WASHINGTON, Feb. 26, 2018 — The Military Sealift Command
hospital ship USNS Mercy departed its home port of San Diego Feb. 23 in support
of the 13th Pacific Partnership mission.
Pacific Partnership is the Navy's humanitarian and civic
assistance mission conducted with and through partner nations, nongovernmental
organizations and other U.S. and international government agencies to execute a
variety of humanitarian civic action missions in the Pacific Fleet area of
responsibility.
The Mercy will visit Indonesia, Malaysia, Sri Lanka and
Vietnam from February through June to provide medical, dental, veterinary,
public health services, engineering and disaster response to host countries who
have invited the ship to visit and provide services to the local population.
More than 800 military and civilian personnel from Australia, Canada, France,
Japan, Peru Singapore, South Korea and the United Kingdom will join allied and
partner nations for the mission.
Building a Foundation of Trust
"Through Pacific Partnership we are deepening integral
ties with our allies and partners across the Indo-Asia-Pacific region,"
said Navy Rear Adm. Don Gabrielson, the commander of Task Force 73, the
executive agent for Pacific Partnership 18. "The challenges we face with
natural and manmade disasters do not respect borders or national sovereignty.”
Gabrielson added, “This dynamic mission enables many nations
and subject matter experts to come together to pursue solutions to complex
problems while enhancing preparations for disaster emergencies that reduce the
severity of their impact. The foundation of trust created through Pacific
Partnership engagement helps foster a cooperative environment that encourages
collaborative approaches to improving the lives and conditions for the people
of this region and beyond."
Medical, dental, civil engineering and veterinary teams will
partner with each host nation to conduct civic-action projects, community
health exchanges, medical symposiums and disaster response training activities.
Additional community relations engagements will occur in each mission stop to
enhance relationships and camaraderie with citizens of the host nations. The
Mercy will also visit Japan during its return transit across the Pacific Ocean.
Mercy is joined on the Pacific Partnership mission by the
expeditionary fast transport ship USNS Fall River. The Fall River will make
separate mission stops in Malaysia, Palau, Thailand and Yap, supporting public
diplomacy, community outreach and theater security cooperation initiatives.
Amazing Experience
“Being a part of the Pacific Partnership mission is really
an amazing experience,” said civil service mariner Barron Garvey, the Mercy’s
cargo officer. “What we do touches so many lives and you can’t walk away from
this deployment without having been impacted by the people we help and the
experiences of the mission. People always talk about making a difference, but
this is where that really happens -- on a Pacific Partnership mission.
“I think about the other PP missions I have been on, and I
look forward to the next one,” Garvey continued. “This really is one of the
best things I have been a part of since coming to MSC.”
This Year’s Mission
Pacific Partnership began in response to one of the world's
most catastrophic natural disasters, the December 2004 tsunami that devastated
parts of South and Southeast Asia. The mission has evolved over the years from
emphasis on direct care to an operation focused on enhancing partnerships
through host nation subject matter expert and civil-military exchanges.
Pacific Partnership 2018 will have several other
distinctions:
-- A multinational command-and-control structure will be
used to include a deputy mission commander from the United Kingdom and mission
chief of staff from Australia.
-- The mission will visit Sri Lanka for a second consecutive
year to enhance ties with the Indian Ocean nation.
-- Pacific Partnership will continue to leverage the U.S. National
Action Plan on Women, Peace and Security, a plan backed by Executive Order
13595 and U.N. Security Council Resolution 1325. Integration of WPS into
Pacific Partnership yields opportunities to engage with partner nations on the
topic of gender integration and perspectives, as well as preparedness in
dealing with vulnerable populations -- women and children, the elderly and the
disabled -- during and in the aftermath of crises.
-- This year's mission will return to Indonesia, Malaysia
and Vietnam, where the United States continues its legacy of strong cooperation
and defense ties with these nations.
(Reporting from Combined Joint Task Force 73; Sarah Burford,
Military Sealift Command Pacific; and U.S. Third Fleet contributed to this
story.)
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