Defense News: 55th Annual EOD Memorial Ceremony Set for May 4

Source: United States Navy

EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. – Naval School Explosive Ordnance Disposal (NAVSCOLEOD) will host the 55th annual Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) Memorial Ceremony on Saturday, May 4, 2024, at 9:00 a.m. CDT in honor and remembrance of the 344 EOD technicians who have made the ultimate sacrifice and given their lives in the line of duty. 

The ceremony will also be livestreamed and available for viewing online by visiting https://eodwarriorfoundation.org/events/.
 
The original memorial structure was dedicated on June 12, 1970, in Indian Head, Maryland. It consisted of four white cenotaphs — one for each branch of service — and was faced with bronze tablets containing the names of EOD technicians who died in the line of duty. 

After NAVSCOLEOD was consolidated at Eglin Air Force Base, the original memorial was disassembled and redesigned. The new structure consists of a single white wall faced with four bronze tablets identifying the names of the fallen. A brick from one of the original cenotaphs was incorporated into the current memorial by entombing it within the concrete wall.

The wall currently honors 344 fallen EOD warriors from 1942 to the present.

Defense News: IKE Carrier Strike Group Arrives in the Eastern Mediterranean

Source: United States Navy

The Nimitz-class nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (CVN 69) and the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Gravely (DDG 107) entered the Eastern Mediterranean after transiting through the Suez Canal, April 26.

CSGs bring to the region additional aviation and surface assets, providing greater flexibility and maritime capability to the U.S. 6th Fleet.

“The Dwight D. Eisenhower Carrier Strike Group has delivered exceptional naval power in the U.S. 5th Fleet for the last five months,” said Rear Adm. Marc Miguez, commander, CSG-2, IKECSG. “Reentry into the U.S. 6th Fleet is only a small gesture of our ability to project combat superiority to any part of the globe.”

While operating in the U.S. 5th Fleet, the IKECSG conducted operations in the Red Sea, Bab Al-Mandeb Strait, Gulf of Aden and Arabian Gulf including Operation Prosperity Guardian and self-defensive strikes into Iranian-backed Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen.

The strike group is commanded by Carrier Strike Group (CSG) 2 and comprised of flagship Dwight D. Eisenhower, Carrier Air Wing (CVW) 3 with its nine squadrons, USS Philippine Sea (CG 58), and Destroyer Squadron (DESRON) 22, with the guided-missile destroyers USS Gravely (DDG 107) and USS Mason (DDG 87).

Squadrons of CVW-3 include the “Gunslingers” of Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 105, the “Fighting Swordsmen” of Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 32, the “Rampagers” of Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 83, the “Wildcats” of Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 131, the “Screwtops” of Carrier Airborne Early Warning Squadron (VAW) 123, the “Zappers” of Electronic Attack Squadron (VAQ) 130, the “Dusty Dogs” of Helicopter Sea Combat Squadron (HSC) 7, the “Swamp Foxes” of Helicopter Maritime Strike Squadron (HSM) 74 and the “Rawhides” of Fleet Logistics Support Squadron (VRC) 40.

IKECSG units departed their homeports of Norfolk, Virginia, and Mayport, Florida, on Oct. 13 & 14 for a scheduled deployment.

For over 80 years, U.S. Naval Forces Europe-Africa (NAVEUR-NAVAF) has forged strategic relationships with allies and partners, leveraging a foundation of shared values to preserve security and stability.

Headquartered in Naples, Italy, NAVEUR-NAVAF operates U.S. naval forces in the U.S. European Command (USEUCOM) and U.S. Africa Command (USAFRICOM) areas of responsibility. U.S. Sixth Fleet is permanently assigned to NAVEUR-NAVAF, and employs maritime forces through the full spectrum of joint and naval operations.

Defense News: Keel Authenticated for Future USNS Hector A. Cafferata Jr.

Source: United States Navy

SAN DIEGO – The keel for the future USNS Hector A. Cafferata Jr. (ESB 8), a Lewis B. Puller-class Expeditionary Sea Base, was laid at GD NASSCO shipyard April 25. 

