United States Third Fleet

(Redirected from US Third Fleet)

The United States Third Fleet is one of the numbered fleets in the United States Navy. Third Fleet's area of responsibility includes approximately fifty million square miles of the eastern and northern Pacific Ocean areas including the Bering Sea, Alaska, the Aleutian Islands, and a sector of the Arctic. Major oil and trade sea lines of communication within this area are critically important to the economic health of the United States and friendly nations throughout the Pacific Rim region.[1]

Commander, U.S. Third Fleet
Third Fleet Logo
Active15 March 1943 – 7 October 1945
1 February 1973 – present
(51 years, 9 months)
Country United States
Branch United States Navy
TypeFleet
Part of United States Pacific Fleet
Garrison/HQ Naval Base Point Loma
Websitehttps://www.c3f.navy.mil/
Commanders
CommanderVADM John F.G. Wade
Deputy CommanderRDML Richard W. Meyer
Command Master ChiefCMDCM H. Trenton Schmidt
Notable
commanders
FADM William F. Halsey

First established in 1943, the Third Fleet conducted extensive operations against Japanese forces in the Central Pacific during World War II. Deactivated in 1945, the fleet remained inactive until 1973, when it was reactivated and assumed its current responsibilities.

Mission

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The Third Fleet plans and executes naval operations in the Pacific Ocean. The fleet provides maritime homeland defense, regional security, and humanitarian operations support through integrated naval and coastguard forces acting as a single Sea Service. It strengthens relations between the U.S. and its allies and partners through joint, inter-agency and multinational exercises and operations like Rim of the Pacific, Pacific Partnership, and Fleet Weeks. The Third Fleet ensures realistic, relevant training to its personnel so they have the necessary skills to promote peace and prevail in conflict.[2]

The Third Fleet is a combat-ready power in control of ships, submarines, and aircraft stationed in California, Washington, and Hawaii. The Third Fleet's sea-going force includes five aircraft carrier strike groups, each consisting of a combination of cruisers, destroyers, and frigates. They also have more than 30 submarines and a dozen supply ships to support the strike groups. Third Fleet's air forces comprises more than 400 Navy aircraft, including Boeing F/A-18 Super Hornets, Northrop Grumman E-2C Hawkeyes, McDonnell Douglas AV-8B Harrier II, Bell AH-1Z SuperCobra and Sikorsky SH-60 Seahawk helicopters.[2]

History

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World War II

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The Third Fleet was originally formed during World War II on 15 March 1943 under the command of Admiral William F. Halsey. Its on-shore headquarters at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii was established on 15 June 1944. The ships of the Third Fleet also formed the basis of the Fifth Fleet, formed on 26 April 1944, which was the designation of the "Big Blue Fleet" when under the command of Admiral Raymond A. Spruance.[note 1] Spruance and Halsey alternated command of the fleet for major operations, allowing the other admiral and his staff time to plan for subsequent operations. A secondary benefit was confusing the Japanese into thinking that there were actually two separate fleets as the fleet designation flipped back and forth.[4]

While under Halsey's command as the Third Fleet, the fleet operated in and around the Solomon Islands, the Philippines, Formosa, Okinawa, the Ryukyu Islands, and the Japanese Home Islands, first with the battleship USS New Jersey and, from May 1945 to the end of the war, the battleship USS Missouri as its flagship. As the Third Fleet, it took part in the Palau Islands campaign of September–November 1944 and the Philippines campaign of 1944–1945, defeated the Imperial Japanese Navy in two of the four major actions – the Battle of the Sibuyan Sea and the Battle off Cape Engaño – that made up the Battle of Leyte Gulf in October 1944, encountered the damaging Typhoon Cobra in December 1944, endured Typhoon Connie in June 1945, and took part in the war's final operations in Japanese waters in the summer of 1945, launching air attacks on Tokyo, the naval base at Kure, and the island of Hokkaidō and bombarding several Japanese coastal cities with naval gunfire.

The British Pacific Fleet was operating as Task Force 57 of the Fifth Fleet when Halsey relieved Spruance of command in May 1945. Like the rest of the Fifth Fleet's ships, the British ships were resubordinated from Spruance's Fifth Fleet to Halsey's Third Fleet. The British Pacific Fleet then constituted Task Force 37 under the Third Fleet's operational command through the end of World War II on 15 August 1945.

The Third Fleet's next major combat operation would have been Operation Olympic, the invasion of Kyushu in the Japanese Home Islands, scheduled to begin on 1 November 1945, during which it would have operated simultaneously with the Fifth Fleet for the first time.[contradictory] The end of the war made this operation unnecessary.

