Diamond’s sleek lines are designed for stealth at sea, appearing virtually invisible on enemy radar.
HMS Diamond, which has cutting-edge military sensors to detect and track multiple targets, is equipped with 48 Sea Viper missiles – long-range, precision weapons capable of reaching supersonic speeds of Mach 4.5 and each costing more than £1m.
The weapon system can launch eight missiles in under 10 seconds and guide up to 16 missiles simultaneously.
Other armaments include a 4.5in main gun, 30mm cannon, 20mm rapid-fire Gatling guns, anti-ship Harpoon missiles and an anti-torpedo defence system.
The destroyer, which can reach 30 knots and has a range of 7,000 nautical miles, is equipped with a distinctive SAMPSON radar system – a large, spherical surveillance device that can detect and track threats from over 250 miles away, as well as guide friendly missiles.
Unlike conventional radars, it can perform several functions at once, has immense range and accuracy and is immune to enemy jamming.
It also has a flight deck for a single helicopter.
HMS Lancaster
The Type 23 frigate, which has a top speed of 28 knots and a range of 7,800 nautical miles, is the core of the Royal Navy’s frontline fleet because of its all-round operational effectiveness.
Originally designed for anti-submarine warfare during the Cold War, its technology and weaponry has since been updated to handle virtually any threat.
The warship’s 4.5-inch gun can provide artillery bombardment of shore targets, firing up to 24 high explosive shells per minute (each weighing 40kg) up to 18 miles away.
It is also equipped with Harpoon long-range anti-ship missiles and the cutting-edge Sea Ceptor air defence system, which can guard an area of 500 square miles and engage multiple targets at the same time.
HMS Richmond, another Type 23 frigate, is also on its way to the region.
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0:38
US and British strikes hit Yemen
RAF Typhoons
Although not based in the Gulf, four of the multi-role combat aircraft, flying from Cyprus, were used to carry out strikes against Houthi military targets in Yemen.
The long-range mission was made possible by a Voyager air refuelling tanker.
Capable of reaching a top speed of Mach 1.8, the FGR4 Typhoon has a maximum altitude of 55,000ft.
From brakes off it can reach Mach 1.5 at 35,000ft in less than two minutes 30 seconds.
Armed with a 27mm Mauser cannon it is capable of range of missiles and precision-guided bombs.
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0:46
Houthi target hit by RAF in Yemen
Paveway IV guided bombs
The highly accurate precision weapons used by the Typhoons in the attacks on Houthi facilities are capable of destroying the majority of targets while minimising collateral damage.
The RAF’s go-to weapon has been in operational use since 2008.
Costing about £30,000 each and weighing 226kg, the Paveway has four main parts – the guidance system in the front, a 500lb warhead in the middle (which can penetrate concrete) and, at the back, the tail section guides the bomb, with a smart fuse to control how it detonates.
GPS is one way the bomb can be guided to its target, but as a dual-mode weapon it can also be directed using a laser.
United States
USS Dwight D Eisenhower
The nuclear-powered Nimitz-class aircraft carrier was sent to the region to “deter hostile actions against Israel or any efforts toward widening this war following Hamas’s attack on Israel”, according to US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin.
Described by the US Navy as its “finest five-star aircraft carrier”, the 1,092ft-long vessel has a top speed of more than 30 knots.
With a personnel of around 5,000 it can carry in the region of 60 aircraft.
It is accompanied by a Carrier Strike Group, which includes USS Philippine Sea, a guided-missile cruiser, and USS Gravely and USS Mason.
USS Laboon, a destroyer, is also operating in the Red Sea.
The warships have a range of armaments including surface-to-air missiles, guns and and close-in weapons systems.
They also have electronic warfare capabilities that could cut the links between drones and their on-shore controllers.
Image: An F/A-18 Super Hornet launches from the USS Dwight D Eisenhower
F/A-18 Super Hornet
The advanced warplane is the US Navy’s main strike aircraft.
