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28 Oct 2024

UK And US Carrier Groups Combine Forces For Strike Warrior Exercise

UK And US Carrier Groups Combine Forces For Strike Warrior Exercise
Friends and family welcome the HMS Prince of Wales into port. Image: Henry Parks, UK MOD © Crown Copyright 2024
Originally posted by the Royal Navy

One of the most powerful maritime forces in the UK’s arsenal joined forces with a US counterpart to demonstrate allied resolve, unity and cooperation in the North Sea.

While at sea for Exercise Strike Warrior the UK Carrier Strike Group (UKCSG) – spearheaded by HMS Prince of Wales – and the US Carrier Strike Group 8 (CSG8) centred on the USS Harry S Truman, joined forces to deliver a powerful statement of NATO’s ability to project power from the sea.

Britain’s biggest warship hosted the US Strike Group Commander Rear Admiral Sean Bailey, who watched UK F-35B Lightning stealth fighters launch from her flight deck – then join the Truman’s F/A-18 Super Hornets and an E/A-18G Growler conduct a flypast over the two naval groups.

The UK Carrier Strike Group comprising HMS Prince of Wales, associated air wing, escorts, supporting vessels and almost 2,000 personnel, has been at sea for training as part of exercise Strike Warrior, one of the final milestones in the preparations of the Strike Group to undertake a global deployment to the Indo-Pacific region in 2025.

Lightnings from the UK’s new front-line strike fighter unit, 809 Naval Air Squadron have been operating from the deck of HMS Prince of Wales, training for strike missions that has included the dropping of live ordnance onto the Cape Wrath range in Scotland.

The exercise scenario was choreographed by the UK’s Joint Training and Exercise Planning Staff based in the Royal Navy Warfighting Centre in Portsmouth Naval Base with the activity of the Strike Group in response to the training scenario being directed by the staff of Headquarters UK Carrier Strike Group, embarked in HMS Prince of Wales.

Involving warships and support vessels from the Royal Navy and Royal Fleet Auxiliary along with elements of the British Army, Royal Air Force and NATO warships from six nations – Norway, Denmark, Belgium, Germany, Portugal and the UK – Exercise Strike Warrior has seen air and naval power tested in challenging tactical situations.

The RAF supported the anti-submarine defence of the Carrier Strike Group through provision of Poseidon P8 maritime patrol aircraft while other NATO aircraft supported F35s in defending the strike group from “aggressor” aircraft, to fend off threats from the sky.

Between these large scale set-piece activities, participating ships have conducted their own training – fighting fires and floods, dealing with mock casualties, replenishing with fuel and stores while underway. The end goal being to hone both individual and collective skills to forge a powerful yet flexible trike group able to deploy around the globe.

“Strike Warrior has delivered a short and intense period of training for the UK Carrier Strike Group, testing the group all the way from individual responses to a fire or flood through to complex long-range F-35B missions involving live weapon drops in support of Royal Marines ashore,” said Captain John Cromie, Deputy Commander UK Carrier Strike Group.

“Throughout the Strike Group has taken the opportunity to work alongside NATO partners participating in activity concurrent to Strike Warrior, confirming our procedures and interoperability with key Allies and demonstrating the UK’s continued and absolute commitment to NATO.”

Since departing Portsmouth last month HMS Prince of Wales has sailed 1,500 conducting training. Her aircraft have conducted 71 sorties accounting for 210 hours (nearly nine whole days) airborne, and the F-35s have dropped four Paveway bombs on the Cape Wrath range during a live ordnance exercise.

Commander Nick Smith, 809 Naval Air Squadron’s Commanding Officer, said the maiden embarkation had been “phenomenally successful”, laying “firm foundations” for when his F-35s re-join the task group in 2025 on its first deployment. 

He continued: “The training teams have surpassed their targets with 19 pilots completing carrier qualifications within the first weeks of the deployment and flight deck teams receiving their authorisations to safely operate on the deck, both day and night.

“Our integration has also spread beyond the ship, demonstrated by the successful release of live weapons on targets at Cape Wrath; weapons prepared by the ship’s company, loaded and delivered by 809 NAS and 617 Squadron engineers and pilots, controlled by Royal Marine Commandos on the ground.”

To read more, please visit the Royal Navy's website

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