Battleship diplomacy: Britain's new aircraft carrier joins NATO, has
message for China
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[May 28, 2021]
By Bart Biesemans
CASCAIS, Portugal (Reuters) - The maiden
voyage of a new British aircraft carrier will seek to show allies that
post-Brexit Britain is ready to defend Western interests and eager to
see China respect international rules, the vessel's commander said.
HMS Queen Elizabeth took part in NATO exercises in the Mediterranean
this week, ahead of the eight-month voyage that will cross through the
South China Sea in a signal to Beijing that sea lanes must remain open.
The carrier is "a hugely powerful statement," Commodore Steve Moorhouse,
the ship's commanding officer and captain told Reuters on deck off the
Portuguese coast as F-35B fighter jets took off around him.
"It shows that we are a global navy and wanting to be back out there,"
he said. "The aim for us is that this deployment will be part of a more
persistent presence for the United Kingdom in that region," he added,
referring to the Indo-Pacific that includes India and Australia.
Britain was the main battlefield ally of the United States in Iraq and
Afghanistan and, alongside France, the principal military power in the
European Union. But its 2016 vote to leave the EU had raised questions
about its global role.
Partly in response to those concerns, London announced its biggest
military spending increase since the Cold War late last year and has
been touting the clout of the carrier, built at a cost of more than 3
billion pounds ($4.26 billion).
HMS Queen Elizabeth will exercise with naval vessels from the United
States, Singapore, Japan, and South Korea, along the route, Moorhouse
said on Thursday.
THREATS AND CHALLENGES
Britain, like China, now has two aircraft carriers, both countries
dwarfed by the United States' 11. The new 65,000-tonne vessel carries
eight British F-35Bs and 10 U.S. F-35s as well as 250 U.S. marines as
part of its 1,700-strong crew.
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F-35B Lightning II aircrafts are seen on the deck of the HMS Queen
Elizabeth aircraft carrier offshore Portugal, May 27, 2021. Picture
taken through the window. REUTERS/Bart Biesemans
It will lead two destroyers, two frigates, a
submarine and two support ships on its journey of 26,000 nautical
miles, joined by a U.S. destroyer and a frigate from the Dutch navy.
Asked about British efforts to step up influence in the Indo-Pacific
region to counter China's rising power - a strategy also followed by
the European Union and supported by NATO - Moorhouse said: "We want
to uphold international norms ... our presence out there is
absolutely key."
China claims 90% of the potentially energy-rich South China Sea, but
Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam also lay claim
to parts of it.
The United States has long opposed China's expansive territorial
claims there, sending warships regularly through the waterway to
demonstrate freedom of navigation. About $3 trillion worth of trade
passes through it each year.
In the Mediterranean, the British carrier group is part of NATO's
biggest drills of the year, Steadfast Defender, that includes a
maritime live exercise with around 5,000 forces and 18 ships.
"It sends a message of NATO's resolve," NATO Secretary-General Jens
Stoltenberg said onboard the aircraft carrier.
"We face global threats and challenges, including the shifting
balance of power with the rise of China," he said, adding that
although China had the world's biggest navy, it was not considered
an adversary by NATO.
($1 = 0.7045 pounds)
(Writing by Robin Emmott; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
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