NewsUS vulnerably exposed in Pacific as carriers rerouted to Mideast

US vulnerably exposed in Pacific as carriers rerouted to Mideast

Carrier strike group
Carrier strike group
Images source: © Getty Images | Handout

9:37 AM EDT, August 9, 2024

Currently, no U.S. aircraft carrier is operating in the Pacific region. Due to Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin's decision to reroute the USS Abraham Lincoln group to the Middle East, Washington now lacks any aircraft carrier in this crucial area for the U.S.

Security analysts report the United States' decision to redirect the USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group from Asia to the Middle East "leaves the West Pacific dangerously open" according to the "Asia Nikkei" newspaper.

An aircraft carrier may only return to the region by the end of the year when the currently refurbished unit reaches Japan.

Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin decided to reroute the USS Abraham Lincoln to the Middle East. This move was necessitated by the situation in the region and the threat of Iranian retaliation against Israel following the elimination of Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran.

Americans without an aircraft carrier in the Pacific region

This move occurred less than two months after Austin ordered another aircraft carrier, the USS Theodore Roosevelt, also deployed in the Pacific, to replace the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower Carrier Strike Group in the Red Sea. The USS Roosevelt, replaced by the USS Lincoln, will head to the U.S., and the USS Eisenhower is already at the base.

The situation in the Pacific stabilizes

Bryan McGrath, a retired Navy officer and director of the consulting firm The FerryBridge Group, said the U.S. Navy's absence in the region plays into the hands of Chinese President Xi Jinping and his claim about "the fact that the United States of America does not have enough naval power to cover its requirements," according to the newspaper.

Collin Koh, an analyst at the Institute of Defense and Strategic Studies in Singapore, said that the Pentagon concluded that "the situation in the Western Pacific is at least stabilizing for now."

Koh stated that this is due to tensions in the South China Sea easing since China and the Philippines agreed to a temporary agreement, and Taiwan and the Korean Peninsula, although still tense, are at least under control.

According to a US Navy spokesperson, the earliest to arrive in the region will be the USS George Washington, replacing the USS Ronald Reagan in Japan.

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