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USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72)

USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72) is the fifth Nimitz-class aircraft carrier in the United States Navy. She is the second Navy ship to have been named after the former President Abraham Lincoln. Her home port is NAS North Island, San Diego, California; she is a member of the United States Pacific Fleet. She is administratively responsible to Commander, Naval Air Forces Pacific, and operationally serves as the flagship of Carrier Strike Group 3 and host to Carrier Air Wing Nine.[4] She was returned to the fleet on 12 May 2017, marking the successful completion of her Refueling and complex overhaul (RCOH) carried out at Newport News Shipyard. On 1 April 2019, USS Abraham Lincoln was deployed to the Middle East as the flagship for Carrier Strike Group 12 and Carrier Air Wing Seven assigned to her.

USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72)
Abraham Lincoln underway in the Atlantic Ocean on 30 January 2019
History
United States
NameAbraham Lincoln
NamesakeAbraham Lincoln
OperatorU.S. Navy
Awarded27 December 1982
BuilderNewport News Shipbuilding
Laid down3 November 1984
Launched13 February 1988
Sponsored byJoAnn K. Webb
Christened13 February 1988
Commissioned11 November 1989
HomeportNaval Air Station North Island
Identification
MottoShall Not Perish
Nickname(s)Abe
Statusin active service
Badge
General characteristics
Class and typeNimitz-class aircraft carrier
Displacement104,300 long tons (116,800 short tons)[1][2][3]
Length
  • Overall: 1,092 ft (332.8 m)
  • Waterline: 1,040 ft (317.0 m)
BeamOverall: 252 ft (76.8 m)
Draft
  • Maximum navigational: 37 ft (11.3 m)
  • Limit: 41 ft (12.5 m)
Propulsion
SpeedOver 30 knots (56 km/h; 35 mph)
RangeUnlimited distance; 20–25 years
Complement
  • Ship's company: 3,200
  • Air wing: 2,480
Sensors and
processing systems
  • AN/SPS-48E 3-D air search radar
  • AN/SPS-49(V)5 2-D air search radar
  • AN/SPQ-9B target acquisition radar
  • AN/SPN-46 air traffic control radar
  • AN/SPN-43C air traffic control radar
  • AN/SPN-41 landing aid radar
  • 4 × Mk 91 NSSM guidance systems
  • 4 × Mk 95 radars
Electronic warfare
& decoys
  • SLQ-32A(V)4 Countermeasures suite
  • SLQ-25A Nixie torpedo countermeasures
Armament
Aircraft carried90 fixed wing and helicopters

Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group Edit

Abraham Lincoln is part of Carrier Strike Group Three (CSG-3) with Carrier Air Wing Nine (CVW-9) embarked, with Abraham Lincoln as the flagship of the strike group and the home of the commander of Destroyer Squadron 21.

Ships of Destroyer Squadron 21 Edit

Squadrons of CVW-9 Edit

Ship history Edit

Construction Edit

Abraham Lincoln's contract was awarded to Newport News Shipbuilding on 27 December 1982; her keel was laid 3 November 1984 at Newport News, Virginia. The ship was launched on 13 February 1988 and commissioned on 11 November 1989. She cost $4.726 billion in 2010 dollars.

1990 to 1999 Edit

Abraham Lincoln was transferred to the Pacific in September 1990 performing Gringo-Gaucho with the Argentine Naval Aviation during the transit. From 4 October, Abraham Lincoln formed CTG 24.8 in company with USS Doyle; 6 October transit with USS Pawcatuck and Doyle in company.[5] On 5 November 1990, as Abraham Lincoln was anchored in Valparaíso, Frente Patriótico Manuel Rodríguez guerrillas detonated a bomb inside the restaurant Max und Moritz, in the seaside resort of Viña del Mar, wounding three of her sailors.[6]

Abraham Lincoln's maiden Western Pacific deployment came unexpectedly on 28 May 1991 in response to Operation Desert Shield/Desert Storm. The ship had the staffs of Commander, Carrier Group Three, Rear Admiral Timothy W. Wright, and Destroyer Squadron 9 embarked, as well as Carrier Air Wing Eleven. She was accompanied by a seven-ship battle group.[7]

While heading towards the Indian Ocean, the ship was diverted to support evacuation operations after Mount Pinatubo erupted on Luzon Island in the Philippines. In support of Operation Fiery Vigil, Abraham Lincoln led a 23-ship armada that moved over 45,000 people from the Subic Bay Naval Station to the port of Cebu in the Visayas. It was the largest peacetime evacuation of active military personnel and their families in history. One baby was born onboard Abraham Lincoln during the evacuation; his mother named him Abraham Lincoln Prestera. After Fiery Vigil, Abraham Lincoln steamed toward the Persian Gulf, to run reconnaissance and combat air patrols in Iraq and Kuwait, assisting allied and US troops involved with Desert Storm. In early 1992, the ship was at Naval Air Station Alameda on Ship's Restricted Availability for minor maintenance and refitting.

From June 1993, Abraham Lincoln was the flagship of Commander, Carrier Group Three.[8] In October 1993, the carrier was ordered to the coast of Somalia to assist UN humanitarian operations. For four weeks, Abraham Lincoln flew air patrols over Mogadishu in support of Operation Restore Hope.

Abraham Lincoln was to be the first Pacific Fleet carrier to integrate female aviators into the crew after the Combat Exclusion Laws were lifted on 28 April 1993. The ship left San Diego on 24 October 1994, to begin refresher training. The next day, Lieutenant Kara Spears Hultgreen, the first female F-14 Tomcat pilot, died when her plane crashed into the sea. Her F-14 suffered a compressor stall as she made her final approach, losing power to one of the engines. She aborted the landing to the best of her ability in an effort to prevent a collision with the aft end of the ship and the plane inverted and went into the ocean. Radar intercept officer Lieutenant Matthew Klemish ejected safely from the plane and was rescued from the water minutes later, but Hultgreen, who was automatically ejected 0.4 seconds after Klemish, rocketed straight into the ocean and was instantly killed. Her body, still strapped in the ejection seat, was recovered 19 days later.[9]

Abraham Lincoln's third deployment began in April 1995 when she was sent to the Persian Gulf and took part in Southern Watch and in Operation Vigilant Sentinel.[10] During an underway replenishment, Abraham Lincoln was run into by USS Sacramento, when the latter had steering difficulties due to a split rudder, impacting Sacramento's port side, crushing the M-frames, partially crushing a female crew berthing area, and punching a large hole in Abraham Lincoln's superstructure (TACAN room). Abraham Lincoln was able to continue on with her mission, while Sacramento had to dock at Jebel Ali, UAE, for several weeks for repair.

Operation Infinite Reach Edit

Abraham Lincoln began a fourth deployment in June 1998. Once again, the ship headed for the Persian Gulf in support of operation Southern Watch. During this deployment, the Abraham Lincoln carrier battle group launched Tomahawk cruise missiles against two sites. The first was a Sudanese pharmaceutical factory suspected of assisting Osama bin Laden in making chemical weapons. The second was Bin Laden's terrorist training camps in Afghanistan. These strikes were ordered by President Bill Clinton 13 days after terrorists bombed the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania and was codenamed Operation Infinite Reach.[11] Abraham Lincoln was awarded the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal, and Abraham Lincoln carrier battle group the Meritorious Unit Commendation ribbon for their participation.[12]

2000s Edit

The carrier's fifth deployment commenced in August 2000, when Abraham Lincoln again traveled to the Persian Gulf in support of Southern Watch. On this deployment, the carrier, air wing, and battle group ships earned the Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation. Additionally, the ship earned the prestigious Arleigh Burke Award as the most improved command in the Pacific Fleet.

Abraham Lincoln was in port on 11 September 2001. The carrier was put to sea on 20 July 2002 to support Operation Enduring Freedom. She took up station once more in support of Operation Southern Watch before taking a port visit to Perth, Western Australia. During this time, Abraham Lincoln was ordered to the Persian Gulf to take part in Operation Iraqi Freedom. This forced the Navy to extend Abraham Lincoln's stay from 20 January 2003 to 6 May 2003. The news of this extension was delivered to the ship's crew on New Year's morning by the then battlegroup commander, Rear Admiral Kelly, with the phrase, "We don't need to be home holding our loved ones, we need to be here holding the line. Get over it!" The term "Get over it" became the running joke aboard ship, which eventually led to a deployment patch made aboard that read "Westpac 2003 CVN-72 CVW-14 GET OVER IT" with an image intended to depict an admiral kicking a sailor in the groin.[13]

 
Abraham Lincoln returning to port carrying the Mission Accomplished banner, 2 May 2003

Abraham Lincoln and the carrier battle group and airwing helped deliver the opening salvos and air strikes in Operation Iraqi Freedom. During the airwing's deployment, some 16,500 sorties were flown and 1.6 million pounds of ordnance were used. Sea Control Squadron 35 (VS-35), the "Blue Wolves", was instrumental in delivering over 1,000,000 pounds (450,000 kg) of fuel to these strike aircraft, one of the largest aerial refueling undertakings by a carrier aviation squadron in history. The carrier returned home in May 2003, in the process receiving a visit from President George W. Bush before officially ending Abraham Lincoln's deployment by docking at San Diego before returning to homeport in Everett, Washington. Bush stated at the time that this was the end to major combat operations in Iraq. While this statement did coincide with an end to the conventional phase of the war, Bush's assertion—and a sign displayed during his visit—became controversial after guerrilla warfare in Iraq increased during the Iraqi insurgency. The vast majority of casualties, both military and civilian, occurred after the speech.[14] The White House said their services constructed the banner. As explained by Cmdr. Conrad Chun, a Navy spokesman, "The banner was a Navy idea, the ship's idea. The idea popped up in one of the meetings aboard the ship preparing for her homecoming and thought it would be good to have a banner, 'Mission Accomplished.' The sailors then asked if the White House could get the sign made. ... The banner signified the successful completion of the ship's deployment," Cmdr. Chun continued, noting that Abraham Lincoln was deployed 290 days, longer than any other nuclear-powered aircraft carrier in history. This record would later be broken in 2020.

