US aircraft carrier's Asia-Pacific deployment was suddenly interrupted, the captain wrote a letter asking for help, what exactly happened to the US aircraft carrier?

Soldiers on the U.S. aircraft carrier were infected with new crown pneumonia, and the epidemic has led to more than a thousand people on this carrier infected, at the same time, because of the lack of medical supplies on the carrier, so the epidemic is still spreading on the carrier, and personnel suffering from the new crown pneumonia is not to get treatment, even if some of the most serious patients have already been in the hospital in Guam treatment, but there are still some patients who can't And the carriers are still spreading the disease. And most of the people on the carrier would have to leave the carrier and go to the nearest hospital if they wanted to be treated.

While there are 4,000 people on board the carrier, it is still difficult to completely isolate them, especially now that the number of infected people in the United States is rising because of the spread of the epidemic, which has led to deaths, the U.S. still has the ability to place these 4,000 people properly and get them treated in a timely manner.

And the reason why the infection rate of the carrier is so high this time is still because of the barbecue party that was held on the deck of the carrier before, which led to an increase in the infection rate this time, but if the personnel on the carrier can no longer be treated, then the number of infected people will continue to increase. And the U.S.? Roosevelt? s captain has submitted a distress letter to U.S. Navy headquarters, and the ?

Because the epidemic is raging, the carrier has not made appropriate emergency measures, and thus the captain believes that the most critical thing now is to let the crew off the ship as soon as possible to receive testing and treatment, while the entire carrier to carry out a dead-end disinfection. But until now,? Roosevelt? carrier has still not taken this measure.

Instead, the then-acting U.S. Secretary of the Navy asked that sailors on the carrier not leave it after it docked in Guam harbor, and that infected personnel be treated only through proximity. But because the hospitals in the harbor were already overcrowded, it would have been nearly impossible to get the carrier's personnel tested and treated on land without leaving Guam.