It has been likened to a power tool with various attachments in that it can be configured for different types of missions.
Equipped with a 20mm rotary cannon it can also carry air-to-air and air-to-surface missiles and a variety of other weapons.
The jet can reach a speed of Mach 1.8 and climb to 50,000ft, with a range of 1,275 nautical miles.
The advanced cockpit system includes a touchscreen display providing the pilot with the capability to see, track and target multiple long-range targets.
Tomahawk missiles
Image: Tomahawk cruise missiles can fly ‘evasive’ routes
The US Navy’s low-flying Tomahawk cruise missiles can deliver a 1,000lb conventional warhead hundreds of miles inland.
Launched from either ships or submarines, Tomahawks fly at subsonic speeds on “evasive” or indirect routes which can beat air defence systems.
The missiles are GPS-guided so can change targets or courses after launch.
A 15-year-old boy has been sentenced to life with a minimum term of 16 years for murdering Sheffield schoolboy Harvey Willgoose in a lunch break knife attack.
Harvey, also 15, was stabbed twice in the chest by Mohammed Umar Khan outside their school cafeteria in February this year.
At Sheffield Crown Court, Judge Mrs Justice Ellenbogen told Mohammed Umar Khan his “senseless acts” followed a “long-standing interest in weapons”.
She added the murder had a “devastating effect on Harvey’s family” and their lives have been “blighted by your actions”.
Khan, who can now be named after the judge lifted reporting restrictions, took a 13cm hunting knife with him to All Saints Catholic High School.
Image: Mohammed Umar Khan, Harvey Willgoose’s killer, has been sentenced at Sheffield Crown Court. Pic: South Yorkshire Police
Image: Khan stabbed Harvey Willgoose with a 13cm hunting knife. Pic: South Yorkshire Police
CCTV showed Harvey arriving at the school, with earlier footage showing the attacker trying to provoke Harvey, who remained calm.
The attacker was also seen in footage holding a knife in the canteen before the stabbing.
Image: CCTV footage captured Khan arriving at school on the day of the fatal stabbing. Pic: South Yorkshire Police
Khan had previously admitted to manslaughter but denied murder. But in August, he was found guilty at Sheffield Crown Courtby a majority verdict of 11 to one.
Defence lawyers claimed the boy had “lost control” after years of bullying and “an intense period of fear at school”.
He told teachers after the stabbing “you know I can’t control it” and “I’m not right in the head”.
Image: Harvey Willgoose (L) was murdered by Mohammed Umar Khan (R). Pics: PA/Ben Lack Photography
Doesn’t look like he’s sorry
Speaking outside court, Harvey Willgoose’s mother, Caroline, said she was relieved the case was over.
“I feel like a big weight’s been lifted off my shoulders, to be honest. He [Khan] doesn’t look like he’s sorry but I just hope that’s his mask.”
Image: Harvey was stabbed outside of the school cafeteria. Pic: Ben Lack Photography Limited
Caroline Willgoose, whose father died last week, also spoke to Sky News about the anti-knife campaigns she was developing following the death of Harvey.
“He were funny, he were caring, and that’s how I want him to be remembered. I hate him being remembered as the school kid that got stabbed to death in school. He’d hate that.”
Asked about her thoughts of Khan, she said: “I don’t really have any feelings for him. I don’t know whether they’ll come… but I do feel like he’s been let down. They’ve both been let down.”
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2:22
My son has been ‘let down’
‘Popular, energetic, full-loving’
Steve Davies, chief executive of St Clare Catholic Multi Academy Trust, which operates All Saints Catholic High School, described Harvey as “a popular, energetic and fun-loving pupil who is dearly missed every day by the whole school community”.
He added: “Our thoughts are first and foremost with Harvey’s family, loved ones and friends. We cannot begin to imagine the depth of their loss and our deepest sympathies go out to them today and every day.
