Thistle
Well-Known Member

You surround it with tugs and forget to switch on its AIS.
In Rosyth, now. See https://www.vesselfinder.com/

None of the naval ships patrolling with border force between Greece and Turkey transmit on AIS. Two years ago we saw one that displayed as NATO ship but that's the only one we have seen.
The Grey Funnel Line is pretty much exempt from any general maritime regulations. A real-world case of might is right (of way).
You surround it with tugs and forget to switch on its AIS.
We don't need AIS to reveal British military secrets to the enemy, not while we have Cambridge graduates in positions of trust.
Do you realistically think that our friends (some of whom might be considered dubious - until they need back up) and enemies (I think they are the same for both of us) rely on AIS to follow each other's tracks.
If AIS was the sole source then the idea of a drone carrying the AIS signal would have merit and be very cheap - but I don't think it would work.
Jonathan
I think the RN tried a stealth carrier but dropped the project when all the aircraft that took of had to ditch in the sea because they could not find the carrier to land on.
Paint the portholes red and hide it in a cherry tree.
The Grey Funnel Line is pretty much exempt from any general maritime regulations. A real-world case of might is right (of way).
About four or five years ago, having sailed overnight down the Chesapeake Bay, we were in the extreme SW corner of the bay approaching the James & Elizabeth Rivers when a US 'Battle Fleet' hove into view from the east (seaward) gaining on us fast when we got the VHF Call: "Small sailing vessel..." Having identified ourselves we were advised that we were 'approaching their exclusion zone and needed to change course immediately'.
Oddly enough it does matter in this day and age of total nutters with access explosives. A newspaper report of a visit and an AIS transmission could be enough for someone to throw some explosives into a boat and try a USS Cole style attack.
There followed perhaps thirty seconds silence then a new instruction to 'maintain present course, but increase speed immediately to fifteen knots', whereupon I suggested that they needed put someone on the radio who knew something about sail boats, because our current 5.5kts was as good as it was going to get.