The Brink

What the Royal Navy’s shame says about Britain - Tom Sharpe OBE

Mar 10, 2026
A candid look at Britain’s naval posture and why deployments around the Strait of Hormuz matter. Discussion of specific ship roles, submarine and carrier options, and gaps in mine-countermeasure and air-defence capability. Critique of procurement culture, wasted defence spending, and how thin fleets strain responses. Consideration of strategic choices between European focus and global commitments.
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INSIGHT

Type 45 Is The Essential Air Defence Asset

  • The Type 45 destroyer provides a 200-mile air-defence bubble and is uniquely suited to counter missiles and drones in high-threat Persian Gulf environments.
  • Tom Sharpe says the 45 should have been deployed early to protect Cyprus, carriers, and bases instead of sitting in Portsmouth.
ADVICE

Use Submarines And Carriers Early

  • Deploy submarines and carriers quickly because they offer unique intelligence and strike options that aircraft alone cannot sustain.
  • Sharpe argues HMS Anson should have been kept in-theatre and carriers used to host F-35s to relieve Akrotiri's sustainment limits.
INSIGHT

Britain's Forces Are One Layer Thick

  • Britain has high-quality equipment and people but only 'one layer thick' of capability across fleets, making the force fragile in conflict.
  • Sharpe warns maritime warfare escalates instantly and the UK lacks depth to absorb losses without rapid crisis effects.
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