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USS Joseph Strauss

USS Joseph Strauss (DDG-16) was a Charles F. Adams-class of the , named for Joseph Strauss (1861–1948), a career naval officer renowned for his expertise in ordnance and service as Chief of the during . Laid down on 27 December 1960 at in , launched on 9 December 1961, and commissioned on 20 April 1963, the vessel displaced 4,010 long tons fully loaded and measured 437 feet in length, armed primarily with anti-aircraft missiles, anti-submarine weapons, and 5-inch guns for surface and shore bombardment roles. Throughout her 27-year U.S. service, Joseph Strauss conducted multiple deployments to the Western Pacific and waters, serving as plane guard for aircraft carriers on , participating in interdiction operations against North Vietnamese supply lines, and providing in the IV Tactical . In April 1988, during the Iran-Iraq War, she contributed to by firing Harpoon and Standard missiles that disabled the Iranian frigate Sahand, demonstrating the ship's missile capabilities in a rare direct naval engagement. Decommissioned on 1 February 1990 at and stricken from the on 11 January 1995, she was subsequently transferred to the as Formion (D-220).

Namesake

Admiral Joseph Strauss

Joseph Strauss was born on November 16, 1861, in . Appointed as a Cadet Engineer from , he entered the in , on October 1, 1881, graduating in 1885 before completing additional sea duty requirements. Commissioned as an on July 1, 1887, Strauss developed expertise in , conducting pioneering experimental work that included the superimposed system for mounting guns, the first spring recoil gun mount, the initial disappearing mount for deck guns, a range finder for rapid-fire guns, and the first automatic fuse setter. These innovations advanced naval gunnery precision and efficiency, reflecting his contributions to fleet engineering during an era of rapid technological evolution in warship armament. Strauss served as Chief of the Bureau of Ordnance from October 21, 1913, to December 26, 1916, overseeing the development and procurement of naval weaponry amid escalating global tensions. In World War I, as Rear Admiral and Commander of the U.S. Atlantic Fleet's Mine Force, he directed the North Sea Mine Barrage operation, deploying 56,611 American mines across a 230-mile barrier from the Orkney Islands to the Norwegian coast between March and October 1918 to impede German U-boat transit and protect Allied shipping lanes. This strategic initiative, executed under challenging North Sea conditions, demonstrated innovative application of defensive mining on a massive scale, contributing to the reduction of submarine threats despite the armistice preceding full evaluation of its impact. Strauss advanced to full in 1930 before retiring, dying on December 30, 1948, at the Naval Hospital in , and being interred at . The USS Joseph Strauss (DDG-16) was named in his honor, recognizing his foundational advancements in ordnance and the execution of the North Sea as pivotal to U.S. .

Design and construction

Charles F. Adams-class features

The Charles F. Adams-class guided-missile destroyers featured a of approximately 3,200 to 3,600 tons light and 4,500 tons full load, with dimensions of 437 feet in length, 47 feet in beam, and a draft of 15 to 20 feet. These specifications enabled a balanced design optimized for high-speed escort duties in carrier task forces during the , emphasizing fleet air defense against aerial threats from Soviet bombers and missiles. Central to the class's anti-air warfare role was the system, launched via a twin-arm launcher (on early ships) or single-arm (later variants), with storage for 40 to 42 missiles. This system provided medium-range interception capabilities, integrated with fire-control radars for tracking and guidance, marking the class as the U.S. Navy's first production series of smaller guided-missile destroyers dedicated to point defense. Complementing the missiles were two 5-inch/54-caliber Mark 42 dual-purpose guns, capable of rapid fire against surface and low-altitude air targets. For , the class incorporated one Mark 16 octuple launcher for rockets, which delivered or depth charges at extended ranges, alongside two triple Mark 32 tubes for lightweight Mk 46 . These elements supported multi-threat engagements, though the primary focus remained air defense in blue-water operations. Sensor suites included the AN/SPS-39 three-dimensional air search radar for long-range detection and height-finding, paired with surface search and fire-control radars such as AN/SPS-10 and AN/SPG-series for missile and gun guidance. Early ships also mounted the AN/SQS-23 hull-mounted active for submarine detection up to 10,000 yards, enhancing in contested environments. This integration of electronics underscored the class's evolution toward automated threat response in high-intensity .

