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Italian Navy Destroyer Caio Duilio Shoots Down Drone In Red Sea

This afternoon, implementing the principle of self-defense, the Italian Navy destroyer Caio Duilio shot down a drone in the Red Sea. The drone, with similar characteristics to those already used in previous attacks, was about 6 kilometers from the Italian ship, heading towards it.

Italian Navy destroyer Caio Duilio is one of two Andrea Doria-class air warfare destroyers. Image Italian Navy.

Currently in the area to ensure freedom of navigation and the security of trade routes, D554 Caio Duilio replaced Italian frigate Federico Martinengo in the context of Italian maritime surveillance operations in the Red Sea. The effort began at the end of December, following attacks by Houthi militiamen against traffic sailing in the Strait of Bab-el Mandeb.

“The terrorist attacks by the Houthis are a serious violation of international law and an attack on the security of maritime traffic on which our economy depends. These attacks are part of a hybrid war, which uses every possibility, not only military, to harm some countries and benefit others,” said the Minister of Defence, Guido Crosetto.

The Italian Navy combatant Caio Duilio is operating in the Red Sea to help protect international law and safeguard national maritime interests.

The ship is fitted with three 76 mm guns featuring the DART guided ammunition optimised for air defence, which were used in the engagement. Image Italian Navy.

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No details have been released about the engagement of the Italian Navy destroyer, except for the distance. Caio Duilio is fitted with three 76/62 mm Super Rapido guns designed for close range air defence (CIWS). The radar-guided Strales-configuration of the guns featuring the DART guided ammunition makes the system the weapon of choice used for the engagement. However, the drone was engaged by the Super Rapido with conventional rounds according to an interview given to an Italian TV station by the Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Antonio Tajani, yesterday.

The post Italian Navy Destroyer Caio Duilio Shoots Down Drone In Red Sea appeared first on Naval News.

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Navy destroyer returns to Japan after 4 years of stateside upgrades

The guided-missile destroyer USS McCampbell returns to Yokosuka Naval Base, Japan, on March 2, 2024. (Jennessa Davey/Stars and Stripes)

The guided-missile destroyer USS McCampbell returned to the 7th Fleet on Saturday after nearly four years of maintenance and upgrades in Oregon. Taylor Pascual, wife of Chief John David Pascual, a hospital corpsman, was among the family members who stood in the cold and waited for the ship to dock. “I’m very proud of him for being part of everything McCampbell is doing,” she said. The McCampbell becomes the 10th warship in Destroyer Squadron 15, the principal surface force for 7th Fleet and routinely the escorts for the Ronald Reagan Carrier Strike Group. The ship was assigned to Yokosuka from 2007 to 2020. It left for Portland, Oregon, in July 2020 for its mid-life modernization, including upgrades that fortified its “warfighting capability,” according to a news release Saturday from 7th Fleet. “We are excited for the opportunity to rejoin 7th Fleet and the forward-deployed ships in Yokosuka,” the McCampbell’s skipper, Cmdr. James Pierce III, said in the release. “Our Sailors have trained diligently over the past four years since our departure to prepare for our return to Japan.” Loved ones reunite as the guided-missile destroyer USS McCampbell returns to Yokosuka Naval Base, Japan, on March 2, 2024. (Jennessa Davey/Stars and Stripes) During its previous 13 years in Japan, the destroyer regularly steamed through the Taiwan Strait and took part in freedom-of-navigation operations near the Paracel Islands in the South China Sea. It also participated in disaster-relief efforts, including missions following a 2008 earthquake and tsunami off the coast of Indonesia and Operation Tomodachi after an earthquake and tsunami devasted northeastern Japan in 2011. After a monthlong “acclimation period,” the McCampbell will be fully capable of taking on missions in the Western Pacific, said Capt. Justin Harts, commander of Task Force 71 and Destroyer Squadron 15. JENNESSA DAVEY Jennessa Davey is a reporter and photographer at Yokosuka Naval Base, Japan, who enlisted in the Marine Corps in 2016. Jennessa was named the Marine Corps’ videographer of the year in 2018 and photographer of the year in 2019.


