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Fleet Week Is Back In New York, And The Ships Look Awesome [PHOTOS]

May 22, 2014, 01:50 IST

Eduardo Munoz/ReutersThe USS Oak Hill, a Harpers Ferry-class, is seen from Weehawken in New Jersey as it arrives in New York Harbor for Fleet Week in New York May 21, 2014.

Last year, an ongoing Congressional budget fight wiped out one of the military's premier outreach events: New York's Fleet Week, which didn't involve a single vessel in 2013. But the ships are back this year, and three Navy and two Coast Guard vessels paraded through New York Harbor this morning to kick off the Memorial Day week festivities.

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Lucas Jackson/ReutersSailors and an Osprey stand on the deck of the USS Oak Hill, a Harpers Ferry-class dock landing ship of the United States Navy arrives in New York Harbor for Fleet Week in New York, May 21, 2014.

The USS Cole led the way. Al Qaeda terrorists blew up the Navy destroyer's hull while it was refueling in the Yemeni port of Aden on October 12, 2000, killing 17 American sailors. The ship was rehabilitated and returned to service in 2003. Today, it led a column of three Navy ships entering New York Harbor from the Atlantic. It then overtook the Campbell, a Coast Guard cutter, near the Verizano Narrows Bridge to lead rest of the Fleet Week vessels.

Armin Rosen

Armin RosenThe USS Cole near the Verrazano Bridge

As Naval Lieutenant Commander Ron Carpinella told Business Insider during an embark aboard the Campbell today, Fleet Week is a chance to educate the American public about their military. "It exposes Americans to their armed forces and helps them understand what all of these men and women do," he said.

Mark Lennihan/APSailors line the decks of the destroyer USS Cole as it glides past One World Trade Center on Wednesday, May 21, 2014For recent Medal of Honor recipient and Army sergeant Kyle White, who was also on the Campbell this morning, being at Fleet Week is partly a show of appreciation for the Navy, Marine and Coast Guard personnel he worked alongside. "I'm out here showing support for all of the branches of the military," he told Business Insider, adding that "it's been overwhelming and humbling at the same time," to receive the military's highest honor.

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Armin RosenThe bridge of the USCGC Campbell

The Campbell is a 270-foot vessel used for fisheries enforcement and anti-narcotics efforts. It has pursuit capabilities and a 62-caliber gun that's occasionally used to shoot out the engines of faster ships, like drug-running boats. The Campbell was inaugurated in 1988 and is the successor vessel to an earlier, identically-named Coast Guard ship noted in naval circles for ramming a German submarine during World War II.

The Campbell also has its own mascot: a dog named Sinbad that sailors from the ship's predecessor adopted in 1938. Sinbad lives on through this shrine in the cutter's mess hall - people even leave it dog treats.

Armin Rosen

During its trip to Pier 92 in midtown Manhattan, the Campbell paused briefly to pay tribute to victims of the attack on the World Trade Center on September 11th, 2001. Below, the ship's sailors stand at attention prior to the beginning of a moment of silence.

Armin Rosen

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