ROYAL
NAVY - The British navy Union Jack logo
At
present, and in terms of NATO requirements, the British Royal Navy is under funded,
and unprepared. The situation in Ukraine, with Russia knocking at the
door of other European countries, with the backing of the CRINKs (China,
Russia, Iran & North Korea), represents a diabolical lack of judgment
on the part of the United Kingdom and the European Union. They virtually
opened the door and invited Vladimir
Putin in. Saying here, take it, we don't have the army or navy to
stop you. Where China was saying the same thing. Xi
Jinping was backing Russia, along with Iran and North Korea. Knowing
that 'INK' of CRINK would be supplying armaments, in sufficient
quantities to exhaust those of NATO.
Hardly surprising that Donald Trump was vocal about NATO not honoring
their commitments. The good news being that Joe
Biden, and the US Senate is more practical, helping out where they
can. Not in any way excusing European members from their undertakings.
If
it was not for the guts of Volodymyr
Zelenskyy, Russia would be knocking on the door of Norway
and Poland
by now. In more of the dictators series of Special Operations. And if not
prevented, he will not stop there as a dedicated CRINK. So three cheers for Ukraine,
having the wherewithal to stand up to the communist bullies. It's as if
the Cold War had never ceased. For indeed, the free democratic world
were rather foolishly duped by the Adolf
Hitler like, CRINK dictators, into allowing them to financially ruin
the West with cheap loans and imports. China having invited massive
investment from international investors in Evergrande, none of which
will be repaid.
We
have been entering a new era of warfare, where drones rule the skies,
and will almost assuredly rule the waves, in any World War Three
scenario. Typically, the UK and other NATO allies are unprepared,
standing beside their extremely vulnerable ocean going tanks. Where
Russian tanks in Ukraine are being wiped out by lost cost drones. The
same methods are sure to be operated on the high seas to take out aircraft
carriers, destroyers
and submarines. First proposed before 2012, by a British inventor, and
roundly dismissed by MOD contractors, frightened of losing their grip on
MOD contracts. Hence, little or no development
has taken place in the intervening years. Despite the fact the technology exists.
Politicians did not want to rock the boat, or lose their positions of
power.
The
Royal Navy Commander In Chief and future Queen of England are said to be
doing well.
BRITISH
ROYAL NAVY
The
Royal Navy (RN) is the United Kingdom's naval warfare force and a
component of His Majesty's Naval Service. Although warships were used by
English and Scottish kings from the early medieval period, the first
major maritime engagements were fought in the Hundred Years' War against
France. The modern Royal Navy traces its origins to the early 16th
century; the oldest of the UK's armed services, it is consequently known
as the Senior Service.
From the middle decades of the 17th century, and through the
18th century, the Royal Navy vied with the Dutch Navy and later with the
French Navy for maritime supremacy. From the mid-18th century until the
Second World War, it was the world's most powerful navy. The Royal Navy
played a key part in establishing and defending the
British
Empire, and four Imperial fortress colonies and a string of
imperial bases and coaling stations secured the Royal Navy's ability to
assert naval superiority globally. Owing to this historical prominence,
it is common, even among non-Britons, to refer to it as "the Royal Navy"
without qualification. Following World War
I, it was significantly
reduced in size, although at the onset of
World War II
it was still the world's largest. During the Cold War, the Royal Navy
transformed into a primarily anti-submarine force, hunting for Soviet
submarines and mostly active in the GIUK gap. Following the collapse of
the Soviet Union, its focus has returned to expeditionary operations
around the world and it remains one of the world's foremost blue-water
navies.
The Royal Navy maintains a fleet of technologically
sophisticated ships, submarines, and aircraft, including 2 aircraft
carriers, 2 amphibious transport docks, 4 ballistic missile submarines
(which maintain the nuclear deterrent), 6 nuclear fleet submarines, 6
guided missile destroyers, 11 frigates, 9 mine-countermeasure vessels
and 26 patrol vessels. As of April 2023, there are 70 operational
commissioned ships (including submarines as well as one historic ship,
HMS
Victory) in the Royal Navy, plus 13 ships of the Royal Fleet
Auxiliary (RFA); there are also five Merchant Navy ships available to
the RFA under a private finance initiative. The RFA replenishes Royal
Navy warships at sea, and augments the Royal Navy's
amphibious
warfare capabilities through its three Bay-class landing ship vessels.
It also works as a force multiplier for the Royal Navy, often doing
patrols that frigates used to do.
The Royal Navy is part of His Majesty's
Naval Service, which also includes the Royal Marines and the Royal
Fleet Auxiliary. The professional head of the Naval Service is the First
Sea Lord who is an admiral and member of the Defence Council of the
United Kingdom. The Defence Council delegates management of the Naval
Service to the Admiralty Board, chaired by the Secretary of State for
Defence. The Royal Navy operates from three bases in Britain where
commissioned ships and submarines are based: Portsmouth, Clyde and
Devonport, the last being the largest operational naval base in Western
Europe, as well as two naval air stations, RNAS Yeovilton and RNAS
Culdrose where maritime aircraft are based.
WORLD WAR I
During World War
I, the Royal Navy's strength was mostly deployed at home in the Grand Fleet, confronting the German High Seas Fleet across the
North
Sea. Several inconclusive clashes took place between them,
chiefly the Battle of Jutland in 1916. The British fighting advantage
proved insurmountable, leading the High Seas Fleet to abandon any
attempt to challenge British dominance. The Royal Navy under John
Jellicoe also tried to avoid combat and remained in port at Scapa Flow
for much of the war. This was contrary to widespread prewar expectations
that in the event of a Continental conflict Britain would primarily
provide naval support to the Entente Powers while sending at most only a
small ground army. Nevertheless, the Royal Navy played an important
role in securing the British Isles and the
English
Channel, notably ferrying the entire British Expeditionary
Force to the Western Front without the loss of a single life at the
beginning of the war.