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New photos of fourth Chinese Navy’s Type 075 LHD floating -According to information published by Rupprecht Deino on February 27, 2024, new photos of the fourth Type 075 landing helicopter dock have been released, showing it floating.

Chinese PLA Navy’s fourth Type 075 landing helicopter dock. (Picture source: Ricky Un)

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BELLISSIMO – Check out this great image of the Italian Navy’s Mar Grande Naval Station, Taranto, taken on 23 June 2018.

 

The above includes closest to the camera, two Bergamini-class FREMM frigates–Alpino (F 594) and Luigi Rizzo Martinengo (F 592)— a Lupo-class frigate and an Andrea Doria-class destroyer to the left, both of Italy’s flattops (Cavour and Garibaldi) in the center, a Durand de la Penne-class destroyer being towed out, and an aging Maestrale-class frigate, in addition to a few misciloanius tugs, lighters, and yard craft.

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60 Years of Getting it Done – US Coast Guard disrupts trafficking, The 71-member crew of 210-foot U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Reliance (WMEC 615) returned to their homeport at Pensacola– where the aging class is being collected– on Saturday following a 57-day counterdrug patrol that ranged into the Eastern Pacific Ocean under 4th Fleet/JIATF-South control. And the 59-year-old (not a misprint) cutter bagged a narco sub, which continues to be a thing in those waters.

The crew of U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Reliance (WMEC 615) interdicts a low-profile vessel carrying more than $5 million in illicit narcotics in the Eastern Pacific Ocean, on Feb. 15, 2024. Patrolling in support of Joint Interagency Task Force-South, the Reliance crew stopped two drug trafficking ventures, detaining six suspected traffickers and preventing nearly 4,000 pounds of cocaine and 5,400 pounds of marijuana, worth more than $57 million, from entering the United States. (U.S. Coast Guard photo courtesy of Reliance)

Commissioned in Galveston in 1964 Reliance is the leader of her 16-ship class, of which four have been retired in recent years– only to see those old hulls transferred to overseas allies.

This black and white photo shows newly the commissioned Reliance (WMEC-615) in the mid-1960s with an HH-52 Sea Guard helicopter landing on its pad and davits down with one of its small boats deployed. Notice the lack of smokestack and paint scheme pre-dating the Racing Stripe or “U.S. Coast Guard” paint schemes. She has a 3″/50 forward as well as 20mm cannons for AAA work and weight and space for ASW Mousetraps, a towed sonar, and Mk.32 ASW tubes, although they were never fitted. U.S. Coast Guard photo.

As noted by the USCG:

In addition, the cutter made port calls in Ecuador, Costa Rica, Mexico, and Panama for the first time in the ship’s 59-year history. The cutter also crossed into the Southern Hemisphere, prompting a time-honored equatorial crossing tradition for the Reliance crew. Before returning to Pensacola, the crew conducted aviation training with aircraft from Coast Guard Aviation Training Center Mobile and steamed in formation with Coast Guard Cutter Diligence (WMEC 616) to commemorate the cutters’ upcoming 60th anniversaries this summer.

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Pentagon to lift Osprey flight ban after fatal Air Force crash – By Lolita C. Baldor and Tara Copp

 

A U.S. military CV-22 Osprey takes off from Iwakuni base, Yamaguchi prefecture, western Japan, on July 4, 2018. (Kyodo News via AP)

WASHINGTON — The Pentagon will lift the ban on flights by the grounded V-22 Osprey next week, U.S. officials told The Associated Press on Friday, following a high-level meeting where Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin endorsed the military services’ plans for a safe and measured return to operations.

The officials said that Naval Air Systems Command, which grounded the controversial tilt-rotor aircraft about three months ago, will lift it and allow the services to begin implementing their plans to get the Osprey back into the air. Austin met with the top service leaders, including for the Navy and Air Force, on Friday morning, according to the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss plans not yet made public.

