Defense News: HM-15 Holds Change of Command Ceremony, Welcomes New Commanding Officer

Source: United States Navy

 

The ceremony was held as a rite of passage to signify a change of commanders. Cmdr. Andrew Countiss, a native of Severna Park, Maryland, served as commanding officer and executive officer for HM-15 from January 2022 to August 2024, and was relieved by Cmdr. Jared Schmitt, a native of Doylestown, Pennsylvania.

While in command, Countiss was the recipient of the 2023 Naval Helicopter Association Rear Adm. Tomaszeski Commanding Officer leadership award. Additionally, during his command tour, HM-15 won the 2023 Battle Efficiency Award under his leadership.

Countiss was the architect of a HM-14 and HM-15 squadron merger. As a result, he commanded the largest operational squadron in the Navy with more than 825 active duty/Navy Training and Administration of the Reserves personnel, 125 Selected Reservists and 18 MH-53E helicopters. 

“It was the professional honor of a lifetime to lead HM-15 through a season of unprecedented growth, transformation, and operational execution,” Countiss said. “The Blackhawk Sailors represent the finest our great nation has to offer. Their spirit and dedication were endless sources of inspiration for me. They forged the strongest team in the Fleet – there was never an ask or task too large for them.”

A 2006 graduate of the United States Naval Academy, he was designated a naval aviator in May 2008. Upon completion of flight school, he received orders to the Airborne Mine Countermeasures Weapon Systems Training School (AWSTS) for training in the MH-53E Sea Dragon.

Some of the high-level support Countiss oversaw while in command of HM-15 include providing mission critical logistics capability during Operation Prosperity Guardian in the Gulf of Aden. In addition, HM-15 provided support to White House tasking for a President of the United States supplementing Marine Helicopter Squadron One; and serving as the host squadron during President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden’s visit to Naval Station Norfolk in November 2023.

“It was a great privilege to serve with them and they are in fantastic hands moving forward with Cmdr. Jared Schmitt as commanding officer,” Countiss said.

Schmitt thanked Countiss for his leadership and guidance as he assumes command of the last operational MH-53E squadron in the U.S. Navy.  

“Andrew, thank you for your guidance, wisdom, support and most importantly your friendship,” Schmitt said.

Schmitt further discussed the rich legacy of the MH-53E community, “Once a Blackhawk, always a Blackhawk.”

“Embrace our legacy,” Schmitt added. “We are some of the last men and women who get to serve in this squadron and this community – a community that has been in existence since 1971 and a squadron that was commissioned in 1987. It is a legacy we can all be proud of and a legacy we have the responsibility of seeing through to the finish line and honor those who came before us.”

Schmitt, a 2007 graduate from the United States Naval Academy; was designated as a naval aviator in February 2009. After flight school, he reported to AWSTS for training in the MH-53E Sea Dragon. Schmitt mentioned serving alongside his younger brother, Lt. Cmdr. Keith Schmitt, who has been in the MH-53E community since 2013. 

“Keith, I still can’t believe we ended up in this together,” Schmitt said. “From little kids playing with Hot Wheels cars and throwing the football in the backyard, to big kids flying in the 53, it has been so cool to share this experience with you.” 

The Navy has planned a gradual transition of the MH-53E community to ensure operational readiness is maintained throughout the phasing out process. The ultimate retirement of the MH-53E Sea Dragon aligns with the Navy’s long-term strategy to modernize its fleet and enhance operational capabilities. By phasing out older platforms, the Navy can allocate resources to developing and deploying more advanced technologies that meet operational demands.

HM-15 is the largest helicopter squadron in the Navy with nearly 825 Active Duty/Training and Administration of the Reserves personnel, 125 Selected Reservists, and 18 MH-53E helicopters. Their mission is to maintain a worldwide 72-hour Airborne Mine Countermeasures (AMCM) rapid deployment posture and a forward-deployed AMCM and Vertical Onboard Delivery (VOD) capability in both the Arabian Gulf and Seventh Fleet AOR.
 
 
 
 

Defense News: U.S. and Italian Naval Forces Conduct Bilateral Operations

Source: United States Navy

Participants included the U.S. Navy Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Dewey (DDG 105), the flagship of the Italian navy aircraft carrier ITS Cavour (CVH 550), and the Italian Navy Carlo Bergamini-class frigate ITS Alpino (F 594).

