The first time I
almost got someone killed, I was in the Pacific, between Hawaii and
Japan. On a wintertime transpacific crossing, the crew of my Arleigh
Burke class destroyer was approaching the last section of the voyage
over an area that our maps named "The Haunted Sea," also known as
"The Devil's Triangle."
At the time, my main
billet onboard is First Lieutenant. I am responsible for the deck
equipment, including ropes, anchors, and my favorite, two seven meter
rigid hull inflatable boats, or RIBs. I am also our search and rescue
officer and lead rescue swimmer. By the end of my time onboard, I am
qualified as a small boat engineer, able to conduct maintenance and
troubleshooting on the RIBs. I have probably completed over 50
successful small boat operations as either onboard rescue swimmer or
small boat officer by the time my tour is over. I was the captain's
point man for all search and rescue and small boat operations. When
other officers needed training on the small boats, they come to me.
Over the year leading up to our Pacific crossing, whenever we are
launching our RIBs, I am involved.
So during our
crossing, when the ship needed to conduct a surprise man overboard
recovery drill, I was on the assessment team. The team had two other
members: my boss, the operations officer, or Ops, and my chief, or
BMC. With 15 years of experience, he was more knowledgeable in all
things Navy than I was. I relied on him to inform my decisions,
especially in technical equipment matters.
Ops rubs at his
heavy eyelids and gathers our small group. "Ok team, let's do
this pre brief." It has been dark for two hours, and lunar
illumination is low to nonexistent. The three of us stand in the red
light of the port brake, not quite inside the ship, but not exposed
to the elements. The wind whistles harshly out on the open
weatherdeck, just beyond the threshold of the brake. Even outside the
skin of the ship, the machine oil-paint-wet garbage ship smell is
inescapable.
We talk through the
evolution. The beginning is simple. Ops will drop a smoke float, a
bright floating incendiary, into the water to simulate a man
overboard. The aft lookout (hopefully) will report it to the bridge,
and the bridge team will maneuver the ship to position it near the
man. We will take muster of the crew as quickly as possible, and once
all are accounted for, we can reset and practice the actual recovery
via the RIB. That's the tricky part. The dangerous part.
"BMC," Ops looks
at my chief, "What do you think of these waves?" Wave height is
the most important environmental safety consideration for the RIB. By
instruction, the line between permissible and non-permissible waves
is about four feet. Anything greater requires special permission for
operation. "It's fine, sir." Chief is about five foot two, but
his voice is cutting and he speaks with confidence. We believe him.
The wave height is right on the edge of the four foot threshold, the
RIB can handle a little more, but it's best not to test it.
"So then we'll
lower the RIB, pick up the man, and recover the RIB. Simple enough,"
Ops says.
I know it isn't
going to be simple. Operating a RIB in four foot seas alongside a
destroyer's 30 foot freeboard is dangerous enough during the day.
I've almost crushed my hands multiple times doing it. Operating at
night with no moon is going to be sketchy, but it's something we
need to be able to do. Ops doesn't have the small boat experience I
do, not by a mile. It doesn't occur to him that this is going to be
anything other than routine. He looks at me. "First, who's the
swimmer on the small boat?"
I think for a
second. In addition to myself, I have two enlisted swimmers on board.
Both are very inexperienced. "Well sir in an unannounced man
overboard it could be any of us, but I think Cape is on watch right
now, so it will probably be Skolnick." Skolnick is the older of the
two. He is maybe slightly more mature, but still a goof.
The swimmers
onboard, or "The Locker," as the group is called, is close knit.
As the only officer, I'm the leader, and play big brother for my
guys. I look out for them when they need it, and give them orders
when we as a unit need it. I do it because it is my job, but what's
more important to me is that I do it because I like them. Some days,
their dumb jokes are the only thing that make being onboard bearable.
I would never tell them that, though.
I'm also
responsible for training them. Swimming isn't the only skill a
rescue swimmer needs. I have four priorities written on the wall
inside our small equipment locker: "Physically Fit," "Proficient
in Emergency Medicine," "Proficient in Technical Rescue Skills,"
and "Proficient Small Boat Operators." It's my responsibility
to make sure that each of us is ready for a rescue in all four skill
sets.
At the time of the
drill, Skolnick isn't ready, and I know it. I had only been able to
take him on a few small boat operations since he graduated from
Search and Rescue Swimmer School. He isn't confident on the boat,
but more importantly, I'm not sure that he knows the hard skills
required of him to safely operate it. I had been trying to get him on
the boat since he came back from school, but our previous captain
kept shooting me down. He said it was inconvenient. I knew it was
bullshit, but I didn't realize how dangerous it was. Our new
captain took command right as we began crossing the Pacific, and we
hadn't had time to drill the boat crews since he took command. I
could explain how things worked to the swimmers all I wanted, but
there was no substitute for experience.
