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-   -   Head of Royal Navy threatens resignation over push to scrap Harriers (https://www.pprune.org/military-aviation/353820-head-royal-navy-threatens-resignation-over-push-scrap-harriers.html)

seanbean 6th Dec 2008 23:14

Head of Royal Navy threatens resignation over push to scrap Harriers
 
Here we go:

Head of Royal Navy threatens resignation over push to scrap Harriers - Times Online

It's gonna get personal....

MarkD 7th Dec 2008 01:36

the way things are going HM Forces will consist of chaps in funny hats at the Palaces and the Vanguards.

Trident won't sink one Somali pirate, keep the Argentines off the Falklands or shoot one Taliban in Helmand.

KeepItTidy 7th Dec 2008 03:36

So let me see , if the head of a force like the Navy throws his dummy and resigns , surely thats like so immature and he has a responability to lead his people , if he quits he lets the goverment win. Good old Navy , bring out sweets,a pirate video and they will be back in favour again , the navy should be thankfull Johnny Depp has done them so much favours yet asked for nowt in return.

With a commander like that , what hope is left

althenick 7th Dec 2008 04:25


Air Marshal Sir Glenn Torpy, chief of air staff, is attempting to push through proposals to scrap the 75 Harrier jump jets currently shared between the navy and the air force.
.... You know, I thought for a while there that Torpy was quite switched on when it came to jointery. Assuming that this is accurate journalism then its quite obvious he is a complete tosser. I thought the harrier was the newest of all the CAS Aircraft (save Typhoon)


Torpy believes that the lack of a carrier-borne attack aircraft until the first of the new aircraft carriers comes into service, now 2015 at the earliest, will not be a problem.
Right we got rid of the old ark when? end of '78 and what happened at the beginning of '82?


He argues that with the main focus of UK military operations for the next decade likely to be land-locked Afghanistan, there is no current need for carrier-borne aircraft.
...Again cut you capabilities and you open yourself to other problems of an international nature.


When the new carriers come into service the RAF can fly the Joint Strike Fighters that are currently due to fly off them.
HA HA HA HA HA HA - by that time the RN wont have any current F/W deck experience and the crabs wont have the 1st idea either - also with his utterly stupid slogan “one nation, one air force” he obviously intends to take the RN's R/W assets over. I wonder how he will convice his team (about 6000 at a rough estimate) to commit to going to sea? Iwonder how much that will cost in terms of Recruitment / Training / Retention Bonuses / and PVR rates.

See here
Jointery - Going to Sea - E-Goat :: The Totally Unofficial Royal Air Force Rumour Network forums

Conclusion - 1966 all over again

MaroonMan4 7th Dec 2008 04:53

Now I certainly do not love the Navy or the fast jet community, but what I do have is an interest in the defence of the country and also from the 'shop floor' level making sure that my tiny voice is heard when I see inter service politics and 'land grabs'/feathering of nests interfering with future defence policy - after all I am a tax payer and British citizen as well!

If I can see that this is all about inter service rivalry then I hope to God that CDS and the MoD do (but then again current CDS is a fast jet mate, so they are probably all in together!). Of course we are going to offer up Harrier as a cost savings measure to the beancounters - the sacrificial lamb that on the surface saves money in a time when normally the Services are 'bleating' to save and not cut - so a service that offers a cut is a PR coup with much chance of getting through the media/political spotlight.

However, take a step back and look at the motive. If we the RAF sacrifice our Harrier force and take the pain (limited 'pain' really as we now just backfill our other fast jet slots to full manning - smoke/mirrors and makes top brass look good with manning levels) then that is job done in removing the Fisheads from fixed wing aviation. Land have already done it with the Commando capability, Strike can now reign supreme in the fixed wing world if they manage to bluff this one through.

As I said, I have no love for the Navy whatsoever and they can keep the O Boat, but I do recognise that if we as a country think that we are just going to be able to drop an essential defence capability and pick it back up again in 10 years then MoD are certainly not looking at long term strategic capability, but short term money in the bank to pay off their huge debt.

As to my senior officers - shame on you for even believing that you could pull this one off without it going unnoticed by the masses. As to the chief fishead falling on his sword - good on him if that is what it takes to make people sit up and listen. How many times on this web site have we scoffed at senior officers that have left the service with a fat pension and a place in the Lords that then decide to have some moral fibre, a backbone with integrity.

