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----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, January 08, 2002 8:33 PM
Subject: Fw: [MLNews!*2002] Vieques

 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, January 08, 2002 8:14 PM
Subject: [MLNews!*2002] Vieques

January 8, 2002

Carrier barred from Vieques training

By Rowan Scarborough
THE WASHINGTON TIMES

The Navy, overruling two top commanders, has decided not to let the
USS John F. Kennedy battle group train on the island of Vieques
before deploying this month for the Arabian Sea near Afghanistan.

Citing the war on terrorism, Adm. Vern Clark, the chief of naval
operations, and Gen. James Jones, the Marine Corps commandant, had
asked Navy Secretary Gordon England to permit limited live-fire
training for the Kennedy armada on the Puerto Rican island. The
Puerto Rican governor had urged him to deny the request.

Gov. Sila M. Calderon apparently has won.

Navy officials said yesterday the carrier Kennedy will not train on
Vieques before departing. Instead, pilots and gun crews will use
ranges in Virginia and North Carolina.

"The battle group will not use Vieques," Capt. Mike Brady, a
spokesman for the Atlantic Fleet, said in response to questions from
The Washington Times.
"All exercises will be at training ranges on the East Coast. The
Kennedy battle group will not use Vieques."

Capt. Brady said it is not unusual for a battle group to skip Vieques
in a final tuneup before deploying overseas. He said the Kennedy task
force ships were able to conduct preliminary exercises there in the
fall using dummy ammunition. Training has been limited to less-
realistic inert bombs under an agreement between Puerto Rico and the
Clinton administration.

However, both Adm. Clark and Gen. Jones thought enough of the value of
live-fire training for the Kennedy in January at Vieques that they
sent a private letter to Mr. England this fall asking for permission.

"Their crews would benefit greatly from live-fire practice achieved
over a three-four day period at Vieques," the two said in a jointly
signed letter, a copy of which was obtained by The Washington
Times. "This would ensure that our sailors and Marines can train
under combat conditions as they prepare for deployment operations
which may call for direct action missions in the war on terrorism."

Capt. Frank Thorpe, a spokesman for Adm. Clark, said yesterday, "The
CNO has great confidence in [the Atlantic Fleet commander's] plan to
ensure we deploy the JFK battle-ready."

The Navy declined to comment on what spokesman called "private
communication." Capt. Brady said yesterday he had not seen the letter
to Mr. England and would not comment.

The Kennedy is scheduled to leave its home port in Mayport, Fla., in
mid-January, two months ahead of schedule. Army Gen. Tommy Franks,
who as head of U.S. Central Command is running the war in
Afghanistan, wants at least two carrier battle groups on station in
the Arabian Sea. By leaving early, the Kennedy can relieve the
carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt on station without the Roosevelt
having to extend its six-month deployment, Navy officials said.

Kennedy aircraft may see action over Afghanistan, where Navy aircraft
have conducted the bulk of the tactical missions. Somalia and Iraq
are also known terrorist-harboring states and could face air strikes.

Two carriers, the USS Roosevelt, and West Coast-based USS John C.
Stennis, are now operating in the Arabian Sea. Two other carriers in
the region, the USS Carl Vinson and USS Kitty Hawk, had been in the
Arabian Sea and are returning to their home ports.

Vieques has been a hot political topic for Congress, President
Clinton and now President Bush.

Puerto Rican activists, joined by many leading liberal Democrats,
including members of the Kennedy family, demonstrated outside the
range, demanding an immediate end to practice bombing.

The Navy, and pro-military members of Congress, say the training is
essential.

Mr. Bush, in a decision critics linked to his desire to garner
Hispanic votes, announced earlier this year that the Navy must find
alternative training sites by 2003.

Adm. Robert J. Natter, commander of the Atlantic Fleet, is now
searching for new sites, including ranges in North Carolina and
Virginia.

The Kennedy and its air wing will depart with a partial battle group
of cruisers, destroyers, an oiler and an attack submarine. Remaining
ships will leave the United States as originally scheduled in mid-
March.

Capt. Brady said the decision to send the Kennedy to other training
sites does not mean the Navy is abandoning Vieques before the
deadline of May 1, 2003. "Right now, we don't have a suitable
replacement for it, so I would anticipate we would use it again," he
said. "We have not made a decision yet with regard to future
training."

The carrier Kennedy was in the news last month. The Navy fired its
commanding officer after an inspection board found a rash of
operational failures. "The ship was seriously degraded in her ability
to conduct air operations," said a report by a Navy Board of
Inspection and Survey.

"Three of four aircraft elevators were out of commission, two of four
catapults were degraded and the overall flight deck fire-fighting
capability was seriously degraded," the report said.

Capt. Brady said the new commander is correcting the problems in time
for a January deployment.



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