Building and commissioning

The keel of USS Joseph Strauss (DDG-16) was laid down on 27 December 1960 by the at its yard in . The ship was launched on 9 December 1961, sponsored by Mrs. Lawrence Haines Coburn, granddaughter of the namesake . Following construction and outfitting at the shipyard, Joseph Strauss was delivered for final preparations and commissioned on 20 April 1963 at the , with William M. A. Greene assuming command as the ship's first . The commissioning ceremony marked the vessel's entry into active service with the as part of the Charles F. Adams-class guided missile destroyers. Post-commissioning, Joseph Strauss conducted initial shakedown operations and fitting-out trials, departing on 6 June 1963 for a brief cruise that included port visits to and , . She then transited the to report for duty with the Pacific Fleet, undergoing necessary adjustments for extended operations in that theater. By mid-1967, in anticipation of intensified Pacific commitments, her home port was shifted to , , arriving there on 26 July after transit from the Atlantic. This relocation facilitated early adaptations, such as systems tuning for tropical waters and integration with Seventh Fleet assets.

Armament and capabilities

Weapons systems

The USS Joseph Strauss (DDG-16) was equipped with a primary surface-to-air missile system consisting of the missiles launched from a single Mk 13 Mod. 0 arm launcher, designed for engaging subsonic aircraft and surface targets at ranges up to approximately 8.7 nautical miles (16 km) with guidance. Early variants exhibited reliability issues, but the Improved upgrade, tested successfully aboard Joseph Strauss on September 3, 1965, off Okinawa, enhanced guidance and propulsion for better intercept performance against low-altitude threats. Later refits incorporated (SM-1MR) missiles via the same launcher, extending effective range and electronic countermeasures resistance while maintaining compatibility for surface-to-surface roles. For surface gunfire, the ship mounted two Mk 42 5-inch (127 mm)/54 caliber dual-purpose guns, capable of firing high-explosive, illumination, or anti-aircraft projectiles at rates up to 20 rounds per minute per barrel, providing versatile support against surface, shore, and low-flying air threats. Anti-submarine warfare capabilities included one Mk 16 launcher for rockets, which delivered a or conventional payload to ranges of about 6,000–20,000 yards (5.5–18 km), enabling standoff engagement of submerged submarines. Complementing this were two Mk 32 triple torpedo tubes (six total) firing Mk 46 lightweight homing torpedoes, effective against fast-moving submarines at depths up to 1,200 feet (366 m) with acoustic homing and wire guidance options for precision. These systems demonstrated high reliability in exercises, with Joseph Strauss's weapons maintaining operational readiness throughout periods of intensive use. The ship's weapons were integrated via the (NTDS), which facilitated real-time data sharing for coordinated fire control and missile intercepts, enhancing overall defensive effectiveness in fleet operations.

Propulsion and performance

The propulsion system of USS Joseph Strauss (DDG-16) consisted of four oil-fired boilers rated at 1,275 , which generated steam for two geared steam turbines connected to two propeller shafts. These turbines produced a total of 70,000 shaft horsepower (shp), providing the mechanical power necessary for propulsion efficiency in high-speed naval operations. This arrangement enabled sustained speeds exceeding 32 knots, with documented performance reaching 33 knots during trials and operations. The ship's range extended to 4,500 nautical miles at an economical speed of 20 knots, reflecting storage and consumption optimized for prolonged transits across the Pacific theater without frequent replenishment. Operational was further supported by a complement of approximately 24 officers and 330 enlisted personnel, allowing for efficient maintenance of the steam plant during extended deployments.

