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No Higher Honor: Saving the USS Samuel B. Roberts in the Persian Gulf

by Bradley Peniston

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261903,772 (4)1
Like its World War II namesake of Leyte Gulf fame, USS Samuel B. Roberts (FFG 58) was a small combatant built for escort duty. But its skipper imbued his brand-new crew with a fighting spirit to match their forebears, and in 1988 when the guided missile frigate was thrust into the Persian Gulf at the height of the Iran-Iraq War, there was no better ship for the job. Forbidden to fire unless fired upon, Captain Paul Rinn and his crew sailed amid the chaos in the Gulf for two months, relying on wit and nerve to face down fighter jets and warships bent on the destruction of civilian vessels. Their sternest test came when an Iranian mine ripped open the ship's engine room, ignited fires on four decks, and plunged the ship into darkness. The crew's bravery and cool competence was credited with keeping the ship afloat, and its actions have become part of Navy lore and a staple of naval leadership courses ever since. This is the first book to record the Roberts' extraordinary tale. After years of research and interviews with crewmembers, journalist Bradley Peniston chronicles the crew's heroic efforts to save the ship as they fought flames and flooding well into the night. The author also describes the frigate's origins, its operational history, and the crew's training. Peniston's personal approach to the subject not only breathes life into the historical narrative but gives readers an opportunity to get to know the individuals involved and understand the U.S. retaliation to the mining and the battle that evolved, setting the stage for conflicts to come.… (more)
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A comprehensive narrative of the mining of the frigate "Samuel B. Roberts" in 1988, where the author provides a portrait of Paul Rinn and his crew and how they saved a ship that had been pushed to the literal breaking point. Besides the struggle to save the ship, Peniston also gives you background on the ship's namesake, the program origins of the ship, the career of then Commander Rinn, the nature of the naval confrontation between the United States and Iran, and how the ship was returned to service. Peniston has a good story to write about and tells it well.

What's less than good is that Peniston wants to pump up the story to a bit more importance than it probably deserves; though the lessons regarding asymmetric naval warfare are still relevant. Maybe the single biggest annoyance is when Peniston claims that the actions he describes were "the first clash between groups of warships since World War II and it featured the first missile duel between surface forces." There are men who served in the Israeli, Egyptian, Syrian, Chinese, Vietnamese, Indian, and Portuguese navies who would be irked by that statement; never mind the Anglo-Argentinean War in the South Atlantic. ( )
  Shrike58 | Aug 11, 2012 |
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Like its World War II namesake of Leyte Gulf fame, USS Samuel B. Roberts (FFG 58) was a small combatant built for escort duty. But its skipper imbued his brand-new crew with a fighting spirit to match their forebears, and in 1988 when the guided missile frigate was thrust into the Persian Gulf at the height of the Iran-Iraq War, there was no better ship for the job. Forbidden to fire unless fired upon, Captain Paul Rinn and his crew sailed amid the chaos in the Gulf for two months, relying on wit and nerve to face down fighter jets and warships bent on the destruction of civilian vessels. Their sternest test came when an Iranian mine ripped open the ship's engine room, ignited fires on four decks, and plunged the ship into darkness. The crew's bravery and cool competence was credited with keeping the ship afloat, and its actions have become part of Navy lore and a staple of naval leadership courses ever since. This is the first book to record the Roberts' extraordinary tale. After years of research and interviews with crewmembers, journalist Bradley Peniston chronicles the crew's heroic efforts to save the ship as they fought flames and flooding well into the night. The author also describes the frigate's origins, its operational history, and the crew's training. Peniston's personal approach to the subject not only breathes life into the historical narrative but gives readers an opportunity to get to know the individuals involved and understand the U.S. retaliation to the mining and the battle that evolved, setting the stage for conflicts to come.

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