In with the New, Farewell to the Old - Carrier Trials and Seaking Retirement
The wait is
nearly over. Within the next few days, if all goes to plan, then HMS QUEEN
ELIZABETH will slip and proceed from Norfolk Naval Base in the USA, put to sea
and embark the F35 jet for the first time. A vision 20 years in the making will
be realised.
This is an
exciting time for the Royal Navy, as the culmination of literally decades of
work is brought to fruition as QE embarks her jets for the first time to make sure
that the vessel can operate them safely and effectively at sea.
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It is important
to realise that while this is an important step, it is not the culmination of
the journey for the vessel, and that it does not mean that the UK will
immediately regain a carrier strike capability. Rather it is better to see this
as the beginning of the next stage of the life of the ship. These trials will
provide invaluable amounts of data and lessons that will need to be considered
and acted on as appropriate to ensure that the ship is ready for the next phase
of flying operations – likely next year.
What these
trials are about is proving that the RN can embark, support and operate the F35
and that there are no glitches or issues that need rectification before the
ship prepares to embark her first large scale airwing. This is important as
sometimes these issues can be pretty major – for instance the French discovered
when building the CHARLES DE GAULLE that her flight deck was too short for
some of the aircraft to land on – necessitating emergency modifications to make
it 4m longer.
It is inevitable
that some commentators on the internet will doubtless see images of just 2 F35s
landing and go ‘is that it’? The ‘carrier with no planes’ myth will seamlessly
merge into the ‘carrier with only two planes’ myth that is utterly untrue but
generates traction among those looking to criticise without reason or facts.
There may well
be some negative ill informed comment about the fact that the jets will not be
British, but rather American jets taken from the pool of trial aircraft. No
doubt some will see this as an opportunity to attack the UK for not even being
able to afford our own jets. Actually the fact that the UK will be using US
jets for this process is a helpful and timely reminder of the depth of
integration with the US armed forces, and the enormous debt of gratitude that the
UK owes them for their support to making the QUEEN ELIZABETH and Carrier Enabled
Power Projection concept a reality.
The UK as a
tier one partner in the JSF project has been able to work closely with the US
throughout the evolution of the aircraft, and played a key role in its
development. This has helped build a common test and evaluation team that
relies on pooled aircraft that are suitably instrumented to conduct the full
range of tests needed to put an advanced fighter jet through its paces. This team
is multi-national and the UK has played a critical role in supporting its work.
The fact that the jets landing on the QUEEN ELIZABETH won’t have a Union Flag
on the side of them doesn’t make the blindest bit of difference – for this is burden
sharing and joint operating at its best.
More widely the
RN has benefitted from an enormously close relationship and mutually beneficial
with the US Navy over the regeneration of carrier capability. Since the withdrawal
of Harrier GR9 in 2010, the US has gone out of its way to ensure that RN pilots
were able to get places in F18 cockpits, helping build a large cadre of Fleet
Air Arm pilots who fly the F18 from US carriers, at sea, as exchange officers
(e.g. fully integrated into the ship and squadron and operating essentially as
a US pilot, albeit with a nicer accent!).
This has helped
retain fixed wing aviation experience in the FAA, and meant it was much easier to
begin the transition onto the F35 programme, which will be a truly joint RAF/RN
force. More widely though, the US also provided access for ground crew to work
on USN Carriers deploying on operations to help relearn the art of working on a
‘big deck’. It is 40 years since the RN operated a large carrier, and 8 since
it last took fixed wing aircraft to sea, and the skills needed to work on a
huge flight deck are easily perishable.
For some years
now there have been small detachments of RN personnel (usually 7-10 strong) deploying
on US carriers around the globe as part of wider operations to ensure they are
able to work safely on big flight decks. For example, Humphrey was able to
spend time at sea on a US CVN in the Middle East, and was surprised and
delighted to meet RN crew at all ranks and rates on the flight deck and elsewhere,
playing a truly integrated part in the life of the ship.
