Operational History
The Peleliu immediately steamed southwards, and then she transited the Panama Canal to the Pacific Ocean. She crossed the Equator for the first time on 27 May 1980, setting a new record for time between an American warship's commissioning and her crossing over into the Southern Hemisphere. Next, the Peleliu steamed to the seaport of Long Beach, California.
Following the 17 October 1989 earthquake in the San Francisco area, a variety of Naval forces provided relief services, with a total of 24 U.S. Navy and Military Sealift Command ships rendering assistance. LHA-5 Peleliu provided shelter for 300 victims and provided helicopter support.
In June 1991, while she was coming back from the Persian Gulf after Operation Desert Storm, the Peleliu participated in the evacuation of the Americans at the U.S. Naval Base Subic Bay, following the volcanic eruption of Mount Pinatubo. This eruption was one of the largest eruptions during in the past 100 years, and it covered a large region of the Philippines in volcanic ash. This eruption destroyed of most of the American naval base there, and also Clark Air Force Base. This evacuation included taking several patients from the maternity ward at the Subic Bay naval hospital, and hence there were several births of babies in the onboard hospital of the Peleliu.
The Peleliu was deployed to East Timor as part of the Australian-led INTERFET peacekeeping task force from 26 October to 27 November 1999.
The Peleliu departed from San Diego in August 2001 with the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit on board for a routine six-month deployment in the Western Pacific. She was in the port of Darwin, Australia, during the September 11 attacks. Following those attacks, the Peleliu was sent to the North Arabian Sea, and on 26 November 2001, she took the first U.S. Marines to Afghanistan as part of Operation Enduring Freedom. After the American Taliban John Walker Lindh was captured in Afghanistan, he was sent to the Peleliu on 14 December 2001. There he was interrogated by a U.S. Marine Corps intelligence team. While he was on board the Peleliu, Lindh signed confessions and he told his interrogators that he was not merely a member of the Taliban, but a full member of Al Qaeda.
Lindh received surgery by the senior surgeon of the Peleliu to remove a bullet in his leg, and he was also treated for frostbite on his toes.
On 2 January 2004, a hostile boat was intercepted by warships at sea in the Indian Ocean, and then fifteen people were detained. An estimated 2,800 pounds (1,300 kg) of hashish was seized by American and Australian warships after the interception of a their boat on January 1, 2002 in the North Arabian Sea.
The Peleliu steamed to support of the Pacific Partnership mission from 23 May through 20 September 2007. This mission included medical, dental, construction, and other humanitarian assistance programs on shore and afloat in the Philippines, Vietnam, Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, and the Marshall Islands. The medical personnel on board the Peleliu included teams from the U.S. Navy and ten other countries, and also from three private assistance organizations.
In 2008, the Peleliu was sent to the Indian Ocean to support Operation Iraqi Freedom, Operation Enduring Freedom, and antipiracy operations. On 10 August 2008, the Peleliu responded to a distress call from a merchant ship, the Gem of Kilakari, that was being attacked by armed pirates in the Gulf of Aden. That pirate attack was put to an end with no injuries.
In August 2010, the Peleliu was sent to Port of Karachi, Pakistan, to use 19 of her helicopters for rescues during the massive floods in southern Pakistan, which were the worst one in the (very long) recorded history of Pakistan. During this deployment, Captain David Schnell, the commanding officer of the Peleliu, was relieved of his command and reassigned for being "unduly familiar" with several crewmembers.
Captain Mark E. Cedrun, the chief of staff for Expeditionary Strike Group 3, replaced Captain Schnell as the commanding officer of the Peleliu.
On 24 November 2010, the Peleliu returned full circle and she was berthed in the Subic Bay Freeport Zone on her first visit there since the evacuation by the Navy in 1991. That deployment also included port visits in Phuket and Mo'Obs in Thailand.
The Peleliu returned to her home port in San Diego in December 2010, and she remains on active service in the U.S. Navy as of May 2012.
On 17 September 2012, it was announced she would deploy from Camp Pendleton to the Middle East under the command of Captain Mark Sakaguchi.
Read more about this topic: USS Peleliu (LHA-5)
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