The Osprey has been grounded for almost three months following a Nov. 29 Air Force Special Operations Command crash in Japan that killed eight service members. The Japan incident and an earlier August Osprey crash in Australia that killed three Marines are both still under investigation. The Air Force has said that it has identified what failed in the Japan crash, even though it does not know yet why it failed.

The decision to end the flight ban is up to Naval Air Systems Command, but Austin had asked for an informational briefing on the matter because of the significant safety concerns and the fact that three of the services and a critical ally are involved in the program. While Austin does not have approval authority in the return to flight process, U.S. officials said his endorsement of the services’ plan was considered a key step.

In the months since, the services have worked on plans to mitigate the known material failure by conducting additional safety checks and establishing a new, more conservative approach to how the Osprey is operated.

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Nathan Gordon, the Consolidated PBY Catalina, and a Medal of Honor Flight

When many people think of World War II naval aviation in the Pacific, aircraft such as the Grumman F4F Wildcat or the Vought F4U Corsair often come to mind. Large, slow flying boats like the Consolidated PBY Catalina, however, played vital roles for naval operations, including launching airborne attacks, anti-submarine patrols, delivering supplies, and performing air rescue. Although missions in these roles may not often be remembered, February 2024 marks the 80th anniversary of one of the most extraordinary flights of the PBY Catalina during World War II.

The U.S. Navy has depended on flying boats since the dawn of aviation. Their ability to take off and land on water gave Navy planners a versatile way to deploy aviation assets to support their fleets. They provided an aeronautical capability any place that featured a deep enough body of water. In fact, flying boats proved to be essential during World War I for long range anti-submarine patrols. One of the first major flights accomplished by the US Navy following that conflict was that of the Curtiss NC-4 flying boat, which completed the first trans-Atlantic flight in May 1919. The Navy continued to use flying boats throughout the 1920s and 1930s, and several squadrons were at Pearl Harbor when it was attacked on December 7, 1941. Although some may have considered the PBY Catalina to be outdated at the outbreak of World War II, they provided a very durable airframe for long-range flights.

Black and white image of a small aircraft viewed from above flying over water.

Consolidated PBY-5 “Catalina” patrol bomber in flight, May 1942.

During World War II, the PBY Catalina proved versatile in several roles. They were excellent for anti-submarine patrols during the early days of the Battle of the Atlantic. With a range of almost 3,000 miles and excellent visibility, Catalinas could fly for great distances with a large crew (seven to nine sailors) searching for German U-boats. Catalinas could then either call in additional ships to attack the submarines or attack themselves with their multiple machine guns or bombs. They were also excellent at long-range reconnaissance and proved to be a critical component to the American victory at the Battle of Midway. On June 3, 1942, Catalinas from Navy patrol squadron VP-44 were the first to spot the Japanese fleet sailing to attack Midway Island and launched some of the first attacks against the enemy fleet. PBY Catalinas continued to perform critical patrol missions throughout the battle by keeping track of the Japanese fleet, allowing U.S. carriers to direct attacks that eventually led to the destruction of four Japanese carriers.

Small dark-colored plane flying over water.

Consolidated PBY-5 “Catalina” flying boat of a “Black Cat” night patrol squadron, in flight near the New Guinea coast, May 1944.

PBY Catalinas also proved to be a useful attack platform during the multi-month battle of Guadalcanal from late 1942 to early 1943. Several Catalinas were painted black and referred to as “Black Cats,” conducting night attacks against Japanese shipments during the battle. Catalinas could fly long distances at low altitudes and attack ships carrying troops and supplies at night, often surprising Japanese commanders. These missions greatly helped reduce the effectiveness of the Japanese attacks on the island and allowed the U.S. to keep possession of the island and its critical airfield. One of the most underrated roles of the Catalinas, however, was its search-and-rescue capability.

Wide view of an aircraft flying over water in the distance.

A “Black Cat” PBY Catalina from VPB-34 skins the waters of San Pedro Bay off Samar Island, in the Philippines.