 
A mock-up of the fictional F/A-37 Talon aboard Abraham Lincoln during production of the film Stealth in 2004
 
A camera crew sets up for scenes from the movie Stealth to be filmed on the flight deck with the crew

In June 2004, following a 10-month docking period, the ship put to sea for the start of working up prior to deployment. During this period, a film crew was hosted aboard to produce scenes for the film Stealth, which included the presence of a full-scale model of a fictional aircraft, the F/A-37 Talon, that would feature as operating from the carrier.[15] On 1 October 2004, the carrier's controlling formation was redesignated from Cruiser-Destroyer Group Three to Carrier Strike Group Nine. Abraham Lincoln departed for her next voyage on 15 October 2004. The carrier was on a port call in Hong Kong when the 9.0-magnitude 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake struck southern Asia on 26 December 2004. To help with the international relief effort and assist with search and rescue efforts already underway, Abraham Lincoln deployed to the hard-hit western coast of Sumatra to provide humanitarian assistance. The deployment was designated Operation Unified Assistance.[16] Abraham Lincoln's Air Transportation Office coordinated the flow of supplies into the region, and the carrier provided air traffic control for the relief effort.[17][18] Sailors from Abraham Lincoln's Engineering Department Repair Division designed a potable water manifold to help bring fresh water to Aceh Province, Sumatra, with the system beginning to ship the much-needed fresh water on 4 January.[19] In total, Carrier Strike Group Three delivered 5,929,000 pounds (2,689,000 kg) of relief and humanitarian supplies, including 2,915,500 pounds (1,322,400 kg) of food and 748,410 pounds (339,470 kg) of medical supplies, during Operation Unified Assistance.[20] Carrier Strike Group Three received the Humanitarian Service Medal in recognition of its humanitarian assistance/disaster response (HA/DR) efforts during the OUA mission.[21]

In mid-January 2005, the carrier left Indonesian waters after the Indonesian government refused to allow fighter pilots assigned to Abraham Lincoln to conduct air patrols and training flights. By law, US carrier-based pilots must practice at least once every two to three weeks to remain "fit", otherwise they are grounded. Despite the move into international waters, Abraham Lincoln continued to provide support to the region until 4 February. During the carrier's 33 days on station, she, along with her battle group, Carrier Strike Group Nine delivered 5.7 million pounds of relief supplies. The 17 helicopters assigned to HSL-47 Saberhawks and HS-2 "Golden Falcons", attached to CVW-2 flew 1,747 relief missions along the western coast of Sumatra. The carrier's departure coincided with the arrival of the hospital ship Mercy.

 
An air traffic controller works approach control in Carrier Air Traffic Control Center aboard the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln.

Between 7 March – 27 May 2005, Abraham Lincoln underwent a docking planned incremental availability yard overhaul at Naval Station Everett, Washington, and following subsequent sustainment training, the carrier underwent an additional planned incremental availability at NS Everett between 28 June and 26 August 2005.[22] Between 1 and 23 June 2005, Abraham Lincoln and Carrier Air Wing Two (CVW-2) trained in the northern Pacific, conducting their quarterly Integrated Strike Group (ISG) Sustainment Training cycle.[22][23] Abraham Lincoln carried out surge sustainment training for the Fleet Response Plan, fleet replacement squadron carrier qualifications, and Joint Task Force Exercise 2005 in southern Californian waters between 19 October and 16 November 2005.[22][24][25] For JTFEX-05, Abraham Lincoln and Carrier Air Wing Two were joined by the guided-missile cruiser Mobile Bay; the guided-missile destroyers Russell and Shoup, and Carrier Strike Group Seven led by the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan.[22][26]

On 18 December 2006, Abraham Lincoln left the dry dock at the shipyard ahead of schedule and under budget. The Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility completed ship tank maintenance in less than half the scheduled time. In 89 days, 18 tanks were completed. The Tank Value Stream Team achieved this by partnering with Ship's Force and the Abraham Lincoln Project Team. While in dry dock, the whole ship was painted by the crew at nights and on weekends rather than waiting for contractors to do the job.[27]

On 5 January 2006, the carrier Abraham Lincoln departed her homeport of Everett, Washington, and transited to San Diego, California, for a scheduled underway period to undertake sustainment training exercises and post-refit inspection by the US Navy's Board of Inspection and Survey. Abraham Lincoln completed her additional sustainment training in southern Californian waters 21–24 February 2006.[28][29]

The refit was completed on 26 March 2007, when Rear Adm. Scott R. Van Buskirk assumed command of Carrier Strike Group Nine from Rear Adm. Bill Goodwin.

On 29 August 2006, the carrier Abraham Lincoln arrived at Naval Base Kitsap in Bremerton, Washington, and on 8 September 2006, the carrier entered Dry Dock No. 6 at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility to begin a scheduled Docked Planned Incremental Availability (DPIA) yard maintenance period.[29][30][31] Major projects for this DPIA included the refurbishment of ship tanks, work on three of the four catapults, modernization of navigation systems, resurfacing of the flight deck, and updates to the ship's local area network. Abraham Lincoln also received installation of the RIM-116 Rolling Airframe Missile system, which improved the ship's close-range defensive capabilities.[31][32][33][34] On 18 December 2008, Abraham Lincoln left dry dock ahead of schedule and under budget because the PSNS and IMF yard teams were able to cut the time of ship tank maintenance by more than half, completing 18 tanks in 89 days.[35]

 
Helicopters depart from Abraham Lincoln en route to Aceh, Sumatra, supporting humanitarian airlifts to tsunami-stricken coastal regions in early 2005.

The aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln held a fast cruise from the pier from 23 to 25 June and left Puget Sound on 26 June to conduct sea trials before returning to her homeport of Naval Station Everett, Washington, on 30 June 2007.[32][36][37][38]

Abraham Lincoln underwent flight deck carrier qualifications while sailing in southern Californian waters 12–15 July 2007. F/A-18E Super Hornets and F/A-18C Hornets from strike squadrons VFA-137 and VFA-151 joined VX-23 test pilots performed precision approach drills to ensure that the ship's equipment, such as the Precision Approach Landing System, operated within close tolerances, with SH-60B Seahawks from squadron HS-2 providing search and rescue capabilities during flight operations.[32][39]

On 20 August 2007, Abraham Lincoln and embarked Carrier Air Wing Two completed their 25-day Tailored Ship's Training Availability (TSTA) and Final Evaluation Problem (FEP) training period off southern California. TSTA is designed to prepare the ship and crew for full integration into a carrier strike group, and FEP is a graded 48-hour evolution to evaluate how well the units learned during TSTA. Abraham Lincoln and embarked CVW-2 aircraft conducted over 1,000 fixed-wing sorties. Abraham Lincoln completed five replenishments-at-sea evolutions, including two with the fleet replenishment oiler Henry J. Kaiser, and participated in 18 general quarters (GQ) drills. Also, on 13 August, Abraham Lincoln tested her defensive capabilities when she fired four RIM-7P NATO Sea Sparrow missiles, with two of them at BQM-74E Chukar remote-operated aerial target drones.[32][40]

Carrier Strike Group Nine's Composite Unit Training Exercise featured 24 sailors from Mobile Security Squadron 2 (MSRON-2), Helicopter Visit, Board, Search and Seizure Team 1, a first for West Coast-based U.S. Navy ships. MSRON-2 Team 1 specializes in boarding noncompliant ships at sea in the dead of night, detaining the crew if necessary, and identifying suspected terrorists or subjects of interest, using the element of surprise afforded by helicopter insertion, night vision equipment, and state-of-the-art biometrics. MSRON-2 Team 1 was established in 2004 at Norfolk Naval Shipyard in Portsmouth, Virginia, and it was the first team of its kind to reach operational status.[41]