The Royal Navy nevertheless remained active in other theatres, most notably in the
Mediterranean
Sea, where they waged the Dardanelles and Gallipoli
campaigns in 1914 and 1915. British cruisers hunted down German commerce
raiders across the world's oceans in 1914 and 1915, including the
battles of Coronel, Falklands Islands, Cocos, and Rufiji Delta, among
others.
POST WORLD WAR I
At the end of World War I, the Royal Navy remained by far the world's most powerful navy, larger than the U.S. Navy and
French Navy combined, and over twice as large as the
Imperial Japanese Navy and
Royal Italian Navy
combined. Its former primary competitor, the Imperial German Navy, was
destroyed at the end of the
war. In the inter-war period, the Royal Navy was stripped of
much of its power. The Washington and London Naval Treaties imposed the
scrapping of some capital ships and limitations on new construction.
The lack of an imperial fortress in the region of Asia, the Indian
Ocean, and the Pacific Ocean
was always to be a weakness throughout the 19th century as the former
North American colonies that had become the United States of America had
multiplied towards the Pacific Coast of North America, and the Russian
Empire and Japanese Empire both had ports on the Pacific and had begun
building large, modern fleets which went to war with each other in 1904.
Britain reliance on Malta, via the Suez Canal, as the nearest Imperial
fortress was improved, relying on amity and common interests that
developed between Britain and the United States during and after World
War I, by the completion of the
Panama Canal
in 1914, allowing the cruisers based in Bermuda to more easily and
rapidly reach the eastern Pacific Ocean (after the war, the Royal Navy's
Bermuda-based North America and
West Indies
Station was consequently re-designated the America and West Indies
station, including a South American division. The rising power and
increasing belligerence of the Japanese Empire after World War I,
however, resulted in the construction of the Singapore Naval Base, which
was completed in 1938, less than four years before hostilities with
Japan did commence during
World War
II.
In 1932, the Invergordon Mutiny took place in the Atlantic Fleet
over the National Government's proposed 25% pay cut, which was
eventually reduced to 10%. International tensions increased in the
mid-1930s and the re-armament of the Royal Navy was well under way by
1938. In addition to new construction, several existing old battleships,
battlecruisers and heavy cruisers were reconstructed, and anti-aircraft
weaponry reinforced, while new technologies, such as ASDIC, Huff-Duff
and hydrophones, were developed.
WORLD WAR II
At the start of World War II in 1939, the Royal Navy was still
the largest in the world, with over 1,400 vessels. The Royal Navy
provided critical cover during Operation Dynamo, the British evacuations
from
Dunkirk,
and as the ultimate deterrent to a German invasion of Britain during
the following four months. The Luftwaffe under Hermann Göring attempted
to gain air supremacy over southern England in the Battle of Britain in
order to neutralise the Home Fleet, but faced stiff resistance from the
Royal Air
Force. The Luftwaffe bombing offensive during the Kanalkampf
phase of the battle targeted naval convoys and bases in order to lure
large concentrations of RAF fighters into attrition warfare. At Taranto,
Admiral Cunningham commanded a fleet that launched the first
all-aircraft naval attack in history. The Royal Navy suffered heavy
losses in the first two years of the war. Over 3,000 people were lost
when the converted troopship Lancastria was sunk in June 1940, the
greatest maritime disaster in Britain's history. The Navy's most
critical struggle was the Battle of the Atlantic defending Britain's
vital North American commercial supply lines against
U-boat
attack. A traditional convoy system was instituted from the start of
the war, but German submarine tactics, based on group attacks by
"wolf-packs", were much more effective than in the previous war, and the
threat remained serious for well over three years.
COLD WAR
After World War II, the decline of the British Empire and the
economic hardships in Britain forced the reduction in the size and
capability of the Royal Navy.
The United States Navy
instead took on the role of global naval power. Governments since have
faced increasing budgetary pressures, partly due to the increasing cost
of weapons systems.
In 1981, Defence Secretary John Nott had advocated and initiated
a series of cutbacks to the Navy. The Falklands War however proved a
need for the Royal Navy to regain an expeditionary and littoral
capability which, with its resources and structure at the time, would
prove difficult. At the beginning of the 1980s, the Royal Navy was a
force focused on blue-water anti-submarine warfare. Its purpose was to
search for and destroy
Soviet submarines in the North
Atlantic,
and to operate the nuclear deterrent submarine force. The navy received
its first nuclear weapons with the introduction of the first of the
Resolution-class submarines armed with the Polaris
missile.
POST-COLD WAR
Following the conclusion of the collapse of the Soviet Union and
the end of the Cold War in 1991, the Royal Navy began to experience a
gradual decline in its fleet size in accordance with the changed
strategic environment it operated in. While new and more capable ships
are continually brought into service, such as the
Queen Elizabeth-class aircraft
carriers, Astute-class
submarines, and Type 45 destroyers, the total number of ships and submarines
operated has continued to steadily reduce. This has caused considerable
debate about the size of the Royal Navy. A 2013 report found that the
Royal Navy was already too small, and that Britain would have to depend
on her allies if her territories were attacked.
The financial costs attached to nuclear deterrence, including Trident missile upgrades and replacements, have become an increasingly significant issue for the navy.
