MSC Handbook 2016
MSC Handbook 2016
MSC Handbook 2016
Navys
MILITARY SEALIFT COMMAND
2016
HANDBOOK
Table of Contents
Executive Summary 2
History 4
Organization
Headquarters Organization 6
Area Command Organization 7
Worldwide Organization Chart 8
MSC Contact List 9
Operations
Combat Logistics Force (PM1) (PM6) 11
Service and Command Support (PM4) (PM7) (PM8) 12
Special Mission (PM2) 13
Prepositioning (PM3) 14
Sealift (PM3) 16
Business 18
The Maritime Industry and the Ready Reserve Force 20
Command and Control 22
Force Protection 23
Appendices
A: Revenue and Expenses 24
B: Employment and Personnel 25
C: Vessel Fact Sheets 26
D: MSC Fleet 64
E: Abbreviations 65
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Executive Summary
MSCs workforce of
approximately 8,100
people includes civil service
mariners, active and
reserve military personnel,
and civil servants. An
additional 1,400 afloat
commercial mariners
support our prepositioning
and sealift missions.
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Executive Summary
Army, Air Force, Marine Corps, Missile Defense Agency and other U.S.
government agencies.
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History
During World War II, four separate government agencies controlled sea
transportation. In 1949, the Military Sea Transportation Service (MSTS)
became the single managing agency for the Department of Defenses
ocean transportation needs. The command assumed responsibility for
providing sealift and ocean transportation for all military services as well
as for other government agencies.
Only nine months after its creation, MSTS responded to the challenge
of the Korean War. On July 6, 1950, 11 days after the initial invasion of
South Korea by communist North Korean troops, MSTS transported the
24th Infantry Division and all of its equipment from Japan to Busan,
South Korea, for duty.
During the Vietnam War, MSTS was renamed MSC and moved nearly 54
million tons of combat equipment and supplies and nearly 8 million tons
of fuel to Vietnam between 1965 and 1969. MSC ships also transported
troops to Vietnam. The Vietnam era marked the last use of MSC troop
ships. Now, U.S. troops are primarily transported to theater by air.
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History
Through the 1970s and 1980s, MSC provided the DOD with ocean
transportation in support of U.S. deterrent efforts during the Cold War
years.
During the first Persian Gulf War, in both Operation Desert Shield and
Operation Desert Storm, MSC distinguished itself as the largest source
of defense transportation of any nation involved. MSC ships delivered
more than 12 million tons of wheeled and tracked vehicles, helicopters,
ammunition, dry cargo, fuel, and other supplies and equipment
during the war. At the height of the war, MSC managed more than 230
government-owned and chartered ships.
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Organization
Headquarters Organization
MSC reports through three distinct and separate chains of command:
1. To U.S. Transportation Command for defense transportation matters.
2. To U.S. Fleet Forces Command for Navy-unique matters.
3. To the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Research, Development and
Acquisition for procurement policy and oversight matters.
Combat Logistics Force (PM1) (PM6) manages ships that provide underway
replenishment, commercial helicopter services and other direct fleet support
to Navy ships worldwide. These ships include fleet replenishment oilers, fleet
ordnance and dry cargo ships, and fast combat support ships.
Service and Command Support (PM4) (PM7) (PM8) provides the Navy with
towing, rescue and salvage, submarine support, and cable laying and repair
services, as well as a command and control platform, floating medical facilities
and the Navys first Expeditionary Mobile Base. Also included are Expeditionary
Fast Transports (EPF) which provide rapid, intra-theater transport of troops and
military equipment.
Prepositioning (PM3) provides ships loaded with military stores for forward, at-
sea staging around the world. Prepositioning ships carry cargo owned by the U.S.
Army, Air Force, Navy, and Marine Corps.
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Organization
Area Command Organization
Area Commands
MSC is represented by five geographic area commands, which exercise tactical
control of all assigned USTRANSCOM forces and MSC forces not otherwise
assigned to the numbered fleet commanders. The area command staffs are also
responsible for execution of strategic sealift missions.
