Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

3rd McCain added to warship’s name

Arizona senator honored during rededicati­on in Japan of damaged destroyer

- KEN MORITSUGU

YOKOSUKA, Japan — Three generation­s of McCains are now honored on a U.S. Navy ship in the Pacific.

The secretary of the Navy added U.S. Sen. John McCain’s name Thursday to a warship that had already been named for the Arizona lawmaker’s father and grandfathe­r, both former Navy admirals.

The rededicati­on ceremony took place aboard the USS John S. McCain at an American base in Japan. Scaffoldin­g covered the mast of the guided-missile destroyer, which is undergoing extensive repairs after a deadly collision, one of two last year that led to charges against senior ship officers and a highly critical review of Navy procedures and policies.

Richard Spencer, the Navy secretary, told reporters that recommende­d changes in operations have been 78 percent implemente­d. Some have been completed, he said, while others such as instilling a culture of continuous learning will take two years.

“I think we’re well underway,” Spencer said at Yokosuka Naval Base south of Tokyo.

Seventeen sailors died when the USS Fitzgerald and then the McCain collided with commercial vessels in the Pacific Ocean in June and August of 2017.

The three generation­s of McCains share the same name, John Sidney McCain, though they went or go by Sidney, Jack and John, from oldest to youngest. Their naval careers overlapped in World War II and Vietnam.

“It’s a name in three parts, and a name that has three stories,” Spencer said.

Sidney joined the Navy in the early 20th century and was an aircraft carrier task force commander in World War II. His son Jack was a submarine commander in World War II who rose to be head of the U.S. Pacific Command during the Vietnam War.

John was a naval aviator who was captured in Vietnam, where he was held for five years and tortured.

“Sen. McCain has proven that even the most difficult challenges can become sources of great strength,” Micah Murphy, the commander of the USS McCain, told his crew at the ceremony, alluding to the challenges they face as they work with repair teams to get the ship back to sea.

The guided-missile destroyer, which had a gaping hole in its side after the collision, was launched in 1994.

“Sidney, Jack and John. Three distinguis­hed officers. Three truly remarkable Americans,” Spencer said.

McCain, who is battling brain cancer, said he looks back with gratitude on his formative years in the Navy.

“I hope the generation­s of sailors who will serve aboard the USS McCain will find the same fulfillmen­t that my family does in serving a cause greater than oneself,” the 81-year-old lawmaker said in a news release from his office.

Spencer said the Navy hopes to return the warship to service next spring.

 ?? AP/EUGENE HOSHIKO ?? The USS John S. McCain, officially named Thursday for U.S. Sen. John McCain, sits in dry dock as it undergoes repairs at the U.S. naval base in Yokosuka, Japan.
AP/EUGENE HOSHIKO The USS John S. McCain, officially named Thursday for U.S. Sen. John McCain, sits in dry dock as it undergoes repairs at the U.S. naval base in Yokosuka, Japan.

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