Legion Magazine (For more informative and fascinating articles)
HMCS Frederictons embarked CH-124 Sea King over the
Gulf of Oman. PHOTO: DAN BLACK
Assignment Arabian Sea: At Sea And The War On Terror
Part 2 (click
here for Part 1)
Stalker On The Prowl
Roughly one hundred metres above the Gulf of
Oman: cargo door open; all senses engaged. Shadows and
human silhouettes against sunlit water; vibrations still
typing rhythmic pattern up spine to neck; deep muffled
engine and main rotor noise in helmet overlaid with
sudden invite from 423 Squadrons Captain Adam
Power: Would you like to come up and fly for
awhile?
Immediate outward response: Love to.
Less immediate, but more measured nonverbal response:
Is that really a good idea?
Disengage communications link and safety tether known
as the monkey tail; squeeze past equipment
and tactical co-ordinator Capt. Rene Laporte and co-pilot
Capt. Elton Learning; climb into left front seat of
Stalker, adjust seat and strap in; re-engage
communications link and try to look cool. One joystick
between knees, another next to thigh; feet above peddles;
eyes darting from dials and switches to horizon to more
dials and switches.
Follow instructions: Move Sea King up, then down. Work
peddles and joystick: swing left, then right; each moment
unfolding heavy and slow, like an elephant trying to pass
through a garden hose. Bulbous clouds drifting like mast
airships on horizon; tension dropping; comfort level
rising. How old did you say this helicopter
is?
On radar, Capt. Laporte finds a contact to our left.
The information is conveyed to MotherHer
Majestys Canadian Ship Fredericton. The 47-year-old
Sea King is instructed to go in for a closer look. Capt.
Power tells me to turn left, and then assumes control of
the helo, eventually descending to 150 feet off the
water.
For an overview on HMCS Frederictons time in and
around the Arabian Sea stick with the BLUE COURSE. To
check out the risky role and operations of the
ships naval boarding party, go GOLD, and for a
logbook on how one civilian adjusted to life at sea,
chart GREEN. Well wrap up the series in the
September/October issue with a look at the logistics and
some other components of the ships six-month
deployment. To read Part 1 follow the link Assignment Arabian Sea: At Sea And The
War On Terror Part 1
PHOTO: DAN BLACK A sailor practices firing one of the
ships .50-calibre machine-guns.
The Blue Course: In The Gulf, Part 2
Stalker is flying her second two-hour patrol of the
day; conducting what is called a SSCSurface
Surveillance and Control mission that takes her crew
approximately 150 kilometres from Mother. The latter has
been very busy conducting counter-terrorism patrols as
part of Combined Task Force 150, and in the last couple
of weeks has dispatched its armed and trained boarding
party to investigate half a dozen vessels of interest.
The helo is the warships eye in the sky, a
capability that helps the ship build a maritime
picture. On this afternoonduring their time
over the Gulf, somewhere south of Pakistan and
IranStalker and her crew will investigate two
dhows, and take a closer look at a large bulk carrier.
They will also conduct a proficiency gun shoot with the
mounted C-6 machine-gun pointed out the cargo door at a
dropped flare.
While moving in on the contact, Laporte tells Mom
where the vessel is, the direction it is sailing in, the
type of ship it is andwhen close enoughthe
number of people spotted on board. We report any
useful informationa flag, no flag, a name, no name,
port of registry and any tripwiresanything
suspicious.
Master Corporal Kelvin Card, the crews airborne
electronic sensor operator, is, meanwhile, preparing to
photograph the vessel through the helicopters cargo
door. With the sun streaming in and the ocean whipping
by, Cardarmed with a digital camerais
kneeling on a floor mat next to the C-6. As he leans
forward with a monkey tail attached to his back, Card
aims his camera at a cargo dhow cutting through the waves
below. All he needs is about eight seconds to shoot
several good photos. On something like this we
usually do a 270-degree rotation around the vessel,
explains Capt. Power. Then we usually bugger off,
and resume our patrol with good coms with Mom. If we need
to go back for another look, we will.
While skirting around the south side of the dhow,
Stalker maintains a relatively safe distance, but still
within range of various portable weapons, including
rocket launchers. The possibility of being shot at may be
remote, but it is something the crew has to be prepared
for. If someone on the dhow decides to pull a gun and
start firing, the Sea King could respond with suppressing
fire from its C-6, but more than likely would be turning
left for a quick escape vector. Wed be trying
to get out of there, explains Power. We
wouldnt stay in a fight in that situation.
