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United States Coast Guard
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The United States Coast Guard (USCG) is the maritime security, search and rescue, and law enforcement service branch of the United States Armed Forces.[10] It is one of the country's eight uniformed services. The service is a maritime, military, multi-mission service unique among the United States military branches for having a maritime law enforcement mission with jurisdiction in both domestic and international waters and a federal regulatory agency mission as part of its duties. It is the largest coast guard in the world.
The U.S. Coast Guard protects the United States' borders and economic and security interests abroad; and defends its sovereignty by safeguarding sea lines of communication and commerce across U.S. territorial waters and its Exclusive Economic Zone. Due to ever-expanding risk imposed by transnational threats through the maritime and cyber domains, the U.S. Coast Guard is at any given time deployed to and operating on all seven continents and in cyberspace to enforce its mission. Like its United States Navy sibling, the U.S. Coast Guard maintains a global presence with permanently-assigned personnel throughout the world and forces routinely deploying to both littoral and blue-water regions. The U.S. Coast Guard's adaptive, multi-mission "white hull" fleet is leveraged as a force of both diplomatic soft power and humanitarian and security assistance over the more overtly confrontational nature of "gray hulled" warships. As a humanitarian service, it saves tens of thousands of lives a year at sea and in U.S. waters, and provides emergency response and disaster management for a wide range of human-made and natural catastrophic incidents in the U.S. and throughout the world.[11]
The U.S. Coast Guard operates under the U.S. Department of Homeland Security during peacetime. During times of war, it can be transferred in whole or in part to the U.S. Department of the Navy under the Department of Defense by order of the U.S. president or by act of Congress. Prior to its transfer to Homeland Security, it operated under the Department of Transportation from 1967 to 2003 and the Department of the Treasury from its inception until 1967.[12][13] A congressional authority transfer to the Navy has only happened once: in 1917, during World War I.[14] By the time the U.S. entered World War II in December 1941, the U.S. Coast Guard had already been transferred to the Navy by President Franklin Roosevelt.[15]
The U.S. Coast Guard was formed by a merger of the U.S. Revenue Cutter Service and the U.S. Life-Saving Service on 28 January 1915, under the Department of the Treasury. The Revenue Cutter Service was created by Congress as the Revenue-Marine on 4 August 1790 at the request of Alexander Hamilton, and is therefore the oldest continuously operating naval service of the United States.[Note 1] As secretary of the treasury, Hamilton headed the Revenue-Marine, whose original purpose was collecting customs duties at U.S. seaports. By the 1860s, the service was known as the U.S. Revenue Cutter Service and the term Revenue-Marine gradually fell into disuse.[16]
In 1939, the U.S. Lighthouse Service was also merged into the U.S. Coast Guard. As one of the country's six armed services, the U.S. Coast Guard and its predecessor have participated in every major U.S. war since 1790, from the Quasi-War with France to the Global War on Terrorism.[17][18]
As of December 2021, the U.S. Coast Guard's authorized force strength is 44,500 active duty personnel[19] and 7,000 reservists.[Note 2] The service's force strength also includes 8,577 full-time civilian federal employees and 21,000 uniformed civilian volunteers of the U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary.[20] The service maintains an extensive fleet of roughly 250 coastal and ocean-going cutters, patrol ships, buoy tenders, tugs, and icebreakers; as well as nearly 2,000 small boats and specialized craft. It also maintains an aviation division consisting of more than 200 helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft.[21] While the U.S. Coast Guard is the second smallest of the U.S. military service branches in terms of membership, the service by itself is the world's 12th largest naval force.[22][23]
Mission
[edit]
Role
[edit]The Coast Guard carries out three basic roles, which are further subdivided into eleven statutory missions. The three roles are:
With a decentralized organization and much responsibility placed on even the most junior personnel, the Coast Guard is frequently lauded for its quick responsiveness and adaptability in a broad range of emergencies. In a 2005 article in Time magazine following Hurricane Katrina, the author wrote, "the Coast Guard's most valuable contribution to [a military effort when catastrophe hits] may be as a model of flexibility, and most of all, spirit." Wil Milam, a rescue swimmer from Alaska told the magazine, "In the Navy, it was all about the mission. Practicing for war, training for war. In the Coast Guard, it was, take care of our people and the mission will take care of itself."[24]
Missions
[edit]The eleven statutory missions as defined by law are divided into homeland security missions and non-homeland security missions:[25]
Non-homeland security missions
[edit]- Ice operations, including the International Ice Patrol
- Living marine resources (fisheries law enforcement)
- Marine environmental protection
- Marine safety
- Aids to navigation
- Search and rescue
Homeland security missions
[edit]- Defense readiness
- Maritime law enforcement
- Migrant interdiction
- Ports, waterways and coastal security (PWCS)
- Drug interdiction
Search and rescue
[edit]
The U.S. Coast Guard Search and Rescue (CG-SAR) is one of the Coast Guard's best-known operations.[26] The National Search and Rescue Plan designates the Coast Guard as the federal agency responsible for maritime SAR operations, and the United States Air Force as the federal agency responsible for inland SAR.[27] Both agencies maintain rescue coordination centers to coordinate this effort, and have responsibility for both military and civilian search and rescue.[28] The two services jointly provide instructor staff for the National Search and Rescue School that trains SAR mission planners and coordinators. Previously located on Governors Island, New York, the school is now located at Coast Guard Training Center Yorktown at Yorktown, Virginia.[29]
National Response Center
[edit]Operated by the Coast Guard, the National Response Center (NRC) is the sole U.S. Government point of contact for reporting all oil, chemical, radiological, biological, and etiological spills and discharges into the environment, anywhere in the United States and its territories.[30] In addition to gathering and distributing spill/incident information for Federal On Scene Coordinators and serving as the communications and operations center for the National Response Team, the NRC maintains agreements with a variety of federal entities to make additional notifications regarding incidents meeting established trigger criteria. The NRC also takes Maritime Suspicious Activity and Security Breach Reports. Details on the NRC organization and specific responsibilities can be found in the National Oil and Hazardous Substances Pollution Contingency Plan.[31] The Marine Information for Safety and Law Enforcement (MISLE) database system is managed and used by the Coast Guard for tracking pollution and safety incidents in the nation's ports.[32][33][34]
National Maritime Center
[edit]The National Maritime Center (NMC) is the merchant mariner credentialing authority for the USCG under the auspices of the Department of Homeland Security. To ensure a safe, secure, and environmentally sound marine transportation system, the mission of the NMC is to issue credentials to fully qualified mariners in the United States maritime jurisdiction.[35]
Authority as an armed service
[edit]Title 10 of the U.S. Code says that "[t]he term "armed forces" means the Army, Marine Corps, Navy, Air Force, Space Force, and Coast Guard."[36][37] The Coast Guard is further defined by Title 14 of the United States Code: "The Coast Guard as established January 28, 1915, shall be a military service and a branch of the armed forces of the United States at all times. The Coast Guard shall be a service in the Department of Homeland Security, except when operating as a service in the Navy."[38] Coast Guard organization and operation is as set forth in Title 33 of the Code of Federal Regulations.
On 25 November 2002, the Homeland Security Act was signed into law by U.S. President George W. Bush, designating the Coast Guard to be placed under the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. The transfer of administrative control from the U.S. Department of Transportation to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security was completed the following year, on 1 March 2003.[39][40][41]
The U.S. Coast Guard reports directly to the civilian secretary of homeland security. However, under 14 U.S.C. § 3 as amended by section 211 of the Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation Act of 2006, upon the declaration of war and when Congress so directs in the declaration, or when the president directs, the Coast Guard operates under the Department of Defense as a service in the Department of the Navy.[42]
As members of the military, coast guardsmen on active and reserve service are subject to the Uniform Code of Military Justice and receive the same pay and allowances as members of the same pay grades in the other uniformed services.[43]
The service has participated in every major U.S. conflict from 1790 through today, including landing troops on D-Day and on the Pacific Islands in World War II, in extensive patrols and shore bombardment during the Vietnam War, and multiple roles in Operation Iraqi Freedom. Maritime interception operations, coastal security, transportation security, and law enforcement detachments have been its major roles in recent conflicts in Iraq.[44]
On 17 October 2007, the Coast Guard joined with the U.S. Navy and U.S. Marine Corps to adopt a new maritime strategy called A Cooperative Strategy for 21st Century Seapower that raised the notion of prevention of war to the same philosophical level as the conduct of war.[45] This new strategy charted a course for the Navy, Coast Guard and Marine Corps to work collectively with each other and international partners to prevent regional crises, man-made or natural, from occurring, or reacting quickly should one occur to avoid negative impacts to the United States. During the launch of the new U.S. maritime strategy at the International Seapower Symposium at the U.S. Naval War College in 2007, Coast Guard commandant admiral Thad Allen said the new maritime strategy reinforced the time-honored missions the service has carried out in the United States since 1790. "It reinforces the Coast Guard maritime strategy of safety, security and stewardship, and it reflects not only the global reach of our maritime services but the need to integrate and synchronize and act with our coalition and international partners to not only win wars ... but to prevent wars," Allen said.[45]
Authority as a law enforcement agency
[edit]14 U.S.C. § 102 authorizes the Coast Guard to enforce U.S. federal laws.[46] This authority is further defined in 14 U.S.C. § 522, which gives law enforcement powers to all Coast Guard commissioned officers, warrant officers, and petty officers.[47] Unlike the other armed forces branches, which are prevented from acting in a law enforcement capacity by 18 U.S.C. § 1385, the Posse Comitatus Act, and Department of Defense policy, the Coast Guard is exempt from and not subject to the restrictions of the Posse Comitatus Act.[48]
Further law enforcement authority is given by 14 U.S.C. § 703 and 19 U.S.C. § 1401, which empower U.S. Coast Guard active and reserve commissioned officers, warrant officers, and petty officers as federal customs officers.[49][50] This places them under 19 U.S.C. § 1589a, which grants customs officers general federal law enforcement authority, including the authority to:
(1) carry a firearm;
(2) execute and serve any order, warrant, subpoena, summons, or other process issued under the authority of the United States;
(3) make an arrest without a warrant for any offense against the United States committed in the officer's presence or for a felony, cognizable under the laws of the United States committed outside the officer's presence if the officer has reasonable grounds to believe that the person to be arrested has committed or is committing a felony; and
(4) perform any other law enforcement duty that the Secretary of Homeland Security may designate.
— 19 USC §1589a. Enforcement authority of customs officers[51]
The U.S. Government Accountability Office Report to the House of Representatives, Committee on the Judiciary on its 2006 Survey of Federal Civilian Law Enforcement Functions and Authorities, identified the Coast Guard as one of 104 federal components that employed law enforcement officers.[52] The report also included a summary table of the authorities of the Coast Guard's 192 special agents and 3,780 maritime law enforcement boarding officers.[53]
Coast Guardsmen have the legal authority to carry their service-issued firearms on and off base. This is rarely done in practice, however; at many Coast Guard stations, commanders prefer to have all service-issued weapons in armories when not in use. Still, one court has held in the case of People v. Booth that Coast Guard boarding officers are qualified law enforcement officers authorized to carry personal firearms off-duty for self-defense.[54]
History
[edit]
The Coast Guard traced its roots to the small fleet of vessels maintained by the United States Department of the Treasury beginning in the 1790s to enforce tariffs (an important source of revenue for the new nation). Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton lobbied Congress to fund the construction of ten cutters, which it did on 4 August 1790 (now celebrated as the Coast Guard's official birthday). Until the re-establishment of the Navy in 1798, these "revenue cutters" were the only naval force of the early United States. As such, the cutters and their crews frequently took on additional duties, including combating piracy, rescuing mariners in distress, ferrying government officials, and even carrying mail.[55] Initially not an organized federal agency at all, merely a "system of cutters," each ship operated under the direction of the customs officials in the port to which it was assigned. Several names, including "Revenue-Marine," were used as the service gradually becoming more organized. Eventually it was officially organized as the United States Revenue Cutter Service. In addition to its regular law enforcement and customs duties, revenue cutters and their crews were used to support and supplement the Navy in various armed conflicts including the American Civil War.[56]
A separate federal agency, the U.S. Life-Saving Service, developed alongside the Revenue-Marine. Prior to 1848, there were various charitable efforts at creating systems to provide assistance to shipwrecked mariners from shore-based stations, notably by the Massachusetts Humane Society. The federal government began funding lifesaving stations in 1848 but funding was inconsistent and the system still relied on all-volunteer crews. In 1871, Sumner Increase Kimball was appointed chief of the Treasury Department's newly created Revenue Marine Division, and began the process of organizing the Revenue-Marine cutters into a centralized agency. Kimball also pushed for more funding lifesaving stations and eventually secured approval to create the Lifesaving Service as a separate federal agency, also within the Treasury Department, with fulltime paid crews.
In 1915 these two agencies, the Revenue Cutter Service and the Lifesaving Service, were merged to create the modern United States Coast Guard. The Lighthouse Service and the Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation were absorbed by the Coast Guard 1939 and 1942 respectively.[57][58] In 1967, the Coast Guard moved from the U.S. Department of the Treasury to the newly formed U.S. Department of Transportation, an arrangement that lasted until it was placed under the U.S. Department of Homeland Security in 2003 as part of legislation designed to more efficiently protect American interests following the terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001.[59]
In times of war, the Coast Guard or individual components of it can operate as a service of the Department of the Navy. This arrangement has a broad historical basis, as the Coast Guard has been involved in wars as diverse as the War of 1812, the Mexican–American War, and the American Civil War, in which the cutter Harriet Lane fired the first naval shots attempting to relieve besieged Fort Sumter. The last time the Coast Guard operated as a whole within the Navy was in World War II, in all some 250,000 served in the Coast Guard during World War II.[60] A major fixture of the Coast Guard during WWII were the Beach Patrol units, responsible for patrolling the shorelines of the United States on-foot and horseback.
