Maiden deployment After sea trials and pre-deployment workups,
Theodore Roosevelt started her maiden deployment on 30 December 1988 with
Carrier Air Wing Eight (CVW-8) embarked. The ship patrolled the
Mediterranean Sea prior to returning on 30 June 1989. She was awarded the 1989
Battle "E" from
Commander, Naval Air Force U.S. Atlantic Fleet on 20 March 1990.
1990s On 28 December 1990,
Theodore Roosevelt and CVW-8 deployed for
Operation Desert Shield, arriving in the
Persian Gulf on 16 January 1991. With the commencement of Operation Desert Storm on 15 January 1991,
Theodore Roosevelt began combat operations; eventually flying over 4,200 sorties, more than any other carrier, and dropping more than of ordnance before the cease-fire on 28 February. When
Iraqi forces turned on the
Kurds,
Theodore Roosevelt and CVW-8 were among the first coalition forces in
Operation Provide Comfort, flying patrols over northern Iraq. After a 189-day deployment, with 176 days at sea,
Theodore Roosevelt returned to Norfolk on 28 June 1991. On 14 February 1992, the ship won her second Battle "E". This was followed by the award of the
Battenberg Cup for 1991 as the Atlantic Fleet's premier ship.
Theodore Roosevelt began her third deployment on 11 March 1993, again with CVW-8 embarked. Also embarked was a Special Purpose
Marine Air-Ground Task Force (SPMAGTF), in a test of the concept of embarking a multi-purpose Marine force in a carrier. While the ship was still in the
Virginia Capes operating area, President
Bill Clinton flew aboard for several hours for his first visit to a U.S. Navy ship. but
Theodore Roosevelt suffered more than $7 million damage to her stern, while damages to
Leyte Gulfs bow were assessed at $2 million.
Theodore Roosevelt deployed for her fifth deployment on 25 November 1996, with
CVW-3 embarked, in support of Operation Southern Watch in the Mediterranean and Persian Gulf. The ship returned from deployment in May 1997. On 8 July 1997,
Theodore Roosevelt entered the
Newport News Shipbuilding yard for a one-year Extended Drydock and Selected Restricted Availability (EDSRA), her first major overhaul since commissioning.
Theodore Roosevelt returned to her homeport of
Norfolk Naval Station on 2 July 1998. From 1 February to 4 March 1999
Theodore Roosevelt participated in exercise JTFEX / TMDI99 along with the
Brazilian Navy and several NATO navies. During the exercise,
Theodore Roosevelt was mock-sunk, along with eight other U.S. ships, many of which were the carrier's escorts, by the submarine of the
Royal Netherlands Navy.
Theodore Roosevelt began her sixth deployment on 26 March 1999 with CVW-8 embarked. They were immediately called to duty in the
Ionian Sea to support NATO's
Operation Allied Force.
Theodore Roosevelt and CVW-8 aircraft conducted airstrikes for two months over the skies of
Kosovo against Serbian positions.
Theodore Roosevelt and CVW-8 were then dispatched to support Operation Southern Watch, enforcing the "
no-fly zone" over
Southern Iraq.
Theodore Roosevelt returned to her
home port of Norfolk, Virginia, on 24 September 1999.
2000s On 10 January 2000,
Theodore Roosevelt entered a Planned Incremental Availability (PIA) at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard,
Portsmouth, Virginia for a six-month maintenance period. After the
September 11 attacks,
Theodore Roosevelt began her seventh deployment on 19 September 2001 with
Carrier Air Wing One (CVW-1). On 15 October 2001,
Theodore Roosevelt and CVW-1 entered the
North Arabian Sea, joining the already-present
Enterprise and
Carl Vinson in conducting attacks against al-Qaeda in Afghanistan for
Operation Enduring Freedom. Between departing Norfolk on 19 September 2001 and arriving in Bahrain for a liberty call on 27 February 2002,
Theodore Roosevelt spent 160 consecutive days at sea, breaking the record for the longest period underway since
World War II.