THE
NAVY DEPARTMENT
The
Navy Department was a former ministerial service department of the
British Ministry of Defence responsible for the control and direction of
His Majesty's Naval Service. It was established on 1 April 1964 when
the Admiralty was absorbed into a unified Ministry of Defence, where it
became the Navy Department. Political oversight of the department
originally lay with the Minister of Defence for the Royal Navy
(1964-1967) it then passed to the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State
for Defence for the Royal Navy (1967–1981), then later to the
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Armed Forces (1981-1990),
and finally the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Defence
(1991–1997).
The departments military head was the First Sea Lord and Chief
of Naval Staff, (1964–1997) who was responsible for the day to day
superintendence of the department. Following restructuring in 1997 the
Navy Department as a ministerial department of the Ministry of Defence
was abolished and following restructuring within the MOD the previous
department became an operational grouping Ministry of Defence (Royal
Navy) later called Ministry of Defence (Navy).
The Armed
Forces insignia
In
1959 the newly appointed Chief of the Defence Staff Louis Mountbatten
implemented major changes with regards to defence policy one of which
was the proposal to abolish the three existing service ministries the
Admiralty, Air Ministry, War Office and recommended their staff and
functions be absorbed into a new but enlarged
Ministry of
Defence, as separate Air, Army and Navy Departments but
under the control of the new Defence Council and administered by the
Defence Board (committee) and Defence Secretariat. On 1 April 1964 the
Admiralty was absorbed in the unified Ministry of Defence, where it
became the Navy Department.
The new unified ministry marked the start of a period which saw
increasing pressure to improve efficiency and increase the effectiveness
of the administrative functions of the Armed Forces and the Ministry of
Defence. It was mostly organised on a joint rather than an 'integrated'
or 'functional' basis in that sections of the Naval, Army and Air
Staffs with similar responsibilities remained separate within their own
departments, but were brought together in joint committees. The new
organisation included three ministers of state who headed and
implemented policy within the Navy, Army and Air Departments. The
Minister of Defence for the Royal Navy (1964-1967) had responsibilities
across the whole of the defence field for international policy,
personnel and logistics, and research development and production,
although they did not have executive responsibilities that remained with
the Secretary of State for Defence. The Minister of State for the Royal
Navy was assisted by a Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for
Defence for the Royal Navy (1964–1981) and a civil servant the Second
Permanent Under-Secretary for the
Royal Navy.
In 1967 saw a re-organisation of the ministry aimed at moving
towards a functional rather than service based structure. The three
single service ministerial posts were replaced by two functional
ministerial positions: Minister of Defence (Administration) (1967–1970)
responsible for managing personnel and logistics for the entire defence
establishment. He was assisted by Chief Adviser, Personnel and
Logistics. Minister of Defence (Equipment) (1967–1970) responsible for
managing research, development, production, procurement and sales. He
was assisted by Chief Adviser (Projects), formerly the Chief Scientific
Adviser. The positions of Head of Defence Sales and Deputy Under
Secretary of State (Equipment) were created to assist the Minister of
Defence (Equipment) in general questions of research and development,
procurement and production and sales.
The three single service departments, second permanent under
secretaries were replaced by two functional second permanent under
secretaries, for administration and equipment, and ministerial
responsibility for the single service departments was delegated to the
parliamentary under secretaries of state. The Navy Department was then
brought under the control of the Parliamentary
Under-Secretary of State for Defence for the Royal
Navy. During the previous six years there had been a shift
to a more centralised Ministry of Defence and gradually moving
accountability away from the single service departments. In 1970 the
Heath ministry moved to reverse this trend through the appointment of
three single service Parliamentary Under Secretaries of State appointed
under one minister of state the Minister of State for Defence
(1970–1981).
In May 1981 the office of the Minister of State for Defence was
separated and his previous procurement responsibilities led to the
creation of a new Minister of Defence Procurement whilst his former
logistical responsibilities were handed over to a new Minister of State
for the Armed Forces. At the same time the Under-Secretaries of State
for the Army and Royal Air Force together with the Parliamentary
Under-Secretary of State for Defence for the Royal Navy were unified
into a single post of Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the
Armed Forces who now had overall responsibility for the three service
departments and in 1990 his title was changed to Parliamentary
Under-Secretary of State for Defence. In January 1997 the Navy
Department as a service department with ministerial oversight ended and
integrated into a new operating structure as an organisational grouping
"Ministry of Defence (Royal Navy)", along with "Ministry of Defence,
(Army)", "Ministry of Defence, (Airforce)", and "Ministry of Defence,
(Staffs)". In 2005 the grouping "MOD (Royal Navy)" was changed to "MOD
(Navy)".
During this period of transition the majority of directorates
from the previous department remained under supervision of the First Sea
Lord whilst others were distributed under the Defence Staff)
(1964–1995) that was later given a new organisational grouping name the
"Central Staffs" (1996–2005) In 2006 greater accountability and control
over budgets, equipment and staffing led to the formation new
organisational groups, Central Staffs became Central Top Level Budget
(CTLB) whilst Ministry of Defence (Navy) was renamed Fleet Top Level
Budget. A Top Level Budget (TLB) is a major organisational group of the
MOD. In 2010 Fleet Top Level Budget was renamed Navy Command following
the merger of the Commander-in-Chief Fleet and the Commander-in-Chief,
Naval Home Command (Royal Navy). Navy Command is currently the Top Level
Budget (holder) for the Royal Navy.
KING
CHARLES III
THE
ADMIRALTY
The
Admiralty was a department of the Government of the United Kingdom
responsible for the command of the Royal Navy until 1964, historically
under its titular head, the Lord High Admiral – one of the Great
Officers of State. For much of its history, from the early 18th century
until its abolition, the role of the Lord High Admiral was almost
invariably put "in commission" and exercised by the Lords Commissioner
of the Admiralty, who sat on the governing Board of Admiralty, rather
than by a single person. The Admiralty was replaced by the Admiralty
Board in 1964, as part of the reforms that created the Ministry of
Defence and its Navy Department (later Navy Command).
