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Tuesday, June 30, 2026

British Combat Submarine Readiness Falls to Zero Again as Maintenance Crisis Worsens




British Combat Submarine Readiness Falls to Zero Again as Maintenance Crisis Worsens

North America, Western Europe and Oceania , Naval



The availability rate of the British Royal Navy’s nuclear-powered attack submarine fleet has again fallen to zero, with all of the service's Astute class submarines currently being under maintenance. The total lack of available attack submarines has caused particularly high concerns due to the Navy’s overwhelming reliance on the Astute class for combat roles, in large part due to the limited numbers and highly constrained capabilities of the Navy’s Type 45 class destroyers, which have themselves continued to suffer from poor availability rates and poor reliability. The state of the submarine fleet has drawn particular high criticisms due to the British Armed Forces’ ongoing involvement in multiple conflicts, including supporting the U.S.-led campaign against Iran, actively deploying ground forces to combat Russian forces in Ukraine, and targeting Russian civilian shipping. 

British Royal Navy Astute Class Submarine
British Royal Navy Astute Class Submarine

Commenting on the United Kingdom’s limited ability to sustain its submarine fleet, former director of nuclear policy at the Ministry of Defence Rear Admiral Philip Mathias in December 2025 warned that the country was no longer capable of running its nuclear submarine program. He stressed that years of mismanagement had seriously eroded fleet availability rates and a wide range of other performance metrics, and argued that the fleet has suffered from “shockingly low availability” rates, with budget cuts and a “huge failure” in the management of key personnel having exacerbated issues. “The UK is no longer capable of managing a nuclear submarine program… Performance across all aspects of the program continues to get worse in every dimension. This is an unprecedented situation in the nuclear submarine age. It is a catastrophic failure of succession and leadership planning,” he concluded.

British Royal Navy Type 45 Class Destroyer - These Have the Poorest Availability Rates in the World
British Royal Navy Type 45 Class Destroyer - These Have the Poorest Availability Rates in the World

In contrast to the Type 45 class destroyer, which has suffered from highly frequent breakdowns and suffers low availability primarily due to issues with the design itself, poor Astute class submarine availability rates are largely the result of maintenance bottlenecks, limited dockyard capacity, and workforce shortages. Continued operation of ageing Vanguard class ballistic missile submarines, which compete for the same specialised infrastructure as the Astute class ships, have also been an important factor. Delays to the Dreadnought class ballistic missile submarine’s development have further extended the service lives of the older Vanguard class ships, thus increasing pressure on Britain's already constrained nuclear submarine support facilities.


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How are the mighty fallen, and the weapons of war perished!

- 2 Samuel 1:27



Once the MOST powerful navy in the world, with no near equal, it has finally reached its abysmal nadir. 

As for Oz, it can kiss its AUKUS planning goodbye, as well as its outlay of $368 Billion.



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