Navy to Commission Guided-Missile Destroyer Paul Ignatius

The future guided-missile destroyer Paul Ignatius is launched at first light on Nov. 12, 2016, at Huntington Ingalls Industries Ingalls Shipbuilding in Pascagoula, Mississippi. U.S. Navy/Andrew Young for HII

ARLINGTON, Va. — The U.S. Navy will
commission its newest Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyer, the future
USS Paul Ignatius (DDG 117), during a 10 a.m. EDT ceremony on July 27 at Port
Everglades in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, according to a Defense Department release.

The ship is named in honor of Paul
Robert Ignatius, who served in the Navy during World War II and later
during the administration of President Lyndon B. Johnson as assistant secretary
of defense for installations and logistics from 1964 to 1967 and secretary of
the Navy from 1967 to 1969. 

Current Navy Secretary Richard V.
Spencer, who is also performing the duties of deputy secretary of defense, will
deliver the commissioning ceremony’s principal address. Ignatius’ wife, Nancy,
who passed away earlier this year, is the ship’s sponsor. Elisa Ignatius,
granddaughter of Nancy Ignatius, will serve as the ship sponsor’s
representative. Elisa Ignatius will honor naval tradition when she gives the
first order to “man our ship and bring her to life!”

“The future USS Paul Ignatius
stands as proof of what the teamwork of all our people — civilian, contractor
and military — can accomplish together,” Spencer said. “From the
start of the acquisition process, to the keel laying and christening, to
today’s commissioning and the many missions she will fulfill going forward,
this destroyer enhances our capabilities for air, undersea, surface, strike and
ballistic missile defense.”

The future USS Paul Ignatius will be the 67th Arleigh Burke-class destroyer and is one of 21 ships under contract for the DDG 51 program. Arleigh Burke-class destroyers conduct a variety of missions from peacetime presence and humanitarian assistance/disaster relief to sea control and power projection.

Built in the Flight IIA configuration, the ship delivers rapid reaction time, high firepower and improved electronic warfare capabilities. The ceremony, using hashtag #USSPaulIgnatius, can be viewed on the Navy Live blog here.




Coast Guard Interdicts 12 Chinese Migrants, 2 Suspected Smugglers

The Coast Guard Cutter Paul Clark (WPC-1101) crew interdict the motor yacht Carefree with 14 people aboard during a patrol and safely embarked the 12 Chinese migrants and two potential smugglers. U.S. Coast Guard/Cutter Paul Clark

MIAMI — The Coast Guard interdicted 12 Chinese migrants and two
suspected smugglers on July 23 about 13 miles east
of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, the Coast Guard 7th District said in a release.

The Coast Guard Cutter Paul Clark (WPC-1101) crew located the motor yacht, Carefree, with 14 people aboard during a patrol and safely embarked the 12 Chinese migrants and two potential smugglers. 

The two suspected smugglers were taken into U.S. Department of Homeland Security custody and the 12 migrants were transferred to U.S. Customs and Border Protection Air and Marine Operations custody.

“The Coast Guard maintains a focused and coordinated effort with multiple agency assets to interdict criminals in any attempt to unlawfully smuggle migrants by sea to the United States,” said Lt. Ray Lopez, chief of enforcement at Coast Guard Sector Miami. “Migrants should not attempt to smuggle themselves into the country. They not only risk going to jail but also endanger their lives by entrusting smugglers to bring them across the water with little or no lifesaving equipment on board.”




Cutter Healy Gets Underway for Months-Long Arctic Patrol

Coast Guard Cutter Healy underway. U.S. Coast Guard

SEATTLE — U.S.
Coast Guard Cutter Healy (WAGB-20) departed for a months-long deployment to the
Arctic Ocean on July 22, the Coast Guard Pacific Area said in a release.

The cutter
will support multiple science missions as well as Operation Arctic Shield, the
service’s annual operation to execute Coast Guard missions, enhance maritime
domain awareness, strengthen partnerships and build preparedness, prevention,
and response capabilities across the Arctic domain.

As the nation’s
primary maritime presence in the polar regions, the Coast Guard advances U.S.
national interests through a unique blend of polar operational capability,
regulatory authority, and international leadership across the full spectrum of
maritime governance.

Earlier
this year the Coast Guard released the Arctic Strategic Outlook, reaffirming
the service’s commitment to American leadership in the region through
partnership, unity of effort, and continuous innovation.

“While we
focus our efforts on creating a peaceful and collaborative environment in the
Arctic, we’re also responding to the impacts of increased competition in this
strategically important region,” Coast Guard Commandant Adm. Karl Schultz said.
“Our continued presence will enable us to reinforce positive opportunities and
mitigate negative consequences today and tomorrow.”