Also, on 11 November 2007, an HH-60H Seahawk helicopter from squadron HS-2 crashed while operating from the ship about 100 miles (160 km) from San Diego. Rescuers successfully pulled all seven crewmembers from the water.[32]

Between 3 and 30 January 2008, Carrier Strike Group Nine conducted antisubmarine exercises and Joint Task Force Exercise 03-08 (JTFEx 03–08) off southern California. On 16 January, Secretary of the Navy Donald C. Winter visited the strike group's flagship, Abraham Lincoln. On 20 January, a NATO Boeing E-3A Sentry Airborne Warning and Control System aircraft was deployed from NATO Air Base Geilenkirchen, Germany, with a multinational crew aboard for JTFEx 03–08, defended Carrier Strike Group Nine from a simulated air attack (30 January).[42][43]

Abraham Lincoln began a planned incremental availability maintenance cycle at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in Bremerton, Washington, on 16 April 2009.[44] The objective of this cycle is to refurbish Abraham Lincoln's shipboard system to meet the anticipated 50-year service life of the ship, including an upgraded local area network system.[45][46] Beginning 1 December 2009, Abraham Lincoln began daily flying squad, general quarters, and integrated training team drills in preparation for her first underway period following the ship's current maintenance cycle.[47]

2010 Edit

On 13 January 2010, the carrier completed upgrades and repair that cost $250 million at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard. The carrier was to be assigned to Carrier Strike Group Nine. On 3 February 2011, the ship was awarded the Battle Effectiveness Award for high standards of excellence and combat readiness.[48]

On 9 December 2010, the US Navy officially announced that Naval Station Everett, Washington, was the new homeport for USS Nimitz, replacing Abraham Lincoln, which would be undergoing a scheduled refueling and complex overhaul (RCOH) at the Northrop Grumman Shipbuilding-Newport News shipyard in Virginia, which is slated to begin in 2013.[49][50]

2011 Edit

 
A catapult officer inspects the catapult track prior to flight operations on Abraham Lincoln with fellow shipmates in the background

On 1 March 2011, the news media reported that the US Navy had awarded Northrop Grumman Shipbuilding-Newport News a US$206.7 million option under a previously awarded contract to plan Abraham Lincoln's RCOH.[51] The planning contract covered the design, documentation, engineering, advanced material procurement, inspections, fabrication, and support work for Abraham Lincoln's RCOH, with more than 1,000 employees supporting this planning phase. Additional funding for the RCOH was pending the passage of the U.S. Department of Defense's Fiscal Year 2011 budget appropriations by the U.S. Congress. Upon authorization, Abraham Lincoln's RCOH was anticipated to begin in 2013, and is scheduled to take between three and four years to complete at an estimated overall cost of US$3 billion.[49][52]

On 1 August 2011, the US Navy announced that Abraham Lincoln would shift homeport from Everett, Washington, to Newport News, Virginia, for a scheduled RCOH in August 2012.[53] The ship departed Everett for the deployment that would take the carrier around the world to Newport News in December 2011.

2012 Edit

From 6–10 January, accompanied by guided missile cruiser Cape St. George, Abraham Lincoln visited the Gulf of Thailand port of Laem Chabang.[54] During the visit, Singapore-based Glenn Defense Marine Asia () provided husbanding services, for which the Navy was billed $884,000. In November 2013, federal prosecutors charged that the Navy had been overbilled more than $500,000.[55]

On 22 January 2012, the US Navy announced that Abraham Lincoln had entered the Persian Gulf "without incident." The deployment through the Straits of Hormuz came at a time of escalating tensions with Iran. Abraham Lincoln, accompanied by a strike group of warships, was the first U.S. aircraft carrier to enter the Persian Gulf since late December 2011 and was on a "routine rotation" to replace the outgoing USS John C. Stennis.

The departure of John C. Stennis prompted Iranian army chief Ataollah Salehi to threaten action if another carrier passed back into the Persian Gulf, saying, "I recommend and emphasize to the American carrier not to return to the Persian Gulf. ... We are not in the habit of warning more than once,"[56] The US dismissed the warning.[57]

In June, the actors, crew and producers of the film, Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter attended an unconventional preview screening for the over eighteen hundred sailors aboard the namesake vessel of the 16th president. The event marked the first time a major motion picture had its debut screening for troops deployed in the Middle East.[58][59]

Abraham Lincoln transited the Suez Canal northbound on 16 July 2012[60] and the Strait of Gibraltar on 26 July 2012 en route to the United States. On 7 August 2012, Abraham Lincoln arrived at Norfolk Naval Station following an eight-month deployment to the US Navy's 5th, 6th and 7th Fleet areas of responsibility, in preparation for the Refueling and Complex Overhaul (RCOH) at Newport News.[61]

2013 Edit

On 8 February 2013, the U.S. Department of Defense announced that the scheduled mid-life Refueling and Complex Overhaul intended for Abraham Lincoln would be postponed pending the resolution of the upcoming budget sequestration. This budget shortfall would not only affect Abraham Lincoln's refueling of her nuclear propulsion plant, but it would also delay the next scheduled mid-life complex overhaul involving George Washington forward-based in Yokosuka, Japan, as well as the de-fueling of the recently deactivated Enterprise.[62] By March 2013 Naval ship maintenance and overhaul budget issues had been addressed enough such that Abraham Lincoln's RCOH had been confirmed and the ship was made ready to tow over to Newport News Shipbuilding. By mid-March she had been towed over and docked, and the RCOH work had begun.

2014 Edit

On 3 October 2014, Huntington Ingalls Newport News Shipbuilding said that its workers had transferred a 30-ton anchor from Enterprise, the Navy's first and oldest nuclear carrier, to be installed aboard Abraham Lincoln during that week.[63] The transfer was a result of an anchor replacement on Abraham Lincoln coinciding with the withdrawal of Enterprise, preserving the anchor rather than it being scrapped with the rest of the ship.

2017 Edit

 
Abraham Lincoln carries out a high-speed turn during sea trials, May 2017

On 9 May 2017, Abraham Lincoln got underway for sea trials, following the four-year refueling and complex overhaul. More than 2.5 million man-hours of work were conducted aboard the ship, including refueling the reactors, upgrading ship's infrastructure and modernizing combat systems and air wing capabilities to increase combat effectiveness.[64]

On 12 May 2017, Abraham Lincoln was redelivered to the fleet.[65] On 8 September 2017 Abraham Lincoln was deployed with USS Iwo Jima and USS New York to provide aid to Florida following the Hurricane Irma disaster.[66][67] The vessels joined USS Farragut already on station.[68]

2018 Edit

On 2 August 2018, it was announced that Abraham Lincoln would return to San Diego as part of a home port shift for three carriers, thus returning her to the Pacific Fleet.[69] At the end of August 2018, VFA-125 began operating from Abraham Lincoln as an integrated part of CVW-7, the first time that the F-35C had operated integrated cyclic operations, simulating the full spectrum of planned operations.[70]

Also in August, a movie crew was aboard filming flight deck operations and flying sequences for the sequel Top Gun: Maverick off the coast of Virginia.[71][72][73]

2019 Edit

On 1 April 2019, Abraham Lincoln and Carrier Strike Group 12 departed Norfolk for a six-month deployment that will end with a shifting of homeport to San Diego.[74] On 9 April she arrived in the United States Sixth Fleet area of operations, where she would operate in the Mediterranean Sea before proceeding to the Persian Gulf, then the Indian Ocean and the South China Sea, before heading across the Pacific Ocean to her new homeport in San Diego.[75] On 5 May 2019 this deployment was diverted to the Middle East due to tensions with Iran[76] and headed to the Persian Gulf. Her transit was expedited by omitting a port visit to Split, Croatia.[77]

On 23 April 2019, Abraham Lincoln was reported to have operated simultaneously along with John C. Stennis in the Mediterranean Sea, the two carrier strike groups' operations including more than 130 aircraft, 10 ships, and 9,000 sailors and marines, according to the press release published by the U.S. Naval Forces Europe-Africa/US 6th Fleet.[78] The operations were observed from the aircraft carrier by U.S. Ambassador to Russia, Jon Huntsman and Admiral James Foggo, commander, U.S. Naval Forces Europe-Africa and Joint Force Command Naples.[78] While aboard, Huntsman said: "Diplomatic communication and dialogue coupled with the strong defense these ships provide demonstrate to Russia that if it truly seeks better relations with the United States, it must cease its destabilizing activities around the world."[78][79] In October 2019, it was revealed that Abraham Lincoln's Middle East deployment would be extended due to an electrical malfunction on USS Harry S Truman.[80]

2020 Edit

Abraham Lincoln arrived in her new homeport in San Diego on 20 January following a record-breaking 295 days at sea, the longest post-Cold War era deployment for a US carrier, breaking her own record in the process.[81]

 
Capt. Bauernschmidt in 2019

On 18 December, the Navy announced Captain Amy Bauernschmidt would take command of Abraham Lincoln in following summer of 2021, the first time a woman will command an aircraft carrier.[82]

2021 Edit

Captain Amy Bauernschmidt, who previously served as the carrier's executive officer from 2016 to 2019, relieved Captain Walt Slaughter at a change of command ceremony in San Diego on 19 August.[83]

On 31 August, an MH-60S Knighthawk helicopter, embarked aboard Abraham Lincoln, crashed into the Pacific Ocean at approximately 4:30pm (PST) while conducting routine flight operations, approximately 60 nautical miles (110 km) off the coast of San Diego. Five crew members were killed while one was rescued during subsequent search and rescue operations.[84][85]

2022 Edit

On 4 January, Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 314 (VMFA-314) became the first Marine Corps F-35C squadron to be deployed on an aircraft carrier.[86][87][88]

On 21 May, Abraham Lincoln steamed into Tokyo Bay to relieve USS Ronald Reagan.[89]

The Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group is scheduled to participate in RIMPAC 2022.[90]

On 11 November, Abraham Lincoln hosted a college basketball game on her deck between Gonzaga University and Michigan State University,[91] won 64–63 by Gonzaga.[92]

The carrier suffered a minor fire that injured 9 sailors on 29 November. The cause is unknown and an investigation was launched.[93]

Gallery Edit

Click on the thumbnail to enlarge.