However, most area command commodores are dual-hatted; each one has
a formal relationship with its geographically collocated numbered fleet
commander. Under fleet command authority, the commander may exercise
tactical control of MSC ships assigned to the fleet commander, usually as a
task force commander.
Ship Support
Ashore staff responsible to the area commands for local coordination, engineering,
contracting and IT support to government-owned ships. They also provide IT
support to other MSC ships for government-owned systems, and in-theater
administrative (comptroller, supply and information technology) support.
Reserve Units
In 2015, 44 Navy Reserve units supported MSC operations around the globe.
Units included; Expeditionary Port, Cargo Afloat Rig Teams, Area Command
Headquarters, Strategic Sealift, Logistics Force, MSC Detachment Support and
Afloat Mission Command and Control Support.
MSC HQ Detachments
MSC headquarters has a detachment to U.S. Transportation Command, at
Scott AFB, IL, and a Pacific Detachment in Hawaii. These offices represent
MSC in all mission areas and operations in which their host command has
interest. They direct staff inquiries to appropriate points of contact, and act
as subject matter experts for informal questions. They alert MSCstaff to
developing requirements, tasks and initiatives.
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Organization
Commander
N00
Deputy Commander
N00X
SES
Executive Director
N01
Congressional
Command Inspector SES
and
Master Chief General Chief of Staff Counsel
Public Affairs
N00A N00I N02 N00L
N00P
SES
SES Military Sealift
Total Force Engineering
Government- Command
Management N7
Operated Ships Atlantic
N1
P01
Fleet Service
Oiler Support SES Military Sealift
Operations/Plans
PM1 PM4 Comptroller Command
N3/5
N8 Pacific
Fleet Afloat
Ordnance Staging/
and Command Military Sealift
Support Corporate
Dry Cargo Logistics Command
PM7 Operations
PM6 N4 Europe and
N9
Africa
Expeditionary
Fast
Command,
Transport
Control, Contracts and
PM8 Military Sealift
Communications Business
Command
and Computer Management
Central
Systems N10
SES N6
Contractor-
Operated Ships
P02 Strategic
Military Sealift Military Sealift
Sealift &
Command Command
Prepositioning
Office Far East
Detachment
Special Strategic Washington DC
Scott AFB
Mission Sealift
PM2 PM3
Military Sealift Command
Pacific
Detachment
Pearl Harbor, HI
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Organization
Contact List
Office DSN
Commander, MSC HQ:
Commander 757-443-2706 646-2706
Deputy Commander 757-443-2706 646-2706
Executive Director 757-443-2339 646-2339
Chief of Staff 757-443-5911 646-5911
Global Command Information Center (GCIC) 202-685-5155 325-5155
Director, Total Force Management 757-443-2865 646-2865
MSC Atlantic:
Commodore 757-443-5601 646-5601
Deputy 757-443-5602 646-5602
Staff Duty Officer 757-443-5758 646-5758
MSC Pacific:
Commodore 619-524-9600 524-9600
Deputy 619-524-9600 524-9600
Staff Duty Officer 619-572-2969 572-2969
Ship Support San Diego 619-524-9689 524-9689
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Organization
MSC Central:
Commander 973-1785-3770 318-439-3770
Deputy 973-1785-4181 318-439-4181
Watch Station 973-1785-9479 318-439-9479
Ship Support Bahrain 973-1785-4953 318-439-4953
Other Offices and Representatives:
Beaumont, TX 409-833-0769
Charleston, SC 843-743-0569
Sunny Point, NC 910-457-8210
Port Canaveral, FL 321-853-7818
Jacksonville, FL 904-696-5198
Earle, NJ 732-866-7224
Pearl Harbor, HI 808-471-2113
Seattle, WA 425-304-4851
Diego Garcia 246-370-4778
Rota, Spain 34-95-682-5754
Souda Bay, Crete 30-282-102-1820
Korea 82-51-801-3119
Okinawa, Japan 81-909-789-9683
Kuwait 619-533-7202
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Operations
The Military Sealift Command fleet replenishment oiler USNS Pecos (T-AO 197)
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Operations
The Navys expeditionary fast transports also support the Service and
Command mission. There will be 12 ships in the class, capable of rapidly
transporting passengers and vehicles at speeds of 35 knots.
