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Aboard Ballistic Missile Submarine, Brigham City Native Keeps America’s Nuclear Adversaries at Bay

Friday, August 3, 2018 - 10:15am

Aboard Ballistic Missile Submarine, Brigham City Native Keeps America’s Nuclear Adversaries at Bay          

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By Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class David Wyscaver, Navy Office of Community Outreach

SILVERDALE, Wash. – A 2004 Box Elder High School graduate and Brigham City, Utah, native is presently engaged in a critical mission for the security of the United States: deterring nuclear war.
 

Petty Officer 1st Class David Saunders, a hospital corpsman, is serving aboard one of the world’s most advanced ballistic missile submarines, USS Alabama. Based at Naval Base Kitsap-Bangor in Washington, not far from Seattle, USS Alabama is one of 14 Ohio-class ballistic missile submarines in the Navy’s fleet.

As a hospital corpsman, Saunders is responsible for ensuring the health and welfare of the crew.

“I enjoy helping and guiding people,” Saunders said. “Being a submariner is a unique and different experience.”

Saunders draws from lessons learned growing up in Brigham City.

“I learned the importance of effective communication,” Saunders said.

The Navy’s ballistic missile submarines, often referred to informally as “boomers,” serve as undetectable launch platforms for intercontinental ballistic missiles. They are designed specifically for stealth, extended patrols and the precise delivery of missiles, and they are the only survivable leg of the nation’s strategic nuclear forces, which also include land-based missiles and aircraft.

As long as nuclear weapons remain in the hands of potential adversaries, the nation’s nuclear forces provide a safe, secure and credible deterrent to the threat of nuclear attack. The Navy’s continuous at-sea deployment of submarines like USS Alabama provides the ability to mount an assured response.

As effective as the Ohio-class submarines have been over their decades-long lifetimes, the fleet is aging, with the oldest submarines now more than 30 years old, well past their planned service lives.
 

A new and effective successor is critical to national security, and the Navy is well into the process of designing and fielding a more advanced ballistic missile submarine, which will provide the necessary sea-based nuclear deterrence into the 2080s and beyond.

Submarine sailors are some of the most highly trained and skilled people in the Navy. The training is highly technical, and each crew has to be able to operate, maintain, and repair every system or piece of equipment on board. Regardless of their specialty, everyone also has to learn how everything on the submarine works and how to respond in emergencies to become “qualified in submarines” and earn the right to wear the coveted gold or silver dolphins on their uniforms.

"The men and women from across our nation who volunteer for military service embody the fundamental values of honor, courage and sacrifice that are the bedrock of our republic," said Rear Adm. Blake Converse, Commander, Submarine Group Nine. "They protect and defend America from above, below, and across the world's oceans. The entire nation should be extremely proud of the hard work that these sailors do every single day to support the critical mission of the Navy and the submarine force."

As a member of one of the U.S. Navy’s most relied upon assets, Saunders and other sailors know they are part of a legacy that will last beyond their lifetimes, one that will provide a critical component of the Navy the nation needs.

“Serving, to me, means carrying on a family tradition and legacy,” Saunders said.