A crewmember aboard Healy handles a line in preparation to get underway from their pier in Seattle on July 22. Healy is one of two Coast Guard icebreakers and is the only military ship dedicated to conducting research in the Arctic. U.S. Coast Guard/Petty Officer 2nd Class Steve Strohmaier

The Coast
Guard has been a leader in the Arctic for over 150 years and the sole provider
of the nation’s polar icebreaking capability since 1965. Presently, the Coast
Guard maintains two icebreakers — Healy, a medium icebreaker, and Polar Star,
the only heavy U.S. icebreaker.

While the
Healy deploys annually to the Arctic, the 43-year-old Polar Star is the only
cutter capable of supporting Operation Deep Freeze, the annual mission to
maintain U.S. presence in Antarctica.

If a
catastrophic event, such as a shipboard fire or getting stuck in the ice, were
to strand the Healy in the Arctic or the Polar Star near Antarctica, the Coast
Guard is left without a self-rescue capability.

By
contrast, Russia currently operates more than 40 icebreakers — several of which
are nuclear-powered.

The Coast
Guard is seeking to increase its icebreaking fleet with six new polar security
cutters (PSC) to ensure continued national presence and access to the polar regions.

“The polar security cutters will support the full range of Coast Guard missions, to include search and rescue, law enforcement, environmental response, and national defense,” said Vice Adm. Linda Fagan, the Coast Guard’s Pacific Area commander. “This investment will enable America to project presence in the polar regions.”

In April, the Coast Guard awarded VT Halter Marine Inc. of Pascagoula, Mississippi, a contract for the design and construction of the Coast Guard’s lead PSC, which will be homeported in Seattle. The contract also includes options for the construction of two additional PSCs.




Sailors Use Augmented-Reality Gear to Train for Combat

Sailors assigned to the Center for Security Forces detachment in Chesapeake, Virginia, demonstrate the TRACER system. U.S. Navy/John F. Williams

ARLINGTON,
Va. — The Sailors file into the room, their weapons ready and their adrenaline
flowing. They operate as a team in a seamless manner. Their mission: to secure
an active-shooter situation and apprehend the holographic perpetrator. Commands
are given to the shooter, within the augmented-reality (AR) headset. The
shooter surrenders, and the Sailors’ mission is accomplished.

The Office
of Naval Research (ONR) Global TechSolutions program has teamed with Naval
Surface Warfare Center (NSWC) Dahlgren, U.S. Army Combat Capabilities
Development Command and two industry partners, Magic Leap Horizons and Haptech
Inc., to develop an AR training environment.

The Tactically
Reconfigurable Artificial Combat Enhanced Reality (TRACER) project was recently
tested at the Center for Security Forces (CENSECFOR) Detachment Chesapeake, on
Naval Support Activity Northwest Annex, in Currituck County, North Carolina.

TechSolutions
is ONR Global’s rapid-response science and technology initiative that develops
prototype technologies, to address problems voiced by Sailors and Marines,
within about 12 months.

The TRACER
system consists of a Magic Leap One AR headset, a backpack processor and a
Haptech instrumented weapon, designed to deliver realistic recoil. TRACER uses
software developed by Magic Leap Horizons as part of the U.S. Army’s Augmented
Reality Dismounted Soldier Training (ARDST) project, providing advanced weapons
tracking and allowing trainers to create multiple and adaptable simulation
scenarios for security personnel to experience.

“Our
training system is built mostly from commercial-off-the-shelf products, so we
are using widely available gaming gear,” said Patrick Mead, TRACER project
lead from the Human Systems Research and Development branch at NSWC Dahlgren.

“All
of these technologies combine … to give us extremely accurate weapon and
movement tracking capabilities as well as highly immersive simulation visual,
auditory and haptic (relating to the sense of touch) feedback. Ultimately,
TRACER provides Sailors with dynamic, engaging and less predictable training
scenarios that would otherwise be too costly or time consuming to create in the
real world.”

“Our training system is built mostly from commercial-off-the-shelf products, so we are using widely available gaming gear.”

Patrick Mead, TRACER project lead, Human Systems Research and Development branch, NSWC Dahlgren.

The
mission at CENSECFOR is to train Sailors from divergent career fields in U.S.
Navy security force fundamentals, code of conduct, anti-terrorism and expeditionary
warfare training to achieve maritime-interdiction and irregular-warfare
superiority.

