Not sure what to really think of this maybe SCS1.19 Given its strong connections with South Pacific countries, New Zealand has an enduring interest in regional stability. The South Pacific has remained relatively stable since 2010, and is unlikely to face an external military threat in the foreseeable future. However, the region continues to face a range of economic, governance, and environmental challenges. These challenges indicate that it is likely that the Defence Force will have to deploy to the region over the next ten years, for a response beyond humanitarian assistance and disaster relief.
Cooperation on Anzac replacement?1.23 It is also important that the Defence Force maintains its ability to contribute
to operations further afield should the Government require it to do so. Such contributions will most likely be made as part of operations led by New Zealand’s international partners. The ability of the New Zealand Defence Force to operate effectively with others, particularly Australia, will therefore remain an important focus for New Zealand.
Follow the RAAF on P8 and maybe the G550?1.27 The force structure set out in this White Paper is therefore a mix of existing and planned capabilities, and new capabilities to meet future challenges. The Defence Force will maintain a range of land and naval combat, strategic projection and logistics, intelligence and reconnaissance capabilities. These capabilities will enable the Defence Force to undertake the roles and tasks expected of it, and to continue providing credible deployment options, including combat capable forces, to the Government.
In the house during the general debate he questioned the lack of an Air Combat Capability, which is a legitimate beef. In fact they also should have let him into the announcement scope at 11am and not 1.30pm. But Ron ruins it with statements like he made above about no necessity for Stratlift.Another quote from the same story which I hope takes root in the Kiwi psyche:
Ron Mark has started dribbling rubbish already. He is still claiming that the govt want to replace the C130s with (only) C17s at a cost of $3 billion. He also says that NZ doesn't need strategic airlift and that we only need tactical airlift, plus that the NH90s are no good because you can't fly them off a frigate. Gawd help us.
I agree Mark is right about the Air Combat capability but he has that innate ability to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. Is it arrogance or does he have an inability to learn? i am unsure. Goff was on the TVNZ news and hadn't anything good to say. I agree that Dann and Gower are muppets, but then we shouldn't really insult muppets. Still rankles me that the MSM show an OPV and call it a frigate. Suppose they refrained from calling it a nuclear powered aircraft carrier.In the house during the general debate he questioned the lack of an Air Combat Capability, which is a legitimate beef. In fact they also should have let him into the announcement scope at 11am and not 1.30pm. But Ron ruins it with statements like he made above about no necessity for Stratlift.
National will need to bring him into the tent better in some ways as he maybe an associate minister of defence post 2017.
BTW - I just saw Paddy Gower on TV3 use the XB-47 as an example of a future drone capability and how all the current stuff will be scrapped - then switched channels to see Corrin Dann give his analysis. Muppets both.
No,wrong geographic region. The SCS wasn't in the South Pacific the last time I looked. However one never knows with Hollywood. It was aimed specifically at the South Pacific with probabilities of NZ & Australia having to intervene in a destabilised South Pacific nation.I haven't read it all yet but so far three things stand out,
Not sure what to really think of this maybe SCS
Maybe. According to the DWP, more detail will be provided in the Defence Capability Plan which will be released later this year - well that's the plan, Stan, anyway.Cooperation on Anzac replacement?
I would think that the P8 would now have to be in the frame along with the MQ4C Triton BAMS.Follow the RAAF on P8 and maybe the G550?
I get the feeling he honestly does mean well, which is good to keep challenging, but then ruins it with his lack of insight and common (even for ex mil) knowledge of todays defence force and it's context.In the house during the general debate he questioned the lack of an Air Combat Capability, which is a legitimate beef. In fact they also should have let him into the announcement scope at 11am and not 1.30pm. But Ron ruins it with statements like he made above about no necessity for Stratlift.
National will need to bring him into the tent better in some ways as he maybe an associate minister of defence post 2017.
BTW - I just saw Paddy Gower on TV3 use the XB-47 as an example of a future drone capability and how all the current stuff will be scrapped - then switched channels to see Corrin Dann give his analysis. Muppets both.
1. Bougainville, Timor Leste, Solomans...........West Papua? Nothing new here.I haven't read it all yet but so far three things stand out,
Not sure what to really think of this maybe SCS
Cooperation on Anzac replacement?
Follow the RAAF on P8 and maybe the G550?
With all due respect to Mr Mark, whom I have never met, the evidence over many years suggests his presence in Parliament is depriving a village somewhere of its idiot.I get the feeling he honestly does mean well, which is good to keep challenging, but then ruins it with his lack of insight and common (even for ex mil) knowledge of todays defence force and it's context.
Not sure on the third frigate but no on the ACF depending on the level of capability you desireWould 20 billion be enough to include an extra frigate to the needed replacements, and possibly a lead in to a restored ACF, or is this just wishful thinking on my behalf?
