‘The only thing Putin understands is strength’:
US aircraft carrier flexes muscle in the Med
With Russian ships and submarines patrolling the
Mediterranean, the USS Truman teams up with French and Italian carriers.
BY HANNAH
ROBERTS
March 22,
2022 4:06 am
NORTHERN
IONIAN SEA — The flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman was
covered with jet engine gas vapor as F-18 Super Hornets rocketed into the sky
one after the other. Watching takeoffs and landings at close quarters “is one
of the most dangerous things you will ever do,” claimed my minder, an officer with
28 years of experience in the Navy.
In the
sound and fury of the flight deck, this didn’t feel like hyperbole: The
experience was jarring. Despite ear-defenders, the growl of the throttle from
an aircraft that travels at 1.8 times the speed of sound makes your chest cage
rattle and your heart race. More than once we were yelled at with
drill-sergeant intensity to “GET BEHIND THE LINE!” as aircraft constantly
taxied, took off and landed around us. Welcome to the danger zone.
While the
high tempo was business as usual for the crew of the USS Truman, the backdrop,
both geographically and politically, was not: Accustomed to the Pacific Ocean
and the seas of the Middle East, the USS Truman’s strike group are now in the
northern Ionian Sea, its fighter jets and radar planes patrolling NATO’s
eastern borders and looking east, to a Ukraine now under invasion from Russian
armed forces.
Since the
invasion almost a month ago, these jets have flown more than 75 patrol missions
across NATO’s eastern flank up to the Ukraine border, from the Truman. The
so-called Enhanced Air Policing mission is part of NATO’s Assurance Measures
introduced in 2014, after Russia’s illegal annexation of the Crimean peninsula,
and is aimed at defending NATO airspace, preventing incursions by Russians.
The
20-story nuclear-powered Truman is the flagship of a strike group, a mobile
fighting force of up to 10 destroyers and submarines, 8 aircraft squadrons and
a missile cruiser that can move anywhere in the world’s seas, launching missile
or air strikes or merely providing visible proof of American resolve.
As a mobile
U.S. airbase, the Truman will be on the front line if NATO decides to enforce a
no-fly zone, or should the worst happen and NATO forces be drawn into a direct
conflict. “The role of Truman, with other allies, is to deter Russians from
further aggression and to be on constant standby for orders that might be given
from our president or from other leaders around the world for the protection of
Ukraine and the people of Ukraine,” Secretary of the U.S. Navy Carlos Del Toro
told POLITICO during a visit to the carrier.
Since the
war on terror began 20 years ago, U.S. Navy carriers have spent most of their
deployments in the Middle East. More recently, as tensions with China have increased,
there has been a “pivot” in the U.S.’s focus toward the Pacific, to counter the
perceived security threat presented by Chinese ambitions in the region. But
with the invasion of Ukraine, the center of gravity has, for now at least,
shifted to Eastern Europe, and the strike group is now stationed in the
Mediterranean.
Because of
Russian pressure, there are more U.S. warships in the Mediterranean than ever
before, said Del Toro. “There are numerous Russian ships and subs in the
Mediterranean today and that’s why it’s important for NATO to have an equal
presence, to deter them,” he said, adding: “The only thing Putin understands is
strength.”
The mission
is about demonstrating not just to Russia but to the U.S.’s NATO allies that,
despite the lack of willingness to engage militarily on behalf of Ukraine, it
is a different matter when it comes to countries inside NATO. After the Donald
Trump years, when NATO faced an existential crisis, Truman’s presence in the
Mediterranean, on a NATO mission, is also a physical manifestation of President
Joe Biden’s message to NATO allies that America is back.
For
Lieutenant Adam Wawro, one of the F-18 pilots, the mission is technically
similar to hundreds he has been on during his five years of training. But it
has a symbolic value — sending a message to both the Russians and allies that
NATO is real.
“We are
there to show NATO’s resolve, show we are there for them with more than just
words, with actions. That we are going to be there.” They are showing that NATO
“actually exists, that it’s more than just a number of ideas on paper,” he
added.
This return
to multilateralism after the wilderness years is reflected in the approach
taken by U.S. forces to the Ukrainian conflict, which has obliged NATO forces
to cooperate more significantly than in the last 25 years. “We are working at a
level with NATO allies that most of the folks on board have never seen,” said
Lt. Commander Shawn Ekland, a spokesman for the carrier group. “Usually we
would zorch [sic] through the Med to the Middle East then zorch [sic] back,
It’s very unusual to hang around here.”
Last week the
carrier converged with French carrier FS Charles de Gaulle and Italian carrier
Cavour. “They were operating as a combined unit. That’s a big deal,” said
Ekland.
Following
training with the Romanians in March, pilots involved in the Enhanced Air
Policing mission are able to refuel in the air from NATO partners, which
doubles the time they are able to stay on mission and builds capacity for the
eventuality of fighting together seamlessly.
Captain
Patrick Hourigan, commander of the battle group’s airwing, said: “We meet in
the sky, we know where to meet, how to talk to them, how much gas to expect. We
do this often enough it becomes standard practice.”
What goes
unsaid is that as much as this is a show of force for the benefit of Russia,
and perhaps China, signaling that the U.S. is willing to back up sanctions with
military positions and reassure European allies of American resolve post-Trump,
the show is also a salutary reminder to the Europeans to ramp up their spending
in their own backyard. Since the end of the Cold War, the U.S. has pressed
Europe to do more to police its own neighborhood. And to be fair, European
resolve has stiffened. Mindful of the botched U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan
last year and conscious of the risk of a Trump presidency 2.0, European leaders
realize that they can no longer lean so heavily on Washington to defend
democracy.
Those on
board deflected questions about the wider political nuances of the mission,
more concerned with the immediate urgency of the conflict. In their day-to-day
missions, the Ukraine conflict has created “more motivation, a greater sense of
purpose, that we are actually out here for a very serious reason,” said Wawro.
Having a
birdseye view of the war has brought home the reality of the Russian threat, he
said: “We are right there on the border, where it’s all happening. We can see
the fronts. We can see a lot.” He added: “It’s pretty humbling.”

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