The shadow defence secretary has made a bizarre blunder where he confused a current Royal Navy ship with a fictional vessel from James Bond.
The private visit that has heightened speculation that the incoming US administration could seek to take control of the Danish territory.
In a blunder worthy a 'licence to confuse', the Shadow Defence Secretary James Cartlidge asked the Ministry of Defence about the cost of fixing the non-existent HMS Devonshire.
Annmarie McCarthy has been running The Swan Inn in Barton Stacey for several years but says it has become a "nightmare" ...
A Defense Ministry spokesperson denies that both countries have discussed a possible cooperation on Mogami-class frigates.
Indonesian Minister of Defense Sjafrie Sjamsoeddin received a visit from his Japanese counterpart, Gen. Nakatani, on Tuesday ...
Naval assets take years to build, and therefore, not only is futuristic force planning essential, but indigenous projects ...
THE Tories’ defence chief got a ship from James Bond confused with a real Navy one in a query to officials. James Cartlidge ...
The UK will lead an operation to track potential threats to undersea infrastructure and monitor the Russian shadow fleet, ...
Indian Navy’s latest stealth frigate, INS Tushil has arrived at the Port of Dakar in Senegal as part of its ongoing operational deployment. The Defence Ministry said that INS Tushil will engage in ...
Tokyo has all but thrown out the legal limitations set in Article 9 of the constitution, which bans Japan from acquiring ...