Coast Guard Squadron One, was a combat unit formed by the United States Coast Guard in 1965 for service during the Vietnam War. Placed under the operational control of the United States Navy, it was assigned duties in Operation Market Time. Its formation marked the first time since World War II that Coast Guard personnel were used extensively in a combat environment. The squadron operated divisions in three separate areas during the period of 1965 to 1970. Twenty-six Point-class cutters with their crews and a squadron support staff were assigned to the U.S. Navy with the mission of interdicting the movement of arms and supplies from the South China Sea into South Vietnam by Viet Cong and North Vietnam junk and trawler operators. The squadron also provided 81mm mortar naval gunfire support to nearby friendly units operating along the South Vietnamese coastline and assisted the U.S. Navy during Operation Sealords.[61]
Coast Guard Squadron Three, was a combat unit formed by the United States Coast Guard in 1967 for service during the Vietnam War.[62] Placed under the operational control of the United States Navy and based in Pearl Harbor. It consisted of five USCG High Endurance Cutters operating on revolving six-month deployments. A total of 35 High Endurance Cutters took part in operations from May 1967 to December 1971, most notably using their 5-inch guns to provide naval gunfire support missions.[63]
Often units within the Coast Guard operate under Department of the Navy operational control while other Coast Guard units remain under the Department of Homeland Security.[64]
Deployable Operations Group/Deployable Specialized Forces
[edit]The Deployable Operations Group (DOG) was a Coast Guard command established in July 2007. The DOG established a single command authority to rapidly provide the Coast Guard, Department of Homeland Security, Department of Defense, Department of Justice and other interagency operational commanders adaptive force packages drawn from the Coast Guard's deployable specialized force units. The DOG was disestablished on 22 April 2013 and reorganized into Deployable Specialized Forces (DSF) units that were placed under the control of the Atlantic and Pacific Area Commanders.[65]
The planning for the unit began after the terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001, and culminated with its formation on 20 July 2007. Its missions included maritime law enforcement, anti-terrorism, port security, pollution response, and diving operations.[66][citation needed]
There were over 25 specialized units within the Deployable Operations Group including the Maritime Security Response Team, Maritime Safety and Security Teams, Law Enforcement Detachments, Port Security Units, the National Strike Force, and Regional Dive Lockers. The DOG also managed Coast Guard personnel assigned to the Navy Expeditionary Combat Command and was involved in the selection of Coast Guard candidates to attend Navy BUD/S and serve with Navy SEAL Teams.[67]
Images
[edit]-
Marine Corps Privates First Class William A. McCoy and Ralph L. Plunkett holding a sign thanking the Coast Guard after the Battle of Guam in 1944[68]
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A gun crew on board USCGC Point Comfort (WPB-82317) firing an 81 mm mortar during the bombardment of a suspected Viet Cong staging area one mile behind An Thoi in August 1965
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USCGC Duane (WPG-33) shelling targets in Vietnam in 1967, where the Coast Guard was a part of Operation Market Time
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United States Coast Guard Squadron One unit patch during the Vietnam War
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USS Vandegrift (FFG 48) and USCGC Mellon (WHEC-717) cruising side by side in the Java Sea on May 28, 2010
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A member of USCG Law Enforcement Detachment (LEDET) 106 performing a security sweep aboard a tanker ship in the North Persian Gulf in July 2007
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A Coast Guardsman stands guard over more than 40,000 pounds of cocaine worth an estimated $500 million being offloaded from the Cutter Sherman, 23 April 2007.
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A boatswain's mate keeps watch on a small boat as it heads for the USCGC Chandeleur in 2008
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A Coast Guard Aviation Survival Technician assisting with the rescue of a pregnant woman during Hurricane Katrina in 2005
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USCG Maritime Law Enforcement unit badge
Organization
[edit]The new Department of Homeland Security headquarters complex is on the grounds of the former St. Elizabeths Hospital in the Anacostia section of Southeast Washington, across the Anacostia River from former Coast Guard headquarters.[69]
The fiscal year 2016 budget request for the U.S. Coast Guard was $9.96 billion.[70]

Districts and units
[edit]The Coast Guard's current district organization is divided into 9 districts which were previously numbered, they were renamed in 2025 for clarity and memorability using geographic area names.[71] Their designations, district office and area of responsibility are as follows:
Former U.S. Coast Guard Districts
[edit]Previously the U.S. Coast Guard had two additional districts, the 15th and 16th, which have since been decommissioned. The 15th district previously encompassed the waters around the Panama Canal Zone, as well as the canal itself.[73] The 16th district was formerly the Philippines.[74]
Shore establishments
[edit]
Shore establishment commands exist to support and facilitate the mission of the sea and air assets and Coastal defense. U.S. Coast Guard Headquarters is located in Southeast Washington, D.C. Examples of other shore establishment types are Coast Guard Sectors (which may include Coast Guard Bases), Surface Forces Logistics Center (SFLC),[75] Coast Guard Stations, Coast Guard Air Stations, and the United States Coast Guard Yard. Training centers are included in the shore establishment commands. The military college for the USCG is called the United States Coast Guard Academy[76] which trains both new officers through a four year program and enlisted personnel joining the ranks of officers through a 17 week program called Officer Candidate School (OCS). Abbreviated TRACEN, the other Training Centers include Training Center Cape May for enlisted bootcamp,[77] Training Center Petaluma[78] and Training Center Yorktown[79] for enlisted "A" schools and "C" schools, and Coast Guard Aviation Technical Training Center[80] and Coast Guard Aviation Training Center Mobile[81] for aviation enlisted "A" school, "C" schools, and pilot officer training.
Personnel
[edit]The Coast Guard has a total workforce of 87,569.[82] The formal name for a uniformed member of the Coast Guard is "coast guardsman", irrespective of gender. "Coastie" is an informal term commonly used to refer to current or former Coast Guard personnel. In 2008, the term "guardian" was introduced as an alternative but was later dropped. Admiral Robert J. Papp Jr. stated that it was his belief that no Commandant had the authority to change what members of the Coast Guard are called as the term coast guardsman is found in Title 14 USC, which established the Coast Guard in 1915.[83][Note 3] "Team Coast Guard" refers to the four components of the Coast Guard as a whole: Regular, Reserve, Auxiliary, and Coast Guard civilian employees.[citation needed]
Commissioned officers
[edit]Commissioned officers in the Coast Guard hold pay grades ranging from O-1 to O-10 and have the same rank structure as the Navy.[85][86] Officers holding the rank of ensign (O-1) through lieutenant commander (O-4) are considered junior officers, commanders (O-5) and captains (O-6) are considered senior officers, and rear admirals (O-7) through admirals (O-10) are considered flag officers. The commandant of the Coast Guard and the vice commandant of the Coast Guard are the only members of the Coast Guard authorized to hold the rank of admiral.[87]
The Coast Guard does not have medical officers or chaplains of its own. Instead, chaplains from the U.S. Navy, as well as officers from the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps are assigned to the Coast Guard to perform chaplain-related functions and medical-related functions, respectively. These officers wear Coast Guard uniforms but replace the Coast Guard insignia with that of their own service.[88]
The Navy and Coast Guard share identical officer rank insignia except that Coast Guard officers wear a gold Coast Guard Shield in lieu of a line star or staff corps officer insignia.
| US DoD Pay Grade | O-10 | O-9 | O-8 | O-7 | O-6 | O-5 | O-4 | O-3 | O-2 | O-1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NATO Code | OF-9 | OF-8 | OF-7 | OF-6 | OF-5 | OF-4 | OF-3 | OF-2 | OF-1 | |
| Insignia | ||||||||||
| Title | Admiral | Vice admiral | Rear admiral | Rear admiral (lower half) | Captain | Commander | Lieutenant commander | Lieutenant | Lieutenant (junior grade) | Ensign |
| Abbreviation | ADM | VADM | RADM | RDML | CAPT | CDR | LCDR | LT | LTJG | ENS |
Warrant officers
[edit]Highly qualified enlisted personnel in pay grades E-6 through E-9 with a minimum of eight years' experience can compete each year for appointment as warrant officers (WO). Successful candidates are chosen by a board and then commissioned as chief warrant officer two (CWO2) in one of twenty-one specialties. Over time, chief warrant officers may be promoted to chief warrant officer three (CWO3) and chief warrant officer four (CWO4). The ranks of warrant officer (WO1) and chief warrant officer five (CWO5) are not currently used in the Coast Guard. Chief warrant officers may also compete for the Chief Warrant Officer to Lieutenant Program. If selected, the warrant officer will be promoted to lieutenant (O-3E). The "E" designates over four years' active duty service as a warrant officer or enlisted member and entitles the member to a higher rate of pay than other lieutenants.[citation needed]
| US DoD Pay Grade | W-4 | W-3 | W-2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| NATO Code | WO-4 | WO-3 | WO-2 |
| Insignia | |||
| Title | Chief Warrant Officer 4 | Chief Warrant Officer 3 | Chief Warrant Officer 2 |
| Abbreviation | CWO-4 | CWO-3 | CWO-2 |
Enlisted personnel
[edit]Enlisted members of the Coast Guard have pay grades from E-1 to E-9 and also follow the same rank structure as the Navy. Enlisted members in pay grades of E-4 and higher are considered petty officers and follow career development paths very similar to those of Navy petty officers.[89]
Petty officers in pay grade E-7 and higher are chief petty officers and must attend the Coast Guard Chief Petty Officer Academy, or an equivalent Department of Defense school, in order to be advanced to pay grade E-8. The basic themes of the school are:
- Professionalism
- Leadership
- Communications
- Systems thinking and lifelong learning
Enlisted rank insignia is also nearly identical to Navy enlisted insignia. The Coast Guard shield replacing the petty officer's eagle on collar and cap devices for petty officers or enlisted rating insignia for seamen qualified as a "designated striker". Group Rate marks (stripes) for junior enlisted members (E-3 and below) also follow Navy convention with white for seaman, red for fireman, and green for airman. In a departure from the Navy conventions, all petty officers E-6 and below wear red chevrons and all chief petty officers wear gold.[90]
| U.S. DoD Pay grade | Special | E-9 | E-8 | E-7 | E-6 | E-5 | E-4 | E-3 | E-2 | E-1 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NATO Code | OR-9 | OR-8 | OR-7 | OR-6 | OR-5 | OR-4 | OR-3 | OR-2 | OR-1 | ||||
| Insignia | |||||||||||||
| Title | Master Chief Petty Officer of the Coast Guard | Deputy Master Chief Petty Officer of the Coast Guard or Other senior enlisted leaders[Note 4] |
Command Master Chief Petty Officer | Master Chief Petty Officer | Senior Chief Petty Officer | Chief Petty Officer | Petty Officer First Class | Petty Officer Second Class | Petty Officer Third Class | Seaman | Seaman Apprentice | Seaman Recruit | |
| Abbreviation | MCPOCG | DMCPOCG | CMC | MCPO | SCPO | CPO | PO1 | PO2 | PO3 | SN | SA | SR | |
Training
[edit]Officer training
[edit]
The U.S. Coast Guard Academy is a four-year service academy located in New London, Connecticut. Approximately 200 cadets graduate each year, receiving a Bachelor of Science degree and a commission as an ensign in the Coast Guard. Graduates are obligated to serve a minimum of five years on active duty. Most graduates are assigned to duty aboard Coast Guard cutters immediately after graduation, either as Deck Watch Officers (DWOs) or as Engineer Officers in Training (EOITs). Smaller numbers are assigned directly to flight training at Naval Air Station Pensacola, Florida or to shore duty at Coast Guard Sector, District, or Area headquarters units.[citation needed]
In addition to the Academy, prospective officers, who already hold a college degree, may enter the Coast Guard through Officer Candidate School (OCS), also located at the Coast Guard Academy. OCS is a 17-week course of instruction that prepares candidates to serve effectively as officers in the Coast Guard. In addition to indoctrinating students into a military lifestyle, OCS provides a wide range of highly technical information necessary to perform the duties of a Coast Guard officer.[91]
Graduates of OCS are usually commissioned as ensigns, but some with advanced graduate degrees may enter as lieutenants (junior grade) or lieutenants. Graduating OCS officers entering active duty are required to serve a minimum of three years, while graduating reserve officers are required to serve four years. Graduates may be assigned to a cutter, flight training, a staff job, or an operations ashore billet. OCS is the primary channel through which the Coast Guard enlisted grades ascend to the commissioned officer corps. Unlike the other military services, the Coast Guard does not have a Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC) program.[92][93] However, the Coast Guard Auxiliary offers the Coast Guard Auxiliary University Programs (AUP), which provides college students with leadership training and experience in Coast Guard activities, though participation does not guarantee a commission.[94] The Coast Guard also operates the Select Reserve Direct Commission program, for prospective candidates interested serving as a Coast Guard Reserve Officer.[95]
Lawyers, engineers, intelligence officers, military aviators holding commissions in other branches of the U.S. Armed Forces requesting interservice transfers to the Coast Guard, graduates of maritime academies, and certain other individuals may also receive an officer's commission in the Coast Guard through the Direct Commission Officer (DCO) program. Depending on the specific program and the background of the individual, the course is three, four or five weeks long. The first week of the five-week course is an indoctrination week. The DCO program is designed to commission officers with highly specialized professional training or certain kinds of previous military experience.[96]
Recruit training
[edit]
Newly enlisted personnel are sent to eight weeks of recruit training at Coast Guard Training Center Cape May in Cape May, New Jersey. New recruits arrive at Sexton Hall and remain there for three days of initial processing which includes haircuts, vaccinations, uniform issue, and other necessary entrance procedures. During this initial processing period, the new recruits are led by temporary company commanders. These temporary company commanders are tasked with teaching the new recruits how to march and preparing them to enter into their designated company. The temporary company commanders typically do not enforce any physical activity such as push ups or crunches. When the initial processing is complete, the new seaman recruits are introduced to their permanent company commanders who will remain with them until the end of training. There is typically a designated lead company commander and two support company commanders. The balance of the eight-week boot camp is spent in learning teamwork and developing physical skills. An introduction of how the Coast Guard operates with special emphasis on the Coast Guard's core values is an important part of the training.