This level of
trust and access is not easily granted by the US Navy, who know that a carrier
flight deck is arguably the most dangerous place in the world to work. They
would not let a foreign nation put their personnel to sea in any way that could
threaten the safety of their ships, aircraft and people. It is another small
sign of the intimate trust that exists between our two nations.
More widely, the
First Sea Lord tweeted this week about his visit to the US Naval War College in
Rhode Island. There were images of him meeting the UK exchange staff who are
fully embedded into the US system, where they play a key role in supporting US
and UK operations. This is another timely reminder of the extraordinary depths
of integration that exist between the two nations. At anyone time there are
well over 500 UK military personnel at up to 2* level on exchanges in the US
system, usually with US personnel occupying billets back here too.
The level of
personnel exchanges is probably the highest between any two nations anywhere on
the planet. It is a reflection that the US place real value in the capability and
credibility of UK personnel, and their willingness to let them work as peers
and partners in some very complex and sensitive areas. It is this sort of co-operation
that helps remind us that for all the talk about the UK ‘not mattering’ to the
US, no other nation enjoys anywhere near the same level of access or trust when
it comes to exchanges and joint work.
This is also
not a one way street. Part of the reason why the US is so supportive of the UK
to recover Carrier Strike is the recognition that the UK can in turn provide a
huge amount of support to the US system. For example when QUEEN ELIZABETH
deploys, she will likely do so on a regular basis with a USMC F35 squadron embarked,
or potentially other US assets too.
There is a
major difference between ‘cross decking’ when a plane lands and departs shortly
afterwards, and long term sustained operations from another nations carrier. To
put a USMC squadron onto the QE and then operate it as an integrated part of
the airwing is an astonishing sign of just how close the UK and US systems are –
no other nation on the planet does this.
While there are
odd short term embarkations of aircraft – for instance the French occasionally use
a US CVN for training when their carrier is in refit, no other countries are able
to embark each others aircraft on a carrier designed from the outset for truly
joint operations.
Humphrey has
heard consistent feedback from credible sources that the US Navy has closely
watched how the UK has brought the CVF project to life, and that they are
extremely impressed (and candidly rather jealous in places) of the capabilities
of the platform. The QUEEN ELIZABETH class is the closest thing to a peer partner
that the US Navy will ever see for its own carrier force, and reportedly the US
see them as an extension of their own carrier fleet to the extent that Humphrey
has occasionally heard them only half-jokingly referred to as the 12th
and 13th US Navy carriers.
This is because
the ability to embark, sustain and operate US platforms and get USMC F35 jets
to sea on a vessel other than a LHD is seen as vital to US national interests.
There is also an awareness that as the hard-stretched US carrier force is
pushed to cover an ever more global set of problems, having a Royal Navy
carrier able to deploy with US jets embarked and cover gaps – be it in the Med
or Gulf represents a potentially massive force multiplier for the US too.
The US has been
extraordinarily generous with their time and support to the UK as the F35 trials
have loomed. As she moves forward in her life, the QUEEN ELIZABETH will perhaps
in time become fondly regarded as being as much an American vessel as she is a
UK one.
At the same
time though as we look to the vibrant and exciting future of the F35, it is perhaps
appropriate to pause for a moment and reflect that the much loved Sea King helicopter
is going out of service after nearly 50 years.
This aircraft,
which represents the best of a UK evolution of a US design has been the
mainstay of UK military operations for decades, ranging from search and rescue
in vile weather of civilians, to carrying troops in the desert or searching for
submarines in the Atlantic. As an airframe it represents an enormously
adaptable platform that has made a massive difference to the UK ability to project
power globally.
For instance
the final variant in service (the so-called ASACS platform) took a relatively ubiquitous
ASW helicopter and turned it into one of the most capable ISTAR platforms ever
fielded by the UK. The sheer range of employment of the ASACs force, from sea
going operations to Afghanistan to more recently in the Middle East has shown
what an enormously capable platform it is, and how much value it can bring. Not
only from an tactical perspective, but more widely from an operational perspective,
where ISTAR information provided has played a key role in supporting coalition operations.