Theodore Roosevelt returned to her homeport 27 March 2002 and was awarded the
Navy Unit Commendation, 2001 Battenberg Cup, and 2001 Battle "E". From April to October 2002,
Theodore Roosevelt conducted a Planned Incremental Availability maintenance period at Norfolk Naval Ship Yard. in
Crete Theodore Roosevelt got underway on 6 January for a scheduled month-long training period in the
Puerto Rican Operating Area. Near the end of January,
Theodore Roosevelt received orders to proceed across the Atlantic to the Mediterranean Sea.
Strike Fighter Squadron 201, based at Naval Air Station
Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base Fort Worth, Texas, was ordered to active duty as a unit of Carrier Air Wing (CVW) 8, the first
Naval Reserve squadron to deploy aboard an aircraft carrier since the
Korean War.
Theodore Roosevelt arrived on station in the Eastern Mediterranean in February. On 22 March 2003
Theodore Roosevelt, along with , began launching air strikes into Iraq in support of
Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Theodore Roosevelt returned home on 26 May and was awarded the Meritorious Unit Commendation, the
Navy Unit Citation, and the
Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal. On 19 February 2004,
Theodore Roosevelt entered a ten-month Docked Planned Incremental Availability (DPIA) at NNSY in Portsmouth. Major systems overhauled included AC systems, Steam and CHT (sewage) systems, 1MC (announcing) systems, communication, navigation, and detection suites, weapons elevator overhauls, propeller replacement, hull cleaning and painting, and sea valve replacement.
Theodore Roosevelt came out of dry-dock in August and completed the maintenance availability on 17 December 2004. from the "Sidewinders" of
VFA-86 ignites its afterburners while preparing to be catapulted from the flight deck. On 1 September 2005,
Theodore Roosevelt deployed with CVW-8 embarked for a routine six-month mission to the Persian Gulf in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF), transiting the Suez Canal on 27 September and launching OIF missions beginning 6 October. This deployment was the last cruise for the
F-14 Tomcat before its retirement in 2006.
Theodore Roosevelt carried two Tomcat squadrons,
VF-31 (Tomcatters) and
VF-213 (Black Lions).
Theodore Roosevelt returned to home port on 11 March 2006. Shortly after this cruise,
Theodore Roosevelt earned the
"Jig Dog" Ramage Carrier and Carrier Air Wing Operational Excellence Award, which is a Navy-wide award that is selected jointly by Type Commanders (TYCOM) and is presented to the Carrier/Air Wing team with the best performance as an integrated unit. On 7 March 2007,
Theodore Roosevelt began a nine-month Planned Incremental Availability (PIA) in Norfolk, which saw the addition of
RAM-116 missiles among other upgrades. The ship returned to Naval Station Norfolk on 28 November 2007. CVW-8 and
Theodore Roosevelt participated in Joint Task Force Exercise 08-4 Operation Brimstone off the coast of
North Carolina between 21 and 31 July 2008. The British aircraft carrier , the amphibious assault ship with associated units and the Brazilian frigate and the French submarine also participated in the event.
Theodore Roosevelt left Norfolk on 8 September 2008 for a scheduled deployment to the Middle East with
Carrier Air Wing Eight embarked. On 4 October 2008, the ship stopped at
Cape Town, South Africa. This was the first visit to Cape Town by a nuclear-powered vessel since the German cargo ship
Otto Hahn in the 1970s. Due to poor weather, approximately half of the ship's crew was unable to go ashore on
liberty. Much of the crew that made it ashore were unable to return to
Theodore Roosevelt due to the increasingly poor weather. The remaining crew was forced to remain on the pier till morning alongside the
cruiser . The ship made four subsequent port stops in
Jebel Ali, UAE, including one during the Christmas holiday. CVW-8 and CVN-71 supported Operation Enduring Freedom and flew more than 3,100 sorties and dropped more than 59,500 pounds of ordnance while providing
close air support for
ISAF-forces in Afghanistan. On 21 March 2009,
Theodore Roosevelt was relieved by
Dwight D. Eisenhower. The carrier arrived at Norfolk on 18 April. On 26 August 2009 defense contractor
Northrop Grumman was awarded a 2.4 billion dollar contract for
Refueling and Complex Overhaul (RCOH) of
Theodore Roosevelt at its Newport News shipyard.
