Royal Navy sharpens minehunting skills in key drill with US Navy and Saudis in the Gulf
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HMS Brocklesby joined forces with the foreign navies as they sharpened their skills in destroying deadly underwater explosives.
The Portsmouth-based warship spent a week drilling in the oppressive summer heat of the Middle East alongside American deep-water minehunters Dextrous and Gladiator and Saudi Sandown-class vessel Al Shaqra.
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Hide AdThe operation tested the ships’ abilities to operate as a team and individually to clear explosives from the critical shipping lanes of the Gulf.
Participants were expected to detect, classify and, if required, destroy a series of training mines laid by exercise co-ordinators.
‘It can be hard sometimes being this far from home when there’s so much going on around the world, but it’s rewarding to know that we are making a difference to a part of the globe that I knew very little about before I came out here,’ said mine warfare specialist Able Seaman Dan Buttery, aged 22.
Working not far from the coast, the four ships had to contend with a challenging environment, with temperatures in excess of 40 degrees and strong seasonal winds.
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Hide AdLieutenant Commander Chris Easterbrook, Brocklesby’s captain, said given the challenging weather conditions, the exercise ‘was more a masterclass than a gentle introduction’.
He added: ‘For some new joiners, this was their first taste in working with the UK’s partners in the region. And it was a fantastic opportunity for mine hunters from the UK, USA and Saudi Arabia to learn from each other.
‘We like to pride ourselves on being at the forefront of mine countermeasures, but there’s always something you can learn from your allies.’
Watching proceedings was the senior coalition naval officer in the region, Vice Admiral James Malloy, who commands the US Fifth Fleet from Bahrain.
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