See also Edit

References Edit

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  2. ^ "CVN-68: NIMITZ CLASS" (PDF).
  3. ^ "USS Abraham Lincoln". Naval Vessel Register. Retrieved 12 May 2012.
  4. ^ "Carrier Air Wing (CVW) 9". US Navy. Retrieved 25 April 2022.
  5. ^ Abraham Lincoln Command History 1990
  6. ^ "3 U.S. Sailors Injured in a Bombing in Chile". The New York Times. 5 November 1990. from the original on 20 October 2017. Retrieved 22 May 2018.
  7. ^ USS Abraham Lincoln Command History 1991
  8. ^ "Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72)". DANFS. from the original on 26 April 2012. Retrieved 12 May 2012.
  9. ^ "Kara Spears Hultgreen". arlingtoncemetery.net. from the original on 23 February 2016. Retrieved 23 February 2016.
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  11. ^ John Pike. "BGM-109 Tomahawk – Smart Weapons". Globalsecurity.org. from the original on 8 March 2012. Retrieved 12 May 2012.
  12. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 March 2012. Retrieved 12 May 2012.
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  19. ^ Chief Journalist (SW) Douglas H. Stutz, USN (18 January 2005). "Lincoln Sailors Design Potable Water System, Deliver Water to Banda Aceh". United States Navy. USS Abraham Lincoln Public Affairs. from the original on 13 September 2007. Retrieved 23 December 2010.
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  24. ^ Journalist 3rd Class Michael Cook, USN (2 November 2005). "Abe, CVW-2 Stay "Ready" With Quarterly Surge Training". NNS051102-02. USS Abraham Lincoln Public Affairs. from the original on 13 September 2007. Retrieved 23 December 2010.
  25. ^ "CCSG 9 Sets Sail for JTFEX". NNS051102-04. USS Abraham Lincoln Public Affairs. 11 November 2005. from the original on 13 September 2007. Retrieved 23 December 2010.
  26. ^ "USS Ronald Reagan, Carrier Strike Group 7 Return from COMPTUEX". NNS051110-14. USS Ronald Reagan Public Affairs. 10 November 2005. from the original on 14 September 2007. Retrieved 20 December 2011.
  27. ^ Mass Communication Specialist Seaman James R. Evans (20 September 2006). "Lincoln Enters Dry Dock". NNS060920-03. USS Abraham Lincoln Public Affairs.
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Sources Edit

External links Edit

  • Official website
  • Maritimequest USS Abraham Lincoln CVN-72 pages
  • Story Archive – U.S. Navy,
  • USS Abraham Lincoln history at U.S. Carriers
  • . Archived from the original on 18 October 2000. Retrieved 2 February 2006.