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Operations
The Military Sealift Command oceanographic survey ship USNS Pathfinder (T-AGS 60)
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Operations
Prepositioning - (PM3)
Prepositioning is an essential element in the U.S. militarys readiness
strategy. Afloat prepositioning strategically places military equipment
and supplies onboard ships located in key ocean areas to ensure rapid
availability during a major theater war, a humanitarian operation or
other contingency.
- Seven Army Prepositioned Stocks ships (APS) supporting the U.S. Army
- Four ships supporting the Navy, Marine Corps and Air Force
MPF ships are strategically located in two geographic areas and assigned
to one of two Maritime Prepositioning Ship (MPS) squadrons:
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Operations
The Military Sealift Command MPF Container and RO/RO USNS 1ST LT Jack
Lummus (T-AK 3011)
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Operations
Sealift - (PM3)
MSC provides high-quality, efficient and cost-effective ocean transporta-
tion for DOD and other federal agencies during peacetime and war. More
than 90 percent of U.S. warfighters equipment and supplies travels by
sea. The program manages a mix of government-owned and long-term-
chartered dry cargo ships and tankers, as well as additional short-term
chartered ships. By law and policy, MSC must first look to the U.S.-
flagged market to meet its sealift requirements. Government-owned ships
are used only when suitable U.S.-flagged commercial ships are unavail-
able.
LMSRs are ideal for carrying heavy armored vehicles and equipment used
by the U.S. military. Each LMSR has a slewing stern ramp and a movable
ramp that services two side ports, making it easy to drive vehicles on and
off the ship. Cargo can also be loaded by shipboard cranes. These LMSRs
are capable of off-loading cargo onto floating barges, or lighterage, when
operating in ports that have been damaged or do not possess cargo
cranes.
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Operations
All five ships are crewed by commercial mariners working for companies
under contract to MSC.
MSCs chartered dry cargo ships can carry various items, including
containerized cargo, engineering and construction equipment, military
vehicles, aircraft, patrol boats, and ammunition. Dry cargo ships have
supported transport requirements worldwide, including the critical
resupply missions to Thule Air Base in Greenland, and the National
Science Foundations McMurdo Station in Antarctica.
MSC also has one chartered high-speed vessel that transports Marines,
their combat vehicles and their associated gear in and around the Far East.
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Business
Funding
MSCs worldwide operations are funded through two working capital funds. The
Navy Working Capital Fund is used by MSC to support Navy fleet commanders
and other Department of Defense entities. The Transportation Working Capital
Fund is used to support sealift services.
Unlike private industry that budgets to make a profit, with the Working
Capital Fund, the goal is to break even; i.e., charges levied on customers
equal MSCs expenses, and no more. MSC has an annual operating bud-
get of approximately $3 billion.
MSC Workforce
MSC has a workforce of more than 9,500 people worldwide, most of whom serve
at sea. More than half of MSCs workforce is made up of civil service mariners
who are federal employees. The remainder includes contract commercial
mariners, civil service personnel ashore, and active-duty and reserve military
members.
All MSC government-owned and operated ships, unlike other U.S. Navy ships,
are crewed by civilian mariners. Some ships also have small military departments
assigned to carry out communication and supply functions, as well as special
mission functions appropriate for military personnel. Some ships carry small,
temporary military detachments for force protection. Additionally, four ships -
USS Mount Whitney, USS Ponce, USSFrank Cable and USS Emory S. Land
- have hybrid crews that combine uniformed Navy personnel with civil service
mariners under the leadership of a U.S. Navy captain.
