UK Navy Flagship to Sail Off in 'Powerful Message' of Capability

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Aircraft carrier HMS Prince of Wales
British Normandy veterans wave to the crowds and to the aircraft carrier HMS Prince of Wales that has its sides lined with sailors as they depart Portsmouth Harbour on board the Mont St Michael ferry to France, in Portsmouth England, Tuesday, June 4, 2024. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

LONDON — The UK Royal Navy's flagship HMS Prince of Wales is to set sail to the Indo-Pacific as head of an international Carrier Strike Group with the aim of sending a "powerful message that we mean business."

The £3 billion ($4 billion) aircraft carrier will lead UK, Norwegian and Canadian warships for the eight-month deployment to join exercises, operations and visits with 40 countries across the Mediterranean, Middle East, south-east Asia, Japan and Australia.

Thousands of families and well-wishers are expected to line the harbor walls at Portsmouth on Tuesday to wave off the 65,000-tonne warship, which will be accompanied from the navy base by Type 45 destroyer HMS Dauntless.

They will then be joined by two Norwegian vessels as well as UK and Canadian frigates, which are sailing from Plymouth.

The support vessel Royal Fleet Auxiliary tanker RFA Tidespring will make up the final ship in the Carrier Strike Group (CSG), which will involve other ships and nations during the deployment called Operation Highmast.

A contingent of 18 UK F-35B jets will join the carrier in the days after departure, with that number increasing to 24 during the deployment.

Also joining will be several helicopters, as well as drones.

Commodore James Blackmore, CSG commander, said the deployment would send a "powerful message" of the UK's naval and air power.

He said: "It's about supporting key trade routes that exist from the Indo-Pacific region to the UK, and supporting partners and allies in the region, showing that we are there as a capable and credible force should it be required."

"That in a time of crisis, we can come together and fight together and show that we have a capability that we mean business with."

He added: "Working closely with partners from across the globe, Operation Highmast will demonstrate credible deterrence and our support to NATO and the rules-based international order."

"This will reaffirm that the UK is secure at home and strong abroad and reinforce the UK's commitment to the Indo-Pacific."

A total of 2,500 military personnel – about 2,100 British, 400 from Norway, Canada and Spain – will initially deploy as part of the CSG, with the numbers rising to 4,500 for the major exercises in the Indo-Pacific region.

Captain Will Blackett, commanding officer of HMS Prince of Wales, said: "We have been training very, very hard for over a year now, and we’re good to go."

"This ship is a fantastic machine, she's got amazing equipment – state of the art – and we're very proud to take her around the world," he added.

"But it only works because of the magic that's brought to it by the people on board."

The CSG's first task will be to join a NATO exercise off France testing aerial defences before the ships move on to the Mediterranean to work with an Italian-led carrier force and then heading east via the Red Sea.

This is the second CSG deployment to the Indo-Pacific, with the previous one led by HMS Prince of Wales' sister ship, HMS Queen Elizabeth, in 2021.

©2025 dpa GmbH. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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