Its not because of any difficulty or anything,
its because we have a 440-foot-long warship that is
capable of a lot more destruction than a Sea King with a
C-6. We would go off to a safe standoff distance and tell
Mom where it (the dhow) is, and she would drive in with
all she has and we would be alleviated of any risk. And
they (the dhow) would most likely not challenge a
warship.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK The Sea King gets a good look at a dhow
transiting the Gulf. This one is loaded with sheep.
During the helos three-quarter rotation of the
vessel, her crew gets an excellent view of the
dhows wheelhouse and upper decks. Our cargo
door is on the right hand side so we always set it up so
we fly in a clockwise [direction] so that the person with
the gun and the person with the camera both have a good
view of any activity on the upper deck, explains
Capt. Power.
As it turns out, the 40-metre dhowlike hundreds
of other vessels transiting the Gulf of Omandoes
not appearfrom our distance anywayto be up to
anything unusual. What Stalkers crew is looking for
are tripwiresanything that might
suggest the dhow is engaged in illicit activity, such as
drug smuggling or hauling weapons or individuals that
could be used in terrorist activities. But the nicely
painted wooden vessel maintaining her course below seems
to be in pursuit of legitimate maritime tradean
assumption drawn from the dozens of sheep cramming her
upper deck.
Laporte and the others are looking forward to
eventually spending time on the CH-148 Cyclone, but in
the here and now they have no worries about the Sea King.
In fact, everyone on board and everyone back on ship who
is connected to either flying in or servicing the big
blue-gray helicopter seem comfortable with it. The
technicians know every inch of it, and have the talent
and spare parts to keep it flying on the mission
thousands of kilometres from home base, 12 Wing
Shearwater, N.S. It is old and it does require a
lot of maintenance, but I would fly on it any day,
was the unequivocal testimony received from 423
Squadrons Master Corporal Darren White, an avionics
systems technician.
Sure, we have some kit thats a little old,
but it is not always about what you have, it is how you
use it. It is a great platform for taking digital imagery
of the vessels we come across, added Laporte.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK Captain Adam Power pilots the Sea King.
With two-hour missions twice a day, the Sea King can
cover the ships patrol box twice a day.
Pre-assigned, two-hour missions give the crew and the
ship the flexibility to extend a mission because the Sea
King is topped up with a lot more than two hours of fuel.
If something happens and we get caught out there
for whatever reason, explains Laporte, we
have enough fuel that could be used to extend the mission
outside three hours.
This flexibility came into play earlier in the year
when HMCS Fredericton was patrolling for pirates in the
Gulf of Aden off the Horn of Africa, and the helo was
flying three missions a day. The ship and her helicopter
had located a suspicious skiff. Mom was two hours
away from where we were, explained Laporte.
We wanted to remain on station, so instead of
returning home (to the ship) we just monitored our fuel,
throttled back the engine so we werent burning as
much and waited for Mom.
Whirling away from the back of a moving ship, in a
helicopter model that first went into service in Canada
in 1963, is definitely something for adrenalin junkies,
but Stalkers crew is quick to say their role in the
CTF-150 operation is just one of several key capabilities
provided by the patrol frigate and her crew of
approximately 250. Everybodyfrom the captain to the
cooks to the meteorologists to the men and women who
perform various deck duties and evolutions to the
operators and supervisors in the Ops Room or
mushroom factoryis vital. And as
Commander Steve Waddell points out, they have to be on
top of their game 24/7.
It is a rare opportunity for a civilian to visit the
Ops Room during a mission. Located on 2 Deck near the
front of the ship, it is roughly 30 feet forward to aft
and is home to the ships combat departmentthe
nerve centre. It is where the sensor data from outside
the ship is channelled into, where they fight the
boat from, says naval combat information officer,
Leading Seaman Gordon Rittwage. Included in the mix of
talent are naval electronic sensor operators responsible
for the above-water sensors as well as the electronic
warfare equipment. Nearby is the fire control radar
system. During an action station situation you will
have the operator closed up here, scanning for targets,
taking direction on where to lock the gun up as well as
firing the gun
. Three people work here: two
operators and a fire control supervisor.
The mix includes a ship-borne air controller, an
anti-submarine plotting operator, an air raid reporting
operator and a sonar operator. It is the latter who hears
the pingping through the headset, adds
Rittwage.
