SATURDAY: Iranian man and Romanian woman arrested at Faslane nuclear base …

LATEST: SECURITY BREACH AT FASLANE
Two people have been arrested after trying to enter the naval base in Scotland where Britain’s nuclear submarines are based.
They will appear at Dumbarton Sheriff Court on Monday.
It is claimed that the man is Iranian and the woman in Romanian. 
A Police Scotland spokesman said: “Around 5pm on Thursday, 19 March, 2026, we were made aware of two people attempting to enter HM Naval Base Clyde. A 34-year-old man and 31-year-old woman have been arrested in connection and inquiries are ongoing.”

by Iona Young, BBC Scotland News

Additional reporting by Bill Heaney

An Iranian man has been arrested with a woman after trying to enter the HM Naval Base Clyde at Faslane on the Gareloch, home to the UK’s nuclear-armed submarines.

Police Scotland said a 34-year-old man and 31-year-old woman were arrested at the base near Helensburgh at about 17:00 on Thursday.

The woman’s nationality is unknown, but it is understood she is not Iranian.

The Royal Navy said the suspects “unsuccessfully attempted” to enter the base, which on the landward side is surrounded by high wire security fences.

The spokesperson added: “As the matter is subject to an ongoing investigation, we will not comment further.”

It is understood that the pair did not try to force their way into the base.

They asked if they could enter but were refused permission and were arrested shortly afterwards. Police Scotland said its inquiries were ongoing.

The Faslane base is home to all the Royal Navy’s nuclear submarines.

This includes the UK’s four Vanguard-class ballistic missile submarines which carry Trident nuclear missiles.

A partially submerged missile-armed Vanguard-class submarinesFaslane’s Vanguard submarines are the sole platforms for the UK’s nuclear weapons

The arrests come after the US and Israel launched wide-ranging strikes on Iran, killing the country’s supreme leader on 28 February.

Iran has responded by launching attacks on Israel and US-allied states in the Gulf.

Defence secretary John Healey said the UK was reviewing its terror threat level. It remains at “substantial” meaning an attack is “likely”.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, said the UK had “stepped up protections for British bases and personnel to their highest level.”

It was not clear whether he was referring only to bases in the Middle East and the Mediterranean or to all bases at home and abroad.

An infographic titled “Trident submarine” featuring a large photo of a surfaced Trident-class submarine moving through the water with crew members standing on the hull. Below the photo is a world map with a shaded blue arc representing the 4,000‑nautical‑mile missile range. A label points to the submarine’s location on the map. A section explains that the UK has four Trident submarines, illustrated with red submarine icons showing that one is armed and at sea, one is undergoing maintenance, and two are in port or on training manoeuvres. A size comparison at the bottom contrasts a red silhouette of a Vanguard‑class submarine (150m long, with 132 crew, 16 missiles, and 48 warheads) with the grey silhouette of an Airbus A380 (73m long). A BBC credit line cites the Royal Navy and the Strategic Defence Review as sources.

Faslane has long been the focus of anti-war protests from groups such as the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND). There is a permanent peace camp at the south gate, which has been there since 1982.

The camp began as a protest against the Thatcher government’s decision to purchase the Trident nuclear missile system, but remains nearly 40 years later.

The community, composed of residents living in caravans and temporary structures, holds regular anti-nuclear demonstrations, vigils, and direct actions against nuclear weapons.

Faslane’s Vanguard submarines are the sole platform for the UK’s nuclear weapons and are due to be replaced by the new Dreadnought-class submarines after 2030.

It is also the home of Astute-class nuclear powered but conventionally armed attack submarines.

The UK’s stock of nuclear warheads is based nearby at the Royal Naval Armaments Depot (RNAD) Coulport on nearby Loch Long.

The UK has operated continuous at-sea deterrence since 1969, with first Polaris and then Trident missiles stored on and launched from nuclear-powered submarines with the capacity to remain submerged at sea for months.

One comment

  1. Yes an Iranian man and a woman have been arrested trying to enter the Faslane naval base.

    Elsewhere the British base of Deigo Garcia some 2,400 miles from Iran has come under Iranian ballistic missile attack.

    Maybe of course no surprise when the UK is facilitating US bombing missions from both Fairford in England and Deigo Garcia whilst deploying UK boots on the ground.

    And here was us being told by Starmer that we are not involved and by Trump that the war is over and objectives achieved.

    This was not our war. But it is now as British bases come under attack from a so called defeated Iran.

    Let us pray that the arrest of an Iranian trying to access the nuclear base at Faslane was not a prelude to an attack here.

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