By Jim Garamone DoD News, Defense Media Activity
EDINBURGH, Scotland, Aug. 25, 2017 — The chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff arrived here today to visit British bases and to attend
the Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo as the guest of the British Chief of
Defense Staff Air Chief Marshal Stuart Peach.
Marine Corps Gen. Joe Dunford will visit the Rosyth
shipyard, where the future HMS Prince of Wales is being built. The aircraft
carrier will be the second of the Queen Elizabeth-class British aircraft
carriers and will carry 35 F-35B Lightning II aircraft.
Officials expect the carrier, now 80 percent complete, will
be turned over to the Royal Navy in 2019.
Carrier Resurgence
The Royal Navy is re-entering the aircraft carrier business
in a big way. Britain decommissioned the HMS Ark Royal, its last aircraft
carrier, in 2010. The HMS Queen Elizabeth began sea trials in June. The
65,000-ton carrier has exercised with U.S. and NATO forces and Royal Navy
personnel embarked on the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush to train for
operations aboard the HMS Queen Elizabeth.
The Queen Elizabeth and Prince of Wales are identical and
are the largest ships ever built for the Royal Navy, officials said.
The chairman will also visit the Royal Navy submarine base
at Her Majesty’s Naval Base Clyde, where he will meet with sailors and Royal
Marines.
The chairman will attend the Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo
at Edinburgh Castle, where he will join Peach in taking the salute. The
highlight of the event is the Massed Pipes and Drums celebrating the
contributions of Scottish service members worldwide.
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