Junior Officer’s Perspective of U.S. Coast Guard In Maritime Warfare
by U.S. Coast Guard Chief Petty Officer Sara Muir
January
16, 2020
“Conn, Nav Eval, recommend you come to course 120°.” “Roger.
Nav Eval, helm come to course 120°.” “Aye. Coming to course
120°.”
With that, 418-feet of white steel swing direction and
adjust course through the Western Pacific as the crew of the USCGC
Stratton (WMSL 752) continues their patrol eastward toward the U.S.
and eventually to homeport in Alameda, California.
Lt. j.g.
Angela-Ruth Johnson, an Oak Harbor, Washington native, is assisting
and training a new navigation evaluator during this particular
evolution on the bridge. She is also charting her course. Her
primary role is serving as the assistant operations officer aboard
Stratton. This is her third year in the fleet, and she is
responsible for assisting the operations officer with all major
evolutions conducted by the crew. She is not the first sailor in her
family. Her father Robert was an enlisted aviation electrician in
the U.S. Navy and retired to Pensacola, Florida, at the rank of
Chief Petty Officer.
November 2, 2019 - Lt. j.g. Angela-Ruth Johnson is the assistant operations officer on USCGC Stratton (WMSL 752) and stands on the bridge of the ship. The cutter's crew has spent half of 2019 underway in support of joint operations in the Pacific. Johnson is not the first sailor in her family, nor the last. (U.S. Coast Guard photo by Chief Petty Officer Sara Muir)
|
Her father’s last day in the Navy was her first day in the U.S.
Coast Guard, as she reported to the Coast Guard Academy in New
London, Connecticut. A 2017 graduate of the academy, she holds a
degree in operations research and computer analysis. Her first
assignment was aboard USCGC Diligence (WMEC 616) on the East Coast.
The Stratton’s current patrol through the Indo-Pacific draws
certain parallels to one of her father’s deployments aboard the USS
Midway, homeported in Yokosuka, Japan, in the early 90s. Over the
past four and half months, Stratton traveled throughout the South
Pacific and the Far East on missions for both the U.S. Navy’s 7th
Fleet and the U.S. Coast Guard places her father sailed decades
earlier.
Then as now, with port calls, engagements, and
exercises in the region, the U.S. Coast Guard is operating with our
Pacific partners to promote a free and open Indo-Pacific where
individual sovereignty is paramount and should always be protected.
Fresh off the third round of Maritime Training Activity Sama
Sama, alongside the U.S. and Philippine Navies and the Japan
Maritime Self-Defense Force, Stratton demonstrated the Coast Guard’s
ability to promote regional security cooperation, maintain and
strengthen maritime partnerships, and enhance interoperability by
conducting shared training. Joint teams including operations
specialists and intelligence specialists focused on maritime domain
awareness while engineers from Stratton worked with Philippine
sailors on propulsion systems and firefighting training aboard the
former USCGC Boutwell (WHEC 719), now the BRP Andres Bonafacio (PS
17).
Johnson participated directly in cross deck landings as
a break-in helicopter control officer. Her team successfully
embarked a Philippine helicopter and crew aboard the cutter's flight
deck while the Stratton’s MH-65 Dolphin helicopter crew practiced
landings to foreign ships in the area.
November 1, 2019 - Lt. j.g. Angela-Ruth Johnson, the
assistant operations officer on USCGC Stratton (WMSL 752),
serves as the break-in helicopter operations officer
overseeing the evolution of a helicopter operation from the
bridge of the ship. (U.S. Coast Guard photo by Chief Petty Officer Sara Muir)
|
“People are our most important resource,” said Cmdr. Jeff
Ferlauto, executive officer, USCGC Stratton. “More than 25 years
later Chief Johnson’s daughter is continuing to be part of the
maritime bridge between our Department of Defense’s lethality and
our State Department’s diplomacy that our Commandant, Adm. Karl
Shultz, speaks of so highly. The relationships built by our people
through exercises such as Sama Sama and Talisman Saber also build
partner-nation capacity and model the rules-based values and
behaviors we want to see in this region.”
What does Johnson think?
“This deployment has been challenging.
Working alongside the Navy has its own set of rules and parameters
to which we’ve adapted. The first half of the patrol focused on
non-Coast Guard missions such as surface warfare combat and defense
of the ships. It was a new experience for me as a tactical control
officer (TAO). Our earlier exercise, Talisman Saber, was one big
war-game with our partners and stood in sharp contrast to search and
rescue, counterdrug, and fisheries missions. However, they all
protect our nation and citizens in one way or another.”
In Talisman Saber just off the Australian coast, Johnson was TAO
and managed secure traffic as the Stratton’s crew stepped in to
provide fire support for the landing of U.S. Marines to Australian
shores. These warfighters were simulating an insertion to retake
occupied land. Formerly the Australian Navy was to provide this
support but were called away during the exercise to intercept a
real-world Chinese intelligence-gathering vessel. Johnson will take
her current skills and continue to hone them. Her next goal is to
serve as a commanding officer of a 154-foot Fast-Response Cutter.
“My father was the first in our family to join the military
voluntarily, and I’m the second,” said Johnson. The mariner streak
continues in the Johnson family as her brother, currently in his
final year, completes the Coast Guard Academy and enters the fleet
in 2020.
“The U.S. Coast Guard is a unique instrument of
national security with broad authorities, deep maritime expertise,
and capable assets that provide consistent operational presence
within the Indo-Pacific, including Oceania, also known as the Blue
Pacific. I am proud to be among these integral Pacific partners and
part of a family with a legacy of sea service.”
The 150 crew
of Stratton have been on deployment under the operational control of
the Navy’s Seventh Fleet in the Indo-Pacific region since June
conducting joint missions. Their patrol will continue as the head
east through November. The U.S. Coast Guard has an enduring role in
the Indo-Pacific, going back over 150 years, and the ongoing
deployment of resources to the region directly supports U.S. foreign
policy and national security objectives.
Coast
Guard Gifts |
Coast Guard
| U.S.
Department of Homeland Security
|
|