The ship will be named for U.S. Marine Corps Reserve Private Hector A. Cafferata Jr., who served with distinction during the Korean War. Surviving the Battle of Chosin Reservoir among those who would be called, “the Chosin Few,” Cafferata received the Medal of Honor from President Harry S. Truman for his life-saving heroism during that battle.

The contemporary keel laying ceremony represents the joining together of a ship’s modular components at the land level. As part of the ceremony, the keel is authenticated when the sponsors etch their initials into a ceremonial keel plate. The namesake’s daughter, Heather Cafferata, and granddaughter, Jessica Cafferata, attended the keel laying ceremony as the ship sponsors. The ceremony represents the connection between a ship and its sponsors, throughout the ship’s life.

“We are honored that the late Hector A. Cafferata’s Jr.’s legacy will live on through this ship, and the keel laying is a first step of many milestones to come for this ship,” said Tim Roberts, Strategic and Theater Sealift program manager, Program Executive Office Ships. “ESBs provide a critical capability to the fleet and provide increased flexibility to our Sailors and Marines.”

Expeditionary Sea Base ships are highly flexible platforms used across a broad range of military operations, supporting multiple operational phases. Acting as a mobile sea base, they are a part of the critical access infrastructure that supports deploying forces and supplies to provide prepositioned equipment and sustainment with adaptable distribution capability.

These ships support Aviation Mine Countermeasure and Special Operations Force missions. In addition to the flight deck, the ESB features four aviation operating spots and a hangar capable of supporting MH-53E-equivalent helicopters; accommodations, workspaces, and ordnance storage for embarked forces; and enhanced command, control, communications, computers, and intelligence (C4I). These ships support embarked force mission planning and execution and have a reconfigurable mission deck area to store embarked force equipment, including mine sleds and Rigid Hull Inflatable Boats (RHIBs).

GD NASSCO is also currently constructing the future USNS Robert E. Simanek (ESB 7) and John Lewis-class Fleet Replenishment Oilers Robert F. Kennedy (T-AO 208), Lucy Stone (T-AO 209), Sojourner Truth (T-AO 210) and Thurgood Marshall (T-AO 211).

As one of the Defense Department’s largest acquisition organizations, PEO Ships is responsible for executing the development and procurement of all destroyers, amphibious ships and craft, auxiliary ships, special mission ships, sealift ships and support ships.

Defense News: Navy Research & Development Leaders Convene Summit at NPS

Source: United States Navy

Dr. Brett Seidle, Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Research, Development, Testing and Evaluation (DASN (RDT&E)), was joined by the Chief of Naval Research (CNR), Rear Adm. Kurt Rothenhaus, and executive directors and technical directors from the Navy’s warfare centers, laboratories, University Affiliated Research Centers (UARCs), and Federally Funded Research and Development Centers (FFRDCs). More than 50 Navy and Marine Corps executive and technical directors participated in the event.

As part of the two-day summit, Seidle and Rothenhaus also sat down with retired Vice Adm. Ann Rondeau, President of NPS, for a “fireside chat” discussion with NPS students and faculty. During the talk, Seidle acknowledged the challenges faced by the Navy-Marine Corps team during a time of great power competition, but he also reminded the audience about how Sailors and Marines are meeting those challenges every day.

“The finest Navy in the history of the world is operating on their A-game right now, forward deployed for the U.S. and the nation,” Seidle said. “And they’re batting 1.000. I mean, they are doing a great job.”

Reflecting on the urgency of the challenges confronting the nation and the Department of the Navy, Seidle spoke to the need to lower barriers to collaboration and build teams across traditional boundaries.

“Part of what we’ve been trying to do the last two years, in our Naval Research and Development Establishment, is to just actually build the connective tissue that allows us to share in healthy ways that hasn’t happened in the past,” he said. “We’ve taken some actions to stand up communities of practice in particular areas, to include technical arenas where you can drop a problem into a community of practice, and then they can share best practices, lessons learned, work together to come to better solutions.”

