The powerful sub "completed her final deployment after 35 years of service, circumnavigating the globe in seven months starting from Oahu, Hawaii, transiting through the Panama Canal, Strait of Gibraltar and Suez Canal," Cmdr. Benjamin Selph, the sub's commanding officer, said.
Selph said the sub and its crew worked visited various allies and partners during the deployment, at times engaging other navies, such as the British Royal Navy. "We joined the crew of HMS Talent in a day of barbeque and friendly sports competitions of soccer, football and volleyball," he explained.
Selph said that "sailing around the world in our country’s oldest serving nuclear-powered Los Angeles-class fast-attack submarine is a testament to the durability and design of the submarine but also the tenacity and 'fight on' spirit of the crew."
Master Chief Electronics Technician (Radio) Arturo Placencia, Olympia's chief-of-the-boat, said the boat and its crew "performed with excellence," adding that "for everyone onboard, this was the first time we completed a circumnavigation of the globe."
Even in the final years of its more than three decades of service, the Olympia remained a symbol of US undersea power. For example, last summer, it became the first US sub in 20 years to fire a Harpoon sub-launched anti-ship cruise missile. The US military is building this capability as it confronts great power rivals with capable surface fleets.