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Deep in the Eastern Mediterranean, the $13 billion USS Gerald R. Ford drops anchor exactly 1,240 nautical miles away from a ticking four-hour countdown. Deep inside the Zagros Mountains, volatile Iranian Sejjil ballistic missiles are prepping for launch. But instead of pushing into the shallow, mine-infested waters of the Persian Gulf, the US Navy parks its most expensive supercarrier in a distant sanctuary. Why? The enemy banked on the physical limits of aviation. With F/A-18 Super Hornets bound by a 500-mile combat radius and a crew exhausted from 237 days at sea, a direct assault seems mathematically impossible. Pushing tankers closer only creates a deadly kill-zone for American pilots. But distance isn't a weakness; it's a trap. Witness how the US Navy hacks the laws of physics using the Distributed Kill Web. By linking silent F-35A stealth fighters with a massive, autonomous swarm of JASSM-ER cruise missiles, the CVN-78 unleashes a devastating strike from 600 miles away. The Navy turns a geographic barrier into an untouchable shield, dismantling the enemy's air defense without losing a single aviator. #usnavy #ussgeraldrford #persiangulf #navalstrategy #navydecoded #military Timestamps: 0:00 USS Ford's 1,200-Mile Strategy 3:25 US Navy Aviation vs. Fatigue 7:13 NIFC-CA & Carrier Logistics 10:26 F-35A Sensors & Naval Strike Swarms 18:15 Redefining Modern Naval Warfare