As gf said "whole of govt, whole of govt, whole of govt..............." They answer to the electorate who don't give a big rat's ring b...t.!Do the Senate Estimates committee have the power to veto the planned buy?
As gf said "whole of govt, whole of govt, whole of govt..............." They answer to the electorate who don't give a big rat's ring b...t.!Do the Senate Estimates committee have the power to veto the planned buy?
Was that when Toz Dadswell was NOCNA? My dad worked for him there in the mid to late 70's.Check your facts Peter, the Whitlam govt was in power when the Indonesians invaded E.Timor. It is generally agreed that comments from the Whitlam govt actually encouraged the Indons.
I was the Naval intelligence officer in Darwin at the time and I can tell you for a fact that some of the diplomatic cables coming from our govt did not make pretty reading.
It is likely the vessel dedicated to this role (and the back up vessel) will be DMS operated vessels. I understand the vessel needs an A frame and over stern capability which the SB does not have.With the purchase of Choules, that is perhaps one of the few non-foolish things Gov't has recently done. The capabilities of a Bay-class LSD match up quite closely with some requirements of JP2048 for the third sealift/amphib ship. The ADF was able to purchase the ex-Largs Bay at a bargain price, right when the RAN was desparately in need of new vessels to provide sealift.
The problem AFAIK is neither crews nor the ships themselves, rather it is Gov't which is causing the problem. In addition to the ships which are entering the ASMD upgrade, two Anzac-class FFH's are tied up at dock instead of going out to sea. This is done because the cost to operate a vessel at sea is higher than keeping the same ship at dock. The crew is not much of a problem, as there are sufficient naval personnel on shore duty who could be assigned to the two frigates if they were operational and at sea. In fact, some RAN personnel have opted to transfer to ACPB ops, so that they could be assigned to a vessel which still gets underway.
Having a Blue/Gold crew arrangement for the currently deploying frigates would only help in the sense that the vessel crews could have more time ashore to spend with their families. What gets missed is that some of these deployments are so far away, that in order to sustain them the deployments are by their nature long. The other part of this issue, which has been a bit of a recurring bugbear for the RAN, is that the current frigates (those not undergoing upgrade yet or tied up at dock) are seeing so much use that they are suffering accelerated wear & tear. Adding delays and deferring maintenance because the RAN needs vessels to meet service needs just exacerbates the problem. All so that in the short-term, Gov't can reduce the Defence spend and perhaps show a budgetary surplus.
I do wish people would realize that by taking such short-term actions to save money have real long-terms costs, both in actual fiscal terms as well as capabilities.
If Skandi Bergen was being purchased to operate some form of sub rescue system, that would be one thing, but much of the undersea equipment is being removed prior to entering RAN service. The RAN is getting the Skandi Bergen as an "amphibious" vessel. Granted, there is perhaps the capability to carry ~1,000 tons of cargo, and also can operate a helicopter... There is no way to land any cargo carried unless the vessel can dock at a port. So, no actual way for an "amphibious" vessel to actually conduct amphibious operation. Secondly, the Skandi Bergen is only going to be in RAN service a short time, ~18 months, before being transferred to Customs. Basically the RAN is spending A$130 mil. to get 18 months of service out of a vessel which is unsuitable for the stated role, and that is before one even factors in the potential issues surrounding operating a RAN vessel with a civilian crew. There are so many elements of this which are questionable in terms of legality and rationality that it strikes me as the sort of brainchild of someone with the authority to ignore the considered advice of service and maritime personnel, coupled with the ego to do so.
-Cheers
It would have cost very little to increase the size of the hanger to permit the effective operation of seakings from ANZACs which would have greatly increased the ASW capability of the RAN through using an existing an paid for capability. No brainer really.Same reason the T45 has a flight deck sized for the Chinook but a hanger only for a Merlin or Pair of Lynx?
I don't see your point on this one. The Sea Kings had their ASW gear removed before the Anzacs entered service, so I'm not sure how they would have increased the Anzac's ASW capability?It would have cost very little to increase the size of the hanger to permit the effective operation of seakings from ANZACs which would have greatly increased the ASW capability of the RAN through using an existing an paid for capability. No brainer really.
Whoops! maybe shouldnt reply based on dodgy memory! Sorry guys.Actually Melbourne and Newcastle weren't commissioned until the early 90's.
Likewise the Seahawks didn't start going to sea until around 1990 for trials. The first 4 FFG's couldn't carry them until they under-went the enlargement to the F/D & were fitted with RAST.
During the 80's the FFG's carried the Squirrel or the Kiowa.
