The Corsican Lion roars - Thoughts on the COUGAR 12 deployment
There was a brief flurry of
announcements last week that the Royal Navy would be conducting a deployment
into the Med with the Response Force Task Group (RFTG), to conduct exercises
with a range of partner nations across the region (the official MOD press
release can be found here - http://www.royalnavy.mod.uk/News-and-Events/Latest-News/2012/September/27/120921-Cougar-Preview).
This is a not insignificant
deployment – sending some 3500 personnel into the Med represents roughly 10% of
the Naval Services manpower total strength. At the same time, it is also being
done while the RN continues to fill its other key deployments, such as the
Atlantic Patrol Task, and operations in the Gulf. While this blog has never
tried to put itself across as a ‘fanboy’ site, it is worth noting that there
are very, very few navies in the world capable of sustaining on a permanent
basis the number of operational deployments and training deployments that the
RN does.
The news of COUGAR 12 matters
in several ways. Firstly, it is a good way to test one of the flagship
announcements of the SDSR – namely the forming up of the RFTG. The role of this
organisation is to provide a worked up interventionary force, able to provide
the Government with a range of power projection capabilities ranging from naval
gunfire support, through to air support and landing of Marines. In 2011, on its
inaugural deployment, the force was able to support operations in Libya,
playing a crucial role in the UKs campaign efforts. This marks the second time
a large number of units have formed up under the RFTG banner.
The news of the deployment is
impressive when one considers the operational tempo seen by the UK military
this year – fresh from deploying 20,000 troops in support of the Olympics, and
while operations in the Gulf, Afghanistan and the rest of the world permanently
occupy the best part of 12-13000 troops elsewhere, the UK is still able to
conduct a major amphibious exercise in the Med. Most militaries would have
needed a long break before being able to return to contingent capability after something
as complex as the Olympics, so it is useful reminder that despite being smaller
than in the past, the UK still possesses considerable capability.
From an operational
perspective though, the deployment matters as it seems to signal the quiet
return to contingent capability, and a desire to focus on life beyond OP
HERRICK. It is perhaps faintly ironic that having spent years acquiring
probably the worlds second most capable amphibious force, with HMS OCEAN, the ALBION
class and the BAYS, the UK promptly found itself embroiled in operations in a
landlocked country. For the best part of a decade the majority of the Royal
Marines have been engaged in supporting Ops TELIC and HERRICK, and there has
been perhaps slightly less focus on the amphibious role – with the decision
rightly taken to support the ongoing operation and not preparing for a
hypothetical one.
The COUGAR series of
deployments marks the first major steps back into the regeneration of the Royal
Marines as a large scale amphibious force. SDSR cut the requirement for landing
troops ashore considerably, but there remains a need to land up to roughly 1800
Marines as part of UK contingent capability. While the Corps was tied up with
the OP HERRICK plot, this was a challenge to practise. Amphibious operations
are not remotely easy to do – even basic evolutions like getting loaded marines
from their bunkspaces to the right landing craft take time and effort to
practise. By the time you find yourself trying to land 1800 troops, using a
range of landing craft, helicopters and other capabilities, then suddenly the
whole process becomes a remarkably complicated evolution. It now looks as if
the UK will be able to start exercising at a much higher level than has been
practised for some years during this evolution.
This ties into the wider
delivery of the goals of the SDSR – never forget that while many focused purely
on the short term reduction of personnel and platforms, SDSR was actually about
delivering a force capable of providing expeditionary warfare capabilities as
its heart. The move towards COUGAR and other exercises serves as a reminder
that OP HERRICK is beginning to draw to a close, and that resources previously
tied into the commitments plot are suddenly becoming available again. COUGAR
serves as a useful reminder that while OP HERRICK remains the Defence Main
Effort, there is now increasingly an eye being cast onto the 2015-2020 phase of
the SDSR and delivering a force which is affordable and capable of conducting
expeditionary operations.
