The Navy says that all known fires aboard the USS Bonhomme Richard have
been extinguished, four days after the start of a raging blaze that has
left in doubt whether the amphibious assault ship can remain in service.
"It is four days and -- looking at the clock now -- three hours to
finally say that we've extinguished all known fires on on board the USS
Bonhomme Richard," Rear Adm. Philip Sobeck, the commander of
Expeditionary Strike Group 3, told reporters Thursday afternoon.
"Our fire teams are investigating every space to verify the absence of
fire," said Sobeck in a statement. "Until every space is checked and
there are no active fires we will not be able to commence any official
investigations."
The admiral said that the origin of the fire remains unknown as is the extent of the damage inside the ship
"We do not know the extent of the damage. It is too early to make any
predictions or promises of what the future of the ship will be," said
Sobeck. "We cannot make any conclusions until the investigation is
complete."
Overnight, hundreds of Navy and federal fighters were temporarily
evacuated from the ship after it was determined that the ship was
listing too much. The addition of water to put out the fires on the
inside of the ship have created extra weight that made the ship list by 5
degrees.
With the fires now out, the Navy plans to pump out the remaining water in the ship, said Navy officials.
Earlier in the week the fire that had raged atop the flight deck brought
down one of the ship's two masts that hold its radar and communications
equipment.
Photos that have emerged on social media show the ship's massive hangar
bay has been gutted and burnt as a fire that at times reached 1,200
degrees raged throughout the ship's interior. Those temperatures have
been brought down to as low as 125 degrees, according to Sobeck, who
said it will be possible to salvage the ship.
"It's there, it's survived, it's proven it's survived, and it's in
stable condition all the way through," Sobeck said in a press conference
Thursday afternoon.
But he made clear to distinguish between possibly being saved and definitely being saved.
"The ship can be repaired," Sobeck said. "Whether or not it will be repaired will be determined."
Defense officials told ABC News that a Navy damage assessment team will
help inform decisions about the ship's future. One official told ABC
News that after the assessment is completed, "some hard decisions will
have to be made" about whether the ship can remain operational.
While there has been damage throughout most of the ship, the main
engineering areas remained untouched, a factor that could impact
decisions about the ship's viability.
Navy helicopters carried out more than 1,500 water bucket drops and tug
boats sprayed water on the ship's side to cool down its hull as fires
raged below deck.
Sixty-three personnel, including 40 sailors and 23 civilians, were
treated for minor injuries such as heat exhaustion and smoke inhalation.
None of them remain hospitalized.
Most of the 1,000-strong crew of the Bonhomme Richard were off the ship
as it underwent maintenance when it caught fire and suffered two
explosions. About two-thirds of the maintenance was done at that point,
and some personnel and gear had been moved back on the ship.
One hundred and sixty crew members were on board and evacuated at the
time. They and their shipmates are now "on one of our bases being taken
care of," said Capt. Mark Nieswiadomy, Naval Base San Diego commander.
Sobeck said that sailors had recently undergone training for ship fires,
and shared several anecdotes of heroism from the effort to save the
Bonhomme Richard; "brave sailor stories," he called them.
One involved Damage Controlman 2nd Class Jeffrey Garvin, a Navy fire
marshal who was on scene at the first reports of black smoke coming from
the ship.
Sobeck said the man was on board during the first explosion, and was
sent to the hospital to be assessed. After being cleared he returned to
the ship in time for the second blast.
"He went rushing to the fire," Sobeck said. "Since then he's been on
every site every day, to include two explosions. He had to go to the
hospital to get treated, concussion protocols, was fit for duty, went
back. And when the secondary explosion happened, the same thing
basically happened again. He went through concussion protocols, came
back."
https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/fires-extinguished-uss-bonhomme-richard/story?id=71823443