After a
major naval exercise in the Caribbean with the participation of 13 warships
from several countries of the Americas and following some anti-drugs patrolling
in the Caribbean HMS Dauntless is expected back in Portsmouth at the end of
October.
The RN
HMS Dauntless left, is underway in formation with the Ticonderoga missile
cruiser USS Anzio during UNITAS Atlantic 2012
The
Type45 destroyer would have then spent over six months abroad, the first leg
deployed along the western African coast, later crossing over to the Falkland
Islands for South Atlantic patrolling and later to the North Atlantic and
Caribbean including calls to Barbados and St. Vincent.
On her
first visit to Colombia during September, the £1bn destroyer provided the
impressively steely setting for defense talks between the two nations at the
northern historic port city of Cartagena.
In
Cartagena the recently-appointed British Minister for International Security
Strategy, Dr Andrew Murrison, held the first annual Anglo-Colombian strategic
defense summit with his opposite number from Colombia.
D33 also
served as the venue for the second of the ‘Defense Security Industry’ days the
ship has hosted while deployed (the first was in Lagos, Nigeria), a floating
showcase for UK firms and trade.
So while
many of the ship’s company were off enjoying the sights and sounds of the
ancient walled city – proclaimed a world heritage site by UNESCO as the best
preserved fortified city in South America – their shipmates toiled to prepare
the destroyer and ensure she was a fitting venue to support this sales/diplomatic
role.
Also
part of the job has been showing off Dauntless as the best of British,
cutting-edge, state-of-the-art vessel and as such hosted 44 trainee officers
from the Escuela Naval de Cadetes Almirante Padilla, the Colombian counterpart
to Britannia Royal Naval College in Dartmouth.
“Of
course everyone thinks of a warship in its primary war-fighting role, because
that’s the iconic image of what we do, but events like this help to demonstrate
some of the additional roles – and attributes – that a modern and versatile
warship like Dauntless can deliver,” said the destroyer’s Commanding Officer
Capt Will Warrender.
From
Cartagena, HMS Dauntless left for Key West for the largest and longest running
exercise in the region, UNITAS, which traces its history back to the late
1950s.
The
British destroyer worked alongside a dozen warships from Brazil, Canada,
Colombia, Mexico, Dominican Republic and host nation USA, as part of a
wide-ranging test of the different navies to work together; the vessels are
also on stand-by to provide assistance should a hurricane sweep through the
region.
With
UNITAS completed 28 September, HMS Dauntless will take up anti-drug-running
patrols as part of the international clampdown on the narcotics trade in
Caribbean waters and the Gulf of Mexico. She’s due back home in Portsmouth at
the end of October.
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