The success of
this airframe is in huge part down to two factors – firstly the superb support
offered by military engineers who keep it running, often in very challenging
conditions, and secondly the wider capabilities offered by the UK aerospace industry.
It is easy to take for granted much of what our military can do, but without
the support and technological knowledge of thousands of British companies from
big multi-nationals through to tiny firms, bringing together their skills and
experience, the UK would be far less militarily capable. It is worth reflecting
that our success globally in no small part depends on the quality of the engineers
and scientists that we have here at home.
The
retiremement of the ASACs capability will leave a temporary gap in the UK
ability to deploy forces for about a year. Whilst we should rightly be optimistic
about the future, we should also be clear eyed about some of the challenges
too. The gaps in bringing the ‘Crowsnest’ capability into service are not
ideal, and do come at the cost of reducing the number of Merlin airframes able
to be used for other roles (e.g. although the set can move across platforms, it
does take an airframe off task). Given the RN is down to just 30 Merlins (out
of 44 originally purchased), this does raise concerns about the ability in the
medium term to generate both ASW and ISTAR forces.
More widely the
fragility of the RFA force, particularly from a manpower perspective, which is
seeing tankers tied up alongside (e.g. one WAVE class has not returned to sea yet,
despite completing an expensive refit, fuelling rumours she may be sold to
Brazil), and the fact that no stores ships are currently able to go to sea does
raise medium term concerns about the viability of the RFA to support a global
carrier strike force.
The sense must
be that the RN is on the verge of bringing Carrier Strike into service as a
capability after decades of work. The risk though is that much has been sacrificed
to get here, and much remains opaque. There is still no clarity on funding for Defence,
or what the likely force will look like once the MDP eventually reports back.
While QE may soon
be ready for operations, the RN will now have to invest significant time and
resource in getting its RFA supply chain ready for sea again, getting its escort
ships fully manned and able to get back in the game of operating in major Task
Groups and in sorting out manpower challenges too.
It must do this
against significant public pressure – once the F35 lands on the deck, the public
will assume that the UK is a carrier capable nation again. Explaining that this
is one step on a long journey, and that large scale RN carrier deployments with
24 plus F35 embarked are going to be unlikely until the mid – late 2020s, when
the Type 26 will eventually enter service too is going to be a hard sell.
For a public
that has been told since 1998 that the RN will have a ‘supercarrier’ explaining
that the delivery plan for the F35 force means the UK won’t own them in enough
numbers to put the force to sea properly for the best part of another 10 years
is going to be difficult to explain or understand. Some very capable PR will be
needed to sell the multi-national benefits of the vessel and to justify why the
UK has two very large platforms that collectively will spend the first 10 years
of their life with not that many UK jets available to embark on them.
That though is
a challenge for another day – in the interim let us celebrate the imminent
return of the RN to the fixed wing flying club, and give thanks to all those
who have helped make this possible. It is a superb story of UK success from the
military, civil service and industry combined.
This is the
last article from Humphrey for the next roughly 3 weeks as he is off on his
summer holidays. Normal service will resume in early October!
What is the root cause of RFA's insufficient crew numbers?
ReplyDeleteHumphry
ReplyDeleteAs a taxpayer I make no apology for wanting my considerable investment to start operating as soon as possible. A decade away is just not acceptable.
National prestige and visibility (aka deterrence) is relevant factor in this and one of the main drivers for the purchase, it is especially relevant to the current malarkey in the south China Sea. If we have a full squadron of F35s in 2020, we expect to see them on the QE, sometime around..err...2020. Ideally augmented by a squadron from the USMC.
Theyll learn more at sea than they will at RAF Marham and the wage bill is the same either way.
Seconded
ReplyDelete