Defense News: Navy Week Sets Sail for Las Vegas October 13-20

Source: United States Navy

Participating Navy assets include Sailors from the Navy Parachute Team (Leap Frogs); USS Nevada (SSBN 733); Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 37; U.S. Navy Ceremonial Guard; Explosive Ordnance Disposal Group One; Explosive Ordnance Disposal Mobile Unit One; USS Constitution; Naval Talent Acquisition Group Southwest; Navy Recruiting Command; U.S. Fleet Forces Command; U.S. Vietnam War Commemoration; Naval History & Heritage Command; Navy Band Northwest; Naval Oceanography Special Warfare Center; Bureau of Medicine and Surgery; Navy Esports; and U.S. Naval Academy.

More than 100 Sailors will participate in education and community outreach events throughout the city, including a Navy Week proclamation and recognition ceremony at the iconic Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas sign and a presence at the Raiders and Golden Knights games, South Point 400 NASCAR series, Professional Bull Riders Championship Series, Shriners Children’s Open PGA Tour, and much more. 

The Navy’s senior executive is Rear Adm. Joaquin J. Martinez de Pinillos, Reserve Vice Commander, U.S. Seventh Fleet. During Las Vegas Navy Week, he is participating in community outreach activities and engaging with local business, civic, education, and government leaders.

Navy Weeks are a series of outreach events coordinated by the Navy Office of Community Outreach designed to give Americans an opportunity to learn about the Navy, its people, and its importance to national security and prosperity. Since 2005, the Navy Week program has served as the Navy’s flagship outreach effort into areas of the country without a significant Navy presence, providing the public a firsthand look at why the Navy matters to cities like Las Vegas.

“Sailors are the reason America’s Navy is the most powerful in the world,” said NAVCO’s director, Cmdr. Julie Holland. “We are thrilled to bring your Navy warfighters to Las Vegas. At Navy Weeks, Americans will connect with Sailors who have strong character, competence, and dedication to the mission, and who continue a nearly 250-year tradition of decisive power from seabed to cyberspace.”

Throughout the week, Sailors & civilians will participate in various community events across the area, including engagements with youth at the 2024 Scout Expo, Discovery Children’s Museum and Boys and Girls Club of Southern Nevada. Sailors are volunteering at organizations in the cities of Las Vegas, North Las Vegas and Henderson, including Project 150, Habitat for Humanity and Ice Age Fossils State Park, among others. Residents will also enjoy free live music at venues throughout the city performed by Navy Band Northwest.

Las Vegas Navy Week is one of 15 Navy Weeks in 2024, which brings a variety of assets, equipment and personnel to a single city for a weeklong series of engagements designed to bring America’s Navy closer to the people it protects. Each year, the program reaches more than 140 million people – about half of the U.S. population.

Media organizations wishing to cover Las Vegas Navy Week events should contact Lt. j.g. Josh Keim at (901) 232-4451 or joshua.a.keim.mil@us.navy.mil. You can find the Las Vegas Navy Week schedule of events at www.outreach.navy.mil.

Defense News: Navy Families Honor Fallen Service Members at POW/MIA Recognition Day Rosette Ceremony

Source: United States Navy

The Sailors are among 2,503 service members whose names are etched in the marble walls of the Courts of the Missing at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific. On Sept. 20, 2024, their family members placed a bronze rosette next to their names to symbolize the recovery and identification of their remains. The rosette ceremony was part of National POW/MIA Recognition Day, which is observed nationally and globally on the third Friday of September. The observance is hosted by the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) to remember American service members who were prisoners of war and those who are still missing and unaccounted for. “Our country’s commitment is that we will never ever stop looking because each and every single individual American is important in our democracy,” explained Hon. Charles K. Djou, secretary of the American Battle Monuments Commission (ABMC), host of the rosette ceremony.

During the ceremony, DPAA personnel read the names of 132 service members who have been recovered, identified, and returned to their loved ones since the 2023 POW/MIA Recognition Day.

