Has the UK failed in the West Indies?


There has been significant media coverage of the dreadful impact of Hurricane Irma in the West Indies, which has caused immense damage across a wide swathe of the region. The hurricane, at Category 5 is the single worst one ever recorded in the regions history and has done enormous damage. Islands have been devastated, with widespread destruction and loss of life likely.

Three European nations still retain territory in this region – the UK, France and the Netherlands, while the US maintains sovereignty over other islands as well in its peculiar ‘empire that is not an empire’ approach to the world.For France and the Netherlands, the island groups form a integral part of their homeland – with parliamentary representation and enjoy a very different constitutional relationship to those islands still associated with the UK.  The French West Indies have a population of almost 850,000 people across 7 main islands, all located relatively close to each other. The Dutch Antilles have a population of just over 300,000 people, again spread over a small number of islands in very close proximity to each other.

The UK is responsible for governing five island groups in the West Indies itself – Anguilla, Montserrat, Cayman Islands, Turks and Caicos Islands and the British Virgin Islands (plus Bermuda out in the atlantic), with a total population of roughly 100,000 people across all five islands. The islands are governed by the UK, who is responsible for defence and external affairs, and which provides additional assistance in some areas – for instance legal support or other bespoke issues.  

The key difference is that these islands are not located close to each other – they are spread across the entirety of the Caribbean, and represent the history of decolonisation as different islands broke off from other colonies during the independence process in order to remain affiliated to the UK – for instance Anguilla. While UK policy is that all islands that wish to have independence will get it, for some islands, they are just too small or poor to be able to cope as a fully fledged power – Montserrat has barely 4500 people on it and an enormous volcano that did immense damage in its most recent eruption.


HImage by Ministry of Defence; © Crown copyright
What is the Defence posture?
Both the French and Netherlands armed forces maintain permanent garrisons in their territory – the French have an infantry regiment (size unknown) based in Martinique, coupled with a small naval base facility to support some ships. The Dutch maintain a small naval presence (a support ship and an occasional guard ship deployment) plus a detachment at one of the airfields, which also doubles up as a US Air Force forward operating base. There is a small ground presence too, but again its hard to get exact numbers. In very rough terms, there are roughly 1000 people from each nation in their respective territories doing military work or internal security at any one time.

By contrast the UK defence presence in the West Indies is not land based, and has not been for decades. The usual presence is built around an RFA tanker or Landing Ship, supported by deployments from escorts or OPVS – with the aim being to have a ship loaded with disaster relief supplies in region and available to sail as required during the hurricane season. For the rest of the time the presence involves both regional security visits, capacity building and counter narcotics work.

The UK does not maintain a land presence in the West Indies – although there have been regular training exercises in places like Jamaica. The nearest land presence is in Belize, where there remains a significant real estate footprint, supported by regular exercises in country. The small Army Air Corps detachment (25 Flt with Bell 212 helicopters) closed in 2010 following defence cuts, but the British Army Training Support Unit Belize (BATSUB) has been preserved and was growing in size again as one of two locations where the Army can do jungle warfare training (the other being Brunei).

The other land presence is the Bermuda Regiment, which exists for the security and defence of Bermuda, and has the curious anomaly of being the last part of those armed forces linked to the UK (e.g. such as the Gibraltar Regiment) to practise conscription. But this organisation is not part of the British Army and is realistically not able to be used.

Beyond this there is a small number of paramilitary forces on these islands, ranging from police forces to tiny units, perhaps platoon strength at best. The lack of any credible external threat, coupled with the fact that the UK is responsible for their defence means no island has invested meaningfully in a military capability.

Has the UK failed?
Much of the criticism levelled at the UK in the immediate aftermath of the hurricane hitting was that it had not done as much to provide assistance as both France and the Netherlands, and that more could have been done. Is this a reasonable criticism to make?

Firstly, its important to note that the French and Netherlands armed forces are operated in a totally different manner to the British ones in region. They have much smaller areas to cover, and much higher populations and land to protect. Therefore it makes a lot of sense to have permanent military forces in region in this way – if you only have a couple of islands which need support, you can keep your troops in one place. This also reflect the fact that both French and Netherlands forces are used for internal security, which UK military do not do.

