (CARAT) Thailand 2011. CARAT is a series of bilateral exercises held annually in Southeast Asia to strengthen relationships and enhance force readiness. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Jose Lopez, Jr.)

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During the nine-day CARAT exercise, Combat Air Crew 9, a detachment from the “Skinny Dragons” of Patrol Squadron Four (VP-4), based in Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, shared best practices with Royal Thai Navy P-3 aircrews during several symposiums, discussing maintenance, operations, mine-laying and search and rescue procedures.

The two navies then boarded each other’s aircraft on the ground and in the air, conducting joint mine laying missions and participating in air defense exercise missions with combined U.S. and Thai Navy surface groups at sea.

“The Thai Navy flies the P-3, so there was a lot of commonality already in our work and procedures,” said Lt. Cmdr. Kim DaCosta, a P-3C pilot and VP-4’s Officer in Charge for the CARAT mission. “The Thai aircrews integrated well with our aircrews, and that’s exactly what this exercise is all about – becoming familiar with one another so when we are called to work together, there’s a baseline of understanding and trust already there.”

During the exercise, VP-4 and the Royal Thai Navy’s 102nd Squadron assembled and dropped a total of 2 mines at sea, mission planned together and conducted various joint missions in support of other CARAT units.

The CARAT mission nears the end to VP-4’s deployment, which earlier saw its crews flying search and rescue missions over Japan for Operation Tomodachi. “Now our crew is making new friends with the Thais through CARAT, so it’s been a great experience,” she added.

Approximately 1,800 U.S. Navy and Marine Corps personnel are participating in CARAT Thailand 2011. U.S. Navy ships from Task Group 73.1 include the amphibious dock landing ship USS Tortuga (LSD 46), the guided-missile destroyer USS Howard (DDG 83), the frigate USS Reuben James (FFG 57), and the rescue and salvage ship USNS Safeguard (T-ARS 50). Additional participants include an amphibious landing force of Marines from 2nd Battalion, 23rd Marines, U.S. Navy Seabees, a U.S. Coast Guard training team.

CARAT is a series of bilateral military exercises between the U.S. Navy and the Armed Forces of Bangladesh, Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand. Additionally, Vietnam participates in a CARAT-like skills exchange.


Chesterfield native Brett Mietus named Navy Commander | Village News: Chesterfield County, Virginias Community News

Chesterfield native Brett Mietus named Navy Commander | Village News: Chesterfield County, Virginias Community News.

Chesterfield native Brett Mietus named Navy Commander

Commander Brett MietusThe Fighting Marlins of Patrol Squadron FORTY (VP-40) held its change of command ceremony May 6, when Chesterfield native Commander Brett Mietus relieved Commander John Maxwell. The ceremony marked VP-40’s 55th change of command since its commissioning on January 20, 1951.

Son of Pam Shultz and Gary Mietus, Commander Mietus graduated from Lloyd C. Bird High School in 1988 after earning All-State Football Honors and leading the Skyhawks to a perfect 10-0 regular season. He subsequently attended the United States Naval Academy, where he graduated with a degree in Economics in 1992 and served as a graduate assistant football coach.

After receiving his commission, Commander Mietus became a Naval Flight Officer, and spent two flying tours in Hawaii with VP-4 and VP-9, deploying three times to the Arabian Gulf region. Following the 9/11 attacks, he deployed in support of Operation ENDURING FREEDOM as the Flag Secretary for the Commander of Carrier Group Seven on board USS John C Stennis. During his shore tours, Commander Mietus earned designation as one of the Navy’s first Maritime Patrol Weapons and Tactics Instructors and earned a Masters of Arts with Highest Distinction from the Naval War College. Prior to joining VP-40, he served two tours in the Pentagon as an executive assistant to the Navy’s Director of Air Warfare and as the head of Russian and Baltic policy for the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

“I feel extremely fortunate to have my roots in Chesterfield County,” said Commander Mietus.

Within days of assuming command, VP-40 will deploy to Kadena, Okinawa for six months in support of the US Pacific Fleet. Commander Mietus will lead his 340 Sailors and eight aircraft during Maritime Patrol and Reconnaissance Operations throughout the region.

