
Labour in talks to sell British warships
The Government is in talks to sell UK amphibious assault ships to Brazil.
The sale of HMS Albion and HMS Bulwark, which have not been in use since 2023 and 2017 respectively, was agreed during the recent LAAD Defence & Security event in Rio de Janeiro.
The decision to mothball the ships was made under the Conservatives and was initially criticised by Labour.
While in opposition, Luke Pollard, now Labour's Armed Forces minister, said the ships 'are important for the Royal Navy and should be retained'.
However, John Healey, the Defence Secretary, has since announced that the ships would be mothballed to save money.
A defence source said that, on current planning, there had been no date for either ship to return to sea before their planned out of service dates of 2033 and 2034.
The decision to mothball the two assault ships came after The Telegraph revealed last year that the Navy has so few sailors that it has to decommission the warships HMS Westminster and HMS Argyll, to staff its new class of Type 26 frigates.
The Navy still has Lyme Bay, Mounts Bay and Cardigan Bay – Bay-class landing ship docks – all of which have amphibious capabilities and will fill in until new multi-role support ships replace them in the early 2030s.
However, Lord West, a former First Sea Lord, warned that whilst the current Royal Fleet Auxiliaries and other surface warships could provide 'invaluable help', they were unable to transport equipment such as heavy-lift vehicles ashore.
'As has been shown, time and time again, only HMS Albion and Bulwark, and their forebears, Fearless and Intrepid, with their shallow-draft landing craft and hovercraft, plus their helicopters and embarked military force, can be of any practical and lasting value in the initial stages of war or a natural disaster,' he said.
'It is not just the ships that will be lost under the MoD's cost-saving plans but, with their premature demise the possibility and, of more importance, the expertise required to conduct any form of entry or exit across hostile or damaged shores in time of conflict or, perhaps of more significance, disaster relief.'
Lord West warned that, by mothballing the ships, the Royal Navy risked losing the ability to conduct amphibious training.
'A decade, as now planned by the MoD, without amphibious training and exercises means that this most complicated of tri-service arts will be impossible to regain,' the Labour peer said. 'By the mid 2030s, a near generation of naval and marine practitioners will have long gone. The expertise, so painfully gained over countless years, will be lost forever.'
A Ministry of Defence spokesman said: 'We can confirm we have entered discussions with the Brazilian Navy over the potential sale of HMS Bulwark and HMS Albion. As announced in November, both ships are being decommissioned from the Royal Navy. Neither were planned to go back to sea before their out of service dates in the 2030s.'
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