A corner of a foreign field that is forever England...
Browsing the as always
excellent ‘Think Defence’ website, Humphrey was struck by a number of articles
picked up from around the news on overseas basing, particularly about how the
French are looking to expand their network of basing facilities in Africa to
help meet the challenges of instability. The specific article can be found HERE,
but in summary it says that in future, the French plan to maintain similar
troop numbers in the Sahel region, but spread them out into more austere
locations and have specific roles for each base.
Foreign basing is one of those
subjects which seems to crop up a lot on many internet ‘fantasy fleet’
discussions, with posters on forums creating wishlists of the sort of UK military
structure they’d like to see, and most of the time it has some kind of
permanent basing facility in all manner of odd locations, usually with some
kind of grandiose title attached to it (e.g .15th Imperial Army HQ
in Timbuktu).
There is a strong association
with the concept of possession of overseas facilities, as if the sheer act of
having a smaller part of territory abroad that is forever (England) somehow
makes a nation more potent or powerful. Yet despite this, overseas basing is
one of those areas which relatively few nations still do. For this article,
Humphrey would define an overseas facility as something sustained to support
the permanent stationing of troops and/or military hardware in a foreign
nation, and not the presence of a liaison officer or small admin hub linked to
things like NATO HQs.
If you look beyond a couple of
military operations like HERRICK, where there are obviously operational
facilities for many nations, then outside of the US, France and the UK, and to
a much more limited extent Australia & the Netherlands (which operate
logistics facilities in the Middle East and West Indies), there are no real
western powers operating from overseas locations. The Russians still maintain a
facility in Syria, and in the immensely complicated world of South East Asian
politics, a number of nations maintain small facilities in disputed island
territories, although these owe more to complex political situations (and an
insistence that the facilities themselves are in territorial waters)
It is interesting to consider
then that despite the perception of the UK as a nation in decline militarily,
it still retains a significant overseas footprint of permanent basing facilities,
and a much wider footprint of temporary detachments which over the years have
gained a certain permanency about them. Today the UK operates permanent bases
in Gibraltar, Cyprus, Ascension Island, the Falklands, with access to
facilities in Diego Garcia, Brunei and Singapore. This is backed up by training
facilities in Canada, Kenya and Belize, and there is also a series of
operational detachments operating out of Bahrain, the UAE and Oman. This list
does not consider Germany (due to close), nor the multitude of support
facilities and HQs where UK staff participate both in NATO and more broadly.
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Image by Ministry of Defence; © Crown copyright |
This footprint remains
significantly larger than some may think, but the list also raises a variety of
observations about the realities of overseas basing and how challenging it is
to sustain an overseas presence. The first thing to note is that when looking at UK overseas facilities,
the majority of the ‘operational’ ones (e.g. those owned by PJHQ and run as
Permanent Joint Operating Bases or PJOBs) are located on UK sovereign
territory. Humphrey is lucky enough to have visited and worked at every single
UK PJOB (including Diego Garcia). While they may be considered overseas in some
ways, they are able to be used in a manner which doesn’t allow other nations
control over their function or role. The result is a collection of fairly
substantial sites with considerable permanency (e.g. married quarters, garrison
units or permanent lodger detachments and a sense that the site exists for the
long haul).
Where the UK chooses to
sustain a more expeditionary presence (primarily in the Gulf) it relies on the
presence of temporary units, and a more expeditionary posture. It is rare to
find many permanent buildings in these sites, and the majority of accommodation
remains austere and designed to be lived in for a short period of time. Why though,
especially when the UK has been in the region on a permanent basis for a long
time, has it stepped away from having large permanent facilities outside of
sovereign territory?
Part of the answer is that a
permanent presence implies a permanent dependency on the host nation. In
running a permanent facility overseas, you rely very much on the goodwill of
the host nation to support you, accommodate you and make life as straight
forward as possible – ranging from visa issues at the point of entry, through
to ensuring that the routine life support of food and power is delivered
without any problems. When relationships with a country go well, then this isn’t
an issue, but when countries seek to link support for the bases, or their
continued access to adopting certain policies or helping endorse their views,
then things get more challenging. Permanent bases on foreign soil tie you
implicitly into maintaining a long standing relationship with that nation, no
matter how challenging it may become.
In Africa, one would argue
that French foreign policy has been as much driven by doing what is required to
keep a motley assortment of despots, presidents and Emperors on side as it is
about what is in the long term interests of the French. When you have a large
expat community settling in the vicinity of the bases, and when you have
married quarters, schools and all the other gentle signs of permanence, you
have to consider how the base is run in a very different way. Sustaining the
base on your terms becomes almost a foreign policy objective of its own.
The other challenge associated
with permanency is that when the host nation does something you do not necessarily
agree with, then as a nation you face a difficult challenge. Do you acquiesce,
knowing that it is vital to keep the military facilities open, or do you speak
out, knowing it places your long term presence at risk? The problem with
permanent facilities is that they imply permanence of thinking. You cannot risk
your relationship in the short term, knowing that in the medium term you will
still have to deal with the same people, who may harbour grudges over how you
acted, and in turn, could make the presence of the bases and the limits on what
you can do with them a focal part of the relationship.
Finally, the problem with
permanency is that your forces assigned to the base become permanent in themselves,
and perhaps become in the eyes of the host nation ‘their’ forces. When you see
a facility like the French ones in the UAE or Africa, you see a substantial
military presence. But, by running sites with declared orders of battle, and
declared roles – such as hosting specific squadrons of jet fighters, or supporting
land units, you are declaring your permanent commitment to that nation or
region. As such, when the time comes to reduce a presence, change it around or
send it off to do other jobs, there is a danger that the host nation sees it as
being a weakening of the commitment to them personally. After all, if you host
a French air force base with Rafales, you have a reasonable expectation that
those Rafales are there to defend you. Permanency of presence brings a state
where amending it can become a major challenge in bilateral relations, and
reduce your own freedom of action in a crisis.