“The Fighting Marlins are ready for the challenges that lie ahead,” remarked Commander Mietus. “I am honored to lead such a talented group of sailors and have no doubt that their performance will exceed even the highest of expectations.”

Frank Duane Sloan

 

 

 

 

SLOAN, Frank D. AWCS USN (Ret) VP-4 1977-1982 Frank Duane Sloan, 61, of Spotsylvania County passed away Thursday, March 20, 2008. He was the husband of Pace Pajarillo Sloan.

Mr. Sloan was a retired U.S. Navy veteran of Vietnam. He was an operations specialist with the United States Postal Service. Mr. Sloan was born in West Burlington, Iowa, Aug. 8, 1946, a son of James H. Sloan of Utah and the late Marie Swan Sloan.

He is survived by two sons, Stanley L. Sloan of Spotsylvania and Ivor Sloan of Oklahoma; three daughters, Christina C. Roth and her husband, Gary, of Long Island, N.Y., Maile Sloan Haxton and her husband, Rob Kelley, of South Carolina and Jennifer Sloan Mims and her husband, Kevin, of Texas; a brother, Wray Sloan; two sisters, Judith Cline and Joyce Smith, all of Iowa; grandsons, Gavin Roth, Matthew Haxton and Brennan Mims; granddaughters, Samantha Haxton and Amber Magdaleno and her husband, Jose; and a great- grandson, Jose Bryant Magdaleno.

A funeral will be conducted at 12:30 p.m. Thursday, April 3, at Mullins & Thompson Funeral Service, Stafford Chapel with interment following in Quantico National Cemetery. The family will receive friends from 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday, April 2, at the funeral home.

 

Lee Daniel Little

 

 

 

 

LITTLE, AOCM Lee Daniel USN (Ret), VP-4 1947-1951 Lee Daniel Little, 92 passed away on Monday, March 9, 2009 in Jacksonville, FL. Mr. Little was a 40 year resident of Jacksonville and retired from the U.S. Navy in 1970 as a Master Chief after 30 years service. During World War II he served in the Pacific and was a crewmember on PBY’s and B-24’s and was awarded 3 distinguished flying crosses and 2 presidential unit citations for his service. He is survived by his loving wife of 63 years, Della Little and several nieces and nephews. Graveside funeral services with full military honors will be held on Friday, March 13, 2009, 1:00 PM at JACKSONVILLE MEMORY GARDENS, 111 Blanding Blvd., Orange Park, FL.

Lafayette native becomes Navy’s newest skipper

Anne Ditch pins husband Paul with his US NAVY Command at Sea pin.

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Lafayette native Paul K. Ditch has taken command of Patrol Squadron VP-45, a Navy P-3C squadron based ashore in NAS Jacksonville.

Commander (CDR) Ditch, a 1981 graduate of Cathedral-Carmel High School in Lafayette, relieved CDR Michael D. Doherty in ceremonies last Friday (06 May 2011).
In remarks as he took command, CDR Ditch spoke of the many successes of the Pelican family and praised the men and women of the squadron for their dedication, loyalty and professionalism and thanked the families of VP-45 sailors, recognizing the sacrifices that enable the Pelicans to accomplish their job.

From left, former VP-45 Commanding Officer CDR Michael Doherty, VP-45 Commanding Officer CDR Paul Ditch.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CDR Ditch could not be reached for comment.

As commander, Ditch will lead the Pelicans in their upcoming tri-site deployment in June.

Ditch enlisted in the Navy in 1987. As a first tour aviation anti-submarine warfare operator, he was stationed at the ASW Operations Center, Roosevelt Roads, Puerto Rico, and as an instructor at HSL-41 at NAS North Island.

 
He earned his bachelor’s degree in business management from the University of LaVerne in 1993, was commissioned as an ensign from Aviation Officer Candidate School, and earned his Naval Flight Officer Wings of Gold in 1994.

 

Original article can be found at: http://www.theadvertiser.com/article/20110510/NEWS01/105100302/Lafayette-native-becomes-Navy-s-newest-skipper

Navy Live » Blog Archive » Modern Sailors – Early Adopters of Navy Information Technology

Navy Live » Blog Archive » Modern Sailors – Early Adopters of Navy Information Technology.

