The UK is preparing an aircraft carrier for possible deployment to the Middle East, reducing the time it would take to be readied.
This does not mean that Portsmouth-based HMS Prince of Wales, which is used to carry fighter jets and helicopters, will be sent into the Gulf as conflict escalates in the region but the preparedness of the Royal Navyâs flagship is being increased, the Ministry of Defence (MoD) said.
The Independent understands no decisions taken to deploy Prince of Wales have been taken.
An MoD spokesperson told The Independent: âWe have been bolstering our UK military presence in the Middle East since January, and we have already deployed capabilities to protect British people and our allies in the region, including Typhoons, F-35 jets, air defence systems and an extra 400 personnel into Cyprus.
âSince the strikes began, weâve had British jets in the sky shooting down drowns (sic) and have sent additional assets to the region to further reinforce our air defences, including more Typhoons and Wildcat helicopters with drone busting missiles.
âHMS Prince of Wales has always been on very high readiness and we are increasing the preparedness of the carrier, reducing the time it would take to set sail for any deployment.â
Queen Elizabeth-class aircraft carrier HMS Prince of Wales is the Royal Navyâs flagship. Increasing its preparedness does not stop her undertaking other planned missions.
Additionally, the US has started using British bases for âspecific defensive operationsâ to prevent Iran firing missiles into the region, the MoD has said.
A Merlin helicopter is also being sent to the region to help with surveillance from the air and RAF Typhoon and F-35 jets are continuing air operations over Jordan, Qatar and Cyprus.
Meanwhile, more American bombers have landed in Britain as Donald Trump warned Iran would be âhit very hardâ in another round of strikes.
A first 146ft B-1 Lancer arrived at RAF Fairford in Gloucestershire on Friday evening and three more followed on Saturday morning.
Sir Keir Starmer has granted permission for âdefensiveâ US action against Iranian missile sites from UK bases.
Armed forces chief Sir Richard Knighton said he would expect the US to launch missions from the Gloucestershire base âwithin the next few daysâ.
A second Government charter flight carrying British citizens from Oman landed at Gatwick Airport in the early hours of Saturday as efforts to help people trapped in the war zone continue.
A third will be leaving Muscat, Oman, on Sunday, and the Foreign Office is also exploring options to charter a flight from Dubai to bring people back from the Middle East, the Press Association has reported.
The latest arrivals join more than 9,000 Britons who have returned from the United Arab Emirates since widespread conflict began in the region.
It comes as Kemi Badenoch said the prime minister is âtoo scared to make foreign interventionsâ and that the UK is âin this war whether Keir Starmer likes it or notâ.
Speaking at the Conservative Partyâs spring conference in Harrogate, Mrs Badenoch said Sir Keir was âsitting on the fenceâ when it comes to the conflict in the Middle East, adding that last weekâs by-election won by the Greens has âspookedâ the Labour Party.
She said: âNow Keir Starmer is too scared to make foreign interventions for fear of upsetting a tiny section of that electorate.
âEveryone remembers the mistakes of the Iraq War, nobody sensible is suggesting that we should drop bombs without a second thought.
âBut Keir Starmer spent days consulting lawyers, plucking up the courage to say whose side he was on.
âCanada and Australia had the moral clarity to do so immediately and unequivocally. Even now, our prime minister is sitting on the fence. We are in this war, whether Keir Starmer likes it or not.â
