USS McFaul sails in with Georgia relief
2004 Fillmore High School grad Phillip Diaz is aboard the USS guided-missile destroyer McFaul in the Black Sea. The McFaul was the first US warship to bring aid to Georgia following the Russian attack on that small
nation. IT2 Diaz has been in the Navy for nearly 3 years, and has traveled both to the Middle East and Mediterranean. The McFaul is anchored in the port of Batumi, Georgia, in close proximity to the Russian fleet at Sevastopol, Ukraine. The Georgian flag can be seen at port near the USS McFaul.
2004 Fillmore High School grad Phillip Diaz is aboard the USS guided-missile destroyer McFaul in the Black Sea. The McFaul was the first US warship to bring aid to Georgia following the Russian attack on that small nation. IT2 Diaz has been in the Navy for nearly 3 years, and has traveled both to the Middle East and Mediterranean. The McFaul is anchored in the port of Batumi, Georgia, in close proximity to the Russian fleet at Sevastopol, Ukraine. The Georgian flag can be seen at port near the USS McFaul.
Phillip Diaz with shipmates.
Phillip Diaz with shipmates.
USS McFaul in Georgia.
USS McFaul in Georgia.

2004 Fillmore High School graduate Phillip Diaz, is getting a firsthand view of U.S. humanitarian aid efforts in Georgia. United States Navy Information Technician 2nd Class Phillip C. Diaz, 22, is aboard the USS McFaul, which pulled into the port of Batumi, Georgia, Sunday, August 24th, in the Black Sea. The guided-missile destroyer was the first U.S. warship to bring aid to Georgia and was loaded with nearly 55 tons of supplies; bottled water, baby wipes, baby food, blankets and more and anchored in the port of Batumi, Georgia. The USS McFaul’s arrival puts the U.S. Navy in close proximity to Russia’s Black Sea fleet based in the Ukranian port of Sevastopol. The McFaul is the first Navy ship to arrive in the Black Sea with aid relief. The USS Mount Whitney and the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Dallas have also been sent to assist. The relief is needed after Russian troops occupied parts of Georgia for nearly two weeks following Georgia's Aug. 7 attack to retake South Ossetia.

IT2 Diaz has been in the Navy for nearly three years and has had one deployment to the Middle East and now to the Mediterranean on a routine cruise. IT2 Diaz began his five-month deployment to the Mediterranean in May of this year and was originally scheduled to return to his home port the end of October, or early November but all return plans have been put on hold. The USS McFaul is home-ported in Norfolk, Va., delivered 82 pallets of supplies donated by the U.S. Agency for International Development. The USS McFaul was in the eastern Mediterranean when it got the call to divert to Georgia. The ship first pulled into Souda Bay, Crete, where it was loaded with supplies, then sailed to the Black Sea.

IT2 Diaz’s parents are Richard and Carolyn Diaz, both of Fillmore. "We are very proud of Phillip for serving his country and doing what he's doing. We always tell him we are so proud of what he's doing in the emails we send him and in the satellite phone conversations we have. Phillip recently told me that he feels good to be helping out people that need our help. Phillip cannot say much over the phone, or in emails, but generally tells me to watch and read the news to find out what he is doing. I do that and it makes me nervous to think he is there in harms way, but I always remind him to follow his training, his command officers and to use good judgment. I know if he does that he and his shipmates will be fine.” said his father Richard.