Las Vegas Review-Journal

U.S. Navy vessel hits oil tanker

10 sailors missing, after collision near Singapore

- By Anna Fifield The Washington Post

SEOUL — Ten U.S. Navy sailors were missing and five injured after the USS John S. Mccain guided missile destroyer and an oil tanker three times its size collided early Monday near Singapore

American and Singaporea­n ships and helicopter­s are involved in a search-and-rescue mission after the pre-dawn collision at the entrance to one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes.

It is the second time in two months that a Navy destroyer based at the 7th Fleet’s home port of Yokosuka, Japan, has been involved in a collision at sea. Seven sailors were killed when the USS Fitzgerald collided with a container ship south of Japan in June.

The Mccain, an Arleigh Burke-class destroyer equipped with Aegis missiles, had been on its way to a routine port visit in Singapore after patrolling in the South China Sea.

Shipping data showed that the Liberian-flagged merchant vessel Alnic MC was also on its way to Singapore when the vessels collided east of the Strait of Malacca at 5:24 a.m. local time, while it was still dark.

The 550-mile-wide strait runs between the Malaysian peninsula and the Indonesian island of Sumatra, connecting the Pacific and Indian oceans. It is one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes but is well-traversed and well-governed, analysts say.

The Alnic is more than three times the size of the Mccain, with a gross tonnage of 30,000 tons.

Reports indicated that the destroyer suffered damage to its port side at the rear but is sailing under its own power and heading to port in Singapore.

The Navy’s 7th Fleet said that Navy Seahawk helicopter­s and Ospreys had been mobilized for the search-andrescue effort, joining tugboats from Singapore, a Singapore navy ship and helicopter­s, and a Singapore police coast guard vessel.

The 7th Fleet set up an emergency aid center in Yokosuka for family members of the Mccain crew.

The collision comes days after the Navy issued a damning report listing errors that led to a collision between the USS Fitzgerald — also a Yokosuka-based Arleigh Burke-class destroyer - and a much larger container ship just south of Japan in June.

The collision killed seven sailors, all of whom drowned in their berth compartmen­ts when the container ship struck the destroyer’s side.

The Navy said last week that it would discipline a dozen sailors who were aboard the Fitzgerald, including the top two officers.

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