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Wasp strike group wraps up inaugural patrol of Western Pacific

The USS Wasp strike group, which includes the USS Dewey, from left, the USS Green Bay, the USS Wasp, the USS Ashland and the USS Sterett, steams in formation in the Philippine Sea, April 17, 2018. (RICHARD GOURLEY/U.S. NAVY)

Two thousand, three hundred Marines are back on Okinawa after more than a month at sea accompanying the USS Wasp amphibious warship and F-35B stealth fighters on their first patrol of the Western Pacific.

The Wasp Expeditionary Strike Group dropped the Marines off Saturday at White Beach Naval Facility, Okinawa, after a patrol that included air-defense exercises with Air Force F-35A and Navy F-18 aircraft, live-fire drills, simulated Tomahawk missile strikes and anti-submarine warfare training, a Navy statement said.

The Wasp, which arrived at its new homeport of Sasebo Naval Base in January, also trained alongside a Japanese amphibious transport dock ship in the East China Sea.

Sailors and Marines with the strike group practiced raiding a beach with small boats and amphibious-assault vehicles, evacuating civilians, treating wounded, providing disaster relief, and seizing a smuggler’s vessel, the statement said.

The patrol, which included the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyers USS Dewey and USS Sterett, was a “proof of concept” for the Navy and Marine Corps, Task Force 76 commander Rear Adm. Brad Cooper told Stars and Stripes last week.

“[It’s] not your grandfather’s amphibious readiness group,” he said. “It’s a lethal, capable, integrated naval force that is designed to conduct both the sea-control mission, which is what we do in the Navy, as well as project power ashore.”

Combining the F-35B with destroyers is a big advantage, giving the strike group the ability to hunt enemy submarines and ships and engage in surface-to-surface combat, Cooper said.

Sensors on the destroyers’ Tomahawk missiles are able to detect enemy aircraft at long range, while the F-35B can defend amphibious forces. Meanwhile, sensors aboard the ships give commanders a robust picture of the battlespace, he said.

Capt. Ed Thompson, who led the strike group as commodore of Amphibious Squadron 11, said in the statement that his ships, aircraft, sailors and Marines “created a highly capable, flexible force ready for the spectrum of operations at sea.”

The destroyers have left the strike group and will eventually return to their homeport in San Diego, the statement said.

Navy leaders are already reviewing lessons learned on the patrol, and will incorporate those into future deployments, he said.

The Wasp has replaced the USS Bonhomme Richard, which is heading to San Diego for upgrades after spending six years based at Sasebo.

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© 2018 the Stars and Stripes

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