40 deg south
Well-Known Member
While I always like to wind up our cousins in the East Island, in truth there is enough silliness to go around!They've made Oz look silly in a number of areas...
In some cases, NZ made a better call than Aust. For example, replacing the M113 with the LAVIII, and opting for new-build Seasprites instead of old airframes with new electronics.
On the other hand, spending NZD$260 million to upgrade five 40-year-old C130s, and taking a decade to deliver them, makes the Aussie C130J purchase decision look like the work of Einstein. The P3C upgrade is more defensible given the lack of alternative airframes, but I have trouble believing it also needed to take a decade. And that's not to mention Project Protector...
NZ's besetting sin is cheapness. Even when sensible decisions are made on a platform (e.g Seasprite) we bought too few, meaning the units they had would be flogged to death, and wouldn't get time out for heavy maintenance. Even Protector (the IPV+OPV+sealift) project wasn't conceptually flawed - they just tried to buy too many ships with too little money. Inevitably, corners were cut and compromises made.
In contrast, I think part of Australia's problem has been lack of budget discipline at both Cabinet level and within the defence establishment. Plus wanting to use defence spending to buy votes in sensitive states/electorates. Where that path leads to can be seen in Canada, where they are currently planning to locally-build two Berlin-class replenishment ships, each one of which will cost more than the combined cost of the four (larger) British MARS tankers from South Korea. In this context, NZ's lack of a real defence industrial base (and associated lobbyists) can be seen as an advantage.
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