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Chapter 930 - Chapter 134: Ups and Downs (Part 2)

The solution is simple.

If one carrier is not enough, then group several carriers together, incorporating different types of carriers into a single fleet based on different combat requirements.

Obviously, this is a very significant change.

Previously, to maintain consistency in the battle group, two or three carriers of the same class were often placed in a battle group.

According to the new organizational system, a carrier battle group would typically include 1 to 3 attack carriers and 1 or 2 anti-submarine carriers, based on the combat intensity, such as potential threats encountered. If tasked with ground strike missions or supporting the Marine Corps in launching amphibious landing operations, and ground forces need support, 1 to 3 amphibious assault ships could also be included.

In this way, a battle group could have a maximum of 8 "Flat-Top Ships," capable of carrying about 400 fixed-wing ship-borne aircraft.

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