Modern Sailors – Early Adopters of Navy Information Technology

May 10th, 2011 posted by tjohnson

The following post was written by Nicole Collins, Public Affairs Specialist at Naval Space and Warfare Systems Command (SPAWAR), regarding their most recent class of SPAWAR sponsored recruits to graduate from RTC Great Lakes.

I’ve always been fascinated by the dynamic of multiple generations in the workplace. I seem to hear more and more about it these days, witness it on a daily basis at my job and take every opportunity to learn about it. It is so interesting to hear about traditionalists, baby boomers, generation Y and millennials- how they work together, how they can help each other, their differences and the challenges that come along with this diversity.

Leading up to the RTC Great Lakes Recruit Division 151 graduation on April 29, I had the unique opportunity to speak with three recruits, all millennials, about what inspired them to pursue careers in information systems technology. As a public affairs specialist for Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command (SPAWAR), The Navy’s Information Dominance Systems Command located in San Diego, I like to take every opportunity to connect with students, recruits or new professionals.

“The Navy is always involved in worldwide current events and we need top notch technology to help our allies and protect our loved ones at home, serving as the global force for good,” said Seaman Recruit Christel Lee from Philadelphia, PA.

“Since I was young I have always been interested in technology. My generation is very tech savvy and I wanted to be a part of this growing field and help further technical capabilities in the Navy,” said Seaman Recruit Amanda Copeland from Brooklyn, N.Y.

 

Seaman Recruit Lee from Philadelphia, PA and Seaman Recruit Copeland, Brooklyn, N.Y. study for an exam at RTC Great Lakes. Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command (SPAWAR), the Navy’s Information Systems Command, sponsored Recruit Division 151. Both Lee and Copeland enlisted as IT rates and will soon be deployed to the fleet. U.S. Navy photo by Sarah King / Released

First off, many of you may ask yourself what is a “millennial” or “modern sailor.”? A millennial is an individual born between the years 1977 and 1998. This generation has most likely been raised in a household with a computer and they demonstrate the ability to navigate the Internet independently. From owning smart phones, frequently posting status updates on Facebook or “checking” in on Four Square, this generation likes to remain connected…at all times. A “modern sailor” is exactly that. A millennial sailor. Today’s youth is so far advanced that sociologists have coined the term “digital natives,” for those millenials that have adopted technology so quickly, often times at a very young age.

So what does this mean for the Navy? Since recruiting digital natives, many of today’s modern sailors’ experiences at RTC Great Lakes have differed from those who joined the Navy ten to twenty years ago. Today, the Navy is experiencing a positive shift in technology and is embracing it by recruiting and training enthusiastic, tech savvy sailors. These recruits arrived to boot camp armed with technical knowledge and were eager to apply it.

Hands on information systems technician training at RTC Great Lakes includes learning to design, install, operate and maintain state-of-the-art information systems, with sailors often functioning as computers systems analysts in the fleet.

Tough training? Not so fast. These digital natives grasp their technical training naturally.

The Navy trains modern sailors to be one step ahead of the adversary, detecting threats and protecting national interests. Who knows, maybe one day our sailors, digital natives, will be detecting threats by operating interoperable communication devices similar to today’s commercial smart phones.

While you can never replace the valued experience of a seasoned traditionalist or baby boomers, the technical possibilities seem to be endless with the modern sailor. My interview experiences inspired me to share how recruits at RTC Great Lakes are advancing at lightning speed and are excited to use their technical knowledge as a part of the U.S. Navy.

To learn more about SPAWAR’s RTC Great Lakes Sponsorship visit: www.spawar.navy.mil

Call for testers

We need your help!

Over the last 3 weeks there have been numerous changes to the VP-4 Veterans Association website and even more to come. We need your assistance testing out some of the new feature of the site.

Two of the features we are currently testing out are the ability for registered web site users to upload pictures to the site; and changes to the VP-4 Veterans Association forum.

  • If you are registered (through the WordPress registration process) on the site, please visit the photo upload test page and submit a couple of pictures for us to test with.
  • Please visit the Association Forum, register for the forum(if you haven’t already), make some changes to your forum profile(through the User Control Panel) and make a post in one of the forum sections.
  • We need to make sure the comments blocks at the bottom of most pages of the web site are working correctly too, please post a comment or two on different pages.

 

Thank you very much,

The web team.