As been said over the years on the forum hypothetical's should also have a level of realism attached it, with a number of people being cut off at the knee's for venturing to far off with the fairy's.
Besides *being on the verge of world war when has NZ*ever increased the capability of all three service at the same time and not at the detriment of another?
World War 2 and I never said that it was at the detriment of another. The RNZAF, NZ Army and the NZ Division of the RN expanded very quickly. When the Pacific War started the RNZAF, RNZN and NZ Army expanded exponentially again. The RNZAF had 7 combat sqns in the UK and a similar number in the Pacific. The RNZN went from one cruiser to two which would've been 3, except the Neptune was sunk in the Med when it hit a mine. It also operated ships in the Solomons with the USN. The NZ Army had the 2nd NZ Division in Egypt, UK, North Africa and Italy with the British and Allied Armies and the 3rd NZ Division in the Solomons with the US Army.
You have moved into the realm of CONOPS, lilypad operations require training, therefore that will be one of the requirements for F35B as defined by characteristics of the aircraft and end user's perspective.If part of the requirements are operations from austere airfield it does not necessarily mean that F35B would have to be bought. CTOL aircraft can also operate from austere airfields.Austere airfields are not just dirt and grass where matting has to be placed down.
Also aircraft numbers have a bearing on force planning which ultimately effect CONOPS. Any increase in the budget will work in parallel with force planning which also drive CONOPS,*no sense budgeting for X amount of a more expensive aircraft which effects the number of aircraft procured at the expense of force planning all for the sake of being able to do something which is not part of your CONOPS.
The premise is that the pollies get a humongous fright because of the deteriorating geopolitical situation. Hence there would be a change in CONOPS because of the change in the situation. When the brown smelly stuff hits the quickly rotating cooling device a lot of things would change; not overnight but change they would and reasonably quickly to meet an evolving situation. If, as I suggested the F35B training, was done by the USN & USMC then they would already have the deck experience. CONOPS are not writ large on granite tablets; they do need to have the ability to be flexible or you may end up with mechanised murder like on the Western Front in WW1 and / or you could lose the war. If we end up fighting the Chinese and / or the Russians we will be fighting foes who don't fight our way and who have different cultures and mind sets, especially the Chinese. The Vietnamese might've given the PLA a bloody nose back in the late 1970's, but the PLA today is totally different qualitatively, technologically and doctrinally to what it was then. Nowadays it is a formidable foe and to treat it as anything less would be extremely unwise.
What I'm looking at is possibilities and not discounting them because of current peacetime policy where the feeling amongst the pollies and the general population is that things aren't benign but not serious either. Personally I don't subscribe to that view, but I am looking at when things go rotten big time and how things that are normal now will be set aside. A recent example in NZ terms would be the NZG response to the Christchurch earthquakes, where they mobilised services, introduced regulations, found $15 - 20 billion in a hurry and enacted various pieces of legislation quite quickly to help with the rescue and recovery.