Careers

 Info Index

 About Us

 Contact Us

 Home 

  

>>> Advanced Search

 US Navy Today  About the Navy  Navy Leadership  Media Resources  Links of Interest  Information Index
  Chief Navy Diver Jason Potts, assigned to Mobile Diving and Salvage Unit Two (MDSU 2), jumps into the water to perform an underwater inspection on the amphibious transport dock ship USS New Orleans (LPD 18).
View All Photos
Next Photo
090323-N-9301D-133 BAHRAIN (March 23, 2009) Chief Navy Diver Jason Potts, assigned to Mobile Diving and Salvage Unit (MDSU) 2, jumps into the water to perform an underwater inspection on the amphibious transport dock ship USS New Orleans (LPD 18). MDSU 2 is an Expeditionary Mobile Unit currently deployed to support diving and combat salvage operations and fleet exercises in the U.S. Naval Central Command area of responsibility. New Orleans is in port in Bahrain to assess and evaluate the damage that resulted from their collision at sea with the Los Angeles-class attack submarine USS Hartford (SSN 768) on March 20. (U.S. Navy Photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Mathew J. Diendorf/Released)
 
View Larger Download HiRes
 

USS Hartford, USS New Orleans Undergo Extensive Assessments
Story Number: NNS090327-11
Release Date: 3/27/2009 12:24:00 PM
Top News Story - Editors should consider using these stories first in local publications.

From Commander, U.S. 5th Fleet Public Affairs

MANAMA, Bahrain (NNS) -- The U.S. Navy submarine and U.S. amphibious ship that
collided in the Strait of Hormuz March 20, have been undergoing extensive engineering and damage assessments since pulling into Bahrain March 21.

Engineering and technical experts arrived in Bahrain to assess the damage to USS Hartford (SSN 768) and USS New Orleans (LPD 18). They will augment Mid-Atlantic Regional Maintenance Center (MARMC) Detachment Bahrain.
Twelve Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard (PHNSY) personnel and two Naval Sea Systems (NAVSEA) experts are assessing the damage to Hartford and New Orleans and have begun initial in-theater repairs.

While overall damage to both ships is being evaluated, investigators believe Hartford rolled approximately 85 degrees during the collision.

Despite the roll, engineering investigations have confirmed the propulsion plant of the submarine was unaffected by this collision.

However, Hartford sustained damage to its sail and periscope, as well as the port bow plane.

New Orleans suffered a ruptured fuel tank. Divers have determined the resulting hole is approximately 16 by 18 feet in size. There was also interior damage to two ballast tanks.

In addition to the engineering efforts, two formal investigations are currently underway: a Safety Investigation and a Judge Advocate General Manual (JAGMAN) Investigation. Capt. Craig Kleint, the Dock Landing Ship (LSD) Class Squadron commodore has been appointed as the investigating officer (IO) for the JAGMAN investigation. A senior O-6 submarine officer
has been named as the senior member of the Safety Instigation Review, but his name is not releasable until the investigation has been completed.

The Safety Investigation Board is appointed to identify hazards and their causal factors in serious incidents. Their report is an essential tool to identify causes to prevent recurrence.

The JAGMAN investigation is intended to provide a critical and objective overview of what happened. Kleint, a nuclear-trained surface warfare officer, is joined by a post-command submarine officer. They are supported by a three-person legal team.

Naval Surface Forces (SURFOR) and Naval Submarine Forces (SUBFOR) are providing extensive support to Commander, U.S. Naval Forces Central Command (NAVCENT) for the Safety Investigation Board and JAGMAN investigation team.

Both investigations have a 30-day initial timeline, but extensions may be granted if more time is needed to complete the investigation process.

Hartford and New Orleans were on regularly scheduled deployments to the U.S. 5th Fleet Area of Operations conducting maritime security operations (MSO) when the accident occurred.

For more news from Commander U.S. Naval Forces Central Command/U.S. 5th Fleet, visit www.navy.mil/local/c5f.

E-mail this story to a friend | Send a comment about this story

Related Stories:
USS New Orleans Enters Dry Dock - 4/26/2009 This Story has a Photo
USS Hartford Commanding Officer Relieved - 4/14/2009


MS Word Friendly

Print Friendly


Subscribe NavNews

Submit Story/Photos

Tools

Contact Us

Privacy & Security

About This Site

External Links

Home



<a href="" class="menudark">All Hands PDF Version</a>