Royal Navy to be smaller than Italy’s after defence chiefs admit our new warships are delayed
THE Royal Navy will be smaller than Italy’s as new warships are delayed.
By the mid 2020s the number of frigates and destroyers in service will fall to just 15.
That breaks the Government’s long standing promise never to go below 19.
Former admirals branded the admission “a national embarrassment and disgrace” and warned the cock-up will relegate Britain to the second division of the world’s navies.
In comparison, France has 22 frigates and destroyers, and even Italy has 17.
In a letter to the Commons Public Accounts Committee last month, MoD Permanent Secretary Stephen Lovegrove let slip that five new Type 31 frigates won’t now come into service until May 2027, four years late.
At the same time, the ageing generation of Type 23 frigates are still to be paid off from 2023, leaving the major shortfall.
The number of frigates is set to fall from 13 to nine by 2027, while the number of Type 45 destroyers remains at six.
'NATIONAL EMBARRASSMENT'
Former First Sea Lord Admiral Lord West dubbed the shortfall “a national embarrassment and disgrace”.
The peer had been repeatedly assured by defence ministers that the Type 31s would be delivered on time.
Lord West told The Sun: “Just 15 major service ships will put us into the second tier of the world’s navies
“Fifteen surface ships means only five on task, as a third will be in maintenance and a third will be training.
“For a great nation like ours, just five frigates on task is a national embarrassment and disgrace.”
The revelation will hike tensions further between the MoD and No10 ahead of this summer’s defence and security review, which forces chiefs already plan to use it to plea for more money.
Just 10 days ago at the Sun’s Millies awards, PM Boris Johnson boasted that the number of frigates in increasing.
Last Autumn, the MoD faced international embarrassment when it was unable to protect British flagged merchant ships from being hijacked by Iran in the Straits of Hormuz.
'CONCERNING'
Commons defence committee chairman Tobias Ellwood dubbed the revelation “concerning”, and said he would investigate it.
Mr Ellwood added: “The committee plans to conduct an inquiry into our surface fleet. We rightly prize our carriers but they were built without altering the overall naval budget so the surface fleet is suffering at the very time our shipping lanes are getting more dangerous.
“Our post Brexit economy will require unhindered access to these waters and future justifies an Defence budget closer to 3% than 2.%.”
Britain now lags far behind the naval superpowers, have boasted a fleet of 70 frigates and destroyers in the 1970s.
The US has 91 major surface combatants, China 88, Russia 26 and India 23.
First Sea Lord Admiral Tony Radakin has ordered staff to find ways of making sure the fleet can still meet all its all standing tasks despite the shortfall.
A defence source said: “The Navy is looking to optimise maintenance schedules to maximise operational availability”.
An MOD spokesman added: “We remain committed to ensuring the Royal Navy will have the ships required to fulfil its defence commitments”.
The Sun says
SO much for a strong post-Brexit Britain.
Due to delays in making new frigates, our navy is about to become smaller than Italy’s.
The total number of our frigates and destroyers will stand at 15 by the mid 2020s — despite the Government saying they would never have less than 19.
Given that Iran attempted to obstruct a British oil tanker last year, this is a desperate state of affairs.
Territory such as the Falklands will have limited defence.
It’s an open invitation to our enemies, and frankly, a little embarrassing.
With an upcoming defence review this year, Chancellor Rishi Sunak must put the navy top of his priority list.
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