Saturday, August 20, 2022

Nicaragua native serves aboard floating airport USS Carl Vinson

By Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Jerry Jimenez, Navy Office of Community Outreach

SAN DIEGO - A native of Ocotal, Nicaragua, serves the U.S. Navy aboard one of the world’s largest warships, the U.S. Navy aircraft carrier, USS Carl Vinson.

Photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class
Sang Kim, Navy Public Affairs Support Element West
Petty Officer 3rd Class Oscar Mendoza, a 2005 Bautista Belen High School graduate, joined the Navy three years ago.

“I was inspired to join the Navy to learn about leadership, discipline, and to go to college,” said Mendoza.

Today, Mendoza serves as a logistics specialist.

 

A logistics specialist is responsible for the inventory of equipment and supplies on a ship.

Mendoza relies upon skills and values from lessons learned in Ocotal to succeed in the military.

“I learned to respect other people, seniors, diversity, and to have tolerance for different ideas,” said Mendoza.

Homeported in San Diego, California, USS Carl Vinson is the United States Navy's third Nimitz-class supercarrier. She is named for Carl Vinson, a Congressman from Georgia, in recognition of his contributions to the U.S. Navy.

Aircraft carriers provide unique capabilities and survivability. They are a powerful exhibition of the American Navy's legacy of innovation, technological evolution, and maritime dominance, according to Navy officials.

Vinson, like each of the Navy’s aircraft carriers, is designed for a 50-year service life. When the air wing is embarked, the ship carries more than 70 attack fighter jets, helicopters and other aircraft – all of which take off from and land aboard the carrier at sea.

With more than 5,000 sailors serving aboard, Vinson is a self-contained mobile airport.

Aircraft carriers are often the first responders in a global crisis because of their ability to operate freely from anywhere on the world’s oceans. Carrier strike groups are uniquely mobile, which makes them far more strategically advantageous than fixed-site bases. No other weapon system can deploy and operate forward with a full-sized, nuclear-powered aircraft carrier's speed, endurance, agility and the combat capability of its air wing.

Since USS Langley's commissioning 100 years ago, the nation's aircraft carriers – such as Vinson – and embarked carrier air wings have projected power, sustained sea control, bolstered deterrence, provided humanitarian assistance and disaster relief and maintained enduring commitments worldwide.

"The aircraft carrier is our U.S. Navy's centerpiece, our flagship, and a constant reminder to the rest of the world of our enduring maritime presence and influence," said Rear Adm. James P. Downey, Program Executive Officer (PEO) for Aircraft Carriers. "These ships touch every part of our Navy's mission to project power, ensure sea control and deter our adversaries."

 

Serving in the Navy means Mendoza is part of a world that is taking on new importance in America’s focus on strengthening alliances, modernizing capabilities, increasing capacities and maintaining military readiness in support of the National Defense Strategy.

“The Navy is important to national defense because we protect international commerce,” said Mendoza. “Our presence is very important overseas.”

 

More than 90 percent of all trade travels by sea, and fiber optic cables on the ocean floor carry 95 percent of the world’s international phone and internet traffic. 

 

Navy officials continue to emphasize that the prosperity and security of the United States is directly linked to ready sailors and a strong Navy.

 

“Maintaining the world’s best Navy is an investment in the security and prosperity of the United States, as well as the stability of our world,” said Adm. Mike Gilday, Chief of Naval Operations.

“The U.S. Navy – forward deployed and integrated with all elements of national power – deters conflict, strengthens our alliances and partnerships and guarantees free and open access to the world’s oceans. As the United States responds to the security environment through integrated deterrence, our Navy must continue to deploy forward and campaign with a ready, capable, combat-credible fleet.”

Sailors like Mendoza, have many opportunities to achieve accomplishments during their military service.

“My proudest accomplishment is improving my English,” said Mendoza. “When I went to boot camp I didn't speak English. I'm also proud of buying my house in Los Angeles. The Navy helped me to accomplish that.”

As Mendoza and other sailors continue to train and perform missions, they take pride in serving their country in the United States Navy.

“Serving in the Navy is an honor to give my service to the country, to help me to grow and to improve myself,” added Mendoza. “I’m grateful for this amazing nation.”