Raw data gathered from outside the ship by the sensors
is displayed, evaluated and disseminated among various
co-ordinators and directors, and decisions are made on
what course of action to follow. Top dog is the Ops Room
Officer. In the absence of the captain, this guy
will be making the decisions as per captains
orders, but he is also given a certain amount of
leeway when it comes to more routine decisions.
Parked in front of the ships command and control
system is Lieutenant (N) Ben Seaby of Aylmer, Que. All
the sensors in the room feed into the system. We
will have these green paints on radar, but
that alone doesnt tell you muchdoesnt
tell you what type of aircraft or ship it is or what
their intentions are. The goal is to build
situational awarenessto know all the time what is
going on in the area of the world the ship is into
identify who is out there, what they are doing or intend
to do.
Seaby likes the job and is proud of the people he
works with. He also says whoever gave the room its
nickname was right. Down here you feel like a
mushroomall white and pasty.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK - A crew member
participates in a proficiency gun shoot, firing the
mounted C-6 machine-gun at a target below.
The Green Course: Reporters Logbook, Part 2
Friday, Feb. 19:
Good morning Fredericton. No bark in the
voiceno jarring snap to attention. Just
soft-on-the-senses intercom greeting flowing through
darkness into your rack, but loud enough to slip under
spongy earplugs, one of which has fallen out during the
night and attached itself to left side of jaw.
Grab shaving kit, toothbrush, towel; slip on sweats
and sandals; slide like a Ninja on a dust mop to locker.
Down hall to head. Turn right at urinal; past sinks and
mirrorsand three guys shavingwithout electric
razors; notice and remove orange earplug from right ear.
Strip down, enter shower. Reach for tap, but feel
brain Rolodex spinning to something I read: Section
Eight, Subsection A, Paragraph 8, Canadian Forces
Guidelines for Embedded Media. Water discipline:
Sailors do not waste water. When showering, do it the
pusser way: wet down quickly (one minute), turn off
water, lather up and shampoo, turn water on to rinse (two
minutes)
.
Anything longer or remotely similar to an everyday
shower is a Hollywood. Take one while at sea
and any number of unhappy scenarios could develop.
More interviews and photo ops. Treadmill time on 3
Deck; ears plugged into MP3, listening to Dylans
Tweeter and the Monkey Man when ship leans to starboard,
then portlike running forwards, then
backwards on teeter-totter. Nearing three-mile mark; ship
leans harder to starboard, then back; start thinking
about shortest distance between treadmill and sickbay.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK A view of the warship from the
helos cargo door.
Saturday, Feb. 20:
Ship in patrol area; full sun over calm sea; iridescent
flight of fish over spray; warm breeze, light haze on
orange and purple horizon; ghost-like smudges of distant
cargo ships. Learning best way to keep footprints off
head is avoid going up down ladders. Messmates report
noise emanating from lockersomething rolling
around in there. Enter darkened mess (people
sleeping)switch into Ninja mode. Investigate with
flashlight. Find tiny bottle of wart remover left behind
by someone not too concerned about fate of newbie.
Sunday, Feb. 21:
Work week is 24/7; nothing nine-to-five at sea.
Sunday another word for Monday. The food on
your plate tells you what day it is: Thursday is steak;
Friday, fish; Saturday, pizza; Sunday, roast beef.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK HMCS Frederictons boarding party
heads off in the RHIB to investigate a dhow.
Monday, Feb. 22:
Reports of tadpoles turned into shellbacks after ship
crossed equator Dec. 30, en route to Mombassa, Kenya.
Long-standing navy ceremony called Crossing The Line,
involving King Neptune and Davy Jones, and a whole mess
of pink scrambled eggs and green bacon and
noodlesstand-ins for salmon guts, seaweed and
entrails. Explanation: Tadpoles are folks
whove never crossed the equator at sea. A shellback
is what a tadpole becomes after being scrubbed with a
trout and slopped with aforementioned stand-ins.
Fire port side .50-calibre machine-gun; thumbs on dual
trigger; short, then longer bursts; acrid smell drifting
back with blue-white smoke; sharp, solid pounding
infiltrating helmet, concussive force of guns
action on face, shoulders and arms. Instructions: Aim
lower and walk rounds into target. Watch bullets skip
across water between red tracers.
Tuesday, Feb. 23:
Always remove cap before entering wardroom, main
cafeteria (Main Cave) or petty officers mess.
Unattended cap in Main Cave can result in obscene
artwork, including depictions of gender-specific body
parts, on inside of cap.