Three Navy families shared the story of their recovered loved one with Commander, Navy Region Hawaii.

Cdr. Danforth Ellithorpe White

Cdr. Danforth Ellithorpe White was a Navy reconnaissance pilot who flew RA-5C planes and his final assignment had him on the USS Enterprise (CVN-65).

Marda White Turman, 55, White’s daughter who placed the rosette on the wall, explained the events leading to her father’s death: White flew a classified mission over Laos, his plane went down, and he was declared missing in action (MIA), which was updated to killed in action on Mar. 31, 1969. On that day, Turman was three months old in her mother’s womb with two infant siblings.

Turman also placed a rosette her father’s co-pilot, Lt. Ramey Leo Carpenter who also perished that day and left behind a three-year-old daughter.

In 1997, Turman and other surviving relatives were notified that the DPAA team would excavate her father’s crash site where they discovered a petri dish size amount of bone fragments. Emotion clouded Turman’s voice at times as she described the remarkable way in which her father’s identification unfolded from her father’s jawbone.

“One of them [the bone fragments used for identification], his most outstanding physical feature … his jaw, his mandible. We were able to bring him home and bury him in Arlington, Cemetery. At the time, I was 28. I was burying the father I never met.”

Turman then reflected on the importance of the rosette ceremony.

“In terms of today, why it’s important is not only to have the rosettes placed to let people know that these service members have been brought home, but also it’s an important message that our men and women fight greatly to protect our freedom and they were willing to give the ultimate sacrifice and the very least that we can do to honor them is to do whatever we can to bring them back and it helps us heal from the loss. I think for them [the fallen], the importance of bringing them home it’s a small, but big act of remembering their service. That’s why I’m here.”

Lt. Ralph Eugene Foulks Jr.

Lt. Ralph Eugene Foulks Jr. was a junior pilot who flew the A-4 Skyhawk, a single-seat attack plane based on the USS Oriskany (CVA 34).

Collen Ijuin, 67, Foulks’ sister, who placed the rosette on the commemoration wall next to her brother’s name, explained the details she knew of the night on Jan. 5, 1968, when her brother was later declared missing in action (MIA), a mystery that would go unsolved for 25 years.

“He was on an attack mission at night. It was him and the lead pilot, they took off at night and identified a convoy. The first pilot took a dive and pulled up and my brother took his dive and they never heard from him again. We don’t know what happened.”

Ijuin reflected on the time that her brother was missing and the fear about what had happened to him: her mother sent Red Cross packages that were returned, they heard rumors he might be a prisoner of war (POW), but no updates were reported for several months.

Six months after the last POW returned Foulks’ status was changed to killed in action (KIA).

In December 1988 Ijuin’s family was notified that what was likely her brother’s remains had been returned from North Vietnam. Ijuin recalled she was 12 at the time when a Navy chaplain knocked on the door late at night with the news. At that time, no testing could conclusively identify Foulks. Later when new DNA testing using the ovum was created, Foulks was positively identified. Ijuin’s family was notified of that conclusive finding 25 years to the day after he went missing, on Jan. 5, 1993.

Ijuin expressed awe for the ceremony and the work that was done to identify her brother and gratitude for the ceremony to mark the occasion. She also shared that not knowing what exactly happened to her brother still haunts her.

“I talked with my middle sister today, who was one of the first 16 ’experimental’ ROTC [Reserve Officer Training Corps] women. She retired as a USN [U.S. Navy] commander. She said she remembers that upon the DPAA examination of his remains, it seemed those had been sitting in a warehouse for a long time in Vietnam. Now I wonder all over again – what happened to my brother. I hope he never suffered.”

Lt. Cmdr. Frederick Peter Crosby

Lt. Cmdr. Frederick Peter Crosby was a Navy reconnaissance pilot based on Miramar, San Diego who flew the Vought Crusader Reconnaissance Fighter (RF-8A) from the USS Bon Homme Richard (CVA-31).

Deborah Ann Crosby, 66, Lt. Crosby’s daughter, who placed the rosette next to her father’s name on the commemoration wall, described the events that led to her father’s death.

