Navy Chief Unveils 'Fighting Instructions' to Rely Less on Carriers in Crises
Feb 10
1
Adm. Daryl Caudle, the U.S. Navy’s top uniformed officer, has issued new 'Fighting Instructions' urging commanders to break their habit of defaulting to aircraft carrier strike groups and instead use smaller, tailored force packages built around newer ships, drones and Coast Guard assets. In an interview with the Associated Press ahead of the rollout, Caudle said recent Trump‑ordered deployments of the USS Gerald R. Ford to the Caribbean for the Maduro capture operation and the USS Abraham Lincoln from the South China Sea to the Middle East have strained maintenance cycles and are not always the right tools for missions like tanker interdictions near Venezuela. He says he is working with U.S. Southern Command on leaner Caribbean task groups focused on surveillance and interdiction using littoral combat ships, helicopters, Coast Guard cutters and unmanned systems, arguing that 'it doesn’t really require a carrier strike group' to track suspect merchant shipping. Caudle acknowledges resistance inside the system, noting that combatant commanders and their staffs often don’t yet know how to request or integrate newer niche capabilities, and sees his strategy as both an operational and education campaign. The shift comes as the Trump administration showcases big‑deck carriers as symbols of resolve from Iran to Latin America, setting up a quiet internal fight over how to balance political signaling with what the Navy’s leadership says is more sustainable, mission‑matched force design.
U.S. Navy and Force Posture
National Security and Trump Foreign Policy