USS Lincoln strike group deployed to send Iran 'clear and unmistakable' message, Bolton says
The U.S. is sending the USS Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group and a bomber task force to the Middle East in order "to send a clear and unmistakable message to the Iranian regime," National Security Adviser John Bolton announced Sunday night. Bolton
said the deployment was in response to "a number of troubling and
escalatory indications and warnings" on the part of Tehran, but did not
elaborate. Such deployments are rarely announced in advance. "[A]ny
attack on United States interests or on those of our allies will be met
with unrelenting force," Bolton said. "The United States is not seeking
war with the Iranian regime, but we are fully prepared to respond to
any attack, whether by proxy, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, or
regular Iranian forces."
Aircraft parked on the flight deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln in this 2012 photo.
(AP, File)
The strike group, which
includes the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln, the guided missile
cruiser USS Leyte Gulf and destroyers from Destroyer Squadron 2,
departed Naval Station Norfolk on April 1 for what the Navy described as
a "regularly scheduled deployment." The strike force is under the
command of Rear Adm. John Wade. The USS John Stennis aircraft
carrier strike group was in the Persian Gulf as recently as late March.
The Stennis and USS Abraham Lincoln joined forces in the Mediterranean
Sea in recent days. The deployment comes less than a month after
the Trump administration designated Iran's elite Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps (IRGC) a terrorist organization. In late March, the Air
Force pulled its bombers from Qatar, one of the rare times since 2001 no
bombers were deployed to the Middle East. Last
month, the Air Force deployed a task force of F-35 stealth fighter jets
for the first time to the Middle East. Last week, some of the advanced
jets carried out their first air strikes against ISIS, the Air Force
said. Earlier Sunday, Axios reported
that the Trump administration was preparing to announce a new set of
sanctions against Iran on Wednesday, one year after the U.S. pulled
out from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal. The Wall Street Journal reported
last week that the White House was considering sanctions targeting
petrochemical and consumer goods sales by Iran, but Axios reported
Sunday that the sanctions to be announced this week would target a
different sector of the rogue nation's economy. The
U.S. Navy says there have been zero cases of “unsafe” interactions
between its warships and aircraft and Iranian forces this year as well
as last year. The deployment also comes amid the bloodiest fighting in five years between Israel and Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip. Last
Friday, two Israeli soldiers were wounded by snipers from the
Iran-backed militant group Islamic Jihad. Late Saturday, the Israeli
military announced that an airstrike had killed Hamas commander Hamed
al-Khoudary, a money changer whom Israel said was a key player in
transferring Iranian funds to the militant group. Fox News' Lucas Tomlinson, Kelly Phares and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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