Lt. j.g. Suzanne Gay is the surface information warfare officer serving aboard USS John S. McCain.
A 2007 Calvert High School graduate and St. Leonard, Md. native is serving aboard USS John S. McCain (DDG 56), living and working at a Navy base in Japan.
Lt.j.g. Suzanne Gay is a surface information warfare officer aboard the ship operating out of Japan. Often called โthe tip of the spear,โYokosuka is located approximately 35 miles south of Tokyo and accommodates our nationโs furthest forward deployed naval forces.
An Arleigh Burke-class destroyer, John S. McCain is 505 feet long at just over one and a half football fields. The ship is 66 feet wide, weighs more than 9,200 tons, and four gas turbine engines can push the ship through the ocean at more than 30 knots.
The ship is named in honor of two famous John McCains. Annapolis alumni, John Sidney McCain, Sr., and his son, John Sydney, Jr., both served in World War II and became the first father-son pair ever to achieve the rank of four-star admiral. They are the grandfather and father, respectively, of Senator John McCain, who himself served as a Navy pilot during Vietnam and achieved the rank of captain.
A 24 year-old with numerous responsibilities, Gay said she is learning about herself as a leader, Sailor and a person. โI love what I do serving in the worldโs greatest Navy,โsaid Gay.
โShe also said she is proud of the work she is doing as part of the McCainโs 300-member crew, living thousands of miles from home, and protecting America on the worldโs oceans. โIf you donโt love your job and look forward to it every day, youโre wasting your life,โGay added.
Assigned to the Navyโs Seventh Fleet and Destroyer Squadron 15, McCain sailors are continuously on watch throughout the Indo-Asia-Pacific region and remain amongst our nationโs first responders. After just returning from a four month patrol, McCain is already preparing for her next underway period. Routinely assigned to Carrier Strike Group operations, leading new international exercises, and representing freedom of the seas in challenged waters, the demand for John S. McCain has never been higher. However, despite a demanding overseas tempo, each sailor carefully serves his role in support of Americaโs Asia-Pacific rebalancing strategy.
Approximately 40 officers and 260enlisted men make up the shipโs company. Their jobs are highly specialized and keep each part of the 2 billion dollar destroyer running smoothly โ this includes everything from washing dishes and preparing meals to maintaining engines and handling weaponry.
โOur Navy presence has to be where it matters and we have to be there when it matters. I am so proud and amazed by the knowledge McCain sailors display and the work they do every day,โ said Cmdr. Chase Sargeant, the shipโs commanding officer. Their professionalism, motivation and commitment to the Navy are genuinely inspiring.โ
Fast, maneuverable, and technically advanced, destroyers provide the required warfighting expertise and operational flexibility to execute any tasking overseas. With multi-mission capabilities in surface warfare, anti-submarine warfare, anti-air warfare, ballistic missile defense, and humanitarian assistance, Arleigh Burke destroyers alike excel as the Navyโs premier fighting warship.
As a member of one of the U.S. Navyโs most versatile combat ships, Gay and other John S. McCain sailors understand they are part of a forward deployed team that is heavily relied upon to help protect and defend America across the worldโs oceans.
โIf someone were to ask me about joining the Navy, I would say go for it. Youโll learn a trade, make some of the greatest bonds of friendship as well as getting paid to see the world,โGay added.