abraham, lincoln, other, ships, with, same, name, abraham, lincoln, fifth, nimitz, class, aircraft, carrier, united, states, navy, second, navy, ship, have, been, named, after, former, president, abraham, lincoln, home, port, north, island, diego, california, . For other ships with the same name see USS Abraham Lincoln USS Abraham Lincoln CVN 72 is the fifth Nimitz class aircraft carrier in the United States Navy She is the second Navy ship to have been named after the former President Abraham Lincoln Her home port is NAS North Island San Diego California she is a member of the United States Pacific Fleet She is administratively responsible to Commander Naval Air Forces Pacific and operationally serves as the flagship of Carrier Strike Group 3 and host to Carrier Air Wing Nine 4 She was returned to the fleet on 12 May 2017 marking the successful completion of her Refueling and complex overhaul RCOH carried out at Newport News Shipyard On 1 April 2019 USS Abraham Lincoln was deployed to the Middle East as the flagship for Carrier Strike Group 12 and Carrier Air Wing Seven assigned to her USS Abraham Lincoln CVN 72 Abraham Lincoln underway in the Atlantic Ocean on 30 January 2019HistoryUnited StatesNameAbraham LincolnNamesakeAbraham LincolnOperatorU S NavyAwarded27 December 1982BuilderNewport News ShipbuildingLaid down3 November 1984Launched13 February 1988Sponsored byJoAnn K WebbChristened13 February 1988Commissioned11 November 1989HomeportNaval Air Station North IslandIdentificationMMSI number 369970000 Callsign NABE Hull number CVN 72MottoShall Not PerishNickname s AbeStatusin active serviceBadgeGeneral characteristicsClass and typeNimitz class aircraft carrierDisplacement104 300 long tons 116 800 short tons 1 2 3 LengthOverall 1 092 ft 332 8 m Waterline 1 040 ft 317 0 m BeamOverall 252 ft 76 8 m DraftMaximum navigational 37 ft 11 3 m Limit 41 ft 12 5 m Propulsion2 Westinghouse A4W nuclear reactors 4 steam turbines 4 shafts 260 000 shp 190 000 kW SpeedOver 30 knots 56 km h 35 mph RangeUnlimited distance 20 25 yearsComplementShip s company 3 200 Air wing 2 480Sensors and processing systemsAN SPS 48E 3 D air search radar AN SPS 49 V 5 2 D air search radar AN SPQ 9B target acquisition radar AN SPN 46 air traffic control radar AN SPN 43C air traffic control radar AN SPN 41 landing aid radar 4 Mk 91 NSSM guidance systems 4 Mk 95 radarsElectronic warfare amp decoysSLQ 32A V 4 Countermeasures suite SLQ 25A Nixie torpedo countermeasuresArmament2 Mk 57 Mod 3 Sea Sparrow 2 RIM 116 Rolling Airframe Missile 2 Phalanx CIWSAircraft carried90 fixed wing and helicopters Contents 1 Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group 1 1 Ships of Destroyer Squadron 21 1 2 Squadrons of CVW 9 2 Ship history 2 1 Construction 2 2 1990 to 1999 2 2 1 Operation Infinite Reach 2 3 2000s 2 4 2010 2 5 2011 2 6 2012 2 7 2013 2 8 2014 2 9 2017 2 10 2018 2 11 2019 2 12 2020 2 13 2021 2 14 2022 3 Gallery 4 See also 5 References 6 Sources 7 External linksAbraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group EditAbraham Lincoln is part of Carrier Strike Group Three CSG 3 with Carrier Air Wing Nine CVW 9 embarked with Abraham Lincoln as the flagship of the strike group and the home of the commander of Destroyer Squadron 21 Ships of Destroyer Squadron 21 Edit USS Fitzgerald DDG 62 Arleigh Burke class destroyer USS Gridley DDG 101 Arleigh Burke class destroyer USS Sampson DDG 102 Arleigh Burke class destroyer USS Spruance DDG 111 Arleigh Burke class destroyerSquadrons of CVW 9 Edit Strike Fighter Squadron 41 VFA 41 Black Aces with Boeing F A 18F Super Hornets Strike Fighter Squadron 14 VFA 14 Tophatters with F A 18E Super Hornets Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 314 VMFA 314 Black Knights with Lockheed Martin F 35C Lightning IIs Strike Fighter Squadron 151 VFA 151 Vigilantes with F A 18E Super Hornets Electronic Attack Squadron 133 VAQ 133 Wizards with Boeing EA 18G Growlers Carrier Airborne Early Warning Squadron 117 VAW 117 Wallbangers with Northrop Grumman E 2D Hawkeyes Helicopter Sea Combat Squadron 14 HSC 14 Chargers with Sikorsky MH 60S Seahawks Helicopter Maritime Strike Squadron 71 HSM 71 Raptors with MH 60R Seahawks Fleet Logistics Support Squadron 30 Detachment 2 VRM 30 Titans with Bell Boeing CMV 22B OspreyShip history EditConstruction Edit Abraham Lincoln s contract was awarded to Newport News Shipbuilding on 27 December 1982 her keel was laid 3 November 1984 at Newport News Virginia The ship was launched on 13 February 1988 and commissioned on 11 November 1989 She cost 4 726 billion in 2010 dollars 1990 to 1999 Edit Abraham Lincoln was transferred to the Pacific in September 1990 performing Gringo Gaucho with the Argentine Naval Aviation during the transit From 4 October Abraham Lincoln formed CTG 24 8 in company with USS Doyle 6 October transit with USS Pawcatuck and Doyle in company 5 On 5 November 1990 as Abraham Lincoln was anchored in Valparaiso Frente Patriotico Manuel Rodriguez guerrillas detonated a bomb inside the restaurant Max und Moritz in the seaside resort of Vina del Mar wounding three of her sailors 6 Abraham Lincoln s maiden Western Pacific deployment came unexpectedly on 28 May 1991 in response to Operation Desert Shield Desert Storm The ship had the staffs of Commander Carrier Group Three Rear Admiral Timothy W Wright and Destroyer Squadron 9 embarked as well as Carrier Air Wing Eleven She was accompanied by a seven ship battle group 7 While heading towards the Indian Ocean the ship was diverted to support evacuation operations after Mount Pinatubo erupted on Luzon Island in the Philippines In support of Operation Fiery Vigil Abraham Lincoln led a 23 ship armada that moved over 45 000 people from the Subic Bay Naval Station to the port of Cebu in the Visayas It was the largest peacetime evacuation of active military personnel and their families in history One baby was born onboard Abraham Lincoln during the evacuation his mother named him Abraham Lincoln Prestera After Fiery Vigil Abraham Lincoln steamed toward the Persian Gulf to run reconnaissance and combat air patrols in Iraq and Kuwait assisting allied and US troops involved with Desert Storm In early 1992 the ship was at Naval Air Station Alameda on Ship s Restricted Availability for minor maintenance and refitting From June 1993 Abraham Lincoln was the flagship of Commander Carrier Group Three 8 In October 1993 the carrier was ordered to the coast of Somalia to assist UN humanitarian operations For four weeks Abraham Lincoln flew air patrols over Mogadishu in support of Operation Restore Hope Abraham Lincoln was to be the first Pacific Fleet carrier to integrate female aviators into the crew after the Combat Exclusion Laws were lifted on 28 April 1993 The ship left San Diego on 24 October 1994 to begin refresher training The next day Lieutenant Kara Spears Hultgreen the first female F 14 Tomcat pilot died when her plane crashed into the sea Her F 14 suffered a compressor stall as she made her final approach losing power to one of the engines She aborted the landing to the best of her ability in an effort to prevent a collision with the aft end of the ship and the plane inverted and went into the ocean Radar intercept officer Lieutenant Matthew Klemish ejected safely from the plane and was rescued from the water minutes later but Hultgreen who was automatically ejected 0 4 seconds after Klemish rocketed straight into the ocean and was instantly killed Her body still strapped in the ejection seat was recovered 19 days later 9 Abraham Lincoln s third deployment began in April 1995 when she was sent to the Persian Gulf and took part in Southern Watch and in Operation Vigilant Sentinel 10 During an underway replenishment Abraham Lincoln was run into by USS Sacramento when the latter had steering difficulties due to a split rudder impacting Sacramento s port side crushing the M frames partially crushing a female crew berthing area and punching a large hole in Abraham Lincoln s superstructure TACAN room Abraham Lincoln was able to continue on with her mission while Sacramento had to dock at Jebel Ali UAE for several weeks for repair Operation Infinite Reach Edit Abraham Lincoln began a fourth deployment in June 1998 Once again the ship headed for the Persian Gulf in support of operation Southern Watch During this deployment the Abraham Lincoln carrier battle group launched Tomahawk cruise missiles against two sites The first was a Sudanese pharmaceutical factory suspected of assisting Osama bin Laden in making chemical weapons The second was Bin Laden s terrorist training camps in Afghanistan These strikes were ordered by President Bill Clinton 13 days after terrorists bombed the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania and was codenamed Operation Infinite Reach 11 Abraham Lincoln was awarded the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal and Abraham Lincoln carrier battle group the Meritorious Unit Commendation ribbon for their participation 12 2000s Edit The carrier s fifth deployment commenced in August 2000 when Abraham Lincoln again traveled to the Persian Gulf in support of Southern Watch On this deployment the carrier air wing and battle group ships earned the Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation Additionally the ship earned the prestigious Arleigh Burke Award as the most improved command in the Pacific Fleet Abraham Lincoln was in port on 11 September 2001 The carrier was put to sea on 20 July 2002 to support Operation Enduring Freedom She took up station once more in support of Operation Southern Watch before taking a port visit to Perth Western Australia During this time Abraham Lincoln was ordered to the Persian Gulf to take part in Operation Iraqi Freedom This forced the Navy to extend Abraham Lincoln s stay from 20 January 2003 to 6 May 2003 The news of this extension was delivered to the ship s crew on New Year s morning by the then battlegroup commander Rear Admiral Kelly with the phrase We don t need to be home holding our loved ones we need to be here holding the line Get over it The term Get over it became the running joke aboard ship which eventually led to a deployment patch made aboard that read Westpac 2003 CVN 72 CVW 14 GET OVER IT with an image intended to depict an admiral kicking a sailor in the groin 13 nbsp Abraham Lincoln returning to port carrying the Mission Accomplished banner 2 May 2003Abraham Lincoln and the carrier battle group and airwing helped deliver the opening salvos and air strikes in Operation Iraqi Freedom During the airwing s deployment some 16 500 sorties were flown and 1 6 million pounds of ordnance were used Sea Control Squadron 35 VS 35 the Blue Wolves was instrumental in delivering over 1 000 000 pounds 450 000 kg of fuel to these strike aircraft one of the largest aerial refueling undertakings by a carrier aviation squadron in history The carrier returned home in May 2003 in the process receiving a visit from President George W Bush before officially ending Abraham Lincoln s deployment by docking at San Diego before