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Sailor from US aircraft carrier dies of COVID-19
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) April 13, 2020

Pilots complete carrier qualifications aboard USS Gerald R. Ford
Washington DC (UPI) Apr 13, 2020 - The aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford completed its qualifications for pilots in its first Fleet Replacement Squadron exercise, the U.S. Navy announced Monday.

The training, known as carrier qualifications, was concluded in early April in the Atlantic Ocean where the carrier, whose home port is Newport News, Va., is deployed.

The FRS trains pilots, naval flight officers and maintainers on specific front-line aircraft they have been assigned to fly, some of whom may be training for current and upcoming deployments.

It was conducted during the ship's month-long "Independent Steaming Event 9, in which it independently executed a training schedule without tasking from higher authority. The event ended on Sunday.

The USS Gerald R. Ford is regarded as the world's largest aircraft carrier and is currently the only carrier on the East Coast available to qualify pilots.

The CQ included day and night flight operations, and required the ship and its crew of more than 2,600 personnel to work with Strike Fighter Squadron 106 and Carrier Airborne Early Warning Squadron 120 around the clock, the Navy said in a statement.

"For the first time ever this ship conducted carrier qualifications for two fleet replacement squadrons and generated readiness for the fleet," Capt. J. J. Cummings, Ford's commanding officer said in a statement. "The crew knows that many of these aviators will be headed right out to deployed squadrons and that makes them extremely proud."

Twenty-seven pilots earned their qualifications during the tests. The two squadrons accomplished 425 catapult launches and 495 traps, or arrested landings, while they were aboard the ship, the Navy said.

A sailor who was aboard the USS Theodore Roosevelt aircraft carrier died Monday of COVID-19, the first fatality from nearly 600 confirmed cases among its crew, the US Navy said.

The sailor, who tested positive on March 30, was discovered unresponsive on April 9 and placed in the intensive care unit of the navy's hospital in Guam, where the Roosevelt is docked.

The death came six days after Thomas Modly resigned as acting navy secretary over his mishandling of an outbreak on the Roosevelt, one of two US aircraft carriers in the western Pacific.

Modly had earlier fired the Roosevelt's captain, Brett Crozier, after the officer's warning that the shipboard outbreak could dangerously incapacitate much of the crew became public.

Crozier had sought to evacuate most of the ship's 4,800 crew after it stopped in Guam on March 27, to test them and sterilize the vessel, but the idea was rejected by his superiors.

With the number of proven cases approaching 100, on March 30 the veteran captain wrote an unclassified, widely-distributed letter addressed to his superiors that quickly leaked to his hometown newspaper, the San Francisco Chronicle.

"The spread of the disease is ongoing and accelerating," Crozier wrote. "We are not at war. Sailors do not need to die."

Both Modly and Defense Secretary Mark Esper expressed anger that Crozier had violated the Pentagon's chain of command, and they insinuated that the leak to the media was deliberate.

They were also concerned that he had exposed a vulnerability in US military readiness that could encourage adversaries to take advantage.

Crozier "demonstrated extremely poor judgment in the middle of a crisis," Modly said after announcing the captain's removal on April 2.

The number of COVID-19 cases aboard the ship has continued to mount.

With 92 percent of the crew tested, 585 have been infected with the virus, according to the Navy on Monday, including Crozier himself.

- 'Naive or stupid' -

After Crozier's firing, videos appeared on social media that showed members of the Roosevelt's crew applauding him as he walked alone down the gangway onto shore in Guam.

The controversial firing sparked questions over whether and why the Navy hierarchy had ignored Crozier's internal requests to evacuate the warship.

Modly then flew to Guam where he told the Roosevelt's crew in a profanity-laced speech that their love for Crozier was misguided, calling him "too naive or too stupid."

Those comments exploded in the US media even before Modly returned to the United States, and, having sparked a fresh political firestorm over the handling of the pandemic by the administration of President Donald Trump, he resigned.

He was the second permanent or acting navy secretary in six months to depart.

His predecessor was fired after clashing with Trump over the president's protection of a Navy Seal who had been charged with war crimes and convicted of lesser charges.

Esper said Monday that the Defense Department was "deeply saddened" by the death of the Roosevelt crew member.

"We remain committed to protecting our personnel and their families while continuing to assist in defeating this outbreak," he said.

So far some 150 US military bases and several ships, including two other aircraft carriers, have reported coronavirus cases.

Total cases among Pentagon service personnel, their families, civilians and contractors was 4,528 on Monday.

Across the United States, nearly 560,000 cases have been reported, with 22,146 deaths.


Related Links
Naval Warfare in the 21st Century


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Huntington Ingalls receives $1.5B modification for LPD-31
Washington DC (UPI) Apr 03, 2020
Huntington Ingalls received a $1.5 billion contract modification this week for construction of the LPD-31 amphibious transport dock, the Pentagon announced Friday. The contract announcement confirms a statement from the Navy's Assistant Secretary for Research, Development and Acquisition, who said earlier this week that some large Navy contracts would be accelerated to mitigate disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. In a conference call with reporters Wednesday James "Hondo" Geurts ... read more

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