By Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Archer Alonzo, USS
John S. McCain Public Affairs
EAST CHINA SEA (NNS) -- The Arleigh-Burke class
guided-missile destroyer USS John S. McCain (DDG 56) was the stage for a
compliant boarding exercise involving visit, board, search and seizure (VBSS)
teams from U.S. Navy and Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF), July 27, as
part of exercise Malabar 2014.
"Every boarding event comes with risk," said John
S. McCain's Commanding Officer Cmdr. Chase Sargeant. "In a real world
boarding, Sailors would be going into the unknown, whether compliant or
non-complaint, inspecting for illegal drugs, weapons, and human
trafficking."
This is a skill we need to hone. I believe it is the nature
of the Navy to be prepared for anything and today's exercise helped keep our
team sharp."
The exercise began with JMSDF sailors from the Japanese ship
Ashigara (DDG 178) boarding John S. McCain which was already engaged in the
scenario. The team leader, JMSDF Lt. j.g. Rikiya Akahane, climbed the pilot's
ladder from a small craft, immediately drew his weapon and scanned for contacts
before signaling his team members to come aboard.
Once the entire Japanese VBSS team had successfully made it
aboard and set up a perimeter around the boat deck, they met up with Lt. j.g.
Joseph Travers and the U.S. Navy VBSS team.
"The Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force boarders were
fantastic," said Travers, leader of the John S. McCain VBSS team.
"There was a bit of a language barrier, but our collective understanding
of close quarter combat vastly outweighed it.
The combined forces split into two teams. Team one began the
accent to the pilothouse, where they would question a simulated captain and
review the ship's logs, while team two made its way through the rest of the
ship, checking for hostile contacts.
After team one's inspection of the ship's logs and interview
of the captain, they returned to the boat deck, which team two had secured in
preparation for their arrival.
Both teams then separated back into full U.S. Navy and JMSDF
teams as the small craft returned alongside John S. McCain to retrieve the
sailors and return to the Ashigara.
Still fully immersed in the exercise, Akahane prepared to
depart the U.S. Navy destroyer and knelt in front of the pilot's ladder that
descended into his team's boat with his weapon drawn, remaining vigilant.
Finally, Akahane holstered his weapon and shared a gracious
farewell handshake with Travers.
"Thank you very much for inviting us to conduct this
training," said Akahane. "This was a great experience for me, and
also my team. I look forward to similar operations in the future."
"Today's exercise has expanded my already tremendous
confidence in the ability of not only my own VBSS team, but also that of the
JMSDF," said Sargeant.
The oceans remain the most vital component to global
commerce. Conducting maritime interdiction and sanction enforcement using VBSS
teams as the main element is a crucial part of the U.S. 7th Fleet's mission of
supporting security and stability in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region.
"The day's operations were a success, not only for the
United States Navy, but our friends and allies, the Japan Maritime Self-Defense
Force," said Sargeant.
Malabar 2014 is a U.S. Navy, Indian navy, Japan Maritime
Self-Defense Force trilateral naval field training exercise aimed to improve
our collective maritime relationship and increase understanding in
multinational operations.
No comments:
Post a Comment