General Sir Gwyn Jenkins, First Sea Lord and Chief of the Naval Staff, spoke today at the Combined Naval Event in Farnborough to set out three priorities for the Royal Navy: building a hybrid fleet capable of warfighting, deepening the partnership with industry to deliver it, and forging a persistent multinational maritime force with Joint Expeditionary Force partners in the High North and North Atlantic.

Jenkins, who took up the role one year ago as the first Royal Marine to serve as First Sea Lord, described the geopolitical environment as more volatile and dangerous than at any point in his career. He pointed to Russian activity in the North Atlantic, the ongoing war in Ukraine, and the lessons emerging from the Middle East as drivers of urgency. “The capable status quo is not good enough, not anymore,” he said. “Freedom is not free.”

Jenkins was blunt about what the evidence from recent conflicts had demonstrated. “Drones and autonomy have rapidly become the dominant and decisive factor in the modern battlefield,” he said, adding that anyone who had watched Russia massively increase its drone capability and production over four years would understand how much things had changed. He said the Royal Navy had no time to pander to hybrid sceptics. “We have no time to pander to cynicism or traditionalists, because autonomy is already demonstrably changing the nature of warfare, as evidenced in Ukraine and in the Middle East.”

His vision for the hybrid fleet was summed up simply. “Crewed where necessary, uncrewed wherever possible, and integrated always.” War games had demonstrated that the hybrid model delivered a substantial uplift in combat mass, additional tactical flexibility, and a threefold increase in missile capacity compared to the current fleet. “The case for hybrid is clear. The task is now to get on and deliver it.”

Jenkins confirmed that the first 20 Beehive autonomous boats from Kraken had been delivered, with the first ten arriving in just six days, and that the system would reach full operating capability within 12 to 14 weeks of contract signature. “This is the definition of an agile partnership,” he said, adding that Beehive would be among the first hybrid systems deploying to the Gulf as part of the multinational Strait of Hormuz mission. He described the ability to deploy autonomous sensors and effectors at scale in a congested chokepoint as conferring a clear operational advantage.

Turning to industry, Jenkins called for a fundamental change in how procurement is done, moving from multi-year acquisition models to iterative spiral development, enabling commercial and classified technologies to develop side by side, and allowing talent to flow more freely between the Navy, industry, and academia. He said current regulation was not fit for purpose and expressed hope that the Regulation for Growth Bill announced in the King’s Speech would provide the means to change it. “The navy of the 2030s cannot be created using processes from a bygone age,” he said.

Jenkins also addressed the ongoing Russian threat directly, warning that Moscow was seeking to exploit the current focus on the Gulf. “We must not lose our long-term focus on the North, on our backyard, because it is here that Russian surface and subsurface activity continues to pose the most acute and persistent threat every single day to our critical national infrastructure and the continuous at sea deterrent.” He said the Royal Navy had been expending significant resources with allies to disrupt and deter Russian submarine activity in recent weeks.

His ambition for the JEF was to move beyond episodic exercises toward a persistent integrated multinational maritime force with real capabilities, real war plans, and real integration. Jenkins confirmed that JEF chiefs of navies would meet in the coming weeks to convert a statement of intent into a concrete proposition, with a full formed plan ready for implementation by autumn. “By the autumn, it is our firm intention that a full formed plan is ready for implementation. That sounds like we’re moving fast. It’s because we are, and it’s because we must.”

George Allison
George Allison is the founder and editor of the UK Defence Journal. He holds a degree in Cyber Security from Glasgow Caledonian University and specialises in naval and cyber security topics. George has appeared on national radio and television to provide commentary on defence and security issues. Twitter: @geoallison

4 COMMENTS

  1. This is nonsense, everyone knows that since the battle of Jutland that the Royal navy should have 36 “escorts” any talk of drones at the expense of frigates is just another labour government cut 😀

    • It’s not a cut, as the cuts already happened and the convenience of Drone tech arriving gives HMG and 1SL a figleaf to hide behind and concentrate on.
      Going forward, I’m keen to know how these autonomous ships deploy, alone, to say the South Atlantic in such a scenario. Will they have the several thousands of miles range of conventional types? If not, what’s the solution?
      One assumes that they will still need the RFA, and Carriers, to give air cover, and crewed vessels in the mix as well.
      So 8 T26 and 5 T31 it is, the 6 T45 will I guess be replaced by fewer manned hulls with the autonomous alongside.
      Having read on NL what he says I’m dubious that T83 and MRSS will ever happen, a nice saving for HMG.
      Agree with more cheaper mass though, I’ve suggested differing tiers for years as the only way to balance quality and quantity.
      But alongside, not instead of, and that’s where I forsee problems ahead.

  2. The reality is blue water drones are not a proven as yet. There are issues that need resolving.

    1) maintenance and repair, the sea will kill a ship if it’s power/ propulsion fails and this does happen. Now that’s fine if it’s a cheap as chips 12 meter drone, but a 80-90 meter blue water drone, with high end sensors and very expensive effectors.. your not going to want to loose what is probably 200 millions worth of gear because it lost propulsion.
    2) sub kinetic conflict.. our enemies will play games with autonomous vessels.. accidentally ramming them etc etc and unless we are at war and going kinetic what are you going to do.

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