Tag Archives: Trieste LHD

Italy Finally has an Aircraft Carrier

Italy got into the seaplane tender biz in February 1915 when they bought the aging 392-ft./7,100-ton Spanish-built freighter Quarto and, as Europa, converted the vessel to operate a half-dozen or so FBA flying boats. Taking part in the Battle of the Strait of Otranto against the bottled-up Austro-Hungarian fleet in 1917, she was discarded after the war.

In 1925, Rome bought the incomplete passenger/mail steamer Citta di Messina and, sending her to the La Spezia for completion, produced Giuseppe Miraglia.

Italian seaplane carrier Giuseppe Miraglia entering Taranto. Look at all those Macchis…

She wasn’t a giant ship, just under 400-feet long with a light draft of 4,500-tons. But Miraglia was fast enough for naval use (21 knots) and with enough room for as many as 20 seaplanes of assorted sizes. Her war was lackluster, ending it under British guns at Malta.

Meanwhile, Italy’s first planned aircraft carrier– a respectable 772-foot leviathan by the name of L’Aquila (Eagle) converted from an unfinished ocean liner– was left under construction at Genoa in 1943.

Italian aircraft carrier Aquila in drydock at Genoa in 1942. She would never be completed

Although it was envisioned she would carry up to 56 aircraft, the Italian eagle was never completed and finally scrapped at La Spezia in 1952. A sistership, Sparviero, never even got that far, making Miraglia the sole Italian aviation ship fielded in WWII.

After flirting with Vittorio Veneto in the 1970s and 80s, a so-called “helicopter cruiser” capable of carrying six SH-3D Sea Kings or larger numbers of smaller whirlybirds; the Italian government placed an order for several AV-8B Harriers in 1990 for use on the newly completed 13,000-ton ASW carrier Giuseppe Garibaldi, returning the country’s fleet to a fixed-wing capability that it hadn’t seen since Miraglia steamed for exile in Malta in 1943.

Today, it is thought that the carrier 27,000-ton Harrier carrier Cavour will retire her aging AV-8Bs for a squadron of operational Italian F-35Bs by 2024, right at 99 years after Miraglia was conceived. Except the vessel won’t be beholden to seaplanes or Harriers, a first.

Speaking of which, on 30 July, the first Italian F-35B landed on Cavour while the now-Lightning carrier was operating in the Gulf of Taranto.

On the journey to get there: 

In related news, the current operational British Lightning carrier, HMS Queen Elizabeth (R08), entered the tense waters of the South China Sea last week, with F-35Bs of RAF 617 Squadron and the USMC’s VMFA-211 taking to the air during the evolution. 

Italian Stallion

In Naples over the weekend, Fincantieri launched the Italian Naval Ship Trieste ( L9890), a “multipurpose amphibious unit.”

A big girl at some 33,000-tons and officially classed as a Landing Helicopter Dock (LHD) she is expected to replace 1980s-vintage 13,000-ton 1980s Italian “Harrier carrier” Giuseppe Garibaldi around 2022.

Able to carry a battalion of troops, EH101 and NH90 helicopters, as well as at least a squadron of F-35B Lightning strike aircraft, Trieste will be Italy’s largest carrier, ever, and the largest warship for the country since the ill-fated Vittorio Veneto-class battleship Roma was commissioned in 1942.

She will also be the fourth largest carrier in NATO, behind the two new British Queen Elizabeth-class flattops and the aging French De Gaulle. In terms of amphibious assault ships, she will be the only LHD under a European banner, is the largest non-U.S. ‘phib in NATO, and is nearly the size of American Wasp-class vessels. Further, they are a good bit larger than Japan’s controversial Izumo-class light carriers multi-purpose destroyers which Tokyo is currently modifying to facilitate carrying F-35Bs.