“We
can integrate this AR, virtual training environment into our existing curriculum,
and it allows us to be very reconfigurable,” said Cmdr. Kim Littel,
CENSECFOR’s director of training innovation. “We can go in and we can change
the scenarios, or we can change the opposition forces and the threat that they
pose.”

For
Sailors who often must train and remain proficient while at sea, flexibility is
crucial.

According to Littel, the necessary space required to conduct training operations on a ship is limited and the opportunity to conduct training without impeding on regular operations is scarce. TRACER will help mitigate those issues and help increase proficiency and currency in more expansive training scenarios.

“In an environment where we’re taking students from the fleet, from their primary jobs, to train them, we need to maximize the limited time we have to make them as proficient as possible,” Little said.

“This technology provides a huge advantage by being quickly adaptable to different scenarios, geographic locations and opposition forces. Using this technology, we can conduct training almost anywhere, anytime.”




Former PACFLEET Commander: FONOPs Should Be Consistent, Not Unique to China

WASHINGTON —
The previous commander of the U.S. Pacific Fleet said the United States should
conduct more freedom-of-navigation operations (FONOPs) and not limit them to
Chinese claims but include sailings through the disputed claims of other
nations as well.

“Specific to
the South China Sea, I think the United Sates should conduct FONOPS no less
than every four weeks and not sooner than four weeks of the last FONOPS and not
longer than six seeks of the previous one,” said retired Navy Adm. Scott Swift,
former commander of U.S. Pacific Fleet, the keynote speaker July 24 at the 9th
Annual South China Sea Conference sponsored by the Center for Strategic and
International Studies, a Washington think tank.

“Consistency
is important,” Swift said. “Right now, [the Defense Department] keeps track of
all the FONOPs. They’re passed over to the State Department, and the State
Department publishes once a year what we do globally. We need to publish those
FONOPs every three months.”

“I don’t
think that we should ever do a FONOP that is unique to the South China Sea,
that’s unique to China,” he said. “We should always include other countries to
point out that — I think it’s very important to maintain the position — that we
don’t take positions with respect to claims.”

Swift said
the United States “should be conducting more than 200 FONOPS a year globally.
We should stop saying that these challenges are unique to China. This is a
common issue: adherence to the rule-based order. If people disagree with the
positions being highlighted by the U.S. conducting freedom-of-navigation
operations, they are really done in the service of the State Department. It’s
up to the State Department through the ambassador to take the reasoning why we
did a FONOP to the country that’s being considered.”

He
highlighted the importance of each country making its own decision about how it
wants to highlight deviation from the international rules-based order.

“There are good friends of
the United States that are very concerned about the term ‘freedom of navigation
operations,’ he said. “They have another conceptual way to think about it and
we encourage it. There’s pressure that we bring on other countries that they
should be following our template. That’s not useful. We should be talking about
the rules-based order and asking amongst ourselves the view of common nations
and common concerns about how we can work together to highlight where actions
are deviating from those norms.”




Marine Infantry Battalion Becomes First Operational Unit to Receive JLTVs

James Geurts, assistant secretary of the U.S. Navy for research, development and acquisition, speaks to Marines while touring the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle fielding facility at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina. U.S. Marine Corps/Ashley Calingo

CAMP
LEJEUNE, N.C. — Program Executive Officer Land Systems is equipping the Marine Corps’
first infantry battalion — 3rd Battalion, 8th Marines, 2nd Marine Division — with
the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle, and U.S. Navy and Marine leadership visited to
witness the event.

“I am very
proud of the Joint Marine Corps and Army team whose mission-first approach and
close interaction with the end user has delivered our Marine operators the
JLTV,” said James Geurts, assistant Navy secretary for research, development and
Acquisition. “The fielding of these JLTVs provides our Marines the light
tactical vehicle capability needed to compete and win on the modern
battlefield.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V8pOOjWS3QI

Joining Geurts
for the July 18 tour at Camp Lejeune of the II Marine Expeditionary Force JLTV
fielding site were: Assistant Commandant of the Marine Corps Gen. Gary Thomas; Lt.
Gen. Charles Chiarotti, deputy commandant for installations and logistics; II
Marine Expeditionary Force Commander Lt. Gen. Brian Beaudreault; Michael
Stewart, deputy director for integrated warfare; John Garner, program executive
officer, Land Systems; and Marine Corps Systems Command Brig. Gen. Arthur
Pasagian.

The JLTV
family of vehicles is made up of four different variants: the utility variant;
general purpose vehicle; heavy guns carrier; and close combat weapons carrier.
All variants include multiple mission package configurations and provide
protected, sustained and networked mobility that balances payload, performance
and protection across the full range of military operations.

