Parliament’s Defence Committee has voiced significant concerns regarding the Royal Navy’s ability to respond effectively to the escalating Iran crisis, despite initially expressing satisfaction with the UK’s preparedness.
Following a confidential briefing from senior Ministry of Defence officials, committee members were "left satisfied that the UK’s decision making and preparedness measures in place ahead of the recent military activity were grounded in a coherent logic".
However, this initial confidence has been undermined by the deployment of HMS Dragon.
The warship was dispatched to the Mediterranean on Tuesday after a drone strike hit a Royal Air Force base in Cyprus on 1 March.
Sir Keir Starmer had previously agreed to a US request for British military bases to be used for "defensive" strikes on Iranian missile sites, citing "British lives" at risk, and pledged to scramble the ship the following day.
Yet, what was intended as a show of naval strength has instead been widely criticised as an "appalling and embarrassing" failure, exposing critical shortcomings within the UK’s Navy.
The reported week-long delay in the ship’s deployment left MoD officials "fuming" and highlighted the detrimental impact of previous financially-driven decisions, including agreements with contractors that restrict out-of-hours work.

The committee’s statement added: “We note, however, the considerable gap between some of the political rhetoric circulating internationally, and the reality of the UK’s support to the United States and regional partners.
“The situation has also underlined longstanding and grave concerns – which we share – about whether the Royal Navy has sufficient capacity and resilience to respond effectively to a crisis at a time of worsening global security.
“We therefore call upon the government to urgently release the Defence Investment Plan and take steps to increase spending on defence to 3 per cent of GDP during this Parliament.”
The Defence Secretary, meanwhile, praised the Royal Navy’s “remarkable effort” to prepare HMS Dragon for deployment over the past week.
John Healey said: “I have only praise for our Royal Navy personnel and civilian teams who have worked flat out to prepare HMS Dragon for deployment to the eastern Mediterranean.
“What is normally six weeks of work was completed in just six days – a remarkable effort delivered around the clock. They are the very best of Britain in action.”
HMS Dragon’s commanding officer, Commander Iain Griffin, said: “My ship’s company have worked tirelessly to ensure we are ready for our mission to the eastern Mediterranean.
“I am proud of the professional manner in which they have responded. We are trained for this, we are ready for this, we have the equipment and people, we have the support of the British people and, most importantly, our families and friends.”
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