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Riverines eyeing future missions around the globe.


FORT PICKETT Fort Pickett, Virginia, is a Virginia Army National Guard installation, located near the town of Blackstone, Virginia. Beginnings
In late 1941, as war drew closer to America’s shores, a team of Army surveyors visited the site of a former Civilian Conservation Corps
, Va. -- Even as they prepare for their first deployment, officers in the Navy's Riverine riv·er·ine  
adj.
1. Relating to or resembling a river.

2. Located on or inhabiting the banks of a river; riparian: "Members of a riverine tribe ...
 Group One are contemplating potential missions beyond the imminent one in Iraq.

"We're already looking down the road at deployment to other countries, other continents, for exercises and operations," says Lt. Cmdr. Mike Egan, executive officer for Riverine Squadron One, during a pre-deployment exercise here. The squadron began its mission at Haditha Dam in Al-Anbar province last month.

Riverine operations are a growth industry, with many rivers and deltas all over the world, and burgeoning conflicts, he adds.

Potential hotspots for the riverines are countries in the Gulf of Guinea Noun 1. Gulf of Guinea - a gulf off the southwest coast of Africa
Bioko - an island in the Gulf of Guinea that is part of Equatorial Guinea

Atlantic, Atlantic Ocean - the 2nd largest ocean; separates North and South America on the west from Europe and Africa
 and South America, among other regions.

"The types of missions we'll be working on post-Iraq will be theater security cooperation," says Capt. Michael L. Jordan, commanding officer of Riverine Group One. Riverines not only will be working alongside other countries to increase their maritime security posture, but also training with them to work together if deployed to other areas.

"We're built for a whole new environment," says Cmdr. William Guarini, commanding officer of Riverine Squadron One. With the capability to work in rivers and inland waterways where conventional Navy surface forces cannot easily penetrate, the unit is ideally suited to operate with foreign countries whose navies consist mainly of riverine forces, he says.

"Many nations don't have frigates and crews. What they do have are river forces and patrol boats," says Guarini. Engaging with those nations, operating with them and training with them in their native environments is a win-win situation.

"To them, they get to work with the U.S. Navy. For us, we get to establish relationships with some of these nations and navies in mutual cooperation," he says.

A "major focus" of the Naval Expeditionary Combat Command The U.S. Navy established the Navy Expeditionary Combat Command (NECC) in January 2006 to serve as a single functional command to centrally manage current and future readiness, resources, manning, training and equipping of the Navy’s expeditionary forces. , which has purview The part of a statute or a law that delineates its purpose and scope.

Purview refers to the enacting part of a statute. It generally begins with the words be it enacted and continues as far as the repealing clause.
 over the riverine squadrons, is helping other countries improve their maritime security capabilities, says its commanding officer, Rear Adm. Donald K. Bullard.

The NECC NECC National Educational Computing Conference
NECC Navy Expeditionary Combat Command (Norfolk, VA)
NECC Net-Enabled Command Capability
NECC Northeast Mississippi Community College
NECC North Equatorial Counter Current
 was created to help organize, equip and train naval forces that operate in the near-shore and inland waterway environment. Along the way, it has established new units, such as the riverines, which deployed to Iraq last month, and civil affairs teams, which are training for future deployment.

Bullard wants to formalize a curriculum for training maritime security operations Maritime Security Operations (MSO) is a term for the actions of modern naval forces to "combat sea–based terrorism and other illegal activities, such as hijacking, piracy, and slavery, also known as human trafficking.  forces in other countries.

"This is extending part of the CNO's 1,000-ship Navy," he says referring to a concept concocted by Chief of Naval Operations chief of naval operations
n. pl. chiefs of naval operations Abbr. CNO
The ranking officer of the U.S. Navy, responsible to the secretary of the Navy and to the President.
, Adm. Michael Mullen. The 1,000-ship Navy is a notion in which multiple countries pool their naval forces and work together to promote global maritime security.

The NECC can provide a myriad of training opportunities to help those nations improve their maritime security, says Bullard.

With forces such as the riverines, naval coastal warfare Coastal sea control, harbor defense, and port security, executed both in coastal areas outside the United States in support of national policy and in the United States as part of this Nation's defense. Also called NCW. , force protection and other expeditionary teams, the command is well to take the lead in the coastal and inland waterways, he says.

"NECC is about balancing the overall Navy's commitment to perform maritime security operations--I think we've done that."
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Comment:Riverines eyeing future missions around the globe.(NAVY)
Author:Jean, Grace
Publication:National Defense
Date:Apr 1, 2007
Words:500
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