Geurts was joined at Camp Lejeune by Assistant Commandant of the Marine Corps Gen. Gary Thomas; Lt. Gen. Charles Chiarotti, deputy commandant for installations and logistics; II Marine Expeditionary Force Commander Lt. Gen. Brian Beaudreault; Michael Stewart, deputy director for integrated warfare; John Garner, program executive officer, Land Systems; and Marine Corps Systems Command Brig. Gen. Arthur Pasagian. U.S. Marine Corps/Ashley Calingo

Col.
Farrell Sullivan, chief of staff, 2nd Marine Division, spoke to Geurts on
behalf of the operating forces.

“I think
the battalion, like most battalions, are eager to get these out into the
field,” Sullivan said. “We’re excited about the additional capability [the
JLTV] brings and also for its ability to get Marines to where they need to be.”

Geurts,
Thomas, Chiarotti and Beaudreault then had the opportunity to speak to the
Marines of 3/8 operating forces while taking a closer look at the vehicle.

“We’re excited about the additional capability [the JLTV] brings and also for its ability to get Marines to where they need to be.”

Col. Farrell Sullivan, chief of staff, 2nd Marine Division

Of the
event, Geurts said, “It was an honor to hear directly from the Marines
operating these vehicles about how much of a capability leap it presents over
their aging legacy vehicles and the many ideas they have on how to leverage
them to enable new methods of mobility and expeditionary operations for the
future fight.”

The Marine
Corps is planning to field 15,390 JLTVs, replacing all High Mobility
Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicles in the Corps’ legacy fleet in a one-for-one swap.

PEO Land Systems began
delivery of the JLTV in February to the Corps’ schools of infantry and other
supporting units. The Light Tactical Vehicle program office at PEO Land Systems
will begin fielding the JLTV to First and Third Marine Division units by the
end of September.




Sea Machines, MARAD Partner to Demonstrate Autonomous Technology on Spill-Response Vessel

A Marine Spill Response Corp. vessel like the one that will be used in cooperation with the U.S. Maritime Administration to demonstrate Sea Machines Robotics’ autonomous oil-spill response technology. MSRC

BOSTON — Boston-based
Sea Machines Robotics has entered into a cooperative agreement with the U.S. Department
of Transportation’s Maritime Administration (MARAD) to demonstrate the ability
of Sea Machines’ autonomous technology in increasing the safety, response time
and productivity of marine oil-spill response operations, the company said July
24.

To make the
on-water exercises possible, Sea Machines will install its SM300
autonomous-command system aboard a skimming vessel owned by Marine Spill
Response Corp. (MSRC) and will train MSRC personnel to operate the system.
Then, on Aug. 21, Sea Machines and MSRC will execute simulated oil-spill
recovery exercises in the harbor of Portland, Maine, before an audience of
government, naval, international, environmental and industry partners.

The response
skimming vessel is manufactured by Kvichak Marine Industries of Seattle and is
equipped with a MARCO filter belt skimmer to recover oil from the surface of
the water. This vessel typically operates in coastal or near-shore areas. Once
installed, the SM300 will give the MSRC vessel these new capabilities:

•        Remote autonomous control from an
onshore location or secondary vessel

•        ENC-based mission planning

•        Autonomous waypoint tracking

•        Autonomous grid line tracking

•        Collaborative autonomy for multivessel
operations

•        Wireless remote payload control to
deploy onboard boom and other response equipment

•        Obstacle detection and collision
avoidance

“The ability to use autonomous technology … furthers our mission of response preparedness.”

John Swift, vice president of MSRC

Additionally,
Sea Machines enables minimally manned and unmanned autonomous operations. Such
configurations allow operators to respond to spill events 24 hours a day, seven
days a week depending on recovery conditions, even when crews are unavailable
or restricted. These configurations also reduce or eliminate exposure of
crewmembers to toxic fumes and other safety hazards.

“Autonomous technology has the power to not only help prevent vessel accidents that can lead to spills but can also facilitate better preparedness [and] aid in safer, efficient and effective clean-up,” said Michael G. Johnson, CEO of Sea Machines. “We look forward to working closely with MARAD and MSRC in these industry-modernizing exercises.”

“Our No. 1 priority is the safety of our personnel at MSRC,” said John Swift, vice president of MSRC. “The ability to use autonomous technology — allowing response operations to continue in an environment where their safety may be at risk — furthers our mission of response preparedness.”




