Navy Soon To Resume River-Patrolling Mission

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Mideast Stars and Stripes
January 20, 2007
By Jeff Schogol, Stars and Stripes
ARLINGTON, Va. — For the first time since the Vietnam War era, the U.S. Navy is set to start patrolling rivers again, said Rear Adm. Sharon H. Redpath.
Redpath is vice commander of Navy Expeditionary Combat Command (NECC), which was established last January to serve as an umbrella group for sailors involved in taking the war from deep to shallow water and far inland.
One of the command’s accomplishments over the past year has been to resurrect the Navy’s riverine capability, which largely disappeared after Vietnam, Redpath said.
Realizing it needed to resume its river patrol mission, NECC established a squadron of about 200 riverine sailors who are about to finish their preparations to deploy to Iraq later this fiscal year, Navy officials said.
The command plans to establish a second riverine squadron next month and a third squadron later this year, according to the Navy.
NECC has about 40,000 sailors in specialties as disparate as construction, explosive ordnance disposal, coastal warfare and logistics support, Redpath said.
The sailors in NECC have a distinctly different appearance from sailors in other commands.
“We wear the camouflage uniforms on a day-to-day basis,” Redpath said. “We don’t wear the khakis or the dungarees.”
Not only do the NECC sailors look like ground troops, but many are also tasked with helping ground forces nowhere near the water.
NECC is responsible for individual augmentees, who are sailors sent to theaters of operations to supplement other branches of the service, such as the Army and Marine Corps.
About 8,500 individual augmentees are now serving in the U.S. Central Command area of operations.
In the past year, NECC has established the Expeditionary Combat Readiness Center, which is in charge of training and equipping the augmentees, Redpath said.
Despite their variety of missions, all NECC sailors share a common definition, Redpath said.
“We’re an adaptable force,” she said. “We take our core competencies and apply those to the requirements that are placed before us by the Department of Defense.”
 
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