By Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Christopher
Lindahl, USS Anchorage Public Affairs
PEARL HARBOR (NNS) -- The San Antonio-class amphibious
transport dock ship USS Anchorage (LPD 23), along with the embarked Special
Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force, ASEAN, 1st Marine Expeditionary Force
(MEF), departed Pearl Harbor, April 7.
Anchorage will begin transiting back to her homeport of San
Diego and will continue a series of ongoing at-sea training evolutions.
While in port, the crew was able to conduct training,
strengthen community relations, hold reenlistment ceremonies at multiple Pearl
Harbor landmarks, enjoy some free time, and even host the Secretary of Defense
Chuck Hagel, and other defense ministers from the Association of Southeastern
Asian Nations (ASEAN), during part of their defense forum.
As part of the first ASEAN Defense forum to be held on U.S.
soil, the ship conducted tours showcasing the ship's well deck capabilities,
multiple vehicle stowage areas, flight deck capabilities, medical facilities,
and berthing spaces.
While there was an impressive show of force, the tour also
showcased the capacity and capabilities for the Navy-Marine Corps team to
assist in humanitarian aid and disaster relief efforts.
"It's security, it's stability; it's assuring that all
nations have commercial options. It is trade, it's exchanges; it's about free
people," said Hagel during a media availability on the flight deck.
"We intend to continue to be a Pacific power, to cooperate with our ASEAN
partners of all nations in the Asia-Pacific."
Cmdr. Joel Stewart, Anchorage's commanding officer,
expressed his pride in being the ship selected to host part of the forum.
"It was an honor to have ASEAN and U.S. leaders aboard
to showcase our outstanding Navy-Marine Corps team with this new ship and the
capabilities it brings as part of the strategic rebalance to the Pacific,"
said Stewart.
On the other side of the workday, Anchorage also arranged
for a group of 20 volunteers to visit veterans in the Pearl Harbor area where
they were able to gain some wisdom from times past.
"It was a great experience," said Religious
Program Specialist 2nd Class Brian Jaggers, the community relations coordinator
for the event. "Anytime we have the opportunity to go out there and
brighten someone's day, it feels great; but I'd be lying if I said they didn't
brighten our day just as much."
The volunteers visited Tripler Army Medical Center where
they swapped stories with a variety of veterans, most from the Vietnam War.
"In a way, these guys paved the way for us and made the
military what it is today. It was a bad situation for many of them, they had to
worry about a jungle environment as well as people shooting at them," Jaggers
said. "It was nice to go and hear their stories and let them share their
experiences; to me, that's what community relations are all about. These guys
are the real heroes."
USS Anchorage is the seventh San Antonio-class amphibious
transport dock ship. She was built at the Huntington Ingalls Shipbuilding site
in Avondale, La. She was delivered to the U.S. Navy Sept. 17, 2012 and was
commissioned in her namesake city of Anchorage, Alaska May 4, 2013. She is
homeported in San Diego, Calif.
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