The current nine Recruit Training Objectives are:
- Self-discipline
- Military skills
- Marksmanship
- Vocational skills and academics
- Military bearing
- Physical fitness and wellness
- Water survival and swim qualifications
- Esprit de corps
- Core values (Honor, Respect, and Devotion to Duty)[97]
Service schools
[edit]Following graduation from recruit training, most members are sent to their first unit while they await orders to attend advanced training in Class "A" Schools. At "A" schools, Coast Guard enlisted personnel are trained in their chosen rating; rating is a Coast Guard and Navy term for enlisted skills synonymous with the Army's and Marine Corps' military occupation codes (MOS) and Air Force's Air Force Specialty Code (AFSC). Members who earned high ASVAB scores or who were otherwise guaranteed an "A" School of choice while enlisting may go directly to their "A" School upon graduation from Boot Camp.[98]
Civilian personnel
[edit]The Coast Guard employs over 8,577 civilians in over two hundred different job types including Coast Guard Investigative Service special agents, lawyers, engineers, technicians, administrative personnel, tradesmen, and federal firefighters.[82][99] Civilian employees work at various levels in the Coast Guard to support its various missions.[100]
Equipment
[edit]Cutters
[edit]
The Coast Guard operates 243 cutters,[21] defined as any vessel more than 65 feet (20 m) long, that has a permanently assigned crew and accommodations for the extended support of that crew.[101]
- National Security Cutter (WMSL): Also known as the Legend-class, these are the Coast Guard's latest class of 418-foot (127 m) cutter. At 418 ft. these are the largest USCG military cutters in active service. One-for-one, Legend-class ships have replaced individually decommissioned 1960s Hamilton-class cutters, also known as High Endurance Cutters (WHEC). A total of eleven were authorized and budgeted; as of 2021 eight are in service, and two are under construction.
- Medium Endurance Cutter (WMEC): These are mostly the 210-foot (64 m) Reliance-class, and the 270-foot (82 m) Famous-class cutters, although the 283-foot (86 m) Alex Haley also falls into this category. Primary missions are law enforcement, search and rescue, and military defense. Heritage-class cutters are expected to eventually replace the Reliance- and Famous-class cutters as they are completed.[102]
- Polar-class icebreaker (WAGB): There are three WAGB's used for icebreaking and research though only two, the heavy 399-foot (122 m) Polar Star and the newer medium class 420-foot (130 m) Healy, are active.[103][104][105][106] Polar Sea is located in Seattle, Washington but is not currently in active service. The icebreakers are being replaced with new heavy icebreakers under the Polar icebreaker program, the world's largest coast guard vessel due for delivery in 2025.
- USCGC Storis: A 360-foot (110 m) icebreaker previously used by Royal Dutch Shell before being bought by the Coast Guard in December 2024.
- USCGC Eagle: A 295-foot (90 m) sailing barque used as a training ship for Coast Guard Academy cadets and Coast Guard officer candidates. She was originally built in Germany as Horst Wessel, and was seized by the United States as a prize of war in 1945.[107][108]
- USCGC Mackinaw: A 240-foot (73 m) heavy icebreaker built for operations on the Great Lakes.
- Seagoing Buoy Tender (WLB): These 225-foot (69 m) ships are used to maintain aids to navigation and also assist with law enforcement and search and rescue.
- Coastal Buoy Tender (WLM): The 175-foot (53 m) Keeper-class coastal buoy tenders are used to maintain coastal aids to navigation.
- Sentinel-class cutter (WPC): The 154-foot (47 m) Sentinel-class, also known by its program name, the "Fast Response Cutter"-class and is used for search and rescue work and law enforcement.
- Bay-class icebreaking tug (WTGB): 140-foot (43 m) icebreakers used primarily for domestic icebreaking missions. Other missions include search and rescue, law enforcement, and aids to navigation maintenance.[109]
- Patrol Boats (WPB): There are two classes of WPBs currently in service; the 110-foot (34 m) Island-class patrol boats and the 87-foot (27 m) Marine Protector-class patrol boats[110][111]
- Small Harbor Tug (WYTL): 65-foot (20 m) small icebreaking tugboats, used primary for ice clearing in domestic harbors in addition to limited search and rescue and law enforcement roles.
Boats
[edit]
The Coast Guard operates about 1,650 boats,[21] defined as any vessel less than 65 feet (20 m) long, which generally operate near shore and on inland waterways.
The Coast Guard boat fleet includes:
- 47-foot Motor Lifeboat (MLB): The Coast Guard's 47-foot (14 m) primary heavy-weather boat used for search and rescue as well as law enforcement and homeland security.
- Response Boat – Medium (RB-M): A new multi-mission 45-foot (14 m) vessel intended to replace the 41-foot (12 m) utility boat. 170 planned
- Deployable Pursuit Boat (DPB): A 38-foot (12 m) launch capable of pursuing fast cocaine smuggling craft.
- Long Range Interceptor (LRI): A 36-foot (11 m) high-speed launch that can be launched from the stern ramps of the larger Deepwater cutters.
- Aids to Navigation Boat (TANB/BUSL/ATON/ANB): Various designs ranging from 26 to 55 feet (7.9 to 16.8 m) used to maintain aids to navigation.
- Special Purpose Craft – Law Enforcement (SPC-LE): Intended to operate in support of specialized law enforcement missions, utilizing three 300 horsepower (220 kW) Mercury Marine engines. The SPC-LE is 33 feet (10 m) long and capable of speeds in excess of 50 knots (93 km/h; 58 mph) and operations more than 30 miles (48 km) from shore.
- 29-foot Response Boat Small II (RBS-II): The successor to the 25-foot RB-S, the RBS-II is a 29 foot (9 m) high speed, multi-mission boat commonly used for search and rescue, port security, and law enforcement. Improvements from the RB-S include improved visibility and modernized electronic chart plotter capabilities.
- 25-foot Transportable Port Security Boat (TPSB): A 25-foot (7.6 m) well-armed boat used by Port Security Units for force protection.
- Special Purpose Craft, Shallow-water (SPC-SW): 24 feet (7.3 m)[clarification needed]
- Cutter Boat – Over the Horizon (OTH): A 23-foot (7.0 m) rigid hull inflatable boat used by medium and high endurance cutters and specialized units.
- Short Range Prosecutor (SRP): A 23-foot (7.0 m) rigid hull inflatable boat that can be launched from a stern launching ramp on the National Security Cutters.
Aircraft
[edit]
The Coast Guard operates approximately 201 fixed and rotary wing aircraft[21] from 24 Coast Guard Air Stations throughout the contiguous United States, Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico. Most of these air stations are tenant activities at civilian airports, several of which are former Air Force Bases and Naval Air Stations, although several are also independent military facilities. Coast Guard Air Stations are also located on active Naval Air Stations, Air National Guard bases, and Army Air Fields.[citation needed]
Coast Guard aviators receive Primary (fixed-wing) and Advanced (fixed or rotary-wing) flight training with their Navy and Marine Corps counterparts at NAS Whiting Field, Florida, and NAS Corpus Christi, Texas, and are considered Naval Aviators. After receiving Naval Aviator Wings, Coast Guard pilots, with the exception of those slated to fly the HC-130, report to U.S. Coast Guard Aviation Training Center, Mobile, Alabama to receive 6–12 weeks of specialized training in the Coast Guard fleet aircraft they will operate. HC-130 pilots report to Little Rock AFB, Arkansas, for joint C-130 training under the auspices of the 314th Airlift Wing of the U.S. Air Force.[citation needed]
Fixed-wing aircraft operate from Air Stations on long-duration missions. Helicopters operate from Air Stations and can deploy on a number of different cutters. Helicopters can rescue people or intercept vessels smuggling migrants or narcotics. Since the terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001, the Coast Guard has developed a more prominent role in national security and now has armed helicopters operating in high-risk areas for the purpose of maritime law enforcement and anti-terrorism.[citation needed]
The Coast Guard is now developing an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) program that will utilize the MQ-9 Reaper platform for homeland security and search/rescue operations. To support this endeavor, the Coast Guard has partnered with the Navy and U.S. Customs and Border Protection to study existing/emerging unmanned aerial system (UAS) capabilities within their respective organizations. As these systems mature, research and operational experience gleaned from this joint effort will enable the Coast Guard to develop its own cutter and land-based UAS capabilities.[112]
Current aircraft
[edit]| Type | Manufacturer | Origin | Class | Role | Introduced | In service[113] | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C-27J Spartan | Alenia Aeronautica | U.S. Italy |
Turboprop | Search and rescue | 2014 | 14 | Former Air Force aircraft, acquired in return for the release of seven HC-130H aircraft to the United States Forest Service for use as aerial tankers. |
| C-37A | Gulfstream | U.S. | Jet | Priority Airlift | 1998 | 1 | Priority Airlift for high-ranking members of the Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Coast Guard. |
| C-37B | Gulfstream | U.S. | Jet | Priority Airlift | 2017 | 1 | Priority Airlift for high-ranking members of the Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Coast Guard. |
| HC-130H Hercules | Lockheed Martin | U.S. | Turboprop | Search and rescue | 1974 | 14 | Most have been removed from service and are being replaced by HC-130J aircraft. Seven were turned over to the United States Forest Service to be converted to aerial firefighting tankers. |
| HC-130J Hercules | Lockheed Martin | U.S. | Turboprop | Search and rescue | 2003 | 12 | More on order, currently being manufactured to replace HC-130H. |
| HC-144A Ocean Sentry | Airbus | U.S. Spain |
Turboprop | Search and rescue | 2009 | 15 | |
| HC-144B Minotaur | Airbus | U.S. Spain |
Turboprop | Search and rescue | 2016 | 3 | Minotaur upgrade of HC-144A aircraft includes advance navigation and search and rescue equipment. |
| MH-60T Jayhawk | Sikorsky | U.S. | Helicopter | Medium Range Recovery (MRR) | 1990 | 51 | may remain in service until 2035 |
| MH-65E Dolphin | Eurocopter | U.S. France |
Helicopter | Short Range Recovery (SRR) | 1984 | 46 | Upgraded version of MH-65D with advanced avionics and search and rescue equipment |
Weapons
[edit]
Naval guns
[edit]Most Coast Guard Cutters have one or more naval gun systems installed, including:
- The Oto Melara 76 mm, a radar-guided computer controlled gun system that is used on Medium Endurance Cutters. The 3-inch gun's high rate of fire and availability of specialized ammunition make it a multi-purpose gun capable of anti-shipping, anti-aircraft, ground support, and short-range anti-missile defense.
- The MK 110 57 mm gun, a radar-guided computer controlled variant of the Bofors 57 mm gun. It is used on the Legend-class cutter, also known as the National Security Cutter (NSC). It is a multi-purpose gun capable of anti-shipping, anti-aircraft, and short-range anti-missile defense. The stealth mount has a reduced radar profile. Also, the gun has a small radar mounted on the gun barrel to measure muzzle velocity for fire control purposes and can change ammunition types instantly due to a dual-feed system. It can also be operated/fired manually using a joystick and video camera (mounted on gun).
- The Mk 38 Mod 0 weapons system consists of an M242 Bushmaster 25mm chain gun and the Mk 88 Mod 0 machine gun mount. A manned system, its gyro-stabilization compensates for the pitching deck. It provides ships with defensive and offensive gunfire capability for the engagement of a variety of surface targets. Designed primarily as a close-range defensive measure, it provides protection against patrol boats, floating mines, and various shore-based targets.
- The Mk 38 Mod 2 weapons system is a remotely operated Mk 38 with an electronic optical sight, laser range-finder, FLIR, a more reliable feeding system, all of which enhance the weapon systems capabilities and accuracy.
- The Phalanx CIWS (pronounced "sea-wiz") is a close-in weapon system for defense against aircraft and anti-ship missiles. it can also be used against a variety of surface targets. Consisting of a radar-guided 20 mm 6-barreled M61 Vulcan cannon mounted on a swiveling base, it is used on the Coast Guard's National Security Cutters. This system can operate autonomously against airborne threats or may be manually operated with the use of electronic optical sight, laser range-finder and FLIR systems against surface targets.