I know that times are tight and the Govt is forcing increasing budget restraints/constraints in every area, but please can someone stop this inter service playground squabbling - Joint Force Harrier, Joint Helicopter Command-if we have to go Joint, then make it Joint, not a platform to increase any one Services area of influence or size. The powers that be have directed that we go Joint in key areas - so lets do it and not view the Joint aspect as a method of expanding empires or ensuring any one colour of uniforms survival. If decisions were made on capability and adding value to Defence rather than what colour uniform will fly or operate the capability, then I am sure that efficiencies and resources would be made.

How much effort is being spent in 'staffing' inter service political survival rather than supporting the boys/girls actually doing the business frontline today, and just as importantly for the conflicts that have yet to confront us in the decades ahead

Sorry for a Sunday emotion, but I see Jointery working on the coal face really well - and not just Afghanistan. What is really evident is the single service mentality in supposedly 'Joint' organisations that is making those at the bottom of the pile roll their eyes as 'mum and dad' argue in the safety of their offices not over key important decisions for future capabilies but more on how to dress up an argument/policy to ensure that it favours one service or the other.

Either do Jointery properly or go back to the Secretary of State for Defence and say it is not working (as per the Canadians) - please do not attempt petty little manoeuvres that make us all look very unprofessional.

:=

beerdrinker 7th Dec 2008 05:28

How the hell does Torpy think we could have fullfilled our obligations in Afghanistan when the US Marines moved out of Kandahar 5 years ago. (Whether or not we should be there at all is a totally diffferent point). The runway was too short for anything other than the Harrier. Having it there we were able to supply the support the ground troops needed. Now the runway has been improved the Harrier is being replaced by the Tonka.

But just wait for the next world trouble spot which needs air support from marginal runways. Guess which aircraft will be used.

The more I read about Torpy, the more I think he was a lousy choice as CDS.

Firestreak 7th Dec 2008 06:47

Beerdrinker, if you wish your comments to be taken with any credibility, you really should get your facts straight; Glen Torpy is not CDS, he's CAS.

Pontius Navigator 7th Dec 2008 06:54

Simple really.

Torpy is all for jointery with new toys, so Dave after tranche 3 Tiffy. Rather have 21st century jets than jets from the middle of the last century.

orca 7th Dec 2008 07:08

And now we see the real reason for rushing a LL AI platform into the battle in Helmand, in place of the ML CAS thoroughbred that's been doing the job excellently since 2004.

It will cost the taxpayer millions to get the TGRF to a state whereby it will be adequate at the role in Afghanistan. And all to protect the spine of the air force, and banish the FW FAA to the dust bin of history.

So let's now start talking straight. The GR9 CAS/ COIN platform par excellence is not being pulled out of KAF for re-generation, CVS qualifications or harmony reasons. It's being withdrawn from a war for which it is ideally suited, so that it is seen as not being at war, so that the favoured platform of the higher echelons is seen as the panacea (that it certainly isn't), and then the puffer jet can be sidelined and euthanised.

How long has this been the plan? Have we and parliament been lied to for some time?

beerdrinker 7th Dec 2008 07:34

FS,

Sorry - finger trouble.

Tourist 7th Dec 2008 08:05

As I posted on this thread not too long ago http://www.pprune.org/military-aircr...ml#post4548163

"Elmo you plonker,
The RN desperately does not want the Harriers out of Afghanistan.
Once they are out and not displaying their usefullness on a daily basis, they are a lot easier to quietly dispose of by the RAF under some "costly", "old" , "outdated", "short range" type bollocks arguments.
This is the opening gambit of a beautifully cynical plan to wipe out the RN's fixed wing fleet for good.
The RAF may have lost a very hard fought battle to scupper the carriers, but they have not given up the war..........."

Whilst I usually enjoy being correct, in this case I was hoping I was wrong:mad:

insty66 7th Dec 2008 08:40

Because everything in the papers is true isn't it?

There aren't half some paranoid folk around.

I took the article as a "let's get our side across before anything happens" message.

When we do see a FJ type go I don;t think it'll be Harrier.

Pontius Navigator 7th Dec 2008 08:47

There are two view points here.

The airman's short term pain for long term gain, ie retire an old tired workhorse and gain a shiney new toy in a few years time.

