By Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class (SW) Christopher
Lindahl, Amphibious Squadron 5 Public Affairs
GULF OF ADEN (NNS) -- The time honored title of commodore
was passed from one senior leader to another during a change of command
ceremony for Commander, Amphibious Squadron 5 (PHIBRON 5), Dec 14.
The formal program was held in the fo'c'sle of amphibious
assault ship USS Makin Island (LHD 8), where Capt. Vic Cooper transferred the
title and leadership of the storied, 60-year-old squadron, to Capt. Stephen
McKone, who was promoted from deputy commander.
The ceremony's guest speaker was Maj. Gen. Carl E. Mundy
III, commander, Task Force 51, who praised Cooper for his poise and actions in
a speech to the attendees.
"The PHIBRON 5 and 11th MEU team have done
extraordinary work in this theater," said Mundy. "It has been very
important in demonstrating the unique capability of this blue/green team to be
able to respond to a full range of possible operations. It's made it possible
for America to remain a force for stability in this region."
Mundy continued to praise Cooper for the PHIBRON's
humanitarian and operational exercises throughout their deployment, including a
mission near the Hawaiian Islands where, just two weeks into their deployment,
PHIBRON 5 ships responded to a potential disaster situation and relocated a
group of National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration scientists ahead of
the tropical storms Julio and Iselle.
"The most important part of what makes America
different is the quality of leadership we produce, generation after generation,
and Capt. Cooper is one of those leaders."
Following Mundy's remarks, Cooper was awarded the Legion of
Merit for his superior performance as commander, PHIBRON 5. Cooper addressed
the staff and thanked them for their support and work ethic.
"It has been a great honor to serve our five Squadron
ships during my time as commodore of PHIBRON 5," said Cooper in his
remarks. "The service members of the PHIBRON family have excelled at my
every request and their pride in their work brings me great professional and
personal joy. Capt. McKone has been an outstanding deputy and will continue
that superb performance as Commodore. I am confident that he will continue to
take great care of my PHIBRON family and that he will take this command to even
higher heights."
Following Cooper's remarks, orders were read and command was
transferred. After returning salute and assuming command, McKone addressed the
crowd and was quick to thank Cooper and recognize him for his efforts.
"I couldn't have asked for a better mentor than Capt.
Cooper," said McKone. "He has guided up to five ships, taken our
three ships now through work-ups and into deployment, led a rescue effort of
researchers and provided the command with outstanding leadership.
"As I assume command, I do so knowing how high Capt.
Cooper set the bar and how hard I will need to work to maintain that level of
excellence."
While the Navy no longer maintains a rank of commodore, the
term still serves as a title for senior captains in command of amphibious squadrons,
destroyer or cruiser squadrons, coastal warfare groups, submarine squadrons and
aircraft wings. As commander, PHIBRON 5, McKone now bears that title as he
leads the squadron into the future.
PHIBRON 5 is deployed as part of the three ship Makin Island
Amphibious Ready Group (ARG), which is comprised of Makin Island, amphibious
transport dock ship USS San Diego (LPD 22), amphibious landing dock ship USS
Comstock (LSD 45), and embedded Marines from the 11th Maritime Expeditionary
Unit (MEU), and is currently assigned to U.S. 5th Fleet/Commander, Task Force
51.
PHIBRON 5 was established in 1954, purposed to assist with
tactical planning strategies and operations. As part of the Makin Island ARG,
PHIBRON 5 arrived in the U.S. 5th Fleet area of responsibility September 2014
to support maritime security operations and theater security cooperation
efforts.
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