- The Sea PROTECTOR MK50 is a remotely controlled gyro-stabilized M2 .50 caliber heavy machine gun. The sight package includes a daylight video camera, a thermal camera and an eye-safe laser rangefinder operated by a joystick. It is also furnished with a fully integrated fire control system that provides ballistic correction. The Mk50s are used on only four Marine Protector-class Cutters, the USCGC Sea Fox (WPB-87374), USCGC Sea Devil (WPB-87368), USCGC Sea Dragon (WPB-87367) and USCGC Sea Dog (WPB-87373)
Small arms and light weapons
[edit]
The U.S. Coast Guard uses a wide variety of small arms and light weapons that include:
| Name | Country of origin | Type | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Colt Gold Match M1911 | Semi-automatic pistol | EIC Competition Use | |
| Colt M16A4 | Assault rifle | ||
| Glock 19 Gen 5 MOS | Semi-automatic pistol | Standard issue | |
| Remington 870P | Shotgun | ||
| Colt M4 | Assault rifle | ||
| Close Quarters Battle Receiver | |||
| M14 Tactical | Battle rifle | ||
| Mk 11 Mod 2 precision rifle | Sniper rifle | ||
| Barrett M107 .50-caliber rifle | Used by marksmen from the Helicopter Interdiction Tactical Squadron and Law Enforcement Detachments to disable the engines on fleeing boats. | ||
| M240 machine gun | General-purpose machine gun | Standard issue | |
| Mk 19 40mm grenade launcher | Grenade launcher[114] |
Symbols
[edit]Core values
[edit]The Coast Guard, like the other armed services of the United States, has a set of core values that serve as basic ethical guidelines for all Coast Guard active duty, reservists, auxiliarists, and civilians. The Coast Guard Core Values are:
Honor: Integrity is our standard. We demonstrate uncompromising ethical conduct and moral behavior in all of our personal actions. We are loyal and accountable to the public trust.
Respect: We value our diverse workforce. We treat each other with fairness, dignity, and compassion. We encourage individual opportunity and growth. We encourage creativity through empowerment. We work as a team.
Devotion to Duty: We are professionals, military and civilian, who seek responsibility, accept accountability, and are committed to the successful achievement of our organizational goals. We exist to serve. We serve with pride.
The Guardian Ethos
[edit]In 2008, the Coast Guard introduced the Guardian Ethos. As the commandant, Admiral Allen noted in a message to all members of the Coast Guard: [The Ethos] "defines the essence of the Coast Guard," and is the "contract the Coast Guard and its members make with the nation and its citizens."[116]
The Coast Guard Ethos
[edit]In an ALCOAST message effective 1 December 2011 the Commandant, Admiral Papp, directed that the language of Guardian Ethos be superseded by the Coast Guard Ethos in an effort to use terminology that would help with the identity of personnel serving in the Coast Guard.[117] The term coast guardsman is the correct form of address used in Title 14 USC and is the form that has been used historically. This changed the line in the Guardian Ethos "I am a Guardian." to become "I am a Coast Guardsman."[118]
The Ethos is:
In Service to our Nation
With Honor, Respect, and Devotion to Duty
We protect
We defend
We save
We are Semper Paratus
We are the United States Coast Guard
— The Coast Guard Ethos[84]
Creed of the United States Coast Guardsman
[edit]The "Creed of the United States Coast Guardsman" was written by Vice Admiral Harry G. Hamlet, who served as Commandant of the Coast Guard from 1932 to 1936.[119]
I am proud to be a United States Coast Guardsman.
I revere that long line of expert seamen who by their devotion to duty and sacrifice of self have made it possible for me to be a member of a service honored and respected, in peace and in war, throughout the world.
I never, by word or deed, will bring reproach upon the fair name of my service, nor permit others to do so unchallenged.
I will cheerfully and willingly obey all lawful orders.
I will always be on time to relieve, and shall endeavor to do more, rather than less, than my share.
I will always be at my station, alert and attending to my duties.
I shall, so far as I am able, bring to my seniors solutions, not problems.
I shall live joyously, but always with due regard for the rights and privileges of others.
I shall endeavor to be a model citizen in the community in which I live.
I shall sell life dearly to an enemy of my country, but give it freely to rescue those in peril.
With God's help, I shall endeavor to be one of His noblest Works...
A UNITED STATES COAST GUARDSMAN.
— Creed of the United States Coast Guardsman[120]
"You have to go out, but you don't have to come back!"
[edit]This unofficial motto of the Coast Guard dates to an 1899 United States Lifesaving Service regulation, which states in part: "In attempting a rescue, ... he will not desist from his efforts until by actual trial, the impossibility of effecting a rescue is demonstrated. The statement of the keeper that he did not try to use the boat because the sea or surf was too heavy will not be accepted, unless attempts to launch it were actually made and failed."[121]
Coast Guard ensign
[edit]

The Coast Guard ensign (flag) was first flown by the Revenue Cutter Service in 1799 to distinguish revenue cutters from merchant ships. A 1 August 1799 order issued by Secretary of the Treasury Oliver Wolcott Jr. specified that the Ensign would be "sixteen perpendicular stripes (for the number of states in the United States at the time), alternate red and white, the union of the ensign to be the arms of the United States in a dark blue on a white field."[122]
This ensign became familiar in American waters and served as the sign of authority for the Revenue Cutter Service until the early 20th century. The ensign was originally intended to be flown only on revenue cutters and boats connected with the Customs Service but over the years it was found flying atop custom houses as well, and the practice became a requirement in 1874. On 7 June 1910, President William Howard Taft issued an executive order adding an emblem to (or "defacing") the ensign flown by the Revenue cutters to distinguish it from what is now called the Customs Ensign flown from the custom houses. The emblem was changed to the official seal of the Coast Guard in 1927.[123][124]
The purpose of the ensign is to allow ship captains to easily recognize those vessels having legal authority to stop and board them. It is flown only as a symbol of law enforcement authority and is never carried as a parade standard.[125]
Coast Guard standard
[edit]The Coast Guard standard is used in parades and carries the battle honors of the Coast Guard. It was derived from the jack of the Coast Guard ensign which was flown by revenue cutters. The emblem is a blue eagle from the coat of arms of the United States on a white field. Above the eagle are the words "United States Coast Guard" below the eagle is the motto, "Semper Paratus" and the inscription "1790."[126]

Service Mark ("Racing Stripe")
[edit]The Racing Stripe, officially known as the Service Mark, was designed in 1964 by the industrial design office of Raymond Loewy Associates to give the Coast Guard a distinctive, modern image. Loewy had designed the colors for the Air Force One fleet for Jackie Kennedy. President Kennedy was so impressed with his work, he suggested that the entire Federal Government needed his make-over and suggested that he start with the Coast Guard.[127][128] The stripes are canted at a 64-degree angle, coincidentally the year the Racing Stripe was designed.[129]
The racing stripe is borne by Coast Guard cutters, aircraft, and many boats. First used and placed into official usage as of 6 April 1967, it consists of a narrow blue stripe, a narrow white stripe between, and a broad CG red bar with the Coast Guard shield centered.[9][130] Red-hulled icebreaker cutters and most HH-65/MH-65 helicopters (i.e., those with a red fuselage) bear a narrow blue stripe, a narrow empty stripe the color of the fuselage (an implied red stripe), and broad white bar, with the Coast Guard shield centered. Conversely, black-hulled cutters (such as buoy tenders and inland construction tenders) use the standard racing stripe. Auxiliary vessels maintained by the Coast Guard also carry the Racing Stripe, but in inverted colors (i.e., broad blue stripe with narrow white and CG red stripes) and the Auxiliary shield. Similar racing stripe designs have been adopted for the use of other coast guards and maritime authorities and many other law enforcement and rescue agencies.[Note 5]
Uniforms
[edit]
For most of the Coast Guard's history, its uniforms largely mirrored the style of U.S. Navy uniforms, distinguishable only by their insignia. In 1974, under the leadership of Admiral Chester R. Bender, the initial versions of the current Coast Guard Service Dress Blue and Tropical uniforms were introduced. This represented a major departure from many common conventions in naval and maritime uniforms. Notably, "Bender's Blues" was a common service dress uniform for all ranks, dispensing with the sailor suit and sailor cap formerly worn by enlisted members.[131] Rank insignia remained consistent with the naval pattern and some distinctly-nautical items such as the pea coat, officer's sword, and dress white uniforms remained.[131]
Today, the Coast Guard's uniforms remain among the simplest of any branch of the armed forces, with fewer total uniforms and uniform variants than the other armed services. There are only three uniforms that typically serve as standard uniforms of the day—the Operational Dress Uniform, Tropical Blue, and Service Dress Blue (Bravo).[132]
Coast Guard Reserve
[edit]
The United States Coast Guard Reserve is the reserve military force of the Coast Guard.[133] The Coast Guard Reserve was founded on 19 February 1941. The Coast Guard has 8700 reservists[82] who normally drill two days a month and an additional 12 days of active duty each year, although many perform additional drill and active duty periods, to include those mobilized to extended active duty. Coast Guard reservists possess the same training and qualifications as their active duty counterparts, and as such, can be found augmenting active duty Coast Guard units every day.[citation needed]
During the Vietnam War and shortly thereafter, the Coast Guard considered abandoning the reserve program, but the force was instead reoriented into force augmentation, where its principal focus was not just reserve operations, but to add to the readiness and mission execution of every-day active duty personnel.[134]
Since 11 September 2001, reservists have been activated and served on tours of active duty, to include deployments to the Persian Gulf and also as parts of Department of Defense combatant commands such as the U.S. Northern and Central Commands. Coast Guard Port Security Units are entirely staffed with reservists, except for five to seven active duty personnel. Additionally, most of the staffing the Coast Guard provides to the Navy Expeditionary Combat Command are reservists.[135]
The Reserve is managed by the Assistant Commandant for Reserve, Rear Admiral James M. Kelly, USCG.[136]
Women in the Coast Guard
[edit]
There have been women in the United States Coast Guard since 1918, and women continue to serve in it today.[137][138][139]
During World War I, in January 1918, radio and telegraph operator Myrtle Hazard enlisted as an electrician. She was the only woman to serve during the war and she is the namesake of USCGC Myrtle Hazard .[140] While some newspapers reported that twin sisters Genevieve and Lucille Baker were the first women to serve in the Coast Guard, their attempt to enlist was rejected.[141]
Coast Guard Auxiliary
[edit]
The United States Coast Guard Auxiliary is the uniformed, civilian volunteer component of the United States Coast Guard, created on 23 June 1939 by an act of Congress.[142] Although it is a civilian organization, it was originally named the "United States Coast Guard Reserve" and was later re-named the "United States Coast Guard Auxiliary" on 19 February 1941 when a military reserve force for the Coast Guard was created. As part of "Team Coast Guard" (the term used to collectively describe all active, reserve, auxiliary, and civilian employees), the auxiliary carries out, or assists in, nearly all of the Coast Guard's noncombatant and non-law enforcement missions.[143] Auxiliarists are subject to direction from the commandant of the Coast Guard. As of 2022, there were approximately 26,000 members of the U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary.[144]
Coast Guard policy has assigned many of its duties related to recreational boating safety to the Auxiliary, including public boating safety education and outreach. This includes offering boating skills courses, liaising with marine-related businesses at the local level, and providing voluntary Vessel Safety Checks (formerly called Courtesy Examinations) to the public.[145] Additionally, Auxiliarists use their own vessels, boats, and aircraft (once registered as Coast Guard facilities) to provide operational support to the Coast Guard by conducting safety patrols, assisting in search and rescue missions, inspecting aids to navigation, and performing other tasks on behalf of the Coast Guard.[citation needed]
Prior to 1997, Auxiliarists were largely limited to activities supporting recreational boating safety. In 1997, however, new legislation authorized the Auxiliary to participate in any and all Coast Guard missions except direct military and direct law enforcement.[146] Auxiliarists may directly augment active duty Coast Guard personnel in non-combat, non-law enforcement roles (e.g. radio communications watch stander, interpreter, cook, etc.) and may assist active duty personnel in inspecting commercial vessels and maintaining aids-to-navigation. Auxiliarists may support the law enforcement and homeland security missions of the Coast Guard but may not directly participate (make arrests, etc.), and Auxiliarists are not permitted to carry a weapon while serving in any Auxiliary capacity.[citation needed][147]
Medals and honors
[edit]One coast guardsman, Douglas Albert Munro, has earned the Medal of Honor, the highest military award of the United States.[148] Fifty-five coast guardsmen have earned the Navy Cross and numerous men and women have earned the Distinguished Flying Cross.[citation needed]
The highest peacetime decoration awarded within the Coast Guard is the Homeland Security Distinguished Service Medal; prior to the transfer of the Coast Guard to the Department of Homeland Security, the highest peacetime decoration was the Department of Transportation Distinguished Service Medal. The highest unit award available is the Presidential Unit Citation.[149]
In wartime, members of the Coast Guard are eligible to receive the Navy version of the Medal of Honor. A Coast Guard Medal of Honor is authorized but has not yet been developed or issued.[150]
In May 2006, at the Change of Command ceremony when Admiral Thad Allen took over as Commandant, President George W. Bush awarded the entire Coast Guard, including the Coast Guard Auxiliary, the Coast Guard Presidential Unit Citation with hurricane device, for its efforts during and after Hurricane Katrina and Tropical Storm Rita.[151]
Notable coast guardsmen
[edit]Numerous celebrities have served in the Coast Guard including tennis player Jack Kramer, golfer Arnold Palmer, All Star baseball player Sid Gordon, boxer Jack Dempsey; surfer and inventor Tom Blake; musicians Kai Winding, Rudy Vallee, Derroll Adams, and Tom Waits; actors Buddy Ebsen, Sid Caesar, Victor Mature, Richard Cromwell, Alan Hale Jr., William Hopper, Beau Bridges, Jeff Bridges, Cesar Romero; author Alex Haley; and Senator Claiborne Pell.
