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The US Navy’s guided-missile destroyer USS John S. McCain. Photo: Reuters

US destroyer in Singapore collision was named after Senator McCain’s father, grandfather

The US warship involved in the collision off Singapore before dawn on Monday has a name many Americans recognise – but not for its father-and-son namesakes.

Most know Senator John S. McCain III, the Vietnam war hero who ran for president in 2000 and 2008. But it was his father and grandfather – both naval commanders who served during the second world war – who inspired the naming of the 154-metre guided-missile destroyer.

The USS John S. McCain was damaged in a collision with a Liberian-flagged oil tanker, leaving 10 sailors missing and another five injured. It was not immediately clear how the collision occurred.

Senator McCain said he and his wife were praying for the sailors aboard.

“Cindy & I are keeping America’s sailors aboard the USS John McCain in our prayers tonight – appreciate the work of search & rescue crews,” the Arizona Republican said on Twitter.

McCain himself had reached the rank of captain in a decorated military career marked by extensive injuries from torture and more than five years as a prisoner of war in North Vietnam. He turned to politics after his release in 1973.

Both his father and grandfather retired at the highest level of admiral – the first father-son duo to achieve four-star rank.

Admiral John McCain Jnr, commander in chief of the United States Pacific Forces, in 1969. Photo: AP

McCain Snr, who went by his middle name of Sidney, was the first of the family to graduate from the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis. His decades-long career included second world war command posts in the Pacific. He was on the deck of the ship aboard which Japan signed the instruments of surrender in August 1945 as a crowd of sailors looked on.

His son, McCain Jnr., known as “Jack,” fought in the war with the Navy’s submarine fleet. He commanded US forces in the Pacific during the Vietnam war before he retired in 1972.

Then Lieutenant John S. McCain III (left), and his parents, Rear Admiral John S. McCain Jnr. and Roberta Wright McCain in 1961. Photo: AP

The warship named after the admirals was commissioned in 1994 and is stationed with the Navy’s 7th Fleet in the Pacific. Its crest includes an oriental dragon, a reference to good fortune, bravery and a readiness “to strike quickly with deadly accuracy, recalling the McCain family’s participation in support of the Pacific theatre in the second world war,” according to the US Navy website.

Sailors sometimes refer to the ship as “Big Bad John”. But a 1994 tribute by the Arizona senator’s younger brother, Joe, notes that the McCain military commitment goes beyond the urgency of war:

“The two McCains – John Sidney, Snr, and John Sidney, Jnr – served both in the clamour of battle and the long days of keeping the peace. They sacrificed just as the crews of this ship will sacrifice, in peace and war. For that is the lot, and the privilege of the sailor. To serve.”

Senator John McCain watches a baseball game between the Arizona Diamondbacks and the Los Angeles Dodgers. Photo: AP
This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: ship honours military family
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