Navy News
Direct from the front-line, the official newspaper of the Royal Navy, Navy News, brings you the latest news, features and award winning photos every month.
The nation’s amphibious flagship HMS Albion linked up with Challenger 2 tanks, Apache gunships and Wildcat helicopters from the Army, and RAF Typhoons to demonstrate Britain’s commitment to Estonia and the Baltic region.
Plymouth-based Albion is leading an amphibious task group (Littoral Response Group (North)) in the Baltic and are now participating in the annual NATO-led exercise, Baltops.
Before that, the task group to train together with already deployed units in Estonia as part of the UK’s enduring training programme, Operation Cabrit – bringing together land, sea and air forces.
They chose the headland at Paldiski – a couple of dozen miles west of the Estonian capital Tallinn – for the combined demonstration.
RAF Typhoon fighters, plus Army Air Corps Apaches and Wildcats – currently deployed to Tapa in Estonia rather than their regular bases at Wattisham and RNAS Yeovilton – flew in a tight formation overhead.
And on the water Royal Marines transported the Queen’s Royal Hussars and their main battle tanks from the shore into HMS Albion’s cavernous dock to be off loaded – a rare sight and opportunity to show how British Army tanks can be moved by the Royal Navy’s amphibious experts.
Captain Marcus Hember, HMS Albion’s Commanding Officer, said: “It is not often when the Royal Navy, RAF and Army are in the same place at the same time with major assets.
“This gave us the opportunity to test how we can work together on the sea. Proving again that the Royal Navy can move Army heavy equipment on and off a shoreline whilst being safely covered air by the RAF and Army Air Corps.’
In addition to the combined land-sea-air workout around Paldiski, X-Ray Company of 45 Commando – normally based in Arbroath in north-east Scotland – deployed ashore from HMS Albion for training on an Estonia range, culminating in a day of live-firing exercises.
The commandos tested various weaponry, including Javelin anti-tank missiles, grenade machine-guns, mortars and heavy machine-guns.
Direct from the front-line, the official newspaper of the Royal Navy, Navy News, brings you the latest news, features and award winning photos every month.