Royal Navy shadows nine Russian warships around the UK

Royal Navy shadows NINE Russian warships around the UK in two weeks including destroyer and corvette as Putin increases his military presence in British waters

  • The ships have included a surfaced submarine and a patrol ship with their supporting tugs and supply ships
  • Patrol ship HMS Severn on duty in English Channel and Dover Strait where it shadowed submarine Stary Oskol
  • Frigate HMS Northumberland, based at Devonport, watched movements of destroyer Vice-Admiral Kulakov

Advertisement

Nine Russian warships have been shadowed by the Royal Navy as they sailed in waters around the UK in the past two weeks.

The ships have included a surfaced submarine, a destroyer, a corvette and a patrol ship along with their supporting tugs and supply ships travelling in the English Channel, the Celtic Sea and the west coast of Scotland.

First Sea Lord Admiral Tony Radakin said: ‘This is why the Royal Navy is at sea every day, protecting the UK and our interests.

‘Even with the pressures of Covid, we remain at short notice to respond to threats both in home waters and around the world.

‘Despite the increase in Russian activity, both on the surface and underwater, we are always ready to respond.’

Patrol ship HMS Severn was on duty in the English Channel and Dover Strait, where it shadowed the corvette Boikiy (pictured at the back)

Patrol ship HMS Severn was on duty in the English Channel and Dover Strait, where it shadowed the corvette Boikiy (pictured at the back)

Patrol ship HMS Severn was on duty in the English Channel and Dover Strait, where it shadowed the corvette Boikiy (pictured at the back) 

Type 23 frigate HMS Northumberland, based at Devonport, watched the movements of Udaloy-class destroyer the Vice-Admiral Kulakov

Type 23 frigate HMS Northumberland, based at Devonport, watched the movements of Udaloy-class destroyer the Vice-Admiral Kulakov

Type 23 frigate HMS Northumberland, based at Devonport, watched the movements of Udaloy-class destroyer the Vice-Admiral Kulakov

A sailor on board HMS Severn monitoring Russian patrol ship Vasiliy Bykov (pictured)

A sailor on board HMS Severn monitoring Russian patrol ship Vasiliy Bykov (pictured)

A sailor on board HMS Severn monitoring Russian patrol ship Vasiliy Bykov (pictured) 

Type 23 frigate HMS Northumberland, based at Devonport, watched the movements of Udaloy-class destroyer the Vice-Admiral Kulakov as it sailed north-west of the Outer Hebrides, off the west coast of Scotland.

Patrol ship HMS Severn was on duty in the English Channel and Dover Strait, where it shadowed a surfaced Kilo-class submarine, the Stary Oskol, the corvette Boikiy, patrol ship Vasiliy Bykov and support ships.

Severn was also on patrol as the Vice-Admiral Kulakov sailed through the Channel.

For some of the operation, the Russian ships sheltered from bad weather within the Baie de Seine, northern France, where Severn was joined by allied French navy ships and aircraft.

The ships have included a surfaced submarine, a destroyer, a corvette and a patrol ship along with their supporting tugs and supply ships travelling in the English Channel, Celtic Sea and the west coast of Scotland

The ships have included a surfaced submarine, a destroyer, a corvette and a patrol ship along with their supporting tugs and supply ships travelling in the English Channel, Celtic Sea and the west coast of Scotland

The ships have included a surfaced submarine, a destroyer, a corvette and a patrol ship along with their supporting tugs and supply ships travelling in the English Channel, Celtic Sea and the west coast of Scotland

Type 23 frigate HMS Northumberland, based at Devonport, watched the movements of Udaloy-class destroyer the Vice-Admiral Kulakov (pictured) as it sailed north-west of the Outer Hebrides

Type 23 frigate HMS Northumberland, based at Devonport, watched the movements of Udaloy-class destroyer the Vice-Admiral Kulakov (pictured) as it sailed north-west of the Outer Hebrides

Type 23 frigate HMS Northumberland, based at Devonport, watched the movements of Udaloy-class destroyer the Vice-Admiral Kulakov (pictured) as it sailed north-west of the Outer Hebrides

Patrol ship HMS Severn was on duty in the English Channel and Dover Strait, where it shadowed the corvette Boikiy (pictured)

Patrol ship HMS Severn was on duty in the English Channel and Dover Strait, where it shadowed the corvette Boikiy (pictured)

Patrol ship HMS Severn was on duty in the English Channel and Dover Strait, where it shadowed the corvette Boikiy (pictured)

Commander Philip Harper, Severn’s commanding officer, said: ‘In very challenging conditions with rough weather, Severn and several other British and allied ships have spent 20 days ensuring that Russian transiting warships remain under our watchful eyes.’

HMS Lancaster joined Severn tracking Steregushchiy-class corvette Boikiy in the Channel and using its Wildcat helicopter to gather intelligence.

HMS Tyne, HMS Richmond and HMS Kent jointly escorted the same group of Russian ships as they operated in the Celtic Sea.

The task group were joined by RAF Typhoon and F-35s jets, plus tankers RFA Tideforce and RFA Tiderace.

RUSSIAN WARSHIPS 

Udaloy-class destroyer the Vice-Admiral Kulakov

The ship is a 7,570 ton vessel commissioned into Soviet Navy service in 1982 and serves with the Northern Fleet.

Her length measures 535 feet with a beam of 62 feet and a draught of 26 feet and she can reach speeds of 35 knots and range is out to 10,500 nautical miles.

The Udaloy-class were constructed for anti-submarine functions and she has two 4 SS-N-14 anti submarine/ship missiles.

She also has 4 vertical launchers for SA-N-9 surface-to-air missiles and two 1 100 mm (3.9 in) guns. 

Other armaments include one Gibka (3M47) ADMS station, four 30 mm AK630 Gatling guns, two 4 553 mm (22 in) torpedo tubes, Type 53 ASW/ASuW torpedo and RBU-6000 anti-submarine rocket launchers.  

Kilo-class submarine the Stary Oskol 

Kilo class is a type of diesel-electrical attack submarine built for the Soviet Navy.

These attack submarines are mainly intended for anti-shipping and anti-submaire operations in relatively shallow waters. 

They are not fast submarines and can reach speeds of 12 knots when on the surface and 20 knots when submerged.

The submarine has six torpedo tubes of standard 533-millimeter diameter with 18 torpedoes. 

They were originally configured to carry homing torpedoes and eighteen SS-N-15A Starfish antisubmarine missiles. 

Their armament also includes 24 mines, four anti-ship Kalibr missiles and eight 9K34 Strela-3 (SA-N-8 Gremlin) air defence missiles. 

Patrol ship Vasiliy Bykov 

The vessels are primarily intended for duties such as patrol, monitoring and protection.

She can reach speeds of up to 25 to 30 knots. 

The class’s armament includes the Kalibr-NK cruise missile, aerosol camouflage, two grenade launchers and two machineguns and a 76.2 mm dual-purpose gun (AK-176) 

Steregushchiy-class corvette Boikiy 

The Steregushchiy class is the newest class of corvettes being built by the Russian Navy. 

It was launched on April 11, 2011, and is part of the Baltic fleet.  

The ship full displacement and dimensions are large for a corvette and has been designated as a frigate by NATO.

Her armament includes one 100mm A-190 Arsenal, four 330mm torpedo tubes for Paket-NK anti-torpedo/anti-submarine torpedoes and 14.5mm MTPU pedestal machine guns. 

 

Advertisement

Advertisement

Loading

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Follow by Email
Pinterest
LinkedIn
Share