Donald Trump has redirected the USS Gerald R Ford to the Middle East for what appears to be a final push in Iran nuclear negotiations. The carrier’s deployment from Caribbean operations will bring it alongside the USS Abraham Lincoln after approximately three weeks, substantially increasing American military presence as Trump seeks to force Iranian concessions within roughly a one-month deadline.
The timing demonstrates Trump’s determination to maintain maximum pressure following coordination with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu in Washington. Israel has articulated that acceptable Iran agreements must restrict ballistic missile capabilities and curtail proxy support alongside nuclear enrichment, creating comprehensive requirements.
Iranian negotiators have signaled potential flexibility on nuclear enrichment in exchange for sanctions relief that could provide significant economic benefits. However, Iranian leadership has drawn firm boundaries against accepting constraints on ballistic missile programs or reducing support for regional allies.
The USS Gerald R Ford has been continuously deployed since June 2025, operating first in Mediterranean waters before Caribbean assignment where it played an instrumental role in the January Maduro seizure. The Middle East redeployment extends what has already been an exceptionally lengthy deployment.
Trump delivered increasingly pointed warnings to Iranian leadership as the week concluded. Thursday brought characterizations of negotiation failure as potentially “very traumatic” for Tehran while expressing optimism for agreement. Friday’s Fort Bragg appearance saw Trump suggest that regime change in Iran might ultimately be preferable.