Clemenceau under way in 1981
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History | |
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France | |
Name | Clemenceau |
Namesake | Georges Clemenceau |
Builder | Brest shipyard |
Laid down | November 1955 |
Launched | 21 December 1957 |
Commissioned | 22 November 1961 |
Decommissioned | 1 October 1997 |
Homeport | Brest |
Identification | R98 |
Fate | Scrapped 2009–2010 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | Clemenceau-class aircraft carrier |
Displacement |
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Length | 265 m (869 ft 5 in) |
Beam | 51.2 m (168 ft 0 in) |
Draught | 8.6 m (28 ft 3 in) |
Installed power |
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Propulsion | 4 steam turbines |
Speed | 32 knots (59 km/h; 37 mph) |
Capacity | 582 air group personnel |
Complement |
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Sensors and processing systems | |
Armament |
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Aircraft carried |
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Clemenceau (French pronunciation: [klemɑ̃so]) was the French Navy's sixth aircraft carrier and the lead ship of her class. The carrier served from 1961 to 1997 and was dismantled and recycled in 2009.[1][2] The carrier was the second French warship to be named after Georges Clemenceau, the first being a Richelieu-class battleship laid down in 1939 but never finished.
Clemenceau and her sister ship Foch served as the mainstays of the French fleet. During the carrier's career, Clemenceau sailed more than 1,000,000 nautical miles (1,900,000 km; 1,200,000 mi) during 3,125 days at sea. She was equipped to handle nuclear munitions to be delivered by her air complement and was later modified to fire nuclear-capable missiles. She took part in numerous exercises and cruises, seeing action during the Lebanese Civil War and Gulf War and in air operations over the former Yugoslavia.