The politician's short term gain, ie retire an old tired workhorse now and a long term gain by defering or scraping the shiney new toy in the future.

A bird (harrier) in the had is worth two in the bush (george)

ORAC 7th Dec 2008 08:48

maybe he ought to resign over having so mismanaged the future of the navy, particularly surrendering the flexibility of the frigate fleet in pursuit of the ever receding carrier mirage, that they can't even provide a Falklands Guard Ship any more?

Don't throw stones when you live in a greenhouse...

Pontius Navigator 7th Dec 2008 09:10

Orac, hammer, rivet, head, hit.

The same could, in the future, be said for light blue.

Dark blue, instead of keeping its 20th century warships has, as you said, been chasing a 21st century mirage.

Wrathmonk 7th Dec 2008 09:48

Here we go again .... The only people who are going to win from such sensationalism are the Army (who must be pi55ing themselves laughing watching the other two Services tear each other apart) and the government (who are more than happy for Chiefs to resign because they know there's another yes man waiting his chance).

The following is all my personal opinion. The Tornado is up to the job in AFG. The Harrier is fast becoming a one trick pony and it needs time back home to regenerate and reconstitute its broader military skills i.e aviation from the carrier. If it was to stay out in AFG any longer there is a real chance that they would never regain deck currency period. And the beancounters would start to question the need for carriers in the present and in the future. So not only would the new carriers be delayed (another thread on that topic) but also rather than run on the current CVs, given we don't have enough assets to keep the decks warm (because they're busy on ops) lets bin them early as well. And then we don't need JCA so lets buy more Typohoon (and that keeps BAE happy, and jobs in UK etc etc). So, again a personal view, bringing the Harriers home, and perhaps reducing the fleet size (I wouldn't advocate a complete disbandment for the reasons I've already stated) would support the procurement of the future carriers (again, which I believe we need) and JCA.

I also don't give a fig who crew JFH or JCA. Best person for the job.

I reckon the SofS will call his bluff - if CNS resigns then he will be replaced with a yes man who will have no choice but to support whatever proposals are put on the table (including those affecting the wider Navy, not just the FAA). If he doesn't resign then he will just be seen as a spoilt brat - I'll scream and scream until I get my own way. If he really wanted to make a point he should have had the balls to walk around the 5th floor, resign with no prior notice and then "leaked" his reasons/concerns to the press. His pension is both vast and secure and there will be all sorts of companies looking to welcome a man of such principles on to their board.

Of course, if he had nothing to do with the leak and it was done by a "well meaning" staff officer or civil servant then I suspect CNSs bacon and eggs will not be going down to well this morning!

Jimlad1 7th Dec 2008 09:54

I like the way the DT story ignores the fact that the RN has already got 4 warships in the FI! (tanker, large helo capable patrol vessel, Ice patrol ship and a Bay class).

Tiger_mate 7th Dec 2008 11:07

I am sure I recall just a few months ago Ivan flexing his muscles with threats of Cold war II. How quickly we forget that there is more to world politics then Iraq & Afghanistan.

Like it or loathe it, Harrier is essential for any conventional warfare and therefore an equally essential part of the warfighting inventory of the UK. It would be wrong to reduce the force without a Combat Ready VSTOL replacement in place.

Chugalug2 7th Dec 2008 11:18

Once again Torpy shows himself to be the government's lackey, prepared to compromise the defence of his nation in the interests of short term financial savings which will rebound disastrously on us in the future, probably sooner than later. The same short sighted thinking has resulted in the complete compromise of UK military airworthiness over the past twenty years. That he does this at the supposed cost to a sister service rather than his speaks volumes for his limited grasp of the realities and does the Royal Air Force that he supposedly leads no favours. Shame on him and good for the Navy's boss, prepared to put his service before his own self advancement. Like Speaker Martin the CAS has been too long in this place...

Wrathmonk 7th Dec 2008 12:06

Chugalug

Torpy has already announced his intention to retire at the end of his tenure so can't see this as self advancement within the MOD. He certainly isn't making / won't make friends in UK Defence Companies by reducing fleet sizes either.

I'm also intrigued by your comment


limited grasp of the realities
Surely the reality is the MOD are broke and somehow, somewhere we have got to make painful savings in order to both support/fight/win the current conflicts and protect from the future conflict. As the books clearly don't balance what would you suggest? Just curious as to how you would do things differently.

