Donald Trump has commanded the deployment of the USS Gerald R Ford, the world’s largest aircraft carrier, from Caribbean operations to the Middle East as part of an intensifying campaign to secure concessions from Iran on nuclear and ballistic missile programs. The redeployment requires approximately three weeks and will result in two American carrier strike groups operating simultaneously in the region.
The decision follows Trump’s Washington meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu, where leaders coordinated approaches to emerging negotiations with Tehran. Israel has maintained firm positions requiring Iran to address ballistic missile capabilities and support for regional proxy organizations in addition to nuclear enrichment, creating potential complications for any agreement focused primarily on nuclear issues that Iran might accept.
Iranian representatives have indicated flexibility regarding nuclear enrichment restrictions in exchange for economic sanctions relief, suggesting possible foundation for agreement exists. However, broader demands from Washington and Jerusalem regarding missile programs and support for groups like Hezbollah represent substantial obstacles that Tehran has refused to accept, leaving negotiating process without clear progress despite last week’s initial Oman discussions.
The USS Gerald R Ford has completed exceptionally long deployment since leaving American ports in June 2025. Operations first took the carrier to the eastern Mediterranean before November relocation to the Caribbean, where it played crucial role in January seizure of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro. The additional Middle East deployment means crew members will remain away from home with no confirmed return timeline.
Trump delivered escalating warnings to Iranian leadership as the week progressed. Thursday’s comments characterized potential negotiation failure as “very traumatic” for Iran while expressing optimism for rapid agreement within approximately one month. Friday’s remarks at Fort Bragg suggested fundamental political change in Iran might be preferable to extended negotiations, noting 47 years of diplomatic engagement produced limited results while American lives were lost.