Helicopters and F-35 fighter planes aboard Royal Navy flagship HMS Queen Elizabeth, docked at Changi Naval Base in Singapore.
Victor Loh, CNBC
SINGAPORE — The United Kingdom plans to increase its presence in the contested South China Sea and the Indo-Pacific region, the Royal Air Force Chief of the Air Staff, Air Chief Marshal Sir Mike Wigston said Monday.
Speaking on board the Royal Navy’s HMS Queen Elizabeth docked in Singapore, Sir Wigston said that there would be a “more regular drumbeat of deployments.”
“That would be manifested both in what you see from the Royal Navy and the Royal Air Force,” he said.
The U.K.’s Carrier Strike Group, led by the £3 billion ($3.9 billion) flagship HMS Queen Elizabeth, is on its maiden 28-week deployment around the world in a projection of force.
The British High Commissioner to Singapore, Kara Owen, added that two Royal Navy warships had just transited through the Panama Canal and were headed to Asian waters. This follows an announcement in July to permanently assign two warships in the region.
“Our ambition is to take a more persistent presence here than any other country from [Europe],” she said on board the 65,000-ton ship.
A view of HMS Queen Elizabeth’s flight deck from the top of the aircraft carrier’s skip ramp.
Victor Loh, CNBC
Besides the deployment of more military assets, the increased engagement will come in the form of humanitarian aid and disaster relief, Sir Wigston added.
Earlier, ships from the U.K. Carrier Strike Group participated in an exercise marking the 50th anniversary of the Five Power Defence Arrangements with Singapore, Malaysia, Australia and New Zealand.
The deployment also comes as the U.K. seeks to ink more trade deals around the world following its departure from the E.U.
In June, the U.K. started negotiations to join a wider Asia Pacific free-trade alliance known as the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership.