From Military.com:
“Navy Puts Hospital Alongside
US Military Stockpile in Norwegian Cave Complex”
(Gear is stowed at the Navy’s new
mobile hospital site in a cave above the Arctic Circle in Norway, on Sept. 25,
2021.)
The U.S. Navy has established a
150-bed mobile hospital in a Norwegian cave network, signaling to NATO allies
that the United States is committed to defending Europe, service officials
said. Naval Forces Europe and U.S. Navy
Expeditionary Medical Support Command recently placed the facility in
climate-controlled caves in the Bogen Bay area, above the Arctic Circle, the
U.S. 6th Fleet said in a statement Monday. The mobile hospital can be operated
in the tunnels or transported to any other area, it said. "In this era of
great-power competition, distributing our capabilities around the globe drives
down risk," Rear Adm. Michael T. Curran, the readiness and logistics
director at U.S. Naval Forces Europe-Africa, said in the statement. "The
movement of an expeditionary hospital to Norway is a perfect example of how
U.S. and allied forces provide mutual support in developing a resilient medical
and logistics network."
Cave networks in Norway's granite
mountains house a variety of military and engineering equipment, including M1A1
Abrams tanks, amphibious assault vehicles and howitzers. The Marine Corps began
pre-positioning materiel there during the 1980s, with defense against the
Soviet Union in mind. The mobile hospitals consist of 20 intensive care unit
beds, 130 acute care ward beds, four operating rooms, an emergency room and a
laboratory. They can have a daily throughput as high as 30 hospital admissions
and 36 surgical cases, according to the statement. The
hospitals also have X-ray and CT scan capabilities and can store 300 units of
blood and 192 units of plasma, the Navy said. "This move shows our
commitment to Norway and Europe and will allow us to exercise medical and
logistical processes in an Arctic environment, which improves interoperability
with NATO allies and partners," said Lt. Cmdr. Anthony Skrypek, who works
in the medical service corps. Before 2003, the Navy operated two 500-bed fleet
hospitals in the Bogen Bay area. The hospitals were used in Operation Desert
Storm and returned to Norway after the Gulf War in 1991. During
Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003, those two hospitals were sent to Kuwait and
later were returned to the United States.
^ It’s good to see the US
continue its worldwide commitment to helping our Allies. ^
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