Royal Navy on track to building battlegroup to protect new carriers
Britain’s future carrier strike group will be vital in protecting the Royal Navy’s £6.2bn supercarriers from enemy attack.
The group, made up of frigates, destroyers, submarines and aircraft, will operate alongside the Queen Elizabeth-class warships.
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Hide AdThe first of the two new 65,000-tonne behemoths, HMS Queen Elizabeth, arrived in Portsmouth on Wednesday.
Commodore Andrew Betton is the commander of the UK carrier strike group.
He said: ‘This is the rebirth of carrier strike operations. But this a different beast from the aircraft carriers of the 1960s in terms of its flexibility and scale.
‘HMS Queen Elizabeth is one bit of the complex process that makes up the carrier strike group.’
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Hide AdTo prepare, Cdre Betton took the reins of a US Navy battlegroup, led by the 100,000-tonne supercarrier USS George HW Bush.
The test saw him and his naval battle staff operating the group as part of Exercise Saxon Warrior, a series of war games off the UK coast.
Captain Ken Houlberg, chief of staff to the UK carrier strike group commander, said the exercise had been an invaluable lesson.
‘We have had a bit of a gap in our carrier capability since 2010,’ he said. ‘We have had to look to others to restore our capability – the Americans specifically have been more than generous in helping to guide us, teach us, show us the ropes again help us to restore our capability.’
Capt Houlberg added: ‘This carrier is at the centre of our carrier strike group. This is the class of ship that we’re forming all of our plans and preparations around.’