Destroyer USS Arleigh Burke and submarine USS New Hampshire have arrived at Faslane near Glasgow, Scotland.

With the arrival of these vessels this morning, at least half a dozen American submarine and warship visits have happened at Faslane since the start of July.

While visits themselves are common, this frequency of visits is not. Neither is it common for visits to be publicised by the U.S. Navy or Royal Navy unlike the visit of the USS Rhode Island, a Trident-armed nuclear submarine, that arrived (and departed) in July.

The USS New Hampshire (SSN-778) is a Virginia-class nuclear-powered attack submarine and the first of the Virginia-class Block-II submarines to enter service. The USS Arleigh Burke, named for Admiral Arleigh A. Burke, is the lead ship of the prolific Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyers. She was laid down by the Bath Iron Works company at Bath, Maine, on 6 December 1988, launched on 16 September 1989 and commissioned on 4 July 1991.

A few days ago, the USS Georgia (equipped with an underwater launch system for special forces) visited Faslane naval base. The USS Georgia is an Ohio-class submarine. Unlike Rhode Island, however, she was converted to a cruise missile submarine from a ballistic missile submarine.

The U.S. Navy said that this port visit to Faslane reflects the United States’ “commitment to our allies and partners in the region and complements the many exercises, training, operations, and other military cooperation activities conducted by Strategic Forces to ensure they are available and ready to safely and effectively operate around the globe at any time”.

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George has a degree in Cyber Security from Glasgow Caledonian University and has a keen interest in naval and cyber security matters and has appeared on national radio and television to discuss current events. George is on Twitter at @geoallison
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Ian M.
Ian M.
1 year ago

Am I correct in thinking that bath Iron Works and HII are still churning out Arleigh Burkes? That’s a 31 year old ship and showing it’s age ( to my land lubber Army eyes).

Ian M.
Ian M.
1 year ago
Reply to  DanielMorgan

Cheers!

Paul
Paul
1 year ago
Reply to  Ian M.

That’s correct. Several of the class (including the Arleigh Burke herself) have been upgraded to modern versions of AEGIS Baseline 9 though, she can intercept missiles in space, shoot down airplanes and engage incoming anti-ship missiles simultaneously.

Ian M.
Ian M.
1 year ago
Reply to  Paul

But no beer!😂
cheers for the info.

Chris
Chris
1 year ago
Reply to  Ian M.

By the time the last one is finished it will have had a run of 89 ships!

the Zumwalt class was meant to replace them but that’s been cancelled… so now they have to wait for DDG-X

Martin
Martin
1 year ago
Reply to  Chris

No originally they had a replacement cruiser design but it got canceled and the zumwalt was going to replace the Burkes, then when they realised the cost they came up with it replacing the Iowa’s in providing fire support and now they are just trying to find something for it to do so matches the latest buzz word “hypersonic”

Gavin Gordon
Gavin Gordon
1 year ago
Reply to  Chris

Yes, US can build ABs with its ‘eyes closed’
In contrast, I was surprised at the ‘degree of ambition’ shown with the new Constitution Class frigate concept. They selected a proven FREMM, but then set about very significant dimension and upperworks alteration, of course. Do wish them good luck with that approach, though the potential pitfalls of such a plan will not have escaped Ian, I’m sure.

Chris
Chris
1 year ago
Reply to  Gavin Gordon

I think after having their fingers burnt with the last three designs for the Zum and the two Littorals they were after something a bit more belt and braces in design… I just hope their own demands aren’t too much for the base structure

FormerUSAF
FormerUSAF
1 year ago

You invite one American vessel for a brief port call, and w/in months we are moving in! 😁. Didn’t your forefathers have an expression from WW II era: (Nothing wrong w/) Yanks (except)–overpaid, oversexed and over here? 🤔😁

Crabfat
Crabfat
1 year ago
Reply to  FormerUSAF

Spot on, mate!

David
David
1 year ago
Reply to  FormerUSAF

Glad and proud to have you! You’re welcome to our shores any time!

Stu
Stu
1 year ago
Reply to  David

Seconded.

Monkey spanker
Monkey spanker
1 year ago
Reply to  FormerUSAF

Do you want holy loch back😂😂😂. Great to have our American brothers visiting. Extra bonus if it gives them more time on station.
Expecting a rise in new births with American names in 9 months time in the surrounding area🙈
What will be great will be RN, USN and RAN all having subs and using each other’s bases all around the world.

Ian M.
Ian M.
1 year ago
Reply to  FormerUSAF

I’ll return the compliment, I’m in California next week.😎

DanielMorgan
DanielMorgan
1 year ago
Reply to  FormerUSAF

Only if they also burn the contents of the British Library in retaliation for the burning of the books at the Library of Congress.

