(photo from Jane's)
SUBIC BAY,
This is the first stop in the Philippines
for Fort Worth ,
which is currently on her maiden 16-month rotational deployment in support of
the Indo-Asia-Pacific Rebalance.
“While this is a brief visit for Fort Worth, the ship will
return to the Philippines later this summer to participate in Cooperation Afloat
Readiness and Training 2015 with the Republic of Philippines Navy,” said Cmdr.
Matthew Kawas, Fort Worth Crew 103 commanding officer.
Throughout the summer and fall, Fort Worth will take part in most of the 2015
CARAT exercise series. In its 21st year, CARAT is an annual, bilateral exercise
series with the US Navy, US Marine Corps and the armed forces of nine partner
nations including, Bangladesh, Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, the
Republic of the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Timor-Leste.
Fast, agile and mission-focused, littoral combat ships are
designed to operate in near-shore environments and employ modular mission
packages that can be configured for surface warfare, mine countermeasures or
anti-submarine warfare.
Fort Worth will employ the surface warfare mission package
for her entire deployment, augmenting her 57mm gun and rolling airframe missile
launcher with two 30mm guns, two 11-meter rigid-hull inflatable boats, and two
six-member maritime security boarding teams.
Enhancing the SUW mission package is the embarked aviation
detachment from Helicopter Maritime Squadron 35, the Navy's first composite
expeditionary helicopter squadron, which consists of one MH-60R Sea Hawk
helicopter and one MQ-8B Fire Scout unmanned aircraft system. The Fire Scout
complements the MH-60R by extending the HSM-35's range and endurance, enhancing
maritime domain awareness.
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/109968/american-combat-ship-uss-fort-worth-stops-in-subic-for-resupply-refueling
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