The UK approach though by contrast seems entirely appropriate for the UK situation. We have multiple island groups spread out over thousands of miles of ocean with tiny islands with miniscule populations. There is not the security requirement for a major military presence on these islands, nor much space.

Some seem to think the UK could have sent more troops out to the islands ahead of time – the problem with this idea is that there firstly wasn’t that much warning of the storm. Secondly, where would the troops have gone and why? Many of these islands don’t have international airports, and some probably can’t take C17s or Voyagers, so how do you get to them without access to a ship? The time required to set this up would have been longer than the warning received as to how bad the hurricane was actually going to be – its entirely realistic to assume that they’d have been arriving right in time for the hurricane to hit.

The next issue is that guessing where to put resources when your interests are dispersed isn’t easy. The hurricane skipped some islands unexpectedly, but hit others harder – had forward deployment occurred, then its entirely possible that the troops would have been in the wrong place at the wrong point, and extracting them would have been really hard. There are very few major airports or airfields in the region, and those that are there have been damaged or destroyed (look at St Maarten airfield in the Antilles). Just because you have troops on the ground doesn’t mean they’d have been able to get out again to go where required, and potentially you would have troops and equipment/plant trapped on an island unable to get off to go where it needed to be more urgently.


The assumption a lot of people make is that the armed forces are flush with disaster relief equipment and machinery to solve issues like this. Sadly that’s not really the case at all. The old MOD publication JDP2-02, which focused on UK resilience operations rightly makes the point that even 10 years ago the total UK military engineering capability for this sort of major operation was akin to that of a small town at best, and this is thinly spread across the whole world.

There are not vast halls of equipment sitting idle and waiting to be unloaded, nor many troops specially trained in disaster relief. Much of this equipment is not easily airportable, and the locations where it has to go will likely not be able to land these aircraft at the best of times, let alone post hurricane.

The UK solution is absolutely the right one – send a Landing Ship Dock for half the year as the ‘on call’ ship to respond to this kind of emergency. You could, quite literally, not hope for a better ship to respond to this sort of crisis. The Bay class landing ships are probably the most versatile ships in the RN today in terms of adapting to new roles. MOUNTS BAY has a hospital on board, she has enormous amounts of spare bunk spaces to embark extra personnel as required to move them around, she has a big well deck full of space to embark hurricane relief stores and people specially trained to do this. Don’t forget all deploying ships do disaster relief as part of their FOST training – the only bit of the armed forces to do this.

Given the scale of the disaster, she is well equipped to sail to offer help and support where needed and be self sustaining in islands where power is lost. With landing craft onboard she’ll be able to get ashore on beaches where ports are blocked, and carries the equipment needed to make a lifesaving difference. Of all the ship types in the fleet, MOUNTS BAY is the one that really is the best possible solution right now to this crisis.


Was the UK slow to respond?
Much of the criticism has centred on the speed of the response, with suggestions that it took ‘nearly a day’ for something to be done. To Humphrey this is a deeply foolish complaint to make. Hurricanes and other natural disasters are not something you respond to by just going ‘send X’ in an email and then getting on with it.

To do a disaster relief effort, you need to know where to go, what damage has happened, what the needs are and more importantly where can you land? The RAF is deploying a C17 today with troops and supplies, but its not clear where it can go or where it can land to help (hence the advantage of the RFA in theatre).

Too many people in this era of instant connectivity assume that just because something happens on the news and is known about instantly, it can be responded to instantly. The reality is the harsh tyranny of the Mercator projection has kicked in. It will take two weeks for OCEAN to sail to the west indies because it’s a bloody long way! People don’t understand that the world is a very big place, and ships even at best speed don’t move that fast across it. No other navy in the world right now, other than the US Navy which has similar ships closer could get a ship of equal capability there any faster – yet we’re somehow blaming the RN for the fact that it will take two weeks to get there.

Similarly the UK is being attacked for a lack of foresight for not stationing equipment there. This again seems grossly unfair. The military presence in region today for disaster relief could not be better – compared to ten, twenty or forty years ago when it would have been an old frigate or destroyer with limited aviation, no landing craft, no well deck and most importantly no ability to store lots of disaster relief supplies, the UK response today from a capability perspective is simply the best it could be. Also we'd have had worse ships in the amphibious fleet, less capable of providing assistance like HMS OCEAN will do, and a less capable strategic airlift force too to move the heavy plant (no C17 equivalents). The UK is genuinely better placed now to respond to this crisis, than it is at any previous one in terms of what is in theatre, and what is able to come right now with follow up support.

