Tim Colton is reporting the Federal law suit against Bollinger, alleging fraud in the modification of eight WPBs, has been dismissed. Full story here.
Category Archives: Uncategorized
Maritime Futures Project Complete
CIMSEC has completed their Maritime Futures project I mentioned earlier.
You can link to all the various parts, including an unanticipated section on the future of piracy here.
Coast Guard Manned USS Serpens, Explosion, Jan. 29, 1945
Photo credit: Tim1965, View of the west side of the the USS Serpens Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery near Arlington, Virginia, in the United States. The ship exploded on January 29, 1945, while anchored off Laguna Beach at the island of Guadalcanal.
Yesterday marked the anniversary of the loss of the Blackthorn, today it is the 68th anniversary of the loss of the USS Serpens (AK-97) that resulted in the loss of 196 Coast Guardsmen plus 57 Army stevedores. This was the largest loss of life in a single incident in the history of the service. The names are here.
Turkey also uses HC-144 Airframe for MPA

Navy recognition is reporting that the Turkish Coast Guard and Navy are also using the CN-235 airframe, on which the HC-144 is based, as a maritime Patrol Aircraft.
33rd Anniversary of the Loss of the Blackthorn with 23 Dead.
New Weapon for Patrol Craft
Informationdissemination is reporting that the Navy has tested a surface launched version of a small semi-active laser homing missile, the AGM-176 Griffin, from USS Monsoon (PC-4), a ship very similar in size to the new Fast Response Cutters.
The launcher is relatively small, and appears to impose minimal requirements on the vessel.
This is a very small missile, obviously not a ship killer, in that it did not sink even the small boat used as a target, but with a 13 pound warhead, it does provide hitting power similar to a 76mm round.
The range is not great at about 6,000 yards, but that is beyond the effective range of machineguns, RPGs and even most man-portable anti-tank guided missiles, weapons that might be used by drug smugglers or terrorists. (Since I wrote this the range has increased to 12,000 yards.)
USS Pueblo (AGER-2, originally AKL-44), 1967-____
Photo #: NH 74689-U.S. Army Cargo Vessel FP-344 (1944); Fitting out at the Kewaunee Shipbuilding & Engineering Corp. shipyard, Kewaunee, Wisconsin, Circa July 1944. FP-344 was later renamed FS-344. Transferred to the Navy in 1966, she became USS Pueblo (AGER-2). Courtesy of Kewaunee Shipbuilding Corp., 1968. U.S. Naval Historical Center Photograph.
I’m sure most of you have heard of the USS Pueblo and know that she was seized by the North Koreans. That happened 44 years ago today. One crewmember was killed and the remaining 82 were held for 11 months. The ship is still held, displayed as a museum at Pyongyang, the North Korean capital city.
You may not know that she was once manned by Coast Guardsmen. Originally she was an Army Transport, the FP(later FS)-344, and from 7 April 1945 to January 1946 she was Coast Guard manned.
She was one of 288 Army vessels manned by the Coast Guard during WWII (along with 351 Navy ships and craft.)
Sources:
http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/sh-usn/usnsh-p/ager2.htm
Scheina, Robert L., U. S. Coast Guard Cutters and Craft of World War II, US Naval Institute Press
Expansion of China’s “coast guard” Fleets
Informationdissemination has a short report on the ongoing expansion of the fleets of China’s five law enforcement agencies. Several things stand out. This expansion is massive. The charts in the report may be difficult to read, but it is clear they are building at a furious rate while also taking in former Navy platforms. It is also clear that while some are very large, these are relatively simple and because of the low cost of ship building in China, very inexpensive ships.
These agencies still have relatively few aircraft so they will remain ship rich, aircraft poor.
China has apparently found their maritime law enforcement agencies useful in asserting control over disputed areas.
For reference while the US EEZ is 11,351,000 km2, China’s internationally recognized EEZ is only 877,019 km2 and they claim another approximately 3,000,000km2.
And You Thought We Had It Bad
Yes, some of our aircraft are getting old, and our ships are even older, but consider South Africa. It’s Air Force does their Maritime surveillance. Defense Web reports they use C-47/DC-3 airframes, updated to the extent of having their reciprocating engines replaced by turbines. That makes the aircraft close to 70 years old. I have to think, this is what happens when you put the Air Force in charge of your maritime recon. It takes last place.
Israelis to Buy S.Korean OPVs
Defense News is reporting that the Israelis are negotiating an purchase of four Offshore Patrol Vessels from South Korean ships builders Hyundai and/or Daewoo.
“Navy requirements call for the OPVs to weigh 1,200 to 1,400 tons, sail at a top speed of 24 knots and remain at sea without refueling for more than a week.
“Each ship would be fitted to accommodate one helicopter for search, rescue and evacuation missions and a suite of Israeli-developed combat systems, including radar, electronic warfare, command and control, and self-defense capabilities.”
The ships will patrol the Israeli EEZ. The four ship deal is expected to cost approximately $400M.