I'm not sure what you mean by "spend the next ten years deficient of a concrete plan" when the government has the NSPS and lays out in quite clear detail what it intends to do. The NSPS is the plan and calls for a phased re-building of the RCN along with the development of a local shipbuilding industry in order to support that re-building.
Just because the timelines don't jive with expectations of certain members of the CF doesn't mean there is no plan. Again, I've said it before but "
Soldiers/Sailors are incapable of making policy decisions because they always think whatever they have isn't good enough, that they need more of it and that they aren't getting the support they need," we work for the government. not the other way around and they determine what we should be doing and what kit we are going to be using.
Yes, of course. Silly me. The AOR's and 280's, are top notch, cutting edge and they were good enough for a sailor of the 1960's, why not for those of today. I suppose those of us who've struggled to keep them going in what must be their obviously best years of service don't have a f'n clue and are a bunch of f'n whiners. Same for the soldiers who were saddled with rusting out MLVW or the FANTASTIC LSVW fleets... :
The present government is one of the most disciplined in recent times and they were dealt a bad deck of cards with regard to a military that has been rusting out for decades with little procurement of new equipment. They've made the best of a bad situation and rather than rushing hastily from procurement battle to procurement battle, they have developed a long term plan which will set us up for long term success.
Will it be more expensive at first?
Most definitely but Rome wasn't built in a day and it was always going to be more expensive when the previous industry was destroyed without so much as an after thought.
Is it all about Political Pork?
Of course it is but what decision the government of the day makes isn't? It all goes back to Clausewitz's idea of
Politik. The CF is a tool of policy for the government and the NSPS is a clear reflection of that relationship.
I view the NSPS in the same vein as any other infrastructure project the government undertakes i.e. oil and gas pipelines, highway construction, etc... it's all meant to increase our industrial capacity which is also a form of military power. We will now have our own shipbuilding industry which builds our own ships and gives us
Strategic Capacity.
I envision this industry branching off into other areas other than military shipbuilding with the biggest target being the oil and gas sector, particularly the off shore one.
I don't. There wasn't a rush of orders to keep these yards on the east coast running when they finished the pervious naval builds. If that were the case, then they wouldn't need to be rebuilt. Buyers are going off shore where they get it cheaper, faster and without the BS. Seaspan was in pretty good condition. Irving and Davies in particular less so. Good luck with that.