There's just one thing missing with the news of Frigate upgrade contract being awarded.... the public whining about the unnecessary expense and how many hip replacements could otherwise be bought!
Where's all the normal shallow media discussion with opposition party beat-ups about the cost? Are we perhaps starting to see a real change in thinking about defence spending in NZ...or am I just being naively optimistic!?!
Gibbo and recce
I've been puzzling over exactly the same thing, and believe there are multiple causes.
I think part of it is a generational change. The baby boomer types are too worried about their investment properties and paying their kids student loans to get excited about anything that isn't a matter of direct self-interest.
The world has turned out to be a more complex and dangerous place than many of the political left believed. And with Russian troops massing on a European land border and religious fanatics kidnapping children in Nigeria, it is increasingly hard to paint the USA as the source of all evil.
The NZDF has had some relatively high-profile operations in the past decade, and the public is proud of their achievements in Timor Leste and the Solomons. Afghanistan was much less popular, but was regarded as more of a nuisance than a great moral cause by the public. Attempts to turn it into a Vietnam-style issue failed dismally.
The improving economy, whether it turns out to be real or a flash in the pan, also probably makes people less nervous about govt spending.
Finally, the recent equipment orders have sounded fairly non-aggressive. Training planes - meh. Trucks - nah, they're just trucks. Frigate upgrades -' well, we already have the frigates so better keep them working' seems to be the public response. Fortunately, the next two navy vessels on the shopping list have a similar profile.
If the Nats wanted to take a tactical gamble, they could announce a replacement tanker purchase very loudly around the start of the election campaign. The Greens would almost certainly oppose it reflexively, and Labour might follow suit. National could then have a lot of fun asking why they wanted NZ to put the environment at risk by using a single-skinned vessel to transport oil, and why they were opposed to an asset that will largely be used for disaster relief in the Pacific? Now that would be fun to watch!