Eye In The Sky
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Great dicussion. Just adding a post so I can keep notified on new posts.
NavyShooter said:As someone on the coal-face in the fleet right now, I'll simply ask.
"Where do you propose to get the crew?"
We are so short of the correctly trained/qualified people (particularly Cert 3/4 Stokers) that they're pier-head jumping at a rate I've not seen before.
NS
Oldgateboatdriver said:I find it dumbfounding that Air Force and Army officers constantly want to redraw the Navy without having a clue.
What is this constant attempt at reducing the number of frigates (as if it was a useless ship - when it is this time's single most useful and versatile warship class in current use in ALL the world's Navies) and then turning them into coastal defence patrol boats !!!
I said it before and I will say it again: Coastal defence for countries like Canada and the USA starts thousands of nautical miles away from the coasts. Basically, the front lines of the naval defence of canada are in the Caribbean (go fasts- drug trade), in the Mediterranean sea (Arab spring - human trafficking), in the Gulf of Oman and the Indian Ocean (piracy). And the frigates and destroyers are the quintessential warriors of this defence. (besides, I dare anyone to take a look at the map of Canada and tell me where the ocean "approaches" are. It's everywhere around the country except the Prairies.) Moreover, you have to get over the Army (and to an extent Air Force) mindset that the job consists of defending a border. The role of the NAVY is to defend Canada and canadian interests on the world's oceans just as much if not more than merely preventing illegal landings on our coasts. The Navy is not primarily there to prevent armed landings, though it is one of the secondary missions.
The CTG concept was NOT born of the cold war convoy escort. It was born of the combination of the end of the cold war and the Falkland war, which showed the power of the pairing of destroyers and frigates (most famously the 22/42 and 21/42 combos of the Falkland war), and the need to provide an integrated group as the smallest "deployed" unit in order to maintain Canadian input in the command/decisions relevant to their employment. The validity of this concept (which has nothing to do with "escort work) was proven when during Gulf War I, Canada was given the command of the naval Support Area (including command over more than 40 warships from various coalition nations including the USA), the only nation other the the US to hold a Theatre level command.
And, no, task groups (or whole navies) are NOT and don't have to be built around a "heart" that they defend. A CTG is a useful and suitable group as is right now and it does let us punch above our weight, as demonstrated. A destroyer as command ship is ample enough. Admiral's staffs at sea are not sprawling affairs like shore based HQ's. Staffs of about twenty to twenty-five, which let the Admiral call upon eight to ten staffer on watch at all time are more than sufficient to command and control quite large naval formations.
Mistrals would be useful ships, and yes, they would be excellent national assets that would provide a greater capacity for combined operations (I use combined instead of joint for a very specific reason: IMO "joint" in Canada as been distorted to mean "operational support of the Army by the Air Force and Navy, under the command of the Army and for its land purpose only" or "Geographical command by a single commander over everything in the specified area [an Army approach], instead of a functional approach [Air Force's preference] or a mixed Functional/Geographic approach [the Navy's preference]).
Now, as far as the Mistral's are concerned, I see little problems with the conversion that would be necessary for their employment by Canada. As already indicated going to 110v from 220v is relatively easy: no need to make any changes for fitted equipment. As for general service, the wiring is probably sufficient, and it is just a matter of locally inserting step down transformers and frequency rectifiers, together with new fuse panels and plugs. The "electronics", that is comms and radars, were to be installed in Russia after arrival from France, as were the weapons and weapons systems. So they only carry Merchant navy minimal electronics at this stage and we can do the installation of whatever we may want upon arrival in canada. As for their defensive weapons, we have six CIWS on hand and countless .50 cal. from the decommissioned destroyers and AORS. That is sufficient.
jollyjacktar said:As for having the capability at hand. Yes, it's hard to know (unless you have a crystal ball) when you might need it. Humanitarian lifts such as Katrina or Haiti come all of a sudden. We should have the ability to respond as needed. We no longer have our AOR lift possibilities such as it was. And this is why I say we could "use" the ability. We just can't afford it with the allowance Mum and Dad give us.