DMJ
DMJ
1 year ago
Reply to  DanielMorgan

In the War of 1812 the.. US burnt Toronto then called
York first

FormerUSAF
FormerUSAF
1 year ago
Reply to  FormerUSAF

🤣😂😁. £22 Billion?!? Perhaps Million? Americans really don’t remember or blame you blokes for the first instance of urban renewal in the US, but I mentioned on another post that some would appreciate an in kind repayment for the two frigates and single sloop lost during the campaign. Please feel obligated to turn over two T-26s at your earliest convenience after commissioning. 😁

DMJ
DMJ
1 year ago
Reply to  FormerUSAF

The war the US started by invading Canada. Britain was rather more focussed on a chap called Bonaparte in 1812

Jon
Jon
1 year ago
Reply to  DMJ

We apologize for the two year delay in burning down your President’s Mansion, but bolshy French have been delaying channel crossings. Plus ça change….

FormerUSAF
FormerUSAF
1 year ago
Reply to  Jon

😁

Martin
Martin
1 year ago
Reply to  FormerUSAF

It really is billion not million, for that price we could get three zumwalts 🥲

Jon
Jon
1 year ago
Reply to  FormerUSAF

£22m could barely get you a town house in Belgravia.

FormerUSAF
FormerUSAF
1 year ago
Reply to  Jon

Yes, but Holy Crap!! Does anyone else believe £22Bn is a fairly large chunk of the coin of the realm?

Jon
Jon
1 year ago
Reply to  FormerUSAF

It’s vast, but that’s the upper end of the estimate for work expected to take up to 76 years. Call it £150m-£300m a year, ongoing, to restore, enhance and stop it falling to pieces again. Does that sound a bit better? It’s a Grade 1 listed building, famous the world over, with 1100 rooms and covering as much ground as the flight deck of an aircraft carrier (or whatever that is in Olympic swimming pools). Yes it’s expensive — the Lords want their Pugin wallpaper — but that’s also the cost of decades of neglect. They won’t pick that option… Read more »

Last edited 1 year ago by Jon
FormerUSAF
FormerUSAF
1 year ago
Reply to  Jon

Is the palace open for public tours? If so, ticket prices should be increased immediately and MASSIVELY! 🤔 🤣😂😁

Gavin Gordon
Gavin Gordon
1 year ago
Reply to  FormerUSAF

Gladly. If you’re ever in Wickham, Hampshire over here. Pop into the Chesapeake Mill and take back whatever they’re prepared to return to US ownership!

FormerUSAF
FormerUSAF
1 year ago
Reply to  Gavin Gordon

Guess this means no T-26s? Oh well, worth a try…😊

Martin
Martin
1 year ago
Reply to  FormerUSAF

I believe it’s a secret ploy by Nicola Sturgeon to become the 51st state 😀

FormerUSAF
FormerUSAF
1 year ago
Reply to  Martin

May have to compete w/ Puerto Rico and probably a raft of others. 😁

An old movie, believe entitled “The Mouse That Roared” presented the case of a small European Duchy that decided to solve their budget problem’s by declaring war on US, surrendering quickly, and requesting foreign aid/Marshall Plan aid.
However, they inadvertently win, foiling their well-laid plan. Surprised more countries haven’t considered this. Think anyone at MioD is developing a contingency plan for increased funding? 🤔😁

FormerUSAF
FormerUSAF
1 year ago
Reply to  FormerUSAF

… problems…🙄

Andrew D
Andrew D
1 year ago

Should we be worried 😟

Paul.P
Paul.P
1 year ago

And the B52s are back in Fairford. Hearty welcome to our US friends.

Monkey spanker
Monkey spanker
1 year ago
Reply to  Paul.P

I would describe one of my brothers ex’s as a B52.
BUFF, big ugly fat fu**er 😂🙈

Paul.P
Paul.P
1 year ago
Reply to  Monkey spanker

Great personality though ?

FormerUSAF
FormerUSAF
1 year ago
Reply to  Paul.P

Perhaps somewhat analogous to the Cliff Swallows returning to San Juan Capistrano? 😁 (Sorry, Friday afternoon levity.) Please forgive our noise (and smoke); always understood it was the sound of freedom.

Paul.P
Paul.P
1 year ago
Reply to  FormerUSAF

They are a spectacular and always a welcome sight. Thankful for your support. Both our countries are suffering the consequences of division. The world cannot afford the American people to be divided. When I see division I always ask who is doing the divide and conquer trick.

FormerUSAF
FormerUSAF
1 year ago
Reply to  Paul.P

“A house divided against itself cannot stand.” (Abraham Lincoln, paraphrasing Mathew 12:25) US has traveled this road before.

