USS Ford Heads to Crete After Fire Disrupts Operations, Injures Crew

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The Navy’s newest carrier just got a reminder that the most dangerous enemy on a warship isn’t always the one shooting at you.

USS Gerald R. Fordcrown jewel of the fleet — is limping out of the Red Sea and heading for Souda Bay, Crete, for repairs after a fire broke out where nobody writes speeches about: the laundry room.

That’s right. Not the flight deck. Not the weapons magazines. The laundry.

The March 12 blaze in the aft laundry spaces turned into a full-blown damage control fight that dragged on for hours. Smoke pushed sailors out of their berthing. Operations across the ship took a hit. This wasn’t a drill, and it wasn’t neat.

One sailor had to be medically evacuated. Two more walked away cut up. More than 200 were treated for smoke inhalation — and then sent back to work, because that’s what you do on a carrier in a war zone.

The official line says the ship is still “fully operational” and carrying out missions in support of Central Command. And that’s probably true — in the way a truck with a blown radiator is still “operational” if you keep pouring water into it.

Now comes the quiet scramble.

Ford will tie up at Souda Bay for over a week of pierside repairs. Meanwhile, the Navy is doing what sailors have always done — improvising.

They’re pulling 1,000 mattresses off the not-yet-finished USS John F. Kennedy back in Norfolk and shipping them across the ocean. They’ve rounded up nearly 2,000 sweatsuits and clothing items because a good chunk of the ship’s laundry capability is shot.

Think about that for a second: the most advanced aircraft carrier ever built… and the crew can’t wash their clothes.

No missiles hit her. No drones got through; just heat, wiring, and the kind of everyday machinery that keeps a ship alive.

Investigators are still looking for the cause. They’ll find it, write it up, file it away.

But the lesson’s already there, written in smoke.

On a carrier, it’s not always the enemy that gets you.

Sometimes it’s the thing humming quietly below decks — the one nobody thinks about until it starts burning.

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