2010s On 29 August 2013,
Theodore Roosevelt returned to Norfolk Naval Station, Virginia, completing its post-overhaul sea trials that concluded its four-year mid-life RCOH. On 14 September 2013,
Theodore Roosevelt successfully completed flight deck certification which entailed completing a total of 160 carrier landings during daytime and night-time operations. Other certification drills included rigging the emergency barricade, flight deck firefighting evolutions, and crash and salvage operations. On 17 September 2013,
Theodore Roosevelt completed her first
underway replenishment in over four years. Flight testing for the
X-47B continued on board
Theodore Roosevelt on 10 November 2013. During this phase, the X-47B's digitized carrier-controlled environment was tested which involved the interface between the unmanned aircraft and carrier personnel during launching, flight operations and recovery. The digital environment offered increased flexibility and enhanced safety for carrier operations. On 15 January 2014, the Navy announced that
Theodore Roosevelts homeport would move to San Diego, replacing when she relocated to Japan sometime in 2015 as part of the US Navy's preparation for the planned refueling of . On 4 March 2015, during a training exercise off
Florida,
Theodore Roosevelt was mock-sunk by the
French Navy submarine . On 11 March 2015,
Theodore Roosevelt and
Carrier Strike Group 12 departed Naval Station Norfolk for an around the world tour with deployments to the
U.S. 5th,
6th and
7th Fleets as part the first deployment of
Naval Integrated Fire Control-Counter Air (NIFC-CA) Carrier Strike Group, before arriving in their new homeport of San Diego, California. On 20 April 2015,
Theodore Roosevelt, along with the cruiser , was deployed off the coast of Yemen to intercept suspected Iranian weapons shipments intended for
Houthi rebels, who are engaged in a civil war with Yemeni government forces. In early November 2015,
Theodore Roosevelt along with the guided-missile destroyer , sailed to the
South China Sea to assert freedom of navigation in the area claimed by China.
Theodore Roosevelt pulled into her new home port at San Diego on 23 November 2015, completing a deployment during which she circumnavigated the globe. The carrier launched 1,800 sorties against
Islamic State militants in Iraq and Syria as part of
Operation Inherent Resolve, totaling 10,618 flight hours and over one million pounds of ordnance employed through 1,085 guided munitions. Carrier Strike Group 12 traveled nearly during the deployment, which also marked aviation milestones including the first operational use of the
E-2D Advanced Hawkeye and the last active-duty operational deployment of the
HH-60H Rescue Hawk and
SH-60F Seahawk helicopters. On 6 October 2017,
Theodore Roosevelt departed San Diego for her deployment to the United States Seventh Fleet and United States Fifth Fleet area of operations, accompanied with
Carrier Strike Group 9 and
Carrier Air Wing Seventeen. On November 8, 2017,
Theodore Roosevelt and her group started a 4-day exercise with two other
carrier strike groups, led by carriers
Ronald Reagan and
Nimitz, in the
Sea of Japan. In May 2019,
Theodore Roosevelt participated in
Exercise Northern Edge 2019, marking the first time in a decade a carrier took part in the exercise. Also in 2019,
Carrier Air Wing Eleven was transferred to the ship.
2020s On 5 March 2020,
Theodore Roosevelt, along with the cruiser , arrived at
Da Nang, Vietnam, for a five-day port visit commemorating the 25th anniversary of
United States–Vietnam relations.
COVID-19 pandemic On 24 March 2020, during the
COVID-19 pandemic, three sailors aboard the deployed vessel tested positive for
COVID-19, a coronavirus disease identified as the cause of an outbreak of respiratory illness. Within a few days, that number climbed to dozens.
