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Author Topic: PSU 311 Deploys To Iraq And Kuwait With Navy's MSRON ONE  (Read 1656 times)
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BuoyJumper
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« on: December 02, 2008, 09:24:21 pm »



Press Release
Date: December 2, 2008
Contact: D11 Public Affairs

MSRON ONE Deploys

SAN DIEGO - About 340 Navy and Coast Guard personnel from the Navy's Maritime Expeditionary Security Squadron ONE (MSRON ONE) will deploy Dec. 2 to the Middle East to provide seaward surveillance and security forces in amphibious areas and harbors, and military significant coastal and inshore areas in Iraq and Kuwait.

MSRON ONE embodies the 13th detachment of Maritime Expeditionary Security Forces that have been deployed to the 5th Fleet area of operations since the war began.

They will be joining 75 personnel who deployed earlier in November. The remaining members of the detachment are set to deploy in the next few months. Once the remaining members arrive in theater they will total 450 personnel.

MSRON ONE will continue the mission of providing harbor defense and port security to Kuwaiti and Iraqi seaward approaches and waterways to include manning Iraqi Oil Platforms, and providing force protection and escort services to designated assets transiting chokepoints and in ports.

MSRON ONE commanded by Capt. Luke McCollum, is comprised of MSRON ONE, USCG Port Security Unit 311, Long Beach, Ca.; Communications Division 52, Communications Detachment 521, and Sensor Detachment 522, San Diego; Boat Division 56 and Boat Detachment 562, Seal Beach, Ca.; Boat Detachment 932, Portland, Oregon; and Security Detachment 331, San Antonio, Texas.

MSRON ONE is part of the Navy Expeditionary Combat Command, a global force provider of adaptive force packages of expeditionary capabilities to joint warfighting commanders.

Press Release
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« Reply #1 on: December 02, 2008, 09:35:41 pm »

 ..............to the Navy and Coast Guard.....................

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« Reply #2 on: December 02, 2008, 09:41:27 pm »

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« Reply #3 on: December 03, 2008, 11:22:51 pm »

Los Angeles Times

More troops leave for the Persian Gulf

340 sailors and Coast Guardsmen deploy from North
Island Naval Air Station in Coronado to take over
security duties for two Iraqi oil platforms.

By Tony Perry
December 3, 2008

Coronado, California -- With their maze of aging pipes and narrow catwalks high above the Persian Gulf, they look like something out of "Waterworld," Kevin Costner's post-apocalyptic vision of the future.

Their names too seem lifted from a sci-fi flick: ABOT and KAAOT.


(L)  Members of Coast Guard Port Security Unit 311 stand at ease.  (R)  John Austria of the Navy says goodbye to his 3-month-old daughter as he prepares to deploy with the Maritime Expeditionary Security Squadron at Naval Station on Coronado, Calif.


But the two Iraqi oil platforms 20 miles off the port of Umm al Qasr are considered tempting targets for terrorists thirsting to traumatize the world's oil supply and short-circuit Iraq's march to self-sufficiency.

So 340 sailors and Coast Guardsmen deployed Tuesday from North Island Naval Air Station in Coronado to take over security duties for the platforms, the northern reach of the Persian Gulf and the inland waterway that separates Iraq and Kuwait.

"The threat is emerging. The threat is changing," Coast Guard Rear Adm. Mike Seward told the departing group. "You have to stay on the top of your game."

The 340 are from the Navy's Maritime Expeditionary Security Squadron One, with sailors from units in San Diego, San Pedro, Seal Beach, Portland and San Antonio and Coast Guardsmen from Long Beach. About 85% are reservists, 15% active-duty.

Petty Officer Kerry Salmons, 43, a Navy reservist, is a mathematics and science teacher at Wilmington Middle School in the Los Angeles Unified School District.

He and his wife, Marian, embraced. "I'm missing him already," she said.

In 2004 an explosive-laden speedboat raced toward one of the platforms and was thwarted by U.S. military personnel and Iraq Oil Ministry guards. Two sailors   (#1 and #2) and a Coast Guardsman were killed when the boat exploded short of its target.

Although it may seem a backwater of the U.S. mission in Iraq, security of the two oil platforms remains a top priority. U.S. Navy Secretary Donald Winter calls the terminals the "vital nerve center of the entire Iraqi economy."

The long-range goal is to turn security over to the Iraqis, but that goal is not yet in sight.

The Al Basra Oil Terminal, called ABOT, and Khawr al Amaya Oil Terminal, or KAAOT, can pump 1.7 million barrels a day into tankers. More than 90% of Iraqi's oil is loaded from the two terminals.

The region is so thick with boats of all varieties that sailors refer to it as Thunder Valley. The U.S. declines to discuss whether there have been more attacks on the platforms since the 2004 assault.

"We tell the guys that we're one bad day from making the news," said Navy Cmdr. Charles Sullivan, 46.

"In force protection, it's a good day when nothing happens."

The deployment will last at least six months.

"The sooner he goes out there, the sooner he gets back," said Sullivan's wife, Louise.

After the speeches by admirals and a final check of the gear, the troops loaded aboard the chartered plane and it lumbered down the runway and into the cool night as families watched.

"It comes with the territory for military families, watching loved ones go away," said Janet Lawrence, wife of Petty Officer David Lawrence.

"But it's never easy."

Perry is a Times staff writer

Original Article
« Last Edit: December 03, 2008, 11:32:50 pm by BuoyJumper » Logged

  Save a Boat - Ride a Coastie ... 
"And in the end, it’s not the years in your life that count. It’s the life in your years" ..........Abraham Lincoln
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