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Old 07-16-2018, 01:52 PM
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Unhappy Watch LST-1191 USS Racine Get Pummeled To Death During RIMPAC 2018 Sinking Exercise

Watch LST-1191 USS Racine Get Pummeled To Death During RIMPAC 2018 Sinking Exercise (*)
BY TYLER ROGOWAYJULY 16, 2018
RE: http://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone...nking-exercise

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Personal Note (from Boats): In Naval and Air training exercises they sometimes use old Naval Ships for targets. Knowing a few men that served on that vessel it must have been hard to watch her demise. Anytime you loose a ship its a sad thing to watch.
Photo link of USS Racine - LST1191 during happier times: http://imagesvc.timeincapp.com/v3/fo...ew_cropped.jpg

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The Navy's biennial Rim Of The Pacific (RIMPAC) exercise is well underway and the Navy just posted a video of a sinking exercise (SINKEX) involving the retired Newport class Landing Ship-Tank amphibious ship USS Racine. The 5,100-ton displacement vessel was decommissioned 25 years ago but finally met its end on July 12, 2018, at the hands of a flurry of friendly missiles and torpedoes.

Multiple types of weapons were fired at the ship during the highly anticipated drill, which included land-based attackers for the very first time, and in a big way. A variant of the U.S. Navy's recently selected Naval Strike Missile was launched by the U.S. Army—which is also looking to acquire the weapon—from a palletized truck-mounted canister. It flew 63 miles to impact the target successfully.

Japan also unleashed four of its Type 12 land-based anti-ship missiles at the ship, which marked the first time Japanese anti-ship missiles were fired under the command of U.S. military assets.

According to Military.com, nearly half a dozen HIMARS guided-artillery rockets were also fired at the vessel. The push to migrate the hugely successful HIMARS into a maritime and even an anti-ship role is something we once suggested ourselves and have been following closely as of late. It was all but a given that it would be featured in some sort of live-fire fashion during RIMPAC 2018.

Rounding out the international participants on the SINKEX was close U.S. ally Australia, which used one of its new P-8 Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft to launch AGM-84 Harpoon at the ship.

Last but not least, the Los Angeles class nuclear fast attack submarine USS Olympia also attacked the doomed amphibious ship. As we noted last week, the submarine had been loaded with a submarine-launched version of the Harpoon anti-ship missile—a weapon U.S. submarines haven't carried for two decades—in advance of the exercise.

In addition to firing the UGM-84 Harpoon, USS Olympia also launched a Mk48 torpedo. The torpedo, which often comes last during sinking exercises due to their devastating ability to 'break the backs' of even the hardiest combat ships, did exactly that. Still, it took about an hour for Racine to finally succumb to the seas, passing below the waves at around 8pm on its way to its watery grave 15,000 feet down.

(*) Video Link of Missiles and Torpedo sinking during SINKEK RIMPAC 2018: https://youtu.be/sOC4yNkIttQ

SINKEXs are largely designed to give very high-quality experience to all those involved and to evaluate the effectiveness of weapons and tactics. It's hard for us to accurately evaluate the comparative effects of all the weapons fired as we don't know which ones were loaded with live warheads and which ones we were shown hitting the ship in the video. The location of the impacts and detonations and how the ship was prepped for SINKEX are also important factors. Additionally, much of the video from the exercise isn't released due to the sensitive nature of some weapons' capabilities. But the impacts we do see would likely result in at least a mission kill.

The ship was originally targeted by a Japanese P-3 Orion, but it's ability to track the target and pass that info to 'shooters' was jammed as part of the realistic drill. A Gray Eagle drone and AH-64E Apache Guardian team then targeted the ship and sent that information via data-link back to the shore-based missile and artillery sites where it was loaded into the weapons before they were sent on their way.