The huge expanses of the Pacific Ocean proved to be extremely hazardous to pilots whose planes were damaged in aerial combat or suffered mechanical difficulties. If a pilot could not return to an airfield on an island or to a friendly aircraft carrier, they had no choice but to attempt to ditch their aircraft in the sea and survive in a life raft. The long range, durability, and great visibility that allowed Catalinas to be successful in other roles also made the aircraft excellent for search-and-rescue operations. The ability to land on and take off from the water also meant they could directly rescue downed pilots without the need to call in additional assets. It was this role that led to the only Medal of Honor mission ever conducted in a PBY Catalina.

Two men in uniform shake in a room. A group of men in uniform stand behind them.

Vice Admiral Thomas C. Kinkaid, USN (right) (Commander, Seventh Fleet) and Lieutenant Nathan G. Gordon, USNR (left) shaking hands after Gordon was presented the Medal of Honor at Seventh Fleet Headquarters on 19 August 1944.

On February 15, 1944, Lt. j.g. Nathan Green Gordon of VP-34 was flying his PBY Catalina Arkansas Traveler in support of the U.S. 5th Air Force attack on Kavieng, located on New Ireland island. They were tasked with flying “Dumbo” missions that day, which was the name given to search-and-rescue missions. During the attack, several U.S. planes were shot down by enemy anti-aircraft fire, resulting in several crews ditching their aircraft in the water near Kavieng. Gordon landed his PBY Catalina four times under intense enemy fire to pick up stranded aircrew in the water or in small life rafts. In total, Gordon picked up 15 aircrew and flew his very overloaded plane back home without issue. Gordon was awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions, and the details of his rescue were recorded in the citation for the award:

“For extraordinary heroism above and beyond the call of duty as commander of a Catalina patrol plane in rescuing personnel of the U.S. Army 5th Air Force shot down in combat over Kavieng Harbor in the Bismarck Sea, 15 February 1944. On air alert in the vicinity of Vitu Islands, Lt. (then Lt. j.g.) Gordon unhesitatingly responded to a report of the crash and flew boldly into the harbor, defying close-range fire from enemy shore guns to make 3 separate landings in full view of the Japanese and pick up 9 men, several of them injured. With his cumbersome flying boat dangerously overloaded, he made a brilliant takeoff despite heavy swells and almost total absence of wind and set a course for base, only to receive the report of another group stranded in a rubber life raft 600 yards from the enemy shore. Promptly turning back, he again risked his life to set his plane down under direct fire of the heaviest defenses of Kavieng and take aboard 6 more survivors, coolly making his fourth dexterous takeoff with 15 rescued officers and men. By his exceptional daring, personal valor, and incomparable airmanship under most perilous conditions, Lt. Gordon prevented certain death or capture of our airmen by the Japanese.”

Consolidated PBY Catalina aircraft hangs from the ceiling in a museum setting.

The Museum’s Consolidated PBY Catalina is on loan to the National Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola, Florida, where it is pictured here on display.

Although not as fast or maneuverable as many aircraft of World War II, the PBY Catalina provided critical service during the conflict and was the most produced flying boat by the end of the war. PBYs continued to serve after the war, in both commercial capabilities carrying people and goods to areas without concrete runways, as well as well as in firefighting capabilities.  The Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum acquired the last surviving PBY-5 in the early 1960s, which had entered service on February 28, 1943, and provided invaluable training in Pensacola, Florida. It can still be seen on display at the National Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola, Florida, where it is on loan as a memorial to all those who bravely flew the skies in the greatly underrated flying boat that served numerous roles to bring about an Allied victory.

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Moon Bound Astronauts Join USS San Diego Crew, Navy Divers in Capsule Recovery Drills – GIDGET FUENTES FEBRUARY 29, 2024 5:52 PM

NASA’s crew module test article (CMTA) is launched from the well deck aboard San Antonio-class amphibious transport dock ship USS San Diego (LPD-22) during Underway Recovery Test 11, Feb. 23, 2024. US Navy Photo

When NASA’s Orion spacecraft splashes into the Pacific after its planned lunar mission next year, the first people the astronauts will see will be a bunch of sailors.