Before the Acts of Union 1707, the Office of the Admiralty and
Marine Affairs administered the Royal Navy of the Kingdom of England,
which merged with the Royal Scots Navy and the absorbed the
responsibilities of the Lord High Admiral of the Kingdom of Scotland
with the unification of the Kingdom of Great Britain. The Admiralty was
among the most important departments of the British Government, because
of the Royal Navy's role in the expansion and maintenance of the English
overseas possessions in the 17th century, the British Empire in the
18th century, and subsequently.
The modern Admiralty Board, to which the functions of the
Admiralty were transferred in 1964, is a committee of the tri-service
Defence Council of the United Kingdom. This Admiralty Board meets only
twice a year, and the day-to-day running of the Royal Navy is controlled
by a Navy Board (not to be confused with the historic Navy Board). It
is common for the various authorities now in charge of the Royal Navy to
be referred to as simply 'The Admiralty'.
The title of Lord High Admiral of the United Kingdom was vested
in the monarch from 1964 to 2011. The title was awarded to Prince
Philip, Duke of Edinburgh by
Queen Elizabeth II
on his 90th birthday and since his 2021 death has reverted to the
monarch. There also continues to be a Vice-Admiral of the United Kingdom
and a Rear-Admiral of the United Kingdom, both of which are honorary
offices.
The
Argentinean expedition base camp on Deception Island
Remains
of the whaling operation, where blubber was rendered into oil for lamps
SPECIAL BOAT SERVICE
The Special Boat Service
(SBS) is the special forces unit of the United Kingdom's Royal Navy.
The SBS can trace its origins back to the Second World War when the Army
Special Boat Section was formed in 1940. After the Second World War,
the Royal Navy formed special forces with several name
changes - Special Boat Company was adopted in 1951 and
re-designated as the Special Boat Squadron in
1974 - until on 28 July 1987 when the unit was renamed as the
Special Boat Service after assuming responsibility for maritime
counter-terrorism. Most of the operations conducted by the SBS are
highly classified, and are rarely commented on by the British government
or the Ministry of Defence, owing to their sensitive nature.
The Special Boat Service is the maritime special forces unit of
the United Kingdom Special Forces and is described as the sister unit of
the British Army 22 Special Air Service Regiment (22 SAS), with both
under the operational control of the Director Special Forces. In October
2001, full command of the SBS was transferred from the Commandant
General Royal Marines to the Commander-in-Chief Fleet. On 18 November
2003, the SBS were given their own cap badge with the motto "By Strength
and Guile". The SBS has traditionally been staffed mostly by Royal
Marines Commandos.
The principal roles of the SBS are Surveillance and
Reconnaissance (SR), including information reporting and target
acquisition; Offensive Action (OA), including the direction of air
strikes, artillery and naval gunfire, designation for precision guided
munitions, use of integral weapons and demolitions; and Support and
Influence (SI), including overseas training tasks. The SBS also provide
immediate response Military Counter Terrorism (CT) and Maritime Counter
Terrorism (MCT) teams.
The operational capabilities of the SBS and the SAS are broadly
similar. However, the SBS (being the principal Royal Navy contribution
to UKSF) has the additional training and equipment required to lead in
the maritime, amphibious and riverine environments. Both units come
under the operational command of HQ Directorate of Special Forces (DSF)
and undergo an identical selection process.
Special
Boat Service mottoL By strength and guile
SBS HISTORY
Roger
Courtney became a commando in mid-1940 and was sent to the Combined
Training Centre in Scotland. He was unsuccessful in his initial attempts
to convince Admiral of the Fleet Sir Roger Keyes and later Admiral
Theodore Hallett, commander of the Combined Training Centre, that his
idea of a folding kayak brigade would be effective. He decided to
infiltrate HMS Glengyle, an infantry landing ship anchored in the River
Clyde. Courtney paddled to the ship, climbed aboard undetected, wrote
his initials on the door to the captain's cabin, and stole a deck gun
cover. He presented the soaking cover to a group of high-ranking Royal
Navy officers meeting at a nearby Inveraray hotel. He was promoted to
captain and given command of twelve men as the first Special Boat
Service/Special Boat Section.
The unit, on the shores of Sannox, Isle of Arran, was initially
named the Folboat Troop, after the type of folding canoe employed in
raiding operations and then renamed No. 1 Special Boat Section in early
1941. One training exercise required SBS members to navigate folboats
140 miles (230 km) over 3 days and 3 nights from Ardrossan to Clachan,
via the Isle of Kerrera, where they reconnoitred and sketched RAF Oban.
Attached to Layforce, it moved to the Middle East. The unit worked with
the 1st Submarine Flotilla based at Alexandria and did beach
reconnaissance of Rhodes, evacuated troops left behind on Crete, and
carried out a number of small-scale raids and other operations. In
December 1941 Courtney returned to the United Kingdom where he formed
No2 SBS, and No1 SBS became attached to the Special Air Service (SAS) as
the Folboat Section. In June 1942 they took part in the Crete airfield
raids. In September 1942 eight men of the SBS carried out Operation
Anglo, a raid on two airfields on the island of Rhodes; all but two of
the men were captured after carrying out their mission. Destroying three
aircraft, a fuel dump and numerous buildings, the two uncaptured SBS
men had to hide in the countryside for four days before they could reach
the waiting submarine. After the Rhodes raid, the SBS was absorbed into
the SAS due to the heavy casualties they had suffered.
