Thank you for a most interesting and thoughtful reply .I think a who dares wins culture is fine in grand heroic theory, but no Navy would choose to accept dead sailors if they had the option of building better survivable ships. You cant always cater for the unexpected but most losses are entirely predictable. It was no secret at the end of the 1970's that much of the RN fleet was becoming obselete but in 1982 under armed old ships with brave crews did their duty and took a hammering. But you could have found numerous sources warning that those ships were not suitable.
Just as there were well publicised criticism of the T42 programme. The Navy recieved technologically advanced ships but it was widely seen that they were too small and under armed through budgetary constaints. The RN got 14 Type 42's , but the question with no answer would have been whether an RN with 8 bigger and more expensive T43's would have fared any better in 1982. We sent, I recall 5 Type 42's in total , losing 2 with one damaged. A smaller navy with better ships might have sent 3 Type 43. Would an 8000 tonne twin ended Sea Dart/ Sea Wolf ship provided better air defence than more numerous single ended 4000 tonne Sea Dart ships? We will never know, but for numbers sake we went cheap (er) and in the end had to pair a Type 42 with a Type 22 just to try and rectify the shortcomings.
The County was a fine looking ship, I think we built 8, and although the overall armament was ancient, the concept of a big tough solid ship with point and area defence missiles was a good one, in fact we will come full circle if T45 gets some CAMM to complement Aster, so personaly I would accept fewer , more potent ships. I think a cheap ship is a dead ship, especially as weapons are getting more and more sophisticated. I dont see any major navy abandoning the bigger ship in favour of smaller ones. None of us are privvy to data from wargames or weapon simulations, but the fact is the US,Spain, holland, germany, uk, italy, france, korea, japan have all invested in vastly expensive air warfare assets, at a time when the "experts" are telling is that afghan type rebuilding is the future.Im no expert but that says to me that all the major navies conclude that you need a high end, mega bucks air umbrella and anything outside that umbrella is stuffed.
I think the RN is going along the right lines. If we get the carriers and F35 we will have a mighty big stick, a vast improvement on A2A, finally able to protect the surface group. If we ever get CEC this will be a true force multiplier. A decent AEW platform will add to the blend. With those assets a smaller fleet in numbers is still more potent. If we can keep around 20 surface units, with CV and F35, we will be streets ahead of what we have now, so I cant see the benefit of building cheaper units, but thats just me. Personally I would rather the SSN fleet was expanded than trying to fund a class of cheaper single role ASW frigates.
The point I was trying to make (in my own poor way) was not that the RN should needlessly waste mens life's but rather that the RN has always intrinsically understood that in wartime ships must be risked in order to achieve the desired results . With the future most definitely 'not ours to see' this is a lesson that's worth remembering in my opinion .
Re the Falklands War & the Type 42 - I'd say that looking back on the distinctly minimalist T42's as they come to the end of their long service careers that this most contraversal of ship types has ultimately proved to be a rather successful design that has served the navy well . The true ancestor of the T42 was not the old 'County' class but the one-off Type 82 (HMS Bristol) - if you compare the 6000t T82 with the 4000t T42 it's hard not to conclude that the smaller ship was not only more affordable (and hence built in relatively large numbers) but also a rather better ship . The subsequent history of HMS Bristol was to show that just because a destroyer has a large hull that may well be suitable for rearming this does not necessarily mean that any such refit will ever actually happen .
The problem with the T42's was (as you say) that our ever present budgetary problems led to them being completed with obsolescent radar systems and with no adequate short range AAW defences . Had the Phalenx CWIS been fitted to these ships earlier (they were available from around 1980 and the ships are just about large enough to take them) then both Sheffield & Coventry may well have been saved .
Having seen an illustration of the proposed 'Type 43 Destroyer' (and remembering that I'm no navel architect ) I still must say they looked like an absolute 'dogs dinner' of a destroyer - too big , too expensive and with horribly awkwardly helo arrangements . Woodward didn't need the T43 in 1982 (even if they could have been built in time) what he really needed was the properly equipped T42 the RN got after the conflict ended . The cases of HMS Bristol & the Type 43 show that larger is not necessarily the same as better .
Building a ship - or a whole navy - is a question of striking the right balance between numbers and capability and cost . With the mysterious 'C2' design apparently pushed right back into the MOD'S 'long grass' (for all I know never to emerge again) I fear the RN is in danger of losing its balance entirely .
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