Operational history

Shakedown and 1960s deployments

Following her commissioning on 20 April 1963 at the , USS Joseph Strauss completed post-fitting-out trials and departed on 6 June 1963 for a in . The cruise included port visits to Roosevelt Roads, , and Willemstad, Curaçao, allowing evaluation of systems under operational conditions before transiting the on 20 July 1963. She arrived at on 29 August 1963, marking her integration into the Pacific Fleet and establishment of as her homeport. From late 1963 through early 1965, Joseph Strauss conducted local operations and fleet exercises off , focusing on crew training in , surface gunnery, and initial Tartar missile system qualifications to achieve baseline readiness. These activities included integrations with task groups and squadrons, emphasizing coordinated maneuvers and radar-guided intercepts without live engagements. A brief transit to the U.S. in early 1965 supported further trials and maintenance, reinforcing proficiency in propulsion and weapons handling. In June 1964, serving as flagship for Destroyer Squadron 3, the ship departed Long Beach for her first Western Pacific deployment, stopping at and before arriving at , , on 21 July 1964. Through , subsequent routine patrols and multi-ship exercises in the Pacific built on these efforts, with emphasis on missile firings and gunnery drills amid growing fleet demands, while preparing for heightened operational tempos without direct involvement in combat zones. Homeported at throughout this period, Joseph Strauss logged thousands of steaming hours in non-hostile environments to certify full combat system integration.

Vietnam War operations

In 1968, USS Joseph Strauss joined Task Group 77.1 for off the North Vietnamese coast from 29 August to 4 October, delivering naval gunfire against coastal including highways, bridges, and sites while interdicting waterborne craft to sever enemy resupply routes supporting communist forces. The ship expended 3,389 5-inch rounds during these sorties and returned fire against coastal batteries on four occasions, sustaining no damage or casualties despite enemy counter-battery attempts. This operation, part of broader Seventh Fleet efforts, aimed to degrade North Vietnam's ability to sustain infiltration and sustainment along its southern littoral, contributing to interdiction of supplies critical for expanding communist operations southward. From 20 October to 3 November 1968, Joseph Strauss performed plane guard duties for aircraft carriers USS Coral Sea (Task Group 77.6) and USS Intrepid (Task Group 77.4) on in the , ensuring recovery support for strike aircraft conducting missions against North Vietnamese targets. In November and December, she shifted to in , firing over 4,600 rounds in I and IV Corps areas near the and to aid ARVN divisions, ROK Marines, the 101st Airborne, and the against enemy positions. These actions totaled 9,160 rounds fired in 1968, directly pressuring communist logistics and troop concentrations. Earlier in the war, on 17 June 1965, Joseph Strauss's combat information center directed F-4B Phantom jets from USS Midway to down two MiG-17s in aerial combat off North Vietnam—the first U.S. victories against hostile aircraft since the Korean War—while serving as an advanced search-and-rescue/anti-air warfare picket in the Gulf of Tonkin. This engagement supported initial escalation of air operations to counter North Vietnamese air defenses enabling expanded aggression.

1970s operations

Following the of 1973, which concluded major U.S. involvement in the , USS Joseph Strauss transitioned to mid-career operations emphasizing naval presence and deterrence in the Western Pacific amid escalating naval competition with the . The ship conducted routine patrols, multinational exercises, and allied training to support U.S. alliances, including anti-air warfare and gunnery drills with partner navies in the region. In 1973, Joseph Strauss deployed on a Western Pacific (WestPac) cruise as part of the Seventh Fleet, focusing on presence operations rather than ; the deployment included port visits to , the , and for logistical resupply and alliance-building activities. Subsequent years involved periodic overhauls and upkeep at to maintain operational readiness, interspersed with local missile firings and pre-deployment workups. The mid-1970s saw continued deployments, including one from to 1976, underscoring U.S. commitment to and regional stability without engagement in major conflicts. Another followed from December 1977 to May 1978, featuring escort duties, exercises, and coordination with allied forces to counter Soviet naval expansion in the Pacific. By 1979, operations included a July-to-December period of fleet exercises and logistical support, prioritizing readiness through standard maintenance cycles. These activities reinforced deterrence postures and interoperability with allies like and the amid routine upkeep to ensure the ship's missile and capabilities remained effective.