That recovery task requires intricate planning, coordination and training, the latest of which wrapped up this week with the first joint training exercise at sea involving the astronauts who will crew the planned Artemis missions to the Moon. Four astronauts – including two Navy captains – are training for the Artemis II mission that will send them on a 10-day trip orbiting the moon next year. It’s a critical step for NASA’s planned Artemis III mission, which would be the first crewed launch to land on the moon since the Apollo 17 mission in 1972.

During the weeklong Underway Recovery Test 11, amphibious transport ship USS San Diego (LPD-22), Navy divers, helicopter crews and medical staff recovered the astronauts from a test crew craft following a simulated splashdown into the Pacific and then hauled the training spacecraft into San Diego’s well deck.

URT-11 focused on day and night open-ocean tests, with the test craft aboard San Diego, training with the recovery teams and procedures for the splashdown for next year’s scheduled mission to the Moon. The upcoming Artemis II launch, planned for September 2025, will be crewed by mission commander Navy Capt. Reid Wiseman, pilot Navy Capt. Victor J. Glover and mission specialists Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen, the latter with the Canadian Space Agency.

ULT-11, the latest in a series of planned drills with the Navy and NASA’s Exploration Ground Systems ahead of the September 2025 launch, was “very successful,” said Lili Villareal, NASA’s landing and recovery director.

“We continue to validate our procedures that we can safely recover the Artemis II astronauts from the Orion spacecraft into the recovery vessel, along with bringing the spacecraft into the well deck,” Villareal said at a press briefing Wednesday beside USS San Diego, which is berthed at Naval Base San Diego. The test module – the mock-up is similar in size as the actual Orion spacecraft – sat in the ship’s well deck.

Sailors assigned to Explosive Ordnance Disposal Mobile Unit 1 aassist NASA Astronaut Candidate Chris Birch into a crew module test article (CMTA) during training operations while underway with San Antonio-class amphibious transport dock ship USS San Diego (LPD-22) for NASA’s Underway Recovery Test 11, Feb. 23, 2024. US Navy Photo

“It’s a highly choreographed activity that requires a lot of teams and hardware to come together to bring our Artemis astronauts home,” she said.

After splashdown, that starts with Navy divers who meet the capsule and help astronauts out and onto a raft to be hoisted into Navy helicopters, recovering them, one by one, to the support ship, where the medical department evaluates the astronauts. Then, the joint Navy-NASA team recovers the capsule onto the ship, which returns to the San Diego base.

Navy ship crews have been constant partners with NASA through decades of manned space flight.

Last year, USS Portland (LPD-27) joined Navy crews in recovering the Orion space capsule – sans astronauts – after it splashed down in the Pacific off Baja California. That Artemis I lunar mission had sent the capsule on a 25-day trip to the Moon, where it orbited 1.3 million miles in space. “These tests are what we need to make sure that the Artemis II is just as successful,” Villareal said.

A decade ago, the crew of San Diego participated in recovering the first flight test of the Orion capsule, following its launch from Cape Canaveral, Fla.

Capt. David WaltonSan Diego’s commander, noted how the LPDs, with their flight deck, extensive well deck and large medical department, are well suited to conduct the joint recovery mission. This time, Walton noted, URT-11 took on an exciting note as San Diego hosted the astronauts.

NASA Astronaut Navy Capt. Victor Glover Jr. (right) provides the oath of re-enlistment to Machinist Mate 2nd Class Gerald Castro, a native of Isabela, Philippines, in a crew module test article (CMTA) aboard San Antonio-class amphibious transport dock ship USS San Diego (LPD-22) during Underway Recovery Test 11, Feb. 26, 2024. US Navy Photo

The at-sea training also wowed the astronauts. Wiseman recounted getting hoisted off the ship, dangling from a hovering helicopter at night. “This is crazy. This is off of movies, and we’re living it every day,” he said at the briefing.

