The port go to is a part of Leyte Gulf’s deliberate mid-deployment voyage restore (MDVR) upkeep interval and permits Leyte Gulf Sailors much-deserved leisure time whereas taking within the sights, artwork, historical past and meals of Crete.
“We’re elated to return to Souda Bay,” stated Capt. Michael Weeldreyer, commanding officer of Leyte Gulf. “The time in port will probably be used to conduct wanted upkeep and luxuriate in some well-earned relaxation and leisure, to not point out proceed to foster our friendships with associate nations.”
Ships require preventative and common upkeep to function reliably, a lot of which is accomplished underway. Nevertheless, some upkeep gadgets should be accomplished pierside resulting from work necessities or elements. Deliberate MDVRs enable U.S. ships to finish these corrective and preventative repairs to make sure the ship stays absolutely mission-capable all through all the deployment.
Whereas in port, Sailors may even have the chance to interact with the area people by collaborating in a collection of group relations (COMREL) occasions at an area canine shelter the place the Sailors will help in bettering the shelter grounds and animal socialization, in addition to selecting oranges for native orphanages.
“The COMRELs offered to us are such a fantastic alternative to not solely present a service to the locals, however spend time in a rustic doing one thing that we wouldn’t usually do,” stated Hospital Corpsman 2nd Class Gwendolyn Juel, assigned to Leyte Gulf. “We get to work hand-in-hand with people who I might usually not have the chance to. I’m actually grateful for the chance and expertise. I look ahead to extra sooner or later.”
Leyte Gulf, homeported in Norfolk, is connected to the united statesGeorge H.W. Bush Provider Strike group (CSG) and is working within the U.S. Sixth Fleet space of operations as a part of a scheduled deployment.
The Nimitz-class plane provider George H.W. Bush is the flagship of CSG-10, George H.W. Bush CSG. CSG-10 is comprised of George H.W. Bush, Provider Air Wing (CVW) 7, Destroyer Squadron (DESRON) 26, the Info Warfare Commander, and Leyte Gulf.
The ships of DESRON 26 inside CSG-10 are USS Nitze (DDG 94), USS Farragut (DDG 99), USS Truxtun (DDG 103), and USS Delbert D. Black (DDG 119).
The squadrons of CVW-7 embarked aboard the George H.W. Bush are the “Sidewinders” of Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA 86), the “Jolly Rogers” (VFA-103), the “Knighthawks” (VFA-136), the “Pukin Canine” (VFA-143), the “Bluetails” of Provider Airborne Early Warning Squadron (VAW 121), the “Patriots” of Digital Assault Squadron (VAQ 140), the “Nightdippers” of Helicopter Sea Fight Squadron (HSC 5), and the “Grandmasters” of Helicopter Maritime Strike Squadron (HSM 46).
For over 80 years, U.S. Naval Forces Europe-Africa (NAVEUR-NAVAF) has solid strategic relationships with allies and companions, leveraging a basis of shared values to protect safety and stability.
Headquartered in Naples, Italy, NAVEUR-NAVAF operates U.S. naval forces within the U.S. European Command (USEUCOM) and U.S. Africa Command (USAFRICOM) areas of duty. U.S. Sixth Fleet is completely assigned to NAVEUR-NAVAF, and employs maritime forces by means of the total spectrum of joint and naval operations.
The George H.W. Bush CSG is on a scheduled deployment within the U.S. Naval Forces Europe space of operations, employed by U.S. Sixth Fleet to defend U.S., allied, and associate pursuits.