There are two labor models for crewing aboard MSC ships. On government-
operated vessels, the crew consists of civil service mariners who are personnel
employed directly by MSC and are issued DOD identification cards and receive
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Business
MSC vessels differ from Navy vessels as the crew is divided between licensed
and unlicensed personnel. Licensed personnel (such as the ships master
and chief engineer) hold a current U.S. Coast Guard-issued license, which
is obtained through a combination of sea time and successful completion
of a licensing exam. Although the division between licensed and unlicensed
personnel aboard MSC may be compared to the officer/enlisted relationship
aboard USN ships, a more appropriate analogy is the management/labor
relationship in civilian industry.
MSC is the largest employer of U.S. merchant mariners in the United States,
and works with the U.S. Maritime Administration, industry and academia to
ensure a viable U.S. Merchant Marine workforce.
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The Maritime Industry and the Ready Reserve Force
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The Maritime Industry and the Ready Reserve Force
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Command and Control
Regional Numbered
Special Combatant Fleet
Mission Commander Commander* CTF X3** COMSC
Regional Numbered CTF X3**
Combatant Fleet delegated to
Prepositioning Commander Commander* MPSRON COMSC
Sealift Area
(except EPF)*** USTRANSCOM COMSC Command COMSC
Ready
Reserve Area
Force USTRANSCOM COMSC Command MARAD
* in some theaters OPCON may be delegated to the CTF X3 level
** in some theaters ships are assigned to other CTFs or to CTGs
*** Regional combatant commander, vice USTRANSCOM
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Force Protection
Force Protection
Numbered Fleet commanders exercise force protection authority over
Navy afloat forces within their region, including ships not otherwise in
their chain of command. This means that the primary source for force
protection guidance for MSC ships (including voyage charters where
specified in charter parties) comes from the geographic combatant
commander through the numbered fleet commander tasked with force
protection for ships in their area of responsibility.
MSC ships must routinely enter port and transit narrow straits where the
risk of attack is potentially higher. Federal law and manning conditions
make it difficult to assign crewmembers full-time security duties.
However, ships must be responsive to changes in threat levels and
trained to cooperate with forces assigned to their protection.
MSC ships have very limited self-defense capability. When the fleet
commander determines the threat exceeds the ships inherent self-
defense, additional protection may be provided. This force protection
may take the form of combatant escort, airborne surveillance, increased
military or civilian patrol boat presence, additional pierside security or
embarkation of an armed military security detachment.
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Appendix A: Revenue and Expenses
FY 2015
($ millions)
Revenue Expense Profit/(Loss)
NAVY
Special Mission
Special Mission Ships $192.6 $180.5 $12.1
Chartered Ships $100.6 $115.6 ($15.0)
Ocean Surveillance Ships $72.3 $75.5 ($3.2)
Harbor Tugs $39.0 $36.2 $2.8
Total $404.5 $407.8 ($3.3)
Prepositioning
Prepositioning Ships $379.7 $381.6 ($1.9)
Service Support
Service Support Ships $481.8 $496.3 ($14.5)
Expeditionary Fast Transport (EFP)
EFP Ships $126.9 $121.4 $5.5
Total $1,392.9 $1,407.1 ($14.2)
USTRANSCOM
Prepositioning
Prepositioning Ships $202.5 $201.3 $1.2
Total $202.5 $201.3 $1.2
Sealift
Tankers $266.0 $183.6 $82.4
Dry Cargo $88.3 $92.8 ($4.5)
Surge Sealift $153.6 $186.6 ($33.0)
Total $507.9 $463.0 $44.9
NOTE: In a working capital fund, profits one year are returned to the customer in subsequent years via reduced rates.
Conversely, losses are recouped via customer rates in subsequent years. The goal is for the fund to break even over time.
