A former head of the Royal Navy has warned that Britain is at risk from terrorists and traffickers because of the lack of boats that patrol UK waters.

Lord West described the situation as a "complete mess" as three Border Force vessels are left to patrol 7,700 miles of coastline, the Daily Mail reports.

This follows the deployment of one to the Aegean Sea to help with the migrant crisis and after aerial surveillance of Britain's shores was scrapped in January.

Lord West told the newspaper: "We are taking a calculated risk with our own territorial waters.

"Already we have seen these illegal immigrants and I don't believe there aren't clever traffickers using the smaller ports to send them and I'm sure terrorists are aware of the route too.

"We need to get a grip on this. We are taking a gamble that nothing will ever happen in our seas and that is a risky view to take given the dangerous world we are in."

Two Border Force cutters, HMC Protector and HMC Seeker, were deployed to the Mediterranean along with the Royal Navy ship HMS Bulwark last May.

Civilian vessel VOS Grace was sent to the Mediterranean last November.

Lord West's warning comes as 18 Albanians - including two children - and two British people were rescued from the English Channel after their inflatable boat began to sink on Saturday night.

Last month he pressed the Government over border security amid concerns the UK's at-sea defences were "in a very parlous state".

Speaking during an urgent question on the budget of the Border Force, Lord West said: "Our coastline outside the major ports is highly vulnerable.

"Would the minister confirm as we have sent coastguard cutters to the Mediterranean and because of defects, that we only have two coastguard cutters to look after our coastline from the Tyne round to Cornwall.

"And that we have now cancelled the airborne surveillance programme, which was able to indicate targets of interest, such as illegals coming into the country, to those cutters, because if that is the case we are in a very parlous state."

Responding, Home Office minister Lord Ahmad said he could not give operational details about the Border Force, but insisted there was sufficient capability and funding in place to maintain a presence in UK waters.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.