Navy's tugs fail to pull warship off sea bottomThe USS Port Royal is just coming back from routine maintenance POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Feb 07, 2009 Navy divers and a salvage ship were to try again today to free a 9,600-ton Pearl Harbor warship that ran aground Thursday night about a half-mile south of Honolulu Airport's reef runway, the Navy said.
The warship is stuck in about 20 feet of water. No one was injured. The ship has a crew of about 360. Around 2 a.m. yesterday, at high tide, Navy tugs tried unsuccessfully to pull the 567-foot cruiser off the rocky and sandy bottom. The Navy said divers from Mobile Diving and Salvage Unit One from Pearl Harbor and the salvage ship USS Salvor would try to tow the warship at high tide at 2:45 this morning. The grounding and the extent of damage to the Port Royal, which is equipped with a large sonar dome that protrudes below the bow of the warship, are under investigation. Rear Adm. Dixon Smith, commander of Navy Region Hawaii and Naval Surface Group Middle Pacific, made a special trip to the Port Royal yesterday to get a personal assessment of the situation. Warship Ship Remains Aground Near Airport The U.S.S. Port Royal ran aground Thursday night about a half mile from the Honolulu International Airport's reef runway. It remains stuck in place as of Friday night, with investigators determining what caused the incident. [ Watch ] Navy and Coast Guard personnel are monitoring the surrounding area from shore, from the air and from the sea for any signs of leaking diesel marine fuel, which propels the cruiser's four jet turbine engines. There has been no indication that any fuel leaked. The Port Royal has the capacity to carry 600,000 gallons. The cruiser, which was commissioned in 1994, had just completed an $18 million five-month stint at the Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard for routine repairs and maintenance and a new paint job. It had left Pearl Harbor on Thursday for several days of sea trials. The Port Royal is one of the Navy's premier warships, equipped with the sophisticated Aegis radar system and capable of shooting down enemy ballistic missiles. |
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By Associated Press
POSTED: 08:53 a.m. HST, Feb 07, 2009
Navy officials say an attempt to pull free a 9,600-ton warship that ran aground off the coast of Honolulu was unsuccessful this morning.
The Pacific Fleet says Navy tugboats and the salvage ship USS Salvor tried to tow the USS Port Royal at high tide early Saturday but the ship remained stuck.
Navy spokeswoman Agnes T. Tauyan in Honolulu said the Navy plans to try again after removing fuel and water to lighten the $1 billion vessel.
The 9,600-ton guided missile cruiser ran aground Thursday night on sandy, rocky bottom.
The cause of the grounding and the extent of the damage to the ship remain under investigation.
Navy officials say an attempt to pull free a 9,600-ton warship that ran aground off the coast of Honolulu was unsuccessful this morning.
The Pacific Fleet says Navy tugboats and the salvage ship USS Salvor tried to tow the USS Port Royal at high tide early Saturday but the ship remained stuck.
Navy spokeswoman Agnes T. Tauyan in Honolulu said the Navy plans to try again after removing fuel and water to lighten the $1 billion vessel.
The 9,600-ton guided missile cruiser ran aground Thursday night on sandy, rocky bottom.
The cause of the grounding and the extent of the damage to the ship remain under investigation.