Australia to decommission HMAS Sirius in December 2021

by Ridzwan Rahmat


        Royal Australian Navy's replenishment tanker HMAS 
        Sirius
        . The vessel will be retired in December 2021. 
       (Chris Sattler)

Royal Australian Navy's replenishment tanker HMAS Sirius . The vessel will be retired in December 2021. (Chris Sattler)

The Royal Australian Navy (RAN) will retire its supply vessel HMAS Sirius in December 2021.

The service announced on 3 September via an official social media channel that Sirius has begun its final deployment before it is decommissioned at the end of the year. It will operate in Southeast Asia and the Southwest Pacific during this deployment.

Prior to its service with the RAN in 2006, Sirius was the double-hulled commercial product tanker MV Delos. It was purchased by the Australian government in 2004 and converted to meet the RAN's underway replenishment requirements.

As part of its modifications, Sirius was fitted with a flight deck for vertical replenishment (VERTREP) operations and refuelling masts for at-sea supply missions.

The 191 m vessel displaces 46,000 tonnes at full load and can carry 35,000 m3 of fuel including 5,500 m3 of aviation gasoline. It is equipped with transfer points for victuals, water, and fuel and can replenish two ships at a time.

With the retirement of Sirius


Get the full article by
Already a Janes subscriber? Keep reading


Rafale enters Croatian service

by Gareth Jennings

One of the first six Rafales to be delivered to Croatia. Deliveries of all 12 aircraft will be complete by mid-2025. (Dassault)

Croatia has inducted into service the Dassault Rafale combat aircraft it recently received from France.

The manufacturer announced the milestone on 25 April, saying the first six of 12 Rafales had been formally received into service by the Croatian Air Force (Hrvatsko ratno zrakoplovstvo i protuzračna obrana: HRZ i PZO).

Having been handed over to the Croatian Ministry of Defence (MoD) at the French Air and Space Force (Armée de l'Air et de l'Espace: AAE) base at Mont-de-Marsan in France in 2023, these initial aircraft were received into the 91 operational base near Zagreb in a ceremony that was attended by Croation Prime Minister Andrej Plenković and Minister of Defence Ivan Anušić.

With the Rafale to be operated by 191 Squadron, the first of the follow-on batch of six aircraft will arrive in Croatia by the end of 2024 to complete the unit by mid-2025.

For more information on the Croatian Air Force, please seeCroatia – Air Force .


Get the full article by
Already a Janes subscriber? Keep reading


Italy to enhance SSA with new ground-based sensors

by Olivia Savage

Flyeye is a multiple-optics telescope with a very wide field of view that will be capable of classifying objects in space as small as 15 cm in LEO and 35 cm in MEO. The 6.5 m high and 4 m wide telescope will be used by the Italian Space Agency and military for SSA. (OHB Italia)

The Italian National Armaments Directorate (NAD) is procuring three ground-based sensors to enhance the country's space situational awareness (SSA), Janes learnt at the Military Space Situational Awareness Conference 2024, held in London from 22 to 24 April.

In total, two optical telescopes and one high-performance radar are being procured as part of its national SSA plans, Lieutenant Colonel Ferdinando Dolce, the head of SSA at NAD, said at the conference.

The first sensor being procured is a high-performance optical surveillance telescope from OHB Italia called Flyeye, Lt Col Dolce said.

Flyeye will have the capacity to monitor objects in low Earth orbit (LEO), medium Earth orbit (MEO), and geostationary orbit (GEO), Commander of the Space Situational Awareness Centre at the Italian Air Force Colonel Dario Tarantino told Janes


Get the full article by
Already a Janes subscriber? Keep reading


HMS Diamond shoots down Houthi missile in Red Sea

by Kate Tringham

HMS Diamond shoots down a missile fired by Iranian-backed Houthis from Yemen over the Gulf of Aden using its Sea Viper missile system – the first time a Royal Navy warship has intercepted a missile in combat since 1991. (Royal Navy/Crown Copyright)

The UK Royal Navy's (RN's) Daring (Type 45)-class destroyer HMS Diamond (D 34) has successfully engaged an anti-ship ballistic missile (ASBM) launched by Yemen-based Ansar Allah (commonly known as Houthi) rebels targeting a merchant ship in the Gulf of Aden, the service confirmed on 25 April.

During the incident, which took place around 1151 h local time (Sanaa time) on 24 April, Diamond used its Sea Viper anti-air guided weapon system to shoot down the missile, the navy said. According to a US Central Command (CENTCOM) statement issued on 25 April, the missile was likely targeting the US-flagged, owned, and operated merchant vessel MV Yorktown, which has 18 US and four Greek crew members onboard.

No injuries or damage was sustained by the ship or its crew, CENTCOM said.

Diamond


Get the full article by
Already a Janes subscriber? Keep reading


https://www.janes.com/defence-news/naval-weapons/latest/australia-to-decommission-hmas-sirius-in-december-2021

The Royal Australian Navy (RAN) will retire its supply vessel HMAS Sirius in December 2021.

Latest Podcasts

Iran Israel analysis

In this podcast Janes analysts discuss the Iranian attacks on Israel on the 14 April. They highlight the military systems used by Iran and the performance and impact of these on Israel. They also discuss the implications of this attack goi...

Listen now

A focus on Libya

China Taiwan relations

AI applications for OSINT in defence

Tracking the situation in Israel-Gaza using OSINT

Janes Case Studies

Using Janes Intara to build a common intelligence picture: Russian build up on the Ukrainian border

View Case Study

Assessing threats in the South China Sea 

A competitive assessment of the military aircraft market

Identifying an unknown aircraft

Case study: Using Interconnected Intelligence to Monitor Russian Troop Movement

News Categories

Request Consultation

Request a free consultation to discover how Janes can provide you with assured, interconnected open-source intelligence.

Sea Details