returning to homeport in Everett Washington Bush stated at the time that this was the end to major combat operations in Iraq While this statement did coincide with an end to the conventional phase of the war Bush s assertion and a sign displayed during his visit became controversial after guerrilla warfare in Iraq increased during the Iraqi insurgency The vast majority of casualties both military and civilian occurred after the speech 14 The White House said their services constructed the banner As explained by Cmdr Conrad Chun a Navy spokesman The banner was a Navy idea the ship s idea The idea popped up in one of the meetings aboard the ship preparing for her homecoming and thought it would be good to have a banner Mission Accomplished The sailors then asked if the White House could get the sign made The banner signified the successful completion of the ship s deployment Cmdr Chun continued noting that Abraham Lincoln was deployed 290 days longer than any other nuclear powered aircraft carrier in history This record would later be broken in 2020 nbsp A mock up of the fictional F A 37 Talon aboard Abraham Lincoln during production of the film Stealth in 2004 nbsp A camera crew sets up for scenes from the movie Stealth to be filmed on the flight deck with the crewIn June 2004 following a 10 month docking period the ship put to sea for the start of working up prior to deployment During this period a film crew was hosted aboard to produce scenes for the film Stealth which included the presence of a full scale model of a fictional aircraft the F A 37 Talon that would feature as operating from the carrier 15 On 1 October 2004 the carrier s controlling formation was redesignated from Cruiser Destroyer Group Three to Carrier Strike Group Nine Abraham Lincoln departed for her next voyage on 15 October 2004 The carrier was on a port call in Hong Kong when the 9 0 magnitude 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake struck southern Asia on 26 December 2004 To help with the international relief effort and assist with search and rescue efforts already underway Abraham Lincoln deployed to the hard hit western coast of Sumatra to provide humanitarian assistance The deployment was designated Operation Unified Assistance 16 Abraham Lincoln s Air Transportation Office coordinated the flow of supplies into the region and the carrier provided air traffic control for the relief effort 17 18 Sailors from Abraham Lincoln s Engineering Department Repair Division designed a potable water manifold to help bring fresh water to Aceh Province Sumatra with the system beginning to ship the much needed fresh water on 4 January 19 In total Carrier Strike Group Three delivered 5 929 000 pounds 2 689 000 kg of relief and humanitarian supplies including 2 915 500 pounds 1 322 400 kg of food and 748 410 pounds 339 470 kg of medical supplies during Operation Unified Assistance 20 Carrier Strike Group Three received the Humanitarian Service Medal in recognition of its humanitarian assistance disaster response HA DR efforts during the OUA mission 21 In mid January 2005 the carrier left Indonesian waters after the Indonesian government refused to allow fighter pilots assigned to Abraham Lincoln to conduct air patrols and training flights By law US carrier based pilots must practice at least once every two to three weeks to remain fit otherwise they are grounded Despite the move into international waters Abraham Lincoln continued to provide support to the region until 4 February During the carrier s 33 days on station she along with her battle group Carrier Strike Group Nine delivered 5 7 million pounds of relief supplies The 17 helicopters assigned to HSL 47 Saberhawks and HS 2 Golden Falcons attached to CVW 2 flew 1 747 relief missions along the western coast of Sumatra The carrier s departure coincided with the arrival of the hospital ship Mercy nbsp An air traffic controller works approach control in Carrier Air Traffic Control Center aboard the Nimitz class aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln Between 7 March 27 May 2005 Abraham Lincoln underwent a docking planned incremental availability yard overhaul at Naval Station Everett Washington and following subsequent sustainment training the carrier underwent an additional planned incremental availability at NS Everett between 28 June and 26 August 2005 22 Between 1 and 23 June 2005 Abraham Lincoln and Carrier Air Wing Two CVW 2 trained in the northern Pacific conducting their quarterly Integrated Strike Group ISG Sustainment Training cycle 22 23 Abraham Lincoln carried out surge sustainment training for the Fleet Response Plan fleet replacement squadron carrier qualifications and Joint Task Force Exercise 2005 in southern Californian waters between 19 October and 16 November 2005 22 24 25 For JTFEX 05 Abraham Lincoln and Carrier Air Wing Two were joined by the guided missile cruiser Mobile Bay the guided missile destroyers Russell and Shoup and Carrier Strike Group Seven led by the nuclear powered aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan 22 26 On 18 December 2006 Abraham Lincoln left the dry dock at the shipyard ahead of schedule and under budget The Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility completed ship tank maintenance in less than half the scheduled time In 89 days 18 tanks were completed The Tank Value Stream Team achieved this by partnering with Ship s Force and the Abraham Lincoln Project Team While in dry dock the whole ship was painted by the crew at nights and on weekends rather than waiting for contractors to do the job 27 On 5 January 2006 the carrier Abraham Lincoln departed her homeport of Everett Washington and transited to San Diego California for a scheduled underway period to undertake sustainment training exercises and post refit inspection by the US Navy s Board of Inspection and Survey Abraham Lincoln completed her additional sustainment training in southern Californian waters 21 24 February 2006 28 29 The refit was completed on 26 March 2007 when Rear Adm Scott R Van Buskirk assumed command of Carrier Strike Group Nine from Rear Adm Bill Goodwin On 29 August 2006 the carrier Abraham Lincoln arrived at Naval Base Kitsap in Bremerton Washington and on 8 September 2006 the carrier entered Dry Dock No 6 at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility to begin a scheduled Docked Planned Incremental Availability DPIA yard maintenance period 29 30 31 Major projects for this DPIA included the refurbishment of ship tanks work on three of the four catapults modernization of navigation systems resurfacing of the flight deck and updates to the ship s local area network Abraham Lincoln also received installation of the RIM 116 Rolling Airframe Missile system which improved the ship s close range defensive capabilities 31 32 33 34 On 18 December 2008 Abraham Lincoln left dry dock ahead of schedule and under budget because the PSNS and IMF yard teams were able to cut the time of ship tank maintenance by more than half completing 18 tanks in 89 days 35 nbsp Helicopters depart from Abraham Lincoln en route to Aceh Sumatra supporting humanitarian airlifts to tsunami stricken coastal regions in early 2005 The aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln held a fast cruise from the pier from 23 to 25 June and left Puget Sound on 26 June to conduct sea trials before returning to her homeport of Naval Station Everett Washington on 30 June 2007 32 36 37 38 Abraham Lincoln underwent flight deck carrier qualifications while sailing in southern Californian waters 12 15 July 2007 F A 18E Super Hornets and F A 18C Hornets from strike squadrons VFA 137 and VFA 151 joined VX 23 test pilots performed precision approach drills to ensure that the ship s equipment such as the Precision Approach Landing System operated within close tolerances with SH 60B Seahawks from squadron HS 2 providing search and rescue capabilities during flight operations 32 39 On 20 August 2007 Abraham Lincoln and embarked Carrier Air Wing Two completed their 25 day Tailored Ship s Training Availability TSTA and Final Evaluation Problem FEP training period off southern California TSTA is designed to prepare the ship and crew for full integration into a carrier strike group and FEP is a graded 48 hour evolution to evaluate how well the units learned during TSTA Abraham Lincoln and embarked CVW 2 aircraft conducted over 1 000 fixed wing sorties Abraham Lincoln completed five replenishments at sea evolutions including two with the fleet replenishment oiler Henry J Kaiser and participated in 18 general quarters GQ drills Also on 13 August Abraham Lincoln tested her defensive capabilities when she fired four RIM 7P NATO Sea Sparrow missiles with two of them at BQM 74E Chukar remote operated aerial target drones 32 40 Carrier Strike Group Nine s Composite Unit Training Exercise featured 24 sailors from Mobile Security Squadron 2 MSRON 2 Helicopter Visit Board Search and Seizure Team 1 a first for West Coast based U S Navy ships MSRON 2 Team 1 specializes in boarding noncompliant ships at sea in the dead of night detaining the crew if necessary and identifying suspected terrorists or subjects of interest using the element of surprise afforded by helicopter insertion night vision equipment and state of the art biometrics MSRON 2 Team 1 was established in 2004 at Norfolk Naval Shipyard in Portsmouth Virginia and it was the first team of its kind to reach operational status 41 Also on 11 November 2007 an HH 60H Seahawk helicopter from squadron HS 2 crashed while operating from the ship about 100 miles 160 km from San Diego Rescuers successfully pulled all seven crewmembers from the water 32 Between 3 and 30 January 2008 Carrier Strike Group Nine conducted antisubmarine exercises and Joint Task Force Exercise 03 08 JTFEx 03 08 off southern California On 16 January Secretary of the Navy Donald C Winter visited the strike group s flagship Abraham Lincoln On 20 January a NATO Boeing E 3A Sentry Airborne Warning and Control System aircraft was deployed from NATO Air Base Geilenkirchen Germany with a multinational crew aboard for JTFEx 03 08 defended Carrier Strike Group Nine from a simulated air attack 30 January 42 43 Abraham Lincoln began a planned incremental availability maintenance cycle at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in Bremerton Washington on 16 April 2009 44 The objective of this cycle is to refurbish Abraham Lincoln s shipboard system to meet the anticipated 50 year service life of the ship including an upgraded local area network system 45 46 Beginning 1 December 2009 Abraham Lincoln began daily flying squad general quarters and integrated training team drills in preparation for her first underway period following the ship s current maintenance cycle 47 2010 Edit On 13 January 2010 the carrier completed upgrades and repair that cost 250 million at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard The carrier was to be assigned to Carrier Strike Group Nine On 3 February 2011 the ship was awarded the Battle Effectiveness