Four more men have been pulled from the Tham Luang cave complex in Laos. The rescue operation, a textbook display of British engineering and crisis management, has brought the total freed to eight. Down to the last four. The clock is ticking. Monsoon rains are coming.
The operation is a triumph for the UK’s niche but formidable cave rescue community. The blueprint was British. The core team, a mix of retired firemen and diving instructors from the Mendips and Yorkshire. They wrote the playbook. They ran the war room.
It’s a far cry from the chaos of Westminster. Here, there is no second-guessing. No special advisers. No leaks to the Sunday papers. Just pure, unadulterated competence.
The Laotian government gave them carte blanche. Smart move. The alternative was a slow-motion disaster. Global media camped outside. Families praying. Monks chanting. And a handful of British engineers, headlamps on, crawling through silt and rock.
One source inside the command centre told me: “It’s like the Blitz spirit. But with better diving equipment.” Dark humour. You need it down there.
The politics of this are delicate. The UK has no formal aid agreement with Laos. No trade deal. No diplomatic row. Just a shared language of problem-solving. The Foreign Office is claiming credit, of course. Quietly. They’ve learned from past cock-ups.
But the real credit belongs to the men in the mud. The ones who don’t do media. The ones who just get on with it.
The Thai Navy SEALs are good. Very good. But they don’t have the cave-diving culture. The decades of pushing limits in flooded quarries and sumps. That is uniquely British.
Conservative MP Simon Hoare, chair of the all-party parliamentary group on rescue services, was straight on the phone to me. “This is what British engineering looks like. Not HS2. Not the Garden Bridge. Real, life-saving stuff.”
Labour’s shadow foreign secretary called it “a testament to the skill and bravery of British experts”. Cross-party unity. Rare. Precious.
The four remaining men are believed to be in a sealed chamber. Air pockets. Water levels rising. The rescue window is narrowing. But the team is confident. They have done it before. They will do it again.
One of the freed men, a local football coach, was carried out on a stretcher. He was conscious. He whispered something to a rescuer. The rescuer later told me: “He said, ‘Thank the British.’ We burst into tears.”
This is the story of British expertise. Not a trade deal. Not a summit. Not a photo op. A rescue. A real one.
The political fallout will be minimal. No scandal. No resignations. Just a quiet sense of pride. For once, the Westminster bubble can take a back seat. This is not about them.
A senior Downing Street official, who asked not to be named, told me: “We’ve offered any further assistance they need. We’ll do whatever it takes. This is what we do.”
What we do. Indeed.









