1990s On 3 September 1996, while in the
carrier battle group,
Shiloh launched six
Tomahawk cruise missiles in
Operation Desert Strike against
Iraq.
2000s She deployed with the Battle Group again in July 2002, and was among the first cruisers to launch missiles in
Operation Iraqi Freedom. In March 2003
Shiloh was assigned to
Cruiser-Destroyer Group Three. The
Shiloh returned to her homeport
San Diego, California on 25 April 2003, ending an unusually long nine-month deployment. In January 2005, she participated in
Operation Unified Assistance, rendering aid to those who suffered from the
26 December 2004 tsunami off the coast of
Aceh,
Indonesia.
Shiloh was one of the first American ships to arrive on scene. On 22 June 2006, a
Standard Missile Three (or SM-3) launched from
Shiloh intercepted a multi-stage ballistic missile launched from the
Pacific Missile Range Facility at
Barking Sands,
Hawaii. In August 2006, she arrived on station at
Yokosuka Naval Base in
Yokosuka,
Japan, replacing , as part of a joint U.S.-Japanese ballistic missile defense program. On 8 July 2009, Petty Officer 1st Class Christopher Geathers fell from the ship's
fantail into
Tokyo Bay while rigging shore power cables. A two-and-a-half-day search failed to locate Geathers and he was declared missing and later was declared dead. A Navy investigation, led by Rear Admiral Kevin Donegan, commander of Task Force 70, found that the accident was preventable, in part because
Shiloh personnel had observed Geathers working without proper safety equipment, but had failed to intervene. Nevertheless, the report did not recommend disciplinary action against any of the ship's crewmembers.
2010s In June 2017, a gas turbine systems technician named Peter Mims thought to have been lost at sea was found after seven days hiding in the engine room. Following the Mims incident, several sailors contacted the
Navy Times about severe morale problems on the ship to which they attributed the Mims incident. The
Navy Times requested "command climate surveys" through a
Freedom of Information Act request. These surveys, completed voluntarily by sailors on the ship, reported extensive morale problems universally blamed on the CO, Captain Adam M. Aycock. Among the complaints were widespread depression and suicidal tendencies, a dysfunctional ship that sailors felt was ill-prepared for combat, an overworked and deeply stressed crew, and a constant worry of extreme punishment for minor infractions. Sailors were dismayed that despite a significant number of the ship's crew filing severely critical complaints of Aycock's leadership in the command climate surveys, the only action taken by the Navy was to counsel him. Capt. Aycock was relieved of command after completing his full 26-month tour.
2020s In 2020, a US Navy budget plan proposed putting
Shiloh, as well as her sisters , , and , on a path to early decommissioning, as they had not been modernized. In December 2020 the U.S. Navy's Report to Congress on the Annual Long-Range Plan for Construction of Naval Vessels stated that the ship was planned to be placed Out of Commission in Reserve in 2024. In the US Navy's 2024 proposed budget, presented in 2023,
Shiloh was proposed for retirement. Navy Undersecretary
Erik Raven stated that this was due to the ship's "material condition, life remaining, cost, ... time to upgrade ... and the warfighting value." In September 2023, USS
Shiloh departs
Yokosuka, Japan after 17 years of forward-deployed service. She will be homeported in
Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.
Shiloh is projected to be inactivated during FY2026. ==Awards==