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A Look at the UK's Royal Navy, Which Has Faced Jibe After Jibe From Trump and Hegseth
Trump and Hegseth called the Royal Navy too small as AP analysis found its combat fleet fell two-thirds to 66 ships since 1975.
- On Wednesday, President Donald Trump told the Daily Telegraph that Britain "don't even have a navy," while Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth sarcastically suggested the "big, bad Royal Navy" should secure the Strait of Hormuz.
- The Royal Navy's combat fleet has fallen by two-thirds, declining from 166 vessels in 1975 to 66 in 2025, fueling Trump's criticism of Britain's naval capabilities.
- Kevin Rowlands, editor of the Royal United Services Institute Journal, acknowledged a "grain of truth" in the critiques; the destroyer fleet has halved to six while the frigate fleet was slashed from 60 to just 11.
- British Prime Minister Keir Starmer aims to reverse the decline, promising to raise defense spending to 2.5% of GDP by 2027 and 3.5% by 2035 as part of NATO agreements.
- Friction persists over base access; Trump remains adamant he was "let down" when Starmer initially refused U.S. military use of bases including Diego Garcia following the Iran war's onset on February 28.
Insights by Ground AI
19 Articles
19 Articles
The President of the United States, Donald Trump, and his Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth, have been demolishing with the naval capabilities of the United Kingdom. Their pulls may have hurt in a country with a long and proud maritime history, but they are not without foundation.
Coverage Details
Total News Sources19
Leaning Left4Leaning Right1Center10Last UpdatedBias Distribution66% Center
Bias Distribution
- 66% of the sources are Center
66% Center
L 27%
C 66%
Factuality
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