SERVICE MEMORIES

CASUALTY OF THE USS COLE ATTACK - OCTOBER 12, 2000

The guided missile destroyer USS Cole (DDG-67) was commissioned on June 8, 1996, and was named in honor of SGT Darrell Cole, USMC, who died during the Battle of Iwo Jima during World War II and was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor.  In August 2000 Cole was deployed from her home port of Norfolk, Virginia, to the Mediterranean.  On October 12, 2000, Cole was refueling while docked at Aden, Yemen, when two al-Qaeda suicide terrorists brought an inflatable Zodiac-type speedboat alongside the port side amidships, and detonated their lethal cargo.  Subsequent extensive investigation conducted by the FBI and NCIS determined the bomb contained over 1,000 pounds of C4 explosives.  The explosion blew a 40X60-foot wide hole at the waterline in Cole but the crew’s valiant damage control efforts saved the ship from sinking.  In addition to the two terrorist, 17 members of Cole’s crew died in the attack and 37 of their shipmates sustained wounds, many of whom were transported to Germany for hospital treatment and recovery.  At the time of this attack the rules of engagement prohibited U.S. forces from firing at suspected threats unless they had been fired on.  As a result of the Cole attack the Navy enhanced global force protection training during crucial transits, and sailors qualified to fire M60 and Browning M2 .50 caliber machine guns are now permitted to defend against assaults by low-slow flying aircraft and small boats.  The Cole attack was the deadliest against a U.S. naval vessel since an Iraqi attack on the USS Stark (FFG-31) on May 17, 1987, during the Iran-Iraq War.  Two of the masterminds of the Cole attack were later killed in separate U.S. airstrikes and a third key figure in the plot is in U.S. custody.

Electronic Warfare Technician First Class Kevin Shawn Rux was one of the 17 Cole fatalities.  He was born October 31, 1969, in San Diego, California, and graduated in 1988 from high school in Mayville, North Dakota, where he was on the wrestling team.  Following his father and uncle who were Navy career, Kevin joined the Navy on October 24, 1988, and served on active duty until January 1998, serving aboard two ships as an electronic warfare specialist and in the security force at a land base.  He left the Navy to work as a civilian police officer in Bridgeport, Connecticut, but this civilian employment was short lived as Kevin reenlisted in the Navy and on December 15, 1999, was assigned to the USS Cole.  Records report that it took the Navy five days after the Cole attack to recover and identify Rux’s body which was buried at sea.  In his memory a memorial marker has been placed at the West Virginia National Cemetery.  Also in his memory, the West Virginia state legislature in 2014 dedicated the Kevin S. Rux Memorial Bridge near Bridgeport in Harrison County in his honor.  EW1 Rux was survived by his wife.

          

Submitted by CDR Roy A. Mosteller, USNR (Ret)