As they say don't bring problems bring solutions. And these armchair solutions can't involve more money because there isn't any. And there won't be any under any future government either. At somestage we have to repay the VAT cut etc and, sadly, I suspect this will be through a cut in public spending rather than personal tax rises because guess which one costs more votes. Again, cuts in Health, Social Services and Education are not very voter friendly. As for Defence ....

Pontius Navigator 7th Dec 2008 13:31

Wrath,

From my lowly position the choices are:

Fight today's war with today's kit and hope that there is time to prepare for tomorrow's war.

or

fight today's war with minimal kit and focus on getting th enew kit for tomorrow's war.

Torpy is quite clearly focussed on getting tranche 3 of the Typhoon come what may.

Now it might be argued that this is at the expense of dark blue naval air aspirations today and possibly even tomorrow if, as an airman, he believes that the best interests of the nation will be served by a flexible air force that can be deployed in a matter of hours anywhere in the world.

There are obviously many counter-arguments but those are my thoughts on where he might be coming from.

SirPercyWare-Armitag 7th Dec 2008 13:42

The first paragraph of the article gives this away as yet another brilliant RN PR campaign not too dissimilar to the old "leave the docs on the towpath for the Mail to find" routine.
There isnt any money left and scrapping the Harrier sounds like a reasonable way of allowing ALL THREE SERVICES to keep other projects on track, including the carrier. Of course, there will be a small air gap between the GR7/9 leaving service in 2013 and JSF coming online but the issue of losing carrier operations currency is a bit disingenous. I wonder whether or not exchange posts with the US might give a cadre of knowledgeable pilots able to form the basis of an OCU?

"I thought the harrier was the newest of all the CAS Aircraft (save Typhoon)"

That might hold water if we had a dozen CAS platforms but we dont: we have three.

I dont think we should lose the Harrier but if cuts have to be made, where else? If it results in the end of the FAA, is that a major drama? The RAF lost its maritime branch a billion years ago because others could do the job for them and there hasnt been any catastrophic consequences.
This is RN paranoia which has resulted in them spinning a campaign to the detriment of the military as a whole.

Pontius Navigator 7th Dec 2008 14:51


Originally Posted by SirPercyWare-Armitag (Post 4576953)
The RAF lost its maritime branch a billion years ago because others could do the job for them and there hasnt been any catastrophic consequences.

Actually I think they just went dark blue and every thing was handed over to a contractor. Quite a change for some: they left the RN when the RN disposed of its FTBs and changed to light blue. Then some were able to get their darl blue wooly pulleys out of store and put the light blue ones away.

Gullwings 7th Dec 2008 15:05

Pontius Navigator

The problem is that Torpy does appear to be focussed on getting tranche 3 of the Typhoon come what may. This may be in the best interest of the RAF but not necessarily of the nation.

The Fleet Air Arm has repeatedly shown that it can be relied upon to be deployed in a matter of hours anywhere in the world. If the nation wants a flexible air force then the FAA should continue to help provide that and the RAF not be allowed to destroy it for its own self interests.

For example, if for any reason, the few Falkland based RAF fixed-wing aircraft are unable to fly in defense of the Falklands (particularly if their runway(s) get damaged) then what UK fixed-wing capability is actually going to be left to help defend and retake the Falklands? Sea Harriers (or other radar equipped Spanish/Italian Harriers) would have been perfect for that type of long distance task but that capability has been lost.

Now it appears that the Fleet Air Arm fixed-wing force and possibly all remaining ground attack Harriers could also be at risk! What will a Typhoon Tranche 3 be able to do to help in another Falklands War type long range situation where friendly airfields are not available?

Have the previous lessons of the Falklands War (and many other wars) been lost on our RAF? Our Fleet Air Arm urgently requires strengthening, not wiping out by some very short sighted people.

Will the new aircraft carriers and JSF arrive on time? I sadly doubt that very much, so we as an island nation, are likely to leave our RN ships and overseas interests very badly exposed by a lack of FAA air defence capability for a long time.

Wrathmonk 7th Dec 2008 15:29

PN

Trouble is I don't think we have any choice with Typ Tr 3 - we pay regardless! Stitched up would be my view!

Gullwings

Agree we need carrier based aviation - but does it NEED to be FAA? Similarly, if we want to protect the FAA do all Typhoon/Tornado crews need to be RAF? Back to the best person for the job, regardless of cloth.

