Remembering US WWII Submariners on this Memorial Day

WWII Submarine Combat Patrol Pin with 3 Gold Stars (4 patrols) Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=14925973
WWII Submarine Combat Patrol Pin with 3 Gold Stars (4 patrols) Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=14925973

On Memorial Day, people sometimes thank veterans, rather than remembering those that died defending the United States. Surviving Veterans have our own day, 11 November.  Today, we should remember those that gave the ultimate sacrifice.  As we do so, let us not just think about our most recent conflicts. Before it recedes into history, let us remember comrades of our parents and grandparents, who gave their lives during WWII, which ended over 70 years ago.

The US Submarine Service took the highest percent of casualties of any US service during that war–nearly 23%. Submariners represented only 1.6% of Navy personnel, but were responsible for over 55% of Japanese ships sunk. My father, James Brink, was a submariner. He survived four war patrols on the USS Sea Poacher (SS-406) and went on to raise a family and have a successful career. Over 3,500 of his fellow submariners did not. In all, 52 American submarines were lost during WWII.

Below is a list of US submarines lost during WWII. Casualty lists for each submarine can be found at the San Francisco Maritime National Park Association.

1941

USS SEALION (SS-195)

1942

USS S-36 (SS-141), USS S-26 (SS-131), USS SHARK (SS-174), USS PERCH (SS-176), USS S-27 (SS-132), USS S-39 (SS-144), USS GRUNION (SS-216)

1943

USS ARGONAUT (SS-166), USS AMBERJACK (SS-219), USS GRAMPUS (SS-207), USS TRITON (SS-201), USS PICKEREL (SS-177), USS GRENADIER (SS-210), USS RUNNER (SS-275), USS R-12 (SS-89), USS GRAYLING (SS-209), USS POMPANO (SS-181), USS CISCO (SS-290), USS S-44 (SS-155), USS DORADO (SS-248), USS WAHOO (SS-238), USS CORVINA (SS-226), USS SCULPIN (SS-191), USS CAPELIN (SS-289)

1944

USS SCORPION (SS-278), USS GRAYBACK (SS-208), USS TROUT (SS-202), USS TULIBEE (SS-284), USS GUDGEON (SS-211), USS HERRING (SS-233), USS GOLET (SS-361), USS S-28 (SS-133), USS ROBALO (SS-273), USS FLIER (SS-250), USS HARDER (SS-257), USS SEAWOLF (SS-197), USS SHARK II (SS-314), USS TANG (SS-306), USS ESCOLAR (SS-294), USS ALBACORE (SS-218), USS GROWLER (SS-215), USS DARTER (SS-227), USS SCAMP (SS-277)

1945

USS SWORDFISH (SS-193), USS BARBEL (SS-316), USS KETE (SS-369), USS TRIGGER (SS-237), USS SNOOK (SS-279), USS LAGARTO (SS-371), USS BONEFISH (SS-223), USS BULLHEAD (SS-332)

ADDITIONAL WW II SUBMARINE PERSONNEL LOSSES ARE ALSO ON THE SITE

 

Happy Veterans Day!

Crew of my Dad's Submarine, the USS Sea Poacher, posing at the Pearl Harbor Submarine Base in front of a captured Japanese mini-sub (1944)
Crew of my Dad’s Submarine, the USS Sea Poacher, posing at the Pearl Harbor Submarine Base in front of a captured Japanese mini-sub (1944)
LTJG James A. Brink, Weapons Officer, USS Sea Poacher, 1944-1945
LTJG James A. Brink, Weapons Officer, USS Sea Poacher, 1944-1945

Happy veterans day to all my fellow veterans! Here are some pictures of my Dad, his fellow shipmates, and the USS Sea Poacher (SS 406).  James Brink (at the time a LTJG) served aboard the Sea Poacher for four war patrols during World War II. After the war he remained in the Reserve, was mobilized during Korea and the Cuban Missile Crisis, commanded two reserve submarines, and retired as a Commander in 1964. In his civilian career, he practiced law for over 40 years.

USS Sea Poacher (SS 406). Images courtesy of the USS Sea Poacher Association (www.seapoacher.com). War Patrols may be accessed on the site.

US-backed offensive against Islamic State in Iraq stutters

In this photo from a militant website, “lion cubs” hold rifles and Islamic State flags as they exercise at a training camp in Tal Afar, near Mosul in northern Iraq. Photo: Supplied

Baghdad: A US-backed offensive against Islamic State faltered in its first week as several hundred militants entrenched in Ramadi, the capital of Iraq’s Anbar province, withstood punishing airstrikes and held off a far-larger force of Iraqi ground troops, senior US and coalition commanders said.