On June 1, 1965, Lt. Crosby was on a mission to take photographs of the bridge commonly referred to as Dragon’s Jaw Bridge in North Vietnam, which had been bombed the day before. It was a foggy day and Lt. Crosby had to fly lower than usual, flying at 700 miles per hour, 300 feet off the ground, and the area was heavily defended. Lt. Crosby was hit by ground fire and the plane rolled and crashed into a fishpond.

In 2015, 50 years later, a DPAA team located the site thanks to an eyewitness to the crash, and Lt. Crosby’s alleged remains were brought back to the DPAA laboratory in Hawaii. Using DNA provided by Crosby’s aunt in 2005, the DPAA team confirmed that the remains belonged to Lt. Crosby.

Crosby visited the DPAA laboratory the day before the rosette ceremony and shared the impact of the visit.

“Coming here and being in the laboratory yesterday was really kind of remarkable to think that my father’s remains were here to be that close to my dad because there haven’t been many opportunities where I could be somewhat present to his existence in a way, so it’s really meaningful to have this opportunity to tap in the rosette behind my father’s name after 50 years being missing in action. It’s been just an amazing healing event; I guess really no real closure, but there’s a tremendous amount of healing that has taken place.”

Crosby also thanked the DPAA, Navy, the government, and the military as a whole for bringing her father home as promised for a proper burial with military honors.

“I look at the MIA-POW flag for so long it was a painful thing to look at. It was always a reminder of loss and pain and grief and when I look at the flag now it is a reminder of a promise kept, so it doesn’t hurt to look at that flag any longer.”

Search Continues for MIA Service Members

Keone J. Nakoa, the White House Asian American and Native Hawaiian Pacific Islander senior advisor, reminded those at the ceremony that the mission of all recovery agencies is ongoing.

“President Biden has been and remains deeply committed to honoring the generations of women and men and their families who served and sacrificed,” he said. “This includes pledging to seek out answers for the more than 81,000 brave personnel that are still missing. They are not, and will never be forgotten.”

Defense News: Navy to Begin Red Hill Facility Tank 5 Ventilation  

Source: United States Navy

After notifying the Hawaii Department of Health (DOH), NCTF-RH will start venting tank 5 at the facility – the fourth of 14 tanks to be ventilated and cleaned as part of the decommissioning process.  
 
The initial venting, or degassing phase, eliminates any residual volatile organic compounds (VOC) from the tank by pushing clean air from the bottom of the tank and exhausting it upward through a complex ventilation system.  
 
NCTF-RH installed nine air quality monitoring stations in and around RHBFSF, including at the Halawa Correctional Facility, to track changes in air quality, measure potential VOC levels, and collect atmospheric data (i.e., air speed, wind direction, temperature, humidity, barometric pressure). NCTF-RH monitors the air quality to ensure emissions from ventilation are maintained at less than DOH’s limit of 38 parts per million by volume total VOCs. VOC levels at the facility boundary have remained significantly below the limit, the median is .000 and the average is .003 parts per million by volume total VOCs since inception of ventilation. 
 
For more information about NCTF-RH, visit www.navyclosuretaskforce.navy.mil or download our free mobile app by searching for “NCTF-Red Hill” in the Apple App store or Google Play store. 

SAFE. DELIBERATE. ENGAGED. COMMITTED. 
– NCTF – RH –

Defense News: ROK, US Submarine Commands Hold Talks, Cinch Ties for 30th Year

Source: United States Navy

The engagement included face-to-face meetings by commanders and staff, as well as visiting air and surface assets and facilities that impact undersea warfare.

“We frequently conduct operations and closely coordinate with the Republic of Korea Submarine Force, and with other allies and partners, in the Indo-Pacific to widen our shared advantages in the undersea domain,” said Rear Adm. Chris Cavanaugh, commander, Submarine Group 7. “That takes more than just submarines. Undersea warfare is a multi-domain, multi-national team effort that includes air, surface, and subsurface forces.”

