Is The U.S. Strategy Of Deploying Two Aircraft Carriers To Deter Iran Working?

The U.S. Navy aircraft carriers Dwight D. Eisenhower and Harry S. Truman navigate the Arabian Sea. (Seaman Maxwell Higgins/U.S. Navy)

David B. Larter, Defense News: With Iran tensions high, a US military command pushes a dubious carrier strategy

WASHINGTON — Amid heightened tension with Iran, the U.S. Navy is operating two carriers in the Middle East, and all signs point to increasing pressure from U.S. Central Command to maintain aircraft carrier presence that has ebbed in recent years as the U.S. focuses on competition with China and Russia.

The Navy announced March 20 that aircraft carriers Dwight D. Eisenhower and Harry S. Truman, and their respective escorts, are operating with a B-52 bomber in the Arabian Sea to demonstrate “combined joint capability and interoperability to plan and conduct multi-task force operations in the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility.”

The image of two carriers operating together in the Arabian Sea recalled the late-2010 decision by then-CENTCOM head Gen. Jim Mattis to force the Navy to surge two carriers to the Arabian Gulf as the Obama administration pursued a carrot-and-stick approach to force Iran to the negotiating table over its nuclear program.

The two-carrier presence requirement in place for more than two years exacted an enormous toll on the service, with Navy leaders warning it was unsustainable.

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WNU Editor: I do not see it working. Especially now with Iran more focused on the impact of the Covid-19 impact on its population than a few US Navy ships operating far away in the Arabian Sea.

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