Vice Admiral Thad Allen in 2005 was named Principal Federal Officer to oversee recovery efforts in the Gulf Region after Hurricane Katrina. After promotion to Admiral, on the eve of his retirement as Commandant, Allen again received national visibility after being named National Incident Commander overseeing the response efforts of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill.
Former Coast Guard officers have been appointed to numerous civilian government offices. After retiring as Commandant of the Coast Guard in 2002, Admiral James Loy went on to serve as United States deputy secretary of homeland security. After their respective Coast Guard careers, Carlton Skinner served as the first civilian governor of Guam; G. William Miller, 65th secretary of the treasury, and retired vice admiral Harvey E. Johnson Jr. served as Deputy Administrator and Chief Operating Officer of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) under President George W. Bush. Rear Admiral Stephen W. Rochon was appointed by President George W. Bush to serve as the director of the executive residence and White House chief usher, beginning service on 12 March 2007, and continued to serve in the same capacity under President Barack Obama.
Two Coast Guard aviators, Commander Bruce E. Melnick and Captain Daniel C. Burbank, have served as NASA astronauts. Coast Guard Reserve commander Andre Douglas was selected in 2021 to join NASA Astronaut Group 23.[152]
Signalman First Class Douglas Albert Munro was awarded the Medal of Honor posthumously, and is the only coast guardsman to ever receive this honor.
Associations
[edit]Coast Guard Aviation Association
[edit]Those who have piloted or flown in Coast Guard aircraft under official flight orders may join the Coast Guard Aviation Association which was formerly known as the "Ancient Order of the Pterodactyl" ("Flying Since the World was Flat"). The Ancient Albatross Award is presented to the active duty USCG member who qualified as an aviator earlier than any other person who is still serving. Separate enlisted and officer awards are given.[153][154]
Coast Guard CW Operators Association
[edit]The Coast Guard CW Operators Association (CGCWOA) is a membership organization comprising primarily former members of the United States Coast Guard who held the enlisted rating of Radioman (RM) or Telecommunications Specialist (TC), and who employed International Morse Code (CW) in their routine communications duties on Coast Guard cutters and at shore stations.[155]
USCG Chief Petty Officers Association
[edit]Members of this organization unite to assist members and dependents in need, assist with Coast Guard recruiting efforts, support the aims and goals of the Coast Guard Chief Petty Officers Academy, keep informed on Coast Guard matters, and assemble for social amenities; and include Chief, Senior Chief, and Master Chief Petty Officers, active, reserve and retired. Membership is also open to all Chief Warrant Officers and Officers who have served as a Chief Petty Officer.[156]
USCG Chief Warrant and Warrant Officers Association (CWOA)
[edit]Established in 1929, the Chief Warrant and Warrant Officers Association, United States Coast Guard (CWOA) represents Coast Guard warrant and chief warrant officers (active, reserve and retired) to the Congress, White House and the Department of Homeland Security. Additionally, the association communicates with the Coast Guard leadership on matters of concern to Coast Guard chief warrant officers.[157]
In popular culture
[edit]The U.S. Coast Guard maintains a Motion Picture and Television Office (MOPIC) in Hollywood, California, along with its sister services at the Department of Defense dedicated to enhancing public awareness and understanding of the Coast Guard, its people, and its missions through a cooperative effort with the entertainment industry.[158][159]
In film
[edit]- Don Winslow of the Coast Guard (1943), based on the Don Winslow of the Navy comic strip, depicts a Coast Guard intelligence officer hunting down Japanese spies on the west coast of the United States during WWII.
- Fighting Coast Guard (1951), depicts Coast Guard trained to help win WWII.[159]
- The Boatniks (1970), a slapstick comedy depicting a clumsy Coast Guard ensign newly assigned as skipper of a cutter in the Newport Beach area.
- The Guardian (2006), depicts the Aviation Survival Technician (AST) program.[160]
- Pain & Gain (2013), starring Dwayne Johnson and Mark Wahlberg, depicted the Coast Guard Deployable Specialized Forces in action.[159]
- The Finest Hours (2016), A film portraying the rescue of the crew of SS Pendleton by coxswain Bernard C. Webber and the three other crewmen of Coast Guard Motor Lifeboat CG 36500.[159]
- Deepwater Horizon (2016), depicts the events of 20 April 2010 when the mobile drilling platform Deepwater Horizon suffered a mass casualty explosion that resulted in the deaths of 11 crew members. The film also depicts the Coast Guard's coordination and response in the immediate aftermath of the explosion.[161][162]
On television
[edit]The Coast Guard has been featured in several television series, including:
- Coast Guard Alaska: Search and Rescue, a series on The Weather Channel that features a Coast Guard search-and-rescue unit based in Kodiak, Alaska. Several series have spun off the original to focus on units based in Cape Disappointment and Florida.[163][164][165]
See also
[edit]U.S. Coast Guard
[edit]- AMVER
- Badges of the United States Coast Guard
- Chaplain of the United States Coast Guard
- Coast Guard Day
- Coast Guard Intelligence
- Code of Federal Regulations, Title 33
- Joint Maritime Training Center
- List of United States Coast Guard cutters
- List of United States Coast Guard stations
- Maritime Law Enforcement Academy
- Maritime Security Risk Analysis Model
- MARSEC
- National Data Buoy Center
- Naval militias in the United States
- North Pacific Coast Guard Agencies Forum
- Patrol Forces Southwest Asia
- SPARS
- United States Coast Guard Legal Division
- United States Coast Guard Police
- United States Coast Guard Research & Development Center
- U.S. National Ice Center
Related agencies
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Although the U.S. Navy lists its founding as 1775 with the formation of the Continental Navy, the U.S. Navy was entirely disbanded in 1785. The modern U.S. Navy in its present form was founded in 1794.
- ^ The number of uniformed personnel currently authorized by component. The number actually serving is usually less than the number authorized due to personnel turnover and recruitment efforts that have not filled all available vacancies.
- ^ The term Coast Guardsman is the official term used by the U.S. Coast Guard to refer to a member regardless of the person's gender. In an ALCOAST message effective 1 December 2011 the Commandant, Admiral Papp, directed that the language of the Guardian Ethos be superseded by the Coast Guard Ethos in an effort to use terminology that would help with the identity of personnel serving in the Coast Guard. The term Coast Guardsman is the correct form of address used in Title 14 USC and is the form that has been used historically.[84]
- ^
- Master Chief Petty Officer of the Coast Guard Reserve Force
- Command Master Chief Petty Officers for the Deputy Commandants
- Area Command Master Chief Petty Officers
- ^ For example, the National Park Service operates various vessels with a green racing stripe, as seen at Channel Islands National Park#Vessels (image) or at Sleeping Bear Dunes (image). Other agencies include the Virginia Beach Police Department Marine Patrol, the China Coast Guard, the Turkish Coast Guard, Baltimore Police Marine Unit, and the US Park Police.
References
[edit]- ^ "Coast Guard History: Frequently Asked Questions – When was the Coast Guard (and its forerunners) established and what is its organizational history?". Coast Guard Historian's Office. Archived from the original on 30 January 2018. Retrieved 29 March 2018.
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Further reading
[edit]- Dolbow, Jim (2017). The Coast Guardsman's Manual (11th ed.). Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, Maryland. ISBN 978-1682471890.
- Coast Guard: Observations on Progress Made and Challenges Faced in Developing and Implementing a Common Operational Picture: Testimony before the Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation, Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, House of Representatives Government Accountability Office
- Rankin, Robert H.; Rubin, Norman N. (June 1959). "The Story of Coast Guard Aviation" (PDF). Proceedings. Vol. 85, no. 6. Annapolis, Md.: U.S. Naval Institute. pp. 86–99. ISSN 0041-798X. Archived (PDF) from the original on 15 January 2025. Retrieved 23 January 2025.
- Rankin, Robert H.; Rubin, Norman N. (1964) [Reprinted from Proceedings by permission; Copyright © 1959 by U.S. Naval Institute]. The Story of Coast Guard Aviation (PDF). (As brought up to date by Public Information Division, U.S. Coast Guard). Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. Archived (PDF) from the original on 16 January 2025. Retrieved 23 January 2025.
External links
[edit]- Official website
- Tilley, J. A. "A History of Women in the Coast Guard". U.S. Coast Guard Historian's Office. Retrieved 10 May 2020. Women & the U. S. Coast Guard
- "Women in the U. S. Coast Guard: Moments in History". U.S. Coast Guard Historian's Office. 4 December 2019. Retrieved 10 May 2020.
- Coast Guard in the Federal Register
- Reports on the Coast Guard, Department of Homeland Security Office of Inspector General
- A Cooperative Strategy for 21st Century Seapower [1] Archived 30 April 2020 at the Wayback Machine
- U.S. Coast Guard Videos
- Military search and social network for current and former members of the Army, Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard Archived 12 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine
- U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary Website
- Coast Guard Channel Archived 2 May 2021 at the Wayback Machine
- Coast Guard News Archived 5 May 2021 at the Wayback Machine
- Congressional Research Service (CRS) Reports regarding the U.S. Coast Guard CRS Search Results Archived 5 November 2021 at the Wayback Machine
- Greg Trauthwein (17 March 2014). "USCG ... Past, Present & Future". Maritime Reporter and Marine News magazines online. Retrieved 26 February 2015.
- US Coast Guard Network Group on LinkedIn
- "America's Waterway Watch". U.S. Coast Guard Office of Port & Facility Compliance. 26 June 2017. Retrieved 10 May 2020.
