Whiskey and Ex,
Thanks for taking the time to respond. And of note Ex, it's not that I don't believe you re: AAD, it's that in order to fault-test any paradigm, I start by trying to break the one I have currently utilise with all the information I have at my disposal.
In any case, a couple of quick responses:
1) Whiskey - I think we can eliminate "proportional contribution" as an item as we could allocate CPF's if a single vessel is what is required.
2) Whiskey - Too expensive in comparison to what? Are AAW's and the LPD-17 not nearly equivalent in procurement cost?
3) Whiskey - Support - see below....
4) Whiskey - Not enough soldiers/sailors - downsize NDHQ, and reallocate salaries. ;D
5) Ex-Dragoon - If there are no escorting carriers and a land-based fighter/bomber/cruise missile threat exists, I don't enter the theatre. I would want complete air dominance before ever putting a vessel with 700 "marines" in harm's way.
That being said, let's say that your operational model of an AAD being absolutely necessary to defend an LPD fleet is undeniable, is there a possibility of changing our current structure as generalists with every piece of kit we have, and instead specialize certain kit in certain roles? Specifically, can we break our naval assets (to start with) into two specific groupings high risk littoral vessels (requiring an AAW capability) and lower risk coastal patrol vessels (perhaps not requiring an AAW capability)?
If we did that, could we then get away with procuring only (2) AAD's as flagships for said Littoral Battle Groups?
Littoral Battle Group Composition (one unit per coast)
(1) Aegis Destroyer (off-the-shelf, don't dick with it, keep Tomahawk capability)
(2) CPF - eventual upgrade but pass on the hull extension and focus on ASW and self-defence
(3) LPD-17 - carrying a maximum of 2100 troops with gear. (I say we find a way to get the soldiers and sailors rather than dismiss this sized battlegroup)
Littoral Battle Group Supply Structure (one unit per coast)
(1) Patino-equivalent AOR/MPRS (or alterntaive type)
(2) CPF - same as above
Add-On Units (one unit per coast)
(2) Additional CPF's for ASW and additional self-protection
(3) Dedicated non-steel Minesweepers
(2) Victoria-class Submarines
Remaining CPF's along with Kingston-class become primarily Coastal Defence Units although all CPF's would receive same set of upgrades.
Bottom Line: It would change our role from a long-duration single/double ship allocations to more than one multinatinal projects that last years (constant rotation), to a shorter duration ground forces deployment and support role for shorter time frames at which point everyone comes home, and the second string from other nations step in.
Thank you again for your thoughts....
Cheers,
Matthew.