The Gold Course: Tripwires, Part 2
Ok. Imagine this. You are still hunkered down in that
Rigid-hulled Inflatable Boat. The stern of that
vessel of interestan ancient looking
cargo dhowis only 50 metres off the bow. Every
member of the boarding party has certain
responsibilities, and everyone is well armed and kitted
out.
The boarding team has gone through quite an
evolution. The equipment we have now coupled with the
specialized training has made this one of the best
Canadian boarding teams deployed. We have better
ballistic vests with ceramic plates, better holsters for
side armsmaking it easier to access in a hurry if
you need to.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK A sailor practices firing one of the
ships .50-calibre machine-guns.
With Mother observing from a short distance, the RHIB
moves in. The dhow has already been requested by the ship
to maintain a slow, even speed. This makes it easier for
the RHIBs experienced coxswain to stick
the RHIB against the side of the dhow for the boarding.
However, the RHIB has to maintain the same speed as the
dhow, and take into account the swell that can vary
greatly depending on the sea state.
The biggest or heaviest guy is first up the ladder. If
it doesnt break under his weight, then the rest of
the team will follow. Just getting up the ladder is
tricky, dangerous business, especially if the dhow is
rolling, creating large gaps between the bottom of the
ladder and the RHIB. Once on board, the first guy does a
quick assessment and if all is well gives thumbs up to
the team waiting below. There is a lot of unknown
and that is why we train as much as we do, says the
boarding partys leader who cant be named.
The local merchantmen are well aware of
Frederictons presence, and so far the ships
boarding parties have been well received. There is
a language barrier, a lot of gesturing to get our points
across, but they understand we are here for their
security, to stop or deter the different types of illegal
activity
.
When the entire team is on board it performs a quick,
but careful security sweep. It is, at this point, not a
complete search. That will come later. They are, however,
looking for those tripwiresitems that may have been
quickly hidden from view or perhaps the residue of
something tossed over the side.
Email the writer at: writer@legionmagazine.com
Email a letter to the editor at: letters@legionmagazine.com
HMCS Fredericton in the Gulf of Oman. PHOTO: DAN BLACK
Assignment Arabian Sea: At Sea And The War On Terror
Part 1
Stalker And His Mom
Fifteen metres above the Gulf of Oman: cargo
door open; all senses engaged. Surge of heavy air against
arms and legs; vibrations moving from floor to feet to
spine; muffled whine of the engine infiltrating your
helmet, and best of allout therethrough that
wide opening, the rapid rush of blue-silvery water,
broken only by fleeting whitecaps and the vanishing
trails of flying fish.
They call her StalkerStalker of the
Seas; a Sea King helicopter flying her second mission of
the day as the forward eyes of Her Majestys
Canadian Ship Fredericton, a 134-metre-long warship that
is fast becoming a dot on the horizon to my right. Mom,
as everybody likes to call her, is the only ship from
Canada assigned at this time to counter-terrorism
operations in the Gulf. Just a few weeks ago she was
patrolling for pirates in the Gulf of Aden off
Somaliaall part of a six-month maritime security
deployment that began in October following months of
intense workups.
In Canada, we generally only hear about the navy when
its vessels, its crews and its embarked aircraft leave
home or come back. We read stories and see photos of
loved ones lining the jetty to wave and blow kisses, but
seldom do we read about the in-betweenswhen its
people and assets are away, working on or under the sea.
Missing from the public picture is anything to do with
the day-to-day grindthe drills, duties, evolutions,
logistics and operationsthat lead to success or
failure, whether it is just off shore or thousands of
kilometres from home. And it doesnt matter whether
you are tightening a greasy bolt in the stifling confines
of the after-engine room, gathering and interpreting
classified information in the highly secretive and dimly
lit Operations Room, cooking breakfast for 250 people or
using a rusty ladder to board a suspicious cargo vessel
in rolling seas, it is the ships companyits
officers, petty officers and crewthat determine the
day at sea.
When Legion Magazine visited HMCS Fredericton last
February and March, she was approaching the midway point
in her deployment under Operation Saiph, switching from a
counter-piracy role with Standing NATO Maritime Group 1,
to a counter-terrorism mission under Combined Task Force
150, which was being led by an Australian commodore.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK Corporal Dan Perry (left) and Master
Corporal Jason Miller and the Sea King practice a
vertical replenishment at sea. With the helo 12 feet
overhead, Perry will use a wand to absorb the static
electricity on the helos cable before it is
attached, by Miller, to a cargo bag.
