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Resistance See other Resistance Articles Title: Sailors driving the McCain were not qualified to be on watch, Navy says The battered McCain arrives in port. Severe deficiencies in training and fundamentals on the part of watch-standers have been blamed for the Navy's recent fatal collisions. (U.S. Navy photo by Grady T. Fontana/Released) Five minutes before the guided missile destroyer McCain collided with a commercial vessel in August, McCains commanding officer felt the helmsman was having difficulty steering the ship and controlling its speed normal duties for the watch station. The skipper then ordered the officer of the deck to change to the ships steering configuration so that another sailor could step in and help a maneuver called splitting the watch. But instead of fixing the problem, the helmsmens failure to properly carry out the procedure plunged the bridge into chaos and put the ship into a sharp turn that ultimately caused the collision. Ten sailors died as a result of that collision. The Navys accident report, released Thursday, called splitting the watch an abnormal operating condition, but multiple Navy experts tell Navy Times that its a job a properly trained and qualified bridge team should have been able to handle without incident. Yet McCains bridge team was neither experienced nor qualified to the level they should have been to be steaming a warship through crowded waters, and the Navys report acknowledged as much, blaming the failures on the bridge teams insufficient local training and qualifications. Thats because multiple members of the bridge team on watch at the time of the collision were temporarily assigned from the cruiser Antietam and had never officially qualified to operate the bridge equipment on board McCain. The report noted that the differences between the two ships steering systems were significant, but none of the watch-standers were given any training to learn the new system. Sign up for the Navy Times Daily News Roundup Don't miss the top Navy stories, delivered each afternoonSubscribe Multiple bridge watch standers lacked a basic level of knowledge on the steering control system, in particular the transfer of steering and thrust control between stations, the Navys report concluded, placing the fault squarely on the ships watch-stander training and qualification program. Its a common thread between both the destroyer Fitzgeralds collision in June and the McCain collision: A lack of training on key equipment and a weak understanding of ship operating fundamentals, which ultimately led to failures that killed, in total, 17 sailors. The Navys report on its own internal review found this to be a common factor in all four of the major mishaps in the Japan-based 7th fleet, which included the Fitzgerald and McCain collisions as well as the grounding of the cruiser Antietam in Tokyo Bay in January and the cruiser Lake Champlains collision with a South Korean fishing boat in May. In each of the four mishaps, the qualification of individuals for specific watchstations did not translate to proficiency to safely execute the mission, according to the review that was conducted by Fleet Forces Command commander Adm. Phil Davidson. Maybe todays Navy is just not very good at driving ships Maybe todays Navy is just not very good at driving ships The two collisions and a total of 17 sailors lost at sea this summer have raised concerns about whether this generation of surface fleet officers lack the basic core competency of their trade. By: Mark D. Faram Many believe those shortfalls in training are rooted in decisions made years before the crashes. The leadership of the surface Navy 15 years ago began to cut training, said retired Navy Cmdr. Kirk Lippold, who commanded the guided-missile destroyer Cole. The result is that today, they dont emphasize training. So consequently these commanding officers at sea are in the awkward position that they literally dont know what they dont know. On board the Fitzgerald, investigators determined the ships officers didnt fully comprehend the International Regulations for Preventing Collisions colloquially known as the rules of the road that define international norms for how ships should interact at sea. Retired Navy Capt. Rich Hoffman, who commanded both the frigate DeWert and the cruiser Hue City, acknowledged that being a professional mariner goes well beyond knowing the rules of the road. But without that basic knowledge, its nearly impossible for crews to safely perform complex operations in highly trafficked areas. Ultimately its the captain who is responsible for that lack of knowledge, but it goes much further than that, Hoffman said. We dont put people in airplanes and drive them around until they have ground school, and the surface warfare community doesnt have a ground school. And if we dont know what were doing on the most basic of levels, were a danger to ourselves and those around us, he said in an interview. But the problems on Fitzgerald went deeper than that. The report found that watch team members were not familiar with basic radar fundamentals, impeding effective use. The end result was that watch team members responsible for radar operations failed to properly tune and adjust radars to maintain an accurate picture of other ships in the area. The report also concluded that the command didnt foster a culture of critical self-assessment. In fact, the Fitzgeralds crew had reported a near collision just weeks before the one that killed seven sailors, but that was never fully evaluated by the commands leadership, the report said. No efforts were made to identify that incidents root causes. This negligence indicates that command leadership was not aware that the ships daily standards of performance had degraded to an unacceptable level, the report said. Meanwhile, on the McCain, the chaos caused by splitting the control of steering and throttle in the final moments before the collision was both a lack of judgment on the part of the commanding officer and also a training failure. Maneuvering during a loss of steering is something good bridge teams train regularly to handle. But on McCain, the order plunged the bridge into chaos. According to the Fleet Forces Comprehensive Review of all the 7th fleet incidents, the commanding officer on the bridge saw the helmsman struggling to maintain both the steering and throttle for the ships two shafts. The CO gave the officer of the deck an order to split the helm which was relayed to the helm by the conning officer. The move should have been simple, electronically transferring control of the ships throttles to the another console a few feet to his right, a watch station known as lee helm. But the transfer wasnt performed properly and mistakenly sent the steering control to the lee helm, too. The resulting chaos began when the helmsmen, unaware of the transfer error, announced that hed lost steering. They tried to transfer the ships steering to another location in the back of the ship, but that station was unable to override what was happening on the bridge. Amid chaos on the bridge, the watch team transferred the steering control between various bridge consoles five times in the moments leading up to the collision, the Navy report said. Control over the ships two major propellers ended up being split between two different consoles. When one of the helmsman reacted to throttle control orders to slow the ship, the sailor was unaware he was only controlling the port shaft, so