Obama Setting-Us-Up for Attack Upon U.S.A. - ALL AIRCRAFT CARRIERS NOW IN PORT - NONE AT SEA, ANYWHERE Featured
For the next week, not only will there be no U.S. Navy aircraft carrier in the Middle East, but there will be no American aircraft carriers deployed at sea anywhere else in the world, despite a host of worldwide threats facing the United States.
The carrier USS Dwight D. Eisenhower and her strike group returned to Norfolk, Va., Friday following a seven-month deployment. The Ike launched hundreds of airstrikes against ISIS in Iraq and Syria from both the Mediterranean Sea and the Persian Gulf.
Two destroyers in the Ike’s strike group also saw combat. The USS Nitze and USS Mason were attacked in the Red Sea when Iranian backed Houthi forces in Yemen launched cruise missiles, which were intercepted by the Mason. A retaliatory strike by the Nitze destroyed the radar installations in Yemen in October.
The Eisenhower’s replacement carrier, the USS George H.W. Bush, was delayed by more than six months in the shipyards and will not be able to replace the Ike until early next year, according to Navy officials.
While there is no U.S. aircraft carrier in the Middle East right now, there is a large deck U.S. Navy amphibious assault ship with thousands of Marines on board as well as helicopters and some jets to respond to a crisis, according to officials.
“We are not going to discuss the timing of operational movements of carrier strike groups into and out of the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility,” said Capt. Terry Shannon, a U.S. Naval Forces Central Command spokesman, in a statement to SuperStation95. Centcom is tasked with control over all U.S. forces in the Middle East and Afghanistan.
It’s not the first time there was a carrier gap in the Middle East. Last fall, the U.S. Navy relied on a French aircraft carrier to fill the void when the USS Theodore Roosevelt returned home. At the time it was the first gap in carrier coverage in the Middle East since 2007.
Other factors contribute to the U.S. Navy not having an aircraft carrier deployed anywhere in the world right now. From 2011 to 2013, the Navy maintained two carriers in the Persian Gulf on the orders of Centcom's then-commander, Gen. James Mattis, who is now President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for defense secretary.
The Congressionally mandated budget cuts known as sequestration have also been felt on the waterfront since 2011. After billions of dollars were cut from the Navy’s budget, ships such as the George H.W. Bush were forced to prolong their time in the shipyards, which had a ripple effect down the line. If the Bush had left the shipyard on time, she would have relieved the Ike in the Gulf or the Mediterranean, officials tell Fox News.
A SuperStation95 Correspondent recently flew out to the USS George H.W. Bush 40 miles off the coast of North Carolina to see the crew's final tuneup.
With jets landing every 60 seconds, the flight deck crew worked on getting the time between “traps” (landings) down to 40 seconds.
Aboard the ship, 18- to 22-year-old men and women work 14 hour days on the flight deck, with little rest -- all this before deploying and potentially dropping live rounds on ISIS.
“This is the military equivalent of spring training, because once we complete this at the end of December, then we'll be going forward and it'll be real forces that we'll be going flying with and against,” said Rear Adm. Kenneth Whitesell, commander, Carrier Strike 2, interviewed on his perch above the four-acre flight deck known as “Vulture's Row.”
In addition to fighting ISIS, the ship's commanding officer says his crew will be ready to deal with a resurgent Russia or China if necessary.
“While we don't have any emergent or pending conflicts with them, certainly, it is fair to say that we have divergent interests in many cases. and so we need to be prepared to understand how we will react to that if necessary,” said Capt. Will Pennington.
There is recent history with this ship.
On Aug. 8, 2014, a pair of F-18s from the Bush launched the first airstrikes against ISIS in northern Iraq.
Now, two and a half years later, the ship is headed back to the fight against the Islamic State terror group.
“That doesn't mean that three months or six months from now, that will be the priority for our country. So we have to be ready to execute anywhere, anytime, any mission,” said Capt. James McCall, commander of Air Wing 8, in charge of all of the aircraft on board.
Overshadowing all of this is the nagging feeling that it's all a little too coincidental that ALL aircraft carriers are in-port, for a whole week, just before a very unpopular President is supposed to surrender his office. A President who is making false claims of election interference against a Super-Power, Russia.
Said one Admiral in the Pentagon, "I think we're being set-up for an attack on the USA and there isn't a damn thing I can do about it because it's our Commander-In-Chief who is doing it."
Other flag officers expressed other concerns as well. Said one Captain
"In this time, China can take Taiwan and, if they choose, Japan too. North Korea can take South Korea, Russia can take Ukraine and the Arabs can all go attack Israel. By the time the US is able to respond to any of that, it will all be over."Beware, America. Barack Obama has put us in a position to be defeated worldwide within a week.
LIST OF ACTIVE AIRCRAFT CARRIERS and Home Ports
CVN-68 | Nimitz | 3 May 1975 |
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Nimitz supercarrier, lead ship | Stationed at Naval Base Kitsap, Bremerton, Washington | [64] | |
CVN-69 | Dwight D. Eisenhower | 18 October 1977 |
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Nimitz supercarrier | Stationed at Naval Station Norfolk, Norfolk, Virginia | [65] | |
CVN-70 | Carl Vinson | 13 March 1982 |
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Nimitz supercarrier | Stationed at Naval Air Station North Island, San Diego, California | [66] | |
CVN-71 | Theodore Roosevelt | 25 October 1986 |
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Nimitz supercarrier | Stationed at Naval Air Station North Island, San Diego, California | [67] | |
CVN-72 | Abraham Lincoln | 11 November 1989 |
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Nimitz supercarrier | Stationed at Naval Station Norfolk, Norfolk, Virginia | [68] | |
CVN-73 | George Washington | 4 July 1992 |
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Nimitz supercarrier | Stationed at Naval Station Norfolk, Norfolk, Virginia | [69] | |
CVN-74 | John C. Stennis | 9 December 1995 |
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Nimitz supercarrier | Stationed at Naval Base Kitsap, Bremerton, Washington | [70] | |
CVN-75 | Harry S. Truman | 25 July 1998 |
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Nimitz supercarrier | Stationed at Naval Station Norfolk, Norfolk, Virginia | [71] | |
CVN-76 | Ronald Reagan | 12 July 2003 |
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Nimitz supercarrier | Stationed at Yokosuka Naval Base, Yokosuka, Japan | [72] | |
CVN-77 | George H.W. Bush | 10 January 2009 |
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Nimitz supercarrier | Stationed at Naval Station Norfolk, Norfolk, Virginia | [73] | |
CVN-78 | Gerald R. Ford | 2016 |
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Ford supercarrier, lead ship | Floated in dry dock 2013; Newport News Shipbuilding, Newport News, Virginia, Finished, awaiting commission | [74][75] |
Looking at the list above, and the Home Ports of each ship, an adversary could nuke Norfolk, VA / San Diego, CA / and Bremerton, WA and wipe out 90% of our ability to project power globally in one fell swoop.
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