The slow going in what officials portray as a major test of efforts to bring Iraq’s fractured security forces into a common front against IS comes as a truck bomb late on Friday killed more than 100 people, including women and children, in a mostly Shiite Muslim market town about 55 kilometres north of Baghdad.

The explosion in Khan Bani Saad, one of the deadliest since US combat troops withdrew from Iraq in December 2011, caught shoppers out for the Eid al-Fitr celebration that marks the end of the holy month of Ramadan. IS claimed responsibility, posting grisly pictures online of bodies and wreckage-strewn streets and saying the attack was aimed at government-allied Shiite militia fighters.

via The Sidney Mornigng Herald; read more athttp://ift.tt/1Id6Fhg

Peshmerga forces kill dozens of ISIS elements, including 8 German leaders, near Mosul

(IraqiNews.com) Nineveh – On Sunday, an informed source within the Kurdish Ministry of Peshmerga revealed, that the Kurdish force had managed to kill 42 ISIS elements, including 8 ISIS leaders that are German nationals, during violent clashes in different areas near Mosul. The source told Deutsche Presse Agentur (DPA), “Peshmerga forces managed to kill the

The post Peshmerga forces kill dozens of ISIS elements, including 8 German leaders, near Mosul appeared first on Iraq news, the latest Iraq news.

via Iraq news, the latest Iraq news http://ift.tt/1K7EW21

The US Defense Secretary broached an Iraq possibility that the Obama administration wants to avoid

 

Ashton Carter

US Defense Secretary Ashton Carter acknowledged during a House Armed Services Committee hearing last week that Iraq might eventually fracture into separate territories for Sunnis, Shiites, and Kurds, the Washington Examiner reports.

“What if a multi-sectarian Iraq turns out not to be possible?” Carter said, according to the Examiner. “That is an important part of our strategy now on the ground.

“If that government can’t do what it’s supposed to do, then we will still try to enable local ground forces, if they’re willing to partner with us, to keep stability in Iraq, but there will not be a single state of Iraq.”

The statement by Carter, who previously said that the Iraqi military “showed no will to fight” as ISIS captured the city of Ramadi, strays from the Obama administration’s official position about Iraqi unity.

“If this is a new policy position it should be stated. If these are personal views, that should be stated,” Michael Knights, a Washington Institute fellow who is an expert on military and security affairs in Iraq and Iran, told Business Insider in an email.

“But this is making it sound as if US policy is that the Iraqi army is finished and Iraq is splintering as a state. I doubt that is the overall assessment of the intelligence community or the White House’s read on Iraq.

“Iraqis will hear this as the US backing away and insulting their army and their state,” Knights added. “How does that help the war effort?”

ISIS control

President Barack Obama has said that including Sunnis in the fight against the Islamic State (also known as ISIS, ISIL, and Daesh) is crucial to defeating the terrorists, but it doesn’t seem like that effort is succeeding.

Meanwhile, the conflict in Iraq is becoming increasingly sectarian. The Shiite-dominated government in Baghdad has been reluctant to arm Sunni fighters to defend their territory, and Shia militias backed by Iran are leading the ground fight against the Islamic State, a Sunni extremist group.

These Shia militias have been accused of committing atrocities against Sunni civilians, and many Sunnis who have attempted to flee Islamic State militants have been turned away as they try to get into Baghdad. This all furthers the mistrust that Sunnis have in the Iraqi government.

Given the circumstances, some experts argue that Carter’s hypothetical is already a reality.

“After four decades of misrule under Saddam Hussein and [former Shiite prime minister] Nouri al-Maliki … the [Iraqi] national identity has broken down and it has been replaced by the identities that existed before it — the tribal, the ethnic, the sectarian,” Ali Khedery, the longest continuously serving American official in Iraq, told Business Insider.

iraq shia militia

“[The administration] thinks that Iraq and Syria still exist when in fact they have already collapsed,” Khedery added. “On the ground, there is no Iraq left anymore, there is no Syria left anymore.”

Khedery went on to say that “the first step toward a viable American strategy in Iraq” is to admit that the nation is fractured and work within that reality by backing moderate Sunni, Shia, and Kurdish elements against radical militants, including ISIS and Al Qaeda as well as the Iran-backed militias.

But it’s unclear whether the Obama administration is willing to acknowledge the possibility of a fractured Iraq and go up against the Iran-backed Shia militias as he tries to negotiate a watershed nuclear deal with Iran.

via Military & Defense http://ift.tt/1GDfAXq