I really hope this is over enthusiastic journalism - the "me, me, me" (or in this case "RAF, RAF, RAF") is really quite sad :hmm:

pr00ne 7th Dec 2008 15:31

Gullwing,

" Now it appears that the Fleet Air Arm fixed-wing force and possibly all remaining ground attack Harriers could also be at risk! What will a Typhoon Tranche 3 be able to do to help in another Falklands War type long range situation...."

Just how will the much vaunted 'Naval Strike Wing' be of any help in that (extremely unlikely) scenario?
What is it, 10 jets and 6 pilots? What is the point...................

There is no rational for spending a single penny on "another Falklands War type long range situation" because there isn't going to be one!

The world has changed, Afghanistan is where we are NOW.

If you still think we face conventional wars against conventional foes try reading "The Utility of Force" by General Sir Rupert Smith, it may just open your eyes.

Bismark 7th Dec 2008 16:05

Torpy would not be doing this without Stirrup's tacit backing, thus CDS is as compromised as CAS (and it probably goes much deeper into MoD).

Without the FAA in FW aviation you can forget the carriers as there will be no generation of maritime FW air-minded officers and ratings - the RAF will not generate such people because they fundamentally do not want to go to sea.

Which other nation allows their air force to run maritime FW aviation? Even the Italians reverted when they learned the same lesson in the 90s that the RN learned in the 30s - ie the Air Force does not give a s**t about maritime FW.

Shame on Torpy, shame on the RAF - I thought they were better than this. I wonder whether the lower downs in the RAF support their Chiefs?? I wonder what good old Henry Allingham, the last surviving founder member of the RAF (but ex RNAS) thinks of this.

The Real Slim Shady 7th Dec 2008 16:15

The Harrier.

Operates from woods, runways, roads, PSP, very short damaged bits of asphalt, aircraft carriers, frigates ( albeit with a short range), ramps.

It flies CAS missions, AD missions, Recce.

In short it is FLEXIBLE.

Wasn't the old NATO doctrine "Flexibility is the key to air power"

Which lecture did he sleep through at Staff College?

Pontius Navigator 7th Dec 2008 16:15

Bismarck,

Rock and a hard place.

Torpy is an airman and would press for Tiffy. CDS is now purple and would, one hopes, consider the balancing act. For Torpy to back off on Tiffy and concede Harrier/CVF if he sincerely believes that Tiffy tranche 3 is correct would be a betrayal of the Air Force.

CDS, on the other hand, balancing the need for a balanced budget and the need to pay for tranche 3 has to make the best of what he has.

That CNS (or whoever) adopts an entrenched position opposite Torpy's is quite properly the correct blue approach for his service.

CDS thus has to opt for one or the other and just because he is light blue/purple does not disqualify him from opting for a light blue solution bitter as that may be for dark blue.

Rock and hard place.

Chugalug2 7th Dec 2008 16:18

Wrathmonk:

Torpy has already announced his intention to retire at the end of his tenure so can't see this as self advancement within the MOD. He certainly isn't making / won't make friends in UK Defence Companies by reducing fleet sizes either.
I didn't mean advancement within the MOD, if ever there was proof of being promoted to the level of one's own incompetence...as for UK Defence Companies, just let us all wait and see shall we? As to:

The only people who are going to win from such sensationalism are the Army
Faced with a sound bite like "One nation, one Air Force" (now why does that sound familiar?), I'd be worried for the AAC, or are their Corporal pilots untouchables? This is all arrant nonsense, and no way to plan for UK Defence, no matter how out of balance the books are. The government is responsible for making proper provision for our defence. They are encouraged to slash and burn at that provision by apparatchiks like Torpy. If he sees his job as aiding and abetting in that conspiracy he is reneging on his duty to this nation. If someone has to fall on a sword I can't think of a better candidate. As to resources there are always resources, at the moment being poured into the Banks and as always of course Schools and Hospitals. It is for the government to make tough choices, if the choices they make are untenable then it is for the Service Chiefs to resign, en masse if need be, though some might need more persuading than others!
Proone:

There is no rational for spending a single penny on "another Falklands War type long range situation" because there isn't going to be one!
What can one say, other than the words hostage and fortune?