Embarked aboard Missouri, Admiral Halsey led the Third Fleet into Tokyo Bay on 29 August 1945. On 2 September 1945, the documents of surrender of the Japanese Empire ending the war were signed on Missouri's deck. The Third Fleet remained in Japanese waters until late September 1945, when its ships were directed to proceed to the United States West Coast. On 7 October 1945, the Third Fleet was designated a reserve fleet and decommissioned from active status.

Re-establishment and after

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The areas of responsibility of the United States Second (marked "2F"), Third ("3F"), Sixth ("6F"), and Seventh ("7F") Fleets during the 1980s.
 
The areas of responsibility of the United States Second (marked "2F"), Third ("3F"), Fourth ("4F"), Fifth ("5F"), Sixth ("6F"), and Seventh ("7F") Fleets in 2009.

On 1 February 1973, following a reorganization of the Pacific Fleet, the Third Fleet was recommissioned as an active fleet and assumed the duties of the former First Fleet and Pacific Anti-Submarine Warfare Force located at Ford Island, Hawaii. Third Fleet's new duties were to train naval forces for overseas deployment and evaluate state-of-the-art technology for fleet use. Additionally, Third Fleet could deploy in the event of a major conflict.

On 26 November 1986, Commander, Third Fleet shifted his flag from his headquarters ashore to resume status as an afloat commander for the first time since World War II, aboard USS Coronado. In August 1991, Third Fleet's commander, his staff and the command ship Coronado shifted homeports to San Diego. In September 2003, Commander, Third Fleet shifted his flag from the command ship Coronado to headquarters ashore at Point Loma, San Diego, California.[5]

USS Ronald Reagan and other Third Fleet ships participated in the International Fleet Review (IFR) commemorating the 100th birthday of the Royal Canadian Navy in Victoria, British Columbia.[6] Joining Ronald Reagan for the naval review were the cruiser Chosin, the destroyer Sampson, and the frigate Ford.[7] The naval review took place 9–12 June 2010, and it involved 21 naval ships and more than 8,000 naval personnel from Canada, the French Navy, the Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force, the Royal Australian Navy, the Royal New Zealand Navy, and the United States.[8]

In 2015, Nora Tyson was installed as the new commander of the Third Fleet, making her the first woman to lead a numbered fleet in the U.S. Navy.[9][10]

Current operations

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Third Fleet's primary mission is one of conflict deterrence, but in the event of general war, it would conduct prompt and sustained combat operations at sea. Such operations would be executed well forward and early in a conflict to carry out the primary wartime mission of Third Fleet—the defense of the western sea approaches to the United States, including Alaska and the Aleutian Islands.[citation needed] There are four Carrier Strike Groups reportedly assigned to the Third Fleet: USS Nimitz (CVN-68) and Carrier Strike Group Eleven; USS Carl Vinson (CVN-70) and Carrier Strike Group One; USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN-71) and Carrier Strike Group Nine; and USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72) and Carrier Strike Group Three.[citation needed]

In peacetime, Third Fleet continually trains Navy and U.S. Marine Corps forces for their expeditionary warfare mission. Third Fleet training has been designed to ensure that deploying forces are fully prepared for joint operations. All training is conducted within a joint environment—employing joint doctrine, terminology, procedures, command and control—to ensure that forces are ready to join with the other United States armed forces branches under a joint command structure.

Commander, Third Fleet is also designated as a Joint Task Force (JTF) commander. In that capacity, the commander and their staff may be assigned responsibilities for command of joint U.S. forces deployed in response to a specific event or contingency. As such, the JTF commander reports via a joint chain of command to a unified commander. Commander, U.S. Pacific Command is the unified commander in the Pacific theater.

To allow 7th Fleet to focus more resources on a potential North Korean contingency, the 3rd Fleet is building up its ability to operate forces beyond the International Date Line, in areas of the Western Pacific hitherto commanded by 7th Fleet. The "3rd Fleet Forward" concept was announced by U.S. Pacific Fleet commander Admiral Scott Swift in 2015, but 3rd Fleet commander Vice Adm. Nora Tyson said at the "WEST 2017" conference that the North Korean threat was a main driver behind this effort:[11]

"What we have done in the past really 18 months is we, 3rd Fleet, have worked very closely with 7th Fleet and PACFLT in developing our, 3rd fleet's, capability to command and control forces forward in the Western Pacific, with the assumption that if something were to happen – and as [Vice Admiral Joseph Aucoin, Commander 7th Fleet] said, the number-one probability fight-tonight scenario would be on the Korean Peninsula. "If that were the case, the assumption is that [Aucoin] and his team would be pretty busy up there.. working for General Brooks [ComUSFK/CFC/UNC] and 3rd Fleet would be available to provide that command element to handle whatever else may happen in the Pacific Fleet AOR ...be it a major humanitarian disaster requiring that level of [joint task force] three-star commander, be it some scenario, maritime security issue in the South China Sea. So we have been working very closely with 7th Fleet, [Aucoin] and his team, and PACFLT to ensure that we have the connective tissue where if something were to happen that 3rd Fleet could very quickly respond, complement [Aucoin] and his team and handle whatever scenario may come to pass in the Pacific theater."

