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September 18th, 2011
 CMC Ralph Perez, USS New York, LPD-21
Photo and story by MC3 Shannon Burns
On the morning of Sept. 11, 2011, then-Senior Chief Electronics Technician Rafael
Perez was in his hotel room with his family before being abruptly awoken by
his command sponsor. In the middle of a duty station change, Perez’s sponsor
went on to inform him that two commercial airplanes had crashed into the World
Trade Center Towers. Little did Perez know the events that had transpired would
forever shift the path of his life. A native of Bronx, N.Y., Perez joined the Navy in
1987, five years after graduating high school. His motivation came in the form of
the Hollywood blockbuster, “Top Gun.”
“When I watched the movie ‘Top Gun’ I said to myself, ‘I want to do
that. I wanted to … be like those cool guys in the movie,’” said Perez.
Following his decision to join the Navy, Perez spent the next 14 years
like any other Sailor: deploying, visiting other countries, advancing in
rank, and building friendships.
“When 9/11 happened I had just transferred from USS Newport News
(SSN 750) to Submarine Group Seven, Yokosuka, Japan,” said Perez. “I
was in the Navy Lodge with my family, and my sponsor woke me up at
about 11:30 p.m. Yokosuka time and told me to turn on the TV. He told me
that our country was under attack. After that, our lives changed forever.”
After receiving the devastating news, Perez’s first reaction was to try
to get in touch with his mother and two siblings who resided in the Bronx.
“I talked to my family immediately as [the attack] was happening,”
said Perez. “I said to myself, ‘Oh my God! There must be at least 25,000
people who work in that building.’ I couldn’t believe that someone would
kill innocent people through terrorism in my hometown! I’d always
hear about wars in other countries, but I never thought that the streets
I would walk on and the places I would visit with my family would be a
target for terrorist activity.”
Because he was stationed in Yokosuka at the time of the attacks, Perez
was not able to immediately see his family.
“I was not able to see my mom and brothers until a year after the attacks,” said Perez. “I knew they were safe, but that day changed my life
because I knew that anything could happen anytime, anywhere. Every
day that I get to see them is a blessing.”
During the aftermath of 9/11, Perez attended an admiral’s call in
which the upper chain of command spoke about the current events.
“9/11 reinforced to me that we were going to be a nation at war and
that leadership of Sailors was going to be essential to success. September
11th inspired me to take that next step and lead Sailors outside of my
rate. I aspired to be a CMC,” said Perez.
The steps that Perez took to accomplish his goal of one day becoming
a command master chief included numerous hours of selfless devotion
to his Sailors and constant support to the war against terrorism. One
of those ways, Perez said, is serving aboard USS New York (LPD 21).
It was an opportunity, symbolic as it were, “I knew I couldn’t pass up.”
On Sept. 9, 2003, construction began on New York, a ship containing
7.5 tons of metal salvaged from the towers. New York was christened on
March 1, 2008, during a ceremony at Avondale Shipyard in New Orleans.
On Nov. 7, 2009, she was commissioned in New York City.
“When I heard that they were going to build New York using metal
from the towers, I wanted to be stationed [at that command],” said Perez.
“I felt so great knowing that there was going to be a ship that would have
such a personal connection to New York and those attacks. The souls
of those who perished are in that ship, and it feels so amazing to be a
CMC on board her.”
The attacks changed not only his path in the Navy, but his view of how
safe he was as well.
“Before 9/11, I probably took security and safety for granted,” Perez
explained. “Since 9/11, I realized we can’t live in fear – that would mean
the terrorists won – but, that we must be vigilant that there are some in this
world who still desire to do our nation harm. It takes all of us to protect
our nation and our communities.”
For Perez the connection to the New York goes beyond her crew.
“I’ve been in the Navy for 24 years and most of it has been served in the
submarine community,” Perez said. “The biggest thrill of my naval career is
serving as CMC on USS New York. I feel as though the 348 crewmembers
assigned are not her only crewmembers. I feel like I have about 15 million
New Yorkers as my crewmembers as well.”
Since 9/11 the Navy has had to adjust to the threat of terrorism and
a new kind of war where the enemy may not be as obvious as it has been
in the past.
“The Navy is so adaptable, [but] 9/11 changed the face of the Navy,”
Perez commented. “We had to realize that we had to change our warfare
tactics, I think the entire DoD (Department of Defense) realized that we
were going to have to change. We had to become lite and fast instead of just
trying to overcome [our adversaries] with our military might. It caused
our leadership to think about how quickly and effectively we could bring
the fight to the enemy.”
