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Cutter Dallas returns from historic deployment Editors note: Photos and video of the cutter's return is available below. All media has been loaded to the Coast Guard Visual Imagery website. To download the photos and video click the links and follow the on-screen instructions.
CHARLESTON, S.C. - The crew of the Coast Guard Cutter Dallas returned 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. For more information on the cutter's historic deployment, click here. VIDEO - To view video of the cutter's return, click here and follow the instructions to download. PHOTOS -
CHARLESTON, S.C. - A Coast Guard Cutter Dallas crewmember uses a shipmate’s cell phone to talk to his loved ones waiting for him on the pier as the cutter moors in its homeport of Charleston Oct. 7, 2008.
CHARLESTON, S.C. - Friends and family welcome home the crew of the Coast Guard Cutter Dallas as it returns to its homeport of Charleston Oct. 7, 2008 after a historic four-month deployment in the Gulf of Guinea off West and Central Africa, and the Mediterranean and Black Seas.
CHARLESTON, S.C. - Crewmembers of the Coast Guard Cutter Dallas man the rails as they pull into their homeport of Charleston Oct. 7, 2008. Manning the rail is a method of saluting or rendering honors, which evolved from that of manning the yards from the days of sail.
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