Mount Whitney stages SAR exercise with Republic of Cyprus Rescue Center

U.S. Navy’s command and control ship USS Mount Whitney (LCC 20) conducted a combined search and rescue (SAR) exercise with the Republic of Cyprus Joint Rescue Coordination Center (JRCC) Lanarca in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea, February 29.

The purpose of the exercise was to increase response capabilities of Cypriot emergency personnel and rescue units and to enhance interoperability with the U.S. Navy to conduct these types of missions within the rescue region of the Republic of Cyprus and Eastern Mediterranean Sea.

Captain Carlos Sardiello, USS Mount Whitney (LCC 20) commanding officer, said: “The SAR exercise conducted between the Joint Rescue Coordination Center of the Republic of Cyprus and USS Mount Whitney demonstrated an increased readiness for effective response in SAR and other humanitarian assistance missions. It was a pleasure to cooperate with the Cypriot rescue unit personnel.”

USS Mount Whitney, flagship of the U.S. 6th Fleet, provided the training equipment by dropping human replicas into the water as the ship pulled out of port. Personnel involved in the exercise practiced MEDEVAC coordination procedures, recovery procedures using a helicopter, and combined communications to locate and track missing persons at sea.

Mount Whitney is currently underway conducting unit-level training, performing duties as the fleet command and control ship.

Mount Whitney, forward deployed to Gaeta, Italy, operates with a combined crew of U.S. Navy Sailors and Military Sealift Command civil service mariners. The civil service mariners perform navigation, deck, engineering and supply service operations, while military personnel support communications, weapons systems and security. It is one of only two seaborne Joint Command Platforms in the U.S. Navy, both of which are forward deployed.