Additionally, it becomes a
major millstone when the relationship is not as smooth – arguably both the
French and US who base aircraft overseas would like to see defence sales of
similar equipment flow as a result of their presence in some countries. When
this doesn’t result in a sale (e.g. the French trying and so far failing to sell
Rafale to the UAE), then it either leads to challenging questions, or results
in a sense that assets shouldn’t be used to defend countries not willing to buy
them. Currently the French find themselves in the UAE with a substantial fast
jet presence, an implied assumption that this would be used to defend the UAE
in a crisis, but absolutely no signal nor interest from the UAE in purchasing
similar jets to work with the French. Having secured a permanent presence, they
cannot withdraw the jets without it being seen as an implied snub, and they now
arguably find themselves fixed with a nation expecting them to defend their
interests, but not reward them for doing so.
Of course ultimately, there is
the danger that having a permanent military presence can result in your being
sucked into a war, not necessarily of your choice. One would argue that many
French interventions in West Africa owe as much to protecting their status quo
as they were about protecting French allies. When your permanent bases become a
millstone requiring military action to protect, you realise that they are perhaps
more hassle than they are worth. In the same way, withdrawal, closure or
shutting down a base can have a far greater impact on the bilateral
relationship than it would were it seen as a purely temporary measure. Arguably
the withdrawal of the UK helicopter flights from Belize and the drawing down of
BATSUB have had a huge impact on Anglo-Belizean relations, particularly as the
media coverage seems to portray the provision of 25 Flight as effectively the
SAR cover for the whole country, implying that the UK decision is puitting
Belizean lives at risk. A similar problem may be faced in Kenya, where if BATUK
is drawn down in the post HERRICK environment, linking any change to posture
may become part of the challenges in managing the bilateral relationship.
The beauty of the UK approach
of relying primarily on temporary facilities on foreign soil is that you can
ebb and flow presence with far more ease and far less disturbance. By this, it
is much easier to maintain a small ground detachment of RAF personnel to
service aircraft and run a bare bones facility, then augment them as required
than it is to keep a permanent presence on one station. In an RAF of ever fewer
aircraft, and one built around the concept of expeditionary operations, having
the ability to move quickly around a region, exercising in various countries as
you go is perhaps far more useful than having one tied squadron. In regions
where complex international relationships exist, it would perhaps be more
difficult to send ‘their’ Typhoons or Tornados to exercise in a third party
nation, for fear of causing offence or difficulties. Instead, by maintaining a
broad and austere presence which can quickly be stood up, the UK gets the best
of both worlds – the ability to operate from a diverse range of countries and
locations, but at the same time a much lower problem of challenging diplomatic
problems.
This policy does come at a
cost though – it relies heavily on a ‘detachment mentality’ which requires
troops to deploy on an expeditionary basis and without families. Fine for the
odd training detachment, but after four or five multi-month detachments, then
things can get a bit more wearing. Similarly, the cost associated with being
able to deploy on an expeditionary footing is far more expensive than having a
couple of airbases and permanent facilities. It requires heavier investment in
airlift, sealift and logistics than would otherwise be the case, and means
scarce procurement funds are diverted away from teeth capability like munitions
and into the less glamorous world of logistics.
But, despite this, the UK
seems set to have an ever greater austere overseas presence. As HERRICK draws
to a close, and assets become available for regional training, its likely that
we will see further such deployments into regions of national interest. It is
hard to see the Gulf facilities being reduced in number, and there is a near
permanent demand from across the globe by nations to work with UK military personnel
on training exercises. If anything, as HERRICK ends and global defence
engagement steps up to fore, then sites which have perhaps seen relatively
little use in recent years like Belize, Singapore and Brunei may find
themselves becoming far more prominent in UK defence engagement.
"Permanent bases on foreign soil tie you implicitly into maintaining a long standing relationship with that nation, no matter how challenging it may become."
ReplyDeleteLike Russia in Syria perhaps... Did we care enough about shifting Russia away from Syrian dependence for access to the Med to tip them the nod over Cyprus?
Singapore and Brunei are under used. The logistics hub in Singapore is more US-Aussie manned than RN, despite what you've been harping about. Only if there's another humanitarian disaster or Daring tour will they be used.
ReplyDeleteBrunei has been used as a jungle warfare school as well as hosting a Gurkha battalion and Army Air Corps flight all at a cost to the Sultan pretty consistently since the early 1960s.
DeleteThe facilities in Singapore are used more frequently by allied nations because the RAN and USN have more vessels in the immediate area for obvious reasons. The important thing is that the refueling depot and wharf's are still officially in the hands of a small RN naval party and the whole set-up is MOD owned, giving the RN instant access and all the support they can provide if/when it's required.
I'm not an advocate of setting up bases here, there and everywhere all over the globe, but that doesn't mean the many overseas facilities we do still maintain aren't worth hanging onto.
Brunei has been the same for years and nothing much out of it. The troops there just sit for the Sultan's pleasure and only because of Afghanistan were they put into battle.
DeleteI never said not hanging on to. I said not all facilities are greatly utilised as the article suggest. And despite global basing, the UK armed forces to others like that Gabriele guy isnt that well armed
Gabriele has an almost encyclopaedic knowledge of the UK Armed Forces, but he does go on at length about the negatives, yet ignore or only give a brief mention to any positive developments for the UK military.
DeleteIf he was as critical of other armed forces, especially other European nations, there would be plenty of examples to hi-light their shortcomings and capability gaps.
Waylander
Belize--training there has already been reduced in favour of elsewhere.
ReplyDelete