Martin
Martin
1 year ago
Reply to  Paul.P

Landing strip one is back in action all hail Oceania 😀

Crabfat
Crabfat
1 year ago

Slightly off topic but I read in the Times today that UK Defence Secretary, Ben Wallace, suggested the future of naval warfare might be better served by having more submarines and less surface ships. Ships could be located and destroyed before bringing an effect to the war; whilst subs can transit undetected, to fire their weapons from a great distance.
He also said that only USN and RN subs were able to enter littoral waters undetected and either fire weapons or offload Special Forces.
Wallace appears to be favourite to remain as Defence Secretary in Liz Truss’s cabinet.

Frank62
Frank62
1 year ago
Reply to  Crabfat

Any increase in subs would always be welcome, but not at the cost of fewer of our scarce surface ships. When you’re already fielding just 3 or 4 players in a 5-a-side tournament, losing any more players is demented.

Quentin D63
Quentin D63
1 year ago
Reply to  Crabfat

Carry On Mr Wallace! Having a strong sub/uuv fleet plus a sizeable RFA fleet to keep the rest of the fleet going and keeping international shipping lanes and trade routes open is all good and healthy. Especially with the likes of Russia and China having very sizeable sub fleets already. Same sense of vulnerability could be said for land targets. UK GBAD should be expedited IMHO. And whatever the West does others will copy or are already doing it and we’re copying them…lol.

Gavin Gordon
Gavin Gordon
1 year ago
Reply to  Crabfat

Hm, well. The patter is, ”Persuade public to forgo surface combatants for subs; then don’t build the subs”. Granted, that axiom may have a limited lifespan nowadays, by all that’s sane, complements of the Raz & Zi Bros comedy duo.

Gavin Gordon
Gavin Gordon
1 year ago
Reply to  Gavin Gordon

Alright, Xi

FormerUSAF
FormerUSAF
1 year ago

One somewhat off-topic question, and one off-the-wall proposal that would never find an appropriate forum: 1.) If Ms. Truss becomes PM, will she enjoy the freedom of action to meaningfully increase MoD budget? Virtually all issues discussed on this site, affecting all service branches, would probably be ameliorated w/ increased funding. 2.) Now to the proposal: Radically enhance and enable the utilization of the existing NATO armaments procurement office to level the playing field between governments w/ varying budget constraints and top tier defense contractors on a routine basis. All parties pay the same price, regardless of country of development/manufacture.… Read more »

Martin
Martin
1 year ago
Reply to  FormerUSAF

UK government works differently to US in that as Truss has an inbuilt majority in parliament she can basically pass any budget she pleases with the support of her cabinet. However the UK differs from the US in that we have an a-political professional civil service. As the civil service are able to perform basic functions such as the ability to understand accounts and even find there way out of a room unassisted it will be the civil service blocking any attempts to increase the defence budget. This will largely be on the basis of us being broke and not… Read more »

FormerUSAF
FormerUSAF
1 year ago
Reply to  Martin

Thanks for the explanation of an imbalance in arms purchases; assumed a relatively level playing field.

Jon
Jon
1 year ago
Reply to  FormerUSAF

As Martin says point 1 is mostly a matter of timing. To fulfil her pledge what she’ll probably do is increase the funding in stages of say 0.1% of GDP. So it will go from 2.2% in 2022/3 and 2023/4 up to 2.3% in ’24/5 and 2.4% in ’25/6, with a whopping 0.2% in 2030 to bring it up to 3.0% by the end of the decade. Except the next general election must be before January 2025. Given the Fixed Term Parliament Act is gone, and elections are traditionally held in May, I’d expect to see an election in May… Read more »

Martin
Martin
1 year ago
Reply to  Jon

Given the state of our finances and the complete collapse of our only near by threat, I think 2.5% is reasonable and affordable. With European nato tooling up on land we should focus those funds on the sea as well as ISTAR and key enablers. We could get a lot more bang for £5-£10 billion a year more like that, rather than spreading it across the usual cap-badges and sacred cows.

Gavin Gordon
Gavin Gordon
1 year ago
Reply to  Martin

Wary of any reference to % of GDP., as you’re aware, Martin. GDP only has to fall significantly and you achieve your objective even if defence expenditure falls. Prefer Rishi’s phrasiology, therefore. May not end up any different but is more honest (Honest? Politics?).
What we spend will depend on the Duo. Not by choice; unless Hobson’s….😐

FormerUSAF
FormerUSAF
1 year ago
Reply to  Jon

Thanks for the mini-tutorial on the mechanics of UK politics and budgeting…hmmm, this issue may prove to be a more difficult proposition to resolve than originally envisioned. 🤔😱

Black Sheep
Black Sheep
1 year ago

What are you thinking George, come up with any theories as to the reason for the considerable increase in these publicised visits beyond the obvious?

Last edited 1 year ago by Black Sheep
Chris Ring
Chris Ring
1 year ago

I helped build the Burke and many others. Deadly and strong. Go BIW