- United States Coast Guard at the Wayback Machine (archived 29 January 1997)
United States Coast Guard
View on GrokipediaMission and Legal Authority
Core Statutory Missions
The core statutory missions of the United States Coast Guard are established in 14 U.S.C. § 2, which outlines the service's primary functions while operating under the Department of Homeland Security. These encompass enforcing or assisting in the enforcement of applicable federal laws on, under, and over the high seas and U.S. jurisdictional waters; conducting maritime air surveillance and interdiction to support law enforcement; administering regulations to promote safety of life and property on those waters for matters not delegated to other departments; developing, maintaining, and operating aids to navigation, icebreaking services, and rescue facilities with attention to national defense needs; providing icebreaking services abroad pursuant to international agreements; and sustaining readiness to transfer to the Department of the Navy during wartime or at presidential direction.[9] These foundational duties translate into 11 operational statutory missions, as codified in section 888 of the Homeland Security Act of 2002 (Public Law 107-296, 116 Stat. 2135), which detail the Coast Guard's peacetime responsibilities under Homeland Security while preserving its defense role.[6] The missions emphasize maritime domain awareness, enforcement, and protection, executed through a combination of cutters, aircraft, boats, and personnel across U.S. waters and international approaches. In fiscal year 2022, the Coast Guard allocated resources across these missions, conducting over 18,000 search and rescue cases and interdicting more than 200 metric tons of narcotics.[10] The 11 missions, grouped under maritime safety, security, and stewardship roles, include:- Search and Rescue: Responding to distress signals to prevent loss of life or injury and minimize property damage at sea, often in coordination with international partners; the service maintains a fleet including over 200 cutters and 1,650 smaller boats for this purpose.[11]
- Aids to Navigation: Establishing, operating, and maintaining buoys, lighthouses, and electronic systems to guide maritime traffic, with the Coast Guard managing approximately 50,000 aids nationwide.[11]
- Marine Safety: Overseeing vessel inspections, licensing, and standards to ensure secure and environmentally sound commercial shipping, including enforcement of the Commercial Fishing Industry Vessel Safety Act of 1988.[11]
- Living Marine Resources: Protecting fisheries through patrols and enforcement of laws like the Magnuson-Stevens Act, targeting illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing that depletes stocks.[11]
- Marine Environmental Protection: Preventing and responding to oil spills and hazardous releases under the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, with capabilities including the National Strike Force for rapid cleanup deployment.[11]
- Ice Operations: Conducting domestic and polar icebreaking to facilitate commerce and scientific missions, operating assets like the heavy icebreaker USCGC Polar Star, commissioned in 1976 and modernized for Arctic and Antarctic operations.[11]
- Ports, Waterways, and Coastal Security: Securing infrastructure against threats including terrorism and smuggling, via harbor patrols and risk assessments mandated post-9/11.[11]
- Drug Interdiction: Intercepting narcotics trafficking in collaboration with agencies like the Drug Enforcement Administration, with operations yielding over 500 arrests and seizures valued at billions annually in recent years.[11][10]
- Undocumented Migrant Interdiction: Repelling illegal maritime migration to enforce immigration laws, including operations in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific where thousands are interdicted yearly.[11]
- Other Law Enforcement: Addressing violations such as illegal fishing, piracy, and sanctions evasion on the high seas under authorities like 14 U.S.C. § 522.[11]
- Defense Readiness: Preparing for armed service integration, including training with the Navy and maintaining deployable units for combat support, as required by 14 U.S.C. § 3.[11]
Role in National Defense and Armed Forces Integration
The United States Coast Guard is established by statute as a military service and a branch of the armed forces at all times.[12] It operates as a service in the Department of Homeland Security during peacetime but transfers to the operational control of the Department of the Navy upon declaration of war by Congress or at the direction of the President.[13] This dual structure, codified in 14 U.S.C. §§ 101 and 3, enables the Coast Guard to maintain defense readiness while fulfilling homeland security responsibilities.[12][13] In peacetime, the Coast Guard executes defense readiness missions to support the national military strategy and Department of Defense operations, including securing airspace over Washington, D.C., conducting high-endurance patrols, and providing forces for joint exercises.[11] Specific defense operations encompass maritime interception and interdiction, military environmental response, and port operations security and defense.[14] These activities ensure the service's personnel, vessels, and aircraft remain capable of rapid integration with Department of Defense forces.[15] The Coast Guard integrates with the other armed forces through assignment to unified combatant commands, where its personnel fill key joint billets, such as a two-star admiral serving as J-3 at United States Southern Command.[16] It participates in joint operations, including integrated naval training and exercises with commands like Alaskan Command, enhancing deterrence and interoperability.[17] Historically, during World War I and World War II, the service transferred to the Navy, with cutters escorting convoys, conducting anti-submarine warfare, and supporting amphibious landings.[18] This framework positions the Coast Guard as a versatile component of the joint force, contributing specialized maritime capabilities to national defense.[1]Law Enforcement and Regulatory Powers
The United States Coast Guard exercises extensive law enforcement authority under Title 14 of the United States Code, which empowers its personnel to enforce or assist in enforcing all applicable federal laws on, under, and over the high seas and waters subject to United States jurisdiction.[19] This statutory mandate, outlined in 14 U.S.C. § 102, encompasses promoting the safety of navigation and lifesaving, protecting life, property, and natural resources, and addressing threats such as smuggling, illegal migration, and environmental violations.[19] Complementing this, 14 U.S.C. § 522 authorizes Coast Guard commissioned officers, warrant officers, and petty officers to conduct inquiries, examinations, inspections, searches, seizures, and arrests upon those waters for law enforcement purposes.[20] A core component of this authority is the Coast Guard's unqualified right to board and inspect vessels subject to U.S. jurisdiction, which includes U.S.-flagged ships, foreign vessels in U.S. waters, and boats on inland navigable waterways, without requiring probable cause or a warrant for routine safety and compliance checks.[21] These boardings, governed by protocols under 14 U.S.C. § 522, allow examination of vessel documentation, equipment, crew qualifications, and cargo to verify adherence to federal regulations on safety, pollution prevention, and security.[20] Violations discovered during such inspections can lead to citations, vessel detentions, or criminal referrals, with enforcement actions supported by the ability of Coast Guard members to carry firearms and execute warrants under 14 U.S.C. § 523.[22] In the realm of regulatory powers, the Coast Guard administers and enforces standards for maritime commerce, including vessel construction, operation, and manning requirements under Title 46 of the U.S. Code and associated Code of Federal Regulations (e.g., 33 CFR and 46 CFR).[23] This includes issuing certificates of inspection for commercial vessels, regulating port safety and security zones via captains of the port, and implementing international conventions such as the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS).[23] The agency also oversees environmental protection by enforcing the Act to Prevent Pollution from Ships (MARPOL) and the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, conducting inspections to prevent illegal discharges and responding to spills with regulatory penalties.[23] The Coast Guard Investigative Service (CGIS), established as the primary criminal investigative arm, further bolsters these powers through specialized probes into felonies like drug trafficking and fraud, deriving its authority from Title 14 U.S.C. and operating alongside other federal agencies in joint task forces.[24] In fiscal year 2023, Coast Guard law enforcement operations resulted in over 5,000 boardings and the seizure of more than 200 tons of narcotics, underscoring the practical scope of these statutory tools in interdicting threats to maritime security.[23]Historical Development
Founding and Early Revenue Cutter Service (1790–1915)
The United States Revenue Cutter Service originated from an Act of Congress passed on August 4, 1790, which authorized the construction of ten armed revenue cutters to enforce tariff collection and suppress smuggling along the nation's coasts, providing essential funding for the post-Revolutionary War federal government.[25] This measure was proposed by Alexander Hamilton, the first Secretary of the Treasury, who argued in reports to Congress that a small fleet of agile vessels—each approximately 40 to 50 tons, armed with light guns, and crewed by four officers and about 30 enlisted men—could effectively patrol key ports from Portsmouth, New Hampshire, to Savannah, Georgia, without the expense of a large navy.[26] The service, initially termed the Revenue-Marine, operated under the Treasury Department and focused primarily on intercepting vessels evading customs duties, a critical task given that tariffs constituted nearly 90% of federal revenue in the 1790s.[27] The first cutters entered service in 1791, with the USRC Massachusetts, built at Newburyport, Massachusetts, as the inaugural vessel, followed by others such as the USRC Diligence.[25] Early operations emphasized revenue protection and incidental law enforcement, including the suppression of piracy; for instance, in 1793, the Diligence forced a pirate sloop aground in Chesapeake Bay, marking one of the service's initial combat actions.[25] By 1796, cutters were also enforcing health and quarantine laws under congressional acts.[25] During the Quasi-War with France (1798–1800), an undeclared naval conflict, several cutters were transferred to Navy control and proved effective against French privateers, capturing 18 prizes by 1799, including the notable action by USRC Pickering against the privateer L'Egypte Conquise on October 18, 1799.[25] In the War of 1812, the service's approximately 16 cutters supported naval efforts by blockading ports, pursuing British privateers, and conducting search-and-rescue operations, though losses included the Surveyor and Jefferson in engagements off Virginia and Maine.[28] Throughout the mid-19th century, the Revenue Cutter Service expanded amid growing trade and territorial challenges, with the fleet increasing to address smuggling along expanded coastlines following the Louisiana Purchase and westward expansion.[27] Cutters participated in the Mexican-American War (1846–1848) by providing blockade support and transport, while routine duties evolved to include humanitarian rescues, laying the groundwork for formal lifesaving roles.[29] The service was officially renamed the Revenue Cutter Service in 1863, reflecting its maturing structure with standardized officer ranks and training.[25] During the Civil War (1861–1865), its 24 cutters played a pivotal role in Union maritime operations, including the USRC Harriet Lane firing the first naval shot of the war on April 12, 1861, by shelling the merchant steamer Nashville at Charleston Harbor; most vessels remained loyal, enforcing blockades and seizing Confederate assets, though a few in Southern ports defected.[29][30] By the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the service modernized with steam-powered and steel-hulled cutters, extending operations to the Pacific and Alaska for revenue enforcement, sealing patrols, and Bering Sea expeditions, such as protecting fur seals on the Pribilof Islands starting in 1894.[30] Increasing involvement in lifesaving—informally since the 1830s and more systematically after the 1870s—highlighted overlapping missions with the separate U.S. Life-Saving Service, prompting efficiency reforms. This culminated in the Act of January 28, 1915, signed by President Woodrow Wilson, which merged the Revenue Cutter Service with the Life-Saving Service to form the United States Coast Guard, unifying maritime safety, enforcement, and defense functions under a single entity.[4]World Wars and Institutional Expansion (1915–1945)
On January 28, 1915, the U.S. Revenue Cutter Service and U.S. Lifesaving Service merged to form the United States Coast Guard under the Department of the Treasury, consolidating maritime enforcement, rescue, and navigation aid functions into a unified service.[7] This reorganization enabled expanded operational efficiency in peacetime duties such as smuggling interdiction and lifesaving along U.S. coasts. With the U.S. entry into World War I on April 6, 1917, the Coast Guard transferred to Navy operational control under "Plan One," marking its first large-scale combat integration.[31] Approximately 8,800 personnel served, including the service's first female and minority members in enlisted roles, conducting port security for major hubs like New York and Philadelphia—overseeing the loading of 1,700 ships with 345 million tons of explosives—convoy escorts, anti-submarine patrols, naval aviation support, and troop transports across the Atlantic.[31] Six cutters operated in European waters, with notable actions including the rescue of 42 survivors from the torpedoed British tanker Mirlo on August 16, 1918, earning Gold Lifesaving Medals; however, losses were severe, including the sinking of cutter Tampa on September 26, 1918, with 130 deaths, and five other vessels lost to enemy action or hazards, contributing to 211 total fatalities.[31] The service received two Navy Distinguished Service Medals and approximately 50 Navy Crosses for its efforts.[31] Following the Armistice on November 11, 1918, the Coast Guard reverted to Treasury control on January 28, 1919, resuming peacetime missions amid fiscal constraints that limited fleet modernization.[7] Institutional growth accelerated in the late interwar period; under Reorganization Plan No. I of 1939, the U.S. Lighthouse Service transferred to Coast Guard jurisdiction on July 1, 1939, adding comprehensive aids-to-navigation responsibilities, including maintenance of lighthouses, buoys, and tenders, thereby broadening the service's infrastructural role without immediate combat expansion.[32][33] Anticipating global conflict, the Coast Guard intensified training and vessel acquisitions by 1939, but U.S. entry into World War II on December 8, 1941—following the Pearl Harbor attack, where Coast Guard forces aided naval recovery—prompted full transfer to Navy command via Executive Order on November 1, 1941.[18] Personnel surged from about 29,000 in December 1941 to a peak of over 170,000, with nearly 250,000 total serving, including 10,000 women in the SPARs reserve component formed in November 1942; this expansion supported diverse roles such as Atlantic and Pacific convoy escorts (sinking 11 U-boats, including U-352 in 1942), amphibious assaults in every major U.S. landing from Guadalcanal (1942) to Normandy (D-Day, June 6, 1944), where Coast Guard-manned LSTs and LCIs transported troops and managed beachheads, port and beach security with 25,000 personnel patrolling 3,300 miles of coastline, search and rescue operations saving approximately 2,800 lives, and weather reconnaissance via dedicated stations.[34][18][18] Shipbuilding efforts exemplified wartime institutional scaling, with the Coast Guard constructing or manning over 1,441 vessels, including Treasury-class heavy cutters, 165-foot and 83-foot patrol cutters, and hundreds of landing craft; these assets enabled operations like the first U.S. naval capture of a German weather station by cutter Northland in September 1941 and heroic actions such as Signalman First Class Douglas Munro's Medal of Honor-earning evacuation of Marines under fire at Guadalcanal on September 27, 1942.[18][18] Despite successes, the service suffered losses, including the explosion of transport Serpens in January 1944 with 198 deaths, the highest single-incident toll.[18] By war's end in 1945, these experiences solidified the Coast Guard's dual peacetime-warfighting capacity, with advancements in technologies like LORAN navigation and early helicopter integration laying groundwork for postwar modernization.[18]Cold War Era and Modernization (1945–2001)