In the second after
responding to Ops, I think all of this. I hesitate for a moment, then
speak up. "Sir, I think I should go down with the RIB to watch
Skolnick and the crew and make sure they're alright." Ops gives
me an 'I don't care but want to assert that I'm in charge'
pause, as though considering it. "Ok." He says.
Then my chief speaks
up. "No. They need to learn to do it themselves." I look at Ops,
who could not care less, then back at chief. "You sure?" Chief
doesn't even consider it for a second. "Yes. You should stay up
here, sir."
I trust BMC. He
always gives me good advice. Why should this be any different? I
don't think twice and look at Ops' glazed over eyes. "I'll
stay on the boat deck then, sir." He doesn't even pause this
time. "Ok, fine. Let's get this going guys. I've got to get to
bed."
Back on the flight
deck, I hide in the shadow of the helicopter hangar so the aft
lookout can't see me. The lack of illumination works to my
advantage. I peek over the side of the flight deck and a swell throws
salt spray into my face. I shiver as I wipe it off. Those waves were
higher than 4 feet for sure. The combined thunder of the sea and the
ship's machinery noises overwhelm all sound until the smoke float
passes within three feet of the ship. Its hissing flame blinds me and
shoots its white light up to the flight deck. I step back again into
the shadow and watch the aft lookout, opening my eyes wide to
readjust them to the dark.
The aft lookout
fiddles with her headset, speaking with the bridge. The foghorn
sounds six times, and a voice breaks with urgency over the ship's
loudspeakers. "MAN OVERBOARD, MAN OVERBOARD, MAN OVERBOARD
STARBOARD SIDE. THIS IS A MUSTERING EVOLUTION. DIRECTION OF TRANSIT
IS UP AND FORWARD STARBOARD SIDE, DOWN AND AFT PORT SIDE." It's
on. I make my way up to the boat deck. The whole ship is being timed
now, and they know it. Sailors, some half-dressed and bleary eyed,
rush past frantically. The ship swings around wildly to close
distance with the smoke float and some of us are flung into the wall.
The acceleration of the gas turbines engines below cause the hull to
shudder. As I make my way back outside and pass by the two RIBs, I
plug my ears so the roar of the engine exhausts doesn't burst my
eardrums. Some of my deck team is already up there. Seaman Smith, in
the yellow hard hat of the Petty Officer in Charge, or POIC, is
shouting orders. He's running the evolution. Sailors rush out,
zipping up their coveralls and tying their boots. I station myself
out of the way to observe.
Skolnick, fully
dressed, rushes past me and into the locker "You couldn't have
warned me about the drill? I was halfway through watching La La
Land."
"Shut up and
change out. The clock is running." I say as he closes the door.
I look warily over
the side of the ship at the waves. Definitely more than four feet. My
eyes flick back up. The blackness of the sea is complete save for the
white scorch of the smoke float, almost off our bow now.
As the ship
completes its maneuvers, the rest of the boat crew arrives on
station. Rogers, the coxswain, reports to the POIC, then the
engineer, Sanchez, and finally the Boat Officer and my friend, Jack.
I'm thankful it's him. Second to me, he's probably the best
boat officer we have.
The team gears up
and Jack checks them over as Skolnick bursts out of the locker in his
Tri-SAR harness and wet suit. His mask, snorkel and fins are neatly
packaged in his left hand, and his medkit is in his right. He bundles
a grey wool blanket under his arm. "That's gotta be a lightning
change speed record" He shouts over the thundering background
noise.
"Shut up." I say
again. I point out into to the dark swells, barely illuminated by the
floodlights on the deck. "Be careful out there."
"Will do, dad!"
He should be more concerned about this.
I see Smith,
competing with the background noise, shout over to us and wave an
arm. Even at the top of his lungs, we can't hear him. I know
exactly what he's saying, though. It's time to load, lower and
launch.
I motion to my
buddy. "Jack! It's go time." Jack turns around and leads his
crew over to the small boat. Skolnick gives me a goofy thumbs up.
The boat crew
settles in. The RIB is suspended over the side of the ship, connected
above to the steel cable of the slewing arm davit, the crane we use
to raise and lower the small boat. Thirty feet of destroyer freeboard
separate the fiberglass hull from the black waves below. The rocking
ship swings the boat out, then back in, jostling the crew as its
inflatable sponson bounces off the hull. I clench my jaw as Rogers
grabs the wheel to stay upright.
