1970s and 1980s From 1971 to 2005,
Mount Whitney served as the flagship for Commander Second Fleet/Commander Striking Fleet Atlantic.
1990s In 1994, during the FleetEx 2/94 "George Washington" war game exercise, the
Argentine Navy, acting as the enemy and using the diesel submarine , went undetected, penetrated the
destroyer defense and "sank"
Mount Whitney, which was acting as the command ship during the exercise.
Mount Whitney deployed in 1994 to
Haiti with
Lieutenant General Hugh Shelton, the commander of the
XVIII Airborne Corps, in command of the
Joint Task Force that conducted
Operation Uphold Democracy.
2000s On 12 November 2002,
Mount Whitney deployed to the
Central Command area of responsibility in support of
Operation Enduring Freedom. She was acting as the initial command post for
Combined Joint Task Force – Horn of Africa. During the deployment, the ship embarked elements of the
2nd Marine Division and
II Marine Expeditionary Force (II MEF), based at
Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, under the command of Major General
John F. Sattler and Captain Morton W. Kenyon. In 2004,
Military Sealift Command civilian sailors were integrated into her crew. She remains a commissioned warship in the United States Navy, but the size of her crew was reduced from about 600 sailors to about 170 Navy officers and enlisted personnel and 155 civilians. In February 2005,
Mount Whitney left Norfolk for
Gaeta, Italy where she was redesignated
(LCC/JCC 20) and assumed duties as the 6th Fleet flagship, officially relieving . She also assumed duties as the command ship for the Commander, Joint Command Lisbon and the Commander, Striking Force NATO. In August 2008,
Mount Whitney was deployed to the
Black Sea in support of
Operation Assured Delivery to deliver
humanitarian aid to those affected by the
Russo-Georgian War and became the first
NATO ship to deliver aid to port of
Poti, Georgia. On 6 November 2008,
Mount Whitney was unable to enter the port at
Sevastopol. City authorities and representatives of the
Ukrainian Navy refused to comment on the event. Individuals working for the city administration reported that the failure was due to issues with
Mount Whitneys border crossing documents, while others suggested anti-NATO protests were the cause.
2010s during
Operation Odyssey Dawn From 19 March 2011,
Mount Whitney served in the Mediterranean as the main command vessel for the enforcement of
United Nations Security Council Resolution 1973 against Libya. She was the flagship for
Admiral Samuel J. Locklear, who had tactical command of the
Operation Odyssey Dawn joint task force. The vessel was serving as a command-and-control vessel for the United States' involvement in the coalition campaign aimed to enforce a
Libya no-fly zone and prevent
Muammar Gaddafi's forces from attacking the rebel stronghold of
Benghazi. 20 In February 2013,
Mount Whitney transferred to the San Giorgio del Porto Shipyard in
Genoa, Italy for a major 60-day overhaul and repair project. The ship returned to active duty in April 2013 at the end of the maintenance window. On 31 January 2014,
Mount Whitney left her homeport of Gaeta, Italy.
Mount Whitney, along with , were the first two US Navy ships to operate in the Black Sea during the
Sochi Olympics. On 31 July 2015, a fire broke out aboard
Mount Whitney while she was in
Viktor Lenac Shipyard,
Rijeka, Croatia. There were no reported injuries, and the fire was extinguished within 45 minutes by ship's crew and shipyard fire brigade personnel.
Mount Whitney had been in Viktor Lenac Shipyard since January 2015 undergoing a scheduled maintenance overhaul designed to extend the service life of the ship to 2039. On 30 June 2016,
Mount Whitney visited
Klaipėda, Lithuania, and in October 2016, she visited
Souda Bay, Greece. From early 2017 through to October 2017,
Mount Whitney was at the Viktor Lenac Shipyard; Rijeka, Croatia, for further upgrades to its information technology infrastructure, and various engineering refurbishments. In September 2018,
Mount Whitney visited
Thessaloniki, Greece, for the
83rd Thessaloniki International Fair, where the US was the country of honor. From 25 October to 7 November 2018, she served as the command vessel for the NATO exercise
Trident Juncture.
2020s '', April 2022. In April 2022, the
Combined Maritime Forces command, a 34-nation organization based in Bahrain, has added a new task force led by
Mount Whitney. There are three task forces that handle piracy and security issues both inside and outside of the Persian Gulf. The new task force of two to eight ships at a time would target those smuggling coal, drugs, weapons, and people in the waterway. In late May 2022,
Mount Whitney was operating in the
Baltic Sea, ahead of naval exercise
BALTOPS 2022. The ship is currently stationed in Gaeta, Italy. in the Mediterranean Sea, November 2023. On 18 October 2023,
Mount Whitney deployed from Gaeta with the
Commander 6th fleet, Vice Adm.
Thomas Ishee, and his staff, onboard "in support of U.S. operations" in the eastern Mediterranean Sea in waters off the
Gaza war. This added to new deployments by the
aircraft carrier strike group and , and carrying the
26th Marine Expeditionary Unit, joining the strike group. == Awards ==