Most Magnificent Minor Warships - The Royal Navy and Coastal Operations
The phrase ‘Coastal Forces’ brings to mind gunboats charging
across the Channel in WW2, engaged in brutal combat with enemy forces at near point-blank
range, and conducting highly dangerous missions in hostile territory. It evokes
a mindset of small ships, working in a co-ordinated fashion to enter difficult
waters and bring the fight to the enemy.
The role of Coastal Forces was to attack enemy forces and convoys
or insert small patrols of troops and agents into hostile territory. It was
also, where possible to launch assaults against larger targets of opportunity
as well. The Royal Navy formally disbanded its Coastal Forces assets in the 1950s,
recognising that the nature of the fight had changed. But to this day it
continues to operate a reasonable number of patrol craft whose missions carry the
legacy of this force.
This force is primarily made up of some 16 ARCHER class ‘Coastal
Training Craft’ (or sometimes known as the P2000s) is the modern day successors.
Each vessel is a commissioned RN warship, but in the eyes of some, these
smaller craft do not count as ‘proper’ warships.
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P2000 on manouveres- Image by Ministry of Defence; © Crown copyright |
This was illustrated recently when it was announced that
several of the ships participating in the BALTIC PROTECTOR deployment, a key
deployment for 2019 involving multiple RN ships, aircraft and Royal Marines were
seven P2000s. This is a follow on to 2018, when seven P2000s
conducted a similar exercise.
Cue a lot of comments, mainly negative, that somehow a P2000 wasn’t
a ‘proper warship’.Part of this attitude probably stems from the mindset that the
primary role of these vessels for many years was to train the RNR and University
Students from the URNU and give them basic sea experience.
A simple design at heart, the P2000 was designed to operate in coastal waters, in relatively benign sea states and conduct navigation and other seamanship training. This made them ideal for use with students as training platforms to conduct deployments around the UK and Europe.
While working with URNU students still forms a reasonable
part of their employment, the force (administered under the First Patrol Boat
Squadron – PBS1) is far more widely tasked than some may think. Over the years
it has seen its vessels assigned to a variety of roles, from the soft power
(e.g. conducting port visits into small ports that no other RN ship could reach),
to providing a patrol capability in UK sovereign waters (e.g. off Cyprus as part
of the short-lived ‘RN Cyprus Squadron’) and also providing visible deterrence
to potential hostiles – for example two vessels are used to support movements
of SSBN’s on the Clyde. They have also been used as ‘exercise purposes only’
Fast Attack Craft to support multi-national exercises.
The deployment into the Baltic is an excellent example of
the flexibility of the ships in a variety of roles. The vessels will offer the
RN staff a variety of options for employment. For example, they will be able to
go into smaller ports that would not usually see an RN vessel, helping deliver
valuable defence engagement, reinforcing messages to allied nations of British
support and helping represent the UK. These visits may be low key but generate
goodwill and help reinforce wider work by local Embassies to further British
interests. To have seven P2000s available to offer up for port visits over this
period will be a fantastic asset for the UK.
As the deployment is likely to include some students from various
URNUS, it also provides an excellent opportunity to train and influence the
next generation of potential recruits and industry figures. The URNU system is
a low-cost way to help flag up the work of the Royal Navy to new generations
who may not be familiar with it, and also give them skills and confidence to succeed
in life.
Giving someone the chance to spend their summer sailing across
the Baltic, while working as part of the Royal Navy is a great way to help
positively shape wider images and messaging of the work the RN is getting up
that will last a lifetime. To this day Humphrey can recall his own URNU days, including
deployments abroad and taking part in exercises with the wider RN too.
This may sound a bit ‘fluffy’ but in an age of growing sea
blindness, and a constant battle to attract good talent, the URNU is a good opportunity
to help the RN shape how the next generation of decision makers view it.