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Appendix B: Employment and Personnel
MSC WORKFORCE
Afloat
Civil Service Mariners 5,546 5,833 5.17%
Commercial Mariners 1,570 1,390 (11.46%)
Military (Active Component) 163 152 (6.75%)
Military (Reserve Component) 301 329 9.30%
Total Afloat 7,580 7,704 1.64%
Ashore
Civilian (direct/indirect) 1,148 1,166 1.57%
Military (active component) 171 163 (4.68%)
Military (Reserve component) 564 528 (6.38%)
Total Ashore 1,883 1,857 (1.38%)
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
COMBAT LOGISTICS FORCE
Quick Facts
Length 677.5 ft, Beam 97.5 ft, Draft 35.8 ft
Displacement 40,900-41,225 tons, Speed 20 kts
Crew: Civil service 74-89, Military 5
Government Owned
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
COMBAT LOGISTICS FORCE
Quick Facts
Length 754 ft, Beam 107 ft, Draft 38 ft
Displacement 48,500 tons, Speed 25+ kts
Crew: Civil service 170
Government Owned
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
COMBAT LOGISTICS FORCE
Quick Facts
Length 689 ft, Beam 106 ft, Draft 30 ft
Displacement 41,000 tons, Speed 20 kts
Crew: Civil service 129
Government Owned
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SERVICE AND COMMAND SUPPORT
Quick Facts
Length 894 ft, Beam 106 ft, Draft 32 ft
Displacement 69,552 tons, Speed 17 kts
Crew: Civil service 71, Military up to 1,200
Government Owned
Outfitted with: 12 fully equipped operating rooms, 1,000-bed hospital facility, digital
radiological services, medical laboratory, pharmacy, optometry and lens laboratory, CT
scanner, and two oxygen-producing plants
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SERVICE AND COMMAND SUPPORT
Quick Facts
Length 644 ft, Beam 85 ft, Draft 26 ft
Displacement 23,000 tons, Speed 20 kts
Crew: Civil service 157, Military 292
Government Owned
Navigation, deck, engineering, laundry and galley services provided by MSC civil service
Mariners. Commanded by a Navy captain.
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SERVICE AND COMMAND SUPPORT
Quick Facts
Length 226 ft, Beam 42 ft, Draft 15.1 ft
Displacement 2,296 tons, Speed 14.5 kts
Crew: Civil service 16, Military 4
Government Owned
Ten-ton crane and a 54-ton bollard; deck grid for bolting down portable equipment
during towing operations; three fire monitors supply up to 2,200 gallons of foam per
minute during firefighting; deep submergence module can be embarked to support
naval salvage teams for dive operations
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SERVICE AND COMMAND SUPPORT
Quick Facts
Length 255 ft, Beam 51 ft, Draft 17 ft
Displacement 3,336 tons, Speed 14 kts
Crew: Civil service 26, Military 4, Additional 48 (max)
Government Owned
Utilizes a 7.5-ton boom forward and a 40-ton boom aft for salvage operations; tethered
diving to 190 ft or 300 ft with fly-away mixed gas system; bollard pull of 120,000 lbs
with 3,000-ft drum for towing; bow and stern rollers for heavy lifts up to 300 tons;
monitors with 1,000 gallons/minute seawater or Aqueous Film-Forming Foam (AFFF) for
firefighting
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SERVICE AND COMMAND SUPPORT
Quick Facts
Length 636 ft, Beam 108 ft, Draft 24 ft
Displacement 15,000 tons, Speed 23 kts
Crew: Civil service 154, Military 157 (ship support), 300 (staff)
Government Owned
Navigation, deck, engineering, laundry and galley services provided by MSC civil service
mariners. Commanded by Navy captain.