“The multilateral operations we conduct with our allies and partners in this theater are strengthening our capabilities and keeping our skillsets sharp,” said Vice Adm. Fred Kacher, commander, U.S. 7th Fleet. “As we recently demonstrated with the Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group and Italy’s Cavour Carrier Strike Group, both our nations recognize the importance of a free and open Indo-Pacific and the role our navies play in preserving the peace and stability here.”

The two navies conducted fixed-wing air defense training and combined anti-submarine warfare exercises, as well as subject matter expert exchanges across the participating ships.

“We are ready and very well prepared to operate with our allies in every part of the globe; we are used to this, since we share common tactics, procedures and command, control and communication systems” said Rear Admiral Giancarlo Ciappina, commander Italian Carrier Strike Group on board ITS Cavour.

In addition to cross-functional training across multiple domains, the U.S. and Italian navy vessels also conducted formation exercises and communication drills, events tailored to build understanding and trust when conducting high-end maneuvers.

“Any time we have an opportunity to train together with our partners and allies, it goes a long way in enhancing our ability to exchange information and operate cohesively,” said Cmdr. Nicholas Maruca, Dewey’s commanding officer.

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. Bilateral operations such as this one provides valuable opportunities to train, exercise and develop tactical interoperability across allied navies in the Indo-Pacific.

“The activity with USS Dewey is an outstanding training opportunity for our crews. Another great demonstration of fruitful interactions and cooperation between Italian and US ships at sea,” said Ciappina. “I should say, a normal interoperability rehearsal which keeps up our standards and ability to work together. Conducting this type of activity is one of the strategic objectives of our operational campaign, ensuring security at sea and promoting economic prosperity through the Indo-Pacific region”.

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.

Defense News: NPS’ Warfare Innovation Continuum Drives Students’ Concept Generation

Source: United States Navy

Leveraging classroom work in wargaming, modeling, simulation and red teaming, each WIC cycle supports the advancement of naval concepts, the assessment of new technologies, and the development of new tactics, all while enhancing NPS students’ educational experiences and sharpening their combat skills.

This year’s WIC campaign of analysis, entitled “Integrated Naval Campaigning,” was a resounding success, according to retired U.S. Navy Capt. Jeff Kline, NWSI WIC Director and Operations Research Professor of Practice at NPS.

“At the CNO’s Futures Wargame, I briefed the Chief of Naval Operations and other Navy leadership on an alternative force design specifically for sea control that was based on our campaign of analysis during the WIC,” Kline said. “The alternative fleet took ideas from the workshops we held, from our joint campaign analysis class and from a wargame we just completed, all of which dealt with integrated naval campaigning. The CNO’s staff is now looking at an alternative force design to their program forces. I don’t think you can get a better mark of success than that.”

He added, “As an educator, however, I would say our real product here is at least 200 student officers who now think differently about how they would fight with the fleet and how they build the fleet. The WIC’s real success is that we integrate it with NPS’ educational mission.”

The Navy’s Warfare Development Division (OPNAV N72), which is responsible for the development of Navy strategy and concepts that are aligned with emerging security trends, higher-level guidance, and the tenets of the Navy’s national security role, originally requested NWSI explore the topic of integrated naval campaigning.

From the amphibious operations of World War II to the counter-piracy operations of today, integrated naval campaigning – a series of linked tactical operations in, and from, the maritime domain conducted by joint, inter-organizational and allied forces – has played a critical role in achieving the nation’s strategic and operational objectives.

The dawn of the robotics age of warfare, however, has brought new challenges and opportunities for new concepts across all warfighting domains.

For the Fiscal Year (FY) 2024 WIC, NWSI specifically set out to answer the design challenge: “How might the confluence of new technologies provide opportunities for new operational concepts in executing integrated naval campaigning across the full spectrum of conflict?”

Three courses were conducted over the FY 2023 Summer Quarter to initially define the problem set, each addressing a unique aspect of the theme: Joint Campaign Analysis, Information Warfare Systems Engineering and Networked Autonomous and Unmanned Systems.

These inputs provided critical information for the kickoff of the FY 2024 WIC, the 14th annual WIC Workshop, held Sept. 18-21, 2023. This intense concept generation workshop employed Warfighter Centered Design methods to explore the art of the possible of integrated naval campaigning along eight lines of effort: 21st Century Amphibious Operations, Maritime Gray Zone Operations, Coalition Operations, Undersea Operations, Contested Logistics, Future Vertical Take-Off and Landing Operations, Advanced Mining Operations and Long-Range Fires.

