By Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Travis S. Alston,
USS Carl Vinson Public Affairs
USS CARL VINSON, At Sea (NNS) -- Carl Vinson Carrier Strike
Group, Carrier Air Wing (CVW) 17, and Destroyer Squadron 1 participated in
various bi-lateral training events May 10 in the South China Sea with Malaysian
air and surface units in support of Commander, U.S. 7th Fleet theater security
cooperation objectives.
The strike group conducted a photo exercise (PHOTOEX), a
5-inch gun exercise, dissimilar air combat training (DACT), and concluded with
an expendable maneuverable acoustic training target (EMATT) exercise.
"We greatly value our relationship with the Royal
Malaysian military," said Rear Adm. Chris Grady, Carl Vinson Carrier
Strike Group commander. "Exercises like these are mutually beneficial and
show our commitment to nurturing and deepening our bi-lateral ties with partner
nations throughout the region."
During the DACT portion of the training, CVW 17 F/A-18
Hornets and Super Hornets joined Malaysian SU-30, MiG-29N, and FA-18D Hornets
to train in multiple combat scenarios. Events ranged from single aircraft
engaging single aircraft to complex multi-aircraft combat scenarios. With the
Malaysian SU-30s maneuvering at speeds estimated close to Mach 1, training was
aggressive and realistic.
The EMATT exercise allowed the guided-missile USS Gridley
(DDG 101) to work with their Royal Malaysian Navy counterpart, KD LEKIR (FGS
26), and practice dual-ship anti-submarine warfare.
"The EMATT exercise allowed both U.S. and Malaysian
navies to track a live target that was threat representative," said Lt.
Cmdr. Shelby Nikitin, DESRON 1 operations officer. "This was excellent
practice for both. We were impressed with the capabilities of the Royal
Malaysian Navy."
"Exercises like this validate our training and allows
us to see what our aircraft can do," said Cmdr. Dwayne Ducommun, CVNSG
operations officer. "When you're flying the same aircraft that you are
fighting or training against, it comes down to the skill of the pilot, but when
you have aircraft that aren't the same, both technology and the skill of the
pilot are tested."
Ducommun explained the benefit of this type of training and
the significance of its impact on future operations.
"It is very important for our military and our foreign
counterparts to conduct this type of training routinely," said Ducommun.
"It shows how devoted we are to our maritime partners, and how much we
value the mutual training."
The United States and Malaysia share a diverse and expanding
partnership and cooperate closely on a number of security matters, including
counterterrorism, maritime domain awareness, and regional stability.
The Carl Vinson Carrier Strike Group is operating in the
U.S. 7th Fleet area of operations supporting maritime security operations and
theater security cooperation efforts in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region.
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