Top News
|Pentagon seeks $200 bn extra for Iran War | India Condemns All Attacks On Energy Installations | Iran Continues Attacks on Oil Infrastructures in its Neighbouring Gulf Countries | PM Modi contacts world leaders towards Ending the War | Damage is lasting and continued attacks would hit the world very badly, Modi s | India gets 90 % of its LNG from the Gulf countries, including Iran | Oil prices shoot from $ 79 per barrel to $ 119/ | Trump asks China, UK and France to send Warships to secure Hormuz, gets No response | Oilfield Attacks Continue in Strategic Gulf, and Iran Threatens More Salvoes | Prime Minister Modi calls Gulf Leaders on Hormuz security, Urges Peace | External Affairs Minister Jaishankar meets European counterparts in Brussels on Gulf War | US says Pakistan, along with China, Nirth Korea and Russia, poses Nuclear Threat to America | India to join a Three-nation Consortium to develop futuristic 6th Gen Fighter | US kills Iran’s top leader and Security Chief Ali Larijani | Israel kills Iranian Intelligence minister Esmail Khatib | Khatib was responsible for Internal and External intelligence, and also suppressing public dissent | Israel hit Iran’s huge gas field Pars, triggering panic on oil markets | Supreme Court asks airlines to keep 60 percent seats selection charge free | US offers Free Airfare and $2600 to illegal immigrants for self exit | Iranian drone hits Dubai International Airport, Flights affected then Partially Restored | Gulf countries Securing critical Water Desalination Plants | As Oil prices rise, Airlines add Fuel Surcharge | Trumps says Nothing to Target left in Iran and US Air Force controls the Iranian skies | Iran continues Missile Strikes though and nearly 20 US bases or US related sites hit | Black Rain in Teheran due to bombing of Iran | Trump asks friendly nations for Warships to Secure Strait of Hormuz | About 700 Indians on India-flagged Ships stuck in the Gulf | India sourcing Oil from 40 countries | Petroleum Minister Hardeep Puri promises continued Domestic Gas supplies | Former Diplomat Taranjit Singh Sandhu appointed Lt Governor of Delhi | Mossad and Israeli Special Forces infiltrate Iran for a secret operation Details of the daring ground operation yet unknown | Kuwaiti defence forces mistakenly shoot down three USAF F 15E Strike Eagle aircraft | All Six Pilots Parachute Safely and are in hospitals for Checks | F 15E is a powerful warjet, has two pilots, one to Fly and the other as a Weapons Officer | Iran meanwhile has widened its missile strikes whiie the US Air Force and Navy have intensified Bombing of Iran | US Def Sec Hegseth says There Are No Timelines BUT IRAN WILL NOT HAVE NUCLEAR CAPABILITY | And that ‘War Will Not Be Endless’ | Trump asks Iranians to ‘Rise up and Take Over Your Government’ | Iran says No Negotiations With US | Trump Confirms Iran’s Supreme Islamic Leader ‘evil’ Ali Khamenei killed in targeted missile strikes | Many Iranian military and Islamic leaders also dead | US and Israel launched the biggest ever military strikes in history to decimate Iran’s top leadership | There are no reported of boots on ground | About 200 USAF and Navy jets are hammering Iran’s political and military targets without stop | The missiles are precision | Care is taken to avoid cities and civilians | It’s War | US and Israel attack Iran | Trump says Will Not Allow to Have Nuclear Bomb | Iran Retaliates with Missiles across Gulf and Jordan
DEFENCE INDUSTRY

The King’s Jet Takes a Break in God’s Own Country

By Shyam Bhatia

London. It was a quiet day in Kerala. Coconuts swayed. Elephants napped. Tea was brewing.

Then — boom — a £88 million stealth fighter jet sliced through the monsoon clouds like it was late for a yoga retreat.

