Trump
sends second aircraft carrier to Middle East in effort to increase pressure on
Iran
USS
Gerald R Ford will take about three weeks to sail to region, amid push for Iran
to curb its nuclear ambitions
Dan
Sabbagh Defence and security editor
Fri 13
Feb 2026 23.15 CET
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/13/world/europe/munich-security-conference-nato-rubio.html
Donald
Trump has ordered the world’s largest aircraft carrier to sail from the
Caribbean Sea to the Middle East in an effort to increase pressure on Iran amid
discussions over curbing its nuclear and ballistic missile programmes.
The USS
Gerald R Ford and its supporting warships should take about three weeks to
return to the region, where they will join the USS Abraham Lincoln,
dramatically increasing the military firepower available to the US leader.
On
Tuesday, Trump said in an interview with Axios that he was “thinking” about
sending a second carrier strike group to the Middle East, though at that point
he said he believed Tehran was willing to strike a nuclear deal.
The US
and Iran held a round of indirect negotiations in Oman last week, and further
discussions were expected to follow, but so far no date has been scheduled.
Reports
began circulating in US media on Thursday that the Ford was the carrier that
had been nominated to set sail, a day after Trump met Israel’s prime minister,
Benjamin Netanyahu, in Washington to discuss the emerging negotiations with
Iran.
Iran has
indicated it is willing to curb its nuclear enrichment programme in return for
sanctions relief, but has rejected other demands. Israel wants Iran to limit
its ballistic missile programme and cut support for Hezbollah and other proxy
groups.
Trump’s
rhetoric about Iran has changed markedly over the past month. At first he
appeared to suggest that he wanted to intervene – telling people protesting
against the country’s regime that “help is coming”. But at the time the US had
few military assets available.
That
changed with the arrival of the Lincoln carrier strike group, but by then the
Iranian regime had largely regained control of the streets by killing thousands
of people – possibly tens of thousands – in the most brutal crackdown in the
country’s recent history.
Meanwhile,
the US president’s focus appeared to have moved to curbing Iran’s nuclear
programme – already set back in a summer bombing campaign by Israeli and US air
forces during last summer’s 12-day war.
The Ford
carrier strike group had been sent from the eastern Mediterranean at the end of
October, and arrived in the Caribbean Sea in mid-November as Trump increased
pressure on Venezeula’s former president Nicolás Maduro.
It played
a central role in the extraordinary seizure of Maduro by US forces in early
January, and had remained in the Caribbean. However, sending the carrier and
its allied warships back to the Middle East makes for an unusually long
deployment: it left the US in June 2025 and has no obvious date of return.
On
Thursday Trump warned Iran that failure to reach a deal with his administration
would be “very traumatic” and said he hoped that talks would conclude shortly.
“I guess
over the next month, something like that,” Trump said in response to a question
about his timeline for striking a deal with Iran on its nuclear programme. “It
should happen quickly. They should agree very quickly.”
Then, on
Friday, on a visit to the Fort Bragg military base in North Carolina, Trump
said a change of government in Iran would be the “best thing that could
happen”.
“For 47
years, they’ve been talking and talking and talking. In the meantime, we’ve
lost a lot of lives while they talk,” he told reporters.

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