The Royal Marines Boom Patrol Detachment (RMBPD) was formed on 6
July 1942, and based at Southsea, Portsmouth. The RMBPD was under the
command of Royal Marines Major Herbert 'Blondie' Hasler with Captain J.
D. Stewart as second in command. The detachment consisted of 34 men and
was based at Lumps Fort, and often exercised in the Portsmouth Harbour
and patrolled the harbour boom at nights.
In April 1943, 1st SAS was divided, with 250 men from the SAS
joining the Small Scale Raiding Force to form the Special Boat Squadron
under the command of Major the Earl Jellicoe. They moved to Haifa and
trained with the Greek Sacred Regiment for operations in the Aegean.
They later operated among the Dodecanese and Cyclades groups of
islands in the Dodecanese Campaign and took part in the Battle of Leros
and the Battle of Kos. They, with the Greek Sacred Band, took part in
the successful Raid on Symi in July 1944 in which the entire German
garrison was either killed or captured. In August 1944 they joined with
the Long Range Desert Group in operations in the Adriatic, on the
Peloponnese, in Albania, and, finally, in Istria. So effective were they
that, by 1944, the 200–300 men of the SBS were holding down six German
divisions.
Throughout the war, No.2 SBS did not use the Special Boat
Squadron name but instead retained the name Special Boat Section. They
accompanied US Major General Mark Clark ashore before the Operation
Torch landings in October 1942 on Operation Flagpole. Later, one group, Z
SBS, which was based in Algiers from March 1943, carried out the beach
reconnaissance for the Salerno landings and a raid on Crete, before
moving to Ceylon to work with the Special Operations Executives, Force
136 and later with Special Operations Australia. The rest of No. 2 SBS
became part of South-East Asia Command's Small Operations Group,
operating on the Chindwin and Irrawaddy rivers, and in the Arakan,
during the Burma campaign.
Although their roles always overlapped to some extent, the
various canoe and boat units became more specialised from late 1942
onwards. The RMBPD focused on ship attack and harbour sabotage, the
Special Boat Section and COPP undertook covert beach surveys, and the
Special Boat Squadron engaged in raiding, sabotage and reconnaissance
above the high-water mark.
Post-war era
In 1946, the SBS, whether of Commando or SAS parentage, was
disbanded. The RMBPD was the only British Special Forces unit to survive
the end of World War II intact, and one of three Special Service units
to survive (the other two being the RM Commandos and the Parachute
Regiment). In 1946, the RMBPD became the School of Combined Operations
Beach and Boat Section (SCOBBS) at Fremington, Devon. Lt-Col "Blondie"
Hasler RM became the adviser to SCOBBS and wrote the pamphlet "General
Notes on the Use of Special Parties". The basic SCOBBS course of
fourteen weeks covered the range of skills of the wartime COPPS, SRU,
SBS and Detachment 385. In October 1947 SCOBBS dropped the word School
from its name and moved to RM Eastney to become the Small Raids Wing
(SRW) of the Amphibious School, Royal Marines. The school's Chief
Instructor Norman Tailyour established the Royal Marines Special Boat
Sections taking on the roles proposed in Hasler's paper. Their first
missions were in Palestine, involving ordnance removal, and limpet mine
removal from ships in
Haifa. The SBS went on to serve in the Korean War deployed on
operations along the North Korean coast as well as operating behind
enemy lines destroying lines of communication, installations and
gathering intelligence. During the Korean War the SBS operated from
submarines like their wartime predecessors.
In the early 1950s, NATO
doctrine for the defence of Western Europe called for a rapid fall-back
to the west bank of the Rhine River, a natural defensive barrier. Royal
Navy Rhine Flotilla’s SBS detachment had the task of demolishing the
bridges over the river as well as destroying the many river barges on
the river. The SBS teams of a radio operator and two SBS
swimmer-canoeists would then stay behind on the eastern side of the
river providing reconnaissance and intelligence and to sabotage Warsaw
Pact forces logistics. 2 SB Section, and later also the newly formed 3
SB Section, were part of the Rhine Squadron until around 1958 and took
part in all major British Army of the Rhine (BAOR) exercises when they
would be joined by 4 and 5 SB Section, formed from the Royal Marines
Reserve.
In 1952, SBS teams were held at combat readiness in Egypt in
case Gamal Abdel Nasser's revolution turned more violent than it did.
The SBS were also alerted during the Suez Crisis of 1956 and coup
against King Idris I of Libya (1959), but in both cases they did not see
action. In 1961, SBS teams carried out reconnaissance missions during
the Indonesian Confrontation (see Operation Claret). In the same year,
Iraq threatened to invade Kuwait for the first time, and the SBS put a
detachment at Bahrain. In 1972, the SBS came into prominence when
members of a combined SBS and RAOC team parachuted into the Atlantic
Ocean after a bomb threat on board the cruise liner Queen Elizabeth 2. A
thorough search of the ship found no evidence of any device drawing the
conclusion that it was a hoax. The SBS conducted operations in Northern
Ireland during The Troubles including with submarines. In January 1975,
two SBS kayak teams were inserted from HMS Cachalot to conduct an anti
gun running operation in the area between Torr Head and Garron.
Special Boat Squadron
In 1973, their name was changed to the Special Boat Squadron and in 1980 the SBS relinquished
North Sea oil rig protection
to Comacchio Company, Royal Marines. In 1982, after the Argentinian
invasion of the Falkland Islands, they deployed to South Georgia. The
only losses to the SBS during the Falklands War occurred when the SBS
and SAS were operating behind the lines and two members of the SBS were
shot, one fatally, by an SAS patrol, who had mistaken them for
Argentinians.