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SERVICE AND COMMAND SUPPORT
Quick Facts
Length 570 ft, Beam 100 ft, Draft 22 ft
Displacement 16,591 tons, Speed 20 kts
Crew: Civilian 154, Military 55
Government Owned
Navigation, deck, engineering, laundry and galley services provided by MSC civil
service mariners. Commanded by a Navy captain with combined civil service
mariner/military crew.
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SERVICE AND COMMAND SUPPORT
Quick Facts
Length 784 ft, Beam 164 ft, Draft 31 ft
Displacement 106,664 tons, Speed 15 kts
Crew: Civilian 34, Military 250 (100 Military, 150 Embarked Military)
Government Owned
Crewed by a hybrid team of civilian mariners and permanent military crew members.
Together they operate and maintain a large flight deck, berthing and messing
accommodations and command and control to support embarked forces mission plan.
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SERVICE AND COMMAND SUPPORT
Quick Facts
Length 513 ft, Beam 73 ft, Draft 24.9 ft
Displacement 15,174 tons, Speed 14 kts
Crew: Civil service 58
Government Owned
Equipped with five cable tanks, cable transporters, single- and multi-beam sonar; and
deployable buoys that provide data measurement of the ocean environment
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SERVICE AND COMMAND SUPPORT
Quick Facts
Length 337.9 ft, Beam 93.5 ft, Draft 12.57 ft
Displacement 2,460 tons, Speed 35 kts
Crew: Civil service 22
Government Owned
Capacity: up to 312 passengers and 600 tons with 20,000 sq ft cargo storage
Can be reconfigured to quickly adapt to whatever mission the ship is tasked with, to
include carrying containerized portable hospitals to support disaster relief or transporting
tanks and troops
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SPECIAL MISSION
Quick Facts
Length 224 ft, Beam 43 ft, Draft 14.8 ft
Displacement 2,285 tons, Speed 11 kts
Crew: Civilian 18, Sponsor personnel 18
Government Owned
Converted Ocean Surveillance (T-AGOS) class ship, re-designated in April 2000; equipped
with Dual Band X- and S-band radar systems
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SPECIAL MISSION
Quick Facts
Length 534 ft, Beam 89 ft, Draft 21.4 ft
Displacement 12,642 tons, Speed 20 kts
Crew: Civilian 38, Military 1, Scientists 25
Government Owned
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SPECIAL MISSION
Quick Facts
Length 442 ft, Beam 69 ft, Draft 15 ft
Displacement 12,208 tons, Speed 13.2 kts
Crew: Civilian 28, Military/Scientists 59
Government Owned
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SPECIAL MISSION
Quick Facts
Length 328.5-353 ft, Beam 58 ft, Draft 19 ft
Displacement 5,000 tons, Speed 16 kts
Crew: Civilian 24, Military 27
Government Owned
Crew consists of mission scientists and technicians supplied by the Naval Oceanographic
Office. Equipped with multi-beam echo-sounders, towed sonars, expendable sensors,
three multipurpose cranes and five winches.
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SPECIAL MISSION
Quick Facts
Length 389 ft, Beam 238 ft, Draft 12.4 ft
Displacement 32,690 tons, Speed 8 kts
Crew: Civil service 34 (19 ROS), Mission support 49
Government Owned
Equipped with X-Band Radar and a Solid State Phased Array with a range 4,800 km
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SPECIAL MISSION
Submarine and Special
Warfare Support (PM2)
MV C-COMMANDO
MV C-CHAMPION
MV MALAMA
MV DELORES CHOUEST
MV DOMINATOR
T-AGSE 1 USNS BLACK POWDER
T-AGSE 2 USNS WESTWIND
T-AGSE 3 USNS EAGLEVIEW
T-AGSE 4 USNS ARROWHEAD
Quick Facts
Provide transit protection and open-ocean passenger transfer services for the Navys sub-
marine force. Can support submarine rescue missions if needed, as well as Navy Special
Warfare Command requirements.
