From U.S. 7th Fleet Public Affairs
INDIAN OCEAN (NNS) -- Searching a combined 15,000 square
miles since March 10th, USS Kidd and its MH-60R helicopters completed their
search of the Andaman Sea and have been detached from the MH370 Search and
Rescue (SAR) effort as of March 18th. No debris or wreckage associated with an
aircraft was found.
"The dedication of this crew is amazing. 314 Sailors
were out here operating for 24 hours a day, standing extra watches and
volunteering for extra duties because they knew if it were their loved one
missing on MH370, they'd want the best U.S. Navy capabilities involved in the
search," said Kidd's Executive Officer Commander T.J. Zerr.
The move was made in consultation with the Government of
Malaysia. With the search area expanding into the southern Indian Ocean, long
range patrol aircraft such as the P-8A Poseidon and P-3C Orion are more suited
to the current SAR mission. Covering up to 15,000 square miles in one 9-hour
flight, the P-8 and P-3 can search larger areas with their advanced surface
search radars and electro-optical sensors as well as fly low for visual
identification when needed.
"I'm proud of our crew and their performance and
resiliency during this challenging mission. We trained for operations like this
throughout the year and when it was time to execute this crew came though
flawlessly," said Kidd's Commanding Officer, Commander Gabe Varela.
USS Kidd will proceed South through the Strait of Malacca to
the South China Sea for follow-on operational tasking as they were when the
search operation started. The US Navy will move its P-8 Poseidon to Western
Australia to better support the expanding SAR efforts to the South.
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