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USS Gerald R. Ford Spotted Near Crete | WATCH

 Positioned to defend against Iranian retaliation, the USS Gerald R. Ford is reaching the Israeli coast. Serving as a shield for the Holy Land and a deterrent to Hezbollah, the carrier strike group creates a "two-front pincer" alongside the USS Abraham Lincoln.

USS Gerald R Ford during testing
USS Gerald R Ford during testing (Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=118386978)

The USS Gerald R. Ford is specifically being positioned to serve as a dual-purpose asset: both as a launch platform for potential strikes and as a massive shield for Israel.

Here's why the Ford is heading to the Israeli coast rather than the Persian Gulf:

1. Protecting the "Holy Land" from Retaliation

Multiple reports, including from the New York Times, indicate that President Trump’s primary reason for placing the Ford in the Eastern Mediterranean (off the coast of Israel) rather than the Arabian Sea is to bolster Israel’s air defense.

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Aegis Integration: The Ford’s carrier strike group includes destroyers equipped with the Aegis Combat System, which can track and intercept Iranian ballistic missiles long before they reach Israeli airspace.

Air Superiority: The carrier brings nearly 80 aircraft, including F-35C stealth fighters and EA-18G Growlers (electronic warfare jets). These can intercept incoming drones or missiles and jam Iranian radar systems if they attempt a counter-strike.

2. Deterring Hezbollah

By sitting off the coast of Haifa and Tel Aviv, the Ford sends a direct message to Hezbollah in Lebanon. The US intends to signal that if Hezbollah joins the war in retaliation for a strike on Iran, they will face the full weight of a US carrier strike group stationed just miles from their strongholds.

3. The "Two-Front" Pincer

The US is effectively "sandwiching" Iran:

Gerald R Ford en route to Israeli Coast, Feb 23, 2026

Current Status (February 23, 2026):

As of this afternoon, the Ford has been spotted passing Crete and is expected to reach its station off the Israeli coast within the next 24 to 48 hours. Some reports suggest it may even dock briefly in Haifa for a show of force before moving to its final operational position.

Other opens ource reports indicate that it has arrived in Haifa, but these are unverified at this time.

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