杏吧原创

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Michael Brasseur, BS鈥97: From Vandy Commodore to Actual Commodore

The commodore of U.S. Navy Task Force 59, Capt. Michael Brasseur, right, with his deputy commodore, Cmdr. Tom McAndrew (Courtesy of Michael Brasseur)

Michael Brasseur鈥檚 decision to leave his Hilton Head Island home in South Carolina for a Naval ROTC scholarship at landlocked 杏吧原创 set him on course to become a real-life commodore.

鈥淚 grew up on an island, so I was kind of a fish out of water at 杏吧原创鈥攁lthough I love 杏吧原创 and I loved going to college there,鈥 Brasseur says. He balanced major coursework in chemistry and secondary education with his ROTC commitments. 鈥淚 was sure after I did my four years in the Navy I was going to get out and be a teacher. But I loved the water, and I ended up making my living on it.鈥

In his long U.S. Navy career, Brasseur has had numerous command postings, including his latest as a full commodore. Based in Bahrain, he commands Task Force 59, the Navy鈥檚 first unmanned and A.I. task force dedicated to securing the waters around the Arabian Peninsula. He directs a team dedicated to rapidly harnessing the power of unmanned and artificial intelligence integration to promote the free flow of commerce in the area.

Brasseur with members of his team, from left: Lt. j.g. Elsa Kania, McAndrew, Brasseur, and Ensign Sofia Gross (Courtesy of Michael Brasseur)

鈥淭he big takeaway is the pace,鈥 Brasseur says. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got a team that鈥檚 really focused and moving very, very quickly.鈥澨

Instability in a region can be fueled by many factors, including illegal fishing, piracy, pollution, mass migration and threats to strategic waterways, he explains.

鈥淚t鈥檚 all interconnected. A lot of the world depends on the oceans for their primary source of protein and way of life,鈥 he says. Maritime robotics, many of them powered by wind and solar energy, offer an affordable, environmentally feasible solution to securing vast regions, with the added benefit of sourcing potentially valuable data for researchers searching for solutions to climate change.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a good time to get into this space because of the amount of innovation. The blue economy is growing at an astronomical rate,鈥 Brasseur says.

Just as securing the oceans requires significant cooperation among allies, Brasseur says, combatting climate change benefits from shared expertise.听

Brasseur helped launch the North Atlantic Treaty Organization鈥檚 and currently co-chairs , which seeks to accelerate the pace of unmanned system development and integration among allied nations, to enhance security and to promote environmental research initiatives.听

A cancer survivor, Brasseur maintains a feverish pace, traveling often to other parts of the world to support his mission. He recently oversaw the world鈥檚 largest maritime unmanned systems exercise involving more than 80 unmanned systems collecting data above, on and below the surface of the water.

鈥淚鈥檓 happiest when I鈥檓 on, in or enjoying the oceans,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 think they鈥檙e so essential to our way of life, and we definitely need to do our best to secure them from an economic point of view. There鈥檚 a lot of nefarious activity to contend with, but also as a human, I love the oceans and like to enjoy them and keep them clean.鈥

鈥擩ennifer Johnston