Special Boat Service
In 1987, they were renamed Special Boat Service, and became part
of the United Kingdom Special Forces Group alongside the Special Air
Service and 14 Intelligence Company. In the Gulf War, there was no
amphibious role assigned to the SBS. An "area of operations line" was
drawn down the middle of Iraq; the SAS would operate west of the line
and the SBS to the east. As well as searching for mobile Scud missile
launchers, the SBS's assigned area contained a mass of fibre-optic cable
that provided Iraq with intelligence; the location of the main junction
of the network was 32 miles from Baghdad. On 22 January 1991, 36 SBS
members were inserted by two Chinook helicopters from No. 7 Squadron RAF
into an area full of Iraqi ground and air forces as well as spies and
nomads. The SBS team managed to avoid these and destroyed a 40-yard
section of the cable with explosives, neutralising what was left of the
Iraqi communication grid. The SBS also carried out one of its most
high-profile operations when it liberated the British Embassy in Kuwait,
abseiling from helicopters hovering above the embassy. They also
carried out diversionary raids along the Kuwaiti coast which diverted a
number of Iraqi troops away from the main thrust of the coalition
buildup, to the SBS area of operations.
In September 1999, about 20 SBS members contributed to the
Australian-led International Force for East Timor (INTERFET) in East
Timor. Together with the Australian Special Air Service Regiment and the
New Zealand Special Air Service they formed INTERFET's special forces
element, named Response Force. Response Force departed from Darwin by
C-130 Hercules transport aircraft and flew into Dili tasked with
securing the airport, a seaport and a heli-port to enable regular forces
to land and deploy. The SBS were filmed driving a Land Rover Defender
out of a Hercules. Response Force was then used to perform a variety of
tasks including direct action and special reconnaissance throughout East
Timor. The British forces, including the SBS, withdrew in December
1999. Sergeant Mark Andrew Cox was awarded the Military Cross after his
patrol came under fire from pro-Indonesian militia.
HMS
Proteus, British Antarctic survey ship
SURVEY
SHIPS - BRITISH ANTARCTIC (BAS)
HMS Protector is a dedicated Antarctica patrol ship that fulfils
the nation's mandate to provide support to the British Antarctic Survey
(BAS). HMS Scott is an ocean survey vessel and at 13,500 tonnes is one
of the largest ships in the Navy. As of 2018, the newly commissioned HMS
Magpie also undertakes survey duties at sea. The Royal Fleet Auxiliary
plans to introduce two new Multi-Role Ocean Surveillance Ships, in part
to protect undersea cables and gas pipelines and partly to compensate
for the withdrawal of all ocean-going survey vessels from Royal Navy
service. The first of these vessels, RFA Proteus, entered service in
October 2023.
RFA PROTEUS
RFA Proteus is a ship of the Royal Fleet Auxiliary within His
Majesty's Naval Service of the United Kingdom. Acquired in 2023, the
ship entered drydock at Cammell Laird for modification into a Multi-Role
Ocean Surveillance Ship (MROSS). She formally entered service in
October 2023.
The ship was formerly named MV Topaz Tangaroa in 2017–2022, and
was used as a platform supply vessel operated by P&O Maritime
Logistics. The vessel is in a shipyard being refitted as of May 2023,
after being sold to the U.K. Ministry of Defence in January 2023.
MV Topaz Tangaroa - The ship operated as the offshore support
vessel MV Topaz Tangaroa for Topaz Marine (later, P&O Maritime
Logistics) from December 2019 until January 2023. Designed and built by
Vard Brattvaag, Norway and with the hull construction completed in
Tulcea shipyard,
Romania
the primary capabilities of Topaz Tangaroa were to support subsea
construction and installation projects, subsea inspection and survey,
and as a mother ship to support remotely operated vehicle (ROV)
operations. The ship was flagged in the Marshall Islands with its home
port as Majuro.
Owing to the UK's government's growing concern about protecting
subsea infrastructure, and the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Topaz
Tangaroa was purchased by the UK's Ministry of Defence in February 2023
for £70 million to be converted into a multi-role ocean surveillance
(MROS) ship operated by the Royal Fleet Auxiliary. The ship was assigned
the pennant number K60. Initial conversion for naval service is being
conducted at the Cammell Laird shipyard in Birkenhead, UK.
The MROS was initially announced by the Defence Secretary Ben
Wallace during the 2022 Conservative Party conference. Then-Prime
Minister Boris Johnson had first discussed the possibility of such a
vessel in November 2020.
She is equipped with a 120-tonne crane as well as a hangar and
workshops capable of accommodating remotely operated and other unmanned
underwater vehicles (UUVs). The Ministry of Defence reportedly acquired
three Kongsberg HUGIN Large UUVs which reportedly can conduct
surveillance and surveys down to depths of 6,000 metres (20,000 ft).
Conversion of Proteus was completed in September 2023 and the
ship began post-conversion sea trials. She formally entered service with
the Royal Fleet Auxiliary in October 2023.
HMS PROTECTOR (A173)
HMS Protector is a Royal Navy ice patrol ship built in Norway in mid 2000. As MV Polarbjørn (Norwegian:
polar
bear) she operated under charter as a polar research
icebreaker and a subsea support vessel. In 2011, she was chartered as a
temporary replacement for the ice patrol ship HMS Endurance and was
purchased by the British Ministry of Defence in early September 2013. As
DNV Ice Class 05 the vessel can handle first year ice up to 0.5 metres
(20 in).
