Navy Commissions Final Nimitz-class Aircraft Carrier, USS George H.W. Bush

NORFOLK (NNS) -- As a 21-cannon salute boomed and U.S. Navy fighter jets thundered overhead, President George W. Bush declared a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier named for his father, former President George H. W. Bush, will sail the globe as a potent symbol of men and women in uniform, past and present.

The Navy commissioned the 10th and final nuclear-powered Nimitz-class carrier Jan. 10, USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77), in front of thousands attending the pierside ceremony at Naval Station Norfolk.

"This ship is a fitting tribute to a generation of men with whom my dad was privileged to serve," said the president, noting his father's service as a World War II naval aviator. "She's also a tribute to a generation of American Soldiers, Sailors, and Coast Guardmen and women and Airmen and Marines who have stepped forward to defend the United States of America.

F/A-18 aircraft assigned to Air Wing 1 at Naval Air Station Oceana, Va. perform a flyover during the commissioning ceremony for the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77)

"Again our troops are facing down a brutal enemy," the commander-in-chief added. "Again they are making America and the world safer, and again they will come home in victory."

Dorothy "Doro" Bush Koch, the former president's daughter and ship's sponsor, ordered the command to "man our ship and bring her to life."

Sailors bedecked in dress blue uniforms rushed aboard the massive warship and lined the flight deck amidst a cacophony of sirens, bells and spinning radars. Four F/A-18 Super Hornets and a TBM Avenger torpedo bomber, the same type of aircraft former President Bush once piloted in battle, roared above.

Sailors assigned to the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77) man the rails during the ship's commissioning ceremony at Naval Station Norfolk, Va.

"This is a ship that will make history and today marks the first day of an illustrious journey," said Secretary of the Navy Donald C. Winter. "Nothing else compares to the arrival of a nuclear-powered carrier in our fleet. The impact of a carrier is global for no other ship represents to the world the power of the United States the way this does."

Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Gary Roughead said the dedication marked the start of setting the standards of a warship that will serve the nation for the next five decades, and for crew members not yet born.

"Today is a day of incredible work achieved and incredible work to be done," said Roughead.

"We know this is a technological marvel, but it's going to be the Sailors that make it great," said Adm. Johnathan W. Greenert, commander, U.S. Fleet Forces Command.

Secretary of Defense Robert Gates said naming the final Nimitz-class carrier after the former president and naval aviator was a fitting tribute.

"As a commander-in-chief, President Bush had a courage and toughness that impressed all who served with him," Gates added.

The former commander-in-chief said the commissioning harkened memories of a similar event he attended 65 years ago at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard. The Navy commissioned USS San Jacinto (CVL 30) on Dec. 15, 1943, the ship he served aboard during the war.

He said crew members may routinely encounter duty that's difficult or dangerous as they prepare to stand the watch.

"As someone who has stood that watch and remembers the quiet solitude of that experience, I know you will find comfort and inspiration, particularly in the night sky," he said. "For it is basking in the splendor of the stars that you will truly understand the majesty of creation and bear witness to the certain hand of God."

Once his namesake warship completes sea and builder trials early this year, it will depart on its first operational deployment in late 2010 with 5,500 Sailors and an air wing of about 80 combat aircraft.

The 1,092-foot-long carrier is nearly as long as the Empire State Building is tall. The more than 97,000-ton vessel with two nuclear reactors has a top speed in excess of 30 knots.

Northrup Grumman built the ship at its Newport News, Va., shipyard using more than a billion parts from 2,000 contractors in 46 states.

"If anyone has any questions about the ingenuity and dedication of American workers, they should see this ship," said Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine.

The shipyard will build the nuclear-powered USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) as a new class of supercarrier scheduled for delivery in 2015. Capt. Kevin E. O'Flaherty, Bush commanding officer, said his crew is ready. "We are here to serve, we are trained, and we are ready to take this ship to sea." (news @navy.mil)

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