More widely the vessels will provide good command
opportunities to young officers. In previous decades the plethora of OPVs and
MCMVs (such as the near ubiquitous TON and RIVER class vessels) provided good
chances for an early ‘drive’ by younger officers. Today the earliest point most
officers would get to command is of an MCMV, when they will usually be a
reasonably experienced Lieutenant Commander.
The P2000s provide a great feeder pool to give young Lieutenants
an opportunity to command a proper warship early in their career and give them
the ability to understand the responsibilities that comes with this. It may be
a small command, but each vessel is still run on the same lines as any other RN
ship, and a young CO taking an URNU deployment may find themselves representing
the UK in all manner of challenging situations.
More widely, P2000s (and in Gibraltar the similar SCIMITAR
class) provide a chance to conduct difficult operations in both the Clyde and
Gibraltarian national waters. Deploying armed vessels into situations that, if
not handled appropriately, could quickly escalate is an excellent training opportunity
for a younger Officer. This can pay longer term dividends, as many of the more
senior RN Officers still serving today have gone on post P2000 Command to excel
in a variety of other posts and Commands.
Beyond the clear soft power and personnel training value,
the P2000 provides genuine flexibility in the Baltic to take part in a variety
of exercises where it can simulate Fast Inshore Attack Craft (FIAC), a constant
threat in many operational environments. The ability to operate in very shallow
waters, and to lurk where larger ships cannot go poses a variety of interesting
operational challenges for any Task Force commander, who will need to think
carefully about how to negate this threat.
The Baltic is in many ways the perfect operating environment
for the P2000. As anyone who has been to sea on one can attest, they are lively
in even mild weather, and positively hideous in anything other than calm
conditions. They do not operate comfortably in deeper waters, and while transits
such as down to Spain, or across the North Sea to Norway are possible, they are
also potentially quite choppy – which impacts on crew effectiveness. The
relatively calm sheltered waters of the Baltic coupled with plenty of ports to
spend the night make it a great place to work at peak effectiveness.
It is in this environment that the P2000 can work as an
asset to skulk in island archipelagos, simulating an SSM carrying FAC, it can
prove itself an elusive target to sneak out and disrupt coastal convoys.
Alternatively it can be used to discretely insert small patrols onto hostile
shores for wider operational effect. In other words, the Baltic is an environment
that enables the P2000 force to fully live up to its legacy as the worthy successor
of the WW2 Coastal Forces organisation.
This does not mean that the P2000 is a vessel capable of
standing up to an enemy and engaging in a straight-out fight. It is an inherently
small vessel which can only ship a very limited range of weapons, and which would
be a relatively easy picking for a larger vessel that happened upon it in
wartime. Does this mean that they are not warships though?
In reality over 99% of a warships life is not spent fighting
the enemy. The P2000 class are a very good example of providing a small, cheap
and robust capability that meets the requirements of the RN without proving too
expensive to operate or maintain, while still providing considerable
flexibility to operational commanders. The challenging spot is trying to explain
to people that, for the RN at least, there is no real requirement for an
uparmoured slightly larger class of ship to fill the ‘FIAC’ role.
All too often on ‘fantasy fleet’ threads people will suggest
that what the RN really needs is a mid-point vessel that is a fast attack craft
or small corvette with anti-ship missiles and a medium calibre gun (e.g. 76mm)
to do patrol tasks. Frankly, Humphrey cannot think of a less suitable platform
for the RN, nor an easier way to waste public money for no good purpose.
The challenge with FIACs is that in certain circumstances,
they have the potential to be extremely useful. But these circumstances are relatively
limited and rely heavily on local conditions. For example, in the Adriatic or Scandinavian
countries, with long coastlines and plenty of inlets, a FIAC force (particularly
during the Cold War) was a sensible investment, as it provided a force of ships
that could use the local terrain to hide, and attack enemy forces when
necessary. This was underpinned by a lot of construction of underground
facilities to house them in, or investment in coastal defences and minefields
to provide a properly layered defence that would give any attacker a bloody
nose. Any effort by the Soviet Baltic Fleet to break out into the North Sea, or
conduct amphibious attacks would have been threatened by the existence of
massed FIACs with anti-ship missiles.