Each of these topics was taken up by a team of NPS students and early career professionals from across the fleet, Navy laboratories, industry and academia in the context of a notional future conflict scenario.

“We generate a future fictional scenario every year to tether our work to the workshop and WIC throughout the year,” said Lyla Englehorn, NWSI warfighting concepts lead. “This larger worldwide scenario provides our students and research faculty the relevance of what they’re trying to do, whether it’s viscous fluid in a robotics arm or conceiving a new strategy for Southeast Asia.”

The ideas and concepts the teams developed were then vetted by government, military, industry and academic leaders, as summarized in NWSI’s Final Report on the 2023 WIC Workshop.

“With over 100 individuals attending from warfare labs, industry, warfare development centers, fleet staffs, the Pentagon, and our own faculty and students, we obtained a diverse set of technical, engineering, and operational talent to generate concepts for employing emerging and existing technologies in operational environments,” Kline said. “The workshop then serves as the cornerstone of events that occur across the NPS campus throughout the remainder of the year.”

Working together with NPS’ Office of Research and Innovation (OR&I) under the operating concept of the Naval Innovation Center, NWSI leverages the workshop to cultivate a vibrant innovation ecosystem at NPS.

In addition to follow-on wargaming and joint analysis courses which dealt with specific questions associated with integrated naval campaigning, the concepts generated in the workshop informed research through the Naval Innovation Exchange (NIX), a networked organization under OR&I that coordinates teams of faculty, students and partners working in research “sprints.” Associated technologies were also experimented with at the quarterly Joint Interagency Field Experimentation (JIFX) events.

“We then have larger research projects that in some way inform the larger topic of integrated naval campaigning,” Kline noted, including 2024 Total Ship Systems Engineering Design, various CRUSER innovation and research projects, Force Design for Sea Control Fleet Campaign of Analysis, NPS research and innovation groups, as well as individual theses.

Kline added that the concepts and follow-on work are also carried beyond NPS, including across the fleet, OPNAV sections, the Marine Corps Warfighting Lab (MCWL) and Naval Surface Warfare Centers (NSWC).

“The central theme here is that we’re thought leaders; we lead the thought processes,” Kline said. “We provide the initial seeds and concepts in order to inform these organizations’ official concept developments and campaigns of learning for those developments.”

The WIC’s primary importance is that it empowers NPS students and early career engineers at the warfighting labs to realize that their bottom-up driven ideas are valid and potentially as impactful or influential as those being directed top-down, according to retired Marine Corps Col. Randy Pugh, NPS Vice Provost for Warfare Studies and director of NWSI.

Being able to enter a creative space and think unconstrained about the subject at hand not only generates new ideas, but also creates a culture of constant intellectual curiosity and allows people to think about things critically and propose new ways of doing things.

“As the Marines like to say, “Good ideas know no rank,” he said. “The WIC both directly contributes to the problem set and changes the culture so that we’re not just trying to predict the future and ‘skating to where the puck is going to be,’ but we’re also creating leaders that are adaptive and who, when faced with something they hadn’t predicted or expected, can quickly say, ‘Hey, let’s get together and talk about this: where are we, where do we want to be, and what are some of the things we might try in order to do that?’”

“Even if there was no direct result of WIC – some new capability, concept or policy – the ultimate product is the people that participated in it,” Pugh added.

For the Systems Engineering Analysis (SEA) 33 capstone team, that product was 22 members from multiple NPS degree programs, as well as students from the National University of Singapore’s Temasek Defence Systems Institute (TDSI). Members included officers from the U.S. Navy, U.S. Army, Brazilian Air Force, Taiwanese Navy, Israeli Defense Force, and Singapore Army, as well as U.S. and Singapore Navy civilians.

The team, tasked by the Warfare Integration Directorate for the Office of the Chief Naval Operations (OPNAV N9I) with exploring the Advanced Mining Operations line of effort, was led by Navy Cmdr. Erik Kowalski, a career pilot of the MH-53E “Sea Dragon,” the Navy’s dedicated Airborne Mine Countermeasures (AMCM) platform.

