Portsmouth News

Homecoming for HMS Kent

Warship at sea for two months

- By TOM COTTERILL

ROYAL Navy frigate HMS Kent has returned home after two months sharpening her submarine-hunting skills by playing ‘cat and mouse’ against the world’s ‘finest’ subs.

The Type 23 warship returned home yesterday after carrying out exercises with Nato and supporting aircraft carrier HMS Queen Elizabeth during her F-35 trials last month.

Since leaving the UK in April, Kent and her crew have clocked up almost 19,000 nautical miles and taken part in four war games, from the Bay of Biscay to the Baltic Sea.

The veteran frigate also stopped off in three countries at the height of the coronaviru­s pandemic and operated with four different task groups atsea.

Kent carried out stops in Gothenburg, Sweden, and Den Helder in the Netherland­s for essential stores and fuel, followed by a visit to Reykjavik in Iceland, where the crew spent time ashore.

Engineerin­g Technician (Weapons Engineerin­g) Kieran Luke Ansell, 20, is part of the team looking after Kent’s communicat­ions and informatio­n systems.

He said: ‘This is my first deployment since joining up.

I’ve really enjoyed being able to visit other countries and Iceland was just amazing.’

The focus for Kent’s spring and summer has been developing the entire ship’s skills as a submarine hunter, assisted throughout by a Merlin Mk2 helicopter from 814 Naval Air Squadron in Culdrose.

The helicopter flew 56 sorties, totalling 125 flying hours, carrying out antisubmar­ine operations, longrange surveillan­ce of surface ships, airborne gunnery and intelligen­ce collection.

‘Operating from Kent over the past two months has given us a great opportunit­y to play cat and mouse against some of the finest hunter-killer submarines in the world,’ said Merlin pilot Lieutenant Phil Fordham, aged 30.

‘At the same time we’re proving the unparallel­ed capability of the ship and aircraft operating together to deliver an extremely potent antisubmar­ine warfare capability.’

For their last major engagement, Kent was joined by sister frigate HMS Westminste­r, Trafalgar-class attack submarine HMS Trenchant and an RAF P8 Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft on exercise Dynamic Mongoose.

The two-week submarine hunt in the northern Atlantic involved five warships and five submarines drawn from Nato navies.

Kent’s next mission will see her join HMS Queen Elizabeth’s carrier strike group later this year, providing protection for the carrier’s maiden operationa­l mission in 2021.

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 ?? Picture: LPhot Dan Rosenbaum ?? RESPECT Sailors of HMS Kent salute Nato ships during a sail past following a war game in the northern Atlantic
Picture: LPhot Dan Rosenbaum RESPECT Sailors of HMS Kent salute Nato ships during a sail past following a war game in the northern Atlantic
 ?? Picture: LPhot Belinda Alker ?? WELCOME HOME HMS Kent returns to Portsmouth yesterday after more than two months at sea
Picture: LPhot Belinda Alker WELCOME HOME HMS Kent returns to Portsmouth yesterday after more than two months at sea

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