Smith's voice
strains over the roar of the sea and the exhausts. "DAVIT OPERATOR,
DOWN ON THE HOOK."
"DOWN ON THE HOOK,
AYE!" comes the response, and the RIB lowers.
Some of the most
dangerous times in any operation are the times of transition. The
landing of an aircraft, the merge of a car onto the highway, and the
launch of a RIB all pose higher risk than normal operating
conditions. When I'm on the RIB, I usually try to keep time
alongside the ship down to thirty seconds maximum. When you're side
by side like that, everything is moving relative to each other. The
ship rolls, the small boat pitches as oncoming waves crash into its
bow and side. The heavy hook on the end of the davit cable swings
around. If the relative movement is bad enough, the heavy steel hull
of the ship can overwhelm the RIB's inflatable sponson and push the
whole small boat down into the water, risking a capsize.
As I watch our small
boat approach the sea, swinging on its steel cable, I remember a case
study I read earlier that week. Another Arleigh Burke was recovering
a RIB at night. While the small boat was alongside, preparing to be
raised to the deck edge, the slewing arm davit stopped working. The
RIB was caught in its most vulnerable spot, in its transition time,
tethered to the ship. The small boat took a bad wave, and that was
it. It capsized, throwing everyone overboard. Two sailors were able
to hang on to the hull, but the others were thrown backwards, past
the boat's whipping propeller blades. RIB accidents like that are
not uncommon, and as the small boat expert onboard, they are what I
most want to avoid.
I lean over the side
of the ship to get a look as the small boat approaches the water.
Twenty feet of air separate the two, then ten, then six. The waves
jump and slap the fiberglass.
"COXSWAIN, START
YOU ENGINE." Smith screams over the background noise.
"START MY ENGINE
AYE." Rogers flips his switch, and the diesel fumes cough out of
the exhaust port.
Three feet left. The
ocean reaches up and lifts the RIB three feet into the air on a
wave's crest, then disappears with a trough and drops the hull. The
davit's cable takes the shock load. The crew catches its balance as
the RIB fully touches down into the waves. Skolnick, no longer joking
around, looks up to the deck of the ship.
"DAVIT OPERATOR,
AVAST." Smith calls out.
"AVAST AYE."
"CAST OFF HOOK."
Smith yells over the side, down to the boat crew.
Skolnick fumbles
with the end of the steel cable. Jack helps him and the swinging hook
pulls away, back to the ship. That's one danger out of the way.
"CAST OFF AFT
STEADYING LINE." Orders Smith.
"CAST OFF AFT
STEADYING LINE AYE." Sanchez, the engineer sitting at the rear of
the small boat, unties the line next to him. Skolnick, at his station
at the front of the RIB, takes a wave to the face.
"CAST OFF FORWARD"
Smith shouts.
Skolnick wipes the
brine from his eyes as he repeats back the order. "CAST OFF FORWARD
STEADYING LINE AYE." He has no problem, holding the line up to show
he's done it before he tosses it away from the RIB.
One line remains:
the sea painter. It's the most important line, designed to tow the
small boat alongside the ship in perfect position. It's the rescue
swimmer's job to untie it when ordered, and when recovering the
RIB, re-tie it in a specific way so that it can be quick released if
needed to get the RIB out of danger with little delay.
"CAST OFF SEA
PAINTER." Calls out Smith.
"CAST OFF SEA
PAINTER AYE." Skolnick leans over the front of the RIB to release
the line and takes another wave to the face. As he throws the line
loose into the sea, Rogers slightly cheats the RIB's bow away from
the ship.
One final directive
from Smith: "COXSWAIN, CARRY OUT YOUR ORDERS." And the RIB pulls
away. Over my handheld VHF radio, I eavesdrop as Jack calls up to the
bridge. "RIB is away, four souls onboard. Ops normal." I take a
deep breath. The RIB bounds out over the waves, slowing, then
speeding up again to ride the chop. Distance increases until I can
only see its white sternlight bobbing by the smoke float, still
flickering in the dark. This is the safe part.
After a few minutes,
Jack comes back over the radio. "Evolution complete, beginning our
return." The RIB's green starboard light replaces the stern
light, then the combined red and green lantern indicates its
approach. It takes a position about 500 yards astern of us on our
starboard side.
My radio pipes up.
It's Jack again. "Requesting permission to come alongside."
The bridge responds
"Come alongside." Smith waves his hard hat, calling them in. My
brows furrow. If there's a most dangerous part of the evolution.