Could the UK have lots of troops permanently based in the region during hurricane season to stand by to do disaster relief? Yes it could, but it would be an enormous cost to establish new bases, and then sustain the right amount of kit in one spot, with no guarantee that it would be needed. Remember this is the first ever recorded category 5 hurricane in history to hit most of these islands. Ultimately the RN expects to do some disaster relief each year, which is why it has a ship there to do it, but this year was worse than anyone could credibly have expected. Even if UK troops were there, there is no guarantee their equipment, communications, medical support or other facilities would survive – far better to keep it at sea safely, so it can be deployed as required.  

Additionally complaints of the UK response miss the mark that the armed forces are not intended to function as a disaster relief organisation. They can do it, and have a proud history of doing it, but that is not their intended role. There is a huge number of amazing UK disaster relief organisations that are better trained, better equipped and better suited to do this sort of operation out there-  the military is at best a sticking plaster. But these organisations need to know where to deploy and where to go – they haven’t the resources to go forwards and be in the wrong place, unable to get out to give the help it turns out was needed elsewhere.

So when we look at the UK response, ask yourself these questions. Firstly, was the capability in theatre appropriate for the likely level of need – and the answer is absolutely yes it was. Secondly, could the UK have done more to respond given the geographic dispersal of territory, the lack of easy access and the limited amount of capability to do disaster relief held by the UK forces – and the answer is no, absolutely not.

Ultimately security is about risk management – on every risk register there will be issues that come up that can’t be treated, must be tolerated and which run the risk of doing huge damage. The UK approach to supporting the West Indies has been about balancing investment to keep modern ships with good capability available when required, but when something this game changing happens, no one could have been ready to solve the problem.

To compare the UK response to France or the Netherlands, who have totally different needs, operations and garrisons in region seems a bit futile. We do not know the level to which these forces are able or trained to do disaster relief, or if they are able to do it. The solution for those countries works, because of their specific situation. The UK solution works because it reflects the UKs’ specific and very different needs and requirements for disaster relief.


In this time of desperate human suffering, it is sad that rather than focus on the good that the UK is doing, and the way it is intelligently sending relief where it is needed now, this is seen as grounds for unwarranted criticism of an approach that seems eminently sensible. Send help where it needs to go, not where you think it may have to go. 

Comments

  1. Well written summary Sir. One point is that more should have been invested by the UK in training and equipping these island's own emergency services to be able to provide immediate response to such events.

    Also - the lack of sea rescue resources on each of these islands is notable, as is the ability of the relevant police forces to undertake coast guard activities.

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    1. Do remember some of these islands are tiny. Montserrat has 4,500 inhabitants; what village in UK of that size would you expect to have the training and equipment to cope with Irma? Still they have done well.

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    2. Very good point. I was thinking of Anguilla - population about 15,000.

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  2. Anything usefully forward deployed would have been obliterated by the hurricane.

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  3. Is it normal to send a Bay Class with just one light helicopter? I know the bays don't have a hanger but it seems a little in adequate.