“Since the conclusion of the trial, the school and trust have been able to engage fully with a number of ongoing investigations aimed at answering key questions about Harvey’s tragic death. We will continue to work closely with these partners and cooperate fully with these investigations.”
Image: Khan pictured holding the weapon used to kill Harvey Willgoose. Pic: South Yorkshire Police
‘Senseless acts’ had ‘devastating effect’
During sentencing on Wednesday, Judge Mrs Justice Ellenbogen told Khan his “senseless acts have had a devastating effect”.
“Harvey’s family is haunted by the CCTV footage of the events of that day, and, exhausted by the trauma in their lives in which his absence is felt every day.”
“It is clear that Harvey was also a popular pupil whom students and teachers held in affection. Their lives, too have been blighted by your actions, which have affected them deeply and will continue to do so.”
Mrs Ellenbogen added that Khan had a “long-standing interest in weapons” and images on his mobile phone showed him posing with hunting-style knives, a machete and a hammer.
She told Khan he had a “long-standing inability to manage your anger”, including three separate school incidents between November 2024 and January 2025 in which he had become angry and aggressive.
The judge told him he would serve a minimum term of 16 years minus time spent in custody, which works out at around 15 years, three months. Khan did not show any obvious emotion as the sentence was passed.
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2:41
Do knife arches make schools safer?
‘Our mental health has been destroyed’
Ahead of sentencing, Harvey’s sister, Sophie Willgoose, described in her victim impact statement the family’s “world was shattered forever” after they were told about his murder.
She added: “The defendant didn’t just end Harvey’s life, he ended ours too. Our mental health has been destroyed.”
Richard Thyne KC, prosecuting, said that while Khan had no previous convictions, he had previously taken an axe and a knife separately on to the school premises.
Khan and Harvey had “fronted up” to one another in confrontations at school, he added.
Attack was ‘split-second decision’
The detective who led the murder investigation said there was evidence that Khan was friends with Harvey until days before the fatal incident.
Following the trial, Detective Chief Inspector Andy Knowles said a relatively trivial incident had led to a “split-second decision to do something which just had dire and terrible consequences”.
“It was the knife that escalated this so quickly and led to consequences which you can’t undo or take back afterwards,” he added.
Focus on knife crime prevention
Kilvinder Vigurs, South Yorkshire’s deputy mayor for policing and crime, said the trial “marks a difficult moment for our region” and more must be done “to protect our children from the threat of knife crime”.
In a statement, he said: “Knife crime is not just a policing issue, it’s a societal one. Our joint focus must be on prevention, education, and early intervention.”
Baby P’s mother has told the parole board she allowed her partner to abuse her son because she wanted her “Prince Charming”.
It is the first time Tracey Connelly, 44, has spoken publicly about her 17-month-old son Peter’s death at their home in Tottenham, north London, on 3 August 2007 since she was jailed in 2009.
Peter, who suffered more than 50 injuries, including fractured ribs and a broken back, was known as Baby P during his mother’s Old Bailey trial, where she initially denied wrongdoing, alongside her boyfriend, Steven Barker, and his brother.
The case sparked outrage as the child was on the at-risk register and received 60 visits from social workers, police and health professionals over eight months.
Connelly was given an indefinite sentence for public protection (IPP) with a minimum term of five years in 2009 after pleading guilty to causing or allowing Peter’s death.
Image: Connelly’s boyfriend Steven Barker jailed for 12 years. Pic: PA
She is making her seventh bid to be released from prison – after being twice recalled over having secret relationships with men she met online – which is being live-streamed from her prison to the International Dispute and Resolution Centre, in London.
Risk to children in her care
She admitted she continues to present a risk to any children in her care, saying: “Given how bad I was at it, I have to accept that’s always a risk if I’m left looking after children, which I can’t see ever being the case.
“Am I a risk to children running down the street? Not at all.”
