Oldgateboatdriver said:I captained Rally for a while, well, OIC'd as they were considered tenders in the Navy, not commissioned ships.
E.R. Campbell said:Thanks for that, Kirkhill, and, in answer to your earlier question: my guesstimate is that we will pay $1Billion+ (maybe ++) for a "heavy" which is why I spit-balled $125 Million for the small combatants/MCDV replacements a few days ago.
It seems to me that ships that come pretty close to my ideal (for building starting in about 2025) are available right now so, hopefully, Canadian yards will be willing and able to replace the MCDVs when the RCN finally decides to scrap them.
Kirkhill said:As always I enjoy the exercise.
The problem is not the lack of budget, manpower or technology. All of those exist and can be managed.
I believe the problem is one of managing expectations (a problem known to everyone who has lived through Christmas) and more importantly determining whether the RCN is going to be a full service navy that permits Canada freedom of movement on the High Seas. Or is it going to continue to be an auxiliary force as it was to the RN and is now, to my eye, to the USN. What the sailors do they do very well and have been reasonably well equipped for those tasks. But slotting in the Rainbow and Niobe to the RN's order of battle, or taking the load off the RN's heavies by supplying convoy escorts, or adding ASW screens to USN Carrier Groups is not the same as fielding a force that can act truly independently across a broad spectrum of operations.
And a broad spectrum doesn't have to include Guadalcanal. Adding 1 NZ flotilla to our force mix would broaden our ability to respond.
St-Laurent's navy promised that level of independence but Trudeau sank it. The Bonnie's not coming back but technology has moved on and I believe helos and lilypads and small mother ships and unmanned or autonomous vessels can substitute for much of the capability that previously only a ship like HMCS Bonaventure could supply.
E.R. Campbell said:Now you're talking like Percy Nelles who also wanted a big, "broad spectrum" navy and who, in my opinion, was afoolweak and misguided CNS.
What was needed, as Leonard Murray et al understood, was was absolutely essential, was to win the Battle of the Atlantic, and for that we needed a mix of those cheap, quick and dirty corvettes, frigates and aircraft (land and carrier based). Convoy escort wasn't glamorous but it was one of the three big things that Canada did that really, really mattered; the other two were industrial production and the Commonwealth Air Training Plan.
Our other naval contributions: including the cruisers, fast Tribals, and the brave motor torpedo boats were all distractions
Kirkhill said:Edit to add a PS:
With respect to the New Zealand Flotilla I would swap the four 55m vessels for a third 85m and then equip all the ships in the flotilla with both a flight deck and a pair of CB-90s. 1x Absolon CSC, 3x Protector 1900, 8x CB-90 and a mixed air fleet ranging from Scaneagles to Cyclone/Merlins (connected to friendly shores by Chinooks) could police a very large bit of real estate.
Oldgateboatdriver said:Unfortunately Kirkhill, the CB-90's are NOT davit carried boats They operate from wells or they could be slung from cranes on large ships - but not small ones like Otago class vessels. If you modified the Otagos to host them in a stern well, then you would have to trade in both the containerized systems AND the embarked force cabins, and then what would be the point of carrying them?
The LCVP MK5 can carry, at relatively good speed, some 35 soldiers or a light utility vehicle, but these capabilities are now regarded as secondary. The CB90 seats 18 Marines and takes their kit (and one of her good points is that said 18 Marines were able to all but sleep while riding out in Sea State 4, while people in a LCVP MK5 in the same sea conditions would throw up) but the RM requirement is for as few as 8, which means that some of the troops space on the CB90 in the Force Protection Craft will be likely “sacrificed” for fitting a few commodities and kit to enable longer unsupported sorties.
Kirkhill said:I believe the problem is one of managing expectations (a problem known to everyone who has lived through Christmas) and more importantly determining whether the RCN is going to be a full service navy that permits Canada freedom of movement on the High Seas. Or is it going to continue to be an auxiliary force as it was to the RN and is now, to my eye, to the USN.
An 11 meter Rigid Hull Inflatable Boat launched from Afloat Forward Staging Base (AFSB) Interim (I) USS Ponce equipped to carry the Mk 18 Mod 2 Kingfish mine hunting UUV. ( U.S. Navy photo by Chief Aerographer's Mate Jamie McClain/Released)
Two military coastal defence ships have quietly been taken out of service in an effort to cut costs, CTV News has learned.
The Maritime Coastal Defence Vessels were docked as a cost-saving measure, according to the Department of National Defence.
In total, five navy ships are no longer patrolling Canada's coasts.
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In a statement to CTV News, the DND said the vessels' activities have been reduced for the short-term, "resulting in cost-savings related to operational maintenance and in-service support related expenditures."
"Defence experts that I've spoken to are questioning how this is going to affect the navy's operations," CTV's Mercedes Stephenson told News Channel on Tuesday. "The navy maintains that there will be no impact on maritime security, even though they will have two fewer ships."
In 2010, the head of Canada's navy ordered half of the country's maritime coastal defence vessels to be docked indefinitely, but the decision was reversed following intense political pressure.
The navy operates 12 Kingston-class vessels, but only seven are currently operational.
The ships are responsible for patrolling Canada's coasts, enforcing fisheries laws and participating in search-and-rescue operations.
The latest cuts mean that one less ship will be patrolling each coast.