Over the next three issues of Legion Magazine, we will
explore a variety of in-between moments
experienced by Fredericton and her crew during and just
prior to our visit. But before we set course, we should
set the scene because the regions geography really
does explain why the ships captain, Commander
Steven Waddell, insisted from the start that everyone
remain vigilant and at the top of his or her game.
This is my fifth or sixth six-month deployment, and
it is the same thing every time, he told Legion
Magazine. Two-thirds to three-quarters of the way
through folks are starting to think more about home, and
yet they have to remain focused on the mission. Im
confident that its there, but Im also a
realist and recognize that what Im seeing at this
critical stage is the same thing Ive seen on every
other deployment.
So, where exactly is the Gulf of Oman, and what is it
about the region that triggers so much Canadian and
international interest? The quickest way to get to know
this part of the world is to go online or grab an atlas.
Click or flip to South Western Asia. Locate the Arabian
Sea, then head north above the Tropic of Cancer to where
the Gulf embraces Iran and western Pakistan. Toggle north
a little more and youll find Afghanistan. Look west
and see how the Gulf hugs Oman and the United Arab
Emirates (U.A.E.) before doglegging into the busy Strait
of Hormuz and the Persian Gulf. Now zoom out and look
south and youll spot the Gulf of Aden off the Horn
of Africa, wedged between Somalia on the south and Yemen
on the north. Further south, off the steep, sun-scorched
eastern shores of Somalia and Kenya is the Somali Basin,
a place Somali pirates and the people fighting them know
well.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK A U.A.E. naval vessel in manoeuvres with
Fredericton and her Sea King (above). Passing by is one
of many cargo vessels that transit the area.
One of the most dramatic encounters between pirates
and military personnel occurred in April 2009 when Navy
Seal snipers ended a five-day standoff between American
naval forces and a small group of armed marauders. Held
hostage in an 18-foot lifeboat, the captain of an
American cargo ship was in imminent danger of being
killed by the pirates equipped with AK-47s and pistols.
The captors demanded a $2 million ransom, but three of
them made the mistake of poking their heads out of a rear
hatch, and in the blink of an eye all three became
members of an even darker fraternity: the quick and
now-dead. The snipers shots were remarkable because
they were fired from the deck of a rolling ship at a
lifeboat that was 23 metres away in choppy sea.
Legion Magazines focus on Fredericton
coincides with the navys 100th anniversary, and our
time on board resulted in hundreds of interviews and more
than 2,400 photos, all focused on rarely reported or
rarely seen moments. For an overview on
Frederictons time in and around the Arabian Sea,
including how the ship worked with other coalition
forces, stick with the Blue Course. To check out the
risky role and operations of the boarding party, go Gold,
and for a logbook on how one civilian adjusted to life at
sea, chart the Green Course. In the July/August and
September/October issues well continue with all
three, examining other parts of this mission as well as
the counter-piracy effort. Well take an even more
detailed look at the ship, including the logistics of
sending it and its company to sea for six months.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK Leading seamen Mike Power (left) and
Brendon Pretty on the bridge.
The Blue Course: In The Gulf, Part 1
We are moving at 90 knots or roughly 170 kilometres an
hourstill within minutes after whirling away from
the rise and fall of Frederictons flight deck.
Mom is 16 years old. Stalker is nearly 50. Both are
showing their age, but capable of reaching beyond their
intended years to patrol vast stretches of ocean as part
of Combined Task Force-150 (counter-terrorism) or
Standing NATO Maritime Group 1 (counter-piracy).
Stalkers job is to go out twice a dayon
two-hour missionsto investigate large or small
vessels of interest, mostly Ark-like cargo or
fishing launches known as dhows, ranging in size from 15
to 20 metres. Most times these deep, wooden-hulled
vessels are fishing or plying the ancient trade routes in
pursuit of legitimate maritime trade and commerce. Life
on board the typical dhow is crowded, messy and
dangerouswith long days being tossed back and forth
under the blazing sun. A toilet is a hole over the stern.
A place to sleep is a few feet of deck space or the top
of a wheelhouse with maybe a tarp as cover. Many dhows
are heavily laden with sheep and goats, and all manner of
sights and smells that accompany sheep and goats. Some,
however, are used to smuggle illicit drugs, weapons and
very bad people back and forth through a region
well-known for harbouring and supporting the exploits of
very bad people.