In April 2016, Vice Admiral Tyson deployed a three-ship Surface Action Group of warships (Momsen, Spruance, and USS Decatur (DDG-73))[12]) to the Western Pacific. On Oct. 21, one of them, the destroyer USS Decatur conducted a "Freedom of Navigation" passage near the Paracel Islands, separately claimed by the PRC, Vietnam and Taiwan. All three ships remained under Third Fleet command during the entire operation. As Tyson partially acknowledged during her WEST 2017 conference remarks, "the Chinese know that this administrative (and) operational innovation is directed at them," said Toshi Yoshihara, a U.S. Naval War College professor in January 2017.[13]

Component units

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U.S. Third Fleet component units include the following:[14]

Task Forces

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Task Force Name Task Force Type Location/Notes
CTF-30 Battle force N/A
Task Force 31 Command and Coordination Force Source Polmar Ships and Aircraft of the U.S. Fleet, 18th Ed., 2005.
CTF-32 Ready Force Source Polmar Ships and Aircraft of the U.S. Fleet, 18th Ed., 2005.
CTF-33 Logistics support force Point Loma. Military Sealift Command, Pacific (MSCPAC) is responsible for MSC ships operating in the Eastern Pacific. It is dual-hatted as Commander, Task Force 33, directing the underway delivery of fuel, provisions, ordnance and towing services to Navy combatants in the U.S. 3rd Fleet area of responsibility.[15]
CTF-34 Theatre ASW force Pearl Harbor, HI[16]
CTF-35 Surface combatant force
CTF-36 Amphibious force
CTF-37 Mine Countermeasures Group Three
CTF-39 Landing force

List of commanders

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No. Commander Term
Portrait Name Took office Left office Term length
1Halsey, William Frederick Jr.Admiral
William F. Halsey Jr.
(1882–1959)
15 March 19437 October 19452 years, 206 days
2Kingman, Howard FithianVice Admiral
Howard F. Kingman
(1890–1968)
22 November 194530 November 19461 year, 8 days
Inactive (1946–1973)
3Rapp, William TheodoreVice Admiral
William T. Rapp
(1920–1988)
1 February 1973August 1974~1 year, 181 days
4Doyle, James Henry Jr.Vice Admiral
James H. Doyle Jr.
(1925–2018)
August 1974July 1975~334 days
5Coogan, Robert PaulVice Admiral
Robert P. Coogan
(1922–2015)
July 1975September 1976~1 year, 62 days
6Gravely, Samuel LeeVice Admiral
Samuel L. Gravely Jr.
(1922–2014)
September 1976September 1978~2 years, 0 days
7McKee, Kinnaird RoweVice Admiral
Kinnaird R. McKee
(1929–2013)
September 1978October 1979~1 year, 30 days
8Waller, Edward C. IIIVice Admiral
Edward C. Waller III
(1926–2021)
October 1979August 1981~1 year, 304 days
9Briggs, Edward SamuelVice Admiral
Edward S. Briggs
(1926–2022)
August 1981September 1981~31 days
10Lawrence, William PorterVice Admiral
William P. Lawrence
(1930–2005)
September 1981August 1983~1 year, 334 days
11Jones, Donald S.Vice Admiral
Donald S. Jones
(1928–2004)
August 1983August 1985~2 years, 0 days
12Kinnebrew, Thomas RichardVice Admiral
Thomas R. Kinnebrew
(1930–2009)
August 1985September 1985~31 days
13Moranville, Kendall ElmerVice Admiral
Kendall E. Moranville
(1932–2001)
September 1985June 1986~273 days
14Hernández, Diego EdylVice Admiral
Diego E. Hernández
(1934–2017)
August 1986January 1989~2 years, 153 days
15Dorsey, James FrancisVice Admiral
James F. Dorsey
(born 1934)
January 1989April 1991~2 years, 90 days
16Unruh, Jerry LeeVice Admiral
Jerry L. Unruh
(born 1939)
April 1991July 1994~3 years, 91 days
17Lautenbacher, Conrad Charles Jr.Vice Admiral
Conrad C. Lautenbacher
(born 1942)
July 1994October 1996~2 years, 92 days
18Browne, Herbert A. IIVice Admiral
Herbert A. Browne II
(born 1943)
October 1996November 1998~2 years, 31 days
19McGinn, Dennis VincentVice Admiral
Dennis V. McGinn
(born 1945)
November 19986 October 2000~1 year, 340 days
20Bucchi, Toney MichaelVice Admiral
Toney M. Bucchi
(born 1946)
6 October 200028 May 20032 years, 234 days
21McCabe, Michael JamesVice Admiral
Michael J. McCabe
(born 1948)
28 May 20037 May 20051 year, 344 days
22Costello, Barry MichaelVice Admiral
Barry M. Costello
(born 1951)
7 May 20053 May 20071 year, 361 days
23Locklear, Samuel Jones IIIVice Admiral
Samuel J. Locklear
(born 1954)
3 May 200713 June 20092 years, 41 days
24Hunt, Richard WayneVice Admiral
Richard W. Hunt
(born 1953)
13 June 200921 April 20111 year, 312 days
25Beaman, Gerald RogerVice Admiral
Gerald R. Beaman
(born 1952)
21 April 20113 June 20132 years, 43 days
26Floyd, Kenneth EarlVice Admiral
Kenneth E. Floyd[17]
(born 1958)
3 June 201324 July 20152 years, 51 days
27Tyson, Nora WingfieldVice Admiral
Nora W. Tyson
(born 1957)
24 July 201516 September 20172 years, 54 days
28Alexander, John DavidVice Admiral
John D. Alexander[18]
(born 1959)
16 September 201727 September 20192 years, 11 days
29Conn, Scott DavidVice Admiral
Scott D. Conn
(born 1962)
27 September 20193 June 20211 year, 249 days
30Koehler, Stephen ThomasVice Admiral
Stephen T. Koehler
(born 1964)
3 June 202116 June 20221 year, 13 days
31Boyle, Michael EdwardVice Admiral
Michael E. Boyle
(born 1965)
16 June 20227 June 20241 year, 357 days
32Wade, John Frederic G.Vice Admiral
John F.G. Wade
(born 1968)
7 June 2024Incumbent168 days

