Category: Marines from all over the world

England: Big plans for the Royal Navy

Since 2017, the UK has had a National Shipbuilding Strategy, which Boris Johnson refreshed in 2022, and which was given a further boost by Rishi Sunak, who had resigned as Prime Minister, to coincide with the election campaign ahead of the UK general election. According to this paper - and it first has to prove that it is more than that - the United Kingdom is to become the "most competitive maritime nation" by 2050. Up to 28 new ships are to be built for the Royal Navy in order to halt and reverse the current serious shrinking trend. To this end, 75 billion pounds (85 billion euros) have just been proclaimed, which...

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Great Britain: London relies on MRSS

Six new MRSS - multi-role support ships - are to be built to replace the ageing components of the amphibious forces of the Royal Navy and Royal Marines. Designed in accordance with the latest requirements and knowledge of force projection from sea to land, but also adapted to the needs of humanitarian missions near and far, these platforms are now to be designed and developed in broad cooperation between all stakeholders. As already announced last year, this project is based on close cooperation with the Netherlands in particular, which intends to replace its two Rotterdam-class LPDs at the same time. Corresponding contacts are at an advanced stage. The MRSS...

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Paris: OP frigates for the DOM/TOMs

Faced with the question of how to replace the six small Floréal-class frigates, France recently decided in favour of building the Gowind corvettes - and against waiting any longer until the European Patrol Corvette is ready for series production, which is not making sufficient progress as a joint project, especially in light of the findings of the last six months. Better to build something of our own, that has always been the case in Paris! The Floréal class was designed in the 1990s for low-intensity coastal defence tasks in the French overseas territories, but has been used more and more intensively and now requires more assertiveness as a military platform above and below...

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France: Marine Nationale fires SCALP in double pack

At the end of April, the French defence administration DGA, the Direction Générale de l'Armement in Paris, published a video of the first simultaneous land target firing of the new naval cruise missile MdCN (missile de croisière naval, also known as SCALP-Naval), manufactured by the European consortium MBDA. On 18 April 2024, the first FK was launched from the submerged, nuclear-powered attack submarine "Suffren" and - to arrive at the target at the same time - the second shot was launched from the FREMM frigate "Aquitaine". The rest of the press release consists of patting each other on the back. Video...

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Royal Australian Navy: Deconstruction "down under"

After just 15 years in active service, the Royal Australian Navy decommissioned its largest ship, the 47,000-tonne displacement tanker "Sirius", at the end of 2021. The ship had been purchased on the civilian market as a replacement for an obsolete single-hull tanker and subsequently navalised with a "flange-mounted" helicopter landing deck and RAS harness on both sides. When the two new operational supply vessels "Stalwart" and "Supply" (Cantabria class, 174 metres, 20,000 tonnes) built by Navantia in Spain arrived in 2021, it was too costly for the not overly large navy to maintain several different and less flexible support units. Since resale was probably not profitable either, the...

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