The USS Carl Vinson was reported to have been surging towards the West Pacific. Photo / AP
The USS Carl Vinson was reported to have been surging towards the West Pacific. Photo / AP
The declaration last week that the US had sent an aircraft carrier barrelling towards waters off the Korean Peninsula put tensions with North Korea at boiling point. Except, that never happened.
A series of glitches meant that the USS Carl Vinson and four other warships were actually sailing in theopposite direction when officials announced it was surging towards the West Pacific, The New York Times has revealed.
The USS Carl Vinson never did make it to the Korean Peninsula. Photo / AP
A defence official went even further, telling the AFP on Tuesday that the armada had not yet even begun sailing to the region.
The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the warships were, in fact, still in waters off the northwest coast of Australia and would "start heading north towards the Sea of Japan within the next 24 hours".
The naval strike group had actually spent the past few days conducting drills with the Australian Navy, the official said.
The ships are not expected to reach their destination until next week.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un waves during a military parade in Pyongyang to celebrate the 105th birth anniversary of Kim Il-sung, the country's late founder. Photo / AP
The story unravelled when the US Navy released a photograph showing the Carl Vinson thousands of kilometres away in the Sunda Strait, between the Indonesian islands of Java and Sumatra, on Saturday, the same day Kim Jong-un was making a show of his military arsenal in the streets of Pyongyang.
This picture, handed out by the US Navy, shows the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson in the Sunda Strait on Saturday, thousands of kilometres away from the Korean Peninsula. Photo / Getty Images
The US Navy announced on April 8 that the armada was travelling north as a "prudent measure" to deter North Korean military aggression.
However, when the announcement was made, the naval strike group was still headed towards Australia, where it was scheduled to take part in joint military exercises, 5600km away.
White House officials told the Times that the military's Pacific Command made the announcement prematurely, and the mistake was repeated later by defence secretary Jim Mattis.
Soldiers march across Kim Il-sung Square during a military parade in North Korea, to celebrate the 105th birth anniversary of his birth. Photo / AP
US President Donald Trump talked up the military moves last Wednesday saying: "We are sending an armada. Very powerful."
By the time the misunderstanding was realised, the genie was out of the bottle, with news outlets across the world reporting that the naval strike group was steaming north to scare the rogue nation straight.
The show of force was met with aggressive rhetoric from the North Korean officials, who said on Monday that the US's military moves were creating "a dangerous situation in which a thermonuclear war may break out at any moment".