Following World War II, the United States Coast Guard reverted to peacetime operations under the Department of the Treasury on January 1, 1947, after serving under the Navy since 1941, focusing on maritime safety, law enforcement, and aids to navigation amid demobilization that reduced personnel from 174,000 to about 20,000 by 1946.[7] During the Korean War from 1950 to 1953, the Coast Guard supported United Nations efforts without deploying combat cutters but provided critical port security for over 8,500 members overseeing merchant marine loading of weapons and supplies, operated nine LORAN navigation stations in the Pacific for naval operations, and assisted in evacuations from the Korean Peninsula during the initial North Korean invasion.[35][36][37] In the 1950s and early 1960s, the Coast Guard pursued fleet modernization through the Fleet Renovation and Modernization (FRAM) program, upgrading World War II-era vessels like the 327-foot cutters for extended service, while commissioning new assets such as the 311-foot cutter Storis in 1949 for oceanographic surveys and the first Hamilton-class high-endurance cutters in 1967, equipped with advanced radar, helicopters, and anti-submarine capabilities to enhance search-and-rescue and law enforcement missions.[7][30] Helicopter integration advanced with the HH-52A Sea Guard introduced in 1963, enabling vertical lift for over-water rescues and enabling 5,000 landings on cutters by 1981.[7] The Vietnam War marked a peak in operational tempo from 1965 to 1973, with approximately 8,000 Coast Guardsmen serving in Southeast Asia, primarily through Coast Guard Squadron One deploying 82-foot Point-class patrol boats for Operation Market Time to interdict Viet Cong resupply by sea along the South Vietnamese coast, conducting over 1,000 interdictions and providing naval gunfire support while suffering 11 fatalities from hostile fire.[38][39][40] The service also managed port security units loading explosives, installed aids to navigation under fire, and trained the Vietnamese Navy on former U.S. cutters, with the cutter Sherman achieving the last U.S. warship sinking of an enemy vessel in 1971 by destroying a North Vietnamese trawler.[41][42] Post-Vietnam, the Coast Guard shifted emphasis to domestic law enforcement, emerging as the lead federal agency for maritime drug interdiction in 1976 amid rising smuggling, seizing its first major marijuana load in 1973 and escalating operations that captured over 29 million pounds of marijuana and 141,000 pounds of cocaine by 1990 through coordinated patrols, aircraft surveillance, and joint task forces.[43][44] Surge operations like Frontier Shield in 1996 interdicted over 20,000 pounds of cocaine in six months using cutters and helicopters, reflecting expanded authorities under the 1982 National Narcotics Border Interdiction System.[45][30] Polar operations persisted through Cold War demands, with Wind-class heavy icebreakers like Glacier supporting scientific expeditions and resupply to Antarctic stations until decommissioning in the late 1980s, while maintaining U.S. presence in Arctic waters for navigation and defense reconnaissance amid Soviet naval expansion.[46][47] The commissioning of the medium icebreaker Healy in 1999 bolstered research capabilities in polar regions, complementing heavy icebreaker Polar Star for annual McMurdo resupplies.[48] By the 1980s, transferred to the Department of Transportation in 1967 for operational alignment, the Coast Guard integrated advanced technologies like the HH-60 Jayhawk helicopter in 1990 for long-range SAR and pursued the Deepwater program initiated in the late 1990s to replace aging cutters and aircraft with networked systems for multi-mission flexibility, though early phases faced delays due to cost overruns.[7][49] Environmental response roles expanded, exemplified by leading the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill cleanup involving over 1,000 personnel and deploying containment booms across 10,000 miles of Alaskan shoreline.[30]Post-9/11 Realignment and Contemporary Operations (2001–Present)
Following the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the United States Coast Guard intensified maritime domain awareness and port security measures, establishing Maritime Safety and Security Teams (MSSTs) and the Maritime Security Response Team (MSRT) to counter potential threats to U.S. waterfronts and vessels.[50] These specialized units focused on high-risk port inspections, vessel boardings, and rapid response to terrorism indicators, reflecting a shift toward integrating counter-terrorism into core operations while maintaining traditional missions.[51] In response to the attacks, Congress enacted the Homeland Security Act of 2002, transferring the Coast Guard from the Department of Transportation to the newly formed Department of Homeland Security (DHS) effective March 1, 2003, to align its capabilities with domestic security priorities without diminishing its military role.[52] Under DHS, the service retained statutory authority to operate as an armed force under the Department of the Navy during wartime or by presidential order, enabling deployments such as Law Enforcement Detachments (LEDETs) and Patrol Forces Southwest Asia to support Operation Iraqi Freedom, where Coast Guard teams conducted over 2,000 vessel boardings in the Northern Persian Gulf to enforce maritime interdictions and secure oil terminals from 2003 onward.[53] This dual-hatting preserved operational flexibility for national defense while emphasizing homeland protection, including the implementation of the Maritime Transportation Security Act of 2002, which mandated vulnerability assessments and security plans for over 3,000 U.S. ports and facilities.[54] Modernization efforts post-transfer centered on the Integrated Deepwater System program, launched in 2002 as a 25-year, multi-billion-dollar initiative to replace aging cutters, aircraft, and communications systems with integrated platforms capable of multi-mission demands.[55] However, the program encountered significant challenges, including cost overruns exceeding initial estimates by billions, design flaws in early National Security Cutter builds, and contractor mismanagement by Integrated Coast Guard Systems (ICGS), a Lockheed Martin-Northrop Grumman joint venture, prompting the Coast Guard to assume direct oversight in 2007 and restructure acquisitions to prioritize proven assets like the Legend-class cutters.[56] By 2025, Deepwater deliverables included eight National Security Cutters operational for long-range patrols, though persistent funding shortfalls and sustainment issues limited full fleet recapitalization. Contemporary operations have emphasized counter-narcotics and migrant interdiction, with the Coast Guard seizing over 100,000 pounds of cocaine in the Eastern Pacific since early 2025 alone through initiatives like Operation Pacific Viper, averaging more than 1,600 pounds interdicted daily via cutter patrols and aviation support.[57] Migrant operations, particularly in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific, repatriated over 20,000 individuals in fiscal year 2024, balancing humanitarian search and rescue—responding to thousands of cases annually—with enforcement against illegal maritime crossings. In parallel, the service has expanded presence in strategic domains, deploying cutters to monitor foreign research vessels in the U.S. Arctic, where five Chinese-flagged ships were tracked in 2025 amid growing great-power competition, underscoring the Coast Guard's role in enforcing exclusive economic zone sovereignty and supporting freedom of navigation without direct military confrontation.[58] These efforts integrate with broader Indo-Pacific strategies, including joint exercises and patrols to deter illicit activities and assert U.S. interests against adversarial maritime expansion.[59]Organizational Structure
Command Hierarchy and Headquarters
The United States Coast Guard maintains its headquarters at 2703 Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue SE, Washington, D.C., 20593, on the St. Elizabeths West Campus, housing centralized command functions in a facility dedicated in May 2013.[60] This consolidation enhanced operational efficiency by integrating previously scattered offices in the National Capital Region.[61] In peacetime, the Coast Guard falls under the Department of Homeland Security, with authority delegated from the Secretary to the Commandant, the highest-ranking officer and service chief, appointed by the President with Senate confirmation for a four-year term renewable once.[62] The Commandant exercises general powers to execute maritime laws, maintain patrols, establish shore facilities, assign personnel and equipment, and conduct investigations as codified in 14 U.S.C. § 504.[63] During wartime or at presidential direction, operational control transfers to the Department of the Navy under 14 U.S.C. § 3, preserving administrative functions under Homeland Security. The Vice Commandant, also a four-star admiral, assists the Commandant and assumes duties in their absence, overseeing strategic planning and policy implementation. Two Deputy Commandants—one for Operations (DCO) and one for Mission Support (DCMS)—direct core functions: DCO manages operational policy, maritime security, and response missions, while DCMS handles acquisition, logistics, and human resources.[64] As of July 2025, headquarters reorganized to include a Chief of Staff position to streamline support for operational units.[65] Operational command flows through two area commands: Atlantic Area (Portsmouth, Virginia) and Pacific Area (Alameda, California), each led by a vice admiral, subdividing into districts, sectors, and stations for regional execution of missions.[64] This hierarchy ensures decentralized authority for rapid response while maintaining centralized policy direction from headquarters.[66]Operational Districts, Sectors, and Shore Infrastructure
The U.S. Coast Guard divides its operational responsibilities across nine districts, which function as intermediate echelons between the two area commands (Atlantic Area and Pacific Area) and subordinate units, providing oversight for missions including search and rescue, maritime security, and environmental protection within geographically defined areas.[67] These districts coordinate resources, enforce regulations, and respond to regional threats, with headquarters typically co-located with major sector commands. In July 2025, the Coast Guard renamed its numbered districts to geographic designations to better reflect their operational footprints and facilitate interagency collaboration, with regulatory updates formalized in October 2025.[68][69]| District Name | Headquarters Location | Primary Area of Responsibility |
|---|---|---|
| Northeast District | Boston, Massachusetts | New England coastline, including Maine to New Jersey, and portions of the Great Lakes approaches |
| East District | Portsmouth, Virginia | Mid-Atlantic seaboard from New Jersey to North Carolina, including Chesapeake Bay |
| Southeast District | Miami, Florida | Southeastern U.S. coast from South Carolina to Florida Keys, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands |
| Heartland District | New Orleans, Louisiana | Inland waterways, including the Mississippi River system, Gulf Intracoastal Waterway, and Western Rivers |
| Great Lakes District | Cleveland, Ohio | Great Lakes region, encompassing Lakes Superior, Michigan, Huron, Erie, and Ontario |
| Southwest District | Long Beach, California | Pacific Southwest coast from San Diego to San Francisco, including Hawaii approaches |
| Northwest District | Seattle, Washington | Pacific Northwest from Northern California to Washington, including Puget Sound and inland waters |
| Honolulu District | Honolulu, Hawaii | Hawaiian Islands and surrounding Exclusive Economic Zone |
| Alaska District | Juneau, Alaska | Alaskan coasts, Bering Sea, and Arctic waters |
Deployable Specialized Forces and Elite Units
The Deployable Specialized Forces (DSF) of the United States Coast Guard comprise specialized, rapidly deployable units trained for high-threat maritime security, counter-terrorism, law enforcement interdiction, and force protection missions, often in support of Department of Homeland Security and Department of Defense objectives.[76][77] These forces, functionally aligned under a flag officer reporting to an Area commander as of Force Design 2028 reforms, enable rapid response to national security threats, including port defense and expeditionary operations, with personnel drawn from active duty and reserve components.[77] DSF units emphasize interoperability with joint forces, maintaining readiness through specialized training in advanced combat marksmanship, close-quarters battle, and maritime interdiction.[78] Among DSF components, the Maritime Security Response Teams (MSRT) represent the Coast Guard's premier counter-terrorism capability, with MSRT East and MSRT West serving as short-notice alert forces for maritime interdiction, hostage rescue, and direct action against terrorist threats.[79][80] Established post-9/11 to address heightened homeland security needs, MSRT personnel deploy with advanced tactical equipment to support operational commanders and combatant commands, conducting exercises like Balikatan with allied forces for maritime threat neutralization.[80][81] Tactical Law Enforcement Teams (TACLET), including Law Enforcement Detachments (LEDET), specialize in high-risk boarding operations, anti-piracy actions, and drug interdiction, often embedding 8-11 member teams aboard U.S. Navy vessels for extended patrols.[82][83] With origins tracing to over 40 years of counter-narcotics missions, TACLET South and Pacific TACLET units execute alien expulsion flights, vessel pursuits, and joint operations, such as those supporting Coast Guard Cutter Kimball's 84-day Eastern Pacific patrol in 2025 that resulted in multiple interdictions.[83][84] Maritime Safety and Security Teams (MSST) focus on ports, waterways, and coastal security, deploying for force protection, search and rescue augmentation, and threat mitigation in high-traffic areas, with teams like MSST 91104 in Houston and MSST 91114 in Miami maintaining readiness for domestic and expeditionary roles.[85][86] Formed in response to 9/11 vulnerabilities, these units conduct training for hurricane response and harbor patrols, operating under Atlantic and Pacific Area commands with capabilities for rapid nationwide surge.[80][87] Port Security Units (PSU), primarily reserve-based with active-duty leadership, deliver expeditionary harbor defense, providing waterside and land-based protection for critical infrastructure using transportable boats and sustained operational equipment for up to 15 days independently.[88][89] Operational since 1980, PSUs like 301 in Cape Cod and 309 in Port Clinton have supported global missions, including Operation Iraqi Freedom where they secured oil terminals and conducted combat patrols, amassing nearly 45 years of deployments in contested environments.[90][91]Personnel Composition
Commissioned and Warrant Officers
The commissioned officer corps of the United States Coast Guard consists of leaders appointed to ranks ranging from ensign (O-1) to admiral (O-10), who command units, direct operations, and provide strategic oversight for maritime security, law enforcement, and humanitarian missions.[92] Appointments require presidential nomination for initial commissioning, with higher ranks subject to Senate confirmation, and are governed by statutes limiting total numbers and grade distributions to ensure a balanced force structure.[92] Primary accession paths include graduation from the U.S. Coast Guard Academy, completion of Officer Candidate School, and Direct Commission Officer programs for qualified professionals.[93] Graduates of the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in New London, Connecticut, receive a Bachelor of Science degree after four years of rigorous academic, physical, and leadership training, commissioning directly as ensigns; the program admits about 300 candidates annually through a merit-based process without congressional nominations.[94] Officer Candidate School, a 12-week course at the Coast Guard Academy, trains college graduates with no prior military experience in leadership, navigation, and seamanship, qualifying them for commissioning as ensigns upon successful completion.[95] Direct commissions target civilians with advanced expertise, such as attorneys, physicians, engineers, or chaplains, who undergo abbreviated training—typically 4-5 weeks—and may enter at lieutenant (O-3) or higher, bypassing standard entry-level programs to leverage specialized skills immediately.[96] Warrant officers, designated chief warrant officer 3 (W-3) through chief warrant officer 5 (W-5), function as highly skilled technical experts rather than broad commanders, advising on specialized domains like boatswain's mate duties, aviation maintenance, electronics, or cyber operations.[97] These positions are filled by warranting senior enlisted personnel (typically E-7 or above) with extensive operational experience, selected through a competitive board process and appointed by the Secretary of Homeland Security; unlike commissioned officers, they focus on single-track career specialties without general command authority over large units.[97] The warrant officer cadre remains small, emphasizing depth in niche capabilities to support the service's operational tempo.[98]Enlisted Ranks and Career Paths