Meanwhile, Rothenhaus talked about the pillars of the new Naval Science and Technology Strategy, such as maritime dominance and international partnerships – what he referred to as “naval scientific diplomacy.”

“That’s us recognizing as a nation that not all the greatest ideas come from the United States,” he said. “We have partners around the globe, and we’re going to have a better force and more capable force if we develop things together from basic science and innovation and inspiration all the way through.”

Rothenhaus, who received his master’s and Ph.D. in computer science from NPS, also spoke highly of his experiences in Monterey, as well as how NPS relates to his role as Chief of Naval Research.

“NPS was really just a game-changer for me,” Rothenhaus said. “It expanded my mind significantly about what it was to serve, what technology meant to the Navy, how we used it and how we, as those who serve, need to understand and employ it. But it also gave me a sincere respect for not only the professors here, of course, but the wider civilian scientist, engineer and other professional workforce that really is so central to our success.”

Dr. Kevin Smith, NPS Vice Provost for Research and Innovation, co-organized the summit and briefed participants on the school and its capabilities and contributions to Naval learning, research and innovation. He also emphasized the role that NPS can play within the larger NR&DE ecosystem, bringing together faculty expertise with the operational experience of the school’s warrior-scholar students to develop solutions to challenges identified by the fleet and Fleet Marine Force. 

“By increasing partnerships and collaborations with the Navy’s warfare centers and labs,” Smith said, “we can better leverage each other to more rapidly scale and deliver capabilities to the warfighter.”

Defense News: Benny Cheng Best Paper at RAMS

Source: United States Navy

Dr. Benny Cheng, senior scientist at Naval Surface Warfare Center (NSWC) Corona Division, was recently awarded the 2023 Best Paper of the Symposium Award at the 2024 Reliability and Maintainability Symposium (RAMS).

The Best Paper Award is presented annually to recognize the best written and most well-presented paper at the RAMS. Cheng and former NSWC Corona Engineer Michael Potter were selected as the winners for their 12-page article titled “Bayesian Weapon System Reliability Modeling with Cox-Weibull Neural Network.”

The winning article details an innovative method for the reliability assessment of weapon systems that combines the power of machine learning and Bayesian statistics, a field of statistics based on the application of probabilities.

“Dr. Cheng’s work plays a pivotal role in keeping missile reliability assessment at the cutting edge and ensures we are providing the foundation America’s warfighters need to preserve peace, respond in crisis, and win decisively in combat,” said Technical Director Dianne Costlow. “His dedication and commitment contribute to our Navy remaining the world’s preeminent maritime force.”

According to the RAMS website, the conference brings reliability experts from around the world together to collaborate and address topics like reliability, maintainability requirements and mission critical design.

“We wanted to publish our work and share the results of our research, showcasing a powerful technique that can improve reliability assessment of weapon systems,” said Cheng.

Cheng noted more than 100 papers were submitted for the RAMS award. He said receiving the award was unexpected and compared the achievement to winning a Nobel Prize for reliability.

Prior to working at NSWC Corona, Cheng served as a scientist with the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, conducting research in spectral analysis and oceanography. Most of his current research activities are centered on reliability engineering.

“My primary job is to support the reliability assessment of weapon systems,” he said. “It took three years of hard work to develop this particular methodology, so receiving this award for our efforts is an honor. Our research from the paper is currently being applied to our reliability work with missiles, and we definitely plan to continue to develop and refine this method in the future.”

NSWC Corona Division has provided analysis and assessment for the Navy since 1964. With experience in gauging the Navy’s warfighting capability, NSWC Corona is a leader in NAVSEA data analytics. Corona utilizes networked data environments, data and visualization, and measurement technology to bridge the Navy’s data silos, enabling informed decision-making for the warfighter. Anchor to the Inland Empire Tech Bridge, NSWC Corona is located in Norco, California, with detachments in Fallbrook and Seal Beach and personnel in 14 additional locations.