Cheers
The gear was removable prior to the mid 90s life extension in which it was permanently landed. Dipping sonar was still fitted when the ANZACs were planned / ordered so making the hanger larger would have removed the need for a new helo type in the short term and increased the options for a replacement down the track. Note that variants of the Seaking could be fitted to fire Sea Eagle, Sea Skua and Exocet, so ugrading ours to fire Penguin would likely not have been an issue.I don't see your point on this one. The Sea Kings had their ASW gear removed before the Anzacs entered service, so I'm not sure how they would have increased the Anzac's ASW capability?
Article 4 of the Antarctic Treaty put all claims to Antarctic territory on hold and no new claims are to be made for the life of the treaty.Yes a lot of people seem to forget that we have a claim on parts of Antarctica. I think we need to work out what exactly our rights and responsibilities are if we don't want Gazprom, Chinalco etc. turning up and taking resources.Do we even want compensation or if it stays a conservation area how are we going to enforce it? Sure I would like a small number of OPV's but we got to start somewhere
The ability and interest to police and control the territory would go a long way though, particularly in regard to the claim. Rather superficial to claim and yet not to have the capability or interest to do so, that I think will be the biggest decider of what happens in regards to everyone's claims; especially when Australia may end up being burdened with protecting/policing/controlling other friendly nations claims after the Antarctic Treaty finishes. Unless of course, the Treaty is renewed. Which I find unlikely.What the papers say is that Australia should be making more of an effort to be present in Antarctica, that the profile of Antarctica should be raised within government and that Australia should take more of an interest in participating in Antarctic projects. Australia should avoid taking a passive disinterest in what happens down south and put a focus on everyday participation and an active presence.
I think you've moved the goal posts a bit on that one.The gear was removable prior to the mid 90s life extension in which it was permanently landed. Dipping sonar was still fitted when the ANZACs were planned / ordered so making the hanger larger would have removed the need for a new helo type in the short term and increased the options for a replacement down the track. Note that variants of the Seaking could be fitted to fire Sea Eagle, Sea Skua and Exocet, so ugrading ours to fire Penguin would likely not have been an issue.
The cost of retaining the Seakings ASW capability, upgrading them during their life extentions to fire ASM (variants of the Seaking deployed Sea Eagle, Exocet and Sea Skua, so Penguin Maveric, etc. should not have benn an issue) as well as procuring additional airframes to cover the required ship flights would likely have been lower than the failed Super Sea Sprog. Not to forget that the Seaking was already in service and the Sprog never made it.
Yep, I worked for Eric Johnston for about 6 months then Tos. In the days before email and satcoms Shoal Bay played a huge role during the 1975 Timor affair. The Darwin naval establishment was very small, NOCNA's office/staff, 4 x Attack boats, base engineering, Coonawarra Comms and Shoal Bay which was underWas that when Toz Dadswell was NOCNA? My dad worked for him there in the mid to late 70's.
Yes well I did move them a little after checking key dates.I think you've moved the goal posts a bit on that one.
There's a big difference between making the flight deck of an Anzac large enough for a Sea King to lilly pad from time to time if required and proposing an upgraded Sea King instead of the Sea Sprite for the Anzac's dedicated helicopter. Why upgrade an already 20 year old helicopter for a role its not designed for, not to mention having to more than double the size of the fleet, for a frigate that is supposed to serve for 30 years?
Surely if we are looking back and proposing an alternative to buying the Sea Sprite, the answer would be just to buy more Sea Hawks - a helicopter already in service, already specced for the role required, that already fit into the Anzac hanger and that had a guaranteed upgrade path.
While there are similar groups in the RAN, there is no dedicated FPG like the RM has.Moin,
does the RAN intend to establish a force similiar to the RM Fleet Protection Group?
When it comes to structure , this Force could be modeled on the RAAF ADG.
With the current expansion of the RAN the new ships would have enough spare space to allocate a dedicatet boarding section, similiar to the RM Fleet Protection Group.
I am not sure to be honest but would not be surprised if he is yet another ex-hippy / anti-Vietnam protestor reborn as a defence analyst.Just heard a Lowy Institute presentation from the above prof. He seems to want to steer defence away from warfighting and towards more irregular warfare. He suggests that too much of DoD budget is being spent on subs and F 35's whilst he supports the LHD's.
What is this chaps standing amongst the Defpros and what influence does his opinion hold with govt?
I find it curious that he would be interested in turning Defence away from subs of all things. They are at their core a "special" capability with the potential to disportionately tie up hostile forces since they presence (or absence) is not known. Nevermind their ISR capabilities.Just heard a Lowy Institute presentation from the above prof. He seems to want to steer defence away from warfighting and towards more irregular warfare. He suggests that too much of DoD budget is being spent on subs and F 35's whilst he supports the LHD's.
What is this chaps standing amongst the Defpros and what influence does his opinion hold with govt?