PORTSMOUTH, ENGLAND - AUGUST 16:  The HMS Queen Elizabeth supercarrier heads into port on August 16, 2017 in Portsmouth, England.  The HMS Queen Elizabeth is the lead ship in the new Queen Elizabeth class of supercarriers. Weighing in at 65,000 tonnes she is the largest war ship deployed by the British Royal Navy.   (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images)
Britons flock to see largest aircraft carrier (2017)
01:18 - Source: CNN
Hong Kong CNN  — 

Britain’s new aircraft carrier will go to the Pacific on its first operational mission, Defense Minister Gavin Williamson has revealed.

In a speech to the Royal United Services Institute think tank in London on Monday, Williamson said the 65,000-ton carrier Queen Elizabeth – which was commissioned in late 2017 – would also make appearances in the Mediterranean and Middle East along the way as Britain flexed its military muscles post-Brexit.

“The UK is a global power with truly global interest … we must be prepared to compete for our interests and our values far, far from home,” Williamson said.

The carrier, Britain’s largest and most powerful warship, will carry its contingent of state-of-the-art F-35 stealth fighter jets as well as US Marine Corps F-35s as it ventures into a region where “China is developing its modern military capability and its commercial power,” Williamson added.

A new F-35B Lightning fighter jet is prepped for take off from the deck of the United Kingdom's new aircraft carrier, HMS Queen Elizabeth at sea in September 2018.

The combined US-UK air wing aboard the carrier will improve “the reach and lethality of our forces” while “reinforcing the fact that the United States remains our very closest of partners,” he said.

The defense minister did not give a date for the deployment. However the Queen Elizabeth is scheduled to become operational in 2020.

Boosting Asia-Pacific presence

Williamson said Britain would consider permanent new bases in the Asia-Pacific and Caribbean to exert power globally – reiterating his stance from an interview with the Sunday Telegraph late last year.

“For us global engagement is not a reflex reaction to leaving the European Union. It is about a permanent presence,” he said.

Williamson did not specify what parts of Asia-Pacific the carrier would transit, but last year the Royal Navy amphibious assault ship HMS Albion steamed closed to the Chinese-claimed Paracel Islands in the South China Sea in what Beijing called a “provocative action.”

And last month UK and US warships conducted six days of coordinated drills in the South China Sea.

Williamson’s speech came on the same day that the US Navy sent two warships past other Chinese-claimed islands in the Spratly chain to challenge Beijing’s stance.

The US has accused Beijing of installing missiles and other military hardware on the disputed islands in contradiction to promises made by President Xi Jinping and against international rulings on the status of the islands.

Pictured: HMS Argyll (center) takes part in a large scale PHOTEX with the Malysian, Singapore, Australian and New Zealand Navy in the South China Sea whilst on Exercise Bersama Lima 2018.

HMS ARGYLL TAKES PART IN LARGE SCALE FORMATION SAILING

On Saturday 13th October 2018, HMS Argyll took part in a large scale formation sailing exercise which in turn was covered overhead by a photographic exercise (PHOTEX). The Photex saw 13 ships in total sailing in close proximity during Exercise Bersama Lima 18. The exercise which has finished on training serials will now move into the next phase of a War Exercise the following week which will test the reactions of all the nations taking part including UK, New Zealand, Australia, Singapore and Malaysia.

Credit: LPhot Dan Rosenbaum
HMS Argyll
China on US Navy operation: We have missiles
03:03 - Source: CNN

Williamson said Monday that Britain must be prepared – along with allies – “to oppose those who flout international law” and “shore up the global system of rules and standards on which our security and our prosperity depends.”

He also touted Britain’s military technology, saying new warships, aircraft, missiles and drones were being developed that would ensure it remained “a lethal fighting force fully adapted to the demands of 21st-century warfare.”

Among the innovations would be “swarm squadrons of network-enabled drones capable of confusing and overwhelming enemy air defenses” that could be deployed this year, Williamson added.