HMS Montrose on maneuvers in Baltic Sea as part of nine-nation partnership

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Royal Navy frigate HMS Montrose recently sailed to the Baltic Sea for two weeks of exercises as part of a new agreement on military cooperation between the UK and Baltic states.

Photo: Royal Navy

Earlier this month, defense ministers of Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and the United Kingdom signed a memorandum of understanding which will see the nine nations expand interoperaility.

Exercise Baltic Cross was the first test of the new cooperation and saw Montrose train together with the Finnish and Swedish Navies.

The exercise focused on developing the ability of the three navies to work together in forms of war at sea, from maneuvering ships in close formation to transferring stores, defending each other from enemy air attack, locating submarines and hunting down enemy surface ships.

It also tested Montrose’s Wildcat helicopter working with the Finns’ sleek, fast missile boats Hanko and Pori in the challenging waters around the Swedish and Finnish coasts.

As well as those two 30-knot-plus craft, the Finns also committed their flagship FNS Hämeenmaa, a minelayer/corvette, while the Swedes fielded the futuristic-looking HSwMS Visby.

The Visby is fast, stealthy and armed to the teeth… and particularly tricky for Montrose’s operations room team to track.

The locals had the definite advantage and used periods in the open seas of the Baltic and the more challenging navigational archipelago coastline to their advantage. The war games included a spot of ‘Swedish Tennis’ – two adversaries facing each other on an invisible ‘court’ trying to use their sensors to find and destroy the opposing side whilst moving in on the ‘net’.

Stealth technology, hi-tech and sensors count for nothing without skilled sailors behind them, so sailors from the three participants traded places for a few days.

“It was fun to experience the swap between the ships,” said Swedish Sub Lieutenant Robin Ivarsson.

“It was good to see the culture onboard and see how the Royal Navy works together. All your sailors seem to be very proud of their work and since conscription ended in the Swedish Navy we look to you as a good example and embrace your ways of working.

“As the anti submarine officer on the Visby, it was good to actually meet the faces of the people I’d been working with the previous night.”

The exercise coincided with the Finnish Navy’s 100th anniversary, held in the Turku, southwest Finland, also attended by HMS Ramsey which is in the Baltic with a NATO minehunting group.

HMS Montrose’s sailors joined their minehunting comrades and personnel from the many nations taking part in two days of celebrations.

The British frigate hosted a reception on her flight deck for the Head of the Finnish Navy, Rear Admiral Veijo Taipalus, in the presence of a large number of local VIPs and Britain’s Ambassador to Helsinki, Thomas Dodd.

“This has been an intense and rewarding period of exercises and events, both at sea and ashore,” said Montrose’s Commanding Officer, Commander Conor O’Neill.

“Finland and Sweden have been allies of the UK for many years, but having them in the Joint Expeditionary Force makes that bond even stronger and has given real focus to improving our skills together.

“They are tough adversaries as well, as finding these agile stealthy craft in confined waters has been a challenge, but we have learnt a great deal from the experience.

“Ashore, Montrose and Ramsey were very proud to represent the RN and UK at this important milestone for the Finnish Navy.”