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  4. Hmm... HMS Ocean was busy being a flag ship for a Nato exercise; this is/was her last mission before being scrapped! I'm not sure how fast she can travel, 500 miles a day? Whitehall thinking, before this latest hurricane, is that HMS Ocean is surplus to requirements! Its only when a disaster strikes that Whitehall is forced by circumstances to accept that their idea of defence strategy, military needs, and planning for the unexpected is flawed because it is always financially based. We need more frigates but the posture of Whitehall in the past few days is that the navy needs less mine sweepers, less frigates, less assault ships and can survive on some OPVs, some future type 31s to be appropriated at some in-determinant time in the far far far off future, and less type 26s than the current number of type 23s. The navy asked for 12 type 45s, it was promised 8 and then supplied with 6. The politicians have been playing a game of make reduced equipment supply promises, followed by give less than the reduced promise. This game has been in play since the surprise attack in South Georgia, the navy has been systematically attacked and whittled down to less than 19 ACTIVE warships. When South Georgia was attacked, we had an opportunity to reinforce the Falklands. But we had just previously announced that 6 warships were to be scrapped due to defence cuts. This incentivized Galtieri and the Argentinian military thinking that the British did not have the will power to defend the Faulklanders and islands. This point is, that you have to plan for realistic truthful scenarios such as the invasion of Cyprus / Falklands so that we don’t end up like the Ukrainians. This point is, that you have to invest upfront BEFORE the disaster occurs. Moreover, if the politicians do not honour their responsibilities to the Commonwealth and dependant territories, its right that they are called away from smiley / back slapping media events like naming a Carrier that has no ground to air missiles, no LAWS, no aircraft!, no credible eyes in the sky (Hawkeyes), and insufficient numbers of phalanx pop guns. Now, I don’t want MPs thinking that they can get away with throwing buckets of money at the NHS to hire locums at the expense of financing the 3 services that need to face up some unsavoury possibilities. So will USS ponce be sold to the Argentinians, will Putin sell SU24s to the Argentinians in exchange for Argentinian Beef, after all Russia has been supplying Argentina with new 2nd hand blue water patrol ships. Does the UK want the oil off the coasts of the Falklands? Will the UK fishing grounds get overfished by Spanish trawlers after Brexit? If an idiot in North Korea actually does what he threatens to do which is launch rockets at Guam, will Japan and China get pulled into a conflict that drags in other parties (UK is sending a single warship to train with the Japanese helicopter carrier). Will the UK have to go again cap in hand to the Canadians to ask them to chase Russian submarines out of UK waters again / again / again? Will Scottish fishermen be the eyes to alert the navy that there is a Russian carrier off the coast of Scotland; that the navy was not tracking? There is no slack in the UK military machine, its straining to cover existing commitments. When Kaikoura in New Zealand gets a tidal wave, the Australians and Americans send warships to assist, the Navy was nowhere to be seen, not a single ship for hundreds of miles. When a Malaysian airliner disappears off the radar, China and everyone else sends ships and aircraft to search for ML370, the Royal Navy is absent for weeks until a submarine!!! arrived from the Indian Ocean and a survey ship arrives from the Antarctic and the Australians cannot believe that there are no UK ships anywhere to be seen. The labour party needs a good kicking for losing more ships than the Argentinians destroyed; the Conservatives are playing sleight of hand with the defence budget and the Navy has fewer ships today than it did 3 years ago.

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    1. "So will USS ponce be sold to the Argentinians?" - Highly unlikely, so far they have expressed some interest no more. The Argentine Navy can barely operate what she has let alone a nearly fifty year old Steam turbine powered LPD. "will Putin sell SU24s to the Argentinians in exchange for Argentinian Beef?" - No, that story was totally untrue and has been denied by Argentina and Russia. "Russia has been supplying Argentina with new 2nd hand blue water patrol ships" - Argentina needs Ice breakers, since they bust up Almirante Irizar then bungled her refit they have been leasing an Ice Breaker from FESCO. Argentina needs this capability and the Russians were willing to sell them four twenty year old Polar Ice rated tugs. Hardly the end of the world. "Does the UK want the oil off the coasts of the Falklands?" - It legally belongs to the Falklands so it doesn't matter what the UK wants. "Will the UK fishing grounds get overfished by Spanish trawlers after Brexit?" - Yes. "If an idiot in North Korea actually does what he threatens to do which is launch rockets at Guam, will Japan and China get pulled into a conflict that drags in other parties (UK is sending a single warship to train with the Japanese helicopter carrier)." - Anything is possible. That is why we have armed forces that can globally deploy to protect our interests. "Will the UK have to go again cap in hand to the Canadians to ask them to chase Russian submarines out of UK waters again / again / again?" - No, P-8A starts to stand up from 2019 and we have just penned a new resource sharing agreement with our NATO partners when it comes to ASW. "Will Scottish fishermen be the eyes to alert the navy that there is a Russian carrier off the coast of Scotland; that the navy was not tracking? " - Who cares about the Admiral Kuznetsov beyond Daily Mail readers? She is in a terrible material state and easy to track every time she attempts to sortie. Don't believe everything that you read in the tabloids, we knew she was coming with an Ocean going tug in attendance. We were more concerned that she would break down in the channel and cause a major shipping hazard than any military threat. "There is no slack in the UK military machine, its straining to cover existing commitments. " - Agreed. "When Kaikoura in New Zealand gets a tidal wave, the Australians and Americans send warships to assist, the Navy was nowhere to be seen, not a single ship for hundreds of miles." - Remind me where on a map New Zealand is. Australia is next door we are on the other side of the planet! Who is best placed to render support? "When a Malaysian airliner disappears off the radar, China and everyone else sends ships and aircraft to search for ML370, the Royal Navy is absent for weeks until a submarine!!! arrived from the Indian Ocean and a survey ship arrives from the Antarctic and the Australians cannot believe that there are no UK ships anywhere to be seen." - Again look at a map. Who were placed to render quick support?! That the UK sent any assets shows that we have a global reach. Also ask what kind of assets were sent and their use to any search. A British Hunter Killer with the most advanced sonar in the world and a state of the art hydro-graphic ship seem to be just right.