1980s operations and Operation Praying Mantis

During the Iran-Iraq War, particularly its Tanker War phase from 1984 onward, USS Joseph Strauss shifted operational focus to the Persian Gulf and Indian Ocean regions, conducting deployments to counter Iranian threats to international shipping. In 1987, as part of Operation Earnest Will—the U.S. Navy's effort to escort Kuwaiti oil tankers reflagged with the American ensign to deter attacks—the destroyer participated in convoy protections through mine-infested waters, where Iranian forces had damaged or sunk over 400 vessels cumulatively. These missions involved radar surveillance, anti-submarine warfare, and readiness to engage small boat swarms or missile threats, amid escalating Iranian mining and speedboat harassment tactics that had already struck U.S.-escorted ships like USS Bridgeton in July 1987. Tensions peaked on April 14, 1988, when an Iranian mine struck USS Samuel B. Roberts (FFG-58), prompting a U.S. retaliatory operation on April 18 codenamed Praying Mantis, aimed at neutralizing Iranian offshore oil platforms used as military bases and supporting naval units. Assigned to Surface Action Group (SAG) Delta with USS Jack Williams (FFG-24) and USS O'Brien (DD-975), Joseph Strauss advanced into Iranian waters to execute strikes, launching a Harpoon anti-ship missile in the operation's first coordinated surface-to-air Harpoon salvo against the frigate IRIS Sahand. This attack, synchronized with A-6 Intruder aircraft from USS Enterprise, crippled Sahand—which fired missiles and guns in response but was ultimately set ablaze and abandoned after sustaining multiple hits, sinking later without loss of U.S. personnel. The broader operation destroyed two Sassan and Sirri oil platforms—command nodes for Iranian Revolutionary Guard speedboat attacks—via naval gunfire and SEAL teams, while sinking the gunboat IRIS Josahn and damaging frigate IRIS Sabalan, resulting in Iranian losses of six vessels and over 50 personnel against zero U.S. fatalities or ship sinkings. Joseph Strauss's precise missile employment exemplified the Charles F. Adams-class destroyer's anti-surface warfare capability, contributing to a calibrated escalation that degraded Iran's offensive posture in the Gulf without broader escalation, thereby restoring deterrence against further mining and attacks on neutral traffic. Empirical outcomes validated the response's proportionality: Iranian naval aggression declined post-Mantis, with no reflagged tanker losses thereafter, underscoring the causal link between targeted neutralization and stabilized maritime security.

Transfer and foreign service

Decommissioning from US Navy

The USS Joseph Strauss (DDG-16) was decommissioned from the on February 1, 1990, concluding 27 years of active service since its commissioning on April 20, 1963. This marked the end of its operational role amid the broader phase-out of the Charles F. Adams-class guided missile destroyers, which by the late had become obsolete for confronting evolving threats such as advanced anti-ship missiles and saturated air attacks due to limitations in their analog fire control systems and lack of integrated digital warfare capabilities. The decommissioning reflected the U.S. Navy's strategic shift toward newer platforms like the Aegis-equipped Arleigh Burke-class destroyers (DDG-51), which offered superior multi-mission versatility, vertical launch systems, and phased-array radar for simultaneous tracking and engagement of multiple targets—capabilities absent in the Adams class despite prior modernization efforts. Aging hulls and propulsion systems further compounded maintenance costs, rendering extensive upgrades uneconomical compared to fielding next-generation vessels optimized for post-Cold War contingencies. Rather than immediate scrapping, the ship's intact hull was preserved in a non-operational status for potential foreign military transfer under U.S. security assistance programs, prioritizing allied capability enhancement over domestic disposal to support NATO interoperability without additional procurement expenses.