Of course, all this fits perfectly into the Pentagon's emerging multi-domain battle strategy that aims to closely integrate distributed capabilities at sea, in the air, in space and cyberspace, and on land by quickly and securely sharing intelligence and targeting data. Also, building up the ability to repulse enemy naval advanced in multiple ways is also seen as a key requirement for fighting potential future peer-state battles, especially ones in the vast reaches of the Pacific.

America's long-neglected anti-ship capability is now migrating away from being the domain of strictly sea and air forces and into the hands of land forces as well. The U.S. Army and U.S. Marine Corps are looking to rapidly acquire various anti-ship capabilities to provide organic maritime defenses capable of denying the enemy vessels access to strategic littoral waterways as well as remote operating areas and forward staging bases.

Part of this grand plan that evolved from previous buzzword-worthy concepts is to work seamlessly with allies, especially when it comes to sharing targeting data and situational awareness enhancing intelligence. This becomes even more important when there is a requirement to fight across a huge area. Having an Apache-Gray Eagle team pass off targeting data on a maritime contact—not a traditional use of those platforms by the way—to multi-national 'shooters' on land is a nearly ideal display of this concept.

Historically speaking, RIMPAC has been used as a testing ground for new technologies and tactics, many of which are transient in nature. But multi-domain warfare is here to stay, as is the need to drastically increase anti-ship capabilities across all four of the services and the push for greater interoperability of those capabilities with America's regional allies. In other words, this is a small sample of what is to come both in terms of how the U.S. and its friends intend to fight future conflicts in Asia and when it comes to the procurement of new anti-ship systems for the various services.

As for the ex-USS Racine, she put up a good fight and it isn't clear at this time if she will be the only ship sunk during this RIMPAC evolution. Racine was one of six vessels the Navy had earmarked for SINKEX drills, which sadly includes one of the youngest mothballed Oliver Hazard Perry class frigates as we discussed in detail in this previous article. The next known SINKEX drill will be Valiant Shield in September, during which that relatively young Perry class frigate, the USS Ford (FFG-54), is slated to face a similar fate as the Racine.

According to the U.S. Navy, RIMPAC 2018 includes "twenty-five nations, more than 45 surface ships and submarines, 17 national land forces, and more than 200 aircraft and 25,000 personnel... RIMPAC 2018 is the 26th exercise in a series that began in 1971." The exercise runs through August 2nd.

We will keep you updated as to how it progresses.
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O Almighty Lord God, who neither slumberest nor sleepest; Protect and assist, we beseech thee, all those who at home or abroad, by land, by sea, or in the air, are serving this country, that they, being armed with thy defence, may be preserved evermore in all perils; and being filled with wisdom and girded with strength, may do their duty to thy honour and glory; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

"IN GOD WE TRUST"
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Old 07-16-2018, 02:10 PM
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Thumbs up History of the USS RACINE 22 years of service:

History of the USS RACINE 22 years of service:

USS RACINE was the 13th NEWPORT - class Tank Landing Ship. Decommissioned after more than 22 years of service on October 2, 1993, the RACINE is now berthed at the Naval Inactive Ship Maintenance Facility at Pearl Harbor, HI., awaiting final disposal.

General Characteristics: Awarded: July 15, 1966
Keel laid: December 13, 1969
Launched: August 15, 1970
Commissioned: July 9, 1971
Decommissioned: October 2, 1993
Builder: National Steel and Shipbuilding Company, San Diego, Calif.
Propulsion system: 6 diesels; 16,000 horsepower; bow thruster
Propellers: two and one bow thruster screw
Length: 522 feet (159 meters)
Length over derrick arms: 561 feet (171 meters)
Beam: 70 feet (21.2 meters)
Draft: 17,4 feet (5.3 meters)
Displacement: approx. 8500 tons
Speed: 20 knots
Aircraft: helicopter platform only
Armament: one 20mm Phalanx CIWS, 4 3-inch/.50-caliber guns
Crew: 14 officers, 210 enlisted and approx. 350 embarked troops

