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Tells me he's legit..."Nam pohuy" means "We don't give a flying f**k"
Well, I'm not fluent in trolling, much too old to care 'bout this bullshit.Tells me he's legit...
information mall created in your country.
Yet again, as I see the NA/NFO while on disassociated tour can hold standing the OOD watch, that's from here - http://www.vp47.navy.mil/co_bio.htm
Does it mean that SWOs from carrier ship's company are free from OOD watches? If so, then the routine complaints from carrier-nailed SWOs about their sad life on a "Bird Farms" seem to be a bit exaggerrated, as in my opinion the underway OOD watch is the hardest thing in all SWO tenure. At least, in Russian Navy.
What makes underway OOD so difficult in the Russian Navy? I always found it to be one of the easier parts of the job.
Exactly, but not only that. In mostly landmass countries there is also the habit to have the strong influence of the Army on the other branches. No matter how the Army is configured in itself, it inevitably is dominating the national defence and security structure and so trying to put the Navy and Air Force along its own lines. This is happiness that in US of A the Army had been mostly anti-insurgent asset essentially up to the WWI, I think.^^TL/DR, that's the price the Soviet/Russian military has paid for not having a professional NCO corps.
Here I stand the chance to draw the line between generalists, who USN officers are, and specialists, who are the Russian Navy officers. Let me slightly dig the explanations out. You know, we need to choose our designator at the age 16-17, when we enter the Naval Colleges. 97% of Russian Navy and Coast Guard officers (coasties here have no their own colleges and academies, about 5% of annual NavColls graduates - usually from top quarter of the class - enter CG instead of Navy by competitively volunteering in the limited number of the slots). Last three of the overall five years of studies in respective College are devoted to designator. In USSR there were 11 naval colleges (the number explains the different specialties/designators), each modeled roughly around the approach the Annapolis and West Point had been created by (cadet/midshipmen year seniority, restricted access to the city, one and a half month vacation per a year, uniform and military discipline on a daily basis, active duty status from the Oath at the beginning of the first year and so on). While we are not supporting the majors in those colleges, the designator itself is used as a centerline for education and training. I am the communication means officer and I started to learn the electromagnetism as a basis for my job at the age 19 while at college. First two years we had standard university-level math and physics but from the second year we began to study practical physics related to the aim - how the ships can communicate to the shore and each other? Radio bands are not simple some Hz spectrum, electromagnetic field in every point can be described by the system of 12 equalizers, and I should pass through it to choose a frequency that allows me to hear the other side. And so forth - electrical engineering from the third year to be employed not only as the radio officer but as the constructor or supervisor on the naval radiomeans manufacturing facility. Programming, cryptanalysis (all the secure apparatus, from voice to data, too), repair and maintenance (enlisted corps in Russian Navy is still of conscript nature, often hardly with the full high school graduation), and simultaneously - a bit naval training as well, all around the year. There are just few general courses for all designators. Eventually, those are just navigation (from plain and celestial to the satellite one, and you should know how the satellite works as if you have been an engineer who designed it) and damage control/fire protection (as the Russian Navy from 1955 was submarine-oriented, everyone in the naval college should know how to employ an emergency pump and how to use the foam generator whatever situation arose, as well as how to escape from the drowned boat through the torpedo tube, and everyone did it at special training facility in each naval college, at the end of a third year). That's all.
If I am the fresh grad from my NavColl, I never saw the ship's engine, I don't know how it works. I never studied the ship's artillery and missiles, let alone torpedoes and mines. I know nothing about naval aviation or aviation at all except how to be airline passenger, since the aviation world was cruelly deleted from the Russian naval mind as a result of the interservice rivalry for a scarse sources after WWII. And I know - in the fleet I will have the shipmate alongside, who graduated the respective Naval College in question - somebody will know how to fire misiles, someone will run the machinery and black gang as well, someone will have the knowledge where the ship's rudder is, how to search a submarine and so on. We are very, very narrow specialists in our respective fields and remain such during all our career up to the flag rank.
Now take me as a fresh Lieutenant after such a narrow pipeline and put me on the bridge, trying to qualify me as cruiser's OOD. It is a nightmare by nature. During a weeks you should throw your deep and beloved radio knowledge away and find out what the naval engineering is, weapon engineering is, psychology of leadership is (by the way, Russians in general believe that leadership is born-not-made, so we have no inherent courses on leadership, just a routine career advice to follow the born leaders and model them), maneuvering is, tactics is, foreign language communications to the tugs and overtaking vessels is, the CO's indifference is, the XO's hate is, and this is personal to a highest possible degree. While Western civilization is running by the guilt, which is a feeling of the mistake and is far from the core personality, the Oriental world (Russian military is under much notable Oriental influence than Western one) is ruled by the feeling of shame, which is about the strafe at one's personal self as a whole. "You're doing poorly" is about guilt, you are good in general, but you should correct your behaviour. "You're bad" is about shame, since it means you are effectively useless as a person and this is extremely hard to correct, it's better to fire you, no one will be concerned if you fell overboard (this is the true example of the XO speech in the face of the poor junior OOD, often while the enlisted could hear it).
In short - if you are narrow specialist and all of a sudden you have to become an experienced generalist within a weeks, and you are under heavy pressure by the CO/XO with the true personal hate expressed in very harsh language no matter of the subordinates around, it should be convincing, I hope, to the matter of how hard job is to stand an OOD on Russian surface ships, at least when you are junior Lt. After awhile, it becomes easier, but the takeover of the ship to the new CO or XO can start the process from the beginning, even for the LtCdrs OODs. There is the proverb on the Russian cruisers: "Officer is the crap up to LtCdr generally, and up to Capt in some specifical questions". By the way, I enclose a part of my article about Russian Cruiser as a phenomena, maybe it can explain it better.
US Army is still trying to position itself as the dominant partner in the joint force.
Interesting.
The way you describe it, it sounds more like the challenge is that you're expected to qualify OOD very quickly...you say "weeks" where we'd probably say "months" at the very least. What is the reason for that?
For us, you start out as a Conning Officer, and at the very beginning you're probably getting a lot of direction from the OOD. Gradually you should earn enough trust that you can start making some decisions on your own.
Then as a JOOD, you should be an OOD U/I...basically an "acting" OOD to get practice doing what the OOD does, without taking on the responsibility for it all just yet.
I've also seen it take over an year for folks who show up when their ship is in a long yard period. That said, it seems you provide pretty extensive training in your NavColl's.
Who teaches the new OODs? Does the lack of NCO's hamper the ability to train new OODs? Is that one of the reasons you found it so challenging?
What is the reason Russian OODs are expected to pick up marine engineering and weapons engineering?
You also don't seem to think on CO's/XO's too fondly. What is the reason for that?
Is the foreign language requirement English?
On my Disassociated Tour it took most Aviators ~2mo to get OOD, but we got a tailored PQS and it's not our first rodeo. Most could have realistically qualified in 1mo but there was usually some backlog as the un-pinned SWOs took their sweet time getting their qual and increased the amount of time we had to spend as CONN. Most of us didn't require a lot of JOOD time.It's a fairly long process, depending heavily on how much actual underway steaming time the ship gets, but even optimistically speaking, during a deployment, it should probably take at least ~3-4 months, and that is again, extremely generous, assuming you've got an exceptionally smart person. Even if you have the theory down, it still takes time for the CO to gain trust and confidence in you, and you can't really rush that unless the ship is desperately in need of qualifying new OODs.