U.S. President Donald Trump has ordered the redeployment of the USS Gerald R. Ford, the U.S. Navy’s largest aircraft carrier, from the Caribbean Sea to the Middle East in a significant escalation of military posture amid ongoing nuclear negotiations with Iran.
The carrier will join the USS Abraham Lincoln and accompanying warships already operating in the region, substantially expanding U.S. naval firepower.
Defense officials said the Ford and its strike group are expected to arrive in approximately three weeks, marking a strategic pivot from Caribbean operations back to West Asia.
The move comes as diplomatic efforts between Washington and Tehran remain fragile. U.S. and Iranian officials recently held indirect talks in Oman, though no subsequent round has been scheduled.
President Trump has warned that failure to secure an agreement could result in “very traumatic” consequences for Iran, underscoring the administration’s intensified pressure campaign.
During a White House meeting this week, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu urged broader terms in any prospective deal, including restrictions on Iran’s ballistic missile program and its support for regional proxy groups.
Iran has indicated it may consider limits on nuclear enrichment in exchange for sanctions relief but has rejected expanding negotiations beyond the nuclear file.
The extended deployment of the USS Gerald R. Ford — which has been at sea since June 2025 — signals a more assertive U.S. posture as tensions in the Middle East persist and high-stakes diplomacy continues.