Connelly, who asked to be called Tracey, could not be seen on screen as she told how her own childhood was “torture”.
“It was extremely traumatic, things that I went through which’s not for public consumption. It was not a life experience I would wish on anyone,” she said.
Connelly said her marriage was on “the last legs” when Peter was born and that she would have loved to “have been a mother where I broke the cycle” but perpetuated it.
She admitted “I was a bad mother” who “failed to protect” Peter after moving Barker into their home before having to take her son to hospital with what she was told were “non-accidental injuries”.
Connelly said “deep down” she knew Barker was abusing him, but was so busy trying to prove all the professionals wrong that “I ignored my gut”.
Image: Tributes left to Baby P. Pic: PA
“There’s a lot more I probably could have done,” she said.
“If I had told the professionals this man was living with me, if I had explained we were more than he was just visiting, there are 101 different things I could have done.
“I’m ashamed to admit I was in my own head, my own bubble, where I wanted my Prince Charming and unfortunately [Peter] paid for that.”
She said her “selfishness” meant Peter was stuck in a “worse situation” which “allowed my son to die”.
Sent back to jail over secret flings
The hearing was told she was first released on licence in 2013, but recalled to prison in 2015 for a breach of conditions after “secretly developing intimate personal relationships” online and had “incited” another resident at her accommodation to “engage in inappropriate behaviour”.
She told the panel she engaged in sexualised chat and sent intimate photos of herself to a man in another country, who didn’t know who she was.
Her applications for release in 2015, 2017 and 2019 were rejected by the board, and while back in custody, she “developed an intimate relationship with another prisoner” which she hid from staff.
She said they would “kiss and cuddle”, but it was “more about friendship”, and she continued the relationship through “jail mail” when they were separated.
The parole hearing was told she “developed an intimate relationship with a man” she met online and concealed it from parole officers by deleting material from her phone to avoid being detected.
Connelly is allowed to have relationships but must report them.
She told how she met a man on an app, giving him a fake backstory, and again sent intimate photos before they met, went for food, to the cinema and to a hotel for the weekend, where they had sex twice.
Her voice broke with emotion as she said: “If I had to tell him who I was, anyone in their right mind would run a mile”, and “how could I ask anyone to be okay with that?”
Visit to a sex club
Asked if she was “obsessed with sex”, Connelly said it was her way of making “a connection, even if it’s only temporary sometimes”.
She said she was openly bisexual, has an interest in BDSM, and visited a sex club after she was last released from prison.
Connelly now works on the care and supervision unit as an orderly in prison and is subjected to daily bullying, abuse and threats, including being spat at, her prisoner offender manager (POM) said.
The POM is recommending her re-release, but the application is opposed by Justice Minister David Lammy.
The three panel members, who have seen a 763-page dossier, will decide if she meets the test for release based on an assessment of her “risk to the public” and are expected to make a decision next month.
Statements from members of Peter’s family were not read in public, but the panel chair, Sally Allbeury, said they expressed “concerns about her potential release” and wanted “conditions to be put in place to protect them” if she is freed.
“We found these statements extremely moving. There can be no doubt Peter’s death has caused life-long harm to those who loved him and as such they are also victims of Ms Connelly’s offending,” she said.
Connelly’s boyfriend, Barker, who Peter called “dad”, was jailed for 12 years, and his brother, Jason Owen, was sentenced to six years on appeal after being convicted in relation to Peter’s death.
Their trial heard how Peter was subjected to a series of assaults of increasing violence for up to eight months before his death, and Connelly was described by the sentencing judge as “manipulative and self-centred with a controlling side and a temper” who had prioritised her relationship with her partner.
One of the frontrunners to become chair of the grooming gang inquiry has withdrawn, blaming “vested interests” and “political opportunism and point-scoring”.
Jim Gamble told the home secretary in a letter there was a “highly charged and toxic environment” around the appointment process and victims “deserve better”.