From April 2011, she was chartered to the Royal Navy for three
years as a temporary replacement for the ice patrol ship, HMS Endurance,
and was renamed HMS Protector. The annual cost of the charter was
£8.7m. In September 2013 the British Ministry of Defence purchased the
ship outright from GC Rieber Shipping, for £51 million. In October 2013
the Ministry of Defence announced that from 1 April 2014 the ship's
homeport would change from HMNB Portsmouth to HMNB Devonport, the
location of the Hydrography and Meteorology Centre of Specialisation and
where the Royal Navy's other survey ships are based.
She was commissioned into the Navy on 23 June 2011 as HMS
Protector. The commissioning ceremony was held on the 50th anniversary
of the date that the Antarctic Treaty came into force. During September
2011, Protector embarked on operational sea training in preparation for
her first deployment in November.
In
February 2012, after receiving a distress call from Comandante Ferraz
Antarctic Station on King George Island in the South Shetland Islands,
Protector sailed to provide assistance to the Brazilian research station
after a large fire had broken out there. 23 of her sailors were put
ashore with fire-fighting equipment to tackle the blaze. Two of the
researchers died in the incident.
During March and April 2012, the ship operated in the vicinity
of Rothera Research Station. During a major visit, she delivered around
170 cubic metres of aviation fuel. At 67° 34′ S, this was the most
southerly visit of her career up to that date, nearly 800 miles (1,300
km) from Cape Horn, the southernmost tip of the South America. The crew
competed in a 'winter Olympics' with scientists from the British
Antarctic Survey.
On the way to her second Antarctic deployment, in October 2012
Protector surveyed the wreck of the Dale-class oiler RFA Darkdale in
James Bay, Saint Helena, as part of an assessment of its possible threat
to the island's environment. On arriving in Antarctica in December, her
designated Antarctic Treaty Observers supported an international team
carrying out inspections of research stations to ensure compliance with
the
Antarctic
Treaty.
The ship left for her third Antarctic deployment in October
2013. She revisited Rothera and then sailed across Marguerite Bay,
reaching a latitude of 68° 12′ S, 850 miles (1,370 km) from Cape Horn.
In the northern summer of 2014, the ship visited the Caribbean
to perform training for humanitarian assistance, and also assisted some
community projects in the British Virgin
Islands.
In late 2015, Protector commenced a 20-month deployment to the
Ross Sea for fisheries patrol and hydrographic survey operations. It is
the first time that a Royal Navy or British Government vessel has
operated in the waters south of Australia and New Zealand since 1936. In
addition to the ship's usual equipment, three unmanned aerial vehicles
(designed and 3D printed by the University of Southampton) were
embarked. Sailing from Devonport, Protector visited the Seychelles and
Diego Garcia en route (in the latter instance, becoming the first Royal
Navy surface ship to visit in eight years) before proceeding to
Tasmania, Australia. At the start of December, Protector departed from
Hobart, Tasmania to commence
fisheries
patrols. In January 2016, the ship completed a five-week patrol of the
Ross Sea conducting inspections in support of the Convention for the
Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources, with the aid of six
embarked Australian and New Zealand specialists. The ship visited
Zucchelli Station and reached a latitude of 77° 56′ S. Crew members
visited Scott's Hut at Cape Evans. Protector circled the globe, covering
more than 18,500 nautical miles, in 2016.
In November 2017, following a request for assistance from the
Argentine government, Protector was redeployed to aid international
efforts to locate the missing submarine ARA San Juan.
In 2020 crew from the ship were trained aboard Canadian Coast
Guard vessels in Arctic waters and renewed cooperation again in 2021.
Protector operates several small boats, including the survey
motor boat James Caird IV, the ramped work boat Terra Nova and two
Pacific 22 RIBs Nimrod and Aurora. She also embarks three BV206
all-terrain vehicles and a number of quad-bikes and trailers for
activities on Antarctica, such as moving stores and equipment.
James Caird IV is a 10.5-metre (34 ft), ice-capable survey motor
boat built by Mustang Marine in Pembroke Dockyard, based on a design of
existing British Antarctic Survey boats. It has a crew of five, plus up
to five passengers. The boat was named by Alexandra Shackleton, the
granddaughter of Antarctic explorer
Ernest
Shackleton, during the commissioning ceremony for Protector
on 23 June 2011. The boat's name commemorates the voyage of the James
Caird made by Shackleton in 1916.
Subsequently, it was reported that Protector would carry at
least one of the new 11-metre survey module variants of the Sea-class
work boats being procured for various tasks in the Royal Navy.
HMS ENDURANCE
HMS Endurance was an icebreaker that served as the Royal Navy
ice patrol ship between 1991 and 2008. Built in Norway as MV Polar
Circle, she was chartered by the Royal Navy in 1991 as HMS Polar Circle,
before being purchased outright and renamed HMS Endurance in 1992 as a
replacement for the previous HMS Endurance whose hull had been weakened
by striking an iceberg.
Endurance was a class 1 icebreaker. Her two Bergen BRG8 diesel
engines produced over 8000 shaft horsepower enabling her to travel
through ice up to 1 metre (3 ft 3 in) thick at 3 knots (5.6 km/h). Her
propulsion system used a
computer-controlled variable-pitch
propeller and stern and
bow
thrusters. She carried two ice-modified Lynx helicopters which were instrumental in the making of the
BBC Documentary Series
Planet Earth in 2006.
The ship was laid up in Portsmouth from 2009 to 2016, following
serious damage caused by flooding following an error during routine
maintenance on a sea suction strainer. In October 2013 it was reported
that she would be scrapped; in July 2015 the vessel was offered for sale
for further use or recycling and left Portsmouth under tow to the Leyal
ship recycling facility in Turkey on 1 June 2016.