“We started out looking at next-generation, innovative concepts in mining to help feed some of our ideas of potential directions to go,” Kowalski said. “For the first (Fall) quarter, we focused on framing the problem, understanding how best to approach it, coming up with some basic concepts of operations to downselect from, and then we built an initial functional architecture that we thought we’d need.”

The team refined these at the WIC Workshop into several formal concepts, which evolved into the design and analysis of self-mobile mines.

The incorporation of self-mobility into sea mines can potentially provide numerous benefits over traditional, static mines that could not only improve lethality and counter-mobility effects, but could also aid in mine delivery, minefield flexibility, tactical employment and minelayer safety.

“Traditional mines normally sit on the sea floor and don’t move, so if an enemy comes in and clears a path, that path is clear until you reseed it or something else happens,” Kowalski explained. “The idea behind mobile mines is that the minefield is smart enough that once the minesweepers have come in and cleared that path, the other mines that are in the minefield can then move in that path and essentially keep reseeding it themselves.”

Over the Winter Quarter, the team focused on the physical architecture of self-mobile mines and developing concepts of operations of scenarios that they could test against in simulations. Finally, in the Spring Quarter, they concentrated on the modeling, simulation and data analysis using the Navy’s Modeling and Simulation Toolbox (MAST) software. They also performed a cost-benefit analysis and feasibility study for the design.

The team presented their final brief and report to OPNAV N9I in early June, where it will specifically inform them in their work on advanced mining and offensive mining capabilities.

The primary take-away, Kowalski said, is that with current technologies, the design is entirely feasible.

“We could build self-mobile mines right now,” he said. “Not only would you get the advantages from them being able to move and close gaps based on the patterns of life of the enemy, but also the mobility itself would give us a lot of delivery options that traditional mines don’t necessarily provide.”

“If mines could navigate themselves, really you just have to be able to get the mines in the water close enough and they can do all the hard work to get into the field and position themselves,” he added.

The 21st Century Amphibious Operations line of effort was conducted to support the Marine Corps’ foundational concept development set forth in its Force Design modernization effort.

The team, led by Pugh, consisted of four NPS students, two NPS faculty, and eight guests from warfare centers, MCWL, a systems command and industry.

Meeting up at the WIC Workshop, they were presented with the hypothesis that “in 2040-45, amphibious forces will support maritime campaigning by controlling key maritime terrain.”

“We set out to generate an understanding of the challenges and ideas about how we might close the gap between the current state and the desired future state, given disruptive emerging technologies, future missions and future adversaries,” Pugh said.

The development of adversaries’ long-range intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) capabilities and long-range precision weapons systems, for example, call into question the very survivability of current means of conducting amphibious operations.

“In a nutshell, how are we going to get Marines from ship to shore? How are we ensuring the survivability of the Navy-Marine Corps team holistically, whether that is at sea or after we get the Marines to shore?” said Marine Corps Capt. Karl Flynn, an infantry officer and recent graduate from NPS in computer science.

Flynn and two fellow Marines – Capt. Harrison Rashley, also an infantry officer and computer science student, and Maj. Steven Anderson, a reconnaissance officer and space systems operations student – brought a wealth of recent operational experience to the table at the WIC Workshop.

“We all have fairly significant experience in the Pacific and understand the greater sense of urgency and have a bigger respect for the holistic problem because we’ve lived it, especially deploying on a (Marine Expeditionary Unit) with the Chinese following you in and out of port,” Rashley said.

“Being involved with the Workshop to help inform future amphibious concepts was good because we were able to bring our current experience and think about the things that we want to have in the future, and then also be challenged by people that are in industry and the architectural engineers to tell us whether or not this is actually possible,” he continued.

Over the course of the workshop, the team generated two innovative concepts to support future amphibious operations: a Highly Distributable Rapid Assault (HiDRA) family of ship-to-shore connectors supporting transport and landing force defense, and a network of autonomous surface, subsurface and aerial vehicles (UxVs).

“Our idea for HiDRA was basically to take all the supplies that we needed for conducting amphibious operations and, instead of putting them all in a big gray-hull amphibious ship, putting them all in small transports that are either hard to detect or really, really fast and then infiltrating the supplies with unmanned underwater vehicles that move to whatever landing site we’ve selected and loiter on the bottom waiting for the landing force,” explained Flynn.

Wing-in-ground effect craft, capable of a speed of a couple of hundred knots, would then proceed to the objective to deliver the landing force, which could immediately move out without having to wait for follow-on supplies.

