andpro said:Does the deckO have to be on the boarding team or does he/she have the choice?
Depends. Every Boarding entails a degree of risk and no two boardings are ever the sameIs this job a high stress job?
Depends on your ship and manning requirements but for the most part NLBP is a secondary duty along with your primary duties.Does it replace some of your duties or is it added on to your duties?
andpro said:Is this job a high stress job? Does it replace some of your duties or is it added on to your duties?
mcdvnav said:I just wanted to add something to what Ex- Dragoon said. It's probably the most interesting secondary duty. It requires a lot of work, but it is rewarding.
However, if you're trying to decide between the Navy and the Army. NBP is nothing like being in the infantry. You stand a better chance of going on a peacekeeping mission or other deployment overseas if you join the Army. I know the navy has been involved in many ops, but it's not the same as being in Yugoslavia or Afghanistan.
When I joined I wanted to be involved in a UN mission, the recruiter never mentioned that a MARS officer has very little chance of getting sent on a UN deployment. So, I've been doing my best to find some way to go on a tour, but it hasn't worked out.
Make sure you know what you want before you pick a trade.
FSTO said:Have you applied for HUMINT? Thats the best way for a MARS officer to get to go in country.
No I haven't but the couple of guys I've talked to said that it was a very good tour.mcdvnav said:I have considered it. I am planning to apply when I complete FNO. I've met several people who've gone to Yugoslavia and Afghan with the HUMINT teams, they say it's a good tour-- hard work.
Have you done it? What have you heard?
Navy_Blue said:The yanks tend to loose allot of people boarding ships with only 3 or 4 guys. I think in 2002 the US boarded a ship in the gulf and After the crew was locked away in there mess. The EXO locked one team member in the engine space and killed another on the bridge and sunk there own ship crew and all. Not a good day.
http://www.news.navy.mil/search/display.asp?story_id=2109The Sailors were from USS Peterson (DD 969), a Spruance-class destroyer homeported in Norfolk, Va.
The Peterson had been ordered to board the United Arab Emirates-flagged tanker, M/T Samra. While the Americans were searching the ship, the engineering section began to flood. Two members of the U.S. “sweep team” were trapped and went down with the Samra less than three minutes later.
The cause of the sinking may never be known. It is possible the ship was intentionally scuttled, but those familiar with the vessel say it’s just as likely that the rickety old ship just gave out. Whatever the cause, it points out the fact that boarding operations are difficult, physically challenging and often life-threatening