The upcoming Artemis missions are focused on the Moon, but the greater goal is to pave the way for Mars exploration, Wiseman said. “It’s humans on Mars. It’s humans working on and around the Moon. When we put our minds together to go out and do something – as a planet, all cooperating – that is our goal. To go out and to explore our solar system like humans do. What’s around the next corner? We want to know. We are excited to be the first crew in over 50 years to go out to the moon and back, 50,000 miles out and 250,000 miles back.”

“When we land, it’ll be an LPD from the U.S. Navy with survival swimmers coming down the hoist, maybe in the night,” he said.

The Artemis II mission will be notable for another reason. The four-astronaut crew will be the first to leave low-Earth orbit and fly around the Moon with a female astronaut, a Black astronaut and a Canadian astronaut.

“It doesn’t matter if you’re a first if there’s no seconds, thirds and fourths,” Glover, a veteran fighter and test pilot, said during the briefing. “So that’s really what I think about is making sure we do the best at our job so that the American people and our international partners continue to have faith in their public space agencies so we can keep going and exploring further.” Glover had piloted a 2020-2021 SpaceX mission to the International Space Station and, during 168 days in space, did four spacewalks.

Sailors assigned to Explosive Ordnance Mobile Unit 1 launch a combat rudder raiding craft from the well deck aboard San Antonio-class amphibious transport dock ship USS San Diego (LPD-22) during Underway Recovery Test 11, Feb. 23, 2024. US Navy Photo

“It’s important to bring anyone who has innovative ideas, anyone who has a desire to contribute, to this team,” added Koch, who’s tallied the longest time in space by any woman during a 2019-2020 mission to the space station. “That’s what makes us successful and that’s what is really worth celebrating.”

The latest underway training with the Navy crews helped work through problems such as broken parts and rougher seas than expected, Wiseman said. “You never understand the problems that nature can throw at you,” he said.

The next training drills, ULT-12, will be the mission certification run before the actual lunar mission, Villareal said. The joint NASA-Navy training includes Navy’s Expeditionary Strike Group 3, U.S. Space Command and other Department of Defense units.

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In pictures: On land, in the air and at sea, Nato’s Steadfast Defender’s well under way

Take a look at Exercise Steadfast Defender 24 – Nato’s largest military exercise since the Cold War.

There are more than 90,000 troops from all 31 Nato allies, plus invitee Sweden, involved in the historic exercise on land, at sea and in the air.

Steadfast Defender aims to demonstrate Nato’s ability to defend every inch of its territory and the commitment by Nato allies to protect each other from any threat.

Sixteen thousand British soldiers are taking part in the largest set of Nato multi-national military manoeuvres in a generation.

Troops are deployed across the entirety of Europe’s eastern flank, stretching from the far north of Norway, inside the Arctic Circle, all the way down to Georgia in the Caucasus.

At the forefront of the five-month exercise will be the British Army, underpinning its position not only as the leading Nato European member state but also as one of its most potent.

Ex Steadfast Defender is split into two overlapping parts, with each phase of the exercise including a range of associated exercises hosted by different countries.

It began in January and runs though to May and comprises 11 individual exercises in which British forces will participate alongside Nato allies and partners.

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Excitement for HMS St Albans’ crew as frigate returns to sea following four-year refit Tim Cooper 1st March 2024 at 2:27pm

Watch: HMS St Albans begins work-up trials after refit completion

HMS St Albans has returned to sea after a major four-year refit at His Majesty’s Naval Base Plymouth.

The Type 23 frigate shines like new, thanks to the extensive work completed during the overhaul.

As the ship undergoes simulated sea exercises with seasoned sailors guiding the new recruits, it marks a crucial step towards full operational readiness.

Ahead of setting sail, HMS St Albans role-played being at sea – while staying firmly tied up – giving the team the chance to run through their drills safely with experts from Fleet Operational Sea Training on board to check all is well.

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