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USS Sampson Conducts Change of Command Ceremony
Naval Today >> The industry’s seaborne news provider by Naval Today / 11min // keep unread // skip // preview
The guided missile destroyer USS Sampson (DDG 102) conducted a change of command ceremony while in homeport at Naval Base San Diego, Nov. 22.Cmdr. Steven Foley, who has been the ship’s executive officer since September, relieved Cmdr. Dwayne Ducommun as commanding officer of Sampson during a ceremony on the ship’s flight deck. During Ducommun’s 18-months as commanding officer, the ship completed a Western Pacific deployment in 2012, received exemplary marks during a 2013 material inspection by the Navy’s Board of Inspection and Survey and was awarded the Arizona Memorial trophy. Under Ducommun’s leadership, four officers completed their surface warfare officer qualification, nine Sailors advanced to the rank of chief petty officer and 47 Sailors reenlisted for additional naval service. Ducommun’s next assignment will be on the staff of Commander, Carrier Strike Group One, in San Diego. Foley, a prior senior chief sonar technician, received his commission under the limited-duty officer program and then laterally transferred into the unrestricted line community. His previous sea duty assignments include serving as the executive officer of USS Laboon (DDG 58) as well as duty aboard USS Normandy (CG 60) and USS Porter (DDG 78). Follow Naval Today via: |
Bay of Kotor, Montenegro.

Cruise ships are a permanent fixture around the Adriatic coastline. And it must be amazing if you are on one of these cruises and you enter Kotor Bay. The bay is surrounded by the mountains that you can see here in the background, and the landscape if you are arriving by ship will change dramatically and spectacularly if you arrive from the Mediterranean sea ( I presume!)….
I like the scale of this enormous cruise ship set against the enormity of the mountain. It just shows us how much bigger and more powerful nature is compared to our own endeavours!
Guided-Missile Cruiser Returns to Pearl Harbor
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Guided-Missile Cruiser Returns to Pearl Harbor
Naval Today >> The industry’s seaborne news provider by Naval Today / 42min // keep unread // skip // preview
The Ticonderoga-class guided-missile cruiser USS Chosin (CG 65) returned to its homeport of Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam Nov. 22 from a deployment to the Western Pacific.Commanded by Capt. Patrick Kelly, the ship and its crew of nearly 340 Sailors departed Hawaii on April 30th and conducted integrated operations with allies and partners during the ship’s six-month deployment.
In October, Chosin participated in the International Fleet Review held in Sydney, Australia. Additionally, the ship’s crew participated in a number of multilateral-fleet-training exercises conducted along the coast of Australia.
Sailors aboard the Chosin echoed the captain about the importance of the port call to Austrailia and how for some it was the highlight of their trip.
Throughout the summer, Chosin conducted theater security operations with partner nations while providing deterrence, promoting peace and security, and preserving freedom of the seas.
Sonar Technician (Surface) 2nd Class Joseph Maglione, a Sailor assigned to the Chosin, talked about how he felt about being on deployment.
Among the many guests was Korean War veteran and member of the Chosin Few, Robert Talmadge, who has attended several Chosin homecomings.
Chosin is one of 10 surface ships currently assigned to Commander, Naval Surface Group Middle Pacific. The ship is the first U.S. Navy warship named in commemoration of the First Marine Division’s heroism at the Chosin reservoir in the Korean War, considered the most savage battle of modern warfare. The ship’s motto is “invictus,” Latin for invincible or unconquered. U.S. Navy guided-missile cruisers are primarily multi-mission (air warfare, undersea warfare, naval surface fire support and surface warfare) surface combatants capable of supporting carrier strike groups and amphibious forces, operating independently, and serving as flagships of surface action groups. Commander, U.S. Naval Surface Group Middle Pacific leads and manages the overall warfighting capability of the Surface Combatant Force homeported at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam. MIDPAC ships support U.S. Pacific Fleet in leading America’s rebalance to the Pacific. U.S. Third Fleet leads naval forces in the Eastern Pacific from the West Coast of North America to the international date line. |
Bitter Words Over Shipbuilding Future Scottish parliamentarians increase tensions over independence and shipyards…
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Royal Navy Carrier Heads Out With Philippines Aid
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