Theodore Roosevelt was reported to be the first ship in the U.S. Navy to have a COVID-19 outbreak while at sea;
Theodore Roosevelt docked at Guam on 27 March 2020. By 31 March, the number of infected sailors was over 100, and the captain,
Brett Crozier, pleaded for help from the Navy, sending an e-mail to ten Pacific Fleet admirals and captains, including his superior, the commander of Carrier Strike Group-9, and the commander of the Pacific Fleet, requesting that his ship be evacuated. The US Navy ordered the aircraft carrier evacuated with a skeleton crew of 400 to remain aboard the vessel to maintain the nuclear reactor, the fire-fighting equipment, and the ship's galley. On 2 April, acting
Navy Secretary Thomas Modly relieved Crozier of his command for sending the request for assistance over non-secure email to what he characterized as "broad array of people" rather than up the chain of command, adding that Crozier "allowed the complexity of the challenge of the COVID breakout on the ship to overwhelm his ability to act professionally". Several members of the
House Armed Services Committee criticized the decision, stating that "the dismissal of Captain Crozier at this critical moment, as the sailors aboard the U.S.S.
Theodore Roosevelt are confronted with the COVID-19 pandemic, is a reckless, political move that reeks of undue command influence." Modly traveled to Guam and gave a ship-wide speech, which
The New York Times described as a "tirade", during which he was heckled by some of the sailors. After demands from Congress that he be fired, Modly resigned on April 7. As of Easter Sunday, 12 April, 585 crew members had tested positive. The Navy and the
Centers for Disease Control (CDC) are using the infection, death, and recovery data from
Theodore Roosevelt to study the pandemic. On 13 April, the hospitalized sailor, a
chief petty officer, died. As of 20 April, 4,069 sailors had been moved off the ship, 94% of the crew had been
tested for the virus, yielding 678 positive and 3,904 negative results. About 60% of the people who tested positive
did not have symptoms. As of 16 April, most of the ship had been cleaned. Sailors kept testing positive for the virus even after 14 days of isolation; some who tested positive had previously tested negative. Initial testing was completed by 27 April 2020, at which point, 969 crew members had tested positive, and 14 of those 969 had recovered. By 29 April, sailors that were previously quarantined in Guam began moving back to the ship.
Theodore Roosevelt returned to sea on 21 May for the first time after being sidelined for two months due to COVID-19. On 19 June 2020, the widely expected reinstatement of Captain Crozier was canceled and the promotion of the
Theodore Roosevelt strike group commander was put on hold. On 23 June and
Theodore Roosevelt completed a two-carrier operation in the Philippine Sea.
Theodore Roosevelt was returning to home port when another chief petty officer suffered a medical emergency, of which the nature was not disclosed, and died 2 July 2020. Final analysis of the outbreak in December 2020, found 1271 crew members tested positive for SARS-Cov-2 and an additional 60 had suspected COVID-19 but did not test positive; 76.9% of those who tested positive were asymptomatic at testing. 55% developed symptoms.
Return to service In July 2021 she was moved from San Diego, her usual homeport, to
Bremerton, Washington, where she was retrofitted to accommodate the
F-35 multirole combat aircraft. A Navy spokesman said she was to be at the
Bremerton shipyard for 16 to 18 months. Approximately 3,000 sailors and their families moved to Bremerton with the ship.
Theodore Roosevelt left Bremerton for sea trials in March 2023 and eventually returned to her previous homeport of San Diego.
Theodore Roosevelt deployed in January 2024 from
Naval Air Station North Island in San Diego. On 19 March 2024, a
F/A-18F Super Hornet from
Carrier Air Wing 11 made the 250,000th successful arrested landing on her deck. In late-June 2024, she was ordered to the Middle East to relieve and to continue the U.S. presence in the region arriving there in July. In mid-July, US Navy's
Carrier Strike Group 9 centered on
Theodore Roosevelt along with Carrier Air Wing 11 and conducted an exercise with the
Indian Navy's and in the Indian Ocean. She operated in conjunction with from August until September before returning home on 14 October 2024 after 278 days on deployment. As of early 2026, she was preparing for another deployment. ==Ship awards==