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File photo of the RFA Lyme Bay docked in Gibraltar Bay
The Royal Navy is placing a support ship on "heightened readiness" to be sent to the eastern Mediterranean to support British nationals in the Middle East if needed, the Ministry of Defence has confirmed.
RFA Lyme Bay is equipped with an aviation platform and has medical facilities, meaning she can play a role in evacuations and medical treatment.
The vessel is currently in Gibraltar and has not been tasked yet and the MoD stressed the change in status was precautionary.
The UK is also sending the warship HMS Dragon to the Mediterranean, with Defence Secretary John Healey saying on Monday that it would leave Portsmouth in the next couple of days.
HMS Prince of Wales - one of the UK's two aircraft carriers - has also been placed on heightened readiness in case it is needed.
During the war, which began on 28 February, a number of Gulf nations housing US facilities have been targeted with Iranian missiles and drones, prompting the government to arrange evacuation flights for UK citizens in the region.
An MoD spokesperson said: "As part of prudent planning, we have taken the decision to bring RFA Lyme Bay to heightened readiness as a precaution, should she be needed to assist in maritime tasks in the Eastern Mediterranean."
The MoD would not be drawn on what the primary purpose of the vessel would be were it to be deployed, but its facilities as a support ship make it well-suited for humanitarian and disaster relief missions.
RFA Lyme Bay is a Bay Class landing ship - not a warship - and its primary function is to deliver troops, vehicles, stores and ammunition in the case of amphibious assaults.
The Sun reported that the RAF is due to deliver military medics and a mobile field hospital that can operate aboard the ship.
The UK government has not joined the US and Israel in offensive operations against Iran, but has offered the US use of UK airbases to conduct what it calls defensive strikes against Iranian missiles and launchpads.
It has faced accusations of not responding quickly enough to the crisis. The Royal Navy currently has no major warship in the Mediterranean region.
Defence sources told the BBC on Saturday that the crew of HMS Prince of Wales were told they must be ready to set sail in five days.
However, an MoD spokesperson said on Tuesday that its scheduled deployment to the High North had not changed.

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