source: www.gmanetwork.com
A
United States Navy guided missile destroyer will arrive in Subic Bay in
Zambales on Tuesday for a routine port visit, the American embassy said Monday.
The
USS Stockdale (DDG-106), the third US vessel to visit the Philippines since
January, will replenish supplies as well as offer its crew an opportunity for
rest and relaxation, the embassy said in a statement.
The
Stockdale's routine port call and goodwill visit at Subic Bay — once one of the
largest US military installations in the world outside of the American mainland
— “is a great opportunity to continue the long-term relationship between the
Philippines and the United States,” said ship commanding officer Cdr. Lex
Walker.
This
will be the Stockdale’s first visit to the Philippines. The visit is part of
the ship’s nine-month deployment to the Western Pacific that began in January
2013.
During
the visit, Stockdale sailors will also engage in a number of community
relations projects including visits to local orphanages, the embassy said.
The
USS Stockdale was commissioned on April 18, 2009, and is homeported in San
Diego, California. It is named for Vice Admiral James B. Stockdale, who was the
highest ranking US naval officer to be held as a Prisoner of War in Vietnam.
Walker
also spoke about the diversity of his crew. “We have quite a few Filipino
–American Sailors among our crew, and I hope that the citizens of the
Philippines can look at our ship and see that their people and their culture
are well represented and respected in the U.S. Navy.”
Some
15 Filipino-Americans sail aboard the USS Stockdale, among them sailors with
family ties to Baguio City, Manila, Marikina City, Orion, Olongapo City, Quezon
City, and Santa Monica.
Some,
like Geno C. Uy (GSM2) and Ryan Angeles (AM2), were born in the Philippines and
immigrated to the US in recent years. Others, including Joel Marsigian (AM2)
and Dean Rivera-Villanueva (ADAN), were born in the US but still have relatives
in the Philippines.
Many
of the Stockdale’s sailors plan to visit family while in port, the embassy
said. — Michaela del Callar/KBK, GMA News
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