Lurking123 7th Dec 2008 16:21

The RAF can't get rid of Harrier - how would it survive without Sky Gods?:}

Front Seater 7th Dec 2008 16:23

Proone,

Be very careful in saying such things - Falklands or no Falklands lessons learned I would suggest that we have not been prepared for any of the recent conflicts (less Al Faw).

All the more reason to have the flexible option of carrier borne aircraft here and now and for ever more. Science and technology may make carrier borne aircraft obsolete but a (misguided IMHO) assumption that RUSI/CJO/JCDC/FCO et al believe that Afghanistan is 'the' war rather than 'a' war then I believe you may be wrong (however, I hope that you are not).

As to 'colour of cloth' - sorry, I do not buy into that one. As was seen by our attempt to get Apache to sea we relied on significant experience from the dark blue in all trades and all ranks - naval aviation, ships company and dark blue desk wollers. There has to be something of a capability enhancer with those flying, maintaining, operating, guiding, authorising, air worthiness etc etc that really know their work place and environment. Rather than rocking up and pretending to be the Subject Matter Expert in Naval Aviation and pretending to integrate with the Maritime Component.

By all means have a smattering of light blue along the way, and by all means maintain a Joint Force, but the core components should be RN dark blue. I seem to remember on an RAF Flight Safety course (because the Army doesn't have its own) the gun tape of the RAF Harrier CO landing in the drink alonside one of the carriers - about 8 years ago I think (?).

Just as we in the Apache fleet (and also Army Lynx) have opted for our comfort zone of steering well clear of going to sea I personally believe that from where I sit (with absolutely nothing to gain from this dark blue v light blue willy waving competition) I reckon that as soon as the RN handed over its fast jet fleet to the light blue then the RAF would find every possible conceivable excuse why they should not go to sea - and if they were forced to go to sea then it would be on their terms and conditions.

I say this because I know that the RN also gave up fighting for their integral Armed Helicopter capability (847) because they were 'promised' a double earmarked Apache Squadron and funny old thing we too have all of our excuses all lined as to why Apache cannot go to sea.

No wonder the RN appear seen off as we stiffed them with Apache, are probably about to lose out on any dedicated amphib BRH and now looks as though the RAF are trying to 'steal' RN fixed wing through a charade of 'best interests of thenations defence'.

I think I would be paranoid after being let down by the other 2 services and seeing genuine and operationally effective capabilities frittered away by inter service politics all disguised as 'jointery'.

SirPercyWare-Armitag 7th Dec 2008 16:43

Shame on the RN for leaking this to the press. Again. :E

Stirrup, Torpey and especially Peach have done more than enough to prove their joint credentials. There are those in the RAF who think they have gone too far in their purple approach, at the risk of compromising the light blue service.

Something in the budget has to give. We may not agree with it but those are the harsh realities of life in this Brownite Socialist Utopia.

We need, first and foremost, to have the funds to support the troops in Afghanistan, at the expense of the RN and RAF if necessary. Something has to be chopped. Carriers or Harriers?

OKOC 7th Dec 2008 16:48

Thought?!!! If we didn't have PPRuNe to vent our thoughts/concerns/angers and thus assuaging our frustrations, (and a great valve release) where else could we do do this-the bosses office? I doubt it-he/she is too busy. Newspapers-forget it. So win/win isn't it.

Not so quick, who else reads these columns? Loads of people in and not so in power, and of course they are thinking about Defences best interests aren't they? Careful chaps. Sometimes it is best to keep your powder dry and our using the openess of PPRuNe may not serve us in the best way--just a thought.

orca 7th Dec 2008 19:36

Sir Percy,

Quite agree - we need to support the troops in Helmand first and foremost. So why in God's name are we talking about cutting our only (out and out) CAS platform?

How can anyone of sound mind, in an era famed only for it's surprises and the unexpected, consider getting rid of the one platform that we have that can operate from just about anywhere, in direct support of ground troops?

soddim 7th Dec 2008 19:36

I am surprised that there is not more campaigning against the procurement of the new aircraft carriers, or is that a step too far in the inter-service contest to get the biggest willy?

We simply cannot afford the support vessels to defend a carrier that might be slowly taking our deployable air power somewhere close enough to the action to do what land based aircraft or RPVs could have done far more quickly and effectively.

If we want to think about another Falklands situation (pie in the sky because we simply do not have and will not get either the surface combat vessels or the merchant fleet to support it) we had better find a way to adequately protect the carriers. That option is far too expensive and manpower intensive.