Notes

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  1. ^ The "Big Blue Fleet" was the name given to the main fleet of the U.S. Navy in the Pacific. The term stems from pre-war planning, called the "color plans" because each nation included was given a color code name. In these plans for potential conflicts, the British Royal Navy was "Red," the German Navy was "Black," and so forth. The Imperial Japanese Navy was termed the "Orange Fleet," while the U.S. fleet was the "Blue Fleet". The "Big Blue Fleet" was the massive fleet that the U.S. Navy anticipated it would field to win a war with Japan and which it thought largely would come into being by late 1943 or early 1944.[3]

Citations

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  1. ^ "Global Security.org Third Fleet". Retrieved 10 December 2006.
  2. ^ a b "Third Fleet: Who We Are". United States Navy. Retrieved 11 August 2016.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  3. ^ Potter p. 112
  4. ^ Potter p. 182
  5. ^ "United States Navy Third Fleet (Official Website)". Archived from the original on 13 February 2013. Retrieved 11 October 2010.
  6. ^ Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class (SW/AW) Torrey W. Lee, USN (3 June 2010). "Ronald Reagan Begins Flight Deck Certification". NNS100603-15. USS Ronald Reagan Public Affairs. Retrieved 28 December 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ "2010 History". USS Ronald Reagan CVN-76. USCarriers.net. 16 November 2011. Retrieved 28 December 2012.
  8. ^ Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Aaron Stevens, USN (29 June 2010). "USS Ronald Reagan Draws Excitement in Canadian Naval Centennial's Fleet Review". NNS100629-07. USS Ronald Reagan Public Affairs. Retrieved 28 December 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ 24 July 2015, by Abbey Gibb (25 July 2015). "First woman to lead Navy Fleet takes over | FOX5 San Diego – San Diego news, weather, traffic, sports from KSWB". Fox5sandiego.com. Retrieved 25 July 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ Steele, Jeanette (30 July 1965). "1st woman at helm of U.S. operational fleet". SanDiegoUnionTribune.com. Retrieved 25 July 2015.
  11. ^ "'3rd Fleet Forward' One Of Several Tools to Deter North Korea". USNI News. 22 February 2017. Retrieved 27 September 2017.
  12. ^ "Surface Action Group to Demonstrate 3rd Fleet Forward Concept". Archived from the original on 26 May 2016.
  13. ^ ContentServer. "Navy's Third Fleet Returns to World War II Roots". Military.com. Retrieved 27 September 2017.
  14. ^ "Commander, U.S. Third Fleet". Archived from the original on 15 April 2014. Retrieved 28 April 2014.
  15. ^ "MSC Pacific".
  16. ^ OPNAVNOTE 3111.830, 11 July 2007, RENAME AND MODIFY MISSION OF COMMANDER, ANTI-SUBMARINE WARFARE FORCES PACIFIC[permanent dead link]
  17. ^ Steele, Jeanette (3 June 2013). "New leader as Navy fleet cuts back". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  18. ^ "Vice Admiral John Alexander". Retrieved 27 April 2021.

Bibliography

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