recce.k1
Well-Known Member
Always appreciate your realism Spoz, and your post on this subject a few days ago on the RAN thread prompted me to put some thought into this from the perspectives and lessons learnt of the past and but also the needs going forward. There were also the post war improved Dido light cruisers so there was once a (political) will, albeit token in numbers as you noted, to ensure the RNZN maintained a capability that could slot into a RN/RAN task force (eg additional air defence for the RAN's Majestic-class light aircraft carriers). (Pity it wasn't replaced with a County-class or perhaps (long shot) a 4th CFA to slot directly into the RAN orbat and be based in Australia)?With all due respect to the RNZN, and I trained with one of their CNs, they have always operated what the RAN would have considered Tier 2; Lochs vs. Battles/Darings, T12 vs Darings/Charles F Adams, Anzacs VS CF Adams/FFG7s/F100s. So it would be nothing new; and might well be the appropriate and most importantly, affordable option.
There is much criticism of NZ not pulling its weight and suggest (as ASPI has recently) even NZ purchasing 2-3 RAN project Tier 2's IMO is still tokenistic. Particularly when we have had a greater naval force in the past and now when the Indo-Pacific situation is much more complex than it has been in the past (and when RNZN's focus was primarily ASW post war). Yes the ASW focus should still be so now, but we are at the point where the RNZN needs other capabilities and the MoD/NZDF is itself pushing for greater concurrency in terms of capabilities to support operations.
You know your naval history better than me but for the benefit of others who may not re: NZ early in WW2 when war was declared NZ (Division of the RN) light cruisers ventured into the Southern Ocean looking for raiders, their supply ships or enemy merchant shipping, as such vessels made divergences from their usual ocean tracks escaping to neutral ports or some tried to return home (and were invariably sunk in the Atlantic) or to occupied France and even Japan etc. A deployment was also made to the coasts and ports of Chile, Peru, Ecuador and Colombia for similar reasons.
Today we face a potential adversary with one of the largest and most lethal naval fleets of our times. Backed up by hundreds of coast guard and potentially armed civilian ocean going vessels, which are operating around in the Indo-Pacific.
I'm not sure NZ potentially sending say, a 16 cell VLS equipped ALFA 3000 into the Southern Ocean or another eastern patrol to the likes again of South America to keep an eye on potential raiders causing havoc in eastern Polynesia (underseas cables, refueling facilities etc) would be the most ideal confguration?
So in terms of appropriateness and affordability that's what scares me ... NZ politicians taking the easy way out with smiling photo-ops with their Australian counterparts signing us up to the cheapest and the least (future) upgradable options all for political expediency! Whilst I hope Defence will bring some sembalance of reality into such future fleet and capability planning, never under-estimate a NZ politcian with a chequebook saying take it or leave it ...