WASHINGTON, Sept. 8, 2017 — The Defense Department is
responding to "catastrophic" levels of destruction throughout the
Leeward Islands, including the islands of St. Thomas and St. John in the U.S.
Virgin Islands, DoD spokesman Army Lt. Col. Jamie Davis said today in a
statement.
Open source media reports a total of 23 fatalities in the
affected region, he said. “Preliminary property damage assessments from the
Federal Emergency Management Agency describe ‘massive devastation,’” Davis
said, “including ‘complete power/communications collapse’ in the [U.S. Virgin
Islands], and substantial damage to a local hospital. Irma struck Puerto Rico a
glancing blow, leaving 70 percent of the population -- more than 1 million
customers -- without power.”
Irma is forecast to impact Florida in the next 36 hours as
an extremely dangerous Category 4 hurricane, the colonel said, with
life-threatening wind impacts to much of the state and the danger of storm
surges of up to 12 feet in southwest Florida and the Florida Keys if peak surge
coincides with high tide.
DoD Response
U.S. Northern Command commander Air Force Gen. Lori J.
Robinson is leading DoD's domestic response and is generating forces in
response to FEMA requests, Davis said. DoD components, including the Defense
Logistics Agency and the Army Corps of Engineers, are posturing to provide
significant additional assets and support as needed.
The amphibious assault ship USS Wasp evacuated about 21
critically ill patients yesterday from the damaged hospital on St. Thomas, with
at least 23 more planned for today, Northcom officials said. The amphibious
assault ships USS Kearsarge and USS Oak Hill -- carrying Marines assigned to
the 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit and FEMA personnel -- are supporting
response operations in the U.S. Virgin Islands, including patient evacuation.
U.S. Transportation Command is supporting the aeromedical
evacuation and will evacuate additional patients this evening.
Ten MH-60R Seahawk helicopters were loaded aboard the
aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln to support defense support of civil
authorities operations before the ship departed Norfolk, Virginia, earlier
today, Davis said. The amphibious assault ship USS Iwo Jima and amphibious
transport dock USS New York are loading a second maritime defense support of
civil authorities package and plan to depart Norfolk today and proceed to the
Caribbean region, he added.
The Army Corps of Engineers is assisting with disaster
assessment in the U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico today, the colonel said,
and will have power restoration teams in the area tomorrow. The corps is
monitoring Lake Okeechobee to prepare for the possibility that heavy winds push
floodwaters over the dike holding the lake. Florida has initiated the
precautionary evacuation of sparsely populated counties to the south, he said.
The Defense Logistics Agency has shipped more than a million
shelf-stable meals to St. Thomas and 1.7 million liters of water to San Juan,
Puerto Rico, via sealift, and is redistributing Hurricane Harvey commodities in
support of the response to Irma, Davis said.
Florida Gov. Rick Scott activated 4,000 National Guardsmen
and National Guard Bureau officials said they expect a request from him for an
additional 20,000 troops. National Guardsmen from as far away as California
have been mobilized in anticipation of the storm, National Guard Bureau
officials said yesterday.
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