the slowing of only the starboard-side engine acted like a rudder turn and turned the ship sharply into the path of the commercial vessel, which McCain had just passed. The report discovered that even the most senior officer responsible for maintaining training standards didnt understand how to properly transfer control of steering or throttle functions between watch station consoles, nor did the sailors instructing those operating the system at the time of the collision. Personnel assigned to ensure these watch standers were trained had an insufficient knowledge to effectively maintain appropriate rigor in the qualification program, the report said. Further complicating the situation was the fact that some of the sailors on the watch team werent officially part of the ships crew, but were temporarily assigned from the cruiser Antietam to get more experience while their ship was being repaired after running aground. The Comprehensive Review said those bridge team members included the junior officer of the deck, the boatswains mate of the watch and the lee helmsman. Both the junior officer of the deck and the boatswains mate of the watch were not actually qualified to be standing watch that morning. Though the watch bill listed them as qualified, the dates associated with their qualifications were, in fact, the dates they reported to the McCain, and they had not done any re-qualifying since. The exception was the lee helmsman, who did qualify for his position within a few weeks of arriving on the McCain. Both the report and comprehensive review noted there are significant differences between the steering control systems of both ships. Chief of Naval Operations Adm John Richardson, at a press conference on Nov. 2, identified this as a key contributor to the collision because those watch- standers werent given any kind of training. The requisite training and qualification for the systems that are on that receiving command have got to be in place to ensure that before they operate the equipment that they are trained, qualified and certified to do so, accounting for any differences in configuration between the two commands, Richardson said. That was a gap on the John S. McCain. They did not do any kind of rigorous step to ensure that those watch-standers from Antietam were qualified on the equipment on the John S. McCain, and that ended up contributing to the confusion that led to the collision, the CNO said. Though the issues identified in the report are local command culture and climate issues, Lippold said the root causes leading to these gaps and shortfalls go much deeper. These skippers that we send out there, while they have 17 or 18 years of experience before they ever get to these ships, they are not receiving the mentorship, leadership or the time at sea necessary to train their crews to be able to run these drills to be able to do the routine things to operate their ship, Lippold said. Theyve never experienced an in-depth, across-the-board training program in port and underway that would build that foundation of experience that would allow them to command their ships safely. And its something the Navy needs to focus on because not doing it is costing lives. 6.7K About this Author About Mark D. Faram Mark D. Faram is a senior writer and covers personnel, cultural and historical issues for Navy Times. Faram joined the Navy Times in 1992. From 1996-2000 he was a staff photographer for all the Military Times, before returning to writing in 2001. A nine-year active duty Navy veteran, Faram served from 1978 to 1987 as a Navy Diver and photographer Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Ada (#0)
All those words mentioning failure to understand their jobs and making mistakes while trying to learn seem to focus on the duty officer and everyone under him,and NOT ONE WORD OF CONDEMNATION for the ship commander. What ever happened to the concept of "I am in charge,and the buck stops here!"?? Naval officers were the most anal holes in the entire US Military,and wouldn't hesitate an instant to throw each other under the bus,unless one of them was a Admirals son a certain ship has been named after. WHO was the CO of the ship when this happened,and who is he related to? Or he is a cross-dressing half-black and half-Eskimo left-handed cross-eyed transgender with a clubfoot and a learning disability that is above criticism? Or all of the above? I can guarantee you that ANY ship commander that allowed this to happen in the 1960's or earlier would already be wearing civilian clothes when the ship got to home port and he disembarked for the last time. He would have already received a message while still at sea,and already written his letter of resignation from the Naval Service before the ship docked. It was either that or face a court-martial and be booted out of the Navy and lose his retirement pay and benefits. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ In the entire history of the world,the only nations that had to build walls to keep their own citizens from leaving were those with leftist governments.
The report discovered that even the most senior officer responsible for maintaining training standards didnt understand how to properly transfer control of steering or throttle functions between watch station consoles, nor did the sailors instructing those operating the system at the time of the collision. I am willing to bet that this problem is not an isolated problem, but exists throughout the navy in many technical fields. I'm reminded of the patrol boat sailors that were captured after drifting into Iranian waters. They readily told the Iranians the passwords for their computers. The US navy, and perhaps the entire military is simply not serious.
That would be a conclusion, and could exceed the scope of a report that dwells on the facts of what happened. It seems clear to me that if this problem exists on more than one ship, that the blame is higher up. Seems the navy agrees, as they sacked a higher up over these incidents.
The US navy, and perhaps the entire military is simply not serious. I understand that training is poor--seems they don't even know the rules of the road. Celestial navigation, for instance, is no longer taught. Everyingthing is done by computer programs.
Could be. Scuttlebutt is that affirmative action outranks ability in today's navy. Whoever the skipper was, not only was he dismissed but the 7th fleet rear admiral was also given his walking papers.
The U.S. Navy is agitprop for gay porn. All else is rubbish, including their laughable slogan "A Global Force For Good".
With the exception of Whites, the rule among the peoples of the world, whether residing in their homelands or settled in Western democracies, is ethnocentrism and moral particularism: they stick together and good means what is good for their ethnic group." It's not scuttlebutt in the Navy,the army,the USMC,the USAF,or even the USCG. I know of at least one difficult training class in the army back in the 1990's where minority students,specifically blacks,were not allowed to be flunked out. If you flunked them,they were sent to take the class again with a training cadre reserved for this purpose that were all black themselves. No white students and no white instructors. YOU figure it out. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ In the entire history of the world,the only nations that had to build walls to keep their own citizens from leaving were those with leftist governments.
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