Straight from the script writers of "Yes Minister" and would be equally funny if it didn't involve our dollars...
Never has a truer word been said!
I am convinced that program [and Yes Prime Minister] were plagiarised from the secret training manuals developed over thousands of years by bureaucrats for bureaucrats. This system has reached its zenith in the modern political formats, no accountability, no responsibility, no decisions,perfection in obfuscation and avoidance techniques, constant employment through regime change and a lifetime of benefits, sideways promotion for failure [called taking one for the team]... it's a beautiful thing isn't it? LOL
As to the 'hypothetical carrier' and associated budget, well informed voices have indicated [correctly IMO] we could afford a CV just not at the budgetary limits currently
imposed on the ADF by the politicians and hampered by the systemic bloat also well reported.
If I were to choose a capability level it would be for a Queen Elizabeth type, [with EMALS].
A full sized carrier, not a half arsed hybrid. As Abe [prominent amongst others] has clearly argued even one of these brings many more positives to the table than negatives and I for one cannot see where we MUST have a CV on either coast at all times.
I am aware of maintenance needs [downtime] but I believe Abe has correctly indicated the work around to that more than clear enough to quell uninformed argument about having only one.
I also feel that the airwing should be largely FAA not RAAF, it's a very specialised world at sea.
Going to sea in a small sailing boat can be achieved by any idiot, coming back regularly and safely requires specialist knowledge, imagine how much more difficult landing on a carrier is [even with modern aids], its a specialists role. It's [FAA] role should be recognised as self evident IMO.
The meaning of the airwing being largely FAA, should also be self evident, though to forestall pedantism...army rotors and RAAF/Allied pilots/crew etc would need to be cross trained/decked or worked up for deployments and constitute for a set time part of the embarked airwing.
Whether the British carrier is physically suited to the "Australia Station", i don't know and would leave that for others with more specialist knowledge to inform us.
Nonetheless I feel qualified enough to comment on and support the high level of political, strategic and tactical advantage that
only a full sized conventional CV would bring to Australia, as opposed to even 2 or 3 tiny tots [limited to using only one fast-jet which isn't in service yet and cross-decking only with others so equipped].
The expenditure for a CV may seem large and unfortunately the returns from it would largely be intangible [invisible in dollar terms] to the taxpayer, yet in terms of National prestige, respect, capability, influence and flexibility IMO it would be a very sound investment. Wisely used it could pay for itself the first time it prevents, or helps prevent, an awkward scene from going hot and requiring further ADF or Allied military intervention.
Remember always, budget constraints for a sector are a willful construction, often not indicating a lack of National resources and that political construction always dictates what limits the ADF has to operate within.
I can't see Canberra providing the funding but thankfully a 'hypothetical' like this gives one the chance to vent a little at the ineptitude therein.:flame:
Enough from me,
Cheers,
Mac