Air force
The U.S. Air Force Has a Spy Ship — Yes, Ship — in the Persian Gulf
USNS ‘Invincible’ is in the
perfect position to track Iranian missiles
by
DAVID AXE
The
U.S. Air Force quietly keeps a small, inconspicuous spy ship in the Persian
Gulf, presumably in order to keep an eye on Iran’s missile launches.
Technically
speaking, USNS Invincible—a 224-foot vessel displacing a mere 2,800
tons—belongs to Military Sealift Command, the quasi-civilian branch of the Navy
that operates America’s military logistics ship and other specialist vessels.
But Invincible is
just a hull—unremarkable, painted white and maintained by 18 civilian
contractors. It’s what’s inside and atop the
hull that really matters. A sophisticated, dual X- and S-band radar called Gray
Star that belongs to the Air Force.
No
one says much about Invincible or Gray Star. Military Sealift
Commandrefers to the vessel as a “missile range instrumentation ship” whose job it is to
“monitor missile launches and collect data.”
The
Air Force’s Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance Agency, in its
official history for 2012, lumps Gray Star in with its sea-based systems that
collect “scientific and technical data of foreign military capabilities and
systems.”
War
Is Boring obtained a copy of the history through the Freedom of Information
Act.
The word “Iran” does not appear in any official description of Invincible or Gray Star.
But
it’s apparent from the ship’s deployments that she spends most of her time
keeping tabs on the regime in Tehran—specifically, Iran’s expanding arsenal of
medium-range ballistic missiles.
The
Air Force ISR Agency admits that Invincible “typically”
deploys to Central Command’s area, which includes the Persian Gulf and Indian
Ocean. But there’s not a lot of actual evidence of the ship’s presence
overseas. The military seems keen to downplay Invincible’s
activities.
In
May 2012, Invincible—which has no official home port in the
U.S.—passed through the Strait of Hormuz into the Persian Gulf in a convoy of
U.S. Navy and British vessels. An official photo depicts the transit.
U.S. Navy
photos
Another
official photo from November 2012 shows sailors from the destroyer USS Jason
Dunham riding in a small boat to visit Invinciblesomewhere
in the Persian Gulf.
And
that’s the last official photograph we have of the Air Force spy ship. Military
Sealift Command reveals in its official history for 2013 thatInvincible sailed
to the Mediterranean in May of that year.
But
an online ship-tracking service shows that
on July 27, 2013, Invinciblewas back in the Gulf, sailing 50 miles
or so northeast of Bahrain, where the U.S. Fifth Fleet maintains its
headquarters. After that date, the spy ship disappeared from online location
databases.
Tehran is 650 miles from Bahrain’s capital Manama.
We
can reasonably assert that Invincible is still in the Persian
Gulf. One user of the LinkedIn social media Website claims he was
part of Invincible’s crew as recently as December 2013. He lists
his location at that time as Bahrain.
And
in the fall of 2014, Invincible’s crew shipped a one-ton package
back to the U.S. via a commercial freighter. The crew gave its home address as Manama. The package arrived back in America
in October.
Which
is a strong indicator that the Air Force’s spy ship with her high-tech Gray
Star radar is still on duty near Iran, apparently still watching for Tehran’s
missile tests.
No comments:
Post a Comment