From USS Fort Worth (LCS 3) Public Affairs
CHANGI NAVAL BASE, Singapore (NNS) -- USS Fort Worth (LCS 3)
arrived in Singapore Dec. 29 as part of a 16-month rotational deployment to 7th
Fleet in support of the Indo-Asia-Pacific rebalance.
As part of an initiative to deploy up to four LCS to the
region on a rotational basis, Fort Worth will operate out of Singapore as a
maintenance and logistics hub from which the ship will conduct patrols and
train with regional navies during exercises like Cooperation Afloat Readiness
and Training.
"The much-anticipated arrival of Fort Worth speaks to
our important partnership with the Republic of Singapore Navy and to our shared
commitment to regional security and stability," said Rear Adm. Charlie
Williams, commander, Logistics Group Western Pacific and commander, U.S. 7th
Fleet's Task Force 73. "As multiple LCS deployments become routine, ships
like Fort Worth will become workhorses in 7th Fleet."
Fort Worth is the first LCS to deploy under the
"3-2-1" manning concept, swapping fully trained crews roughly every
four months. This concept allows Fort Worth to deploy six months longer than
the 2013 USS Freedom (LCS 1) deployment and twice as long as typical U.S. Navy
ship deployments, extending LCS forward presence and reducing crew fatigue for
the entire 16-month deployment. It is named 3-2-1 because three rotational
crews will support two LCS ships and maintain one deployed ship.
"Fort Worth's arrival marks the dawn of a continuous
LCS presence in the Asia-Pacific, bringing more flexibility and capability to
U.S. 7th Fleet," said Capt. Fred Kacher, commodore, Destroyer Squadron 7.
"The next 15-months will be busy for Fort Worth and she will operate
extensively throughout Southeast Asia in support of CARAT 2015, as well as
expanding her operational footprint to Northeast Asia."
In addition to presence in nearly every phase of CARAT 2015
in South and Southeast Asia, Fort Worth will train with the Republic of Korea
Navy in exercise Foal Eagle and is scheduled to join multinational ships at
Singapore's Changi Naval Base for the International Maritime Defence Exhibition
(IMDEX). Fort Worth will also expand LCS regional presence by using additional
expeditionary maintenance locations in Northeast Asia.
Fort Worth is embarked with an aviation detachment from
Helicopter Maritime Strike Squadron (HSM) 35, the Navy's first composite
expeditionary helicopter squadron. The detachment consists of one MH-60R
Seahawk helicopter and one MQ-8B Fire Scout unmanned aircraft system. The Fire
Scout will complement the MH-60R by extending the HSM-35's range and endurance
thereby enhancing maritime domain awareness.
"Arriving in Singapore is a significant milestone for
Fort Worth and her crew," said Cmdr. Kendall Bridgewater, LCS Crew 104
commanding officer. "We're excited to be in Singapore and are ready to get
back out to sea and work with regional navies."
Since departing San Diego Nov. 17, Fort Worth transited the
Pacific Ocean, visited Hawaii to conduct joint operations, stopped in Guam to
refuel and stopped in Jakarta, Indonesia for a 5-day port visit. Fort Worth
will spend the remaining 15 months of her deployment operating from Singapore
and will return to her homeport in San Diego in 2016.
Fast, agile and mission-focused, littoral combat ships are
designed to operate in near-shore environments and employ modular mission
packages that can be configured for surface warfare, mine countermeasures or
anti-submarine warfare. Fort Worth will employ the surface warfare mission
package for her entire deployment, augmenting her 57mm gun and rolling airframe
missile launcher with two 30mm guns, two 11-meter rigid-hull inflatable boats
and two eight-member maritime security boarding teams. With more fuel capacity
than Freedom, Fort Worth can refuel less often and stay on patrol longer.
The U.S. 7th Fleet conducts forward-deployed naval
operations in support of U.S. national interests in the Indo-Asia-Pacific area
of operations. As the U.S. Navy's largest numbered fleet, 7th Fleet interacts
with 35 other maritime nations to build maritime partnerships that foster
maritime security, promote stability and prevent conflict.
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