MV Dimensions
Length: 220/220/110/228/240 ft
Beam: 56/56/22/43/54 ft
Displacement: 1,903/2,106/65/1,650/3,655 tons
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SPECIAL MISSION
Quick Facts
Length 234.5 ft, Beam 93.5 ft, Draft 24.9 ft
Displacement 3,384 tons, Speed 10 kts
Crew: Civilian 24-26, Military 8-22
Government Owned
Small Water-plane Twin Hull design. Deployed for 60-day Surveillance Towed Array
Sensor System missions under Operational Control of the theater Anti-Submarine
Warfare Commanders.
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SPECIAL MISSION
Quick Facts
Length 281.6 ft, Beam 95.8 ft, Draft 25.9 ft
Displacement 5,370 tons, Speed 12 kts
Crew: Civilian 26, Military 10-20
Government Owned
Larger and faster than the VICTORIOUS class with the additional capabilities of an active
transmit array and handling system, power amplification and control systems, active
signal processing, environmental analysis
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
PREPOSITIONING
Quick Facts
Length 673.2 ft, Beam 105.5 ft, Draft 33 ft
Displacement 46,111 tons, Speed 17.7 kts
Crew: Civilian 30
Government Owned
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
PREPOSITIONING
Quick Facts
Length 785.1 ft, Beam 164 ft, Draft 39.3 ft
Displacement 77,388 tons, Speed 17.7 kts
Crew: Civilian 33
Embarked Security Team (when required): 12
Government Owned
Capacities: 25,000 sq ft vehicle staging area, 380,000 gallon of cargo fuel, 100,000 pota-
ble water storage, 25,000 gallon potable water generation per day, 20 containers (TEU -
Twenty Foot Equivalent Unit), 3 Landing Craft Air Cushion lanes, and helicopter platform
for medical evacuation operations
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
PREPOSITIONING
Quick Facts
Length 906.9 ft, Beam 105.6 ft, Draft 35.8 ft
Displacement 55,123 tons, Speed 24 kts
Crew: Civilian 30, Additional berthing (172 personnel)
Government Owned
Supports extended operations for two H60 S/F/B/H Helicopters, including refueling;
Equipped with hangar for two Helicopters.
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
PREPOSITIONING
Quick Facts
Length 950 ft, Beam 105.8 ft, Draft 36 ft
Displacement 62,644 tons, Speed 24 kts
Crew: Civilian 30 (plus surge capacity)
Government Owned
Capacity: 394,673 sq ft
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
PREPOSITIONING
MPF Dry Cargo/
Ammunition Ship (PM3)
Quick Facts
Length 689 ft, Beam 106 ft, Draft 30 ft
Displacement 41,000 tons, Speed 20 kts
Crew: Civil service 53
Government Owned
Capacities: 6,675 tons dry cargo, 1,716 tons refrigerated stores, 18,000 bbls cargo fuel;
Designed to carry 63 percent more cargo than previous AE and AFS classes
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
PREPOSITIONING
Quick Facts
Length 652/686 ft, Beam 106/99 ft, Draft 36/38 ft
Displacement 48,012/52,878 tons, Speed 16 kts
Crew: Civilian 19/20
Chartered
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
PREPOSITIONING
Offshore Petroleum Distribution
System (OPDS) (PM3)
Quick Facts
Length 349 ft, Beam 70 ft, Draft 26 ft
Speed 15 kts, Displacement 6,491.5 tons
Civilian 23
Government Owned
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
PREPOSITIONING
Army Prepositioned Stock
LMSR (PM3)
Quick Facts
Length 950 ft, Beam 105.8 ft, Draft 36.1 ft
Displacement 62,644 tons, Speed 24 kts
Crew: Civilian 30
Government Owned
Capacity: 392,627 sq ft
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
PREPOSITIONING
Quick Facts
Length 843.75 ft, Beam 105.62 ft, Draft 35 ft
Displacement 66,079 tons, Speed 21 kts
Crew: Civilian 20
Chartered
