USS Ford has seen war, fire and plumbing woes as it nears a record long deployment
Summary
USS Ford has seen war, fire and plumbing woes as it nears a record long deployment March 17, 2026 5:29 PM ET By Steve Walsh The world's largest aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. In response to a request for comment, the Navy referred NPR to a February statement praising the sailors of the Ford for their "resilience, professionalism, and sustained morale while serving far from home." A crew tested by war, fire and sewage The lengthy deployment is posing a test for the crew of the Ford. He said sailors and their families deserved a clearer rationale for a mission that has kept the Ford out at sea for as long as it has. "It kind of adds insult to injury if you are deployed now for months beyond what you expected, and the sewage system doesn't work," Warner said. "What kind of stress are we putting on these sailors?" The cost of lengthy deployments The Navy prefers to limit carrier deployments to six to seven months. When a carrier deploys, the Navy makes sure that it is close to fully manned, but sailors leave throughout the deployment and they aren't replaced as quickly, which can leave the ship shorthanded, Cordle said. "Once the ship leaves port, then the next ship in line becomes the first priority," he said.
USS Ford has seen war, fire and plumbing woes as it nears a record long deployment March 17, 2026 5:29 PM ET By Steve Walsh The world's largest aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. In response to a request for comment, the Navy referred NPR to a February statement praising the sailors of the Ford for their "resilience, professionalism, and sustained morale while serving far from home." A crew tested by war, fire and sewage The lengthy deployment is posing a test for the crew of the Ford. He said sailors and their families deserved a clearer rationale for a mission that has kept the Ford out at sea for as long as it has. "It kind of adds insult to injury if you are deployed now for months beyond what you expected, and the sewage system doesn't work," Warner said. "What kind of stress are we putting on these sailors?" The cost of lengthy deployments The Navy prefers to limit carrier deployments to six to seven months. When a carrier deploys, the Navy makes sure that it is close to fully manned, but sailors leave throughout the deployment and they aren't replaced as quickly, which can leave the ship shorthanded, Cordle said. "Once the ship leaves port, then the next ship in line becomes the first priority," he said.
## Article Content
USS Ford has seen war, fire and plumbing woes as it nears a record long deployment
March 17, 2026
5:29 PM ET
By
Steve Walsh
The world's largest aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford seen in the North Sea on Sept. 24, 2025.
Jonathan Klein/AFP via Getty Images
hide caption
toggle caption
Jonathan Klein/AFP via Getty Images
After moving to the Red Sea to participate in operations against Iran, the USS Gerald R. Ford, the U.S.' newest and largest aircraft carrier, is approaching a record breaking deployment.
The Ford is on track to exceed the longest deployment of any aircraft carrier since the end of the Vietnam war. The USS Nimitz was kept at sea for 321 days before returning in 2021, but that deployment came during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic and was designed as a way to quarantine ships by keeping them at sea.
As of Tuesday, the Ford was on the 266th day of its current deployment, and it will be at least several more weeks before it returns. Vice Chief of Naval Operations, Adm. James Kilby confirmed to lawmakers recently that the Navy did not expect the carrier to return until May.
National
Major plumbing headache haunts $13 billion U.S. carrier off the coast of Venezuela
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Dan Caine acknowledged the expanding mission during a recent Pentagon briefing.
"The crews on board this strike group have already endured months at sea only to get their deployment extended. These exceptional Americans rogered up, all supported by their families, continue to stand the watch, taking the fight to the enemy," Caine said.
The Ford's crew left Norfolk, Va., on June 24, initially bound for the Mediterranean. They were redeployed to the Caribbean in November, where the Ford became part of the Trump administration's operation to capture Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro in January. The carrier stayed in the Caribbean, as the U.S. continued to pursue sanctioned oil tankers and destroy small craft that the administration has said were carrying drugs.
Just weeks later, the Ford was moved to the Middle East. It was first sent off of the coast of Israel in the Eastern Mediterranean, before heading to the Red Sea for the beginning of the U.S.-Israeli operation against Iran.
The crew was told in the second week of February they would be home by early March, according to the parent of a crew member who spoke to NPR. They did not wish to be identified out of concern for retribution on the sailor.
Less than 12 hours later, the crew was told the carrier was being diverted from the Caribbean back to the Mediterranean, and that they probably wouldn't be home until May. Some sailors have questioned whether they want to stay in the Navy, according to the parent.
"If they are worried about people wanting to reenlist, this doesn't help retention," the parent said.
In response to a request for comment, the Navy referred NPR to
a February statement
praising the sailors of the Ford for their "resilience, professionalism, and sustained morale while serving far from home."
A crew tested by war, fire and sewage
The lengthy deployment is posing a test for the crew of the Ford. Last week, U.S. Central Command reported that three sailors were injured when a fire broke out in the carrier's laundry room. According to the Navy, the fire was not related to combat.
Stars and Stripes
originally
reported
that one sailor was airlifted from the ship.
U.S. Central Command confirms that the sailor is in stable condition and that the fire is under investigation. The other two sailors have been cleared to return to duty.
The New York Times
has reported
that the damage was far more extensive than the Navy reported and that 600 sailors have been displaced from their bunks.
"They are tired. The fire obviously impacted morale, further degrading it after their last extension," said the parent, after talking to their sailor on board the carrier. "The longer they are at sea, the more scheduled maintenance gets deferred. And if they can't do laundry, how will that impact sanitation? Coupled with the toilet issue, this is a huge hygiene problem."
NPR has previously reported about
problems with the ship's sewage treatment system
that have left crew without working toilets. Navy memos show the problems grew worse during the first few months of the carrier's deployment. There were multiple breakdowns each day and sailors onboard were struggling to find a solution. The Navy says the issues improved after that period, but they are still seeing on average one maintenance call per day.
During a stop in Norfolk, the day after the bombing campaign in Iran began, Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., expressed concern about the goals of the Iran operation. He said sailors and their families deserved a clearer rationale for a mission that has kept the Ford out at sea for as long as it has.
"It kind of adds insult to injury if you are deployed now for months beyond what you expected, and the sewage system doesn't work," Warner said. "What kind of stress
---
## Expert Analysis
### Merits
N/A
### Areas for Consideration
- They did not wish to be identified out of concern for retribution on the sailor.
- Coupled with the toilet issue, this is a huge hygiene problem." NPR has previously reported about problems with the ship's sewage treatment system that have left crew without working toilets.
- Mark Warner, D-Va., expressed concern about the goals of the Iran operation.
### Implications
- As of Tuesday, the Ford was on the 266th day of its current deployment, and it will be at least several more weeks before it returns.
- James Kilby confirmed to lawmakers recently that the Navy did not expect the carrier to return until May.
- Less than 12 hours later, the crew was told the carrier was being diverted from the Caribbean back to the Mediterranean, and that they probably wouldn't be home until May.
- And if they can't do laundry, how will that impact sanitation?
### Expert Commentary
This article covers ford, carrier, navy topics. Areas of concern are also raised. Readability: Flesch-Kincaid grade 0.0. Word count: 1489.
Original Source
https://www.npr.org/2026/03/17/nx-s1-5746006/uss-ford-iranRelated Articles
See the messages Brian Hooker sent his friend after wife's disappearance in...
3 days, 16 hours ago
Breaking down Artemis II's reentry process, heat shield's importance
3 days, 16 hours ago
Tracking traffic through the Strait of Hormuz
3 days, 16 hours ago
Israel issues new evacuation orders for Beirut suburbs
3 days, 16 hours ago