The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Aircraft carrier heads for US to test British jets

£3 billion ship sets sail for America where fighters will take off for first time

- BEN MITCHELL

The Royal Navy’s £3 billion aircraft carrier is to set sail for the US where British fighter jets will take off from its flight deck for the first time.

HMS Queen Elizabeth will depart from its home port of Portsmouth Naval Base today for the deployment to the eastern coast of America where the crew will work with the US Navy for operationa­l testing of British F35B Lightning jets.

The carrier will sail along with the Type 45 destroyer HMS Dragon and Type 23 frigate HMS Northumber­land to form a small carrier strike group as it rehearses ahead of its first fully operationa­l deployment planned for 2021.

The Navy’s largest-ever warship will have a ship’s company of just under 800 for the Westlant 19 deployment which follows a previous trip to the US in 2018 when US F35 jets tested the capability of the carrier’s flightdeck.

Commodore Mike Utley, commander of the UK maritime strike group, said: “This is a hugely exciting point in the carrier strike programme.

“It’s a massive enterprise of thousands of people on this next deployment who will take the next step from being able to operate Lightning aircraft from this ship and put that all together with the broader capability set.”

Captain James Blackmore, Commander Air Group, said that up to seven British jets would take part in the exercises along with up to four US jets.

He said: “We know we can safely fly the aircraft to and from the aircraft carrier, now it’s about making sure we can be mission effective.

“It’s huge, it’s the next step to regaining our carrier strike capability.

“In 2010 I had the privilege of launching in the last harrier from Ark Royal, we are nearly 10 years on and we are just getting back into having a carrier strike capability in the UK, one of very few nations that have it, what’s not exciting about that?”

Captain Steve Moorhouse, the carrier’s commanding officer, said: “From the captain down to the youngest sailor, it’s about getting the people ready to do what they would ultimately do should we be called upon.”

Anne-Marie Trevelyan, minister for defence procuremen­t, said: “With British F35B Lightning jets embarking for the very first time, this magnificen­t vessel is moving ever closer to her first operationa­l deployment.

“This will put the ship, the jets and all supporting units through realistic warfightin­g scenarios to ready them for operationa­l deployment ensuring they can fight together as one formidable unit.”

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Captain Steve Moorhouse, commanding officer of HMS Queen Elizabeth, on its flight deck.
Picture: PA. Captain Steve Moorhouse, commanding officer of HMS Queen Elizabeth, on its flight deck.
 ?? Picture: PA . ?? A sign for the Royal Mile in a corridor on board HMS Queen Elizabeth.
Picture: PA . A sign for the Royal Mile in a corridor on board HMS Queen Elizabeth.

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