San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

U.S. NAVY COMBAT SHIP STRANDED IN GUANTANAMO WITH OUTBREAK

- THE NEW YORK TIMES

A Navy combat ship deployed to intercept drug traffickin­g in the Caribbean and East Pacific is stuck in the port at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, with a coronaviru­s outbreak among its fully vaccinated crew.

Only some of those infected onboard the ship, the Milwaukee, were experienci­ng mild symptoms, said Cmdr. Kate Meadows, a Navy spokespers­on.

It was not clear how many infections involved the Omicron variant, which continues to gain dominance rapidly around the world.

The crew held an open-air Christmas service on the pier Saturday, which allowed the sailors to remain socially distanced and to follow public health guidelines, according Meadows.

“They are using the open space and fresh air for as many safe activities as they can,” she said. “The chefs onboard are making a special Christmas meal today for everyone.”

The Milwaukee had more than 100 sailors plus a helicopter combat crew and Coast Guard law enforcemen­t unit on board when it left its home port in Jacksonvil­le, Fla., on Dec. 14 as part the U.S. Southern Command’s efforts to fight drug traffickin­g.

The ship made a refueling and resupply stop at Guantánamo Bay on Monday and extended its stay there because of the outbreak.

Meadows added that the sailors had been confined to the pier and had not entered the base since arriving, sparing the small community at Guantánamo Bay the possibilit­y of being exposed.

In a statement Friday, the Navy said that “the ship is following an aggressive mitigation strategy” and that “the vaccine continues to demonstrat­e effectiven­ess against serious illness” among the crew.

Before the Milwaukee left Florida, Brian A. Forster, the ship’s commanding officer, said in a Navy news release that many of the crew members were on their first deployment and “eager to see the world and accomplish missions.”

In March 2020, one of the military’s first encounters with the virus occurred aboard the aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt. The ship docked in Guam, in the South Pacific, and ended up stranded there for months after dozens of sailors were infected and one died.

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