Kuwait Naval Force

Kuwait Naval Force
Active 1961 (1961)
Country  Kuwait
Branch Military of Kuwait
Type Navy
Size Approx. 2,200 personnel
Part of Kuwait Armed Forces
Garrison/HQ Mohammed Al-Ahmad Kuwait Naval Base
Nickname(s) His Highness Sea Vanguard
Motto(s)

لله والوطن والامير

God, Country & The Emir
Colors Green & Red
Anniversaries National and Liberation Day (25 and 26 February)
Engagements
Commanders
Commander Cdre Jassim Al Ansari
Vice Commander Cdre Mansoor Al Masaad
Umm Al Maradim La Combattante-class missile-attack-craft Al Fahaheel (P3721) in May 2013
Kuwait Naval Force Chief Combat Commander Major General Al-Mulla conducts a troop inspection during a full honor welcome ceremony on board the Washington Navy Yard on February 15, 2005

The Kuwait Naval Force (Arabic: القوة البحرية الكويتية), is the sea-based component of the Kuwait Armed Forces. The headquarters and sole naval base is Mohammed Al-Ahmad Kuwait Naval Base. The Kuwait Naval Force consists of over 2,200 officers and enlisted personnel, excluding approximately 500 coast guard; which are part of General Department of the Coast Guard under the Border Security Directorate of the Kuwait Ministry of Interior.[1][2]

History

Kuwait's Navy was established in 1961[3] shortly after Britain ended the country's protectorate status following Operation Vantage.

During the Invasion of Kuwait and Operation Desert Storm, Kuwait's navy was almost completely destroyed.[4][5] At the start of the invasion, the Iraqi Navy captured and sank five Kuwaiti Lurssen TNC 45 type fast attack craft (missile) and one Lurssen FPB 57 type fast attack craft (missile)[6] and Kuwait Naval Forces also lost 20 other ships to Iraq during the war.[7]

On 11 November 2008, Kuwait Naval Base was the location of the historic signing of the non-legally binding maritime Khawr Abd Allah Protocols otherwise known as the KAA Protocols. The signing of the KAA Protocols by the then respective heads of the Kuwaiti Naval Force and the Iraqi Navy was the first formal and successful maritime bilateral military agreement for the co-ordinated and de-conflicted use of the Khawr Abd Allah waterway since before the 1991 Persian Gulf War. The protocols were developed and mediated by Major David Hammond RM, a British Royal Navy barrister in 2008 and they were subsequently ratified by both the Kuwaiti and Iraqi governments before the 11 November 2008 signing. They were subsequently reported to the US Congress within the December 2008 'Measuring Stability and Security in Iraq' report and the text of which have since become public knowledge following leaks in US diplomatic notes.[8]

Structure and Orgnanization

Part of the present fleet

List Amphibious Vessles and Landing Craft

ClassUnitsNote
Al-Tahaddy LCU 2
Safar (Loadmaster) LCU 1
LCU (ST Marine) 1

List Missile Fast Patrol Boats (MFPB)

ClassUnitsNote
Isitklal (German FPB-57) 1 410 tons full load – 4 MM-40 SSM – commissioned 1983
Al-Sanbouk (German TNC-45) 1 255 tons full load – 4 MM-40 SSM – commissioned 1984
Umm Al Maradim (Combattante P37-BRL) 8 245 tons full load – 4 Sea Skua SSM – commissioned 1998–2000

List Patrol Fighting Vessels

ClassUnitsNote
Intisar (Australian OPV-310) 4
Al-Shaheed (FPB 100K) 3
Subahi (FPB 115) 10
Kassir Inshore Patrol Craft 3
Victory Team (P-46) 16
Inshore Patrol Crafts 50
Mark V Special Operations Craft 10

List Supply Vessels

ClassUnitsNote
Sawahil ( Dorrar Support Ship) 1
Nautilus (Swiftship 176) SDV 2

Future ships

Landing craft, the procurement programme for the Kuwait Navy included the acquisition of two 64 m landing craft, one 42 m landing craft and five 16 m composite landing craft; all will be built at ADSB’s facilities in the Mussafah industrial area(UAE)[9]

See also

Notes

  1. Official Website Sector of the General Department of the Coast Guard, Kuwait Ministry of Interior, (in Arabic)
  2. Naval forces: over 2,200 people (excluding 500 in coastguard)
  3. "Kuwait – Regional and National Security Considerations". Country Studies. Retrieved 17 November 2010.
  4. "Anniversary of Iraqi invasion finds Kuwait free, its neighbor 'contained'". CNN. Archived from the original on 24 March 2007.
  5. "Kuwait Navy". List of Ships in Kuwait Naval Force History
  6. "Saddam's Navy". Globalsecurity.org. Retrieved 17 November 2010.
  7. "Kuwait Navy".List of Ships in Kuwait Naval Force History
  8. "09KUWAIT465: PROTOCOLS ASSIST IRAQI AND KUWAITI NAVIES IN".
  9. http://www.ihs.com/events/exhibitions/idex-2013/news/feb-21/Landing-craft-success-in-Kuwait.aspx

References

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