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Royal Australian Navy Frigate HMAS Arunta’s Crew Trains Hard in Lead-up to Deployment

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Royal Australian Navy Frigate HMAS Arunta’s Crew Trains Hard in Lead-up to Deployment

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Royal Australian Navy Frigate HMAS Arunta
Royal Australian Navy Frigate HMAS Arunta

The Royal Australian Navy (RAN) HMAS Arunta (FFH 151) ship’s company has been busy maintaining and enhancing their skills since departing their home port of Sydney last month for a regional presence deployment. The passage up Australia’s eastern seaboard wasn’t a pleasure cruise for the crew of the Anzac-class frigate, with each day filled with a program of individual and collective training activities. Training has ranged from enhancing technical skills, with routine maintenance and staying proficient in small-arms safety, through to more complex training such as flight-deck operations with Arunta’s embarked MH-60R Seahawk helicopter or whole-of-ship damage-control exercises.

Commanding Officer HMAS Arunta Commander Samuel Woolrych said he was pleased with how his team had come together. “It’s been an intensive time since leaving our home port, but the ship and flight crews have come together well into one integrated team. We have ensured individual and collective skill proficiency is up to standard and we have the whole team working as one. We are well-trained, confident in each other, know our ship, and are ready for any possible task,” Commander Woolrych said.

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Leading Seaman Nathan Bob, left, directs Able Seaman Bradley Hocking as he fires an F89 Minimi on the flight deck of HMAS Arunta in the lead-up to the ship's regional presence deployment.
Leading Seaman Nathan Bob, left, directs Able Seaman Bradley Hocking as he fires an F89 Minimi on the flight deck of HMAS Arunta in the lead-up to the ship’s regional presence deployment. (Photo by Leading Seaman Sittichai Sakonpoonpol)

Key areas of focus included integrating the embarked flight, which included the aircraft, aircrew and maintenance team, with the ship’s flight-deck operations’ team, along with naval gunnery and anti-submarine warfare. The busy training program is a normal part of life at sea for Navy personnel, whose individual and team skills are continually being developed and assessed. The training was the final step in preparing the ship before undertaking an Indo-Pacific regional presence deployment. HMAS Arunta has since completed a routine logistics port visit in Darwin before departing to support Australia’s longstanding contribution to preserving security and stability in the Indo-Pacific. This first regional presence deployment for 2022 will provide opportunities to undertake maritime exercises and enhance interoperability with partners in the South-East Asia and north-east Indian Ocean regions.

HMAS Arunta (FFH 151) is an Anzac-class frigate of the Royal Australian Navy (RAN). The ship, named for the Arrernte people, was laid down in 1995 and commissioned in 1998. Since entering service, Arunta has performed a wide range of duties, including border protection patrols in northern Australian waters, and several deployments to the Persian Gulf. The Anzac class originated from RAN plans to replace the six River-class destroyer escorts with a mid-capability patrol frigate. The Australian shipbuilding industry was thought to be incapable of warship design, so the RAN decided to take a proven foreign design and modify it.

Leading Seaman Aiden Muller marshals HMAS Arunta's flight deck crew during MH-60R Seahawk helicopter flying operations.
Leading Seaman Aiden Muller marshals HMAS Arunta’s flight deck crew during MH-60R Seahawk helicopter flying operations. (Photo by Leading Seaman Sittichai Sakonpoonpol)

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