Posted on 04/29/2026 5:52:21 PM PDT by MinorityRepublican
The world’s largest aircraft carrier, the USS Gerald R Ford, will be heading home following a record-setting deployment of more than 300 days that included participating in the war against Iran and capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, two US officials said Wednesday.
The Ford will be leaving the Middle East in the coming days and returning to its home port in Virginia in mid-May, according to the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to detail sensitive military movements. The Washington Post reported the development earlier.
The arrival of the USS George HW Bush to the region last week meant three American aircraft carriers were deployed to the Middle East – a number not seen since 2003 – during a tenuous ceasefire in the Iran war. The USS Abraham Lincoln also has been in the region since January as tensions with Tehran ramped up.
This month, the Ford broke the US record for the longest post Vietnam-war deployment, a nearly 10-month span after leaving Naval Station Norfolk in June.
The ship’s 295th day at sea surpassed the previous longest deployment by an aircraft carrier in the past 50 years, when the Lincoln was sent out for 294 days in 2020 during the Covid pandemic, according to data compiled by US Naval Institute News, a news outlet run by the US Naval Institute, a nonprofit organization.
The Ford’s long deployment has raised questions about the impact on service members who are away from home for long periods as well as increasing strain on the ship and its equipment, with the carrier already enduring a fire that forced it to undergo lengthy repairs.
(Excerpt) Read more at theguardian.com ...
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I dunno. Too much of it’s time is spent in port. Should it be 50% only?
I served on the USS Enterprise during the Viet Nam war, and we were never gone that long. Maybe 8 months at the most because another ship had problems.
I put 20 years in the Navy and had quite a few deployments, but 300 days away is far too much.
Home Port is Naval Station Norfolk in Norfolk, Virginia
After Virginia’s recent vote on temporary Congressional borders that would favor Democrats I was surprised to see a map showing several districts near Norfolk favored this move. Does this vote mean Norfolk area voters are against the attacks in Venezuela and Iran, or just that they don’t want their naval personnel sent away for such a long time?
I”m going to go along with our former navy men and say 300 days away but this has to be the most consequential sailing of an American carrier in decades given the Maduro mission and Iran engagement.
I’m as shocked at that number as I was the British boomer that just came back to Faslane doing a 200 day deterrence cruise.
Those districts just aren’t as reliable conservative as they used to be! Demographics and population changes have made it that way.
Could they transfer a fresh crew from another ship to the carrier and take the tired crew back on the crew resupply ship?
Maybe the info was “leaked” to make the Iranians think there are only 3 carriers out there. I am not Navy...but a little subterfuge could be going on....
Those districts just aren’t as reliable conservative as they used to be! Demographics and population changes have made it that way.
The ship is in a bad shape even though it's brand new!
My heart goes out to the wives of the crew. A tremendous sacrifice on the home front.
Arghhhh! Haze gray and underway, that’s the only way for me! Sailors were meant for the sea! Cursed be the scalley wags that can’t handle living on the sea. Go join the Girl Scouts if you can’t handle being underway all the time.
Strictly opinion here as I am not a Navy guy but I predict a long home port & dry dock stay for this carrier. Multiple critical systems challenges from extended service without a regular maintenance cycle, especially the new launch & recovery systems. Throw in the overhaul to interior spaces directly affected by the fire & I wouldn’t doubt a 2-year break from regular sea duty. Add in the investigation for the laundry fire relating to systems & personnel performance. That is going to be some ugly bilge wash, IMO. All this is based on a couple of YouTube videos that seem well informed on the damage & quick turn repair done in Souda Bay, Crete.
That old leaky bucket just keeps on giving...
I’d rotate the crew and keep the carrier there awhile. Right now is a horrible time to signal any weakness to the thugs in Teheran.
The Marine tour of duty in Vietnam was 13 months long.
I'd also point out that some US assets were damaged by Iranian missiles that hit that UK base in Cyprus before the HMS Dragon got there. (IIRC, a French warship took up defense duties for a week or two after that attack.)
Keeping these big, complicated, high tech boats out on the water is, well... big and complicated. And the USS Ford is the biggest and most complicated of all - not entirely to its disadvantage, as the aircraft launch and retrieval system DID work successfully at a rate no other US carrier can match.
I should ask Sal of "What's Going On With Shipping" to post a vid about why these maintenance cycles have become such a problem, after WW2. He's way more knowledgeable on the subject than I am.
No, because those ships have to go in for repairs refits and a lot of maintenance work. They can’t just stay out on a permanent basis.
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