This is it. I'm most concerned with the sea painter. Anyone can
unite one, but to tie it back up correctly is a different story, and
I'm not positive that Skolnick knows how to do it.
I lean over the deck
edge again to watch the RIB approach. The wind whips past my exposed
face as sea foam leaps up thirty feet to fill my nose. The modulating
growl of the RIB's diesel engine grows louder. All of a sudden, the
boat is below us, tossed up and down by the roiling darknesss. I mark
the time. Come
on boys, let's keep it below 30 seconds.
I think to myself.
When recovering a
RIB, the order of lines is reversed. The sea painter ties first. I
know that Skolnick at least knows this, and he stands ready in the
bow of the RIB. His legs are slightly bent, acting as shock absorbers
in the bounce of the waves.
Smith takes control
again "MAKE UP SEA PAINTER."
"MAKE UP SEA
PAINTER AYE." Skolnick shouts back. This is it. My eyes lock onto
Skolnick's hands. He takes hold of the sea painter dangling in
front of him and hesitates. Immediately I can tell he doesn't know
how to do it. He thinks for far too long, then just wraps it clumsily
around the forward post of the RIB. Not even close. The ocean
continues to toss the small boat back and forth.
Smith doesn't
notice the mistake. "MAKE UP FORWARD STEADYING LINE."
I'm about to speak
up when one of my more senior petty officers up on the Ship's deck
does. "AVAST." He shouts to Smith, then turning to Skolnick,
yells "THAT SEA PANTER IS WRONG. YOU NEED TO REDO IT."
Skolnick looks up at
him. Confused, he can't make out the sentence. The petty officer
repeats himself, but it doesn't help. Skolnick has no idea what to
do. They go back and forth trying to hear each other as I check the
time: 45 seconds. A wave slaps the bow of the RIB. It rolls hard to
the right, away from the ship. Rogers turns the wheel to correct
course.
This is taking too
long. I pull a flashlight from my pocket and click it on. Reaching
over, I aim it at the sea painter and draw circles with the beam.
Given the background noise, the only way to communicate verbally is
by one or two word phrases.
"SKOLNICK." I
shout. "SEA PAINTER." He understands and removes the wrap. I
check the time. A minute and a half has passed. Everyone knows
something's wrong now. I look up to see silhouettes on the bridge,
staring down and wondering what is going on.
Skolnick tries a
second time. He simply passes the end loop of the sea painter over
the RIB's forward post. Wrong again. He looks up at me for
approval. I wave my flashlight beam back and forth. "NO." I shout
down. Skolnick looks up, confused, anxious, and a little scared. This
is dangerous. I try my best to act out the correct attachment of the
line, but it's too complicated to pantomime.
Skolnick tries twice
more. At this point, four minutes have passed. No number of attempts
will help. I look down at the RIB to see Jack staring confused at
Skolnick, unable to make out what's happening in the chaos. He has
been both trying to keep things in order in the back of the RIB and
communicate with the deck above. Next to me, a few senior sailors are
shouting directions. What I can hear of their voices is unclear and
overlapping. The danger increases as control of the evolution slips
away from Smith and begins to fall apart.
Suddenly, a nasty
wave crest slams into the starboard side of the small boat and soaks
everyone onboard. The RIB pitches up and rolls left, towards the
steel hull of the destroyer towering above it. Jack stumbles forward
as the RIB rolls back the other way. Skolnick lowers his center of
gravity and the fiberglass hull slams down into the following trough.
The engineer at the stern rocks back towards the engine, then rights
himself with a lurching grab at a handle bolted into the RIB. Contact
with the ship's hull momentarily pulls the back left corner of the
RIB down, then releases it. It shoots back up, shaking the crew
again. The RIB swerves to the right, 45 degrees off the ship's
course, as Rogers turns the small boat to the safer seaward side. His
knuckles turn white on the wheel as he corrects back left and takes
position again. That could have been very bad.
Only one thing is
going to move this forward and get the crew out of trouble: the
correct attachment of the sea painter. I shine my flashlight beam at
Jack's face to get his attention. He looks up.
"YOU NEED TO DO
IT." I yell. His face shows that he has not understood. I turn to
the petty officer yelling next to me. "SHUT UP, DUDE." No time to
be polite. I circle my beam at Jack, then the sea painter. "YOU
NEED TO TIE UP THE SEA PAINTER." He still hasn't heard me over
the surrounding roar, but understands. Realizing what's been going
on the whole time, he nods and makes his way to the bow of RIB. As he
moves forward, he dodges the swinging heavy end of the steel crane
cable. With firm control, he moves Skolnick out of the way and within
seconds correctly makes up the sea painter. He looks up to Smith on
the deck. "SEA PAINTER MADE UP."
