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Royal Navy of Oman

Naval warfare branch of the Royal Armed Forces of the Sultanate of Oman

Royal Navy of Oman

Naval warfare branch of the Royal Armed Forces of the Sultanate of Oman

FieldValue
unit_nameRoyal Navy of Oman
native_nameالبحرية السلطانية العمانية
imageRoyal Navy of Oman Seal.svg
image_size200px
captionNaval Ensign of Oman
start_dateorigin 807 CE. formal 1650 CE.
1970 (official)
countryOman
typeNavy
size4,200 personnel
garrisonMuratafat Al Matar Muscat
colorsBlue and Yellow
equipment5 corvettes
12 patrol vessels
3 amphibious warfare vessels
2 auxiliary ships
identification_symbol[[File:Naval Ensign of Oman.svg200px]]
identification_symbol_labelNaval Ensign of Oman
identification_symbol_2[[File:Naval Jack of Oman.svg200px]]
identification_symbol_2_labelNaval Jack of Oman

1970 (official) 12 patrol vessels 3 amphibious warfare vessels 2 auxiliary ships

RNOV ''Al-Shamikh'', (nearest) a modern corvette and RNOV ''Al-Seeb'', a fast attack craft moored in Goa harbour in 2016
The RNO's sail training ship ''Shebab Oman''

The Royal Navy of Oman (), abbreviated RNO, is the maritime component of the Sultan's Armed Forces of the Sultanate of Oman. Given its long coastline and strategic location along the Indian Ocean, as well as being close to the Strait of Hormuz, the Royal Navy is one of the priorities of the government of Oman. It has a fleet of gunboats, fast missile boats and support, training, cargo and hydro-graphical survey vessels, which can be deployed to defend the territorial waters and coastline of Oman as well as protect tankers passing through the Strait of Hormuz. The Royal Navy's headquarters are in Seeb, near the Muscat International Airport. A modernization program is ongoing, with the objective of creating a first-rate fleet. Similarly, the Royal Oman Police's fleet, which operates smaller range boats and patrol craft, is being updated due to rising tensions in the region.

The origin of the Royal Navy of Oman is traceable to the reign of Imam Ghassan bin Abdullah (807–824 CE). He was the first ruler of Oman to possess a navy, with a standing royal navy of Oman being formally established in 1650.

History

The origin of the Royal Navy of Oman can be traced to the reign of Imam Ghassan bin Abdullah (807–824 CE). He was the first ruler of Oman to possess a navy. He commissioned ships in order to fend off pirates operating along the western shores of the Indian Ocean who were conducting raids along the coast of the Arabian Peninsula.

The Omani Navy dominated the Western Indian Ocean for many years thereafter until the arrival of the Portuguese that changed the balance of sea power in the region. Beginning in 1508 with the invasion of Oman by the Portuguese the conflict came to end in 1515 with the loss of Oman’s maritime trade routes.

Beginning in 1624, Oman started to recover its lost naval ports under Nasir bin Murshid (1624–1649), and Sultan bin Saif (1649–1688); the objective of the Omani navy, to force out the Portuguese from their bases in Oman, was achieved by 1650.

The Royal Oman Navy fell into another period of neglect until the reign of Ahmed bin Said. (1749–1783). He began to rebuild the Omani Navy and had commissioned a fleet of four ships, that were equipped with 40 guns. Additionally, he had 25 coastal boats built. A stronger navy was rebuilt between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries. Its main purpose was to then protect Oman’s overseas territories.

During the reign of Sultan Said bin Sultan (1806–1856) the navy grew larger. The Sultan had sent several Royal Omani Navy ships on specific commercial and diplomatic visits, first to New York in 1840 the Al Sultanah transported Ahmed bin Al-Noman Al-Ka’abi who was the first Arab envoy sent to the United States.

From 1862, the Sultanate of Oman lapsed again into a period of steady decline due to internal political wrangling and along with it the Royal Oman Navy. In 1888 Oman became a protectorate of the British Empire, which it would remain for almost 100 years. In 1962, the Dhofar Rebellion erupted, pitting communist insurgents against the Omani government. Although small, the Omani Navy undertook an important role in this conflict by providing naval gunfire support and bombarding insurgent positions inland.

During the late 1960s, the Royal Oman Navy existed as the naval branch of the Sultan’s Armed Forces (SAF) instead of as a separate standing navy. In 1971 the British Protectorate of Oman came to an end, and following the discovery of oil fields leading to the sale of oil abroad, that provided much-needed investment in modernizing the navy and growing the existing fleet.

The main naval base moved from Sultan Bin Ahmed Naval Base in Muscat to Said bin Sultan Naval Base in Wudam Al Sahil, near Al-Musannah, which opened in 1988. One of the largest engineering projects in Oman, it serves as a homeport for the fleet and includes training facilities as well as repair bays. The Sultan Qaboos Naval Academy, located at the base, provided instruction for officers and enlisted personnel, as well as specific branch training. Originally, most of the officers were British, with non-commissioned officers being mostly Pakistani. However, by 1980, most of the officers were Omani, though British technicians remained. In 1992, the Royal Oman Navy had a strength of 3,000 personnel.

The Royal Oman Navy does not have a marine corps or any naval infantry formations, though it has multiple amphibious warfare ships. A modernization program is ongoing in order to protect the coastline as well as the strategically important Strait of Hormuz. The British Royal Navy, in 2011, helped train corvette crews with its Flag Officer Sea Training.