The enlisted ranks of the United States Coast Guard comprise nine pay grades, E-1 through E-9, mirroring the structure used across U.S. uniformed services for compensation and authority levels. Junior enlisted personnel in E-1 to E-3 perform foundational duties in seamanship, maintenance, and operations, while E-4 to E-9 non-commissioned officers assume supervisory roles, technical expertise, and leadership in specialized fields. At E-9, select positions include command master chiefs advising unit commanders and the Master Chief Petty Officer of the Coast Guard serving as senior enlisted advisor to the Commandant.[99]| Pay Grade | Rank | Abbreviation |
|---|---|---|
| E-1 | Seaman Recruit | SR |
| E-2 | Seaman Apprentice | SA |
| E-3 | Seaman | SN |
| E-4 | Petty Officer Third Class | PO3 |
| E-5 | Petty Officer Second Class | PO2 |
| E-6 | Petty Officer First Class | PO1 |
| E-7 | Chief Petty Officer | CPO |
| E-8 | Senior Chief Petty Officer | SCPO |
| E-9 | Master Chief Petty Officer | MCPO |
Recruitment, Retention, and Manpower Challenges
The United States Coast Guard has encountered persistent recruitment shortfalls, particularly among enlisted personnel, from fiscal years 2019 through 2023, during which it consistently missed its annual targets and experienced net losses in active-duty strength.[107] In fiscal year 2023, for instance, the service lost over 3,800 enlisted members while recruiting only 3,126, contributing to a workforce gap that reached nearly 10% of the total enlisted force by late 2023.[108] [109] With approximately 30,600 enlisted personnel comprising the bulk of its over 39,000 active-duty members as of fiscal year 2024, these deficits have strained operational capacity, prompting projections of nearly 6,000 enlisted and several hundred officer shortages by 2025.[107] [110] Retention challenges exacerbate recruitment pressures, driven by factors such as competition from higher-paying private-sector jobs, limited promotion opportunities, extended work hours, frequent relocations, and demanding operational environments that contribute to burnout and family disruptions.[111] [108] The Coast Guard has identified some issues through member surveys but lacks comprehensive data and targeted strategies to address root causes effectively, as noted in Government Accountability Office assessments.[112] These dynamics have resulted in a net shortfall of about 2,600 active-duty personnel as of 2025, below levels deemed necessary for mission requirements.[113] Manpower constraints have directly impaired frontline operations, leading to operational adjustments including the idling or decommissioning of 10 cutters and the closure or reduction of 29 small boat stations by late 2023 to reallocate scarce personnel.[114] Such measures have reduced readiness for tasks like search and rescue, maritime patrols, and maintenance, with shortages forecasted to intensify demands on remaining assets and potentially disrupt responses to contingencies such as hurricanes or spills.[115] [116] In response, the Coast Guard expanded recruiting offices, enhanced marketing efforts, and improved basic training pipelines, enabling it to exceed fiscal year 2024 enlisted accession goals for active duty, reserves, and non-Academy officers—accessing over 4,400 active-duty members for the first time since 2018.[117] Early fiscal year 2025 data indicated continued momentum, with over 4,250 recruits by mid-year, surpassing projections.[118] Despite these gains, sustained retention improvements and deeper analytical efforts remain essential to mitigate ongoing shortages and restore full operational tempo.[107]Training and Professional Development
Enlisted personnel undergo an eight-week basic recruit training program at Training Center Cape May, New Jersey, the Coast Guard's sole enlisted accession point, focusing on military discipline, physical fitness, seamanship, and core competencies such as firefighting and damage control.[119] [120] Following graduation, active-duty recruits attend the START Program at Training Center Yorktown, Virginia, for initial rate-specific orientation, while a recently implemented First Step Professional Course provides a one-week acclimation to military life prior to basic training integration.[119] [121] Commissioned officers are primarily trained through the United States Coast Guard Academy in New London, Connecticut, a four-year baccalaureate program emphasizing engineering, management, and maritime operations, with mandatory summer cruises for practical sea duty and leadership experience.[122] Alternative paths include the 12-week Officer Candidate School at the Leadership Development Center in New London, which delivers intensive instruction in leadership, navigation, and Coast Guard law for candidates without prior commissioning.[95] [123] Direct Commission Officer programs for professionals in fields like health care or engineering require a five-week foundational course in administrative and leadership skills.[96] Warrant officers, appointed from senior enlisted ranks, complete the Chief Warrant Officer Professional Development course to transition into technical specialist roles, emphasizing subject-matter expertise in areas such as engineering or aviation maintenance.[106] Professional military education progresses through tiered programs, including Enlisted Professional Military Education for leadership foundations and Joint Professional Military Education Phase I for intermediate joint operations awareness, often delivered via distance learning or at centers like Yorktown.[124] [125] The Chief Petty Officer Academy at Training Center Yorktown trains senior enlisted in advanced supervisory skills.[106] Specialized training occurs at dedicated facilities, such as Aviation Training Center Mobile for flight operations, Training Center Petaluma for health services and logistics, the Maritime Law Enforcement Academy for boarding tactics, and the National Motor Lifeboat School at Yorktown for heavy-weather rescue techniques.[126] [127] [128] [129] These programs ensure operational readiness across missions, with annual throughput of thousands of personnel.[106]Assets and Capabilities
Surface Fleet: Cutters and Patrol Vessels
The United States Coast Guard's surface fleet relies on cutters—commissioned vessels 65 feet (20 meters) or longer equipped for sustained crew operations—as its primary assets for maritime patrol, interdiction, search and rescue, and enforcement missions.[130] These vessels operate across littoral, offshore, and open-ocean environments, with capabilities scaled by class to address varying threats and operational demands. As of July 2025, the Coast Guard maintained 241 cutters greater than 65 feet, though maintenance backlogs and aging hulls have constrained readiness, with only about 70 percent of the fleet mission-capable in recent assessments.[131] The fleet's high-endurance component centers on the Legend-class National Security Cutters (WMSL), eight 378-foot (115-meter) vessels displacing 4,500 tons, designed for extended transoceanic deployments with vertical-takeoff aircraft hangars, advanced sensors, and stern boat launch ramps for helicopters and cutters boats.[132] Commissioned between 2008 and 2019 at Huntington Ingalls Industries' Ingalls Shipbuilding, these cutters replaced the older 378-foot Hamilton-class high-endurance cutters, offering twice the operational range (12,000 nautical miles at 14 knots) and enhanced command-and-control integration for joint operations.[133] In June 2025, the Department of Homeland Security canceled construction of an 11th NSC, then 15 percent complete, citing unresolved contract disputes with the builder and a shift toward Offshore Patrol Cutter priorities, leaving the class capped at eight hulls.[134][135] Bridging large and medium cutters, the Offshore Patrol Cutter (OPC) program aims to deliver up to 25 Heritage-class vessels (WMSM), each 360 feet (110 meters) long and displacing 3,500 tons, to replace aging medium-endurance cutters while providing robust offshore presence short of NSC capabilities.[136] Contracts awarded to Eastern Shipbuilding Group and Austal USA support dual production lines; as of August 2025, Austal began fabricating the second Stage 2 OPC in Mobile, Alabama, following hull fabrication starts on earlier units, though delays from Hurricane Michael in 2018 and design changes have pushed initial deliveries beyond 2025.[136][137] The Coast Guard exercised options for additional OPCs in September 2025, signaling commitment to the class as the fleet's workhorse for missions like drug interdiction and migrant patrols in contested waters.[137] For near-coastal and high-speed response, the Sentinel-class Fast Response Cutters (WPC) dominate the patrol vessel inventory, with 59 of these 154-foot (47-meter) steel-hulled cutters commissioned by August 2025, replacing the 110-foot Island-class patrol boats.[138] Built by Bollinger Shipyards under a 2008 contract expanded to 67 hulls, FRCs achieve 28 knots with a 2,500-nautical-mile range, carrying two small boats, a helicopter landing deck, and systems for surveillance and light armaments, enabling independent operations in ports, waterways, and exclusive economic zones.[139] In September 2025, the Coast Guard exercised an option for 10 more FRCs at $507 million, extending deliveries into the early 2030s to bolster fleet numbers amid rising border security demands.[140][141] Legacy medium-endurance cutters, including the 13 Famous-class (270-foot WMEC) and remaining Reliance-class (210-foot WMEC) vessels totaling around 28 active units, continue multi-week patrols despite structural fatigue and outdated propulsion, with the OPCs slated for their phase-out.[130] Smaller patrol cutters, such as the 87-foot Marine Protector-class WPBs, number in the dozens and focus on harbor security and short-range enforcement, often forward-deployed to high-traffic areas.[142] Fleet sustainment challenges persist, as evidenced by GAO findings of deferred maintenance on over 100 cutters, driven by budget constraints and industrial base limitations that reduce steaming hours and operational tempo.[131]| Class | Designation | Length | Active/Ordered | Primary Role |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Legend (National Security Cutter) | WMSL | 378 ft | 8 active | Open-ocean security, long-range interdiction[132] |
| Heritage (Offshore Patrol Cutter) | WMSM | 360 ft | 0 active / 25 planned | Offshore patrol, multi-mission replacement[136] |
| Sentinel (Fast Response Cutter) | WPC | 154 ft | 59 active / 77+ ordered | Coastal response, port security[138][139] |
| Famous | WMEC | 270 ft | 13 active | Medium-endurance enforcement[130] |
| Reliance | WMEC | 210 ft | ~12 active | Medium-endurance support[142] |
Aviation Assets and Unmanned Systems
The United States Coast Guard maintains a fleet of fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters to execute missions including search and rescue, maritime domain awareness, law enforcement support, and environmental monitoring, with rotary-wing assets comprising the majority at approximately 146 platforms out of a total of nearly 200 aircraft as of December 2023.[143] Fixed-wing platforms emphasize endurance and sensor-equipped surveillance, while helicopters provide rapid response, hoist capabilities, and deployability from cutters. Fixed-Wing AircraftThe HC-130J Super Hercules serves as the long-range, multi-mission platform, capable of extended patrols, aerial refueling for helicopters, and delivery of rescue equipment, with six aircraft operational and three more on order as of 2025.[144] The HC-144A/B Ocean Sentry, a maritime patrol variant of the Airbus CN235, supports medium-range surveillance with electro-optical/infrared sensors, synthetic aperture radar, and automatic identification system integration for tracking vessels.[145] These assets operate from air stations, enabling coverage over vast ocean areas, though fleet recapitalization efforts address aging platforms and maintenance demands.[146] Rotary-Wing Aircraft
Helicopters form the backbone of Coast Guard aviation, with the Sikorsky MH-60T Jayhawk providing extended-range capabilities for over-water SAR, including night operations and medical evacuation via hoist, numbering approximately 45 in service.[147] The Eurocopter (Airbus Helicopters) MH-65E Dolphin, an upgraded variant of the Dauphin, totals about 94 units and specializes in shipboard launches from cutters for interdiction, pollution response, and short-haul rescues, featuring advanced avionics and survivability enhancements.[147][148] The service plans to sustain a mixed rotary fleet amid debates over full replacement, with FY2025 budgets allocating funds for sustainment rather than immediate retirements.[149] Unmanned Systems
Unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) augment manned assets by delivering cost-effective, persistent surveillance, with short-range models like the Skydio X2D and Parrot Anafi deployed to sectors, marine safety units, and cutters for tactical tasks such as vessel inspection and SAR augmentation at acquisition costs around $20,000 per unit.[150] Vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) UAS, including Shield AI's V-BAT, underwent operational testing aboard National Security Cutters Midgett and Stone by July 2025, supporting intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) for maritime threat detection prior to fleet-wide rollout.[151] Larger platforms, such as the General Atomics MQ-9A Reaper, are entering service with initial deliveries in 2025 under a $266 million allocation, enabling extended-duration monitoring for counter-narcotics and human smuggling operations.[152][153] In August 2025, the Coast Guard established a dedicated program executive office to expedite uncrewed systems integration, transitioning from prior contracts like Insitu's ScanEagle on cutters.[154][151]
| Aircraft/UAS Type | Primary Role | Approximate Inventory (2025) |
|---|---|---|
| HC-130J Super Hercules | Long-range SAR/surveillance | 6 (3 on order)[144] |
| HC-144 Ocean Sentry | Medium-range patrol | Recapitalizing fleet[145] |
| MH-60T Jayhawk | Extended-range rescue/enforcement | ~45[147] |
| MH-65E Dolphin | Shipboard interdiction/SAR | ~94[147] |
| Skydio X2D / Parrot Anafi | Tactical short-range ISR | Deployed variably[150] |
| V-BAT VTOL UAS | Cutter-based ISR | Testing complete, expanding[151] |
| MQ-9A Reaper | Persistent maritime surveillance | Initial deliveries[152] |
Small Craft, Armaments, and Support Equipment
The U.S. Coast Guard employs a fleet of small craft, classified as vessels under 65 feet in length, to support near-shore, inland, and multi-mission operations such as search and rescue (SAR), law enforcement interdictions, aids to navigation (ATON) maintenance, and port security. These boats, often deployed from larger cutters or shore stations, emphasize speed, maneuverability, and survivability features like self-righting hulls and shock-mitigating seating. As of 2024, the inventory includes over 1,000 units across response, cutter, ATON, and special purpose categories, with designs prioritizing aluminum or composite construction for durability in harsh environments.[155][142] Key response boat classes include the 45-foot Response Boat-Medium (RB-M), with 174 units providing 40+ knots speed and self-righting capability for SAR and interdictions; the 47-foot Motor Lifeboat (MLB), numbering 110 units at 25 knots for heavy-weather rescues; and the 29-foot Response Boat-Small II (RB-S II), with 345 units achieving 45 knots for rapid coastal response.[155] Cutter boats, launched from larger vessels, feature models like the 26-foot Over-The-Horizon IV (CB-OTH IV) with 121 units at 40 knots for extended-range pursuits, and the 35-foot Long Range Interceptor II (CB-LRI II) with 11 units exceeding 35 knots for law enforcement. ATON boats, such as the 49-foot Buoy Utility Stern Loader (BUSL) with 26 units handling 16,000-pound deck loads at 10.5 knots, support buoy tendering and waterway marking. Special purpose craft include the 64-foot Screening Vessel (SPC-SV), 12 units at 30+ knots for security zones, and the 33-foot Law Enforcement (SPC-LE), 49 units at 45+ knots for counter-drug operations.[155][142]| Class | Length (ft) | Quantity (2024) | Top Speed (kts) | Primary Role |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 45' RB-M | 44.75 | 174 | 40+ | SAR, Law Enforcement |
| 47' MLB | 48.92 | 110 | 25 | Heavy-Weather Rescue |
| 29' RB-S II | 31.67 | 345 | 45 | Coastal Response |
| 26' CB-OTH IV | 25.42 | 121 | 40 | Interdiction |
| 49' BUSL | 49.17 | 26 | 10.5 | ATON Buoy Tendering |
| 33' SPC-LE | 39.67 | 49 | 45+ | Counter-Drug |











