Thanks for the background.
The Cruisers never really made sense to me but the carrier, especially with the huge NZ presence in the BPF seemed to make more sense. If not for ex BPF Kiwis moving over to the RAN the Australian carriers would have been a far more difficult proposition. The politics you outlined makes sense but it is a shame as a CVL would have been a far better investment than a pair of out dated cruisers while it could be argued that considering the Skyhawks that ended up forming the RNZAF ACF that a carrier or two would not have been a bad investment.
I understand there was a similar issue with the RAN in WWII with senior RN officers in the RAN making arrangements that the Australian establishment was not at all interested in. Such as the transfer of an entire squadron consisting of a carrier, two cruisers and six destroyers to the RAN or even the transfer of the new Armoured Fleet Carriers Implacable and Indefatigable to the RAN to work with the BPF. The RAN and RN were keen the politicians were not, they were perfectly happy sending ships where the US wanted them but otherwise keeping out of the way.
Too bad I say as Australia and New Zealand are both, irrespective of what the air forces and armies believe, maritime nations and carriers would actually have improved the power projection, air and land power of both nations more than any system. platform or organisational structure that the army of air force of either could adopt.
The Cruisers never really made sense to me but the carrier, especially with the huge NZ presence in the BPF seemed to make more sense. If not for ex BPF Kiwis moving over to the RAN the Australian carriers would have been a far more difficult proposition. The politics you outlined makes sense but it is a shame as a CVL would have been a far better investment than a pair of out dated cruisers while it could be argued that considering the Skyhawks that ended up forming the RNZAF ACF that a carrier or two would not have been a bad investment.
I understand there was a similar issue with the RAN in WWII with senior RN officers in the RAN making arrangements that the Australian establishment was not at all interested in. Such as the transfer of an entire squadron consisting of a carrier, two cruisers and six destroyers to the RAN or even the transfer of the new Armoured Fleet Carriers Implacable and Indefatigable to the RAN to work with the BPF. The RAN and RN were keen the politicians were not, they were perfectly happy sending ships where the US wanted them but otherwise keeping out of the way.
Too bad I say as Australia and New Zealand are both, irrespective of what the air forces and armies believe, maritime nations and carriers would actually have improved the power projection, air and land power of both nations more than any system. platform or organisational structure that the army of air force of either could adopt.