By Lt. Arlo Abrahamson, Commander, U.S. Naval Forces Korea
Public Affairs
CHINHAE, Republic of Korea (NNS) -- The U.S. and Republic of
Korea navies completed a successful mine countermeasures exercise Oct. 24, in
waters south of the Korean peninsula.
The annual Clear Horizon exercise ran Oct. 20-24 and was
designed to increase interoperability in mine countermeasures operations
between the U.S. and Republic of Korea navies.
"Clear Horizon 2014 was a very successful exercise for
both navies," said Capt. Mike Dowling, commander, Mine Countermeasures
Squadron 7. "We operated together in a difficult and demanding training
environment, and we've increased our combined capabilities in mine
countermeasures operations."
Approximately 330 U.S. Navy personnel assigned to Mine
Countermeasures Squadron 7, mine countermeasure ships USS Warrior (MCM 10) and
USS Chief (MCM 14); along with MH-53E helicopters from Helicopter Mine
Countermeasures Squadron (HM) 14 and a team from Explosive Ordnance Disposal
Mobile Unit (EODMU) 5, Platoon 501, participated in the training alongside
their Republic of Korea navy partners.
During the exercise, U.S. and Republic of Korea navy ships,
aircraft and explosive ordnance disposal divers practiced clearing routes for
shipping and conducted training surveys for clearing operational areas. Mine
clearing helicopters and remotely operated vehicles were also used to rehearse mine
countermeasures operations from the air and under the sea.
"We achieved our training objectives during this
exercise," said Cmdr. Kim, Boem Woo, of the Republic of Korea Fleet.
"Clear Horizon 2014 increased the readiness of both navies to effectively
carry out mine countermeasures operations in the maritime environment."
Leaders from both navies said the training made them more
confident in their ability to work as a team during combined operations at sea.
"I am extremely proud of the performance of my crew
during exercise Clear Horizon," said Lt. Cmdr. James Correia, commanding
officer of USS Chief. "Our crew received some very valuable training
during the exercise and we enhanced our ability to operate with our partners in
the Republic of Korea navy."
Clear Horizon is one of approximately 20 annual bilateral
training exercises held each year between the U.S. and Republic of Korea navies
aimed at strengthening the alliance and preserving stability and peace around
the Korean peninsula and throughout Northeast Asia.
The U.S. 7th Fleet maintains routine presence in the
Indo-Asia-Pacific region to help promote maritime security and develop
partnerships with friends and allies. Forward-deployed U.S. naval presence
contributes to freedom of navigation, operational readiness, and enables an
exchange of culture, skills, and tactical knowledge with nations throughout the
region.
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