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British Navy Wildcats in Two-Ship Formation Armed with Martlet Missiles Reinforce Air Defences Over Cyprus.
On March 30, 2026, official Royal Navy communication highlighted how the crews and Wildcat helicopters of 815 Naval Air Squadron continue to support Ministry of Defence tasking as British operations remain active in the Eastern Mediterranean.
The message comes as HMS Dragon operates in the region to defend UK assets and support allied security efforts. The image of Wildcats flying in two-ship formation over British Forces Cyprus draws attention to a British posture built around readiness, mobility and layered protection. The development underlines the growing importance of maritime aviation in countering evolving aerial threats.
Royal Navy Wildcat helicopters armed with Martlet missiles are actively reinforcing air defences over Cyprus, signaling a layered and mobile UK response to rising drone and low-altitude threats in the Eastern Mediterranean (Picture Source: Royal British Navy)
The latest development centres on the visible deployment of Royal Navy Wildcat helicopters from 815 Naval Air Squadron over Cyprus, in parallel with the presence of HMS Dragon in the Eastern Mediterranean. More than a symbolic formation flight, the patrol reflects an operational message of preparedness and deterrence at a time when British forces must remain ready to protect bases, personnel and regional access routes. In a theatre shaped by persistent instability and the growing use of drones and stand-off threats, the Royal Navy is demonstrating that it can sustain an integrated defensive posture close to key UK installations.
The Wildcat HMA2 is a maritime battlefield helicopter designed for multi-role operations from both ships and shore bases. In Royal Navy service, it supports surveillance, force protection, target acquisition, surface attack and broader fleet support missions. Equipped with advanced electro-optical and infrared sensors, modern avionics and digital mission systems, the aircraft gives commanders a responsive airborne platform able to detect, identify and track threats across a wide area. Its compact naval design also allows rapid embarkation and deployment, making it particularly suited to expeditionary operations in contested maritime environments.
Armed with Martlet lightweight multirole missiles, the Wildcat gains a precision engagement capability against fast, agile and lightly protected targets. Martlet has been associated primarily with the defeat of fast inshore attack craft and asymmetric surface threats, but its integration on the Wildcat also provides an increasingly valuable counter-drone function. Combined with the helicopter’s sensor suite, the missile offers a short-range intercept option against low-signature aerial targets that might otherwise threaten fixed positions, warships or support infrastructure. This pairing of platform and weapon gives the Royal Navy a flexible response tool for modern air-defence and force-protection missions.
The use of two Wildcats in formation improves coverage, persistence and mutual support. A two-ship package can extend the surveillance envelope, maintain continuous observation over sensitive areas and complicate hostile drone ingress routes by presenting multiple intercept axes. It also gives local commanders greater flexibility in assigning one aircraft to tracking and another to engagement or overwatch. Around British Forces Cyprus, such an arrangement strengthens the immediate defensive screen and supports a more agile response to low-altitude and rapidly emerging threats.
The strategic value of this deployment is equally clear. By combining Wildcat helicopters armed with Martlet missiles and the area air-defence capabilities of HMS Dragon, the United Kingdom is displaying a layered approach to regional security. That matters in the Eastern Mediterranean, where military movements, regional tensions and the spread of uncrewed systems continue to reshape operational planning. Britain is showing that it can deploy credible maritime-air power not only to protect its own assets, but also to contribute actively to the wider security architecture supporting allied presence in the region.
This also reflects a broader shift in British defence posture, in which naval aviation is not limited to surveillance or transport support but forms part of a distributed defensive network. Lessons from recent conflicts have shown the growing danger posed by low-cost drones, compressed warning timelines and saturation-style attacks. In that environment, a mobile helicopter armed with precision missiles becomes a practical and adaptable asset. The Royal Navy’s message is clear: British maritime forces remain capable of meeting contemporary threats with trained crews, deployable systems and a force structure designed for real operational demands.
The deployment of 815 Naval Air Squadron Wildcats with Martlet missiles over Cyprus sends a firm signal about British capability and intent in the Eastern Mediterranean. Supported by HMS Dragon, the Royal Navy is fielding a defensive posture that combines mobility, precision and layered protection around UK forces and installations. At a time when aerial threats are becoming faster, cheaper and harder to detect, Britain is proving that its naval aviation and fleet assets remain ready to defend national interests and uphold allied security in a demanding theatre.
Written by Teoman S. Nicanci – Defense Analyst, Army Recognition Group
Teoman S. Nicanci holds degrees in Political Science, Comparative and International Politics, and International Relations and Diplomacy from leading Belgian universities, with research focused on Russian strategic behavior, defense technology, and modern warfare. He is a defense analyst at Army Recognition, specializing in the global defense industry, military armament, and emerging defense technologies.