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Tight-knit Trident Submariners Conduct Strategic Deterrence Missions
By Gerry J. Gilmore American Forces Press Service
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WASHINGTON, Feb. 25, 2009 – Somewhere in the Atlantic Ocean last week,
sailors aboard the Trident strategic missile submarine USS Maryland
prepared to start a series of underwater practice maneuvers known as
“angles and dangles.”
 The
USS Maryland’s “Gold” crew executive officer, Navy Lt. Cmdr. Louis J.
Springer, takes a look through the vessel’s periscope, Feb. 17, 2009.
DoD photo by Gerry J. Gilmore (Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available. |
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The Maryland’s captain, Navy Cmdr. Jeffrey M. Grimes, and his chief of
the boat and senior enlisted leader, Master Chief Petty Officer Michael
C. McLauchlan, intently observed the actions of the officers and
enlisted crew in the control room as the vessel silently tilted
downward.
Trident strategic deterrent submarines -- nicknamed “Boomers” -- carry as many as 24 Trident II D-5 nuclear ballistic missiles.
“We’re
there on the front line, ready to go,” Grimes said. Important missions,
he said, are “happening every day in the deep, blue ocean.”
Tridents
are nuclear-powered, Ohio-class submarines. At 560 feet long and 42
feet wide, they are the largest submarines in the U.S. Navy’s
inventory.
Meanwhile, in the control room, Petty Officer 3rd
Class Lamar Johnson, 23, sits calmly at the helmsman’s station as he
adroitly manipulates the yoke control that adjusts the submarine’s
depth and direction. At about 400 feet under the waves, the Maryland
leveled off, then began ascending.
After the exercise,
Johnson, who hails from Chicago, said piloting the Maryland underwater
is a matter of “paying attention, making sure you’re tracking the
gauges.”
Sailors volunteer for submarine duty and are among the top performers across the Navy, McLauchlan, a 26-year veteran, said.
“There
is a pretty rigid screening process to get a guy to come into the
submarine force,” McLauchlan said. New submariners are subject to
stringent qualification criteria when they report to their first boat,
he said, while submarine veterans experience continued certifications
during their careers.
During their first year while assigned
to their first submarine, enlisted members are required to earn the
coveted silver “dolphins” pin that says they’ve learned how to function
as a team member aboard their boat. Dolphins-pin recipients also must
demonstrate knowledge of basic submarine operations, as well as the
ability to work as a team member to put out fires and control flooding.
“They kill themselves to try to get those dolphins, because
it’s very important to them,” McLauchlan said of enlisted sailors
aboard their first submarine. “And we make it very special when we
present them. Once they get those dolphins, it’s just the start for
more and more for these kids.”
Commissioned-officer submariners also must qualify to wear golden dolphins.
About
a week earlier, the Maryland’s “Gold” crew under Grimes’ command
embarked on its 53rd patrol from its home port at Naval Submarine Base
King’s Bay, Ga. Trident submarines have two crews, called Blue and
Gold, which rotate patrols. One crew is at sea for 60 to 90 days, while
the other trains ashore. In this way, the vessels can be employed at
sea 70 percent of the time, when not undergoing scheduled maintenance
in port.
The USS Maryland is “a platform that is undetectable,
that cannot be found, and yet, is in constant connection with the
national command authorities,” Grimes explained. The submarine, he
added, possesses “the stealth and power needed to respond to a global
crisis with devastating force.”
The Maryland’s crew routinely
performs damage control exercises –- consisting of flooding and fire
scenarios -- as well as mock battle and strategic-deterrence drills
during its patrols, so that if the real event should ever occur, “we’re
ready to go,” Grimes said.
As the Maryland’s commander, it’s important to impart to the crew “how they fit together on the ship as a team,” Grimes said.
“They
realize the mission is relevant and they feel the importance of their
job,” Grimes said. “They leave their families at home. They work long
hours for me when we have the boat in for refit.
“It’s all
about the mission,” Grimes said, adding that Trident submarine sailors
stay in the Navy “because they like what they do, and they are true
patriots.”
The Navy’s attack and strategic-deterrent submarine
force “is safe, secure and reliable and ready to perform its mission,
24/7,” said Navy Capt. Kevin R. Brenton, who was along for part of the
Maryland’s patrol and is preparing to take command of Submarine
Squadron 20 at King’s Bay.
“We couldn’t do it without the
extraordinary young men that man these submarines,” Brenton said.
“They’re America’s best and brightest.”
Besides its 160-member
crew, the Maryland also was carrying a group of journalists, who early
on Feb. 15 had been conveyed by tugboat to the Maryland for a two-day
orientation tour. During the journalists’ visit, the submarine would be
submerged for 24 hours.
A nuclear-powered Trident submarine
like the Maryland produces its own drinking water and oxygen, and,
therefore can remain submerged nearly indefinitely, Grimes said,
needing to surface only to take on food.
The Maryland’s lead
culinary specialist, Chief Petty Officer Tony L. Thompson, 40, said he
and his staff prepare food for about 120 crew members during the course
of the day. Submariners, he said, enjoy the best food in the Navy.
“We
do all we can to make them comfortable down here,” Thompson said of his
team’s efforts to provide the best meals possible for the Maryland’s
crew.
Thompson, a 20-year Navy veteran, said he enjoys the
“close-knitted” camaraderie that’s part of duty aboard submarines such
as the Maryland.
“I could walk around and talk to anybody
around here,” said Thompson, as he enjoyed a plate of prime rib.
“Everything is ‘one’ crew … because you’ve got to depend on everybody.
“I’m a cook,” Thompson said, “but at the same time, I can go and put out a fire.”
Near
the end of the journalists’ visit, the submarine surfaced to make its
rendezvous with the tugboat that would return them to shore.
A
cloudless, bright-blue sky stretched across the horizon as Lt. j.g.
Eric S. Spurling, Petty Officer 2nd Class Kyle G. Fulmer and Seaman
DeAngelo Jackson Adams pulled watch duty on the bridge atop the
Maryland’s sail panel, or uppermost structure. The day’s temperature
was unseasonably mild.
Submariners belong to “a real tight
community” of sailors who perform a vital, unique mission, said Fulmer,
23, from Dillon, S.C.
“You have to be able to trust everybody
with your life. … Any time, anything could go wrong, and if you’re
beside it, you have to be ready to act on it,” Fulmer said.
Adams,
a 21-year-old sailor from Detroit, cracked a sliver of a smile at his
machine-gun station as the breeze batted at his orange windbreaker.
Adams said he loves the sailor’s life aboard the Maryland.
“The mission of being out to sea, under water, is just cool, you know?” he said. |
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