A bit of sanity at last.Alright, lets stop this idiotic comparison of the near future RN to the near future RAN right now.
Whilst we can critise the Admirals, they will always fight for the gold plated solution, you can't blame them for that. They fought for a capability designed to take on a major tier one power, instead of going for a more sensible 2 x Wasp sized Commando carriers capable of carrying limited numbers of fast air. And to be honest why wouldn't you if the politicians gave you the wink. Hindsight is a wonderful thing, unfortunately the world has changed (major block on block conflict to largely asymmetrical) coupled with the fact we are currently experiencing the worst financial crisis since the 1930's.
Whilst the UK will end up with capability gaps in the short term to deal with a highly unlikely Falklands take-back scenario, capabilities to sustain and equip the here and know, namely Afghanistan, will be maintained and in some areas (SF) greatly enhanced.
The ConLibs have confirmed the plan to activate at least one very capable strike carrier. The second is still a question mark (mothballing or selling based on the current financial situation), this however could change driven either by a dramatic threat change or financial recovery. Switching to F35C reduces the risk and is less likely to suffer huge cost creep. The one overriding lesson of SDR is ridiculous cost blowouts will no longer be tolerated (politicians, public and media alike).
With the loss of JFH, the RAF flyers can be retired or diverted to one of the two T models. The FAA can be sent to the States to continue carrier pilot training. 50% are already doing this according to some reports. The single remaining helo carrier will have to keep elements of the supporting ground crews trained in all but fast jet handling. Again not ideal, but better than salami slicing bits here and bits there, something big had to give.
Whilst the loss of Nimrod and a number of surface ships is lamentable, the fact that 3 Commando Brigade remains intact (not reduced or transferred to army command) is far more strategically important based on current and future likely commitments. The RM / Army will evolve in to multiple brigades of around 6000++. This will ensure the UK will remain the only NATO partner of the US (bar Turkey) capable of sustaining an overseas brigade sized presence indefinitely. As a former Para, I'm over the moon the regiment will retain its parachuting capability across all three battalions and will continue to form the core of 16 Air Assault brigade, these assets along with the high readiness 3 Commando Brigade are absolutely indispensable. SRR & the SFSG will also be enhanced with more technology and associated kit. If we have to rob Peter to pay Paul there will always be winners and losers, we have stop looking at each service in isolation.
Hopefully once this god awful mess is sorted out we will end up with a two tier fleet:
Tier One - Carrier Strike (shared with the French) plus ARG and credible protective assets (minimum 6 x T45, 6 x T26, 7 x SSN available) plus supporting RFA POL support, and
Tier Two - Multiple numbers of cheap C3's complimented by a few extra T26's or similar when required*
*Noted intention to reduce Destroyer / Frigate force to 19 (T45/T23-26) , but that all 14 MCM will be retained and replaced by a future multi-task OPV. Doubt we will see a like for like replacement, but lets hope at least 6-8 hulls are bought.
As the UK no longer has endless overseas dependencies, is a member of NATO and is surrounded (East & West) by Allies, this should be enough when balanced against the needs of the other services Army, RAF, domestic and foreign intelligence services (the latters budgets have increased 10 fold since 9/11).
Regards Sentinel R1, it was designed to scan the cold war battlefield and feed-in critical real-time information covering the movement of enemy divisions and supporting logistical activity along the MSR's, thus allowing for surgical strikes at critcal choke points. It can be used, and is used to monitor MSR's in A-San to look for insurgent activity. A very expensive nutcracker considering the target. Rivet Joint and more armed UCAV's would be more useful if failed states remain a priority.
Another critical factor is the UK's desire to maintian (not cut-back) the current high tempo of live fire realistic training outside the confines of Europe. This includes regular battalion / brigade depolyments to Kenya, Canada, India (RAF) and the US (combined arms). The UK spends more on training than any other country in Europe. This is vital in ensuring the military retains its combat edge in A-Stan. You could of stopped all but basic training and retained more shiny bits of kit, this however would have been a grave mistake and cost lives.
Last edited: