Todjaeger
Potstirrer
This might sound a bit surprising to some, but if the minor party does gain enough political influence to cause the ACF to be reconstituted, unless a number of conditions are met beforehand, then I hope they do not keep that particular policy plank.
While I would like the RNZAF to have an ACF, and the current lack of one is causing all sorts of capability gaps which, for now, have not YET caused a major problem... I do feel that one has to be pragmatic about it.
IIRC from discussions here on DT about a decade ago, the annual operating cost for an ACF of about 24 aircraft was ~$200 mil. p.a. While I do not know what NZ's average rate of inflation is, I would not be at all surprised if the annual operating costs would be somewhere around, if not past, $300 mil. p.a. Again, that is operating costs, not initial costs to (re)establish an ACF like purchasing aircraft, modifying or upgrading existing facilities, or establishing a cadre of personnel trained to flying, maintain, or otherwise support the aircraft, who could then be used establish a training programme so that there is a stream of new personnel for the ACF establishment.
I cannot honestly guestimate the cost to make the needed acquisitions, because there are so many variables, like which platform is selected, how many, what support package, what munitions package, etc. Unless extremely small numbers (like low single digits) are involved, any selection is likely to run into the hundreds of millions of dollars, just to initially setup the capability, never mind sustain it. It is also worth noting that for the first few years, the ACF programme would need to focus on just training before it could be reasonably expected to be capable and ready for deployment or operations. Again, IIRC the old estimates were ~5 years before the ACF would reach the competence the old ACF had, or $1 bil. over that time period.
Given the wide range of other areas and capabilities within the NZDF as a whole that either are coming up for upgrade and/or replacement, plus the other capabilities which have been allowed to wither, I think there are better ways to spend such funding. Especially if the ACF is not established in such a way that it could not, again, be disbanded following another change in gov't.
If I had a choice between the RNZAF getting 4 P-8A Poseidons, plus 10 each of KAI's T-50 and FA-50 Golden Eagles, or the RNZAF getting a total of 6 or 7 P-8A Poseidon's, I would go with getting more P-8A's. IMO it would be a far wiser decision to properly fund current capabilities, so that they can be done fully/correctly, rather than trying to 'stretch' the defence budget by doing things on the cheap and ending up with a capability which is half-donkeyed by have too few to be effective, or lacking important subsystems, etc.
Unfortunately the NZDF is full of such issues, like too few frigates, too few NH90's, too few A109's, etc. I am not aware of an occasion where such decisions caused a capability shortfall which can be directly tied to a Kiwi fatality, but it is bound to happen at some point, if it has not happened already.
Now if the minor party is able to arrange additional funding for the NZDF, sufficient to permit proper support for existing capabilities and their upgrades, as well as to establish and then sustain an ACF, I would be all for it. Unfortunately though, I strongly suspect it would a case of either Peter or Paul getting robbed to pay Mary, and then who knows what happens after then next change of gov't.
While I would like the RNZAF to have an ACF, and the current lack of one is causing all sorts of capability gaps which, for now, have not YET caused a major problem... I do feel that one has to be pragmatic about it.
IIRC from discussions here on DT about a decade ago, the annual operating cost for an ACF of about 24 aircraft was ~$200 mil. p.a. While I do not know what NZ's average rate of inflation is, I would not be at all surprised if the annual operating costs would be somewhere around, if not past, $300 mil. p.a. Again, that is operating costs, not initial costs to (re)establish an ACF like purchasing aircraft, modifying or upgrading existing facilities, or establishing a cadre of personnel trained to flying, maintain, or otherwise support the aircraft, who could then be used establish a training programme so that there is a stream of new personnel for the ACF establishment.
I cannot honestly guestimate the cost to make the needed acquisitions, because there are so many variables, like which platform is selected, how many, what support package, what munitions package, etc. Unless extremely small numbers (like low single digits) are involved, any selection is likely to run into the hundreds of millions of dollars, just to initially setup the capability, never mind sustain it. It is also worth noting that for the first few years, the ACF programme would need to focus on just training before it could be reasonably expected to be capable and ready for deployment or operations. Again, IIRC the old estimates were ~5 years before the ACF would reach the competence the old ACF had, or $1 bil. over that time period.
Given the wide range of other areas and capabilities within the NZDF as a whole that either are coming up for upgrade and/or replacement, plus the other capabilities which have been allowed to wither, I think there are better ways to spend such funding. Especially if the ACF is not established in such a way that it could not, again, be disbanded following another change in gov't.
If I had a choice between the RNZAF getting 4 P-8A Poseidons, plus 10 each of KAI's T-50 and FA-50 Golden Eagles, or the RNZAF getting a total of 6 or 7 P-8A Poseidon's, I would go with getting more P-8A's. IMO it would be a far wiser decision to properly fund current capabilities, so that they can be done fully/correctly, rather than trying to 'stretch' the defence budget by doing things on the cheap and ending up with a capability which is half-donkeyed by have too few to be effective, or lacking important subsystems, etc.
Unfortunately the NZDF is full of such issues, like too few frigates, too few NH90's, too few A109's, etc. I am not aware of an occasion where such decisions caused a capability shortfall which can be directly tied to a Kiwi fatality, but it is bound to happen at some point, if it has not happened already.
Now if the minor party is able to arrange additional funding for the NZDF, sufficient to permit proper support for existing capabilities and their upgrades, as well as to establish and then sustain an ACF, I would be all for it. Unfortunately though, I strongly suspect it would a case of either Peter or Paul getting robbed to pay Mary, and then who knows what happens after then next change of gov't.