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Royal Navy Deploys Mine-Hunting Mothership Amid Strait of Hormuz Tensions
By MGN Editorial•May 26, 2026 at 06:00 PM
The Royal Fleet Auxiliary vessel RFA Lyme Bay has departed Gibraltar as the United Kingdom positions assets for a potential multinational mine-countermeasures operation in the Strait of Hormuz.
## Royal Navy Advances Hormuz Mine-Countermeasures Posture
The United Kingdom has taken a significant step toward establishing a multinational mine-countermeasures presence in the Strait of Hormuz, with Royal Fleet Auxiliary vessel **RFA Lyme Bay** departing Gibraltar as part of what observers are describing as a deliberate forward deployment, according to gCaptain.
The Bay-class landing ship dock, which serves as a mine-hunting mothership capable of supporting smaller unmanned and manned mine-countermeasures vessels, represents a substantial escalation in the UK's operational readiness in the region. The Strait of Hormuz remains one of the world's most strategically critical maritime chokepoints, with an estimated 20 percent of global oil trade transiting the waterway.
### Strategic Significance
The deployment of RFA Lyme Bay signals that planning for a coordinated multinational response to potential mining threats in the strait has moved beyond the conceptual phase. Mine-hunting motherships such as Lyme Bay provide the logistical backbone for sustained mine-countermeasures operations, offering berthing, maintenance, and command facilities for the smaller, specialist vessels that conduct the actual detection and neutralisation work.
The Strait of Hormuz has been a focal point of maritime security concern for several years, with incidents involving vessel seizures, drone attacks, and the persistent threat of naval mining periodically disrupting commercial shipping and driving up war-risk insurance premiums for tankers and bulk carriers transiting the Persian Gulf.
### Implications for Commercial Shipping
For commercial operators, the visible build-up of Western naval mine-countermeasures capability in the region may offer some reassurance regarding the long-term security of the transit corridor. However, the deployment itself underscores the elevated threat environment that shipping companies, insurers, and flag states must continue to factor into voyage risk assessments for Gulf-bound vessels.
Shipowners and operators trading to and from Gulf ports are advised to monitor developments closely and maintain engagement with their war-risk underwriters and flag state advisories as the situation evolves.
*Source: gCaptain*
#Royal Navy#Strait of Hormuz#mine countermeasures#RFA Lyme Bay#maritime security#Persian Gulf#Royal Fleet Auxiliary#naval operations
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