LST-1191 DEPLOYMENTS - MAJOR EVENTS
Add a LST-1191 Shellback Initiation Add a LST-1191 Deployment - Major Event
Month Year to Month Year Deployment / Event
DEC 1969 - Keel Date: 13 DEC 1969
at National Steel & Shipbuilding
AUG 1970 - Launch Date: 15 AUG 1970
JUL 1971 - Commissioned: 9 JUL 1971
JUL 1971 - Shellback Initiation - 9 JUL 1971 - Pacific Ocean
JAN 1972 - JAN 1973 West Pac-Viet Nam
JUN 1972 - JUL 1972 Shellback Initiation 6/19/1972 Pacific Ocean 81degrees-37min
AUG 1972 - AUG 1972 Panama Canal
SEP 1972 - MAY 1973 West Pac-Viet Nam
OCT 1972 - JAN 1973 West Pac-Viet Nam
JAN 1973 - JAN 1974 Sea Trials
OCT 1974 - Shellback Initiation - 26 OCT 1974 - Pacific Ocean
OCT 1974 - Shellback Initiation - 26 OCT 1974 - Pacific Ocean
MAY 1976 - FEB 1977 West Pac
OCT 1976 - MAY 1977 West Pac
JUL 1977 - FEB 1978 West Pac
JUN 1980 - Shellback Initiation - 1 JUN 1980 - Indian Ocean
JUN 1980 - Shellback Initiation - 1 JUN 1980 - Indian Ocean
JAN 1983 - FEB 1983 escortnewhydrofoils
JAN 1988 - APR 1988 Joint Chiefs of Staff tasking Central America
FEB 1988 - Shellback Initiation - 19 FEB 1988 - Pacific Ocean
MAR 1992 - JUN 1992 South Pacific Deployment
JUN 1992 - SEP 1992 Task Force Guadalcanal / 50th Anniversary
JUN 1992 - Shellback Initiation - 6 JUN 1992 - Pacific Ocean
JUN 1992 - Shellback Initiation - 28 JUN 1992 - Pacific Ocean
OCT 1993 - Decommissioned: 2 OCT 1993
LST-1191 GENERAL SPECIFICATIONS
Class: Newport class tank landing ship

Named for: Racine

Complement: 14 Officers and 210 Enlisted

Displacement: 5190 tons

Length: 522 feet

Beam: 70 feet

Flank Speed: 20+ knots

Final Disposition: Inactive reserve Pearl Harbor



USS RACINE (LST-1191)


The second Racine (LST-1191) was laid down by the National Steel & Shipbuilding Co. San Diego Calif. 13 December 1969; and launched 15 August 1970; sponsored by Mrs. Edwin B. Hooper wife of Vice Adm. Edwin B. Hooper USN (Ret.) Director of Naval History; Racine was placed in commission 9 July 1971 Comdr. Daniel W. Anderson in command.

She remained at Long Beach completing her fitting-out until 9 August when she departed for San Diego. Racine underwent tests and participated in exercises off the west coast until 8 June 1972. At that time she steamed out of San Diego for a South American cruise with a group of NROTC Midshipmen. She visited Valparaiso Chile; Callao Peru and the Canal Zone returning to San Diego 17 July. On 13 September she embarked on a tour of duty with WestPac. She remained in the Far East shuttling men and material between Vietnam and various American bases in the area until 26 April 1973 when she weighed anchor for San Diego. Racine arrived at San Diego 17 May 1973 and as of January 1974 continues operating in that area.


Racine was decommissioned 02 Oct. 1993. As of 1997 the vessel was in 180-day reserve at Pearl Harbor.
__________________
Boats

O Almighty Lord God, who neither slumberest nor sleepest; Protect and assist, we beseech thee, all those who at home or abroad, by land, by sea, or in the air, are serving this country, that they, being armed with thy defence, may be preserved evermore in all perils; and being filled with wisdom and girded with strength, may do their duty to thy honour and glory; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

"IN GOD WE TRUST"
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