U.S. forces participate in Hong Kong exercise

  • Published
  • By Chief Mass Communication Specialist (SW) Ray Mooney
  • Fleet Public Affairs Center Pacific
Search and rescue units from the U.S. Coast Guard District 14 in Honolulu, Hawaii, and the Alaska Air National Guard's 210th and 212th Rescue Squadrons in Anchorage arrived here last week to work with SAR teams from Hong Kong's Government Flying Service.

As a work-up to this week's scheduled humanitarian Search and Rescue Exercise 2008 - also known as SAREX, an international exercise involving forces from the U.S., Hong Kong and the People's Republic of China - the U.S. Coast Guard and U.S. Air Force teams have used this week to get to know their hosts. 

A total of 450 U.S. military personnel are participating in the exercise. The SAREX is a routine exercise that focuses on understanding the procedures necessary to search, locate and rescue personnel on vessels requiring assistance or those who have been missing at sea.

"These guys have invited us out on everything that they do," said Lt. Col. Tim O'Brien, commander of the 210th Rescue Squadron. "They've taken us out on familiarization flights on their helicopters. We've landed on islands here in Hong Kong. Today our (rescue swimmers) got a chance to go down the hoist and into the water, and a couple of our guys have even had the chance to go on actual rescue missions. They've just been fabulous hosts."

The mission of the Hong Kong GFS is comparable to the SAR mission practiced by the U.S. Coast Guard and the U.S. Air Force, according to 2nd Lt. John Romspert, combat rescue officer.

"The GFS is really similar to the Coast Guard," Lieutenant Romspert said. "The rescue swimmer and helicopter operations the Coast Guard does, are very similar in all the roles and missions. [The Air Force] is similar in that we do work out of helicopters, but we also have a lot of different mission sets that they don't do."

The chance to work with other organizations that perform the same mission makes everyone better, according to Master Sgt. Peter Alexakis, aircraft maintenance supervisor.

"We have a specific mission that we do for the Air Force and for the state of Alaska," said Sergeant Alexakis. "In doing that, in sharing our mission with others, if we can learn how to make a better mousetrap, we will."

"Sitting here with these guys has been fabulous," said Colonel O'Brien. "Sitting here and trading pilot talk, if you will on how they do water operations? How do they land on ships? How do we land on ships? What do they do for operational risk management? How is ours different?

"How do they talk a helicopter onto a survivor on a boat? They call it patter. We call it cockpit communications or crew coordination," Colonel O'Brien added. "It's tiny little terminology differences, but it's amazing how similar our operations are."

The exercise is designed to facilitate exchange of procedures, techniques, and innovations in the annual multi-national civil search and rescue exercise held in the Hong Kong special administrative region.

While the U.S. has participated in the Hong Kong SAREX in previous years, this is the first time a week long work-up has been built into the program, according to the colonel.

"Really where the learning takes place is here in the classroom," Colonel O'Brien said. "If we were to just come in, get a briefing, and then go out and execute, none of this interoperability piece, none of the trading of stories, none of that would have happened. So I think this extra week was well worth it."

The SAR personnel at GFS also recognize the tremendous value in working with other units.

"We don't want to be the frog at the bottom of the well, looking up at our small piece of sky and thinking all is well," said Bowie Fung, acting senior pilot for the Helicopter Search and Rescue at GFS. "We want to look outside to other operators, see how they do it. That's the main reason we want to operate with [the United States]. We want to learn, we always want to improve."

"Everybody gets high value out of working like this because there's not a patent on good ideas," said Lieutenant Romspert. "They do some things different than we do, and it's almost like taking a look at your organization from the outside and seeing how you can improve, what you can do better, or what they can get from us and also do better."