Award for high standards of excellence and combat readiness 48 On 9 December 2010 the US Navy officially announced that Naval Station Everett Washington was the new homeport for USS Nimitz replacing Abraham Lincoln which would be undergoing a scheduled refueling and complex overhaul RCOH at the Northrop Grumman Shipbuilding Newport News shipyard in Virginia which is slated to begin in 2013 49 50 2011 Edit nbsp A catapult officer inspects the catapult track prior to flight operations on Abraham Lincoln with fellow shipmates in the backgroundOn 1 March 2011 the news media reported that the US Navy had awarded Northrop Grumman Shipbuilding Newport News a US 206 7 million option under a previously awarded contract to plan Abraham Lincoln s RCOH 51 The planning contract covered the design documentation engineering advanced material procurement inspections fabrication and support work for Abraham Lincoln s RCOH with more than 1 000 employees supporting this planning phase Additional funding for the RCOH was pending the passage of the U S Department of Defense s Fiscal Year 2011 budget appropriations by the U S Congress Upon authorization Abraham Lincoln s RCOH was anticipated to begin in 2013 and is scheduled to take between three and four years to complete at an estimated overall cost of US 3 billion 49 52 On 1 August 2011 the US Navy announced that Abraham Lincoln would shift homeport from Everett Washington to Newport News Virginia for a scheduled RCOH in August 2012 53 The ship departed Everett for the deployment that would take the carrier around the world to Newport News in December 2011 2012 Edit From 6 10 January accompanied by guided missile cruiser Cape St George Abraham Lincoln visited the Gulf of Thailand port of Laem Chabang 54 During the visit Singapore based Glenn Defense Marine Asia GDMA provided husbanding services for which the Navy was billed 884 000 In November 2013 federal prosecutors charged that the Navy had been overbilled more than 500 000 55 On 22 January 2012 the US Navy announced that Abraham Lincoln had entered the Persian Gulf without incident The deployment through the Straits of Hormuz came at a time of escalating tensions with Iran Abraham Lincoln accompanied by a strike group of warships was the first U S aircraft carrier to enter the Persian Gulf since late December 2011 and was on a routine rotation to replace the outgoing USS John C Stennis The departure of John C Stennis prompted Iranian army chief Ataollah Salehi to threaten action if another carrier passed back into the Persian Gulf saying I recommend and emphasize to the American carrier not to return to the Persian Gulf We are not in the habit of warning more than once 56 The US dismissed the warning 57 In June the actors crew and producers of the film Abraham Lincoln Vampire Hunter attended an unconventional preview screening for the over eighteen hundred sailors aboard the namesake vessel of the 16th president The event marked the first time a major motion picture had its debut screening for troops deployed in the Middle East 58 59 Abraham Lincoln transited the Suez Canal northbound on 16 July 2012 60 and the Strait of Gibraltar on 26 July 2012 en route to the United States On 7 August 2012 Abraham Lincoln arrived at Norfolk Naval Station following an eight month deployment to the US Navy s 5th 6th and 7th Fleet areas of responsibility in preparation for the Refueling and Complex Overhaul RCOH at Newport News 61 2013 Edit On 8 February 2013 the U S Department of Defense announced that the scheduled mid life Refueling and Complex Overhaul intended for Abraham Lincoln would be postponed pending the resolution of the upcoming budget sequestration This budget shortfall would not only affect Abraham Lincoln s refueling of her nuclear propulsion plant but it would also delay the next scheduled mid life complex overhaul involving George Washington forward based in Yokosuka Japan as well as the de fueling of the recently deactivated Enterprise 62 By March 2013 Naval ship maintenance and overhaul budget issues had been addressed enough such that Abraham Lincoln s RCOH had been confirmed and the ship was made ready to tow over to Newport News Shipbuilding By mid March she had been towed over and docked and the RCOH work had begun 2014 Edit On 3 October 2014 Huntington Ingalls Newport News Shipbuilding said that its workers had transferred a 30 ton anchor from Enterprise the Navy s first and oldest nuclear carrier to be installed aboard Abraham Lincoln during that week 63 The transfer was a result of an anchor replacement on Abraham Lincoln coinciding with the withdrawal of Enterprise preserving the anchor rather than it being scrapped with the rest of the ship 2017 Edit nbsp Abraham Lincoln carries out a high speed turn during sea trials May 2017On 9 May 2017 Abraham Lincoln got underway for sea trials following the four year refueling and complex overhaul More than 2 5 million man hours of work were conducted aboard the ship including refueling the reactors upgrading ship s infrastructure and modernizing combat systems and air wing capabilities to increase combat effectiveness 64 On 12 May 2017 Abraham Lincoln was redelivered to the fleet 65 On 8 September 2017 Abraham Lincoln was deployed with USS Iwo Jima and USS New York to provide aid to Florida following the Hurricane Irma disaster 66 67 The vessels joined USS Farragut already on station 68 2018 Edit On 2 August 2018 it was announced that Abraham Lincoln would return to San Diego as part of a home port shift for three carriers thus returning her to the Pacific Fleet 69 At the end of August 2018 VFA 125 began operating from Abraham Lincoln as an integrated part of CVW 7 the first time that the F 35C had operated integrated cyclic operations simulating the full spectrum of planned operations 70 Also in August a movie crew was aboard filming flight deck operations and flying sequences for the sequel Top Gun Maverick off the coast of Virginia 71 72 73 2019 Edit On 1 April 2019 Abraham Lincoln and Carrier Strike Group 12 departed Norfolk for a six month deployment that will end with a shifting of homeport to San Diego 74 On 9 April she arrived in the United States Sixth Fleet area of operations where she would operate in the Mediterranean Sea before proceeding to the Persian Gulf then the Indian Ocean and the South China Sea before heading across the Pacific Ocean to her new homeport in San Diego 75 On 5 May 2019 this deployment was diverted to the Middle East due to tensions with Iran 76 and headed to the Persian Gulf Her transit was expedited by omitting a port visit to Split Croatia 77 On 23 April 2019 Abraham Lincoln was reported to have operated simultaneously along with John C Stennis in the Mediterranean Sea the two carrier strike groups operations including more than 130 aircraft 10 ships and 9 000 sailors and marines according to the press release published by the U S Naval Forces Europe Africa US 6th Fleet 78 The operations were observed from the aircraft carrier by U S Ambassador to Russia Jon Huntsman and Admiral James Foggo commander U S Naval Forces Europe Africa and Joint Force Command Naples 78 While aboard Huntsman said Diplomatic communication and dialogue coupled with the strong defense these ships provide demonstrate to Russia that if it truly seeks better relations with the United States it must cease its destabilizing activities around the world 78 79 In October 2019 it was revealed that Abraham Lincoln s Middle East deployment would be extended due to an electrical malfunction on USS Harry S Truman 80 2020 Edit Abraham Lincoln arrived in her new homeport in San Diego on 20 January following a record breaking 295 days at sea the longest post Cold War era deployment for a US carrier breaking her own record in the process 81 nbsp Capt Bauernschmidt in 2019On 18 December the Navy announced Captain Amy Bauernschmidt would take command of Abraham Lincoln in following summer of 2021 the first time a woman will command an aircraft carrier 82 2021 Edit Captain Amy Bauernschmidt who previously served as the carrier s executive officer from 2016 to 2019 relieved Captain Walt Slaughter at a change of command ceremony in San Diego on 19 August 83 On 31 August an MH 60S Knighthawk helicopter embarked aboard Abraham Lincoln crashed into the Pacific Ocean at approximately 4 30pm PST while conducting routine flight operations approximately 60 nautical miles 110 km off the coast of San Diego Five crew members were killed while one was rescued during subsequent search and rescue operations 84 85 2022 Edit On 4 January Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 314 VMFA 314 became the first Marine Corps F 35C squadron to be deployed on an aircraft carrier 86 87 88 On 21 May Abraham Lincoln steamed into Tokyo Bay to relieve USS Ronald Reagan 89 The Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group is scheduled to participate in RIMPAC 2022 90 On 11 November Abraham Lincoln hosted a college basketball game on her deck between Gonzaga University and Michigan State University 91 won 64 63 by Gonzaga 92 The carrier suffered a minor fire that injured 9 sailors on 29 November The cause is unknown and an investigation was launched 93 Gallery EditClick on the thumbnail to enlarge nbsp USS Abraham Lincoln carrier battle group during the RIMPAC exercises on 20 June 2000 nbsp Abraham Lincoln sailing in the Western Pacific Ocean in 2004 nbsp Abraham Lincoln sailing in the Gulf of Alaska as part of a joint training exercise specifically during the Northern Edge Joint Training Exercise nbsp Abraham Lincoln in San Diego Bay 2011 See also Edit2003 Mission Accomplished Speech List of aircraft carriers List of aircraft carriers of the United States Navy Modern United States Navy carrier air operationsReferences Edit Polmar Norman 2004 The Naval Institute guide to the ships and aircraft of the U S fleet Naval Institute Press p 112 ISBN 978 1 59114 685 8 Retrieved 26 September 2016 nimitz class displacement CVN 68 NIMITZ CLASS PDF USS Abraham Lincoln Naval Vessel Register Retrieved 12 May 2012 Carrier Air Wing CVW 9 US Navy Retrieved 25 April 2022 Abraham Lincoln Command History 1990 3 U S Sailors Injured in a Bombing in Chile The New York Times 5 November 1990 Archived from the original on 20 October 2017 Retrieved 22 May 2018 USS Abraham Lincoln Command History 1991 Abraham Lincoln CVN 72 DANFS Archived from the original on 26 April 2012 Retrieved 12 May 2012 Kara Spears Hultgreen arlingtoncemetery net Archived from the original on 23 February 2016 Retrieved 23 February 2016 USS Abraham Lincoln CVN 72 U S Navy Archived from the original on 27 June 2019 Retrieved 27 June 2019 Lincoln deployed again to the Persian Gulf to support Operation Southern Watch and Vigilant Sentinel John Pike BGM 109 Tomahawk Smart Weapons Globalsecurity org Archived from the original on 8 March 2012 Retrieved 12 May 2012 OPNAVNOTE 1650 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 23 March 2012 Retrieved 12 May 2012 AV8rstuff com Archived from the original on 28 March 2012 Retrieved 