Only Paddy Gower mentioned the X-47 as a way to sensationalise the DWP launch.What really???, X-47, lol gezzzz are we going to buy a used Nimitz to launch these off too. Even think the M-4 Triton is over kill for NZ, we'd be best ask our mates in AU if we can there feet under some arrangement if we need them, Best swap the 6 P-3 for 4 P-8, we'd be better invest UAV funds into 4-5 Predator/Hermes 900 with a Marine Surveillance for Navy/AF free up P3/P8s, Ground Surveillance pods for Army new capability kill two birds with one stone.
Short answer, I think probably if one is using open source costings and does some tweaking of the capabilities. There would be no change left though for the piggy bank. The real question though would there be ongoing support for such acquisitions through extra personnel and operational funding?Would 20 billion be enough to include an extra frigate to the needed replacements, and possibly a lead in to a restored ACF, or is this just wishful thinking on my behalf?
Yes that is correct. The extra operational finding from 2026-2031 has not been factored in the $20B dollar boost. There is around $11B to be spent over the next decade with around $4B in further operational spending from current baselines. Only the direct capital investments in the following 5 year period have been factored and not the further additional operating baselines.John Key in his interview said that costs for the NZDF would rise including operational support for the new capabilities and additional funds would need to be found.
PNG proper. Plenty of concern right there. Given police shot 8 students yesterday. Not really a one off incident. Tension is building.. How would NZ feel about a joint peace keeping mission if things get worse.1. Bougainville, Timor Leste, Solomans...........West Papua? Nothing new here.
You will have to trim around $4B from that NG unless it is aspirational. The DWP funding increase includes the increased OpEx until 2026 and CapEx until 2031. Only $5B of CapEx funding is projected between 2026 to 2031 following the $11B over the first 10 years to 2026.This is a theoretical list of acquisitions for illustrative purposes only the costings have been worked out in a spreadsheet and based upon open sourced material where available. This builds upon current NZDF capability sets. Sources are provided where possible.
All costs are in NZ$. I haven't bothered to round up / down after converting to NZ$ because that would magnify already existing errors.
- RNZAF
- 5 x Augusta Westland AW109 LUH: $66,706,196
- 5 x Beechcraft B350ER: $126,000,593
- 5 x Beechcraft B350ER MSA ISR: $222,353,988 (base price + guesstimate equip cost)
- 6 x Beechcraft T6C Texan II: $61,369,701
- 3 x Boeing C17A (ex USAF): $667,061,963 less guesstimate 2nd hand cost
- 3 x Boeing CH47F Chinook: $132,567,447
- 3 x Boeing KC40 (based on combination of B737-800 BCF & ERX): $713,725,170 and KC46 price difference
- 5 x Lockheed KC130J: $498,814,112
- 2 x NHI NH90 Helicopter (NFH -Support): $120,749,710
- 3 x Northrop Grump MQ4C Triton BAMS: $546,941,891
- LM F16 Block 25 REGENUPGRADE Package: $1,111,769,938
- Total RNZAF Acquisitions: $4,268,060,709
- .
- RNZN
- 1 x MSC: $250,000,000 (NZDF LTDP}
- 3 x FFG/H: $2,487,974,789 unit price guesstimated @ €500 million to allow for mods.
- 1 x LHD ~ 15,000 tonnes: $441,743,255 yes I know - only source I could find.
- 1 x LWSC: $150,000,000 Guesstimate
- NHI NH90 Helicopter (NFH -Support): $120,749,710
- 4 x OPV: $1,107,978,106 OPVs of similar capabilities but around 3000 tonne mark.
- 12 x Sikorsky MH60R: $773,987,548
- Total RNZN Acquistions: $5,082,433,408
- .
- NZ Army
- 12 x 8x8 Self Propelled Howitzer 105mm: $96,000,000 Guesstimate
- 12 x 8x8 Self Propelled Anti Aircraft Artillery 35mm Millenium gun & Mistral: $102,000,000 Guesstimate
- 12 x Bell AH1 Viper: $551,437,889
- Total Army Acquisitions: $749,437,889
- .
- Estimated spares, maintenance, manuals, simulators etc., @ 100% unit cost: $9,238,162,068
- Total Estimated Present Value Acquisition Cost: $19,588,094,073
- .
- Annual Present Value Funding Requirements 15 Years: $1,305,872,938
- Exchange rates valid: 25/5/2016
- NZ$1.00 = US$0.6746
- NZ$1.00 = €0.6029
Bugger. I shall have to rethink it then. Tot time.You will have to trim around $4B from that NG unless it is aspirational. The DWP funding increase includes the increased OpEx until 2026 and CapEx until 2031. Only $5B of CapEx funding is projected between 2026 to 2031 following the $11B over the first 10 years to 2026.