Getting back onto the RN tack...
Here's some news on Type-45....
http://navynews.co.uk/archive/news/item/3221
SA
According to the article she's "ready for anything". Is she really?
As we start to rely on the Type 45 to take on front line duties in the RN's highest threat areas (such as the Gulf in this case) her "fitted for but not with list" just keeps jarring with me.
We are told her equipment omissions are due to her being an AAW vessel and she could be fitted with the required capabilities if needed.
Both of those arguments are baloney to me.
1) Given Type 45's make up 30% of the surface fleet we need all of our ships to be general purpose not fixed to role.
2) You can't bring a ship back from the Gulf to fit weapons on it that it doesn't have if things get hot. Ships need to go into high threat environments with full capability embarked.
3) Given the current high threat level in the Gulf the Type 45's advanced radar would be crucial if things got hot with Iran. Yet her usefulness in this her primary AAW role is severely retarded by her not being fitted with the Co-operative Engagement Capability to enable her to network all of the data from her systems to other ships. Odd that we don't fit an AAW vessel with one of the key AAW enabling technologies.
4) Why the ships have no ASW torpedoes or SSM's is beyond me. You could easily fit four Harpoons to each ship from the retired Type 22 batch III ships and ASW torpedoes from retired Type 42's. The weapons are already in our inventory for heavens sakes. Without them the ship has to carry the Lynx helicopter rather than the Merlin which severely reduces her ASW capability (but is necessary because Merlin can't carry the Sea Skua ASM without which the Type 45 would have no stand off anti-ship capability).
Before anyone posts about "when was the last time SSM's were used" it was in Operation Praying Mantis when US and Iranian warships both fired SSM's at each other during Iranian atttempts to disrupt the Gulf and US retaliation and martime security enforcement. This is exactly the scenario into which HMS Daring may be sailing.
In any event, it isn't about volleys of SSM's or ASW torpedoes; it's about a ship being able to enforce a zone of control around itself from other surface and sub-surface units which will not want to come into its weapons envelope. The Type 45 is entirely reliant on its helicopter for this. That relies on the helicopter being appropriately configured, fuelled and ready to fly which is far from always the case.
I've also read that the Sea Viper has never actually been tested against supersonic targets. Does anyone know if that's true?