From Chief of Naval Operations Public Affairs
QINGDAO, China (NNS) -- Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) and
the U.S. Pacific Fleet commander joined over 20 maritime leaders April 22 at
the 14th Western Pacific Naval Symposium (WPNS) to exchange ideas and agree
upon procedures affecting maritime conduct at sea.
"It's great to be with the heads of navy and the
maritime leaders of the Pacific," said CNO Adm. Jonathan Greenert of the
WPNS. "We're strongest when we all operate together," said Greenert,
who often stresses the importance of coalitions to respond natural disasters
and future global challenges.
During Greenert's remarks he stated that forums like the
WPNS offer the most tangible agenda to accomplish worldwide naval initiatives
by allowing heads of navy to sit down as a group and discuss important issues
of the highest consequence.
The most significant issue at this year's symposium was the
vote on the endorsement of the Code for Unplanned Encounters at Sea (CUES),
which passed by an overwhelming majority of the WPNS voting members.
The CUES document is not legally binding, but is an
agreement upon which the participating nations have a standardized protocol of
safety procedures, basic communications and basic maneuvering instructions to
follow for naval ships and aircraft during unplanned encounters at sea.
"We can be proud of our collective work," said
Greenert of the CUES document, which was years in the making. "I
appreciate the hard work in developing the document."
Greenert expanded upon the significance of the CUES
agreement stating, "We've agreed to increase the standards that we will
set at sea. We've agreed to establish proficiency in communications. We've
agreed to establish common behavior at sea. We've agreed to prevent
misunderstanding and miscalculations."
In Greenert's remarks he also highlighted the importance of
building on WPNS achievements and the need to communicate more openly, directly
and talk more frequently.
Greenert said the endorsement of CUES is just the beginning.
He said the real challenge will be what comes next; the implementation and
training of future generations of commanding officers and junior officers on
achievements like CUES and other cooperative initiatives spawned from the WPNS
and annual WPNS workshops.
The WPNS is a biannual meeting among navies with significant
strategic interests in the Western Pacific. The WPNS aims to increase
cooperation and the ability to operate together, as well as build trust and
confidence among navies by providing them a venue to discuss maritime issues of
mutual interest as a group and through bilateral meetings.
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