The Sep -Jul issue of the Navy Leagues's "Navy" has a paper by Jonathan Foreman - The British Royal Navy - Road to Salvation? part 2 .
The author is a known critic of the current Situation and decline of the RN but I think those views are worth repeating. I'm unable to link the piece so I'll do my best to précis the main thrust.
"RN LEADERSHIP AND THE DECLINE IN BRITISH NAVAL DESIGN"
- the RNs leadership does bear responsibility for the fact that British warships tend to be conceived, like T45, without proper consideration of financial realities so the ships are progressively stripped of their planned capabilities in order to save money during their long gestation.
- common sense dictates that the few destroyers and frigates fielded by a mini navy should be genuine GP warships with a speciality, not specialist ships.
- the T45 so often proclaimed to be the "best in the world" by the RN and its cheerleaders in the British media are a case in point. They may well field argueably the best AAW systems but in almost every other respect they are inferior to contemporary competitors the world and are pathetically and unforgivingly vulnerable to submarine and surface threats.
- claims made and export expectations for the long delayed T26 may be similarly deluded. It's boosters may claim it to be superior to France's FREMM frigates thus negating the fact that the French Navy has more ships than the RN but the FREMMs are already in service and it's manufacturers have already found a bigger export market (Greece, Egypt, Morocco and possibly Canada and Australia) than any British ship in the last three decades.
MONOPOLIES AND CAPITAL SHIPS DESIGNED BY CIVIL SERVANTS
one of the extraordinary revelations that came out of the recent Defence Select Committee report was that the thinking behind the design and purpose of Britains new carriers had apparently come from not the Admiralty or ant other identifiable group of defence thinkers but in the words of Lord West"Policy people at the centre and the Permanent Secretary".
- some of the baffling flaws in the conception of the two QEs may well be a result of their strange origins; no consideration of nuclear power, will come into service without an adequate number of aircraft and will only have the benefit of escorts if the RN abandons most of its other missions, lack of cats and traps thereby limiting their use to F35B.
- BAE a prime contractor for the F35B took over a year to respond to the Cameron government (when asked to cost cats and traps) and when it did so it claimed that putting cats on the ships would mow add more than GBP 2b a piece rather than GBP 900m as planned.
NUMBERS
- lack of quantity has a negative quality all its own. If your six new destroyers are technologically superior to the twelve you just retired (which in the U.K. Means scrapping not mothballs) the fact that you cannot deploy your ships in half as many places around the world means you have ended up with an inherently diminished naval capability.
- operating a very small number of relatively high quality, extremely costly vessels whose designs were conceived two decades ago and for a much larger fleet - the current situation in the RN - is argueably a pointless even maturbatory exercise.
BETRAYING THE OFFENSIVE
-the RNs leadership bears even more responsibility for three decades of warship design that has all but ignored the importance of offensive capability,
- it's painful to say this but the difference between the generation of naval leaders (between the war years and the last three decades) is argueably, that the Admiralty of the war years and decades after, took warfare,seriously, treating it not as an abstraction or a phenonomem unlikely to be repeated in their lifetime. They were wrong on many things but their primary concern was the defence of the realm, not the short term interests of a particular government.
- However for the last three decades every significant procurement and spending decision made by successive defence ministers, the U.K. Mod and the RN leadership has been based on the explicit or implicit assumptions that there is no chance that the navy might find itself at war for decades to come. At the same time tremendous efforts have been made by politicians, civil servants and senior naval officers to deny, disguise or distract from the resulting decline in capability and these have been remarkably successful
A ROYAL NAVY FIT FOR THIS ERA
I'll paraphrase this chapter the thrust of which is that the RN has made little attempt to create radical solutions to combat the decline and has continued on as if nothing has changed. He quoted modularity, something akin to the USN distributed lethality doctrine with RFAs, a mix of both conventional and nucs to increase sub numbers and smaller cheaper merchant hull type carriers, all ideas never truely exploited.
IS THERE HOPE
- the culture that made the RN great is far from dead, it's merely on the back foot and challenged from without and from within. There are still,senior officers who believe in and exemplify old virtues and courage: personal responsibility and patriotism was recently demonstrated by VADM Simon Lister, Chief of Materiel(Fleet) and Chief of Support. VADM Lister broke with current custom by taking a public stand against the running down of the Navy writing what newspapers called "a scathing attack" on govt. cuts, diminished readiness and over reliance on civilian support (The Naval Engineer). During the last two decades the only British Generals and Admirals willing to come out and criticise the degree and manner of defence cuts have been those who are already retired and have recieved their gongs - and therefor lost much of their leverage and ability to get public attention."
This is a scathing paper and I stress it's the opinion of a constant critic of the RN but it makes very thoughtful reading.