Let's talk about what actually happened and not a false dichotomy of some fictitious qualified OOD who can ace a written exam but can't apply those skills on watch just that you made up to try to prove a point. What is actually going on is that the SWO community is routinely putting people on watch who have inadequate knowledge to be there.
No, I think you've missed the point. These two ships had all the resources necessary to ensure their wardrooms were experts at applying the rules of the road. You want to point to other issues discovered in the comprehensive review then great, but let's not pretend like they caused the collisions.
Dude, I'm speaking from experience of what I've seen as a Surface Warfare Officer and what I know to be true about the community. I think we're just going to have to agree to disagree here.
The issue was there was no requirement for them to be out there. The ship was already qualified. The aviation crews were already qualified (done separately through their own syllabus), and the ship and aviation crews were already qualified to work together (also done through their own syllabus). ATG just seemed to be there to "observe and make sure we were doing it right," but if we did something wrong, ATG had no authority to "un-qual" us.
Again, made extra special when they would talk about doing something during the in-brief and we (the aviation crews) would explain that's not a) how it actually would happen and b) how it's not legally allowed to be conducted.
Like I said, it was just weird.
This is not uncommon in the SWO world. My ship was certified to deploy with a waiver for astern refueling since A) we would never do it while deployed to 4th Fleet AOR, B) were never a high enough priority to warrant a tanker, and C) it's an incredibly dangerous evolution for little tactical gain. A week before we were set to deploy, a tanker was diverted to Mayport for something or other unrelated to us, we then were informed that ATG had the waiver rescinded and we were going to perform the astern refueling the day we were set to deploy. We literally did the tasking with ATG on board as we made our way down to the Caribbean. It was insane. This all goes back to the fact that the standards are fluid, most have not had a serious review in over a decade, and even ATG squabbles over how to apply them. It's a cultural thing.