the aircraft carrier

July 21, 1946 - In the first U.S. test of the
adaptability of jet aircraft to shipboard operations, an FD-1 Phantom,
piloted by Cmdr. James Davidson made successful landings and take-offs
on board the USS Franklin D. Roosevelt
In the second half of the
20th century, the aircraft carrier became a symbol of the United States’
position as a superpower. These massive ships had been essential to Allied
victory in the Pacific during World War II, but afterward, they began to
find a new important role as the "forward military presence" of the United
States, arriving first on the scene of trouble. Since 1946, when the USS
Franklin D. Roosevelt was sent to Greece to symbolize support for the
pro-Western side during Greece’s civil war against the communists, the
carrier has shown up to warn potential enemies that America is watching.
Former President Bill Clinton honoured the carrier’s importance when he
said, "When word of crisis breaks out in Washington, it’s no accident the
first question that comes to everyone’s lips is: ‘where is the nearest
carrier?’" Providing "forward presence," the aircraft carrier remains an
extremely important part of America’s power and image.

Between Aug. 6 and Oct. 4, 1946,
the USS Franklin D. Roosevelt deployed to the Mediterranean Sea. The
carrier made a port visit at Athens, reemphasizing U.S. support of the
pro-Western Greek government, involved in a civil war against Communist
insurgents. This was the earliest example of forward presence.
But the carrier was almost
relegated to history after World War II. Foreseeing the inevitable
post-war budget battles, navy leaders had spent World War II rallying for
funding for the next generation of carriers. They knew that peace would
arrive before these ships were built, but they also understood that in
peacetime, funding would be harder to secure.
The end of the war would
also signal the arrival of the navy’s first jet aircraft to operate off
the deck of a carrier, the Douglas A3D Skyraider. Jet power, coupled with
the navy’s desire to have planes that could carry nuclear bombs, meant
that these new carriers would be too small. The navy now needed carriers
with more deck space. These larger carriers would be called supercarriers.
Money for a new fleet of
supercarriers, however, was hard to come by because, after the war,
defence spending had been reduced to a level that would support only one
large project. The competitors were the air force’s B-36 bomber and the
navy’s supercarrier. The air force claimed that Hiroshima and Nagasaki had
proven that a bomber equipped with nuclear weapons made other weaponry
obsolete. The navy, on the other hand, replied that since the supercarrier
was large enough to launch large bombers equipped with nuclear ordnance
closer to the target, it was a better investment.
The air force won, and the
supercarrier project was cancelled even though the keel of the first
supercarrier, the USS United States, had been laid down just five days
earlier. The keel became scrap metal. The navy and the Marine Corps, which
usually did not cooperate on funding issues, united to discredit the air
force project, afraid that the funding of the B-36 was the first move in
the process to unify all aviation under one service, a development they
opposed. Termed the "Revolt of the Admirals," their investigators exposed
fraud, favouritism, and misrepresentation associated with the bomber.
Nevertheless, congressional hearings cleared the air force of all
wrongdoing, and the navy was accused of being the one service not
cooperating in the new Department of Defence organization. The chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Omar Bradley, went so far as to say that the
navy "won’t hit the line with all they have on every play unless they can
call the signals." Although Congress did appropriate money for the navy to
modernize the current carrier fleet and develop jet aircraft, many
admirals were forced to retire and some programs were cut.

The USS Valley Forge launched the
first carrier air strikes in Korea on July 3, 1950.
When the Korean War began
the next year, the carrier was given a chance to prove its value. Within
days of North Korea’s invasion of the south, the USS Valley Forge arrived
off the coast of Korea with the British light carrier Triumph. The navy
planes performed all types of missions but primarily provided close air
support. Consequently, Congress finally gave the navy funding for its
supercarrier.
During the war, the jet
airplanes had problems with the carriers then in service. Because of the
jet’s speed, the plane’s tailhook did not always catch the arresting wires
(the wires strung across the carrier deck that first slowed and then
stopped the plane) when it landed, so the plane could not stop before it
skidded into the bank of parked airplanes, causing much damage. The
British had already developed an angled deck that allowed a plane that
missed the wire to take off again from a clear runway (a move called a
"bolter"). The first American supercarrier, named the USS Forrestal,
debuted in 1955 with an angled deck, as well as new steam catapults
sufficiently powerful to launch powerful large jets.

October 1, 1955 - USS
Forrestal, the first of four ships of her class and the Navy's first
supercarrier was placed in commission at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard,
Portsmouth, Va.
The modern aircraft carrier
functions as a small city at sea, with not only a small airport on deck
but also medical offices, machine shops, law offices, security, food
service, housing, and power plants among other things supporting the crew
of several thousand. Most carriers can carry about 85 vehicles, including
fighter jets to protect the fleet, transport helicopters, submarine
hunting planes, search and rescue helicopters, and missiles. Planes such
as the F/A-18 Hornet, which can perform different types of missions, are
most valued for the options they give the fleet. And because of the
demands of carrier flight, which include violent landings that are
essentially crashes onto the deck, carrier airplane frames are stronger
than frames on other planes. In the past this had meant that they were
heavier and less agile than their land-based counterparts, but due to new
materials such as composites and carbons, the new carrier planes can
perform as well as other planes.
In the military actions of
the second half of the 20th century, aircraft carriers performed essential
roles, proving their versatility and becoming the prime forward presence
of the United States. When the Marines landed on the beaches of Beirut in
1958, carrier-based airplanes covered them. During the Cuban Missile
Crisis in 1962, President John Kennedy sent the carriers USS Enterprise,
Independence, Essex, and Randolph to set up a naval quarantine around
Cuba. And when the USS Maddox, a destroyer on electronic intelligence
patrol in the Tonkin Gulf off Vietnam in August 1964, was attacked by
three Communist patrol boats, the USS Ticonderoga and Constellation
arrived in the area within days, and their jets launched bombing raids
against North Vietnamese patrol boat bases and an oil storage depot. These
were the first air missions of the war.
During the Vietnam War,
navy planes based on carriers located in the Tonkin Gulf suffered heavy
losses. In 1968, the USS Oriskany lost half its aircraft, 39 vehicles, in
122 days. In fact, losing at least 20 aircraft per cruise was not uncommon
during the war. The morale of naval aviators plummeted as a result, but
they fought hard until the last helicopter landed on a carrier after the
evacuation of Saigon in 1975.

August 2, 1964 - Aircraft from USS
Ticonderoga drove off North Vietnamese motor torpedo boats attacking the
destroyer USS Maddox, patrolling international waters in the Gulf of
Tonkin.
Toward the end of the 20th
and beginning of the 21st centuries, the U.S. aircraft carrier remained
the country’s forward presence. With three carriers always on a cruise
somewhere in the world, normally in the Mediterranean Sea, Pacific Ocean,
and Persian Gulf, they can reach hot spots quickly. When Saddam Hussein
invaded Kuwait in August 1990, the USS Eisenhower, cruising in the
Mediterranean, was able to reach the Red Sea, within striking distance of
Iraq, in two days. And because, by international law, aircraft carriers
are sovereign U.S. territory when in international waters, they eliminate
the need for the United States to gain permission from a host nation to
position planes or troops on their territory. American bases in foreign
countries, increasingly unpopular and the focus of anger and resentment
among native populations, do not need to be built or maintained. Carriers
are free to roam the seas, which make up 70 percent of the Earth’s
surface. Their speed and flexibility allow them to bring firepower and
presence anywhere they are needed. In the words of President Clinton, and
every president since World War II, the most important question in times
of tension is "where is the nearest carrier?"
|