Liz & Georges first playdate...
Without doubt the most impressive defence related story of the week was the news of QUEEN ELIZABETH and the USS GEORGE W BUSH steaming together off the coast of Scotland in concert with a variety of escorts. The sight of a pair of allied carriers operating together is increasingly uncommon, and its even less common to see a US carrier in UK waters these days.
The pictures are genuinely stirring – two of the largest and
most complex warships in human history sailing together, one returning from
operations in the Middle East and the other at the start of a career that will
see her doubtless spend many years deployed in the Middle East. But its not
just a photo that is so compelling here, it’s the deeper story of integration
and co-operation between the US and UK that makes this such a fabulous story to
tell.
Any nation can put on a photo shoot of ships together at sea
– indeed when you have multi-national maritime exercises between countries that
don’t work closely together, the most important ‘take away’ is being able to
get them all to steam together long enough to take a photo or two. But a photo
is little more than a snapshot in time intended to look good for PR images.
Ultimately there is nothing particularly difficult for the RN & USN to form
up in a completely non-tactical but very photogenic formation and steam in
roughly the same direction for a short time.
What really matters is the wider support and links between
the USN and RN that have helped keep the UK on track to sustain and regenerate
carrier strike over the last few years. This is less visible, but as equally
important.
The decision by the RN to move to a bigger generation of
carriers for CVF posed a number of challenges. For nearly 30 years it ran a reasonably
small airwing on the Invincibles – usually peaking at roughly 20 airframes all
told of which only about half were fixed wing Harriers. This meant the RN had
lost its experience of dealing with big deck carriers, and wasn’t used to
dealing with large airwings anymore – not just in terms of practical handling
on deck, but the wider issues of force generation, sortie generation and employing
a large airwing in a very different manner to a small force of defensive
fighters.
From the outset of the CVF project the RN has worked closely
to maintain an excellent relationship with the USN, who have in turn provided
fantastic assistance. This took on renewed significance after 2010 when the
decision was taken to delete the GR9 from service and take a gap in operating
fixed wing carriers. At the time the intent was to move to a CTOL F35 fleet,
and even though this later changed to STOVL, the USN remained very willing to let
the RN in and have access to its resources and training pipeline.
This offer has played an enormous part in keeping the RN
able to keep naval aviation alive and prepare for the reintroduction of a truly
‘big deck’ carrier capability. The USN hasn’t just trained pilots (there are a
lot of RN F18 pilots out there now), its also provided training for RN flight deck
crew to get them aware of just how complex a ‘big deck’ carrier is, and what a
step up it is from the Invincibles.
For many years now, there has routinely been a detachment of
6-10 RN personnel onboard many US Carriers, usually flight deck crew, pilots or
officers carrying out roles as an integrated part of the ships company. This
isn’t always without its challenges – apparently the USN doesn’t allow beards,
and at least one copy of Queens Regulations has been sent out to confirm to the
USN that the bearded RN crewmen aren’t trying to get one over on them!
A similar story can be told about the manner in which the
USN is prepared to allocate control of its assets to the RN, such as during
SAXON WARRIOR to help the RN gain experience of operating a large carrier with
significant strike capability. It is no exaggeration to say that the RN has
simply never had the level of strike capability generation that QEC offers.
Even in the supposed ‘heyday’ of the RN carrier fleet in the 1970s, the strike package
was limited to 18 buccaneers. Once QEC is fully up and running, she will be
able to support and sustain an air-group of 36 JSF and potentially significantly higher, with a
level of sortie generation far in excess of what has been possible before.
Being able to practise this sort of planning and
co-ordination with a US carrier matters because the RN is going to be operating
at a scale of capability that it simply has not experienced before. At the risk
of descending into ‘fantasy fleets’ territory here, its worth noting that a
combined US/UK embarkation of 48 F35 on a CVF gives her an almost equivalent
level of capability to a US carrier. If the US didn’t give the UK this sort of
access, it would take many more years for CVF to reach her full potential with
a much steeper learning curve.
The USN has always been generous to other fixed wing carrier
operators – for instance allowing Argentinean and Brazilian jets to practise ‘touch
and go’ landings to maintain currency, or working closely with the French when
De Gaulle is in refit. But the level of co-operation and support extended to
the UK is far in excess of what any other nation has ever had.
This is because CVF is such a big deal for the Americans as
well as the UK, and there are very strong US national interests at stake in
seeing her succeed. To the USN, CVF represents a ‘near peer’ carrier capability
that is on their side. She is able to embark and more crucially operate US jets
(more below) and brings a self sustaining task group with the level of
defensive capabilities and replenishment abilities needed to operate in high
threat areas. In other words she is a vessel able to operate alongside and if
needs be relieve a US Carrier on station.
The US generosity then is as much driven by national self
interest – they know that a fully capable RN carrier, operated in an effective
manner, is a vessel which can be deployed to cover gaps in their own carrier
coverage. It is notable that the Gulf has seen a sharp reduction in US carrier
presence, down from 2 near constant hulls only a few years ago, to a situation
today where carriers only deploy in for shorter periods, with long gaps. CVF
presents an opportunity to put a peer platform into the gulf to cover these
gaps and help provide contingent capability.
Integration of the
Airwing
The other key difference between the USN support to the RN
and the manner in which it is provided to other nations is the depth to which
the two nations work together. There is often a lot of military low level
exchanges between countries, where a liaison officer may be sent to work
alongside a host nation and represent his country. But proper fully fledged
exchanges are significantly rarer because
they essentially plug a foreign national into a hosts armed forces and
treat them as one of their own.
