From Commander Task Force 73 Public Affairs
CHINHAE, Republic of Korea (NNS) -- U.S. Navy and Republic
of Korea (ROK) navy diving and salvage experts wrapped up two weeks of advanced
training during Salvage Exercise (SALVEX) Korea 2015, March 14.
Building on thirty years of partnership since SALVEX Korea
began in 1985, approximately 180 U.S. and ROK navy personnel conducted a series
of advanced combined salvage operations, both in-port and at-sea. Sailors
assigned to Mobile Diving and Salvage Unit (MDSU) 1 embarked aboard the rescue
and salvage ship USNS Salvor (T-ARS 52) sharpened skills with ROKN counterparts
from Salvage Squadron (SALVORON) 55 embarked on their diving and salvage ship
ROKS Pyongtaek (ATS 27).
Training focused on combined diving operations, heavy lift
procedures, and for the first time this year, a two-day salvage operations
conference to discuss bilateral certification procedures and coordination. For
the capstone event, Salvor and Pyongtaek teamed up in a real-world salvage
operation to conduct bow-lifts of a 30-ton fishing vessel on an underwater
training range near Chinhae, Korea. This highly complex evolution highlighted
the continued importance of diving and salvage interoperability between the
U.S. and ROK navies.
"One of the great privileges of being forward deployed
to the Western Pacific is the opportunity to work together with our friends and
partners all across Asia," said Lt. Cmdr. William Sumsion, Commander Task
Force 73 diving and salvage officer. "Exercises like SALVEX Korea and
others throughout South and Southeast Asia are a valuable way for us to enhance
theater security cooperation and maritime interoperability with regional
navies."
The bow-lift continued an upward trend from SALVEX Korea
2014 in which U.S. Navy divers achieved an international first with their ROKN
counterparts by conducting mixed-gas diving on a foreign vessel. Mixed-gas
diving is among the highest-risk types of diving in the U.S. Navy.
Using a foreign system is rare even for a simple
self-contained underwater breathing apparatus (SCUBA), let alone a complex set
of valves and pipes like the mixed-gas system aboard Pyeongtaek. A waiver
ultimately allowed U.S. Navy personnel to use a foreign navy dive system and
chamber to conduct diving operations for SALVEX 2014, reflecting the high level
of trust between the U.S. and ROK navies.
"It took quite extensive planning and cooperation with
the Korean navy to dive with a mixed-gas system from a foreign navy," said
Senior Chief Navy Diver (Master Diver) Phillip Strautman, CTF-73 master diver.
"When we talked about it at the planning events, we wanted something both
navies could benefit from and sharing our best techniques during the exercise
made all of us better divers and salvors," said Strautman.
SALVEX Korea 2015 is part of Exercise Foal Eagle -- an
umbrella of regularly-scheduled, annual exercises that are the culmination of
many months of planning and based on realistic training scenarios. The naval
portion of the Foal Eagle exercises take place in international waters around
South Korea and features a full spectrum of maritime operations.
"Having this exercise and others similar to it in 7th
Fleet will help ensure that Navy Expeditionary Combat Command units paired with
USNS salvage assets are ready to respond to any future incidents," said
Lt. John Kennedy, assigned to MDSU-1.
MDSU-1 provides combat ready, expeditionary, rapidly
deployable mobile, diving and salvage capabilities to conduct harbor clearance,
salvage, underwater search and recovery, and underwater emergency repairs in
any environment.
CTF 73 is U.S. 7th Fleet's theater security cooperation
agent for South and Southeast Asia.
Military Sealift Command operates approximately 110
noncombatant, merchant mariner-crewed ships that replenish U.S. Navy ships at
sea, conduct specialized missions, strategically preposition combat cargo at
sea around the world and move military cargo and supplies used by deployed U.S.
forces.
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