But, the FIAC also has a lot of weaknesses too. Endurance is
usually limited, and they would struggle to stay at sea for any great length of
time (e.g. it is rare to see P2000s at sea overnight). The habitability beyond
a few days is debatable, and in wartime their survivability in open waters
against a credible foe is questionable. In recent campaigns, where FIAC have
put to sea in the open waters against an enemy with air superiority, they have
usually been destroyed.
These ships are too small to receive the full range of combat
systems, electronic warfare suites and other items which could aid survivability,
but which also come at a considerable price. This results in a vessel which is
essentially considered to be disposable in wartime, but which in peacetime is
fairly constrained in how it can operate by the weather.
While a FIAC is a good solution for some countries, for the
RN it would not be remotely ideal. Practically, UK territorial waters are
rarely the benign conditions that are optimal for FIAC operations – rather they
are difficult and deeply unpleasant. Going to sea would be difficult, let alone
being able to fight the ship.
The endurance is another challenge – these ships are too small
to do anything long term at sea, which leads to a requirement for good shore
support solution. In UK waters, it is hard to see what operational value they
would add compared to the existing highly capable mixture of P2000s/MCMVs and
OPVs, or what threat specifically requires their presence.
Were they to be deployed overseas, they would require significant
shore support, including ammunition facilities, crew accommodation and
maintenance facilities – essentially a similar set up to what is seen in
Gibraltar or Bahrain. Finding a nation willing to host an RN FIAC force, and
that is prepared to provide the UK with the ability to build a base to support this
is going to be a challenge, as is finding a reason or part of the world for
them to operate in that existing RN ships cannot already work in.
Finally from a personnel perspective, a FIAC force would
require significant increases in maintainers and operators for whichever anti-ship
missile was mounted. Not only would this in the medium term have a long term impact
in wider fleet manning (e.g. a ship mounting 8 Anti-Ship Missiles is going to
need the same maintenance and support for the weapon whether it is a FIAC or a
Frigate). Regardless of how easy it is to type a proposal that the RN should buy
a class of 8 FIAC, it would take years to generate sufficient extra bodies with
the right training to deliver this, assuming a manpower uplift was approved, or
the RN would need to gap posts in other ships to deliver it. Manpower does not
just appear out of nowhere.
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RN SCIMITAR Class |
The reality then is that procuring some kind of ‘mid range’
FIAC for the RN armed with a gun and anti-ship missiles is that it is an answer
in search of a problem. When you look at the work the RN does, it is practically
impossible to find a credible role for such a vessel that is not already being
done equally as well by other RN platforms or allies.
The beauty of the P2000 is that it is cheap to operate and
simple to maintain. It is a flexible training platform that is not intended to
go up in armed combat against a Russian warship, but which can provide a very
valuable source of training and experience, and help prepare the fleet and
allies against this threat.
Sometimes keeping something simple is more important than people
realise. A ship that doesn’t need many people to take it to sea, which can
visit small ports and which is reliable and easy to maintain is an extremely
useful asset to have available. The RN does not need a vessels like FIACs that are
too cheap to be survivable but too expensive to be expendable. The current
structure seems to work remarkably well for the RN and the specific operational
challenges it faces. While FIAC may work well for other nations, that does not
mean the RN needs them too.
So, instead of looking at the RN P2000 as some kind of ‘wannabe’
warship and dismissing its presence out of hand, perhaps pause and reflect on
the work that these small ships are being asked to do. Capable for their
intended role, deployable to support NATO Allies and able to provide invaluable
training and exercise support, they are in every sense a valuable and real ‘warship’.