In other words, a British RN pilot on exchange with the US
Navy is considered for all intents and purposes to be ‘an American’ (albeit
with a far nice accent), and will occupy a permanent slot in a unit that would
otherwise be filled by a US national. This means that generally exchange
officers can be asked to deploy on operations that their original country may
not be directly involved in. For instance, reports of RN exchange officers
flying over Syria in USN F18s before the UK Parliament authorised the UK military
to conduct these ops. Therefore you want to be certain that you are comfortable
accommodating exchange officers and that they wont be pulled hours before a
mission over national policy differences.
A lot of people have complained that the decision to not
make QUEEN ELIZABETH a CTOL carrier damages the ability to ‘crossdeck’ and
operate French and US aircraft, and that this is somehow a mistake. In reality
the so-called ‘crossdecking’ experience is an exceptionally rare occurrence.
There have been plenty of low level visits, where a few
aircraft may land on, then take off from a foreign carrier, and plenty of
photos exist to attest to this. But these were little more than PR shots – the aircraft
landed, refuelled and went on its way. In the over 100 years of Naval aviation,
Humphrey can find only one occurrence of genuine cross decking occurring, which
was in WW2 when HMS VICTORIOUS embarked some US aircraft for a few months
during her Pacific deployment. (For more information on this, there is a superb article on the deployment at https://goo.gl/MqLPwU)
True crossdecking is a lot more than just parking some
planes on deck. It requires the embarkation of maintenance parties, spare parts
and munitions. Every nation will have subtly different modifications and parts
that need to be stowed – which in turn requires a stores system that can
accommodate these parts, and workshops with the right tools to maintain them.
The aircraft need mission planning software, and the ability
to be able to prepare and fly a mission that in turn likely needs access to ‘EYES
ONLY’ software. Part of the challenge of operations these days is not the
fighting together on the front line, it’s the fight to get your national IT architecture
to play together. Crossdecking requires you to feel comfortable in setting up a
national eyes IT network on a foreign nations platform and feel that you can
operate it without compromising national secrets.
Finally you need to be confident that both countries share
the same Rules of Engagement and legal interpretations of how to handle
different operational situations. At its simplest, if Country A is flying
airstrikes from Country Bs aircraft carrier, then you need to be certain that
doing so won’t contravene Country B’s laws and ROE. This is not a small problem – coalition operations
are a real challenge at times when trying to work out what the national
permissions allow Commanders to do.
You would only embark assets onto another country’s carrier
if you were certain that there was total alignment and that you would get the
full support needed to carry out the operation – what happens if you want to
launch a strike, and the host carrier refuses as its against their laws? Can a
Commander provide met data, fuel or other capabilities that would enable you to
conduct the strike or is this going to be a breach of their mandates?
True interoperability is an act of faith and trust between
partners. This trust takes decades to build up and is only very sparingly
given. All it takes is one act where a country is unable to carry out military
action due to another refusing access (for instance overflight of airspace) for
this trust to collapse.
This is why the QUEEN ELIZABETH is so significant – for the
first time ever the US Armed Forces feel comfortable enough to assume that the
USMC will be routinely embarking and operating from a foreign platform. This
level of shared sovereignty is a real step change for the US, which works well
as a coalition lead, but less well as a coalition partner over concerns about
how its assets will be used.
This is a big deal, and highlights yet another reason why
QUEEN ELIZABETH is such a game changer, not just for the UK but our American
allies too. No other country gets this level of access or integration – others get
as far as integrating an air defence platform into a CVBG, but this takes the
Anglo-US relationship to a whole new level of capability.
At a time when it is
fashionable to say that the UK doesn’t exert much influence in DC and gets
little from the US, Humphrey would argue that the reverse is true. The UK has
been given an astonishing level of access to US Navy capability and platforms,
and in return the US feels it can trust the UK enough to embark sailors and
marines to sea with the UK on operations.
As I postulated many years ago, in a Waynes world style - if you build them, they will come......
ReplyDeleteThis - despite the naysayers, is as you say, properly game changing. With concomitant effect on influence with those who matter, often to be found without comedy haircuts.
Not just the USN - they've been playing with USAF F-15E's at Lakenheath as well.
ReplyDeleteIs the plan still for 24 jets available for carrier ops by 2023? I'd be interested to know if this is planned to be the regular air-group or if 24 'available' means we'll see this occasionally and around 12 will be the norm?
ReplyDeleteIt's still a bit vague and i'm thinking regular USMC detachments may make up the numbers quite often.
Another visible sign of the partnershp is our involvement in the RC-135 programme; the fact that of the US's allies, only we operate such sensitive equipment and have soveriegn control on deployment and operation, speaks volumes.
ReplyDeleteGlad to see you fight back the silliness out there on defence :)
Good to hear a positive slant on these brilliant ships. Personally, I am heartily sick of the pathetic negatively and ill-informed comment in much of the press, e.g. white elephants, no aircraft, too big, not enough escorts, not nuclear powered, why did we not just buy F18s/Rafales/Sea Typhoons/new Harriers? etc. No, things are not perfect but let us remember how fortunate we are that this project has been allowed to reach fruition and recognise the superb capability that the QE/F35B package represents.
ReplyDelete