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  2. Navy Marine Corps Intranet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Navy_Marine_Corps_Intranet

    The Department of the Navy has shown no desire to scale back or cancel the program. On 24 March 2006 the Navy exercised its three-year, $3 billion option to extend the contract through September 2010. In April 2006, users began to log on with Common Access Cards (CACs), a smartcard-based logon system called the Cryptographic Log On (CLO). In ...

  3. USS O'Kane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_O'Kane

    Service history. USS O'Kane, a Baseline 5.3 Flight II Arleigh Burke -class guided missile destroyer, is the 27th destroyer of the class and the sixteenth built by Bath Iron Works. O’Kane is the second ship to be commissioned in her home port of Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. She was laid down on 8 May 1997 at Bath Iron Works in Bath, Maine, launched ...

  4. Naval Station New York - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naval_Station_New_York

    Naval Station New York was a United States Navy Naval Station on Staten Island in New York City, closed in 1994. Opened in 1990, it was part of the Reagan administration 's Strategic Homeport program. The station had two sections: a Strategic Homeport in Stapleton where ships docked, and a larger section occupying Fort Wadsworth, where ...

  5. Home port - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Home_port

    In a navy, a ship's home port is the port best suited to provide maintenance and restock weaponry particular to ships of that class and build. On conclusion of a tour of duty, a combat vessel returning to port will usually return to its home port. [citation needed] A single home port also makes it easier for family to visit sailors on leave .

  6. USS Stout - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Stout

    USS Stout. USS. Stout. USS Stout (DDG-55) is the fifth Arleigh Burke -class guided missile destroyer. Built for the United States Navy by Ingalls Shipbuilding, she was commissioned on 13 August 1994 and she is currently home-ported in Naval Station Norfolk. She is part of Destroyer Squadron 28. [4]

  7. United States Naval Sea Cadet Corps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Naval_Sea...

    RADM Andrew Lennon, USN (Ret.) The United States Naval Sea Cadet Corps ( USNSCC or NSCC) is a congressionally chartered, U.S. Navy -sponsored organization that serves to involve individuals in the sea-going military services, U.S. naval operations and training, community service, citizenship, and teach an understanding of discipline and teamwork.

  8. Naval Station Mobile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naval_Station_Mobile

    Naval Station Mobile is a former station of the United States Navy. It opened in 1985 during the creation of the Strategic Homeport program under the administration of President Ronald Reagan. In 1991, the homeport was closed, as part of declining funding under the Base Realignment and Closure Commission (1989). References

  9. USS Wayne E. Meyer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Wayne_E._Meyer

    Mark 54 lightweight torpedo. Aircraft carried. 2 × MH-60R Seahawk helicopters. USS Wayne E. Meyer (DDG-108) is an Arleigh Burke -class guided missile destroyer in the United States Navy. She is named after Rear Admiral Wayne E. Meyer, known as the "Father of Aegis". She carries the 100th AEGIS Weapon System to be delivered to the United States ...