During SWCM, Cavanaugh met with Rear Adm. Kang Jeong-ho, commander, ROK Navy Submarine Force (CSF), to discuss ways to strengthen mutual cooperation and improve combined operational capabilities.

“The ROK-US SWCM, with a bright history that spans the past 30 years, is a symbol of the two submarine forces’ friendship,” said Kang. “We will continue to strengthen our cooperation.”

SWCM complements the many combined port visits, exercises, training, operations, and other military cooperation activities by the U.S. and ROK submarine commands.

As an example of this, the Virginia-class fast-attack submarine USS Vermont (SSN 792) arrived in Busan, Republic of Korea, Sept. 23 to conduct a regularly scheduled port visit.

Conversely, the Son Won-il-class submarine ROKS Lee Beom-seok (SS 081), visited Naval Base Guam, Sept. 16-19, where it moored alongside the Emory S. Land-class submarine tender USS Frank Cable (AS 40).

During the talks, the two submarine commanders visited assets crucial to the undersea domain including the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS McCampbell (DDG 85), an MH-60R Seahawk helicopter assigned to Helicopter Maritime Strike Squadron 51, and a P-8A Poseidon assigned to Patrol and Reconnaissance Squadron 10.

SWCM meetings have been held twice per year by U.S. and ROK submarine forces since 1994. During the meetings, submarine force leaders and staff discuss ways to deepen partnerships and improve combined interoperability. SWCM 58 was held in Jinhae, Jeju, and Busan, Republic of Korea, in May 2024.

The last time SWCM was held at CSG-7 headquarters was in 2017 for SWCM 45.

Submarine Group 7 directs forward-deployed, combat capable forces across the full spectrum of undersea warfare throughout the Western Pacific, Indian Ocean, and Arabian Sea.

For more news from Commander, Submarine Group 7, visit https://www.dvidshub.net/unit/SG-7

Defense News: US, Australia, and Japan naval forces conduct multilateral exercise

Source: United States Navy

Participants included the U.S. Navy (USN) Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Dewey (DDG 105), Royal Australian Navy (RAN) Anzac-class frigate HMAS Stuart (FFH 153) and the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF) Murasame-class destroyer JS Ariake (DD 109).

“Our relationships with Australia and Japan are a cornerstone of security in the Indo-Pacific,” said Vice Adm. Fred Kacher, commander, U.S. 7th Fleet. “Seamless coordination with the JMSDF and RAN serve as an effective deterrent against aggression in the region and promotes our shared commitment to preserving a free and open Indo-Pacific.”

The ships conducted a wide range of training, including formation sailing, combined communication, and a replenishment-at-sea.

“Interoperability and interchangeability among JMSDF, USN, and RAN are our strength,” said JMSDF Rear Adm. YOKOTA Kazushi, commander, Escort Flotilla 3. “Not only in this multilateral exercise, but also in exercises like KAKADU 2024, we are working together for a free and open Indo-Pacific.”

Other elements of the exercise included anti-surface and anti-submarine warfare area operations, as well as electronic warfare drills and subject matter expert exchanges.

“Strong international relationships are the foundation for Australia’s response to shared regional security challenges,” said Australia’s Joint Force Maritime Component Commander, Commodore Jonathan Ley. “Every opportunity to cooperate with partners at sea is highly valued by Australian ships deployed throughout the Indo-Pacific region.”

The U.S. Navy regularly operates alongside our allies in the Indo-Pacific region as a demonstration of our shared commitment to the rules-based international order. Multilateral exercises such as this one provide valuable opportunities to train, exercise and develop tactical interoperability across allied navies in the Indo-Pacific.

Dewey is forward-deployed and assigned to Destroyer Squadron (DESRON) 15, the Navy’s largest DESRON and the U.S. 7th Fleet’s principal surface force.

U.S. 7th Fleet is the U.S. Navy’s largest forward-deployed numbered fleet, and routinely interacts and operates with allies and partners in preserving a free and open Indo-Pacific region.