RoyalDrew said:Military power is but one facet of national power, it's up to us to make a business case to the government on why we should develop and maintain an ability to quickly invade a reasonably sized country over simply paying said country to shut its mouth and do what we tell it to do.
Navy_Pete said:I'd be more excited about the prospect of getting LHDs if we had enough resources to support our current fleet.
Currently we don't have the resources to properly support our existing fleet, and that won't change. Money aside, if you take a look at the crit manning messages, every time any ship goes to sea there seem to be the same positions they always need to fill to get out the door. That's not something you can fix over night, and getting yet another class of ship would make it harder. From what I remember from a presentation on the Mistrals years ago from someone in the French Navy is that the min rank on the crew is the equivalent to a MS; their crewing philosophy is different from ours in that you show up fully trained. Not sure how we would adapt to that one.
The other issue is simple jetty space; it's getting pretty crowded right now in Halifax and Esq; they don't really have room right now for the AOPs until they get rid of the 280s and tankers. Going to be really tight once JSS comes in, so not even sure where you would put LHDs if we somehow got everything else sorted.
SeaKingTacco said:There is Allso the carrier jetty in Shearwater.
Hmmm.... I wonder why they named it that?
Chief Stoker said:If they did get the LHD's, I would imagine money would have to be spent rebuilding the jetty down by MARLANT where the Bonnie used to tie up.
Chief Stoker said:Yes but who wants to go alongside in Shearwater ;D
Navy_Pete said:I'd be more excited about the prospect of getting LHDs if we had enough resources to support our current fleet.
Currently we don't have the resources to properly support our existing fleet, and that won't change. Money aside, if you take a look at the crit manning messages, every time any ship goes to sea there seem to be the same positions they always need to fill to get out the door. That's not something you can fix over night, and getting yet another class of ship would make it harder. From what I remember from a presentation on the Mistrals years ago from someone in the French Navy is that the min rank on the crew is the equivalent to a MS; their crewing philosophy is different from ours in that you show up fully trained. Not sure how we would adapt to that one.
The other issue is simple jetty space; it's getting pretty crowded right now in Halifax and Esq; they don't really have room right now for the AOPs until they get rid of the 280s and tankers. Going to be really tight once JSS comes in, so not even sure where you would put LHDs if we somehow got everything else sorted.
Eye In The Sky said:On the other hand, it is possible a new class of ship might attract folks to the Navy, like new tanks might have attracted people to the army.
Chief Stoker said:Pete its funny that all those extra sailors they say they have with the 280's and the tankers going down, where exactly are they? I know on the Kingston Class their home units are are constantly looking for their guys back.
If they did get the LHD's, I would imagine money would have to be spent rebuilding the jetty down by MARLANT where the Bonnie used to tie up.
End state its wishful thinking we would get them, perhaps if Rick Hillier was still CDS, not under the current leadership that's for sure.
Navy_Pete said:I think a lot of them already swapped over to the frigates, and then there is a holding crew for normal maintenance and disposal activities, even after they get paid off. Until the ships are actually turned over to the winning breaker yard in a few years, there will still be a skeleton crew of some sort (maybe a pool for the ships on each coast?) No idea where the operators etc go, but they were already down to effectively two crews and a bit for three 280s when I got posted to the NCR four years ago. A lot of the PO1s and PO2s I sailed with retired though.
Funny thing, with the AOPs and JSS, none of them are direct crew transfers. They don't have enough techs to spread out among six AOPs from the three 280s, and there are a number of trades that don't exist at all on the non combatants. They may end up fat on some of the ops room types but scrambling for roundskeepers; going to be interesting. So even though there are more billets on the five old ships being paid off then in the new AOPS and JSSs, you can't just take the crews and spread them into the new ships.
Fortunately that's the problem of a whole team of people figuring it out somewhere in the pers world! With the hundreds of thousands of individual parts that make up a ship, the engineering world will be busy enough making sure all the demil/CG stuff goes well.
Spectrum said:Are the beer machines still on the ships?
That's far more important than us getting LHD's.