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SEALIFT
Quick Facts
Length 906-954 ft, Beam 106 ft, Draft 34 ft
Displacement 59,460-61,680 tons, Speed 24 kts
Crew: Civilian 30
Government Owned
Maintained in Reduced Operating Status (ROS)
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SEALIFT
Quick Facts
Length 821 ft, Beam 106 ft, Draft 32.2 ft
Displacement 51,612 tons, Speed 20 kts
Crew: Civilian 25
Government Owned
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SEALIFT
Quick Facts
Length 754/864 ft, Beam 106/98 ft, Draft 36.1/34.8 ft
Displacement 51,531/50,570 tons, Speed 17/22 kts
Crew: Civilian 25/28
Government Owned
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SEALIFT
Quick Facts
Length 600/591/332/621/604 ft
Beam 106/105/62/106/71 ft
Draft 42/34/23/41/28 ft
Displacement 58,746/47,876/9,989/62,174/26,884 tons
Speed 14.8 kts
Crew: Civilian 21
Chartered
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SEALIFT
Quick Facts
Length 615 ft, Beam 90 ft, Draft 36 ft
Displacement 39,624 tons
Crew: Civilian, Military
Government Owned
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SEALIFT
Quick Facts
Length 330/144 ft, Beam 53/150 ft
Displacement 9,295/440 tons, Speed 15/8 kts
Crew: Civilian, Military
Chartered
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SEALIFT
Quick Facts
Length 331.3 ft, Beam 87.5 ft, Draft 14.1 ft
Displacement 2,118 tons, Speed 35 kts
Crew: Civilian 14
Chartered
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SEALIFT
Quick Facts
Length 373/379 ft, Beam 78 ft, Draft 12 ft
Displacement 1,646 tons, Speed 33 kts
Crew: Civilian 15-18
Government Owned
Capacity: 24,500 sq ft
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Appendix C: Vessel Fact Sheet
SEALIFT
27 Roll-on/Roll-off Ships
8 Fast Sealift Ships
6 Auxiliary Crane Ships
2 Heavy-lift Ships
2 Aviation Maintenance Ships
1 OPDS Tanker (Offshore Petroleum Distribution System)
46 Total
Quick Facts
Crew: Civilian
Government Owned
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Appendix D: MSC Fleet
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Appendix E: Abbreviations
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Appendix E: Abbreviations
ENR Enroute
EOB Estimated on Berth
EPU Expeditionary Port Unit
EPF Expeditionary Fast Transport
ESB Expeditionary Mobile Base
ESD Expeditionary Transfer Dock
ETA Estimated Time of Arrival
ETC Estimated Time of Completion
ETD Estimated Time of Departure
ETR Estimated Time of Repair
FAS Fueling-At-Sea
FLO/FLO Float On/Float Off
FOS Full Operating Status
FP Force Protection
FPO Force Protection Officer
FSS Fast Sealift Ship
GAA General Agency Agreement
GB Government Bunkers
GCCS-M Global Command and Control System
Maritime Operator
GCIC Global Command Information Center
GMDSS Global Maritime Distress and Safety System
GOCO Government-owned, contract-operated
GOGO Government-owned, government-operated
H/L Heavy Lift
IMO International Maritime Organization
INCSEA Incidents at Sea
JLOTS Joint Logistics-Over-The-Shore
JOPES Joint Operational Planning and Execution System
JP-5 Jet Propellant 5 (Aviation Fuel)
KT Knot
LAD Latest Arrival Date
LASH Lighter Aboard Ship
LCM Landing Craft Mechanized
LI Liner in (operator loads)
LMSR Large, Medium Speed Roll-on/Roll-off
LNO Liaison Officer
LO Liner out (operator discharges)
LOGREQ Logistics Requirement
LO/LO Lift-on/Lift-off
LT Long Ton
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Appendix E: Abbreviations
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Appendix E: Abbreviations
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