Summary and Key Points: Harrison Kass, a national security journalist and former US Air Force pilot selectee, evaluates the survival of the aircraft carrier in the era of Anti-Ship Ballistic Missiles (ASBMs) and hypersonics.
-While critics compare carriers to obsolete battleships, this 19FortyFive report argues that the USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) is evolving into a mobile command hub.

USS Forrestal Aircraft Carrier. Image Credit: Creative Commons.
-The analysis examines the shift from uncontested airpower in Libya and Iraq to the contested environments of the Indo-Pacific, highlighting the integration of uncrewed “loyal wingmen,” P-8 Poseidons, and space-based ISR to maintain naval dominance against China’s A2/AD networks.
The Aircraft Carrier Evolution: Why the US Navy’s Floating Airfields Aren’t Becoming the Next “Battleship”
Every generation, new weapons emerge that challenge the aircraft carrier, causing some to declare the floating airfields obsolete. In fact, many experts worry the aircraft carrier could become the new ‘battleship’ of the 2020s: an old warship that seems hopelessly obsolete in the face of new threats.
Submarines, missiles, satellites, and hypersonics have all raised questions about the aircraft carrier’s survivability. Yet the carrier remains central to US naval strategy, actively deployed worldwide.

USS Intrepid USN Aircraft Carrier 19FortyFive Original Image. Taken by 19FortyFive.com staff in New York City Harbor.
The question really isn’t whether aircraft carriers are outdated, but whether the strategic environment has changed. The question is especially pressing as the US pivots from weak or mid-tier adversaries, like Libya and Iraq, towards peer competitors who can threaten carriers directly. Is deploying the aircraft carrier worth the risk and the cost in the modern threat environment?
Historical context of the carrier
Carriers replaced battleships as capital ships after World War II. The carrier’s key advantages included mobility, each, and flexibility, allowing states to project air power without bases. For decades, most US carrier operations were against adversaries with little ability to strike back at sea (Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya).

USS George Washington Aircraft Carrier. Image Credit: Creative Commons.

USS Harry S. Truman Aircraft Carrier. Image Credit: Creative Commons.
These conflicts posed minimal naval threat to the US, and this perception led to the view that carriers were one-sided instruments of power.
Critiquing the carrier
Critics have argued that carriers only work against weak states or that they are too expensive and too vulnerable. Critics point to the emergence of anti-ship ballistic missiles, long-range cruise missiles, and swarming drones.
And yes, against China or Russia, carriers would face real danger, so the critiques are rooted in accuracy. But the critiques assume that carriers can’t adapt, that they must operate the same way they always have. Warfare tends to be more dynamic than that.
Carriers still relevant
Carriers still provide persistent air power, flexible response, and escalation control. No other platform combines mobility, sortie generation, and political signaling quite like the carrier. And there is no alternative elsewhere.

(May 30, 2020) The Nimitz class aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76) conducts routine operations in the Philippine Sea. Ronald Reagan is forward-deployed to the U.S. 7th Fleet area of operations in support of security and stability in the Indo-Pacific region. (U.S. Navy photo by Ltjg. Samuel Hardgrove)
Land bases are fixed and politically constrained. Bombers lack persistence. Missiles are single-use. Carriers, meanwhile, are not just strike platforms; they are command hubs, air defense nodes, and ISR platforms. Those capabilities are hard to replace with one platform—which is why carriers are still being built.
Shifting to contested space
The US is no longer fighting opponents who can’t contest the sea. ISIS or the Taliban ever posed much threat to US carriers—but Russia and China can. China’s A2/AD strategy, for example, is designed to push carriers back and raise the cost of forward presence.
This doesn’t eliminate carriers, necessarily, but it changes how close carriers can operate and what missions they can perform. It forces adaptation, such as a greater emphasis on stand-off capabilities, longer-range aircraft, and distributed operations. The carrier is adapting, essentially, from the tip of the spear into a mobile base and network hub. The threat environment has matured, become more sophisticated—but that has not rendered carriers useless.

16-Inch Guns of USS Iowa 19FortyFive Image taken by Harry J. Kazianis on the Deck of the Battleship USS Iowa.
Asymmetric risks
Modern threats are asymmetric, further complicating the carrier’s standing in the battle space. Drones, cyber attacks, and space targeting—these are relatively cheap ways to disrupt carrier operations. Ironic, given how expensive a carrier is (the Ford-class costs $13 billion per unit).
But this exorbitant price tag is exactly what makes the airline such a magnet; targeting a carrier draws attention, with the prospect of damaging a multibillion-dollar vessel that took several years to construct.
Losing a carrier would be catastrophic in both military, fiscal, and political terms. This raises the stakes every time a carrier sets sail. But high stakes don’t equal obsolescence. The answer isn’t abandoning the concept entirely; it’s in protection, redundancy, and more innovative use.
US adaptations
Changes are already underway. Longer-range air wings are being developed, with more emphasis on tanking and integration with submarines and space assets. Future carrier air wings may include more drones and loyal wingmen, with fewer short-range strike missions.
Carriers operate as part of a system, not some isolated vessel, and that entire system will flex to protect the carrier against new risks.
So, the aircraft carrier is not yet obsolete. They’re just invulnerable, which is unsettling, but a fairly standard part of deploying weapons systems. The era of uncontested carrier dominance is likely over. The era of contested, adaptive carrier operations is beginning.
The US is adapting accordingly, refining how carriers are used to remain effective and survivable in the 21st century.
About the Author: Harrison Kass
Harrison Kass is an attorney and journalist covering national security, technology, and politics. Previously, he was a political staffer and candidate, and a US Air Force pilot selectee. He holds a JD from the University of Oregon and a master’s in global journalism and international relations from NYU.