UK to deploy Royal Navy ships to Middle East to 'bolster security'

  • Published
Related Topics
RFA ArgusImage source, Alamy
Image caption,

No 10 said Royal Navy ship RFA Argus would be deployed (file photo)

The UK will send two Royal Navy ships and surveillance aircraft to the eastern Mediterranean in plans to "bolster security", No 10 says.

It comes after six days of violence following the surprise attack on Israel by Hamas.

The aircraft will begin patrols on Friday to "track threats to regional stability such as the transfer of weapons to terrorist groups".

Three Merlin helicopters and Royal Marines are also being dispatched.

The government is also arranging flights for British nationals stranded in Israel. The first plane was expected to leave Tel Aviv on Thursday, but as of Friday morning it had not yet left.

A Foreign Office spokesperson said the situation around departure was "fluid", and it was "currently working to ensure the flight can proceed as soon as possible".

Speaking in Sweden on Friday, Rishi Sunak said the UK was monitoring the situation in Israel closely, adding "humanitarian concerns and protection of civilians are very important".

The prime minister said Royal Navy assets were being moved to the Mediterranean over the coming week so they can "provide humanitarian support as required".

On Thursday he spoke to Israel's prime minister to reaffirm the UK's support for Israel following Hamas' appalling terrorist attack", Downing Street said.

Defence Secretary Grant Shapps earlier said the Royal Navy vessels were not warships, but "ships that can assist with hospital facilities".

He told BBC Breakfast sending the boats was also about "deterring others from getting involved in the region" and "maligning external influence".

Image source, MOD
Image caption,

RAF personnel preparing to deploy from RAF Lossiemouth

When asked about Israel's response to the attacks, the defence secretary said "Israel has the right to defend itself" and added that, "unlike Hamas", it was giving warning "that it's coming after Hamas terrorists" which was the right thing to do.

Mr Sunak also spoke to Egyptian President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi on Thursday morning to discuss the importance of opening the Rafah crossing into Gaza to allow for humanitarian access and provide a route for British and other nationals to leave.

Speaking on Thursday, he said the UK's military and diplomatic teams across the region would support international partners to "re-establish security and ensure humanitarian aid reaches the thousands of innocent victims of this barbaric attack from Hamas terrorists".

More on Israel Gaza war

Hamas launched an unprecedented attack on southern Israel on Saturday, killing at least 1,300 and taking around 150 hostages to Gaza.

More than 1,300 have also been killed in Gaza since Israel launched retaliatory air strikes.