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U.S. Navy's 2nd Fleet reaches initial operational capability
by Sommer Brokaw
Washington (UPI) May 30, 2019

The U.S. Navy's 2nd Fleet has reached initial operational capability a year after it was re-established, the branch announced late Wednesday.

The 2nd fleet was brought back last May as a "leaner, agile and more expeditionary," fleet, Rear Adm. John Mustin said, to support North Atlantic and Arctic operations after being deactivated in 2011.

Vice Adm. Andrew "Woody" Lewis, who leads command for the re-established fleet, declared Wednesday at Naval Station Norfolk, Virginia, that the fleet has achieved IOC.

"The North Atlantic has some of the world's busiest shipping lanes, and with the opening of waterways in the Arctic, this traffic will only grow," Lewis said in a statement. "This is a fact acknowledged by our allies and competitors, and as such, it is critically important U.S. 2nd Fleet reinvigorates the way our forces are employed in this influential theater."

The IOC designation means its capable of commanding and controlling naval forces, the Navy said, adding that it would be "focusing on the high-end training and employment of assigned assets," ahead of a large exercise in the Baltics next month.

"The new 2nd Fleet will be postured to support the employment of forces, whether that is on the Western side of the Atlantic, the Eastern side of the Atlantic, or up into the Arctic," the Navy said.

"A few days after achieving IOC, the new fleet with lead Exercise Baltic Operations (BALTOPS), marking the first time the fleet with operate in the European theater, and leveraging increased lethality, interoperability and integrated warfighting capability with allies and partners in the region."

The two-week Baltic exercise starts on June 7 with approximately 50 naval assets.

"BALTOPS 2019 is our collective opportunity to promote peace and security through cooperation, collaboration, interoperability, and an unambiguous display of strength in the Baltic region," Lewis said. "As an alliance, increasing our capabilities across all-domains as well as building a command-wide network will give us the ability to deter aggression and project stability."


Related Links
Naval Warfare in the 21st Century


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Raytheon awarded $246M in two contracts for Navy's jet landing systems
Washington (UPI) May 23, 2019
Raytheon has been awarded two contracts worth $243.6 million for jets' landing systems on the U.S. Navy's aircraft carriers. One contract is worth $234.6 million for 23 joint precision approach and landing systems, and another one is for a replacement GPS sensor for the JPALS, the Defense Department announced Wednesday. The contract for the systems also includes three production and installation engineering development model unit upgrade kits, engineering change proposals and associated ... read more

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