The Power of Aircraft Carriers
An
aircraft carrier is a
large naval vessel with a flight deck that supports the takeoff
and landing of military aircraft.
Aircraft carriers are the most important warships operated
by the navies of the world.
Their mission is the operation of aircraft in an ocean environment,
which provides air cover to other warships and supports operations
ashore where
an air base is unavailable. Aircraft carriers are easily
recognizable by their large size and distinctive shape, characterized
by a continuous
flat deck running the length of the ship.
Carriers are a powerful and extremely flexible part of a nation’s
defense. A carrier is flexible in a way that armies and air
forces are not because it can influence events merely by being
seen. The power of
an aircraft carrier can act as a visible deterrent to enemy
aggression. A carrier is also flexible because it operates
on the ocean. Unlike a land
air base, no other country has to be consulted about where
a carrier can go and what it can be used for because most of
the ocean is considered
international water and not part of any one country. This freedom
allows carriers to move from one trouble spot to another quite
easily. Carriers
operate with a number of support and supply ships; this flotilla
of ships is referred to as a carrier battle group.
Since World
War II, carriers have primarily been
used to influence world events and to support troops
ashore. When the Korean War broke out in June
1950, United States Navy carriers
were the only military airpower immediately available
to engage the enemy. U.S. Air Force units were unable to
respond for several months. Aircraft
carriers were also the first American units to arrive
on the scene during the Vietnam War and the Persian
Gulf War.
While carriers are important, they are also quite expensive,
so there are only a few patrolling the world’s oceans
today. Approximately 40 carriers of all types are currently
in use or are being built. Of these, over half are in
service in the U.S. Navy. A typical American nuclear powered
aircraft carrier can cost well over $4 billion and take five
years to build.
The Evolution of this Design
Each
U.S. Navy aircraft carrier has a variety of aircraft, including fighters,
bombers, and aircraft for airborne surveillance and early warning, electronic
warfare, antisubmarine warfare, and logistics. Carriers stand as the most
capable warships at sea. The carrier is the core of a large group of vessels
known as a carrier battle group, which includes 12 to 15 other vessels,
including destroyers, cruisers, and supply ships.
A
Nimitz-class aircraft carrier weighs about 90,000 metric
tons and carries 85 to 90 aircraft. By comparison, a Russian
aircraft
carrier weighs about
61,200 metric tons and carries about 20 aircraft. A typical
load of aircraft for a Nimitz-class carrier consists of the
following: F/A-18 Hornets for air-to-air combat or ground
attack; F-14 Tomcats for air defense of the
carrier; FA-6E Intruders
for all-weather
bomber attack; E-A6B Prowlers for electronic warfare;
S-3A Vikings for antisubmarine warfare; and SH-60
Sea Hawks
for search-and-rescue and for antisubmarine warfare. Other aircraft on board might include support airplanes
and the AV-8B Harrier—the vertical takeoff and landing
attack aircraft used by the Marines. This array of aircraft
can strike enemy aircraft, surface ships, or submarines,
as well as ground targets deep in enemy territory. Some of
the carrier’s aircraft employ electronic warfare, using
special electronics to jam enemy communications and to cloak
U.S. forces from detection by the enemy. Because of its varied
and long-range fighting capabilities, the aircraft carrier
also serves a central role in maintaining sea control.
Carrier-based airplanes are a specially modified type of
land plane designed for takeoff from and landing aboard naval
aircraft carriers. Carrier airplanes have a strengthened
structure, including their landing gear, to handle the stresses
of catapult-assisted takeoff, in which the craft is launched
by a steam-driven catapult; and arrested landings, made by
using a hook attached to the underside of the aircraft’s
tail to catch one of four wires strung across the flight
deck of the carrier.
The central Pacific thrust was slower in getting started.
The southwest Pacific islands were relatively close together;
airfields on one could furnish support for the move to the
next; and the Japanese navy was wary of risking its ships
within range of land-based aircraft. In the central Pacific,
however, the islands were scattered over vast stretches of
ocean, and powerful naval forces were needed to support the
landings, particularly aircraft carriers, which were not
available in sufficient numbers until late 1943.
The first central Pacific landings were in the Gilbert Islands,
at Makin and Tarawa in November 1943. Betio Island in the
Tarawa Atoll, 117.8 hectares of coral sand and
concrete and coconut log bunkers, cost the 2nd Marine Division
3000 casualties in three days. More intensive preliminary
bombardments and larger numbers of amphibian tractors capable
of crossing the surrounding reefs made the taking of Kwajalein
and Enewetak in the Marshall Islands in February 1944 somewhat
less expensive.
The most important naval ships of modern times, aircraft
carriers are massive vessels equipped with flight decks to
support the takeoff and landing of military aircraft. The
largest and most advanced carriers in the world belong to
the Nimitz class. Nimitz carriers stretch 333 m (1,092 ft)
in length and carry 85 aircraft. Their crews number more
than 3,000, and they also house aircrew and support teams
numbering almost 2,500. They are powered by a two-reactor
power plant.
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