Rotor Review Fall 2021 #154

Page 26

Report from the Rising Sun A Cultural Lesson in Attention to Detail By LT Rob “OG” Swain, USN

K

onnichi wa ( ) Naval Helicopter Association! My name is LT Rob “OG” Swain. I am the Helicopter Element Coordinator for the World Famous, Forward Deployed Naval Force CVW 5 “Badman” Team stationed out of Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni, Japan. To inform and educate the rotary-wing community, this column will draw inspiration from partner nation cultures and provide TRANS-PAC insight to Navy helicopter operations abroad! I arrived in Japan mid-October, two months after meeting the Ronald Reagan Carrier Strike Group on the home stretch of deployment in the Northern Arabian Sea. After two and a half years in San Diego and following a third visit to Fifth Fleet, I was shocked to disembark into a rainstorm on the Yokosuka pier. Environmentals aside, everything felt foreign…even on a US Navy installation. Retaining walls separated jungle growth from the road stretching away from the ships. Unfamiliar vines snaked their way down the stone barriers. Every vehicle rolling across the base appeared smaller and boxier than those on California freeways. Mini vans were micro-vans. Instead of 4x4 F-150s, the Japanese appear to drive 1x1s. Walking past the gate, I observed that the off-base infrastructure follows some universal, culturally agnostic trend. Even though I couldn’t read the Japanese writing plastered across storefront entrances in neon lights, I recognized the familiar tattoo parlors, barber shops, and used car dealerships which form the staple of main-gate adjacent industry. I was the only member of the CVW 5 OPS Team who had not previously spent time in Japan and felt drawn to stop

Photo credit: Getty images

Rotor Review #154 Fall '21

and peer through each commercial window. I filtered out the calls ahead from my fixed-wing aviator counterparts, but heard “speed up” something, something “helicopter.” Rather than nosing over, I stood transfixed looking through a bakery window at an origami crane and a bottle of jam. I have no idea what flavor the jam was. I only know that every glass container was filled with a mix of fruit and tiny, evenly distributed flower petals. I stared pensively, reflecting on the delicate care that must have gone into preserving the integrity of those petals throughout the mixing process. Over the past two weeks in Japan, my interactions with the people, cultural exposure, and introductory education on Japanese history has consistently reinforced a concept rooted deeply in this land. An ethos which echoes our own rotary-wing professional challenge and endeavor – attention to detail. The nature of maritime-based, vertical flight is inherently multi-mission. Helicopters provide a spectrum of capability necessary for the full range of military operations in both peacetime and conflict. Whether providing close-in ship defense, airborne mine countermeasures, permissive and non-permissive personnel recovery, anti-submarine warfare, or urgent logistic support, each mission area demands rotarywing pilots and aircrewmen to approach the event with focused attention and precision planning. Contributing to a culture of professional pride and attention to detail across the Navy Rotary-Wing Community is not "drinking the kool aid," or "buying the tourist jam." To the contrary, enthusiastic attention to detail promotes and force multiplies organizational positivity, adaptable problemsolving, and flexible operational preparedness. Job satisfaction rarely occurs passively. That bottle of Japanese jam reminded me that when you proactively hone your craft as a rotarywing aviator with focus, resilience, and attention to detail, the dividends of your effort will yield a beautiful experience in Naval Aviation. Standby for follow-on situation updates in this Report from the Rising Sun and Fly Navy! 24


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Articles inside

Engaging Rotors

1min
pages 72-77

Don’t Wash That Coffee Mug!

5min
page 65

Signal Charlie

13min
pages 78-84

Change of Command

1min
pages 70-71

Off Duty

3min
page 64

Radio Check

7min
pages 66-69

PEP, Part 2: Left Pedal or Right Pedal?

14min
pages 54-57

"MAYDAY" over North Korea

9min
pages 52-53

“You Fight Like You Train” - A Case for COTS Eye-Safe Lasers

7min
pages 58-59

Squadron Anniversaries and Reunions

1min
page 69

Did You Know?

5min
pages 60-61

Around the Regions

3min
pages 62-63

Industry and Technology

5min
pages 50-51

Symposium Highlights

9min
pages 42-49

Back to the Future – Doubling Down on Visual Information in Naval Aviation

5min
pages 40-41

Report from the Rising Sun LT R.O. Swain, USN

3min
pages 26-27

Getting Started Telling Your Stories

6min
pages 28-29

Cheap Price, Beautiful Substance: Mine Warfare in a GPC World

15min
pages 34-37

A Tale of Two Futures

9min
pages 30-33

Commodore's Corner

4min
pages 24-25

On Leadership Force of the Future By RDML Eric C. Ruttenberg, USN (NAVWAR CHENG)

4min
pages 22-23

View from the Labs

4min
pages 20-21

Vice President of Membership Report

2min
pages 12-13

Scholarship Fund Update

4min
pages 16-17

Chairman’s Brief

3min
page 8

J.O. President Message

1min
page 11

In Review

6min
pages 14-15

Historical Society

3min
pages 18-19

National President's Message

1min
page 10

Executive Director's View

2min
page 9
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