Separately, the UxV network would assist the Marines in getting to shore and engaging the enemy.

“We were thinking of an architecture that supports getting amphibious ships to a point where they can safely drop things off,” Rashley said. “Essentially, you’d have a sensing force and a shooting force arrayed in time and space that allows your decision-makers to make a decision based on the enemy’s location and actions.”

“The network would be connected by different nodes that would allow us to maintain constant communication,” he continued. “The end state would be that the full formation is more survivable, and we can get it to where we need it to be.”

Since September, research has been led by members of MCWL and Naval Surface Warfare Center Carderock, which continues to refine concepts that support 21st Century Amphibious Operations.

NPS students conducted a follow-on wargame to provide insights about the potential relationships between stand-in and amphibious forces. The primary lesson learned from that event was that there does not appear to be a “one size fits all” command and control (C2) template for stand-in forces operating with distinctly amphibious forces. The wargame deepened MCWL’s understanding of how certain C2 relationships are more suitable in given situations.

In addition to conducting service-level amphibious operations, MCWL continued to broaden stakeholder engagement briefs and held a tabletop exercise at the Marine Corps Combat Development Command with liaison officers from the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, Italy, Israel, Japan, the Republic of Korea, Singapore, Australia and Canada.

MCWL also hosted a wargame in early March to explore further components of 21st Century Amphibious Operations. The team is using the results of the wargame to create a foundational model that they can use to assess trade-offs of different ship capabilities and their impact on operational effectiveness in potential excursions.

Some proposed details to the concept’s requirements were discussed during the WIC Workshop, according to Matt Van Echo, senior military operations analyst at the Future Concepts and Operational Planning section of MCWL.

“For MCWL Concepts, the WIC Workshop served as a venue to socialize ideas and receive broadly informed feedback,” he said. “In the lifecycle of a concept, this portion of the process is called ‘development’ and involves curating a body of information that validates or invalidates the hypothesis of the concept.”

“The learning generated by the WIC Workshop showed us some opportunities to pursue new ways of approaching amphibious operations with a system of emerging technology like unmanned systems,” Van Echo added.

Building on these results, the 2024 WIC Workshop, scheduled for Sept. 23-26, will focus on challenges to “Non-Permissive Global Sea Control” and related issues essential to the Navy’s wartime mission where control of operational maritime environments is necessary to meet integrated naval and joint campaign objectives.

The year-long theme was requested by OPNAV N72 and will strive to answer the design challenge: “How might emerging technologies, existing capabilities, and new operational force employment create opportunities to enhance the Navy’s ability to deter adversaries, or ensure use of the maritime domain in non-permissive environments?”

The 2024 WIC will cultivate fresh ideas and concepts from multidisciplinary teams from across academia, industry, and the military, both U.S. and international. Ten potential lines of effort have already been identified, including Maritime Domain Awareness (MDA) for Sea Control, Logistics to and in the Weapons Engagement Zone (WEZ), Expeditionary Advanced Base Operations (EABO) for Sea Control, Counter Sea Denial, and Command and Control (C2) for Decision Advantage.

This year’s theme is particularly significant, noted Cmdr. Chris O’Connor, NPS Logistics Chair and NWSI Futures Group coordinator.

“It will inform ongoing fleet design efforts for the U.S. Navy in this era of Great Power competition and rapid technological change,” he said.

Defense News: Chief of Naval Operations Attends WARCOM ‘24

Source: United States Navy

Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) Adm. Lisa Franchetti attended the Warfare Commander’s conference (WARCOM) held at the Naval Aviation Warfare Development Center (NAWDC) in Fallon, Nevada, on August 19-20, 2024. This critical event united top warfighters to present, discuss, and refine the latest innovations and tactical strategies in Naval operations.

WARCOM provides a structured and dynamic platform for collaboration among leaders in Aviation, Surface, and Information Warfare. The conference is designed to include a wide array of commanders, such as those from Strike Groups, Air Wings, Information Warfare units, Type Wings, Destroyer Squadrons, Amphibious Squadrons, as well as Commanding Officers of CVNs and ships. The event also integrates representation from Numbered Fleets, OPNAV, and acquisition sectors, ensuring a holistic approach to Naval warfare.

