Britain | In deep trouble

Britain’s submarines are at sea for too long—or not at all

No sunlight or fresh food for months

Familes of HMS Audacious wave as she passes by.
Photograph: Royal Navy

IN THE final days of August one of Britain’s four nuclear-armed Vanguard-class submarines—the government will not say which—limped back into the Scottish port of Faslane. Weary submariners, deprived of sunlight and fresh air for nearly six months, lay slumped against the conning tower. The hull was encrusted with marine growth. John Healey, Britain’s defence secretary, watching on, hailed the sailors’ “extraordinary sacrifices”. Yet such long patrols are also emblematic of a crisis in Britain’s submarine force.

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This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “In deep trouble”

From the September 14th 2024 edition

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