The US naval presence around the Middle East is getting a firepower boost

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Jake Epstein – Business Insider

  • The US Navy has an assortment of warships in the Middle East and Eastern Mediterranean.
  • These assets were deployed to respond to various conflicts and crises — and more are coming.
  • Here are the warships in the area and what’s coming, according to a US defense official.

The US Navy is rapidly moving additional forces to the Middle East as the region remains on high alert, bracing for a potential attack on Israel by Iran and its proxies.

Iranian officials have vowed to take revenge over the recent assassinations of Hezbollah and Hamas leaders — both of which have been blamed on Israel — and fears continue to grow that any retaliation from Tehran and its proxies could plunge the Middle East into more violence.

Facing this possibility, the Pentagon has deployed several military assets to the Middle East this month to defend Israel and US troops in the region. Most recently, on Sunday, the secretary of defense, Lloyd Austin, directed a submarine to the Middle East and ordered a carrier strike group to accelerate its transit to the region.

When these forces arrive on station, they’re set to join a wide range of existing naval capabilities in the Middle East and Eastern Mediterranean that were already deployed in response to various conflicts and crises.

These are the American warships already in the area and those on their way, according to a US defense official who told Business Insider on Tuesday that the Navy was “ready to respond to anything.”

Eastern Mediterranean

An AH-1Z Viper and an MH-60S Sea Hawk near the amphibious assault ship USS Wasp as it transited the Strait of Gibraltar on June 26. US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Sydney Milligan

An AH-1Z Viper and an MH-60S Sea Hawk near the amphibious assault ship USS Wasp as it transited the Strait of Gibraltar on June 26. US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Sydney Milligan© US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Sydney Milligan

The Wasp Amphibious Ready Group deployed in June and is operating in the Eastern Mediterranean, which falls under US European Command.

Its arrival in the region came amid concerns over increasing hostilities between Israel and Lebanon’s Hezbollah.

The ARG consists of the multipurpose amphibious assault ship USS Wasp and its embarked 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit, the dock landing ship USS Oak Hill, and the amphibious transport dock USS New York.

Additionally, two destroyers — the USS Bulkeley and the USS Roosevelt — have been in the area for several weeks.

A third destroyer, the USS Laboon, is in port at Souda Bay, a decades-old forward-operating station on the Greek island of Crete. Laboon spent months deployed off the coast of Yemen as part of the US response to Houthi attacks on merchant shipping lanes.

Red Sea

The Mk 45 gun system firing during a live-fire exercise aboard the destroyer USS Cole on July 19. US Navy photo

The Mk 45 gun system firing during a live-fire exercise aboard the destroyer USS Cole on July 19. US Navy photo© US Navy photo

The destroyer USS Cole is operating in the Red Sea, where the Navy has seen continuous conflict for months.

Like the Laboon and a number of other American warships, the Cole has been involved in the Navy’s ongoing counter-Houthi mission for several weeks.

As part of this mission, this warship is tasked with defending commercial shipping lanes in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden — both of which fall under US Central Command, or Centcom — from missiles and drones launched by the Yemeni rebels.

Gulf of Oman

Sailors moving an F/A-18F Super Hornet fighter jet on the flight deck aboard the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt on July 16. US Navy photo

Sailors moving an F/A-18F Super Hornet fighter jet on the flight deck aboard the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt on July 16. US Navy photo© US Navy photo

The Theodore Roosevelt Carrier Strike Group arrived in the Centcom region last month to replace the Dwight D. Eisenhower Carrier Strike Group, which spent months battling the Houthis but has since returned to the US.

The strike group consists of the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt and four destroyers — specifically the USS Michael Murphy, USS John S. McCain, USS Daniel Inouye, and USS Russell — and is operating around the Gulf of Oman.

Warships in transit

A MH-60S Seahawk helicopter next to the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln on August 2. US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Apprentice Daniel Kimmelman

A MH-60S Seahawk helicopter next to the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln on August 2. US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Apprentice Daniel Kimmelman© US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Apprentice Daniel Kimmelman

Shortly after the back-to-back killings of a top Hezbollah commander in Beirut and Hamas’ politician chief in Tehran two weeks ago that prompted calls for revenge in Iran, the US announced sweeping force posture changes in the Middle East.

The Pentagon directed the USS Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group to replace the Roosevelt and its escort ships in the Centcom area of responsibility.

The coming Lincoln strike group consists of the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln and the destroyers USS Spruance, USS Stockdale, USS Frank E. Petersen, and USS O’Kane.

The strike group is still in the Philippine Sea, so it still has a ways to go before arriving in the Middle East. But Austin has ordered the Lincoln strike group to accelerate its transit to the region, where it’ll add “to the capabilities already provided” by the Roosevelt strike group, the Pentagon has said.

The defense secretary has also directed the guided-missile submarine USS Georgia to the Centcom area. The Ohio-class vessel is armed with more than 150 Tomahawk land-attack cruise missiles and was in the Mediterranean Sea as of July 31.

The Pentagon press secretary, Air Force Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder, told reporters at a briefing that as of Tuesday, the missile submarine had not yet arrived in the Centcom region.

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