The U.S. Navy could soon place a third aircraft carrier strike group within reach of Iran.
The USS George H. W. Bush (CVN-77) and its Carrier Strike Group have completed their Composite Training Unit Exercise (COMPTUEX)—the final certification before deployment. The carrier is expected to depart Naval Station Norfolk, before the end of March on a regularly scheduled deployment to the U.S. Fifth Fleet area of responsibility, which includes the Persian Gulf and surrounding waters.
What remains unclear is whether Bush will replace or reinforce the current carrier presence already operating near Iran.
The USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) has entered the Red Sea, deployed for nearly 11 months, an unusually long stretch even for a nuclear-powered carrier. Normally a fresh strike group would relieve a ship that has been forward deployed that long.
But the situation in the Middle East is anything but normal.
If USS George H. W. Bush (CVN-77) sails directly into the region without Ford departing, the United States would effectively be stacking carriers near Iran—a signal Washington wants Tehran to read clearly.
Three carrier strike groups in or around the Middle East would represent one of the largest U.S. naval concentrations in the region in years.
Each carrier brings:
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roughly 70–80 combat aircraft
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a screen of guided-missile destroyers and cruisers
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attack submarines
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and the logistics ships that keep the entire force running
In practical terms, that means the ability to sustain continuous air operations across the Gulf, the Red Sea, and the eastern Mediterranean.
Whether Bush replaces Ford—or joins it—will tell us a lot about how Washington believes the confrontation with Iran is likely to unfold in the weeks ahead.