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    2. Thanks Fedaykin, if one compares our respective comments; the one thing that stands out is the downward pressure on the royal navy and air force assets. The symptom of SDR miscalculations is politely called a capability cap, but manifests itself in that, the UK was not on point to track Russian assets (in our own local back yard), help our Anzac friends, show the flag to prospective customers of military kit. The fact is, the navy has retreated from large parts of the globe, the knock on effect of this, is that Singapore / Australia now look to themselves, or Japan or US to buy their kit. Having lived in Singas, NZ, Fiji I can say that there is a morale issue when the navy does not turn up to help out. Locally, when the navy is not present to be seen, it becomes a talking point on local talk back radio, it affects the sense of comradeship and friendship felt towards Britain. This is a big issue that is also felt among British ex-pats; it’s not just the effect of losing the world service to a large number of countries. When India turns round to a local trade delegation and …., its only then do you realise that it’s important to have the navy turning up for more than just military reasons. A lack of ships is hurting the UK economy. There is long term degradation on UK jobs when commonwealth countries buy submarines from Japan or start hosting foreign air forces from other countries instead of the UK. This whittling down of military capabilities is a politically motivated problem; it has nothing to do with business investment in the commonwealth, or with having a credible military that can stand up to the political pressures of Russia / Malaysia / China / Korea or stand up to the military pressures of Russia / China / … As New Zealand discovered, once Helen Clark rolled down the New Zealand Air-force, it’s very hard to get it back. Once people have retired, engineers left, teacher training disappeared, research and development been cut back, you can’t just write out a cheque and magic it back into existence.

      The UK is doing a Stirling job in the Caribbean; let’s hope that the British press do not indulge in too much self-harm.

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  5. Twenty two years ago, almost to the day, HMS SOUTHAMPTON anchored in Road Bay, Anguilla after Hurricane Luis (Cat 4) had a direct hit on the island. The one thing that a DD can deploy that an RFA will struggle with is landing a serious manpower unless they have an embarked force. During the recovery stage SOUTHAMPTON landed in the region of 180 men per day and it was the range of skills that they brought bringing flooded generators back on line at the power station, getting Radio Anguilla back on air, opening the airport and making schools safe that helped the island get back on its feet.
    Being assigned to a WIGS patrol may have seemed like the easy deployment, but the ships companies of SOUTHAMPTON and LIVERPOOL in 97 will tell a different story both having significant HADR operations in Anguilla and Montserrat where landing manpower was the critical factor.

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    1. When a Bay class is out in the Caribbean, they also carry a HADR team consisting of troops from the Royal Marines, Royal Engineers and Royal Logistics Corps, somewhere in the region of 60-70 personnel. So yes, less than a FF/DD would be putting ashore - but bear in mind that's experts in civil engineering and disaster relief, plus heavy plant and landing craft that can deploy it as needed. A pretty fair swap, I feel!

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  6. Agree with every word but still pretty cold comfort to Brits turned away by allied nations (US/Dutch). Could repayment arrangements not be reached? Chris

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  7. Interesting read, thank you. Very much appreciated.

    We British are awfully hard on ourselves.

    Best,
    Sally.

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  8. Interesting reading and a good balance of contributions from writers. Probably no consolation but resident here in France I am watching regular news analyses condemning the poor (at least perceived by the chattering classes) French response. What is perhaps more significant for comparisons is that the French President has flown to the area today. Contrast and compare?

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