Mines

| March 17, 2026 | 26 Comments

Happy St. Patty’s to all you Irish ba****** out there. Sláinte!

 

Seems like all we ever hear about lately is drones causing damage and mines helping close the Straits of Hormuz. At least mines can be cleared, right?

Barely two months ago, a striking and slightly forlorn naval convoy made its way out of the Gulf.

Sitting on the deck of the heavy-lifting carrier Seaway Hawk were four recently retired United States naval vessels heading to the scrapyard.

The departure of the last four Avenger-class anti-mine vessels in the Gulf marked the closure of a chapter that might not have been glamorous in its operations, but was long considered critical to protecting trade.

In a nutshell, the old style wood-hulled minesweeper is thought to have seen its day. They did yeoman’s service in earlier times, helping to clear Iranian-laid minefields. But they are being replaced by – wait for it – modified Littoral Combat Ships. Thought you had heard the last of the LCS, eh? To quote Big Jake – not hardly.

Three of these aluminium-hulled trimarans are now believed to be in the region: the USS Canberra, USS Tulsa and USS Santa Barbara.

Their equipment includes Raytheon’s new AN/AQS-20C sonar mine-hunting system.

Fitted to remotely controlled drone boats, four high-resolution sensors can detect, classify and identify mine-like objects, from the seafloor to the near-surface in a single pass, the manufacturer says.

Another gadget is the AN/AES-1 Airborne Laser Mine Detection System (ALMDS) fitted to an MH-60 Seahawk helicopter.

This detects and pinpoints surface and near-surface moored sea mines using light detection and ranging technology (LiDAR).

Once detected, the mines get destroyed by the Archerfish Airborne Mine Neutralisation System, (AMNS-AF). Presumably the system is airborne, not the mines. There is only one problem – some of it has been operational less than a year and none is battle tested.

A US navy briefing on early operations found that the drone boats were unreliable and needed lengthy maintenance, the news outlet Hunterbrook reported.

Sensors have also reportedly struggled to identify mines.

The Brits also pulled their last minesweeper.

Until recently, the Royal Navy kept four vessels in Bahrain. However, the same month the Avengers departed, their last UK counterpart, the Hunt-class HMS Middleton, also left.

The Royal Navy and the French navy have been working together on an upgrade to their drone technology for mine-hunting, called the Maritime Mine Counter Measures (MMCM) programme.

The Royal Navy’s system will involve unmanned drone speedboats working from a mothership to tow sonar sensors that can find the mines. The Saab Multi-Shot Mine Neutralisation System (MuMNS) will then destroy them.

However, the technology is understood to be still under trial.

It ain’t pretty. If the Iranians heavily mine the area, we will be trying to clear it under potential fire from shore missiles – a very ugly prospect. Read the article – it’s worth it.  The Telegraph

***  Just got a little stranger. I wrote this on Sunday afternoon. Sunday evening TWZ reports hat the Tulsa and Santa Barbara have shown up….in Penang, Malaysia. Huh? One of the most important chokepoints in the world is said to be mined, and the ships to deal with it get moved several thousand miles away?***

 

Hearkens back to WWI – if a British skipper rammed and sank a German submarine, they got a reward and a gold watch presented by the King. The Germans made up a bunch of special mines that looked like sub conning towers – when a Brit rammed them and they exploded, the merchant captain just thought he got hit by a torpedo just exiting the tube. Too many sunken ships later, the Admiralty said the sub had to be 100% verified first, ie: by submerging. So the Germans designed a mine that would float on the surface until it heard the acoustic signature of a ship headed to ram it, at which point it sank – and BOOM the Brits lost another ship.   (From “The Sea Devil’s Fo’c’sle” by Felix Von Luckner and Lowell Thomas.)

 

Category: Iran, Navy, UK

guest

26 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Toxic Deplorable B Woodman

Irish bastard!? I resemble that remark!

Odie

Not Bastard. Ba*****.

Skivvy Stacker

Bastars?

Odie

Not enough *’s I see now that I proof read

SFC D

Personally, I’m more of a mick sonuvabitch, but Irish bastard will do!

jeff LPH 3 63-66

Happy St. Pat’s day SFC D

Eggs

Happy St Patrick’s Day from a part German/Dutch/Irish mix of some sort. ☘️ Off to the Legion for some Guinness – 35 years ago today I was drinkin’ pints at the Shannon Ireland airport coming home from Desert Storm.

