Your are in charge of an S-class submarine on a war tour through the Aleutian Islands during the summer of 1942. Read through the situation background below, then answer your call to command.
One Call Command places you as a vessel commander during a critical moment of decision. Tell us how you would respond.
On June 3rd your S-class submarine was anchored at Dutch Harbor, Alaska during a Japanese air attack, which also coincided with an attack on Midway Island during the early Pacific battles of World War II.
On 12 June, you headed west with orders to patrol in the Kuluk Bay area and to reconnoiter Constantine Harbor, Amchitka.
On the night of 16–17 June, your vessel was ordered to Kiska. On 18 June, you reconnoitered Constantine Harbor, found no signs of enemy activity in that evacuated village, and moved on to round the southern end of the island, whence you would proceed to Kiska. In mid-afternoon, you rounded East Cape and that night you surfaced to find fog obscuring your position. After 16 hours of daylight, when the vessel was best hid underwater, the fleeting darkness is used to charge your electric engines. At midnight, you got underway, slowly, on one engine and continued to charge on the other.
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S-Class Aleutian Island Tour Edition
This was an actual submarine commander situation taken from an early war tour of the Aleutian Islands during World War Two.
At 12:43 AM on 19 June, large breaking waves are reported 75 feet forward of the bow for your submarine.
What is your command for the vessel?