Perez said that he feels privileged not only to be in the Navy, but to be
on New York as the CMC as well.
“I’m so blessed to be a part of this organization. I’m so proud that I
get to represent New York, her crewmembers, and the Navy to the world,”
said Perez. “I wish I could invite the whole Navy to come and visit USS
New York because she’s a fantastic ship, and the people who serve aboard
her are fantastic.”
Perez’s focus is on helping his Sailors improve in and out of the Navy.
“I really want to help USS New York become the best it can be,” said
Perez. “Developing my Sailors both personally and professionally is my
primary focus right now. Most of the Sailors that serve on [New York]
chose to serve here, and they have a deep personal connection to what
this ship stands for.”
Perez’s hope for the future of New York is for the ship to reach its full
potential while on deployment.
“I’d really like the ship to excel in all warfare areas,” Perez commented.
“I really want her to make a difference while deployed so that when people
ask how New York fared on deployment I can say that we exceeded all
expectations.”
Perez has been New York CMC for five months. New York’s homeport
is Norfolk, Va.
Burns is assigned to Defense Media Activity
Original story here
http://www.navy.mil/media/allhands/acrobat/ah201109.pdf
Tags: 1010 wins, 10th anniversary, 11th anniversary, 1776, 343 firefighters, 9 11 attacks, 9 11 pentagon, A FIGHTING TRIBUTE, amphibious craft, amphibious operations, amphibious ships, amphibious transport, amphibious transport dock, center towers, Christening, Christening Ceremony, commercial airplanes, COMMISSIONING, Crews News, electronics technician, mc3, Media, New York Metro, News, rafael perez, sept 11, shannon burns, top gun, USS New York, USS New York LPD-21
September 15th, 2008
Mourners pay their respects during Thursday’s observance at Ground Zero.
By D. Allan Kerr
September 14, 2008 6:00 AM
Normally, I try to avoid the rah-rah feel-good patriotic spiels favored by some pundits. They’re too cheap, too easy, too pandering. But one year from now, the amphibious transport ship USS New York is being commissioned in the city for which it was named, and that simple fact says more about the character of this nation than a thousand country songs.
Truth be told, this landing platform dock (LPD-21) isn’t much of a beauty. She isn’t sleek or especially majestic — in pictures she kind of looks like a big gray box. But she’s a warship, built to hit the beaches with up to 800 Marines as well as both assault vehicles and helicopters. In other words, if you did something stupid and an LPD is coming your way, you’re in for a world of hurt.
Perhaps the most striking feature of the USS New York’s makeup is the approximately 24 tons of steel from the World Trade Center used in her construction. Scrap metal from the center, destroyed during the 9/11 attacks of 2001, was melted down to make the bow of the hull. The ship’s motto, fittingly enough, is “Never Forget.”
I’m sorry to be such a sap, but there’s a lyrical, almost uniquely American perfection to the idea of taking the ruins from one of the worst days in our history to help build an instrument of vengeance. It was welcome news as we approached the seventh anniversary of 9/11, which is for me usually a season of frustration — an annual reminder of the misdirected follies in Iraq and our failure to apprehend Osama bin Laden.
Don’t get me wrong — it’s still pretty annoying to know bin Laden hasn’t been brought to justice. But this year that frustration is tempered somewhat by the existence of the USS New York. It’s not only a ship of war, but a vessel symbolizing for the world our resolve and tenacity. It’s a reassuring reminder of this country’s strength of character, a demonstration of our ability to, quite literally, pick up the pieces and renew the fight.
A Navy captain at the scene later told the media that when the melted metal was poured into the moulds for the ship’s bow section, “those big rough steelworkers treated it with total reverence.”
“It sounds trite, but I saw it in their eyes,” added Philip Teel, head of the ship systems division for Northrop Grumman, the company that built the ship. “These are very patriotic people, and the fact that the ship has steel from the trade center is a source of great pride. They view it as something incredibly special. They’re building it for the nation.’
One shipbuilder, a guy named Tony Quaglino, was due to retire after 40 years on the job, but he held off for the opportunity to work on the New York. “This is sacred,” he told a reporter.
The ship’s steel was tested yet again in 2005, by Hurricane Katrina. The New York was built and christened in New Orleans, and during the hurricane many of the workers lost their homes. Some had to live at the shipyard afterward during construction, but the ship survived intact.
The New York is a San Antonio-class vessel, a new-and-improved generation of amphibious assault ship so cutting edge that plans call for 12 of the new LPDs to essentially replace 41 ships of the older classes.