Ships

ClassPhotoTypeDisplacementShipsHull NumberBuilderLaunchedCommissionedNoteCorvettes (5)Patrol Vessels (8 in service)Al Mabrukah classAmphibious Ships (2 in service)Nasr al Bahr classAl Sultana classAuxiliaries (2 in service)
[[File:ONS_Al_Rahmani-10a.jpgframeless200x200px]]Corvette2,660 tonsAl ShamikhQ40BAE Systems22 July 2009October 20138 MM-40 anti-ship missiles, 12 VL Mica anti-aircraft missiles
Al RahmaniQ4123 July 2010March 2014
Al RasikhQ4227 June 2011May 2014
[[File:JS Akebono(DD-108) and Royal Navy of Oman’s corvette Al Mua’zzar are conducting bilateral training between Japan-Oman in the Gulf of Oman.jpgleft201x201pxRoyal Oman Navy corvette Al Mua'zzar]]1,450 tonsQahir Al AmwajC31 (ex Q31)Vosper Thornycroft21 September 19943 September 19968 MM-40 anti-ship missiles, 1 × 8 Crotale anti-aircraft missiles
Al Mua'zzarC32 (ex Q32)26 September 199513 April 1997
[[File:RNOV_Al-Seeb_in_Goa.JPGframeless200x200px]]Patrol vessel1,100 tonsAl-SeebZ20ST Marine29 January 201431 March 20151 × 76 mm Oto Melara cannon, 2 × 30 mm Oto Melara Marlin-WS
Al-ShinasZ2114 June 2014
SadhZ2217 September 2014
KhassabZ2324 June 20162 August 2016
Patrol vessel475 tonsAl BushraB1 (ex Z1)CMN1995Mawj Project
Al MansoorB2 (ex Z2)1995
Al NajahB3 (ex Z3)1996
Patrol ship785 tonsAl MabrukahQ30 (ex A1)Brooke Marine7 April 19701971Former royal yacht converted to training ship; serving as a patrol ship since 1997
[[File:Omani Naval Ship Nasr al Bahr and HMS Monmouth During Exercise Khanjar Ha'ad near Oman MOD 45153355.jpgframeless200x200px]]Landing Ship Tank2,500 tons full load{{shipNasr al BahrL22}}L2Brooke Marine19841985Equipped with helicopter deck. Capacity for 7 tanks; 240 troops. Laid down in 1982.
Al SultanaA2Netherlands1975
[[File:2018 Iran-Oman naval exercise (07).jpgframeless200x200px]]High speed support vesselAl MubshirS11Austal20 October 201520 May 2016250 troops, 69 crew, cargo capacity of 320 tonnes (350 short tons), 35 knot speed.
Al NaasirS12April 20168 September 2016

Missiles

  • 50 VT-1 Crotale NG SAMs
  • 162 Exocet MM-40 (122 Block-1+ 40 Block-2)
  • Exocet MM-38
  • Harpoon Block-II
  • VL Mica-SAM

Electronics

  • MASS Ship protection system
  • 3 x SMART-S MK-II Ship sensors
  • 2 x MW-8 Air search radar
  • 5 x Sting fire control radar
  • 2 x DRBV-51C fire control radar
  • 3 x RA-20S air search radar
  • 4 x 9LV radar
  • 3 x CEROS-200 radar

Future

Procurement

New Research Vessel

The Royal Navy of Oman (RNO) has contracted with the US Pentagon through a Foreign Military Sales (FMS) program to provide a new research vessel based on the RV F.G. Walton Smith, a University of Miami vessel. DeJong & Lebet, Naval Architects, provided the US Navy with Contract Drawings and Engineering.

Thoma-Sea Shipbuilders of Lockport, Louisiana reportedly won a $7.3m contract to build a Catamaran Hull Hydrographic Survey Vessel for the government of Oman, according to a report. This vessel will be built by Thoma-Sea. Thoma-Sea’s partner in this proposal is Technology Associates Inc. (TAI) of New Orleans in Louisiana. TAI prepared the proposal for Thoma-Sea and will be in charge of performing the Design, Program Management and Integrated Logistics Support (ILS) functions for Thoma-Sea. The Sultanate of Oman will receive this 90-foot vessel, which is designed to conduct hydrographic and environmental surveys of harbors and bays, and will work in Oman’s territorial waters, according to the release.

Oman has also issued RFI for a new ‘hydrographic survey vessel’. US Naval Sea Systems Command is promoting ship design based on the Walton Smith Catamaran design.

In Oman, South Korean defence minister Song Young-moo met with his counterpart Sayyid Badr bin Saud bin Harib Al Busaidi. They spoke highly about the South Korean destroyers, Oman signed a deal in 2018 for an unknown number of ships and other arms including tanks.

Former ships

  • Four Brooke Marine patrol craft
  • : Dhofar (B10), Al Sharquiyah (B11), Al Bat'nah (B12), Mussandam (B14) (served between 1982 and 2023, and scrapped afterwards)
  • (L3): Amphibious transport (served between 1987 and 2024, and scrapped afterwards)

Ranks

Main article: Military ranks of Oman

Commissioned officer ranks

The rank insignia of commissioned officers.

Other ranks

The rank insignia of non-commissioned officers and enlisted personnel.

References

References

  1. Sulaiman Aljabri. p.182.
  2. "About Royal Navy of Oman".
  3. John Pike. "Royal Oman Navy (RON)".
  4. (18 June 2012). "Omans Maritime Doctrine: a thesis for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Arab and Islamic Studies". University of Exeter.
  5. Sulaiman Aljabri. p. 182.
  6. (2006). "The Cultural Roots of American Islamicism". Cambridge University Press.
  7. (July 2010). "Thoma-Sea Wins Navy Deal". Marine Link.
Info: Wikipedia Source

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