Two-minute video explains the possible false flag attack target of the aircraft carrier USS Enterpr

Yoyo is correct:

"When a commissioned U.S. Navy ship is decommissioned, it is taken out of active service and the crew is reassigned to another ship or command. The day of the official decommissioning is established by the Fleet within the fiscal year specified by the Chief of Naval Operations. Inactivation is a process that prepares a ship for decommissioning or for safe storage pending disposal."
*Ed’s note: Decommissioning ceremony, if any, will not accommodate tours or visitors."

"....While the Enterprise was inactivated Saturday, it will be several more years before it is fully decommissioned. Its nuclear fuel must first be removed by punching gigantic holes in the ship, rendering it unfit for service or turning it into a museum. It will eventually be towed to Washington state for scrapping."
 
Yoyo is correct:

"When a commissioned U.S. Navy ship is decommissioned, it is taken out of active service and the crew is reassigned to another ship or command. The day of the official decommissioning is established by the Fleet within the fiscal year specified by the Chief of Naval Operations. Inactivation is a process that prepares a ship for decommissioning or for safe storage pending disposal."
*Ed’s note: Decommissioning ceremony, if any, will not accommodate tours or visitors."

"....While the Enterprise was inactivated Saturday, it will be several more years before it is fully decommissioned. Its nuclear fuel must first be removed by punching gigantic holes in the ship, rendering it unfit for service or turning it into a museum. It will eventually be towed to Washington state for scrapping."

What's in WA?
 
Maybe Bremerton shipyard?

The carrier, minus planes, ammunition and a propulsion system, heads to Puget Sound, the long way.
"It will be towed around (Cape) Horn to Puget Sound, Washington," Maus said.
The Enterprise, like America's other nuclear carriers, is too big to fit through the Panama Canal, so it must round the southern-most point of South America to get to Washington State.
"It'll be a very lengthy tow," he said.
Once it reaches the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, the long and difficult task of removing the eight reactors from the Enterprise's hold begins.

http://www.cnn.com/2012/11/01/us/enterprise-scrap/index.html
 
Maybe Bremerton shipyard?

The carrier, minus planes, ammunition and a propulsion system, heads to Puget Sound, the long way.
"It will be towed around (Cape) Horn to Puget Sound, Washington," Maus said.
The Enterprise, like America's other nuclear carriers, is too big to fit through the Panama Canal, so it must round the southern-most point of South America to get to Washington State.
"It'll be a very lengthy tow," he said.
Once it reaches the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, the long and difficult task of removing the eight reactors from the Enterprise's hold begins.

http://www.cnn.com/2...crap/index.html

Being as I can't remember when the last flat top was scrapped in the 'Burgh, I figured you would know...

Wasn't aware there is a facility there.