Selasa 23 Dec 2014 01:54 WIB

A US littoral combat ship makes the first visit to Indonesia on Monday

USS Fort Worth docks at Tanjung Priok, Jakarta on Monday Dec 22.
Foto: US Embassy in Jakarta
USS Fort Worth docks at Tanjung Priok, Jakarta on Monday Dec 22.

REPUBLIKA.CO.ID, JAKARTA -- The littoral combat ship USS Fort Worth (LCS 3) arrived in Jakarta, Indonesia Dec. 22 as part of a 16-month rotational deployment in support of the Indo-Asia-Pacific rebalance.

This port visit is Fort Worth’s first in Southeast Asia, and also marks the first LCS visit to Indonesia, an archipelagic nation comprised of 17,000 islands and the world’s third largest democracy.

Greeting the ship upon arrival were the US Ambassador to Indonesia, Robert Blake, commander of Indonesia’s Western Fleet Command, Rear Adm. Widodo, commander of US 7th Fleet’s Task Force 73, Rear Adm. Charlie Williams and commander of Destroyer Squadron 7, Capt. Fred Kacher.

“Fort Worth’s arrival in Jakarta is the first of many engagements she will conduct with regional navies while deployed to 7th Fleet for the next 15 months,” Williams said in a press statement received by Republika.

"This port visit also speaks to our strong and growing partnership with the Indonesian Navy.”    

Southeast Asia is a textbook example of a littoral region and an area where LCS is uniquely suited to operate. With its maneuverability, high speed and shallow draft, LCS provides regular and routine presence in the region and access to places where larger US Navy ships cannot go.

Fort Worth is of comparable size to the warships operated by regional navies in Southeast Asia, and a major benefit of the platform is its ability to work with them during exercises like Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training (CARAT).  Fort Worth will return to Indonesia in 2015 as part of the CARAT series.

"Fort Worth's arrival in Jakarta is a new dawn for US Navy operations in Southeast Asia," said Kacher.  

Fort Worth will employ the surface warfare mission package for her entire deployment, augmenting her 57mm gun and rolling airframe missile launcher with two 30mm guns, two 11-meter rigid-hull inflatable boats and two six-member maritime security boarding teams.  

Enhancing the SUW mission package is the embarked aviation detachment from Helicopter Maritime Squadron (HSM) 35, the Navy’s first composite expeditionary helicopter squadron, which consists of one MH-60R Seahawk helicopter and one MQ-8B Fire Scout unmanned aircraft system. The Fire Scout will complement the MH-60R by extending the HSM-35’s range and endurance, enhancing maritime domain awareness.

Following the Jakarta port visit, Fort Worth will head to Singapore, the primary maintenance and logistics hub for littoral combat ships rotationally deployed to 7th Fleet.

 

 

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