A glance at the list of units
participating in COUGAR is also illuminating – firstly, one notes the lack of
any RFA tankers or stores ships. This is a task force which will be utterly
reliant on shore support, or other nations tankers and supply vessels to remain
at sea. This is probably the first time in memory that an RN task force has
deployed to sea without a tanker or store ship as an integral part of its
force. While the Med is to all intents a very friendly region, and the UK has a
naval base in the area at Gibraltar, and support facilities in Cyprus, if
something changed and the force had to deploy further afield, then things may
become more challenging. This serves as a reminder that in future, an RN of
only three store ships and six tankers, is going to have to make very tough
choices between supporting single ship operations at distance, or supporting
multi-ship exercises nearer to home.
Additionally the presence of
the Apache is also interesting – the Apache force is increasingly playing a
role at the heart of UK maritime strike roles, and this is not something that
can be just spun up overnight. Exercises like COUGAR are vital to iron out bugs
and demonstrate capability, and act on lessons identified from previous
operations. The COUGAR deployment highlights the importance of joint working,
and we are likely to see further such examples in future.
The final point is the
programme – COUGAR is about working with other nations to improve our ability
to operate with them in the real world. There will be plenty of opportunities
to improve relations with the French, and other NATO partners. But perhaps the
most exciting opportunity is the chance to improve relations with nations such
as Algeria, with whom the UK rarely works, but where an exercise programme
might open the door to better co-operation, and future opportunities (both
defence and commercial). These sort of exercises can have a huge impact on
relations between the UK and other nations, and often play a very beneficial
effect.
So, although its only an
exercise, and although there are plenty of other higher profile operations
going on at the moment, COUGAR 12 is worthy of note. It reaffirms the UKs
capabilities, commitment to the wider Med region and also demonstrates that
despite being very, very busy, the UK is still more than able to deploy a wide
range of military capability to carry out operations at some distance from
home. There are likely to be plenty of other exercises like this in the coming
years as the UK moves on from HERRICK and instead focuses on a future force
optimised for short term intervention. This is really just the beginning!
"Operations like Cougar, (even larger ones? Perhaps including Carriers?) Done once every few years are far better at building "soft power" than the constant presence of a single warship"
ReplyDeleteDiscuss?
Couldnt think of a better way to ask :)
Ideally we should stage exercises like this from time to time to remind the world what we can do...but sustain a sufficient trip-wire presence (Using a mixture of diplomacy, overseas aid and some visible military activity) to avoid the need to do it. Anyone for an enhanced diplomatic and intelligence presence - underpinned by a judicious mixture of colonial frigates, forward deployed air assets, ground troops training here there and everywhere, and the concentrated use of aid to make friends and influence people in places where we currently lack secure basing and staging areas (Sierra Leone? Northern Somalia?)...or is that all a bit "Think Defence" for this audience!
ReplyDeleteTrip Wires, generaly speaking, "Trip" something, like a claymore, or an armoured division.
DeleteA T23 in the Falklands would be brushed aside by the Argentine fleet, unless is being brushed aside "activates" something else, it serves no purpose.
A T23 in the Falklands would be "brushed aside" by the "Argentine Fleet"? Actually whilst it may be an uneven match (assuming a credible "Argentine Fleet" bursts into existence), properly employed a T23 would be capable of making a serious pain in the a*** of itself.
DeleteTrT
DeletePrecisely what do the Argentinians have in their inventory that could "brush aside" a T23?
Cougar is a good template for the future. A major amphibian and/or in the future a carrier, two or three escorts, perhaps a sub working in close company, furnished with additional support ships, a full spectrum of helicopters (hopefully one day some jets) and a Royal Marine battle-group is not too shabby at all.
ReplyDeleteYou are very right Sir H to point out that very few countries could keep up this tempo of operations whilst supporting a deployment similar to Herrick and various other bits and pieces. Britain's armed forces may be diminishing but they can still punch above their weight!
