Linked DefMin Statement said:
Enhanced maritime cooperation
Consistent with ongoing bilateral maritime and humanitarian assistance and disaster relief cooperation the Ministers today announced the next phase in maritime capability sharing.
Following on from successful secondments of New Zealand crew on Australian warships , Australia will provide seconded crew to Royal New Zealand Navy over the course of 2013.
“This is a practical program that enhances maritime interoperability,” Minister Smith said.
Does this mean that RAN personnel are going to fill gaps the RNZN has been having in specialist crew that has been hampering their operations (
see discussion in RNZN thread)?
I've been away for a while and haven't caught up with the thread conversation, so if this has been discussed I apologise.
And...
Linked DefMin Statement said:
Strengthening the Australia-New Zealand Defence Relationship
The Ministers considered the progress of implementation of the 2011 Review of the Australia New Zealand Defence Relationship which they endorsed in January 2012.
Ministers agreed to deepen practical cooperation by:
- Increasing collaboration between the two Navies regarding sealift and afloat support. We have agreed to a mutual sealift cooperation program. This will allow for cross crewing of Royal Australian Navy and Royal New Zealand Navy vessels and afloat support to each other’s fleets.
- New Zealand participating with embedded observers in the 2013 iteration of the biennial Australia-United States exercise, TALISMAN SABRE 2013 with the aim of full participation from 2015 onwards;
- Australia hosting a 1.5 Track dialogue in Canberra in December on common security challenges;
- Agreeing to complementary personnel exchanges, such as New Zealand’s secondment to the Australian Civil Military Centre;
- Collaborating on Pacific maritime security, in dialogue with partners in the region.
Is this a first step to an integrated ANZ Defence Force?
:
More seriously though, the ADF and NZDF are part way there anyway after many years of joint operations, aligned procurement, and broadly compatible military doctrine and government policy. And there are already other cross-Tasman statutory bodies that operate quite successfully, or at least appear to from the outside!
Keep national deployable units, but developing a joint support infrastructure should be achievable.
There is a certain freedom and security (particularly from a NZ perspective) in knowing that a diplomatic breach between the nations that would result in a suspension of military co-operation is incredibly unlikely. It means that the creation of a joint capability or training/support program isn't going to disappear on a whim.
Problems would include a differing equipment replacement timetable, of course, with Australia tending to replace equipment more often.
Linked DefMin Statement said:
Ministers discussed Australia’s plans for a Pacific Maritime Security Program to replace the Pacific Patrol Boat Program. Ministers agreed Australia and New Zealand would continue to collaborate on Pacific maritime security, working all the time in close partnership with Pacific Island countries.
I'm curious what form the PPBP replacement will take. I don't think that it is a state secret to say that there are some very disappointing aspects to how the PPBP has been going. A lot of money has been spent by Australia to provide the boats and the training to run them, only to see them clocking up few days at sea, low availability and high running costs (I'd link to the published report but I can't remember where it was, DFAT, Defence or a senate submission). The point was to enable the PI nations to build up capability and a measure of self-sufficiency over EEZ protection, but the nations can't afford to run the boats and they don't go out often enough.
Perhaps a PPBP Mk2 isn't the way to go. No much point repeating a strategy that hasn't achieved the desired aims.
Options might be a statutory authority established among the partner nations which will operate the fleet as a pooled resource which would be preferable from a operational and sustainment perspective, as most of the nations operate a single boat. As they undertake an EEZ protection rather than a defence role, hopefully cross border jurisdiction problems could be managed easier.
Another option might be to emulate Customs and buy capability from a private operator like Surveillance Australia.