Britain’s warships have gym where land attack missiles should be

The Type 45s ended up with a gym in a space designed to accommodate the Mark 41 Vertical Launching System
The Type 45s ended up with a gym in a space designed to accommodate the Mark 41 Vertical Launching System
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Royal Navy destroyers have been fitted with treadmills where land attack cruise missiles should be, prompting warnings that the Navy is falling further behind the United States.

The Type 45 warships were designed to accommodate the Mark 41 Vertical Launching System fitted in their bows, allowing them to fire cruise missiles.

However, the space has only ever been used as a gym for crew because the Navy did not procure the weapons due to a lack of funds.

It comes after The Telegraph revealed HMS Diamond cannot attack Houthi targets on land because it lacks the firepower, although the warship has had direct involvement in successfully destroying Houthi drones targeting shipping in the Red Sea using its anti-air Sea Viper missile system.

The US has had to carry out the majority of strikes on Houthi targets with support from RAF aircraft based 1,500 miles away.

The only weapons on destroyers that can fire at other ships or land are artillery guns at the front of each vessel. The US destroyers can fire Tomahawk guided missiles at land targets, however, the UK could only achieve such strikes through Typhoon fighter jets or submarines.

The Type 45s will be enhanced with 24 Sea Ceptor missile cells, anti-air warfare that will upgrade the vessels’ air and missile defence capabilities.

HMS Diamond cannot attack Houthi targets on land because it lacks the firepower
HMS Diamond cannot attack Houthi targets on land because it lacks the firepower - RN/Chris Sellars

Last month, Carlos Del Toro, the US navy secretary, warned that “given the near-term threats to the UK and US”, investments in the Royal Navy were “significantly important”.

Tobias Ellwood, former chairman of the defence select committee, said: “When advances in missile technology saw the phasing out of battleships with those mighty 16in guns that could strike targets at sea and on land, the Navy prioritised blue-water warfare, focusing only on defending against and striking air, surface and subsurface targets.

“It is now clear the UK should have followed the example of the US and fitted the Type 45s with Tomahawks rather than only placing them in our submarine fleet.”

Mr Ellwood has since written to the Defence Secretary recommending “consideration of short-term solutions for our destroyer fleet”, including adapting the latest model of guided multiple launch rocket system launchers.

“In the meantime we should immediately dispatch our carrier group armed with F-35s,” he added. “This is what it was built for.”

A defence source defended the installation of the gyms, saying that “space in any warship is at a premium” and that “available space is often used to house gym equipment that can easily be removed should that area be required for operational use”.

‘Subs can’t be everywhere’

Dr Phil Weir, a naval historian, said there had been a view that land attack was covered by nuclear attack submarines, so surface ships did not require them.

“The submarines can’t be everywhere,” he added.

“They also have other jobs to do in terms of things like intelligence gathering, so that’s not always conducive to popping up and firing missiles.

“This was an attitude we could get away with back in the glory days of early 2000s when there didn’t seem to be as much of a submarine threat from Russia.

“But with the uptick from Russia and increasing threat from China you need to develop other options.”

Pete Sandeman, director of Navy Lookout, said: “For years, many commentators and naval advocates have urged the Navy to add land attack capability to its surface ships.

“For the majority of other top-tier navies this is a standard feature of major surface combatants.

“Over the last 20 years, wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, together with prioritisation of the carriers and assorted other pressures, have left this as an unfunded aspiration.

“Only with increased likelihood of peer conflict recognised in the last five years or so, has the Navy very slowly started to address its lack of offensive weaponry.”

A Ministry of Defence spokesman said: “The Type 45 destroyers are optimised for air defence and this capability is due to be further enhanced by the incorporation of the common anti-air modular missile.”

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