USS Paul Ignatius
USS Paul Ignatius is an Aegis guided missile destroyer of the United States Navy. She is named for Paul Ignatius who served as United States Secretary of the Navy under President Lyndon Johnson from 1967 to 1969. Ignatius had previously served as a lieutenant in the Navy during World War II. Paul Ignatius is the second of eight planned Flight IIA "technology insertion" ships, which contain elements of the Flight III ships.
Paul Ignatius was launched on 12 November 2016, and was christened on 8 April 2017. She was commissioned on 27 July 2019 Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The ship was sponsored by Ignatius's wife Nancy before her death and that role was taken over by their granddaughter, Dr. Elisa Ignatius. Paul Ignatius is homeported in Rota, Spain.
Operational history
On 28 April 2022, Paul Ignatius departed Mayport, Florida, for a patrol in the US Sixth Fleet area of operations and a homeport shift to Naval Station Rota.On 17 June 2022, Paul Ignatius arrived at her new homeport of in Rota, Spain. Her Phalanx CIWS was moved to the forward mount and she received the SeaRAM close-in weapon system on her aft mount.
In October 2022, Paul Ignatius conducted a routine patrol in the Baltic Sea, where she was accompanied by the support ship. After the 2022 Nord Stream pipeline sabotage the ship remained deployed there to safeguard regional energy interests and to guard the areas of the pipeline sabotage. During this period, she embarked personnel from diving, salvage, and explosive ordnance disposal units to assist in security and assessment operations.
On December 25, 2025, Paul Ignatius participated in a military operation against Islamic State militants in northwest Nigeria, in collaboration with the Nigerian government and U.S. Africa Command. The operation involved launching Tomahawk cruise missiles from the Paul Ignatius in the Gulf of Guinea, authorized by President Donald Trump.