The following article is from Warrior Maven, a Military Content Group member website. 

Drones, land-attack cruise missiles, high-diver ballistic missiles and anti-ship missiles were all destroyed in the Red Sea by the US Navy’s USS Laboon, a destroyer which just returned home after being under attack and persistent threat of attack ..  for eight months.

“We knew something was going to happen going in,” were words used by USS Laboon Commanding Officer Capt. Eric Blomberg upon returning his destroyer and crew from 9 months of maritime warfare in the Red Sea. Preparing “early” before deployment was part of the reason for the ships combat power success, which included the successful intercept and destruction of 13 drones, two anti-ship missiles, four land attack cruise missiles headed toward Israel and eight high-diver ballistic missiles.

The Arleigh Burke-class Destroyer USS Laboon and its crew of 330 sailors … arrived home at Norfolk Navy Base on Sept.1. Warrior attended the USS Laboon homecoming and talked to Capt. Blomberg about how the crew held up under constant missile and drone attacks at sea.

“We knew something was going to happen going in, because we deployed a little bit later. The fighting had already started. We prepared early to make sure everything was set on the ship and we were ready to go and then when we got there we executed the way we have been trained. We did that over and over again for the last nine months. We stayed focused on the mission,”  Blomberg told Warrior in Norfolk after coming ashore from the ship. “I’m So incredibly proud of this team.. They have performed flawlessly like the professionals they are. Happy everyone came back safe and sound.” 

Mostly “Interceptors”

Naturally, the specifics of each intercept and the tactics and technologies used to execute them are not fully available for reasons of operational security, yet Blomberg was clear that the weapons systems and layered ship defenses performed extremely well.

Blomberg told Warrior the warship used mostly “interceptors” in its takedown of the  drones and missiles and added the USS Laboon was “able to take down anything that was coming at us.”

“It was mostly interceptors. Other ships did use deck-mounted guns. The ship worked exactly the way it was designed, and it did it over and over again. I could not be happier with the weapons systems. Our ship is a little bit older but she performed just as well as all the new ships around with us and was able to take down anything that was coming at us,”  Blomberg said.