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USS Abraham pulls into Pearl Harbor amid lengthy deployment by Christen Mccurdy Washington DC (UPI) Jan 09, 2020 The USS Abraham Lincoln has entered the last leg of a lengthy deployment with a port visit at Pearl Harbor. "I am proud of all of the hard work and dedication shown by the entire crew throughout the deployment," Capt. Walter Slaughter, commanding officer of Abraham Lincoln, said. "Hawaii is a strategic, historic location that presents a well-deserved opportunity for rest and relaxation, and for the crew to honor the sacrifices of those who have gone before us during the attack on Pearl Harbor." The aircraft carrier deployed in April with a strike group surface ships that have since returned to Norfolk, and remained in the Persian Gulf as tensions flared up in the region, rushing into the North Arabian Sea in May and remaining there until a November transit through the Strait of Hormuz. The Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group also conducted flight operations in the South China Sea and participated in exercises with allied navies in the U.S. 5th and 6th Fleets. Before it departs Hawaii, family and friends will embark on a tiger cruise -- a Navy tradition allowing civilians aboard for a short embarkment to see what their loved ones' jobs entail. The Lincoln has been deployed since April 1, or 283 days, nearing a record for length of carrier deployment post-Vietnam. That record is also held by the Lincoln, which was stationed in the Middle East from July 2002 to May 2003, or 290 days.The all-time record length of deployment is held by the USS America, which was deployed for 292 days from June 1972 to March 1973.
USS Leyte Gulf returns home after nine-month deployment Washington (UPI) Jan 6, 2020 The guided missile cruiser USS Leyte Gulf returned to Norfolk Naval Station, Va., its home port, after a nine-month deployment of 50,000 nautical miles. The Ticonderoga-class vessel deployed in March, part of Carrier Strike Force 12 and led by the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln. The Leyte Gulf completed multiple "choke point" transits, including the Strait of Gibraltar, the Suez Canal, the Bab-el Mandeb strait at the southern tip of the Red Sea, and the Strait of Hormuz. The ship a ... read more
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