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Autonomous Systems: Land & Sea
3JUL

US prime digs into UK seabed war

4 min read
10:14UTC

At the Combined Naval Event from 19 to 21 May, US shipbuilder HII pushed its uncrewed underwater vehicles toward the Royal Navy through British partner Babcock under the ARMOR Force initiative.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

An American firm is embedding in Britain's underwater robot fleet through a UK partner, not selling from abroad.

At the Combined Naval Event from 19 to 21 May in Farnborough, the American shipbuilder HII pushed its uncrewed underwater vehicles toward the Royal Navy through a British partner. 1 An uncrewed underwater vehicle (UUV) is a submarine-shaped robot that runs without a crew, used to hunt mines, inspect seabed cables, and scout ahead of manned ships. HII said it has delivered more than 750 REMUS UUVs to over 30 countries, and that a REMUS 600 was launched and recovered through the torpedo tube of the submarine USS Delaware. That manoeuvre lets a submerged boat send a robot ahead to scout or hunt mines without surfacing.

The UK hook is the tie-up with Britain's Babcock on the Autonomous Maritime Operations and Recovery initiative (ARMOR Force) for the Royal Navy, plus an enlarged HII facility at Portchester in Hampshire, positioned as a European hub for allied navies. Routing the pitch through Babcock and a UK site converts a US export bid into a British industrial presence that is harder to displace on sovereignty grounds, the same ground on which European buyers are pressing for home-built kit.

L3Harris said on 27 May its sub-launched Iver4 900 underwater vehicle is in delivery to the US Navy under a Defense Innovation Unit contract, a marker of how fast torpedo-tube-launched robots are reaching the fleet. 2 Both HII and L3Harris demonstrated the launch-and-recovery trick within the same window. For European navies the read is procurement urgency, since seabed cables and pipelines now sit inside the threat picture and the robots to defend them are arriving from American primes first.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

HII's REMUS family are underwater robots launched from a submarine's torpedo tube; they can search the seabed for mines, gather intelligence, or inspect undersea cables without a crew aboard. The parent submarine stays hidden while its robot scouts ahead, which is why navies pay large sums for this capability. At a UK naval conference in May, the American shipbuilder HII showed the Royal Navy its REMUS and ROMULUS underwater robots, working through its British partner Babcock. HII has already sold over 750 of these vehicles to more than 30 countries. A separate US company, L3Harris, also announced its Iver4 900 torpedo-launched robot is now being delivered to the US Navy. Both pitches are part of a push by US firms to supply the UK and European navies as demand for underwater surveillance rises.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The Royal Navy's receptiveness to US-origin subsea autonomy has one primary structural driver: the decommissioning of the UK's dedicated mine countermeasures and hydrographic capability at a pace that outstrips domestic procurement.

When the Batch 1 River-class offshore patrol vessels were sold, and as the Hunt and Sandown mine hunter fleets age, the gap between what the Royal Navy needs to do and what its own hulls can deliver has widened. ARMOR Force offers a faster route to subsea ISR and minehunting capability than a clean-sheet UK programme.

For HII, the strategic logic is market consolidation ahead of an expected NATO-wide increase in UUV procurement following the Red Sea cable-cutting incidents of 2023-24 and Baltic seabed infrastructure attacks. Establishing a European support hub before that procurement wave arrives creates a switching cost for Allied navies: a Royal Navy fleet using REMUS 600 for torpedo-tube operations will naturally prefer to re-order from HII's Portchester hub rather than convert to a competing system.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    HII's Portchester European hub and Babcock partnership create a US-origin UUV supply chain embedded in UK sovereign infrastructure, making future Royal Navy procurement of competing European platforms structurally harder.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Risk

    French and German AUV manufacturers face a narrowing window to establish equivalent reference sales with a NATO tier-one navy before US-origin platforms set the interoperability standard for Allied submarine-launched UUV operations.

    Short term · Suggested
  • Precedent

    USS Delaware's torpedo-tube REMUS 600 demonstration is the first publicly confirmed instance of a UK-allied navy certifying a US UUV for submarine-tube launch, establishing a technical baseline for joint Allied subsea operations.

    Immediate · Assessed
First Reported In

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Naval News· 29 May 2026
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