Fire Aboard USS Gerald R. Ford Burned for Over 30 Hours, Displacing Hundreds of Sailors
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A fire in the main laundry area of the U.S. aircraft carrier Gerald R. Ford burned for more than 30 hours last week, forcing over 600 sailors and crew members to abandon their bunks and sleep on floors and tables, according to sailors and military officials cited by the New York Times. U.S. Central Command said two sailors were treated for non‑life‑threatening injuries, while people aboard report that dozens suffered smoke inhalation, and shipboard laundry has been largely unavailable since the blaze. The Ford, carrying about 4,500 sailors and aviators, had already been pushed hard by back‑to‑back taskings: ordered out of the Mediterranean to the Caribbean in October to bolster President Trump’s pressure campaign on Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, then rushed to the Middle East for the U.S.–Israeli war against Iran. The incident highlights the operational strain on the Navy’s most advanced carrier and raises fresh questions about fire safety, damage control and crew living conditions on a capital ship deployed through multiple crises. It also comes as social media chatter from sailors’ families focuses on the lack of official detail about the scale of the damage and the health impacts, underscoring long‑standing skepticism about how frankly the Pentagon reports non‑combat mishaps at sea.
U.S. Military Readiness and Safety
Iran and Venezuela War Operations