29 May 2026

After four months supporting Australia’s near continuous presence in the Indo Pacific, HMAS Toowoomba returned home to Fleet Base West in late May.

Departing in January, Toowoomba travelled more than 28,500 nautical miles (52,782 kilometres) – equivalent to sailing around Australia’s coastline twice – across East and South-East Asia, visiting six regional partners: Indonesia, the Philippines, South Korea, Japan, Vietnam and Singapore.

Toowoomba completed an operational deployment enforcing United Nations Security Council sanctions against North Korea, and engaged in multilateral and bilateral exercises, activities and operations with allied nations.

Commanding Officer Toowoomba Commander Alicia Harrison said these routine activities demonstrated Australia’s commitment to a peaceful, stable and prosperous Indo-Pacific, where sovereignty and agreed rules and norms are respected.

“Our deployment delivered on Australia’s commitment to maintaining a near-continuous presence in the Indo-Pacific, supporting a stable, open and rules-based maritime environment,” she said.

Commander Harrison said a personal highlight was witnessing the hard work and dedication of all Toowoomba’s officers and sailors, along with the constant encouragement the ship received from back home, either through social media or an organised parcel drop before Anzac Day.

“Our mission would not have been possible without the exceptional efforts of our crew and the support of our families and loved ones at home,” Commander Harrison said.

'Toowoomba’s sailors built positive, professional relationships with partners that enhanced our collective capability and understanding.'

Professional development continued during the deployment, with 12 senior and junior sailor promotions, 23 honours awarded and more than 11 commendations delivered to Toowoomba’s crew.

Toowoomba Command Warrant Officer Paul Chircop said witnessing the ship’s company develop into a cohesive, confident and highly capable team was a highlight.

“Throughout the deployment our sailors demonstrated a strong commitment to continuous improvement,” Warrant Officer Chircop said.

“Their professionalism, adaptability and pride in their work were evident, as was their confidence, supporting one another and maintaining the high standards expected of the Royal Australian Navy.”

Warrant Officer Chircop said what stood out was the strong sense of collaboration and shared purpose when working with partner navies.

“Whether conducting combined training serials or routine interactions, Toowoomba’s sailors built positive, professional relationships with partners that enhanced our collective capability and understanding,” Warrant Officer Chircop said.

“I believe these positive engagements reinforced the value of regional partnerships and interoperability.

“The experience gained has strengthened our people, broadened their perspective and ensured we remain ready to operate effectively alongside our partners in support of shared security objectives.” 

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