The USS Carl Vinson strike group will return home today after a six month deployment. The 6000 plus crew were in charge of lose air support missions, airborne electronic warfare missions and airborne command and control missions.
The aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson,
guided-missile cruiser USS Bunker Hill and guided-missile destroyer USS
Halsey are scheduled to return to San Diego Wednesday after a deployment
of nearly six months.
Friends and family will gather for joyful
reunions at Naval Air Station North Island for the Vinson and its
6,000-plus crew, and at Naval Station San Diego for the Bunker Hill and
Halsey.
However, for nearly 1,000 relatives of sailors,
the reunions came early when they flew to Hawaii to board the Vinson for
what's known as a Tiger Cruise. During the Tiger Cruise, relatives
lived aboard the carrier as the sailors do during the final leg of their
journey home, from Honolulu to San Diego.
Air crews aboard the Carl Vinson flew nearly
1,100 missions in support of Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan
during the deployment, including close air support missions, airborne
electronic warfare missions and airborne command and control missions,
according to the Navy.
Pilots compiled around 6,600 flight hours during three months of operations in the North Arabian Sea earlier this year.
"This was the ship's second deployment in 18
months, and the crew performed superbly," said Capt. Kent Whalen, the
Vinson's commanding officer. "I could not be more proud of my crew."
Their operations took place at a time of
increasing tensions with Iran, which threatened to close the narrow
Strait of Hormuz after economic sanctions began to affect its economy.
The vessels sailed through the strait without
incident. During a previous deployment, however, a sailor aboard the
Halsey went missing, and her body was recovered in the Gulf of Oman.
Petty Officer Dominique Cruz, 26, of Panama City, Fla., was found dead a
day after she was reported missing in January 2011.
During the latest deployment, the sailors also
took part in exercises with Singapore, Britain, India and Australia and
participated in humanitarian operations in several countries.
The Bunker Hill's commander, Capt. Michael Ford,
said his crew was excited to be coming home after serving as the
primary air defense vessel for the Vinson Strike Group.
Various squadrons from the air wing aboard the Vinson are also returning home to various bases across the country.
The vessels left San Diego on Nov. 30. The Navy has 58 surface ships in San Diego, plus
a half-dozen submarines. The Vinson is San Diego's sole aircraft
carrier until the USS Ronald Reagan returns early next year. The Reagan
and its 2,500-person crew pulled out of San Diego in January and headed
to Washington for maintenance work. By 2016, a third
yet-to-be-named-carrier is expected to move into town.
Last month, Rear Adm. Dixon Smith, the commander
of Navy Region Southwest, said the Navy has a $30.5 billion annual
economic impact on San Diego, and that 26 percent of all jobs in the
region are Defense Department-related.
The Navy estimates that growth could result in
8,100 more sailors stationed in San Diego in the future, bringing with
them 6,700 family members.
For more information go to CBS8.
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
USS Carl Vinson returns home to San Diego
Posted by Larimer Associates on 9:33 AM


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