The lack of RFA assets assigned to Cougar is a worry. As you say the Mediterranean is a relatively friendly region where we have a considerable support infrastructure from British bases and allied nations.
The point of a task group such as this though is to be able to operate out of area, in places where we don't have the luxury of friendly territory. Could the RFA support a sizeable deployment to somewhere hostile and remote? Even if they managed to pull every ship off of other operations and out of port I doubt it's achievable.
How quickly and efficiently could the MOD charter and press into service the relevant tankers and stores vessels? Could enough be scraped together to supply and sustain a major, high intensity operation?
Tankers, possibly. Sticking an abeam RAS rig on a product carrier need not be a major drama. Even an over the stern rig would do (if only we hadn't disposed of them all - D'Oh!)
DeleteStores ships to supply ships (as opposed to carrying land logs) not a chance. Can't be done with pure containerships and Ro-Cons would be very difficult to work as well, even if you could get hold of them.
The fact that Cougar 12 doesn't have a tanker tells you just how tightly the RFA is stretched, although one would have thought the two Rovers and one Leaf remaining could have covered FOST and the Gulf, leaving a Wave to support the Ex. May just be a scheduling issue, but still very uncomfortable.
So the conclusion is that the RN would find it difficult to stay supplied via commercial charters alone, that is on station at sea as opposed to heading off to a friendly port.
DeleteThe absence of the RFA for Cougar is pretty revealing. In addition to the tasking you mentioned a tanker is often operating around the Caribbean or South Atlantic. Once you factor in maintenance it's easy to see their just aren't enough ships to go around.
Roughly 8 tankers and 4 stores ships was the minimum the RN could get away with, letting the numbers drop below this was total madness.
The tanker(s) and stores ship(s) (i.e. a Wave and two Forts) are already deployed East of Suez, ready to service the RFTG if things kick off with Iran. Part of the naval buildup that Sir H. denies is taking place. ;-)
DeleteOne Leaf just went into refit, one Rover is not yet out of refit, the last Rover is APT(S). The Wave that isn't EoS is FOST tanker prior to wherever she goes next, probably APT(N) or EoS.
Thought Vicky was on her way back, must be soon. I imagine Birkenhead is a tad busy ATM - thought it might be scheduling.
DeleteFort Victoria is in drydock in Dubai. She is not heading home any time soon. Three ships are on the Mersey at present.
DeleteHas been raised elsewhere that there are no Type 45s listed, or any AAW destroyer for that matter, which was something of a surprise as such an exercise would surely be an ideal opportunity to exercise a Type 45.
ReplyDeleteOf course, with Diamond in the Gulf, Daring not long back and Dauntless down south, the conclusion was there simply aren't any available at the moment.
But what about Dragon? She is apparently undertaking operational training, following commissioning earlier this year, and in preparation of her first deployment next year. It was reported in the summer when she fired her first Sea Viper that she would be undertaking advanced training with a french carrier group - which sounds like Corsican Lion?
The lack of a destroyer puzzled me as well. It's undoubtedly due to shortages, with only Daring, Dauntless, Diamond and Edinburgh fully operational the RN is 2 ships short of the eventual target. A peaceful deployment to a semi friendly region can technically make do with a couple of frigates, but it would obviously be good practice to have a destroyer present and it's a vital component for a task force in a high threat scenario.
DeleteI am assuming Dragon will either exercise with the French carrier group at a later date, or more likely it was cancelled because of some technical issue.
An interesting article, and Sir H is probably correct not many countries could do what the RN can do. That said, what is it this exercise shows us that the RN can do at the current tempo?
ReplyDeleteThe lesson I take is that the RN can operate in a benign environment where it has shore based facilities to cater for resupply and then as long as there is no even semi-serious threat from the air.
A blue water navy capable of war fighting? Perhaps not. No disrespect to the RN's people, its training or its kit. The RN is just too damn small.
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ReplyDelete