Not sure why you are focused on calling these vessels warships? For all the reasons you outline they are not, and again for the reasons you outline they should not be up-armed or replaced to make them so. Calling them warships may conjure up an entirely unsuitable perception in the general public's mind and dare I say it in the minds of politicians. While I do not subscribe to the need for fantasy fleet numbers, we should not create a perception that the UK's navy is somehow much larger and more capable than it actually is.
ReplyDeleteNothing wrong with characterising them as patrol boats for constabulary, fair weather, short duration use. Intended primarily as general purpose training vessels that can also be used as FIAC proxies in exercises. When appropriate, replacing them with something like HMS Magpie, designed for 7-day endurance, all weather operational and perhaps also capable of UUV MCM inshore home waters operations might provide greater practical utility.
I really enjoyed reading this post, the smaller ships in the Royal Navy don't get a lot of coverage, so it was very interesting to find out more about them.
ReplyDeleteThe small ships have always been a corner stone of the RN. Often called upon to do great things... And often exceeding those requests..... Hms Endurance...... Hms Beagle......
ReplyDeleteDespite a career operating in a non-UK navy on boats of similar size, the issue that I have with this post is that it lauds the participation of the P2000s in what is essentially a military exercise rather than a constabulary activity that reflects their viable roles. The question inevitably arises as to whether the RN has a legally-established role that the P2000s can effectively fulfill. As the RN's sole (as far as I am aware) constabulary role, Fisheries Protection is provided by the Squadron established for that task. Outside the security role typified by SSBN escorts, operations in Gib and what was done in Cyprus, I question whether these boats serve a purpose outside training and force visibility.
ReplyDeleteThe P2000 vessels offer excellent initial training and combined with their harbour, and inshore capabilities, provide good value for money.
ReplyDeleteUsing them in a military exercise is due to the benefit gained by large warship in dealing with small ship vessels and simulated swarms.
Extended benefits of such vessels are restricted to a limited scope due to practical reasons, but in the event of any hostilities their main contribution would stay as it is:- harbour patrol and training with the only additions of rescue and maybe anti diver work in harbours with a diver detection sonar.
"it can prove itself an elusive target to sneak out and disrupt coastal convoys."
ReplyDeleteHumph, you have already blown the very idea of convoy out of the water a few posts ago. Neither we nor our potential foes have the ships to protect or disrupt convoys. They are an obsolete 20th century tactic. Please don't engage in fantasy fleet speculation please.
Nope, they're not warships and the only reason they get the coverage they do is because we've shrunk so small we need to 'big' up these dinghies. Humph your blog which is interesting sometimes veers towards the 'everything is fine' side of things - it's not, our navy is too small and those we have are underarmed.
ReplyDeleteOn the point of RN ships being under armed, I would disagree. If you're tasked with AAW then I would suggest it's far better to concentrate on getting that right than overload a ships with ASW and ASM systems which it will not be able to use in a shooting war. Those funds could be better rerouted to providing additional ships.
DeleteHumphry - seriously - what do they do? Provide experience - really? How relevant is the experience in a boat with a crew of 5 and a displacement of 54t? What military task can they perform? Can they seize drugs or illegals? Enforce EEZ related issues? I doubt it.
ReplyDeleteAnd the FIAC is a straw man.
How about coming up with a practical proposal for an expanded force of 45m Border Force cutters jointly crewed by RN and Law enforcement personnel, optionally armed as the mission dictates.
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ReplyDeleteIn response to "Sim'an Dawood", the provide a wealth of experience. Often, they give newly commissioned young warfare officers hands on experience with Navigating ships when a major surface ship probably couldn't. Whether you're navigating a T45 or a P2000, the basics of Navigation are the same, so experience gained in these is vital to the career progression of a YO.
ReplyDeleteIn addition, they give Young Officers an early introduction to command, leading a team and decision making. That experience cannot be replicated.
Finally, the experience gained by University Undergraduates not only benefits the students themselves, it steers them towards a brilliant career as well as flying the flag for the wider RN.
Small ships, big impact.