SFC D

Had a few in Shannon headed home on R&R from Iraq in 2006. We weren’t allowed to drink until we hit our leave destination, but when the senior officer on our flight (LTC) headed for the pub, then stopped and looked at the group of senior NCO’s standing there. We decided that we’d be failing as NCO’s if we did not go in and support that officer. And support we did.

Eggs

I’m sure you all brought a happy tear to his eye. Never leave a man behind !

USAFRetired

During multiple deployments to SOUTHERN WATCH. NORTHERN WATCH, and PROVIDE COMFORT, I passed through Shannon multiple times. Being a son of Eire, I indulged, my choice being Beamish Irish Red. I learned to order two because the line to get a second one was too long so order up front. Being a fan of WEB Griffin’s books I hit the duty free on the concourse and got a bottle of Famous Grouse. Its still unopened.

Eggs

That was our only trip via Ireland, during our ONW/Provide Comfort and OSW trips it was either military if you were first in/last out with aircraft and equipment or the good old rotator via Baltimore. I had some Murphy’s Red Ale at Paddy’s in Rota on my final deployment, we used to be able to get their stout here locally but that disappeared a couple of years ago.

SFC D

Always liked Murphy’s. Just a little sweeter than Guinness.

SFC D

I managed to get two bottles of Bushmill’s ten year single malt home.

Sailorcurt

I wonder if they’re starting to regret disbanding most of the Airborne Mine CounterMeasures (AMCM) squadrons from the Navy?

Even so, I understand HM-15 maintains a detachment in Bahrain, I would think they’d be part of this discussion.

BTW: I did a tour in HM-14 back in the late ’90’s.

jeff LPH 3 63-66

When we med moored at Gitmo back in the day for a visit and a Liberty call, I remember going into the landing dock on our utility boat and passing sweeps and tin cans at piers on the right hand side. While at med moor, we used our motor whaleboat to circle the ship until we left. Being the boat engineer and aft bowhook we had a gunners mate with a box of hand grenades and an M-1 Garand rifle. Gunners mate tells us that if we see any bubbles coming up from the water to let him know and the grenades would go overboard..Going into town we had to walk I thinkm it was called the bloody mile due to drunk sailors and Marines fighting and maybe because of the mine field on our left side in front of the large fences that divided the base from Cuba. Couple of sailors were killed by a mine a few years before we were there. Few years ago, Guy sees my cap and tells me about when they were in gitmo back in the early 1950’s, a couple of sailors walked into cuba to gamble and have some suds and got drunk. Cuban PD puts them in jail and the next day a couple of gunners Mates walk into the jail with Thompson sub guns and tells the jailer the ship is leaving and our guys are going with us..I guess I went off on another tangent AGAIN. I should make a long story short like the song Beans put up awhile ago.. Later Alligator.

MustangCryppie

I was watching “What’s going on with shipping” on YouTube yesterday and he mentioned that we only have 3 minesweepers in the USN and two of them are now in Malaysia!

Prior Service (Ret)

I guess we can put a front-end date on when planning for Epic Fury started.

My entire life has been punctuated at regular intervals by a recurring phrase. Something about Iran and maybe it sounds like, “mining the straits.” I don’t remember the specifics…. I am just an old army guy but where I come from, we got rid of mines (via MCLC!) before moving through. I guess it’s different with boats…(heavy sarc applied).

26Limabeans

If people would just mine their own business….

Toxic Deplorable B Woodman

Yours, mines, and ours….

jeff LPH 3 63-66

RIM SHOT

AW1Ed

Any ship can be a minesweeper. Once.

SFC D

And then it becomes a submarine.

Not a Lawyer

Not sure how the Iranians are going to lay mines without boats or aircraft? Roll them into the sea? Enlist a tanker for a certain to be one time mission with a suicidal crew? I guess there might be a way to do it.

Sounds like the perfect mission for a combat ineffective vessel like the LCS to go after a non-existent threat. Maybe they can also be enlisted to handle the surrender of Cuba? Which is basically on its knees waiting to be decapitated. Its an island after all. Then we can give the rest to Mexico, so they can pretend to have a Navy?

MustangCryppie

I’m sure they have plenty of volunteers to push them into the strait!

“Get in there, Muhammad! You’ll be fine!”

Last edited 1 day ago by MustangCryppie
MustangCryppie

“Happy St. Patty’s to all you Irish ba****** out there.”

Go raibh mile maith agat! Lá Fheile Padraig sona doaibh!