The ex-police chief and child protection specialist said he needed the confidence of victims and survivors, but it was clear “a lack of confidence due to my previous occupation exists among some”.
Speaking to Sky News, he said he originally viewed the job as an “opportunity of a lifetime” but changed his mind due to a “growing level of toxicity” and misinformation.
He said he had more than 20 years’ experience working with abuse survivors and understood the issues involved.
“To imply for one second I would align myself with any political party to hide their blushes is just nonsense,” said Mr Gamble, who added he was stepping back “with a heavy heart”.
In his letter to the home secretary, Mr Gamble said his decision was “reinforced by the highly charged and toxic environment that has surrounded and influenced the appointment process and the impact this has had on those closest to me”.
He added: “Regrettably, the reaction to the appointment process has been defined more by the vested interests of some, as well as political opportunism and point-scoring, rather than by the cross-party consensus required to address such a serious national issue.
“Victims and survivors, who have been let down so often in the past, deserve better than to be used as leverage for short-term gain by anyone.”
Mr Gamble began his career in Northern Ireland, rising to become head of RUC special branch in Belfast.
However, he is best known for his work combating child abuse, and in 2006 headed up the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre, which revolutionised the approach to policing online child abuse networks.
He was one of two known leading candidates for the role.
Image: Annie Hudson has also withdrawn
The other, Annie Hudson, a former social worker, said earlier this week she no longer wanted to be considered after intense media coverage.
It is understood that the government is exploring a range of other candidates and will provide an update in due course.
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2:50
Rochdale grooming gang jailed
A Home Office spokesperson said: “The grooming gang scandal was one of the darkest moments in this country’s history.
“That is why this government is committed to a full, statutory, national inquiry to uncover the truth. It is the very least that the victims of these hideous crimes deserve.
“We are disappointed that candidates to chair that inquiry have withdrawn. This is an extremely sensitive topic, and we have to take the time to appoint the best person suitable for the role.
“The home secretary has been clear – there will be no hiding place for those who abused the most vulnerable in our society.”
Ms Badenoch asked – on behalf of one of the resigned grooming inquiry members – what the point of an inquiry is if they are just ignored.
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17:34
Grooming gangs: Family’s fight for justice
Mr Starmer said the inquiry “is not and will never be watered down” and that he wanted survivors “to be at the heart of this”.
He added: “I want an inquiry that can get to the truth, these are the hard yards, I accept that. But I want to press on and get this right.”
Asked about Labour’s change in position this year from saying a national inquiry is not necessary to the current situation, the prime minister said: “I want to go as fast as we can to get the justice that is deserved.
“I want to ensure survivors are involved in that, and we’re balancing the two to get this right, and I’ll continue to do so.”
Victim’s father calls for minister to resign
Marlon West, whose daughter Scarlett was a grooming victim who was raped by more than 60 men, has called for safeguarding minister Jess Phillips to resign.
He said he doubted she would, but claimed she “has lost any kind of faith from the public, and more importantly with survivors and families”.
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2:14
PM backs Jess Phillips over grooming gangs
Mr West described the minister in parliament this week as “unprofessional” and “defensive rather than listening to what survivors are saying”.
He also wants to see an inquiry with family members included, alongside survivors, on the panel, and even though he doesn’t want to be included, he said, “it’s the families who are dealing with the services, not so much the survivors”.
Mr West added: “It’s the parents who are dealing with the police, every single day, and social services. It’s really important that they get family perspective. I think they should start again.”
‘Gaslit and manipulated’
Ellie-Ann Reynolds, who withdrew earlier this week, said as soon as they [victims] found out what the two candidates used to do [police and social work], it “raised red flags” as they were involved with “the two institutions that have failed us”.
Mr Gamble’s decision to withdraw was “the right thing to do”, she said, as victims were “gaslit” and “manipulated” during the process and had “very little faith in authorities and systems”.