Service in Hellenic Navy as HS Formion

The USS Joseph Strauss was stricken from the U.S. Navy Register on 30 September 1992 and transferred to the following day, entering service with the as HS Formion (D-220) on 1 October 1992. The renaming honored Phormio, an Athenian admiral renowned for innovative naval tactics during the (431–404 BCE), reflecting 's tradition of commemorating historical naval figures in its fleet nomenclature. Integrated into the Hellenic Navy's Kimon-class destroyer squadron (the Greek designation for the Charles F. Adams class), HS Formion retained core capabilities including the Mk 13 single-arm missile launcher for surface-to-air missiles, a 5-inch/54-caliber , ASROC anti-submarine rockets, and torpedo tubes, enabling multi-role operations in air defense, , and anti-submarine tasks. This acquisition strengthened Greece's surface combatant force amid regional tensions in the Aegean and , supporting NATO's southern flank by providing a platform for patrols, exercises, and rapid response in strategically vital waters prone to disputes over maritime boundaries and island sovereignty. HS Formion served approximately a decade in Greek commission, demonstrating the extended operational utility of transferred U.S. vessels through allied reuse, before decommissioning on 29 July 2002 and subsequent sale for scrap on 19 February 2004. The ship's post-transfer lifespan underscored the practical benefits of interoperability, allowing to maintain fleet readiness without immediate need for new construction amid fiscal constraints.

Legacy and decommissioning

Awards and combat record

During its service, USS Joseph Strauss (DDG-16) participated in verified engagements, including missions in Vietnam's IV Corps Tactical Zone from October 17 to November 2, 1968, where it provided shore bombardment under Commander Destroyer Squadron 362. In one documented incident off the Vietnamese coast, the ship engaged and destroyed enemy gunboats attempting to attack it, sustaining only minor damage and no personnel casualties. These actions contributed to deterrence in contested waters, with the destroyer conducting multiple patrols and plane guard duties for carrier operations in the . The ship's most significant combat operation occurred during on April 18, 1988, in the , where it formed part of Surface Action Group Delta alongside USS O'Brien (DD-975) and USS Jack Williams (FFG-1). Joseph Strauss launched anti-ship missiles in a coordinated strike with A-6 Intruder aircraft from VA-95, achieving near-simultaneous impacts on Iranian targets in the first combined surface-air attack of its kind by the U.S. Navy. This engagement neutralized two Iranian oil platforms used as military bases and contributed to the destruction of several Iranian vessels, marking the largest U.S. Navy surface action since and demonstrating effective missile deterrence against asymmetric threats. For these operations, Joseph Strauss received the for its role in Praying Mantis, recognizing outstanding achievement in sustained combat performance. The ship also earned the , , for direct enemy engagements, and with campaign stars for verified deployments and contributions to operational successes in high-threat environments. These awards reflect empirical metrics of mission effectiveness, including targets neutralized and sustained presence amid enemy fire, without reliance on post-hoc narratives.

Crew health issues and environmental exposures

Crew members of the USS Joseph Strauss (DDG-16) who served during operations faced potential exposure to herbicide, particularly during inland waterway transits in the River Delta in March 1968, as documented in deck logs and qualifying the vessel for the U.S. Department of (VA) presumption of exposure for personnel aboard at the time. This presumption applies to sailors on ships that entered Vietnam's brown-water areas, enabling claims for service-connected disabilities linked to 14 presumptive conditions, including , ischemic heart disease, and certain cancers, without requiring direct proof of contact. The USS Joseph Strauss has compiled complete deck logs from these deployments to support applications, reflecting operational requirements for coastal gunfire support that necessitated proximity to sprayed areas despite known risks. Asbestos, extensively used in the ship's construction during the late and early for , , and fireproofing in rooms, boilers, and below-deck spaces, exposed to fibers through , repairs, and vibrations from machinery and gunfire. veterans from destroyers like the Joseph Strauss exhibit elevated rates of , including and , with epidemiological data from the National Institute for indicating that shipboard exposure contributed to latency periods of 20–50 years before onset. Individual cases, such as a developing after service aboard, underscore these links, with the association facilitating access to records for and compensation claims tied to verified service periods. Potential radiation exposures were noted by the association in relation to VA-recognized illnesses like and , possibly from radar systems or incidental contacts during operations, though no ship-specific incidents are detailed in declassified records; claims require medical evidence and proof of onboard service rather than presumed causation. These health concerns, while significant, arose from standard materials and tactics essential to the destroyer's multirole capabilities in an era predating modern mitigation standards, with post-service advocacy focusing on empirical documentation over retrospective policy critique.

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