So why are we simply delaying the carriers or is the planned early demise of the Harrier the way to show that we do not need a seaborne fixed wing aircraft?

MaroonMan4 7th Dec 2008 20:27

Soddim,

How very tactfully put, but maybe a tad too subtle - of course this is a sad ruse to say in 5 to 10 years time:

' Sir, sir, sir please sir - we dont need aircraft carriers sir'

No but yes but no but sir, listen sir - we haven't needed it for the past 10 years sir since those old Harrier flying machines help pay off your Northern Rock debt sir'

Well sir, lets use that carrier money when you chop it sir for some hospitals or schools or something else that you may want sir'

What a brilliant idea sir, you are clever - absolutely, yes of course the carriers aren't required sir, and no sir, of course we will not let you down and we can truly go anywhere at anytime - short runways, long runways, short distances, long distances, of course sir.

Thank you sir, I knew that you would understand, a tough decision I know sir, but you have made the right one.....

Just sign here sir and I will make it all go away for you.

exscribbler 7th Dec 2008 20:32

Here we go again! We're back to the old RAF argument that land-based air assets are more effective at power-projection than carrier-based ones. If that's the case, why are the USN and USMC happily building what appears to be an almost complete set of carriers - and the Russians and Chinese are joining in?

Do we know something they don't know? No, we know it pretty well in this country but we (Tory and New Labour alike) we haven't learned from history. We suffered from it after 1 April 1918 (a suitable date for the RNAS) more or less until 1942 when the RN started getting US carrier aircraft.

It continues to this day; Torpy is no more keen on jointery than was the CAS when the nuclear strike capability was transferred from the RAF to the RN all those years ago, so he'd like to gather everything that flies to the bosom of the RAF. That's what Goering did and look what happened to him...

We can afford the T45s (at £560 million each) to defend the carriers; what we can't afford are the serried ranks of Typhoons (at £30 million each) at Coningsby. I have yet to hear Bob Ainsworth say that Typhoon is so capable that we don't need all of them - but he said that about the T45 and a lot of people believed him!

When will we learn? If we want to have a greater say in the world, we need the assets and we need them at sea. If we don't want a greater say then let's have the RN become a coastal defence force, let the RAF have all the aircraft (Coningsby and Waddington should be quite adequate) and stop bloody worrying about what the others think... :ugh:

TwoStep 7th Dec 2008 21:50


Here we go again! We're back to the old RAF argument that land-based air assets are more effective at power-projection than carrier-based ones. If that's the case, why are the USN and USMC happily building what appears to be an almost complete set of carriers - and the Russians and Chinese are joining in?


It makes total sense to have the carriers but you have to be willing to spend the money properly like the USN/USMC/China/India and not the half-arsed cheapo attempt that we are turning it into. Why go for Dave B? When the ships are large enough for a catapult and arrestor system, why build the Type 45, a ship eclisped in capability by the Spanish Alvaro de Bazan-class. The 45s won't even have an anti-ship capability. It's just sheer tokenism at a time when we can't afford it, Britain used to the rule the waves, and we can't anymore, carriers are the wrong equipment at the wrong time.

Jackonicko 7th Dec 2008 21:52

There seem to be several questions here.

1) Do we need carriers in order to have balanced, capable forces which fully meet Britain's strategic/geopolitical/military needs?

2) If economies have to be made, should carriers be a higher priority than land-based air?

3) If we do need carriers, long term, would it be acceptable to have a longer 'capability holiday' than already looks likely? (Remember that Harrier can't go on past 2016/17 without major expenditure - new rear fuselages, etc. and JSF can't be in squadron service until 2018....)

Even if you believe that the answers to the first two questions are "yes" and "yes", it may still be that withdrawing CVS and Harrier now would be a sensible way of easing pressure on an overstretched and overstressed defence budget. Is Harrier likely to be needed to deliver effect again before it is scheduled to retire? When you're not involved in 'cat and trap' type carrier aviation, do you need to maintain a cadre of current operating experience, or is it possible, with STOVL aircraft, to work up a capability again fairly quickly - especially if you've been clever with exchange tours....?

Unless you're going to say that actually we can afford to do everything, and that we're no more than eye blink away from massive tax rises being electorally popular.....

For me, the answers are no, no and of course.


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