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US-UK conduct unmanned exercise in Arabian Gulf

October 10, 2022 at 10:46 am

US Navy’s carrier, the USS Nimitz seen in the Arabian Gulf on June 29, 2003 during ‘Operation Iraqi Freedom’ [Kristi J. Earl / US Navy]

Naval forces from the United States and United Kingdom have tested unmanned surveillance ships in the Arabian Gulf with the aim of enhancing “maritime monitoring” by crewed ships and operators ashore, the US Naval Forces Central Command Public Affairs said in a statement.

The one-day exercise, dubbed Phantom Scope, took place on Friday off the coast of Bahrain with forces from the US 5th Fleet and the UK Royal Navy.

According to the statement, three Saildrone Explorer unmanned surface vessels (USVs) participated alongside guided-missile destroyer USS Delbert D. Black (DDG 119), fast response cutter USCGC Robert Goldman (WPC 1142) and Royal Navy mine countermeasures vessels HMS Chiddingfold (M37) and HMS Bangor (M109).

In August, the Nour News website, which is close to the Iranian National Security Council, announced that the Iranian Revolutionary Guards had seized and then released an unmanned American ship in Gulf waters.

A statement by the US Fifth Fleet at the time confirmed that the US Navy had thwarted the Iranian naval forces’ attempt to seize an unmanned ship operated by the fleet in the Gulf.

The Saildrone Explorer, which is equipped with sensors, radars and cameras, was sailing in international waters to collect navigation and unspecified data, according to a Fifth Fleet statement.

The ship has a five metre steel wing and uses solar and wind energy for power generation and can spend up to a year on a mission.

Since 2020, tensions have escalated in the Gulf region after the United States sent military reinforcements to the area against the backdrop of an attack on two oil tankers in the Sea of Oman as well as the downing of a US reconnaissance plane by an Iranian missile over the Strait of Hormuz.

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