“WARCOM is all about the highest levels of advanced warfighting in all domains from space to the sea bed floor,” said Vice Adm. Dan Cheever, Commander, Naval Air Forces. “We are thinking, acting and operating differently to preserve the peace, respond in crisis and win decisively in combat. It is our free thinking, our tactical and operational excellence that will prove decisive.”

Adm. Franchetti underscored the pivotal role of WARCOM ‘24, emphasizing its importance in bringing together diverse expertise from across the Navy’s operational spectrum. This year’s conference aims to fortify the U.S. Navy’s position as the world’s leading fighting force by fostering a comprehensive and integrated approach to warfare and highlight the significance of leveraging collective knowledge and strategies to stay ahead in a rapidly evolving tactical environment.

“As the Navy’s center of excellence for advanced tactics and combat training, Naval Aviation Warfighting Development Center (NAWDC) remains focused on developing the most knowledgeable, competent and proficient Naval warfighters in order to compete and win in an ever evolving strategic landscape,” said Rear Adm. Mike Spencer, Commander, Naval Aviation Warfighting Development Center. “The Fallon Range Training Complex and the NAWDC staff and facilities provide a second to none, cutting-edge training environment that will always ensure our Navy prevails throughout the spectrum of competition, crisis and conflict.  NAWDC’s hosting of WARCOM serves as a pinnacle event to advance Navy warfighting across all warfare competencies.”

A key focus of WARCOM ‘24 is the development and enhancement of the Navy’s warfighting ecosystem. This ecosystem encompasses the full range of Naval warfare capabilities—surface, aviation, subsurface, information, and special operations—ensuring they work seamlessly together to provide a cohesive and formidable operational force. By integrating various domains of warfare, the conference aims to create synergies that enhance overall effectiveness and adaptability in complex and contested environments.

Vice Adm. Mike Vernazza, Commander, Naval Information Forces and the Navy’s IBoss, explained how Information Warfare underpins this ecosystem.

“The Navy’s warfighting ecosystem depends on a robust constellation of capabilities – all enabled by Information Warfare,” said Vernazza. “IW’s pillars of Assured Command and Control, Battlespace Awareness, and Integrated Fires are foundational to every single warfighting area in the high-end fight.” 

Adm. Franchetti stressed the importance of utilizing all aspects of Naval warfare to ensure an effective, integrated, and lethal force. Her direction was centered on maintaining the Navy’s edge against increasingly sophisticated adversaries through a unified approach that leverages the full spectrum of naval capabilities.

“Bringing together warfighters from all communities in Fallon this year reflects the changing character of war and enhances our ability to integrate and accelerate efforts across tactical and operational levels of warfighting. As warfare evolves, so must the Navy,” said Franchetti “Our ability to work with the Joint Force in a warfighting ecosystem, enables us to achieve compounding effects that confound and degrade adversaries’ ability to sense and make sense of the information environment, allowing us to maneuver our strengths against their weaknesses.”

Adm. Franchetti emphasized the need for a unified and integrated approach to achieve superior operational outcomes and adapt to emerging threats.

WARCOM ‘24 is instrumental in aligning Navy leaders with cutting-edge training, operational readiness, and emerging tactics, while also addressing theater-specific requirements. The conference’s focus on enhancing the Navy’s warfighting ecosystem highlights the importance of integration and collaboration in maintaining a strategic advantage and ensuring continued excellence in naval operations.

This was Franchetti’s first time attending WARCOM as CNO.   

Defense News: SECNAV Del Toro meets with Minister of Foreign Affairs, Industry and Trade of the Faroe Islands Høgni Hoydal

Source: United States Navy

Edinburgh, SCOTLAND – Secretary of the Navy Carlos Del Toro met with Minister of Foreign Affairs, Industry and Trade of the Faroe Islands Høgni Hoydal, Aug. 15.

The leaders discussed shared security interests in the Arctic Circle, including strategic competition, climate change, fisheries management, and strategic transit routes across the GIUK Gap.  Noting release of the U.S. Department of Defense Arctic Strategy in July, Secretary Del Toro added that the Navy’s forthcoming Arctic strategy would support the DoD strategy across the maritime domain.

Secretary Del Toro thanked Minister Hoydal for his continued support for U.S. Navy submarine port visits to the Faroe Islands, most recently with USS Albany’s (SSN 753) visit in July.     

Secretary Del Toro invited Minister Hoydal to visit him at the Pentagon in Washington D.C.