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technical research ship : ウィキペディア英語版
technical research ship

Technical research ships were used by the United States Navy during the 1960s to gather intelligence by monitoring, recording and analyzing wireless electronic communications of nations in various parts of the world. At the time these ships were active, the mission of the ships was covert and discussion of the true mission was prohibited ("classified information"). The mission of the ships was publicly given as conducting research into atmospheric and communications phenomena. However, the true mission was more or less an open secret and the ships were commonly referred to as "spy ships".
== Function ==

These ships carried a crew of U.S. Navy personnel whose specialty was intercepting wireless electronic communications and gathering intelligence from those communications (signals intelligence, communications intelligence, and electronic signals intelligence). In the 1960s those personnel had a U.S. Navy rating of Communications Technician, or CT.
In order to transmit intelligence information that had been gathered back to United States for further processing and analysis, these ships had a special system named Technical Research Ship Special Communications, or TRSSCOM (pronounced tress-com). This Earth-Moon-Earth (EME) communications system used a special gyroscope-stabilized 16-foot parabolic antenna, which can be seen aft of the main superstructure in the accompanying photographs of the ''Belmont'' and ''Liberty''. Radio signals were transmitted toward the moon, where they would bounce back toward the Earth and be received by a large 84-foot parabolic antenna at a Naval Communications Station in Cheltenham, Maryland (near Washington, D.C.) or Wahiawa, Hawaii. Communications could occur only when the moon was visible simultaneously at the ship's location and in Cheltenham or Wahiawa. The gyro stabilization of the antenna kept the antenna pointed at the moon while the ship rolled and pitched on the surface of the ocean.
These ships were classified as naval auxiliaries with a hull designation of AGTR, which stands for Auxiliary, General, Technical Research. Five of these ships were built with hull numbers of 1–5. The first three ships of this type (''Oxford'', ''Georgetown'', and ''Jamestown'') were converted from World War II-era Liberty ships. The last two ships (''Belmont'' and ''Liberty'') were converted from Victory ships.〔 The former Liberty ships' top speed of 11 knots limited the first three AGTRs to missions of slow steaming on station with a minimum of transits.〔 Victory ships' sustained speed of 18 knots enabled ''Belmont'' to shadow Mediterranean Sea operations of the Soviet helicopter carrier ''Moskva'' in 1969.〔 All of the technical research ships were decommissioned and stricken by 1970.
One of these ships' crew received a Presidential Unit Citation for heroism in combat. The was attacked, severely damaged and 34 crew members killed by shelling, napalm bombing and torpedoing from Israeli jet fighter aircraft and motor torpedo boats on June 8, 1967.
The was awarded a Meritorious Unit Commendation along with the . The citation reads (in part) "For meritorious service from 1 November 1965 to 30 June 1969 while participating in combat support operations in Southeast Asia. Through research and the compilation of extremely valuable technical data, USS ''Jamestown'' and USS ''Oxford'' contributed most significantly to the overall security of the United States and other Free World forces operating in support of the Republic of Vietnam. Signed E.R. Zumwalt, Admiral, USN, Chief of Naval Operations."
For specifications of these ships, see Liberty ship and Victory ship.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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