(Representative image)

Out of the heavens came His Majesty’s F-35B Lightning II, part of the Royal Navy’s HMS Prince of Wales carrier strike group, making an unscheduled (and very expensive) pitstop at Thiruvananthapuram International Airport. Locals simply call it TVM. Now it stands for Temporarily Visiting Monarch.

The warplane had been conducting joint drills with the Indian Navy over the Indian Ocean when it ran into bad weather. Some say the pilot muttered “Oh bugger” before requesting an emergency landing. Others claim he was just tired of the aircraft carrier menu and fancied some sambar, a spicy south Indian delicacy.

The jet touched down like a true British gentleman: quietly, dramatically, and slightly confused.

The Kerala ground crew blinked. Then they called their supervisor. Then they took selfies.

Soon after, the aircraft developed what the Royal Navy called a “hydraulic snag.” Translation: “I’m not moving until someone brings me engineers, (holy) coconut water, and maybe a monsoon massage.”

Attempts to move the jet failed. The Royal Navy reportedly rejected Air India’s offer to house the aircraft in a hangar, citing concerns about “unwanted access” to the jet’s stealth tech — a polite way of saying: “We don’t want Uncle Ramesh poking around the radar array.”

So the £88 million warbird remained parked in an isolated bay under monsoon clouds, guarded — rather valiantly — by Indian soldiers in high-visibility jackets, cradling vintage rifles.

Think Top Gun: Local Edition.

Two weeks into this impromptu royal layover, Kerala’s tourism board struck. With coconut-scented precision, they released a cartoon of the jet basking among palm trees, alongside a glowing five-star “review” allegedly from the UK F-35B itself:

“Kerala is such an amazing place, I don’t want to leave.’’

Their appropriate caption?

“Kerala: the destination you’ll never want to leave.”

Subtle. Savage. Sweet.

Social media exploded. One user suggested giving the jet Indian citizenship. Another proposed putting the cartoon on a London bus. A third wondered if the pilot — rumoured to be watching Bigg Boss Malayalam — might be contemplating an arranged marriage in Munnar. A new life as Nigel Kutty, perhaps.

Meanwhile, defence officials in London quietly removed all flight tracking data from public platforms as they reportedly choked on their morning tea due to the massive social media interest.

According to Tweets and Instagram posts, Kerala airport authorities were rumoured to be charging parking fees. After all, even the King’s jet can’t escape any bureaucracy — or a good invoice. But then, airport charges are normal.

India offered logistical support. The British responded by dispatching engineering teams with “specialist equipment” — presumably including a giant spanner, an Allen key, and an apology letter.

Nonetheless, as of July 6, the F-35B remains grounded, sulking gently, and reconsidering its life choices. The British High Commission announced in a press statement that a team of 24 personnel arrived July 6 on a Royal Air Force Airbus 400 M, and immediately took charge of the aircraft and moved it to an MRO (Maintenance, Repair and Overhaul) facility at the airport.

Those magnificent Men for the Adamant Flying Machine include 14 Technical Experts and 10 Crew members, according to a British High Commission press statement. “The visiting team will assess the condition of the stranded jet to determine whether it can be repaired locally, or needs to be dismantled and transported back to the United Kingdom.

If it has to be taken back, its wings will have to be dismantled, quite a tedious job, and a Royal Air Force Boeing C 17 Globemaster would need to be summoned. The F 35 is an extremely sophisticated and formidable aircraft, build by Lockheed Martin. It’s light, powerful, made of composites, can carry precision attack weapons. The B variant is made for aircraft carriers.

Lockheed Martin engineers were also expected to arrive to coordinate with the British team

The F 35 is the best flying machine after the F 22, also built by Lockheed Martin.

Moral of the Story:

  • Don’t mess with Kerala’s monsoon.
  • Always carry extra hydraulic fluid.
  • And if you’re the Royal Navy, prepare for the possibility that your stealth jet may become the most beloved tourist attraction in India.

Related Articles

Back to top button