GR66
Army.ca Veteran
- Reaction score
- 4,150
- Points
- 1,160
E.R. Campbell said:See my comments about "Buy America," "Canada First," and stupid political decisions driven by even more stupid voters here. And I mean it: the reason ministers and senior bureaucrats, generally smarter than average people, make dumb decisions is because the people, the almighty but incredibly stupid f'ing people, demand stupid decisions.
Tony Abbott may get away with some smart defence procurement in Australia, but if he does it is because Kevin Rudd and Julia Gillard have nearly destroyed the Labour Party, not because Australians are smart. He might, also, spend some of the dollars he saves by smarter defence procurement on visible job creation projects, remembering Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chrétien's quip about Canadians liking to see construction cranes because it means people are working.
Agree totally but what particularly bothers me about the NSPS is that for the most part we're planning to design and build ships that nobody else will ever buy. There are a pretty limited number of countries that are in the market for a high-end multi-purpose frigate and most of these countries have their own domestic programs and will never politically be able to choose to buy Canadian.
If you're going to spend pork on shipbuilders then in my opinion you need to both KEEP them busy with ongoing orders and have them build something for which there is an international market. The CSC is at the top end of what the major world navies have in their fleets. The US, Brits, French, Italians, Spanish, Japanese, Danes, etc. are not going to give orders for their premier warships to Canada over their own shipyards. It's just not going to happen. The rest of the world DO buy warships offshore because they don't have their own industries to protect, but they simply can't afford ships like the CSC.
In my humble opinion Canada would be better served both militarily and industrially by once again becoming primarily a "Corvette Navy". We have the longest coastline in the world which means we should have a fairly large number of ships and aircraft to patrol and protect that water. We're also blessed with an excellent strategic location in that our populated areas are physically far from other naval powers and we sit on top of the US with it's dominant navy. No other country has the blue-water power to steam into North American waters with their fleet and hope to survive.
Submarines, mines and asymmetrical attacks however would be a serious potential and realistic threat. I think in many ways having a larger number of ASW corvettes instead of a smaller number of multi-purpose and AAW Frigates would not only provide better protection for our own waters but would be as much of an advantage for our allies as well. The USN has lost much of it's ASW capability and experience at the same time that diesel subs are becoming more central to the navies of many potential enemies. Canadian expertise in this area would probably be very welcome.
A ship design similar to DCNS's GoWind class (http://www.naval-technology.com/projects/gowind_corvettes/) that are around 2000t with a crew of less than 100, have a helicopter hanger and stern ramps that can be used for RHIBs for boarding parties or mine hunting UUVs and 3-week endurance might be able to fulfill this role. The RCN could perhaps have a standing order for one new ship every two years which could give us a 30-ship fleet that is constantly renewing itself as technology advances and give our shipyards an affordable hullform that can be modified into a number of ship configurations that would be affordable for international customers.
If there's a real need for a handful of more capable AAW or Command-capable Frigates/Destroyers then buy a couple of those off the shelf from the US/Brits/French/etc. to save time and cost rather than designing and building our own (because we'll never sell them to anyone else anyway).