I check the time:
six minutes. Smith gives the rest of the orders. The crew makes up
all lines and the cable lifts the RIB out of the water. As it rises,
one last wave crest slaps the bottom of the fiberglass hull. The
davit raises the RIB to the deck edge, and the crew disembarks. I
take another deep breath and check the time again: seven minutes.
Skolnick walks directly to me as the deck crew secures the RIB for
sea. We're face to face but he doesn't say a word. He's visibly
shaken.
"That wasn't
your fault." I say. "Go get changed." As he closes the locker
door, all I can think is that it wasn't his fault, it was mine.
Now we have to
debrief on the bridge. I know that there will be one major question:
why was the RIB alongside for so long? I think about what I'm going
to say as I climb the stairs leading to the pilot house and the
weight of my mistake hits me. I'm the last one up there. The
captain is silhouetted against the bridge windows in his elevated
chair. The relevant crew members are gathered in a circle around him.
The debrief begins.
I can barely listen to what is being said, but people keep mentioning
the alongside time. Seven
minutes,
I think to myself. Those
guys could have died out there.
"First, you got
anything?" Someone says to me. It's my turn. I zone back in. What
can I even say?
"Ummm, yeah. The
crew performed well, but we were alongside for seven minutes. That
was bad. That's my fault. We know how to fix it." I look to the
captain. "Sir, can I talk to you after the debrief?"
"Yeah, you
probably should." He replies. That wasn't a suggestion. We finish
the meeting and everyone leaves but Ops, BMC, the captain and I.
It was quiet for a
moment. I watch the captain's black outline until finally he
speaks. "So what happened?"
I
answer. "Sir, Skolnick didn't know how to make up the sea
painter."
"Why
not?"
"Well,
I didn't train him well enough. We tried to practice out of the
water, but there's no substitute for the real thing." I pause,
then try to take it one step further. "Not sure if you remember
sir, but captain Boza kept shutting me down." Maybe it was childish
not to just take the reputation hit, but I wanted him to know that I
at least tried.
Luckily, he
remembered his predecessor well. "That's right." He says. "Well
I need you to make sure everyone gets trained. This can't happen
again"
Ops parrots the
captain. "Yeah, First, we can't let this happen."
For the first time
that day, I get angry. Well
Ops, maybe if you gave half a shit and backed me up when I said we
needed more training, we wouldn't have just almost lost a boat
crew.
I think, but I keep it inside. I look at the captain.
"I understand,
sir. Honestly, Skolnick wasn't ready, and I shouldn't have kept
that to myself. Tomorrow, I'm going to walk it through with all of
them."
The captain pauses
for a moment. Then speaks again. "Ok. Do it. Now go to your rack
and get some sleep, First."
"Thank you sir."
I reply, and turn to leave.
BMC joins me inside
the airlock before descending to the lower decks. "Thanks for
covering for me." What
the hell is he talking about?
I think. This
was my fault. There was nothing to cover.
All I say is "No
worries, chief."
As I walk down to my
rack, it feels wrong. How did I get off so easily? The captain should
have at least yelled at me. Someone could have easily died. That's
a fact. It's my responsibility to keep boat operations safe. That's
also a fact. I didn't do that today. From a selfish standpoint,
that fact may be the worst one. In a practical sense, everything
ended up fine, and that's great, but as I get ready for bed, I
think about how this reflects on me.
What should I have
done? Fought BMC and insisted on going down with the RIB? Fought the
old captain months before and insisted on getting training time for
the locker? Yes to both, but I didn't.
Does the fact that
we got lucky and no one happened to die when they could have make me
a better person than I would have been if someone had died? I don't
think so. I did all of the things that I would have needed to do to
lead to the death of a sailor. The fact that nothing bad happened as
a result of my reckless actions does not rectify them, and completing
that evolution with no injuries was nothing more than a coincidence.
On top of that, I'm an officer and am responsible for the lives of
my sailors. That makes it all even worse.
There's
nothing I can do to change what happened, so then what do I do now?
I ask myself as I brush my teeth. Don't do it again? Make sure
everyone is trained? While of course that's the logical thing, and
that's what I will do, those answers feel incomplete. Continuing to
beat myself up won't help, so again: What
do I do?
As the ship rocks me
to sleep in my coffin sized rack that night, I don't have an
answer. I don't even know if I've come to an answer today, but I
do know that the answer isn't to stop operating. Someone has to do
it, and it's probably best if those who have made mistakes use them
to get better.
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