Schiebel UAS Mobilized for Coast Guard Services for Croatian Agency

A Schiebel CAMCOPTER S-100 unmanned aerial system. Schiebel Group

VIENNA — Croatia’s
Maritime Safety Directorate issued the first mobilization request to the
European Maritime Safety Agency (EMSA) for CAMCOPTER S-100 maritime
surveillance services, according to Schiebel, provider of the UAS services.

Starting in
the summer of 2019, the service provision for Croatia will assist in maritime
Coast Guard functions such as search and rescue, monitoring and surveillance,
ship and port security, vessel traffic, environmental protection and response
and ship casualty assistance as well as accident and disaster response.

For these
purposes, the CAMCOPTER S-100 UAS will be based on the island of Brač and will
carry out regular patrolling flights, on-demand incident monitoring missions
and specific inspection operations.

EMSA awarded
the multiyear maritime surveillance contract for a vertical takeoff and landing
remotely piloted aircraft system to Schiebel last November. In execution of
this contract, Schiebel will provide simultaneous maritime surveillance
services to several European Union member states and EU bodies.

“The CAMCOPTER S-100 is the
perfect vertical takeoff and landing UAS to perform these Coast Guard
functions,” said Hans Georg Schiebel, chairman of the Schiebel Group. “Backed
by an impressive service record in the maritime domain, the S-100 has
established itself as the best choice whenever sophisticated maritime
surveillance is required.”




Navy Selects Lockheed as Future Frigate’s Combat Systems Integrator

MOORESTOWN,
N.J. — The U.S. Navy has selected Lockheed Martin as the combat system ship integration
and test agent for the Navy’s future Guided Missile Frigate ship program, the
FFG(X), the company said in a July 19 release.

The combat
system ship integration and test contract will ensure the overall integration
of the combat system elements into the FFG(X) design and validate the
installation through the completion of waterfront testing. The 10-year contract
will consist of one base year and nine option years’ worth up to $125 million.

“The U.S.
Navy will experience substantial efficiency by utilizing the existing
processes, tools and experience of the Lockheed Martin ship integration and
test team,” said Chris Minster, program director of Lockheed Martin Surface
Navy Integration Systems. “While minimizing ship impact and cost, our ship integration
and test team will enable the successful integration of the combat system
elements into the future frigate ship design.”

Lockheed has
more than 40 years of ship integration and test experience, including Aegis
Ticonderoga-class guided-missile cruisers and Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile
destroyers.

Lockheed Martin has delivered
and integrated Aegis and Aegis-based products on 126 platforms in eight
nations, with an additional 23 under construction or planned. Aegis and
Aegis-derived systems are in service in U.S. Navy cruisers, destroyers, littoral
combat ships, U.S. Coast Guard national security cutters and Aegis ashore
sites. The navies of Japan, Spain, Norway, the Republic of Korea and Australia
have also chosen Aegis to protect their nations.




Future USS Oakland Launched at Austal’s Alabama Facility

An illustration of the future USS Oakland. U.S. Navy

WASHINGTON
— The future USS Oakland (LCS 24) was launched July 21 at Austal USA’s ship
manufacturing facility in Mobile, Alabama, according to the Naval Sea System
Command’s Program Executive Office-Ships Unmanned and Small Combatants. This marked
the first time the ship floated in water as it is prepared for delivery next year.

The future
USS Oakland is the 12th of 19 Independence-variant littoral combat ships that
will join the fleet. Ship sponsor Kate Brandt, Google’s sustainability officer,
christened the vessel in Mobile on June 29. She previously welded her initials
onto a steel plate included in Oakland’s hull during a keel-laying ceremony last
July. Brandt is a recipient of the Distinguished Public Service Award, the
highest award the U.S. Navy can give to a civilian.

Four
additional LCSs are under various stages of construction at Austal’s Alabama
shipyard. The future USS Kansas City (LCS 22) is preparing for sea trials. The
future USS Mobile (LCS 26), Savannah (LCS 28) and Canberra (LCS 30) are under
construction, and Austal has four more LCSs under contract.

The future USS Oakland
honors the long-standing history its namesake city has with the Navy. It will
be the third naval ship to bear the city’s name. The first, commissioned in
1918, was largely used to transport cargo. The second USS Oakland was
commissioned in 1942 during the height of World War II. While in service for
just seven years, it was key in many anti-aircraft missions in places such as
Pearl Harbor, Marshall Islands, Pagan, Guam, Iwo Jima, Rota, Peleliu and
Okinawa. After the war, Oakland performed two duty patrols off the coast of
China before being decommissioned.