Noha307 wrote:
I haven't heard that before, but I wouldn't be surprised if it's true. However, there might have been something else at play in the decision to make that name change. History tells us that no one likes it when a ship carries the name of its country. It's too much of a propaganda coup for the enemy if it gets sunk, not to mention if you're superstitious. The Germans did it with the pocket-battleship Deutschland during WWII, it became the Lutzow.
CVN-75 was laid down as the United States (see below, from the CVN-75 page on Wiki). I was in DC at the time, and remember how the whole soap-operaesque thing played out. Or at least how I read about it in the Washington Post and heard about from friends a lot closer to the situation than I was.
The Republican Congress was elected in late 1994. One of the things at the top of their list, apart from the Contract with America, was naming a LOT of stuff after Ronald Reagan. This included what became the Reagan Building in DC (Federal Triangle) and what was once known as "Washington National Airport". They also asked that CVN-76 be named after Reagan.
Clinton's SecNav refused. So the GOP Congress overruled him and tacked a rider directing that the name used for CVN-76 onto an early bill. By both law and tradition the SecNav gets to name ships, so this really ticked him off as not only politically-motivated boosterism but also an infringement upon his office and authority.
Apparently he was also ticked off that the Navy brass in the Pentagon were pretty close to being unrepentantly enthusiastic about hanging Reagan's name on CVN-76. So, with approval from the White House (Clinton was also a big fan of David McCullough's biography of Truman, which was recently out at that point) he decided to exact a measure of payback, and even going an extra mile to add insult (hanging Truman's name on CVN-75) to injury (changing the name of an already-named and laid-down ship).
The "insult" with it being Truman is that it was under Truman that the previous "United States" (CVB-58 - which was going to be the first super-carrier) was cancelled only a few days after having been laid down ... in favor of the USAF's B-36 bomber. An act that sparked the 1949 "Revolt of the Admirals" within the Navy. On top of that, CVN-75 developed something of a rep as a jinxed ship - a couple workers were killed in an accident during her construction and she had some problems during her builders trials - nothing major but enough for the superstition to build. The icing on the cake was how a good number of prominent GOP Congressmen and Senators (including iirc John Warner) deciding to boycott either her Christening or Commissioning because of disputes with the Clinton Administration.
Morale was so bad on the ship that the Navy actually sent the Blue Angles out - in their display jets - to do CarQuals on her in order to help improve things. I think it was the first time the Blues had gone to sea since their stint as an active combat squadron during the Korean War.
Anyways, nothing more than a bit of petty political drama/theater. But I'd assume, like other USN ships, that the name she was laid down under is welded onto her keel. A few decades from now, when she gets broken up, that's something that should probably be saved and make its way to Pensacola.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/c ... _Cover.jpg