Hey Thataway,
Dive teams are not assigned to combatant vessels such as the Fitzgerald and haven't been for several decades. I believe it was around 1972 when they started reassigning divers to dive lockers, repair ships, etc. About the same time they required all the old hard hat divers to train in SCUBA.
The Navy now has Consolidated Dive teams where they are rotated to the various repair ships (Submarine Tenders, Destroyer Tender, etc) and even the old dive lockers located at just about every Navy base. The salvage vessels (ARS/ASRs and ATFs) are now manned by civilians crews with one of the Dive teams assigned as needed.
About the only ship that would have had any divers on board at the time would have been an air craft carrier and they are usually an EOD team assigned on a rotating basis or a SEAL Team/USMC Force Recon Team on one of the gator freighters if they had been assigned/attached to that squadron/fleet
It is normal procedure for a CO to face a disciplinary hearing and/or court-martial after a collision with another vessel, especially of this magnitude. Either way their career is over.
A lot has changed since I retired. My rating was a Hull Maintenance Technician with a secondary NEC 5342 (Deep Sea Diver). The Deep Sea Divers is now a rating, as are EOD, SEALs and special boat units.
And, yes, it is proper procedure to "keep the captain informed" especially when operating in those conditions. I just don't remember a CO sleeping in their bunk under those conditions. I've seen them napping in their bridge chair, but not in their bunks in conditions like these.
Be good and if ya can't be good, be careful!
