Onboard the US Coast Guard Cutter Dallas
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Onboard the US Dallas The Dallas at anchor off São Tomé and Príncipe. Although the ship has a white hull and the benign-sounding title of ‘Coast Guard Cutter’, it is a small warship with a 76mm main gun battery. -
Onboard the US Dallas The Dallas crew wait on the heli-deck for their daily briefing. The ship’s full complement is about 170 personnel. -
Onboard the US Dallas Second Class Petty Officer Ansel Jones battles with a yellowfin tuna he has hooked from the stern of the Dallas during a rare spell of free time. -
Onboard the US Dallas São Tomé Coast Guard Lieutenant Jimmy Tiny practises unarmed combat with his Dallas trainers. The trainers use a handout that describes levels of aggression up to “lethal force”, although not all techniques are taught to all visiting foreign military officers. -
Onboard the US Dallas Sergeant Vitalina Lopes of the São Tomé Coast Guard watches ship movements along the west African coast. The radar tracking facility - like São Tomé’s deepwater harbour – is being developed with US support. Information from the monitoring station is shared with the US military. -
Onboard the US Dallas The one that – eventually – got away. São Tomé’s waters are rich in fish such as the yellowfin tuna depicted, marlin, and barracuda, but illegal fishing is a problem. -
Onboard the US Dallas Seaman Clifton Chang patrols the heli-deck at sundown off the coast of Port-Gentil, oil capital of Gabon. -
Onboard the US Dallas The Dallas mid-tour in the Gulf of Guinea. The ship and the fast small boats it carries more often see actions in drugs busts in the Caribbean. -
Onboard the US Dallas – Second lieutenant Ramoon Nascimento (left) and Aspirant Jimmy Tiny of the São Tomé coastguards receive mementoes of their stay on the Dallas from Captain Robert Wagner. US vessels have hosted military officers and coastguards from all over the Gulf of Guinea as part of Washington’s Africa Partnership Station mission. -
Onboard the US Dallas A fisherman holds up an octopus he caught with his bare hands off a quay in the port of São Tomé, the capital. -
Onboard the US Dallas São Tomé’s main port sees few big ships and is light on security.
You can read Michael Peel’s account of his journey, with the crew of the US Coast Guard Cutter Dallas, across the oil-rich Gulf of Guinea here. To read the caption of each photograph, drag your cursor down the top of the screen.
Comments (2)
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ricardinho
Mon Mar 18 20:11:41 GMT 2013
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ricardinho
Fri Mar 15 18:35:04 GMT 2013
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