
Warrior Maven Video Above: Strykers to Be Armed with Attack Drones& LasersBy Christopher Woody,Business Insider
FT. LAUDERDALE, Florida — Once the Coast Guard has a suspect vessel in its sights on the high seas, there's usually nowhere for it to go, but getting it to stop isn't always easy.
The crew of the Coast Guard cutter James returned to Florida last week with nearly 38,000 pounds of cocaine seized by it and other Coast Guard ships in the Pacific. Stacked on some of the bales of cocaine were clear signs of the Coast Guard's precision.
"So what you see here are some engine cowlings," said Capt. Jeffrey Randall, commander of the James, referring to the half-dozen plastic covers perched on bales of seized drugs like trophies.
"We pair up the capabilities of the ship, the sensors of the ship, with our helicopter detachment that's back there," he said, referring to the helicopter parked behind the crew on the James' aft deck.
"That helicopter has what we call an aerial-use-of-force capability. So we can shoot from the aircraft with precision marksman fire, and we direct it at the engines of the vessel to stop the vessels when they fail to heave to."
A helicopter crew from the Helicopter Interdiction Tactical Squadron Jacksonville trains over the St. Johns River on September 22, 2009. US Coast Guard/Petty Officer 3rd Class Michael Hulme
Coast Guard Petty Officer 3rd Class Paulo Cheng, a maritime enforcement specialist and student of the Precision Marksmanship School, shoots at known distance targets with an M110 Semi-Automatic Sniper System during the Precision Marksmanship Course at the Spartan Ranch Tactical Training Center in Maysville, July 26, 2018. US Marine Corps/Lance Cpl. Nicholas Lubchenko
Petty Officer 1st Class Jesse Pitrelli and Petty Officer 1st Class Peter Purcell at Army Sniper School at Fort Benning, Georgia, February 16, 2016. Pitrelli and Purcell are the first active-duty Coast Guardsmen in history to graduate from Army Sniper school. US Coast Guard
"The relationship between the shooter and the spotter is extremely important. The spotter's job is probably the hardest He's evaluating the factors with the wind," the MRST member said. "The spotters responsibility is to actually see what the wind is doing and give the shooter the correct information so that he can make that accurate shot."
Pitrelli and Purcell participate in training during Army Sniper School at Fort Benning, Georgia. US Army
Petty Officer 2nd Class Anthony Phillips, a precision marksman at Helicopter Interdiction Tactical Squadron, displays the weaponry used by a HITRON during missions, February 23, 2010. US Coast Guard/Petty Officer 1st Class Bobby Nash
The 2017 and 2018 results have brought derision for Marine snipers and praise for Coast Guard marksmen.
A gunner in an MH-68 Stingray helicopter from the Helicopter Interdiction Squadron from Jacksonville, Florida, patrols a drug transit zone alongside the Coast Guard cutter Gallatin from Charleston, S.C. Chief Warrant Officer Donnie Brzuska/US Coast Guard
A Coast Guard aerial marksman from Air Station San Francisco sights in on a target during counter-terrorism training, in San Pablo Bay, California, June 11, 2009. US Coast Guard
Coast Guard marksmen are often armed with Robar RC-50 anti-material rifles, which are designed to take out machinery (and are also used by US Special Operations Command.)
Coast Guard helicopters and surface vessels, like the 45-foot small boats used in the use-of-force demonstration in New York Harbor in October, can be armed with mounted M240 machine guns.
Coast Guard crew members practice intercepting an unidentified vessel during a use-of-force demonstration in New York Harbor, October 5, 2018. Graham Flanagan/Business Insider
The Coast Guard's Maritime Safety and Security Teams, or MSSTs, and Maritime Safety and Response Teams, or MSRTs, were set up after the September 11 to respond to terrorism and other threats to US ports and waterways.
There are now 11 MSST teams whose assignments include security for UN General Assemblies, national political conventions, hurricane-response efforts, and major sporting events.
MSRTs are a ready-alert force for the Coast Guard and Defense Department combatant commanders for both short-notice operations and planned security needs. MSRTs provide subject-matter expertise for security, training, and disaster-response events and recent operations include presidential inaugurations and NATO summits.
Read more:An ISIS-inspired tactic is raising concerns in US ports
The crew of the Coast Guard Cutter Harriet Lane approaches a suspected smuggling vessel while a helicopter crew from the Coast Guard Helicopter Interdiction Tactical Squadron monitors from the air on February 25, 2018. US Coast Guard
A helicopter crew from the Helicopter Interdiction Tactical Squadron Jacksonville demonstrates warning shots fired at a non-compliant boat off the coast of Jacksonville, September 24, 2009. US Coast Guard/Petty Officer 3rd Class Michael Hulme
One of the cowlings from an engine disabled by Coast Guard crews aboard the James during the offload. Christopher Woody/Business Insider
Another cowling from a disabled engine. The offload included drugs seized in 15 different incidents off the coasts of Mexico, Central America, and South America. Christopher Woody/Business Insider
National-security cutters James and Stratton and the medium-endurance cutters Bear, Active, Dauntless, Venturous, Spencer, and Campbell made the seizures. Christopher Woody/Business Insider
Of the roughly 38,000 pounds of cocaine offloaded on Thursday, more than 19,000 pounds of it was seized by the James alone. Christopher Woody/Business Insider
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