U.S. Central Command said Monday it is staging a multi-day air readiness exercise across its Middle East area of responsibility, as the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln and three accompanying destroyers arrive in the region. The moves come as protests in Iran and the government’s response continue to drive sharp disagreements over casualty figures and raise concerns about a potential U.S.-Iran escalation.
On Monday, U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) announced a stepped-up round of military activity across its area of responsibility, which it says spans more than 4 million square miles from Northeast Africa through the Middle East to Central and South Asia and includes waterways such as the Persian Gulf, the Red Sea, the Arabian Sea, and the Gulf of Oman.
CENTCOM said Ninth Air Force (Air Forces Central) is conducting a multi-day readiness exercise intended to demonstrate the ability to deploy, disperse, and sustain combat airpower across the region.
“Our Airmen are proving they can disperse, operate, and generate combat sorties under demanding conditions—safely, precisely and alongside our partners,” Lt. Gen. Derek France, the Air Forces Central commander, said in the announcement. He said the effort is meant to reinforce combat readiness and the procedures needed to keep airpower available “when and where it’s needed.”
The Air Force description of the drill said it is designed to validate rapid movement of personnel and aircraft, dispersed operations at contingency locations, logistics sustainment with a small footprint, and multinational command and control over a wide operating area. Air Forces Central and CENTCOM materials also said the exercise includes movements involving aircraft such as F-35 Lightning IIs and F-15E Strike Eagles.
At the same time, the Navy’s USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group has arrived in CENTCOM’s area, with the command saying the deployment is meant to “promote regional security and stability.” An Associated Press report carried by Navy Times said the carrier’s arrival marks the first U.S. aircraft carrier presence in the region since the USS Gerald R. Ford was ordered in October to sail to the Caribbean.
The military activity is unfolding amid unrest in Iran and competing accounts of the toll from the government’s crackdown. TIME reported, citing two senior officials in Iran’s Health Ministry, that internal figures suggested as many as 30,000 people may have been killed over two days in early January; TIME said it could not independently verify the figures. The magazine also cited activist and other tallies that were substantially lower than the 30,000 figure, as well as an official Iranian death toll far below activist estimates.
President Donald Trump has said the carrier group was sent “just in case,” according to the Associated Press report. The same report said Trump previously warned that mass executions of prisoners or further killings of demonstrators could lead to U.S. military action, and that he suggested any such intervention would exceed the scale of last year’s U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear sites.
The Associated Press report also said analysts tracking flight data have observed U.S. military cargo aircraft moving toward the region, describing the pattern as similar to activity seen last year ahead of U.S. strikes and subsequent Iranian retaliation. Independent confirmation of specific munitions loads cited in some commentary, including references to Tomahawk missiles as part of the current buildup, was not provided in the publicly available CENTCOM and Air Forces Central announcements.