Tempered by stubborn determination, baptized by Mother Nature and designed with bad intent, this is going to be a vessel to be reckoned with.
If you ARE in the mood for some artistry, however, I give you Longfellow’s “O Ship of State,” which includes the lines: “We know what Master laid thy keel/What Workmen wrought thy ribs of steel,/Who made each mast, and sail, and rope,/What anvils rang, what hammers beat,/In what a forge and what a heat/Were shaped the anchors of thy hope!”
D. Allan Kerr is such a relic his old ship USS Guam was decommissioned 10 years ago. Kerr may be contacted at the_culling@hotmail.com.
Tags: 9 11 attacks, acre, America, American, amphibious transport, Anchors, anniversary, Antonio-class, assault, assault vehicles, beauty, bin, bow, box, Building, cap, center, City, class, class vessel, com, commission, construction, country, country songs, D. Allan Kerr, day, design, Division, dock, Don, end, EST, event, follies, frustration, Great, Ground, ground zero, grumman, Guam, head, history, home, hull, hurricane, idea, Iraq, job, Katrina, kind, Laden, landing, LPD, makeup, Mar, metal, min, Motto, mourners, nation, Navy, New Orleans, News, News, northrop, northrop grumman, NY, O Ship, observance, org, OTHER, perfection, Philip Teel, photo, place, platform, Port, pundits, reminder, sail, San Antonio, Scrap, scrap metal, sea, Sept, September, ship systems, ships, shipyard, simple fact, something, spiels, State, Steel, stem, story, Strength, strength of character, striking feature, Temp, tenacity, term, Thursday, thy, tons of steel, Tony Quaglino, trade, transport, transport ship, Truth, US, USS, USS New York, View, war, warship, way, welcome news, World, World Trade Center, year, Zero, Zoom
March 1st, 2008
NY POST, March 1, 2008
Say this for the US Navy: It knows how to remember.
Consider USS New York, the Navy’s newest amphibious transport dock ship, to be christened this morning during a ceremony at the Northrop Grumman shipyards in New Orleans.
The ship, named in commemoration of the victims of 9/11, was forged in part from 7.5 tons of steel salvaged from the wreckage of the World Trade Center – used, as the Navy puts it, to symbolize “the spirit and resiliency of the people of New York.”
Her motto: “Never Forget.”
It’s hard to think of a better tribute to the heroes of that day than New York, which can transport up to 800 Marines in support of expeditionary warfare missions and special ops – perfect, in other words, for taking the fight back to America’s enemies.
And she’ll be skippered, upon her commissioning next year, by Cmdr. F. Curtis Jones of upstate Binghamton, at the head of a crew of 360 sailors.
Like we said: wholly fitting (as are two more planned San Antonio-class transports, USS Arlington and USS Somerset – named for the sites of the other 9/11 attacks).
Indeed, for decades to come, the US fleet will sail with a physical manifestation of the plain American courage that makes her sailors the finest in the world – and a firm reminder, as if they needed it, of the stakes of their service.
Anchors aweigh!
Tags: 9 11 attacks, A FIGHTING TRIBUTE, America, American, amphibious transport dock, Anchors, Antonio-class, Arlington, aweigh, Binghamton, ceremony, class, cmdr, Cmdr. F. Curtis, com, commemoration, commission, courage, crew, curtis jones, day, EST, FIGHTING, fleet, Forged, grumman, head, hero, Heroes, Jones, Mar, March, Media, min, morning, Motto, Navy, New Orleans, News, northrop, northrop grumman, northrop grumman shipyards, NY, NY POST, org, OTHER, part, physical manifestation, Port, Post, reminder, resiliency, sail, sailors, San Antonio, service, ship, shipyard, special ops, spirit, State, Steel, support, symbolize, tons of steel, trade, transport, tribute, tribute to the heroes, US, us navy, USS, uss arlington, USS New York, USS New York commissioning, USS Somerset LPD-25, war, warfare, World, World Trade Center, wreckage, year
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The future USS New York LPD-21 under construction at Northrop Grumman Ship Systems’ shipyard in Avondale, LA, will be the fifth amphibious transport dock of the San Antonio class. The ship was named New York after the state and incorporates in its construction steel salvaged from the World Trade Centers. Her ship motto is "Never Forget." "We're very proud that the twisted steel from the WTC towers will soon be used to forge an even stronger national defense," New York Gov. George Pataki spoke in 2002. "The USS New York will soon be defending freedom and combating terrorism around the globe, while also ensuring that the world never forgets the evil attacks of Sept. 11 and the courage and strength New Yorkers showed.” This will be the seventh U.S. ship named New York.
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