The Submarine Off Our Port Bow
It was a lazy Sunday afternoon.
I was in our berthing space,
watching a movie with my shipmates,
when the alarm klaxon shattered the quiet:
“General quarters, general quarters.
All hands man your battle stations!”
After years of drills,
my body knew what to do.
I leapt from my chair
and proceeded—
not running,
but quickly—
toward the port 3-inch gun magazine:
my battle station.
but something felt different.
There was nothing
in the Plan of the Day
about a General Quarters drill.
This wasn’t practice.
It was real.
To understand the tension,
you must remember
the frigate USS Stark—
struck by an Iranian-fired
French Exocet missile.
Lives were lost.
The Indian Ocean
was no longer just water—
it was a crucible.
And now
eight months later
we sailed those same waters
and I could not but help wonder
Was this what they saw on the Stark?
Then the captain’s voice
came over the 1MC:
“A submarine
of unknown identity
has surfaced off our port bow.”
Inside the magazine—
a cramped compartment
below the gun,
where we passed shells
upward through a
narrow opening—
I donned my headgear
and listened.
The Executive Officer’s voice
crackled through:
“Load the gun.
But do not
train it on the target.”
Tensions were high.
History had taught us
that moments like this
could turn catastrophic
with a single nervous gesture.
Then came the revelation:
it was a Turkish submarine.
a trusted NATO friend
They had surfaced
to declare peaceful intent.
No threat.
No escalation.
We secured from battle stations—
slowly,
deliberately,
like a crew exhaling
after holding its breath.
If this offering stirred something in you—
a memory,
a question,
a flicker of light—
you are welcome to share
your reflection below.
No need for eloquence.
No need for certainty.
Just a lantern,
gently placed.
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