Early departure of HMS Anson, a stealth submarine, from Australia fuels speculation it could be en route to the Gulf to help defend the US and allies from Iran ...
A combined Canzuk-Aukus framework does not replace the American alliance – it reinforces it with strategic coherence.
The restoration is called Project Yellow Submarine because the end of the train's cab is yellow, Pathak loves The Beatles' ...
Plymouth’s Devonport Dockyard has been taken out of special measures after proving its nuclear submarine work is safe. The facility had been in “enhanced regulatory attention” since 2014 due to safety ...
Fresh concerns have been raised at the state of the UK's warship and submarine fleet in the wake of an Iranian attack on RAF ...
The Royal Navy seeks to maintain a certified under-ice operational capability centred on its submarine force as competition in the Arctic grows.
The expanding contracts with universities feed into the next phase of the AUKUS military pact between the US, UK and Australia, targeting China.
By integrating industrial bases and operational practices, Australia and the U.K. are signalling that their partnership is not a relic of history but central to their contemporary strategies.
Australia has taken another step along the AUKUS pathway with the arrival of the Royal Navy's Astute-class submarine HMS Anson at HMAS Stirling.
To this day, there has only been one recorded instance of submarine-on-submarine warfare during WWII. The German Navy's destroyed U-864 is toxic to this day.
The USS Lionfish was commissioned in 1944 and earned one battle star for service in World War II. It sank a Japanese submarine, rescued the crew of a B-29 bomber, and served as a training submarine.