Stalker, with the deep, black gaze of her skull and
crossbones war art staring forward from just above the
cockpit, soon begins to climbturning and then
passing through mistas she scans the horizon and
the surface below; ready to report to Mom whenever she
spots a vessel, whether it is a dhow, wooden skiff,
fibreglass runabout or even something as small as a
shasha, a boat made out of palm fronds usually found
closer to the U.A.E. Key to it all is the search for what
are called tripwires, anything out of
the ordinary. It could be something as obvious as a dhow
sailing without a state flag or having an unusual number
of people on board. If a closer look is needed, Mom will
close the gap and dispatch an armed approach or boarding
party. Fredericton and her boarding party would
participate in about 10 of these during our visit, and
while no illicit cargo was found, the boardings
reinforced CTF-150s presence.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK Frederictons naval boarding party
participates in target practice.
Combined Task Force 150 has been around since 9/11,
and Canada has been involved since day one. Two years ago
the multinational force was led by Canadian Commodore Bob
Davidson, now Rear-Admiral Davidson. Canadian ships other
than Fredericton know these waters well. One of the more
recent examples is HMCS Winnipegs role in thwarting
a pirate attack on a Maltese cargo ship in May 2009.
Our patrol area is about 20 miles off the
Iranian and Pakistani coast, explains the commander
of Fredericton, who at age 39 is 10 years younger than
the ships embarked Sea King. Well
remain here for the next while and then perhaps head back
down towards Yemen again. It will depend on what we are
assigned to, but I expect we will be doing that up until
the end of March.
The ships patrol area is roughly 110 miles by 60
miles, but, as her captain points out, it can vary,
depending on what assets and what type of
intelligence CTF-150 collects and where the targeted
vessels are coming from at any given moment. It is really
intelligence based. Information is generated from many
sources, and that information is pushed to the ships and
we can then individually target where we want our
patrols, and try to find specific vessels to board,
looking for illicit cargo.
Often it is narcotics because the trade and
shipment of that raises funds that can be used for fairly
serious business ashore, including Afghanistan. This is
illicit business that can ultimately hurt people,
including our folks, on the ground there. So it is all
linked
.
Opium produced in land-locked Afghanistan can make it
to sea via Pakistan. It is loaded onto dhows and shipped
through the Gulf of Oman to where it can be sent to hubs
in Africa, the Middle East or further afield to Europe
and North America. The proceeds make it back to
Afghanistan in the form of money or weapons, including
Improvised Explosive Devices.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK The Sea Kings machine-gun is
manned during a patrol.
It was just such a device that ended the life of
Leading Seaman Michael Kennedys younger brother in
2007. Kevin served with 2nd Battalion, Royal
Canadian Regiment, explained Kennedy, one of nearly
250 personnel on board Fredericton. He was with
Hotel Company. They were on their last patrol before
heading into Kandahar, about to go on their decompression
leave. They were in a LAV III, about 75 kilometres to the
west in Helmand Province. The IED struck the rear troop
compartment. Six were killed, including Kevin. One guy,
Corporal Shaun Fevens, who is a good friend of mine
today, survived because he was the lookout
. The
blast or shock wave sent him out of the vehicle, but he
had a lot of injuriesshrapnel pretty much head to
toe, and fractures in his legs
.
The commander of Canadian Expeditionary Force Command
(CEFCOM) is also quick to recognize the linkages between
what is going on in the Gulf and what is happening
elsewhere in the region. Whether you are talking
about the insurgentsthe enemyal-Qaida, other
terrorist groups, or talking about terrorist groups in
the Arab Peninsula or in Eastern Africa, there is a link
between them, said Lieutenant-General Marc Lessard.
By having maritime operations you are working to
ensure the link between those terrorist organizations in
Afghanistan is impeded in the transition to the Arab
Peninsula or even Eastern Africa.
It is a coalition effort. If we board a vessel
and seize some terrorist out here, we may not be helping
Canadian troops right away. We may be helping coalition
troops, but helping Canadian troops indirectly as well as
the people of Afghanistan. It depends. There are many
variables. The main thing we have to understand is that
it is one theatre from the Afghanistan-Pakistan border
right up to Eastern Africa.
The man leading CTF-150, Commodore Richard Menhinick,
said the number of coalition ships in his force varies,
but at the moment there are more than half a dozen,
including those from Australia, Britain, France, Germany,
Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and the United States. The closest
Fredericton got to another coalition ship occurred during
what is called a RAS or Replenishment A Sea. More on this
in Part 2.
When contacted from the ship by Legion Magazine,
Menhinicks first order of business was to
congratulate Canada on its gold medal hockey performance
at Vancouver. This was soon followed by: The
Canadian navy is first-rate. It is a modern, highly
trained navy
. It is one of those navies that can
just come into an operation and be effective from day
one.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK A target is collected after a practice
shoot.