MV Polar Circle was built in Norway in 1990 by Ulstein Hatlo for
Rieber Shipping. The Royal Navy chartered her for eight months as HMS
Polar Circle from 21 November 1991. She was bought outright and renamed
HMS Endurance on 9 October 1992.
Endurance provided a sovereign presence in polar waters,
performing hydrographic surveys and supporting the British Antarctic
Survey in Antarctica. Her usual deployment saw her in the
Southern Ocean
and returning to the UK through tropical waters each year. Later, a
longer, 18-month deployment was designed to maximise her time available
for BAS usage.
In 1997, Endurance made the first visit to Argentina by a Royal
Naval vessel since the Falklands War, calling at the capital, Buenos
Aires, en route to her Antarctic deployment. That she was seen as a
scientific and research vessel rather than a warship facilitated the
visit and helped to normalise relations between Argentina and the United
Kingdom. She visited the Argentinian port of Mar del Plata in 1998 and
returned to Buenos Aires in 2002.
In 2005, Endurance was chosen to carry the Queen and the Duke of
Edinburgh at the International Fleet Review as part of the Trafalgar
200 celebrations.
In July 2007, the United Kingdom offered Endurance to supply
Argentina's Antarctic bases after their ARA Almirante Irizar icebreaker
suffered extensive damage in a fire.
Although she enjoyed a varied, purposeful career as the UK's
sole ice patrol vessel, Endurance's later years were problematic and
ended in ignominy. After her 2004 docking period in Falmouth, the ship
suffered a minor accident which resulted in her listing badly when the
drydock she was situated in flooded up. The months after the refit were
troublesome and the ship suffered numerous debilitating machinery
failures. This was to become something of a theme over the next four
years as the ship's crew struggled to keep her serviceable, set against
more demanding challenges.
Docking in Puerto Belgrano 2006
During survey work in Antarctica in January 2006, the ship's
engineering staff discovered that her rudder was apparently loose on the
stock. Her work period was cut short and she returned to Mare Harbour
in the Falkland Islands for further inspections. Det Norske Veritas, the
ship's assurance certification company, instructed that the ship should
dock at the nearest available port – the nearest large enough being
Puerto Belgrano, Argentina's largest naval base, where Endurance docked
in mid-March 2006.
Without hotel services on board, the ship's company moved to
shore-side accommodation in the city of Bahía Blanca, some twenty
kilometres west of Puerto Belgrano. The rudder was removed for repairs,
and once it was on the floor of the drydock, a dockers' strike followed.
The ship remained there for nearly three weeks. Picket lines formed at
the gates of the naval base, preventing the ship's company from
relieving the stranded duty watch on board.
When the strike broke, the rudder was replaced and welded into
position and the ship left Puerto Belgrano in early April 2006. She
returned to Portsmouth via Lisbon and to drydock again for further
engineering work on the rudder and stock.
2008 near loss
In December 2008, while on an 18-month deployment, Endurance
suffered extensive flooding to her machinery spaces and lower
accommodation decks resulting in the near loss of the ship. A serious
engine room flood left her without power or propulsion, and she was
towed to Punta Arenas by a Chilean tug. After an extensive survey was
completed, the estimates to refit the ship were put at around £30m. On 8
April 2009 Endurance arrived off Portsmouth, on the semi-submersible
transporter ship MV Target.
The Royal Navy inquiry found that the flood happened while a
sea-water strainer was being cleaned, in an attempt to improve the
production of fresh
water.
The air lines controlling a hull valve were incorrectly reconnected,
resulting in the valve opening and an inability to close it. The pipe
installation fell below generally accepted standards, which made
reconnection of the air lines ambiguous.
The inquiry also found that, due to manpower constraints, the
ship did not have a system maintainer and that clarity of engineering
command had been lost, with no-one clearly in charge of risk-management.
It was fortunate that, without propulsion, Endurance had drifted over
an area shallow enough for anchors to be let go and to hold the ship in
position, otherwise, "there was a very real possibility that she would
have been lost either by running ashore or by succumbing to the flood."
The inquiry judged that the ship's company responded well to control
damage in challenging conditions.
Ice Patrol (TV series)
In 2009, National Geographic
Channel ran a four-episode documentary series on Endurance. Five ran
the same series the following year under the name Ice Patrol, with the
final episode showing what happened the day the ship almost sank.
Replacement
On 9 September 2010, speculation in the press suggested it was
likely that Endurance would be scrapped and replaced with another
icebreaker from Norway.
On 22 March 2011, it was announced that the Royal Navy intended
to hire MV Polarbjørn, to be renamed HMS Protector, for three years
whilst a final decision on whether to repair or scrap Endurance is made.
HMS Protector was purchased in September 2013.
It was announced on 7 October 2013 that Endurance would be sold
for scrap, as it was not 'economically viable' to repair the damage
sustained in 2008. In July 2015 the Ministry of Defence gave advanced
notice of sale of the vessel for further use or recycling, noting that
"parties interested in acquiring the vessel for future use should note
it will require considerable investment". The vessel left Portsmouth
under tow to the breakers' yard in Turkey on 1 June 2016.
SIR ERNEST SHACKLETON
Endurance was named after the ship which Sir Ernest Shackleton
used in his Antarctic expedition of 1914–1917. The names of Endurance's
boats and landing craft continued the Shackleton connection: James
Caird and Dudley Docker were named after boats carried by Shackleton's
HMS
Endurance, Nimrod was named after the ship which Shackleton
used on his Antarctic expedition of 1907–1909, and Eddie Shackleton was
named after the explorer's son. The motto of Endurance, "fortitudine
vincimus" ("by endurance, we conquer"), was also the Shackleton family
motto.
Antarctica
is surrounded by the Southern Ocean