1. Firstly there was no indication given by me that MV-22's would be used on the CY. There was no regard given to it by me at all. I have been fairly consistent about that over the years.
I didn't suggest that at all, I was just stating that the issues involved if such was mooted.
2. No I would wait until the urgent priority capabilities are solved first. Strategic/Heavy, then Medium/Tactical. Then follow up with the bridging solution between LTT and MUH capability gaps.
That would be the sensible and practical option, however given the history of NZ defence acquisitions, the pollies and Treasury would not necessarily see a subsequent acquisition of Osprey as being a necessity, unfortunately. I think that there would need to be a major shift in the political classes attitude towards defence before this happened.
3. LPD's are cheaper, but not that dramatically different. but are limited in their aviation capability with respect to a LHD design. Not just sea blindness but air blindness is just as a pronounced affliction in the NZ context and its wider area of capabilities. MV-22's fold up quite nicely by the way. If a LHD hanger takes a Chook height wise it should take a V-22. You do want us to have a hanger that can stow a Chook now NG? Stowed dimensions a similar.
I saw the video of the Osprey folding and being stowed. Quite impressive. Personally, if I was the one approving procurement, I would approve an MV22 acquisition over a Chook acquisition purely because of the capability difference. Unfortunately I don't hold that position. I would prefer the LHD however given the proclivity of NZGs for cost restraint my thoughts are that they would opt for the LPD. You are correct about air blindness and something that is as insidious as sea blindness. I like the term.
4. A link to a journalistic suggestion that the V-22 variant line maybe closed in the 2020s? I have a counter suggestion that it may stay open. With further potential variants coming on that Todj touched on, massive R&D investment so far, maturing platforms, a reasonable order book so far, the knowledge that defence systems are increasingly conceptualized holistically and not through singular "silo" capabilities.
Why is the article problematic? It makes a valid observation and given NZGs glacial speed - to use your term - acquisition process, it could possibly be out of production when the NZG finally makes a decision.
5. Chinooks are around US$6400 pfh (2013) and MV-22's are around US$9300 (2015) according to USGov figures. So yes more but the Chook cannot also pretend to be a CN235 when it wants to. Osprey's fly further & faster than chooks.
6. Scoring 5-6 MV-22's we would end up foregoing buying more NH-90s and a few light-medium tactical transport twins, and possibly the need for a Chinnock sized rotary. I have no problems rationalising on cost and conops grounds that very thing as we move to maturing our joint amphibious context and having a "graduated" spectrum solution with both rotary and fixed wing airlift. Can a graduated spectrum solution be found for less?
I have been giving the same question some serious thought for quite a while. I don't think that a graduated spectrum could be found for less.
7. European spare parts culture? Yeap they have experienced it. You can understand why they are very keen on US solutions these days. The V-22 sus/spt model now being developed on the C-17 global model.
8. The biggest problem is not really the unwillingness to spend money - to be cheapskates - they (the NZGovt) have made headway. It is just that they are glacial in their decision making.
I agree about the decision making velocity, or lack thereof. However I still think that the pollies do not take defence seriously enough. If they were they would resource it far better than they do now and they wouldn't still be enforcing the compulsory savings and the capital charge, when defence is struggling already. How much does that reduce Vote:NZDF by; 10 - 20% at a guess? What ever it is, it is funds that NZDF badly needs. I view the capital charge as a tax and NZDF is not exempt GST and other duties and taxes.
The graduated spectrum - a good descriptive term - for NZDF air mobility around the medium - light tactical level and the heavy rotary wing lift area, is something that IMHO should be discussed. As I intimated above, I have been giving this some serious thought for quite a while and have reached the tentative conclusion that given costs and CONOPS, a MV22 acquisition would be, in the long term, a viable cost effective acquisition for NZDF. This would be because it negates the requirement of having to acquire two platforms with the associated acquisition and full life costs. This acquisition would also bring a range of capabilities to NZDF that would exceed anything that it has had before and introduce new capability sets to NZDF, that would be of direct benefit to it and to our allies, coalition partners and friends. This platform would also bring a very distinct and unique capability set to HADR.