Menhinick said the contribution of maritime patrol
aircraft cannot be overlooked, and Frederictons Sea
King is helping to build a complete picture
of the area. Asked if the overall effort is paying off,
he said, Yes, absolutely, but it takes a continued
presencethe persistence of patrol. It is the task
of gaining good knowledge of the pattern of life at sea.
And it is just as dependent on the goodwill of
law-abiding fishermen and traders of the region to help
us with that information and make sure that they know we
are here to help them, and that is how we build the
picture. It is not about a single major incident
we
will occasionally get those. And I know it doesnt
play well on the nightly news, but it is about just going
out there and doing our job so people ashore can live
much better.
When asked for numbers or a few specific examples of
recent counter-terrorism activity, the commodore
declined, citing operational reasons. I publically
cant get into specifics, but I can assure you that
there are examples that show we are being very
effective.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK Ammunition is inspected prior to the
shoot.
Its not just the number of boardings,
number of terrorists capturedit is the deterrence
factor, added Lessard. The people engaged, or
thinking about engaging, themselves in activities that
support terrorism know their ability to sail unimpeded
does not exist anymore.
This is an extremely busy piece of ocean,
added Frederictons Executive Officer,
Lieutenant-Commander Dan Charlebois. There is all
sorts of coastal dhow traffic and maybe one in 200 dhows
has illegal cargothats a total guess, but
they really only need to have one filled with opium to
get through to make a big difference in their
operations.
Still heading east and reaching roughly 500 feet with
the 9,225-kilogram helicopter, Captain Adam Power of 423
Squadron gives everyone a wider view of the patrol area.
Helping out are Capt. Elton Learning of Stephenville,
Nfld., tactical officer Captain Rene Laporte, who when
asked where hes from, thinks before answering,
Base Brat, Canada, and Master Corporal Kelvin
Card, a lean and lanky airborne electronic sensor
operator who has the added duty of photographing any
vessel Stalker swoops in to investigate.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK Commander Steven Waddell on the bridge.
With Mom no longer in sight, it isfor the
initiated and uninitiatedan exercise in trust to be
out here; over an ocean you could easily disappear into,
never to be heard from again. You cant help but
think about your wife and kids back home and the bad
things written about the Sea King, but you quietly tell
yourself that youre in good hands, in an aircraft
that is old, yes, but well flown, and rigorously
maintained by people who know every inch of itfrom
the reserve oil pan to the dials and switches, which bear
a strange resemblance to an old Pontiac my dad used to
own. Id let my kids fly in it, offered
one of the grinning maintenance guys just prior to our
whirl above the waves.
The Green Course: Reporters Logbook, Part 1
Sunday, Feb. 14 to Monday, Feb. 15:
Depart Ottawa for Dubai, with connection in frozen
Frankfurt. Jetlag erodes patience with annoying German
couple who hit the call bell five times within 20 minutes
of finding their seats on Jumbo. Smiling flight attendant
worthy of Nobel Peace Prize. Jumbo has problem: the door
wont close or theres a tiny, annoying light
somewhere saying the door wont close. Maintenance
men come and gominutes turn into hour. We push back
from the gate and roar away; hoping like hell the door is
closed.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK A sailor armed with a machine-gun and
wearing protective gear stands guard on
Frederictons starboard bridge wing.
Tuesday, Feb. 16:
Arrive Dubai around 2 a.m. Dark, but through Jumbo window
the citys outskirts look like a sprawling power
grid in the middle of an enormous sand trap. Off the
plane, follow polished catwalk above indoor mall. Notice
what could be a Lamborghini or some otherexotic sports
car way down there for someone with a wheelbarrow full of
dirhams. Life is either good or false. Arrive Passport
Control, ready with papers, including the
letterwritten in Arabic and Englishfrom
Canadian Expeditionary Force Command, summing up why
after flying all this way Im only sticking around
for a day or two, and when I do leave, it wont be
through an airport, but in a Canadian warship. Fresh is
the story of an assassinated Hamas leader in a downtown
hotel; fresher are stories on how tight the security is.
Passport Control Man doesnt smile, doesnt
even look at the letter, just stamps me in and says,
Carry on, sir.