12 May 2012 John Pike Globalsecurity org Globalsecurity org Archived from the original on 28 April 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2012 Cook Michael 23 June 2004 Hollywood Joins Abe Underway to Film Stealth United States Navy Archived from the original on 11 October 2016 Retrieved 23 August 2016 John Pike Globalsecurity org Globalsecurity org Archived from the original on 18 May 2012 Retrieved 12 May 2012 Journalist 3rd Class Michael Hart USN 26 January 2005 ATO Keeps Relief Workers Supplies Flying NNS050126 03 Archived from the original on 29 June 2011 Retrieved 23 December 2010 Journalist 3rd Class Michael Hart USN 7 January 2005 Lincoln Choreographs Supply Drops from Ship to Shore NNS050107 12 Commander U S 7th Fleet Public Affairs Archived from the original on 6 September 2009 Retrieved 24 December 2010 Chief Journalist SW Douglas H Stutz USN 18 January 2005 Lincoln Sailors Design Potable Water System Deliver Water to Banda Aceh United States Navy USS Abraham Lincoln Public Affairs Archived from the original on 13 September 2007 Retrieved 23 December 2010 John M Daniels 2004 2004 Command History USS Abraham Lincoln CVN 72 PDF Naval History amp Heritage Command Archived PDF from the original on 31 January 2012 Retrieved 24 December 2010 USS Abraham Lincoln CVN 72 Unit Awards Received with annotations Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships Navy Department Naval History and Heritage Command Retrieved 21 December 2010 a b c d USS Abraham Lincoln CVN 72 2005 Operations Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships Navy Department Naval History and Heritage Command Retrieved 21 December 2010 Journalist 3rd Class Dave Poe USN 13 June 2005 Lincoln CVW 2 to Return to Sea for Surge Upkeep NNS050613 12 USS Abraham Lincoln Public Affairs Archived from the original on 13 September 2007 Retrieved 23 December 2010 Journalist 3rd Class Michael Cook USN 2 November 2005 Abe CVW 2 Stay Ready With Quarterly Surge Training NNS051102 02 USS Abraham Lincoln Public Affairs Archived from the original on 13 September 2007 Retrieved 23 December 2010 CCSG 9 Sets Sail for JTFEX NNS051102 04 USS Abraham Lincoln Public Affairs 11 November 2005 Archived from the original on 13 September 2007 Retrieved 23 December 2010 USS Ronald Reagan Carrier Strike Group 7 Return from COMPTUEX NNS051110 14 USS Ronald Reagan Public Affairs 10 November 2005 Archived from the original on 14 September 2007 Retrieved 20 December 2011 Mass Communication Specialist Seaman James R Evans 20 September 2006 Lincoln Enters Dry Dock NNS060920 03 USS Abraham Lincoln Public Affairs Journalist 2nd Class Michael Cook USN 9 February 2006 Lincoln Ready for Anything During Surge Sustainment Training NNS060109 06 USS Abraham Lincoln Public Affairs Archived from the original on 13 September 2007 Retrieved 20 April 2009 a b USS Abraham Lincoln CVN 72 2006 Operations Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships Navy Department Naval History and Heritage Command Retrieved 21 December 2010 Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Bruce McVicar USN 31 August 2006 USS Abraham Lincoln Arrives at NBK for Overhaul NNS060831 12 Northwest Region Fleet Public Affairs Archived from the original on 10 August 2009 Retrieved 26 December 2010 a b Mass Communication Specialist Seaman James R Evans USB 20 September 2006 Lincoln Enters Dry Dock NNS060920 03 USS Abraham Lincoln Public Affairs Archived from the original on 13 September 2007 Retrieved 26 December 2010 a b c d e USS Abraham Lincoln CVN 72 2006 Operations Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships Navy Department Naval History and Heritage Command Retrieved 27 December 2010 USS Abraham Lincoln CVN 72 Changes in armament and major systems Weapons and radar sonar equipment Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships Navy Department Naval History and Heritage Command Retrieved 21 December 2010 Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Kathleen Corona USN 13 February 2007 Lincoln Flight Deck Readies for Operations NNS070213 01 USS Abraham Lincoln Public Affairs Archived from the original on 13 September 2007 Retrieved 27 December 2010 Mary A Mascianica 26 December 2006 Lincoln Ahead of Schedule NNS061226 05 Puget Sound Naval Shipyard Public Affairs Archived from the original on 13 September 2007 Retrieved 27 December 2010 Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Brandon Wilson USN 1 July 2007 Lincoln Completes Final Fast Cruise Begins Sea Trials NNS070701 09 USS Abraham Lincoln Public Affairs Archived from the original on 13 September 2007 Retrieved 27 December 2010 Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Jeannette Bowles USN 2 July 2007 Lincoln Heads to Sea Following Nine Months in Dry Dock NNS070702 09 USS Abraham Lincoln Public Affairs Archived from the original on 13 September 2007 Retrieved 27 December 2010 Mass Communication Specialist Brad Wages USN 3 July 2007 Lincoln Comes Home Again NNS070703 17 USS Abraham Lincoln Public Affairs Archived from the original on 13 September 2007 Retrieved 27 December 2010 Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class James R Evans USN 19 July 2007 Flight Deck Certification Gets Lincoln Back in Business NNS070718 13 USS Abraham Lincoln Public Affairs Archived from the original on 13 September 2007 Retrieved 27 December 2010 Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Recruit Kathleen Corona USN 22 August 2007 Lincoln Achieves Outstanding Grade During TSTA FEP NNS070822 07 USS Abraham Linco Public Affairs Archived from the original on 12 September 2007 Retrieved 27 December 2010 Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class James R Evans USN 29 October 2007 Unexpected Company Arrives for Lincoln Strike Group s COMTUEX NNS071029 05 USS Abraham Lincoln Public Affairs Retrieved 27 December 2010 USS Abraham Lincoln CVN 72 2008 Operations Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships Navy Department Naval History and Heritage Command Retrieved 27 December 2010 Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class James Evans Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class AW SW Patrick Bonafede 29 January 2008 SECNAV Views ASW Exercise Aboard Lincoln NNS080129 04 USS Abraham Lincoln Public Affairs Archived from the original on 8 April 2008 Retrieved 27 December 2010 Mass Communication 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Today 11 January 2012 Archived from the original on 12 May 2015 Retrieved 15 November 2013 Aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln CVN 72 accompanied by guided missile cruiser Cape St George CG 71 departed Laem Chabang Thailand 10 Jan following a four day port visit Perry Tony 15 November 2013 Navy cancels 200 million in contracts with firm in bribery scandal Stars and Stripes Archived from the original on 31 October 2014 Retrieved 15 November 2013 SAN DIEGO The Navy has canceled more than 200 million in contracts with a Singapore based company at the center of a spiraling scandal involving accusations of bribery and leaking of confidential information U S aircraft carrier enters Gulf without incident day after Iran backs from threat Haaretz 23 January 2012 Archived from the original on 2 February 2012 Pentagon Officials Dismiss Iranian Warning Against US Carrier in Gulf Fox News 3 January 2012 Archived from the original on 16 October 2015 Retrieved 7 February 2013 Hannet Michelle 14 June 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carrier operations serve as floating American diplomacy CNN Archived from the original on 24 April 2019 Adamczyk Ed 13 June 2019 Navy s Truman Carrier Strike Group deploys without its aircraft carrier UPI Saunders Mark 20 January 2020 USS Abraham Lincoln returns from around the world deployment ABC 10 News San Diego California Female CO Will Command Aircraft Carrier for First Time Naval Air Force U S Pacific fleet Retrieved 24 April 2022 This Navy captain is now the first woman commanding a nuclear aircraft carrier navytimes com 20 August 2021 Retrieved 21 August 2021 Helicopter embarked aboard USS Abraham Lincoln crashes into the Pacific navytimes com 1 September 2021 Retrieved 3 September 2021 U S Navy helicopter crashes off San Diego coast Pacific Fleet says reuters com 1 September 2021 Retrieved 3 September 2021 First USMC F 35C Squadron Deploys on an Aircraft Carrier navalnew com 5 January 2022 Retrieved 2 May 2022 First USMC F 35c Squadron Deploys navy mil 5 January 2022 Retrieved 30 April 2022 First USMC F 35c Squadron Deploys on Aircraft Carrier defensenews com 13 April 2022 Retrieved 30 April 2022 USNI News Fleet and Marine Tracker May 23 2022 USNI News 1 June 2022 Retrieved 2 June 2022 USNI News Fleet and Marine Tracker June 27 2022 27 June 2022 Gonzaga Michigan State to play on USS Abraham Lincoln on Nov 11 espn com 14 July 2022 Retrieved 14 July 2022 Timme s 22 lead No 2 Zags past Spartans on carrier deck ESPN com Associated Press 11 November 2022 Retrieved 12 November 2022 Ziezulewicz Geoff 30 November 2022 Fire aboard aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln injures 9 sailors Navy Times Retrieved 1 December 2022 Sources EditUSS Abraham Lincoln CVN 72 command histories Naval History amp Heritage Command1989 Archived 5 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine 1990 Archived 5 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine 1991 Archived 5 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine 1992 Archived 5 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine 1993 Archived 5 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine 1994 Archived 5 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine 1995 Archived 13 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine 1996 Archived 5 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine 1997 Archived 16 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine 1998 Archived 5 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine 1999 Archived 5 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine 2001 Archived 5 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine 2002 Archived 5 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine 2003 Archived 15 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine 2004 Archived 31 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine This article incorporates text from the public domainDictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships The entry can be found here gExternal links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to USS Abraham Lincoln CVN 72 ship 1989 Official website Maritimequest USS Abraham Lincoln CVN 72 pages Story Archive U S Navy USS Abraham Lincoln CVN 72 USS Abraham Lincoln history at U S Carriers USS Abraham Lincoln Archived from the original on 18 October 2000 Retrieved 2 February 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title USS Abraham Lincoln CVN 72 amp oldid 1173965771, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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