DATE: October 6, 2008 10:02:28 AM EDT

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News Release

Date: Oct. 6, 2008
Contact: Petty Officer 1st Class Christopher Evanson
(305) 318-1864

Coast Guard Cutter Dallas returns home from four-month deployment

*Media interested in attending the homecoming shall contact Petty Officer Christopher Evanson at 305-318-1864 no later than 5 p.m. Monday*

CHARLESTON, S.C. - The crew of the Coast Guard Cutter Dallas will return to its homeport of Charleston Tuesday at 9:30 a.m. after a historic four-month deployment in the Gulf of Guinea off West and Central Africa, and the Mediterranean and Black Seas.

Dallas crewmembers were deployed under the command of the Navy's 6th Fleet based in Naples, Italy and carried out multiple missions in support of the Navy in countries throughout Africa and Europe.

The crew of the Dallas was the second United States military ship to bring humanitarian assistance supplies to the Republic of Georgia following the conflict between Russian and Georgian forces in August. The crew loaded more than 76,000 pounds of hygiene products, infant care, and food items onto the ship's flight deck in Souda Bay, Crete, and delivered it to Batumi, Georgia, Aug. 27 for further distribution to those affected by the fighting.

During the first half of the deployment, the crew trained with navies and coast guards in Cape Verde, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Ghana, Sao Tome and Principe and Senegal as part of the Africa Partnership Station, a 6th Fleet initiative aimed to strengthen maritime safety and security in west and central Africa.

The Dallas visited Gibraltar, Malta, Greece, Ukraine, Romania, Bulgaria, Turkey and Spain on the second half of the deployment. Dallas crewmembers trained with maritime partners in Malta, Bulgaria and Turkey during the visits. In Spain, the crew hosted 50 of America's civilian public opinion leaders who were selected to participate in the 76th Joint Civilian Orientation Conference, a Department of Defense program established in 1948 designed to expose business, public sector, and academia leaders with little or no military experience to the working of the armed forces and national defense issues.

"Many Americans do not realize the role of the Coast Guard in representing America's maritime interests throughout the world," said Capt. Robert Wagner, commanding officer of the Dallas. "Deployments like this showcase how America's naval services work cooperatively to achieve what's important to our nation."

The Dallas is expected to remain in port for three months before departing for the next patrol.

MEDIA NOTES: 

Imagery of Dallas operations from this deployment is available via the Coast Guard's Visual Imagery Gallery at http://cgvi.uscg.mil/media/main.php. Once at the Web site search for "Dallas."

Additional information about APS is available via the U.S. Navy Web site:  http://www.news.navy.mil/local/naveur/

 

The Coast Guard Cutter Dallas sits in port at Batumi, Georgia, shortly before the off-load of more than 76,000 pounds of humanitarian assistance supplies to be given to the people of the Republic of Georgia Aug. 27, 2008. The humanitarian supplies are brought in response to the request of the government of the Republic of Georgia. Dallas is part of Combined Task Force 367; the maritime element of the U.S. humanitarian assistance mission to Georgia.

(U.S. Navy photo/ Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Eddie Harrison)


The USS Dallas and the Coast Guard Cutter Dallas leave Gibraltar together Monday, Aug. 11, 2008.

The Coast Guard Cutter Dallas, a 378-foot high endurance cutter based in Charleston, S.C., stopped in Gibraltar for maintenance halfway through a four-month deployment Aug. 1, 2008. During the first half of the deployment, the cutter made stops in Cape Verde, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Sao Tome and Principe, Ghana and Senegal to train and collaborate with the host nations' navies and coast guards in support of the Africa Partnership Station program, an initiative aimed to strengthen maritime safety and security in west and central Africa.

(Coast Guard photo/Petty Officer 2nd Class Lauren Jorgensen)

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