Todjaeger
Potstirrer
The defence situation will very much depend on what form the hostiles take, and where they are located. A modern incarnation of the old A-4 Skyhawk ACF could potentially handle some maritime strike and air to air engagements in and around NZ, or if the the ACF got forward deployed somewhere.My point was that for the primary defence of NZ, ( the primary role of any defence Force ) a frigate has a very limited influence due to the amount of time it takes to reach any point of threat and the limited range of its weapons. the combat aircraft can cover a very wide area very quickly and effectively It is noted that the strike aircraft are not much use against Subs,but frigates are only effective against subs in their immediate area and there are a hell of a lot of things frigates are not effective against., a frigate has a very limited area of influence and we have a very large area both on land and the sea around us to consider. I think that doubling the defence vote is a little over the top. the last figures I had on the cost of strike wing was those supplied to the parliamentary select committee in 1998, that out of a defence operational vote of $1.1 B strike wing cost $50m ,$30 m for the skyhawks and $20m for the Macchi's I know Helen Clark claimed they cost 10% of the defence budget but she included depreciation , the capital charge, proportioned charges and the strike wing share of the cost of running Ohakea, to justify her intention to close strike wing down. While these figures are very old percentage wise they would not be to far out.
Of interest the cost of running a frigate then , from memory was about $22m. and a treasury report about 2003/4 note that the actual savings for defence accrued by the scrapping of strike wing was $30m per year.
A frigate could potentially handle surface, subsurface, and aerial targets, all depending on where the frigate was located relative to the threat(s). A potential key advantage for something like a frigate is that they can operate for prolonged periods of time a long way away from NZ proper, which could allow the NZDF to use the 'tyranny of distance' to it's own advantage for defence in depth.
If the primary threat would be a maritime threat, then it would be worth devoting more resources to both maritime surveillance and strike. Given the surveillance capabilities of aircraft like the Poseidon, as well as the strike capabilities when armed with standoff munitions like the Harpoon, SLAM-ER, or any of the other PGM's which could be integrated... I would still go with more armed MPA than fighters to cover maritime strike. Even within NZ's EEZ, the NZDF would need some asset to detect and alert NZ to a potential threat, before the ACF could be queued for a response. IMO it would be better (and likely faster) if the surveillance asset responsible for the initial detection was able to deliver a response. An AShM salvo launched from within the MPA's detection range, but well outside the engagement range of the target ship's possible air defence systems seems a better option than waiting for fighter aircraft armed with the same AShM to get close enough to detect and launch on the target. An MPA also provides the potential to engage in ASW operations.