Grab taxi and weave onto boulevard populated by
chrome-covered Land Rovers, Bentleys, Mercedes. Looks
like a North American freeway minus economy cars, and 100
times more dangerous: 332 traffic deaths in 2007. And the
road Im on nowShaikh Zayedtops the list
of black spots. Check into hotel, fall asleep in a haze
of jetlag, mumbling something about not being watched;
dream about getting even with annoying German couple.
Wednesday, Feb. 17:
Make contact with Public Affairs Officer Lieutenant (N)
Brian Owens and Sergeant Darren Stacey, a member of HMCS
Frederictons forward logistics team. Drive to
nearby port and find HMCS Fredericton hidden smartly
behind wall of sea containers. Shown to No. 12 Mess on
Three Deck, thats one deck above and behind the
after-engine room. My rack (bunk) is lowest in a stack of
three opposite another stack of three.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK Commander Steven Waddell (centre) chats
with Lieutenant-General Marc Lessard, commander of
Canadian Expeditionary Force Command.
Thursday, Feb. 18:
Breakfast in wardroom, followed by commanders
briefing on bridge. Scheduled to leave port at 0800
hours, but local authority closes port to all shipping on
account of something Canadian ships have apparently never
seen before: foghuh, fancy that. Soon on our way,
conduct boarding party and manoeuvres with U.A.E. navy.
Sunshine, hardly a ripple: sea snakes, jelly fish,
massive algae blooms. Return to 12 Mess. First night in
narrow rack. Getting in works best with a combination,
backwards jackknife dive, finishing with half twist.
Drift off knowing night will give way to a morning pipe
call, followed by the words: Good morning
Fredericton.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK A dhow, loaded with sheep and goats,
plies the waters of the Gulf of Oman.
The Gold Course: Tripwires, Part 1
OK. Imagine this. Youre hunkered down in a
Rigid-hulled Inflatable Boata kind of Zodiac on
testosterone. Youre way out here in the Gulf of
Oman, part of the vast Arabian Sea. There isnt a
speck of land in sight, and as you and the other members
of the boarding party whip across the breaking waves and
occasionally find air you keep a watchful eye
on the vessel youre approaching, looking for
anything unusual, any tripwires that have
gone unnoticed before the team embarked the RHIB from
HMCS Fredericton.
It could be something being thrown discreetly over the
far side; the sudden appearance of an additional person
on board; the lack of a certain type of fishing gear on a
fishing vessel; visible scars or bruises on a passenger.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK The ships company musters on the
flight deck for an awards ceremony.
The vessel of interest may not know youre
coming, but most times they do and theyre waiting
for youeven though when you embark the RHIB, the
boat is tactically hidden from the vessel of
interest by Frederictons massive grey
superstructure.
Your personal kit, which weighs roughly 60 to 70
pounds, includes a Sig Sauer 9mm pistol, a tactical
webbing vest, bullet-proof vest with ceramic plates, two
life vests, a locator beacon, sawed-off shotgun,
ammunition, (12 rounds for the shotgun and magazines for
the Sig Sauer), knife, plastic handcuffs, small
truncheon, flashlight, ear defenders, safety glasses,
communications set, first aid kit.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK HMCS Frederictons naval boarding
party receives instructions before a boarding operation.
If you are part of the search wavethe second
waveyou will have an array of drug detection
equipment, including swab kits and various sprays.
Someone will have a pole camera called a bore scope, used
to drill into a wall or bulkhead. It comes with a fibre
optic cable which allows you to look inside without
smashing the place to smithereens. It means you
dont have to take a hammer to anything, said
one member of the team, who like all the other members,
cant be identified. Before all this new
equipment arrived, they would board ships with a
notebook, flashlight, a bag of hammers and some pry
bars.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK The ships Rigid-hulled Inflatable
Boat waits near a dhow as members of the boarding party
conduct an inspection.
Computer technology makes it possible to collect
biometrics, including finger prints and iris scans. But
the technology is advancing faster than policy can be
written. You have to be careful about who you share
the information with, and we have to be sure what it is
going to be used for, said Lieutenant-Commander
Mike McKay, CEFCOMs international desk officer for
Fredericton. So from the start, we have to make
sure the guys equipped with the technology know what they
can and cant collect.
PHOTO: DAN BLACK The naval boarding party returns to HMCS
Fredericton following a practice drill.
Meanwhile, you and the others on the RHIB are getting
closerapproaching the dhow from her stern, looking
for tripwires. Fredericton is right therekeeping a
very close eye on the entire evolution.
Email the writer at: writer@legionmagazine.com
Email a letter to the editor at: letters@legionmagazine.com
|