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The USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) has set a post‑Vietnam era U.S. aircraft carrier deployment record, remaining at sea roughly 295–296 days after departing Naval Station Norfolk on June 24, 2025.
The carrier operated across multiple theaters — Mediterranean, North Sea/Arctic, Caribbean and the Middle East — and took part in NATO exercises, counter‑narcotics and security operations in the Caribbean, a U.S. raid in Venezuela, and early operations in the war with Iran.
The deployment involved multiple Atlantic crossings and Suez transits and included port visits to Crete and Split, Croatia, for repairs after a March laundry‑room fire in the Red Sea that damaged hundreds of berths and injured three sailors.
Lawmakers and Navy leaders have voiced concern about the deployment’s toll on crew mental health and ship systems.
Navy officials have signaled the deployment could stretch to about 11 months, with relief possible from the USS George H.W. Bush carrier strike group; ongoing maintenance issues reported during 2025 have highlighted strains on carrier sustainment and logistics.
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Veteran accounts emphasize that specialized equipment, long qualification pipelines and a significant manpower shortfall make rotating the Ford’s ship’s company impractical, amplifying maintenance burdens and morale problems. Reports of physical damage are contested, but fire and sewage issues are repeatedly cited, heightening concerns about readiness.






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