Britain’s flagship aircraft carrier HMS Queen Elizabeth has arrived in New York on its latest mission to America.
The 65,000-tonne behemoth dropped anchor within sight of the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbour early on Sunday evening.
The £3.2bn aircraft carrier set sail from its home base in Portsmouth earlier this month to act as a stand-in for sister ship, HMS Prince of Wales – which was meant to be sailing to America but broke down near the Isle of Wight hours after departing.
The Queen Elizabeth will be acting as the floating venue for the Atlantic Future Forum (AFF) – a defence conference focusing on Anglo-American military, political and strategic relations.
HMS Queen Elizabeth, the flagship of the Royal Navy, sails into New York on Sunday on her second visit to the American city
The ship has a crew of about 700 sailors and is the biggest warship ever created for Britain. She is also the first in the world custom built to support the deadly new stealth jet, the F-35
The arrival of the warship to New York comes hours after Liz Truss spoke about her intentions to make the UK’s ‘special’ relationship with the US ‘even more special’ in the next few years.
In an interview on CNN’s State Of The Union programme, the Prime Minister was asked about concerns in US president Joe Biden’s administration that she does not share the same belief in the special relationship as some of her predecessors in No 10.
Ms Truss said: ‘I do think our relationship is special and it’s increasingly important at a time when we’re facing threats from Russia, increased assertiveness from China.
‘I’m determined that we make the special relationship even more special over the coming years.’
HMS Queen Elizabeth was welcomed into New York by the UK’s Ambassador to the United States, Dame Karen Pierce.
Dame Karen said: ‘HMS Queen Elizabeth is not only the United Kingdom’s flagship, but is a fantastic demonstration of the soft power and the close working relationship between the United Kingdom and the United States, as well as the transatlantic relationship.
‘It’s an enormous honour to sail into New York on her.
‘We share an endeavour in remaining the United States’ closest ally and I am very proud of what the ship has achieved for Britain in her deployment to the Indo-Pacific last year.’
The arrival of HMS Queen Elizabeth in New York comes hours after Prime Minister Liz Truss spoke about her intentions to make the UK’s ‘special’ relationship with the US ‘even more special’ in the next few years.
The 65,000-tonne behemoth dropped anchor within sight of the Statue of Liberty, pictured, in New York Harbour on Sunday evening.
All the ship’s crew lined the huge four-acre flight deck of the ship as it sailed into New York Harbour, with Queen Elizabeth followed closely by frigate HMS Richmond, pictured rear
Captain Ian Feasey, HMS Queen Elizabeth’s commanding officer, said: ‘It is an amazing privilege to bring HMS Queen Elizabeth back to New York and to be formally welcomed to the United States by His Majesty’s ambassador.
‘We are very much looking forward to hosting the fifth Atlantic Future Forum and welcoming onboard senior leaders that embody our deep and special relationship with the United States.’
The carrier debuted in New York in 2018 – again to host the forum – ahead of fast jet trials with F-35 Lightnings.
She’s joined in New York by her frigate escort, HMS Richmond, which sailed up the Hudson River for a berth on Manhattan Island.
As well as hosting the two-day forum, the carrier’s crew will also have the opportunity to get ashore and visit New York, including formally paying their respects at the 9/11 memorial.
Now fully operational – the ship led an international carrier group to the Pacific Rim last year – HMS Queen Elizabeth will return across the Atlantic and spend the remainder of the autumn leading operations and exercises in European waters upon completion of the visit.
The Queen Elizabeth will be acting as the floating venue for the Atlantic Future Forum (AFF) – a defence conference focusing on Anglo-American military, political and strategic relations.
HMS Queen Elizabeth was welcomed into New York by the UK’s Ambassador to the United States, Dame Karen Pierce, after the ship sailed past the iconic Statue of Liberty, pictured
The massive vessel’s arrival to New York was never on her original schedule of planned deployments, with her sister ship HMS Prince of Wales meant to be flying the flag for Britain in the States.
The trip to Manhattan would have been Prince of Wales’s first jaunt to America since being commissioned into the Royal Navy by King Charles in 2019.
The warship – which is fractionally larger and heavier than her older sister, HMS Queen Elizabeth – had meant to remain overseas until about Christmas, carrying out trials with Britain’s deadly new stealth jet, the F-35.
But the problem-plague carrier suffered a major mechanical malfunction hours after leaving her home port of Portsmouth, with a fault crippling the starboard shaft.
Since the breakdown, on August 27, the ship has been languishing alongside at Portsmouth Naval Base, with specialist divers today continuing with their assessment of the damage.
At the moment, it is not known when HMS Prince of Wales will be back in action or when major repairs will take place.
Defence procurement minister Alec Shelbrooke – who is in charge of buying all of Britain’s military kit – admitted in a parliamentary question: ‘This is a very unusual fault, and we continue to pursue all repair options. It is too early to say what the timetable is for rectifying the issue.’
HMS Prince of Wales, the newest of Britain’s two aircraft carriers, was supposed to sail to America but she suffered a serious fault with her starboard shaft which damaged the ship so severely that top brass were forced to call off its trip to the USA
The fault is not the first suffered by HMS Prince of Wales; it flooded twice in 2020 in incidents that cost the Ministry of Defence million of pounds to fix.
The first flood was in May 2020 when a video emerged showing water pouring through the ceiling into an accommodation area.
Then, months later in October, an faulty fire system caused unleashed hundreds a huge torrent of water, which flooded an engine room, damaging sensitive electrical equipment.
The issue caused about £3.3 million of damage, with the MoD forking out an additional £2.2 million for ‘remedial works’ on both the Queen Elizabeth-class carriers to stop future floods taking place.
In 2017, HMS Queen Elizabeth also faced multi-million pound repairs after it was discovered that a faulty seal on a propeller shaft was letting in 200 litres of sea water an hour.
The aircraft carriers – built in Scotland for £6.2 billion – are the navy’s largest and most powerful ships ever. They are due to serve the country for the next 50 years.