Tuesday, December 4, 2018

U.S. Navy Deploys The Aircraft Carrier USS John C. Stennis To The Persian Gulf

© REUTERS / US NAVY

Business Insider: The US Navy is sending an aircraft carrier to the Persian Gulf in a message to a belligerent Iran

* There has not been an aircraft carrier in the Persian Gulf since March, but that is coming to the end as a carrier group led by the USS John C. Stennis is expected to arrive in the region by week's end.
* The carrier group is expected to send a "deterrence" message to Iran, which test-fired a ballistic missile capable of carrying multiple warheads over the weekend, the Wall Street Journal reported.
* The carrier and its escort ships will also support the ongoing fight against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, as well as the war in Afghanistan.

A US carrier force is sailing toward the Persian Gulf, preparing to close a months-long carrier gap in the Middle East.

The USS John C. Stennis aircraft carrier and its escort ships will arrive in the region by week's end. The deployment, the first carrier deployment to the Persian Gulf since the USS Theodore Roosevelt left eight months ago, is intended as a clear show of force against Iran, the Wall Street Journal reported Monday.

Read more ....

Update #1: U.S. Sends Aircraft Carrier to Persian Gulf in Show of Force Against Iran (The Wall Street Journal)
Update #2: US Aircraft Carrier Heads Towards Persian Gulf After Iran Unveils New Warship (Sputnik)

WNU Editor: This deployment is long overdue.

2 comments:

Warnews said...

Fire when possible

Anonymous said...

The Stennis left Bremerton the first week of September to transition to the east coast for refueling and overhaul period.

They will most likely cruise around for a month or so and then transit the Atlantic. It will give the Iranians a good chance to train to observe US fleet response in the straits and the Persian Gulf.

I can't see why the Iranians would be in any way intimidated or worried since the CSG is just passing through. The Persians have been there for over 2000 years and they aren't going anywhere.