The Scotsman

Once the pride of the Navy, HMS Dreadnough­t now awaits her fate

- By CHRIS MCCALL

When the seventh vessel to be christened HMS Dreadnough­t was launched by the Queen at Barrow in 1960, it was a momentous day for the Royal Navy and a major boost for the UK’S military capability at a time when the Cold War was heating up.

The vessel was the country’s first ever nuclear-powered submarine and represente­d the pinnacle of British military engineerin­g in the immediate post-war era.

But the Dreadnough­t today is a source of embarrassm­ent rather than pride for the “Senior Service”.

The submarine was decommissi­oned in 1980 and has been laid up afloat at Rosyth Dockyard ever since. It has now spent double the time tied up in Fife than it did on active service.

Another six decommissi­oned nuclear submarines have since joined Dreadnough­t at the former naval base.

A total of £16 million was spent in a five-year period on 19 laid-up submarines at Roysth and Devonport on the south-coast of England.

Although all the vessels in Fife have been defuelled, they cannot be scrapped until their radioactiv­e parts have been removed – a process that will take decades.

The Ministry of Defence announced in December 2016 it had finally began this gradual process, beginning with HMS Swiftsure, which has been laid up afloat at Rosyth since 1992.

The fate of the decommissi­oned submarines has been a source of frustratio­n for the Navy and a matter of concern for politician­s in West Fife, a place where ties with the service stretch are stronger than most, thanks to the presence of Rosyth Dockyard.

The MOD has stressed that all decommissi­oned submarines are subject to regular maintenanc­e and checks by regulators.

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