What Are The Immediate Lessons Identified From The Iranian Navy 'Friendly Fire' Incident?
The news has broken overnight that an Iranian live firing
exercise in the Arabian Gulf appears to have gone disastrously wrong. Media
reports indicate that a missile, fired by the Iranian frigate Jamaran appears
to have struck an Iranian support vessel (the Konarak), leaving 19 dead sailors
and the ship probably a total loss.
At the outset it is important to be clear that this is a tragedy
for the families of the sailors involved. It is a timely reminder of the
incredibly dangerous nature of maritime operations, and how things can quickly
go horribly wrong in a very short time.
The incident raises several issues and concerns that are
worthy of further consideration. Firstly, it once again highlights that there appear
to be significant command and control challenges within the Iranian Armed
Forces which could be a real problem at times of heightened crisis.
Earlier this year the shooting down of Ukrainian Airlines
flight 752 in January by the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) was put
down to confusion following the aftermath of the assassination of Qaseem Soleimani.
But this incident, involving Iranian Armed Forces and not the IRGC again
highlights that both sets of organisations appear to have procedures in place
that make it possible for live missiles to be fired without full checks being
made.
In the context of the region this is concerning because it
indicates that it is possible for local commanders on the ground to carry out live
firings without full checks being made, and potentially without being in full understanding
of the local surface picture, or the whereabouts of friendly shipping.
One has to ask what this means for other circumstances,
given the frequency by which Iranian forces (both Naval and IRGC) harass and
exercise exceptionally unprofessional conduct near coalition vessels, whether a
local commander could carry out a similar firing by accident or mistake, or
even on purpose.
The continued lack of a robust chain of command, and the
ease by which firings can occur, and local units carry out at times extremely
dangerous activity at sea does raise concerns about the safety for shipping in the
region as a whole.
It is also a reminder of the inherent danger of conducting
high seas firings, particularly in very crowded waterways. Range safety is
essential, and understanding what is on the range, and what has the potential,
even in an extremely limited way to obstruct it and pose a risk is key. Anyone who
has ever fired on Tipner Range in Portsmouth will be well aware of the frustrations
caused by having to stop firing while yet another yacht sailed blithely near
the danger area.
The UK has not conducted high seas firings against target
ships for many years, but they are always extremely complex and risky ventures
to do. Firing a live missile is fraught with danger – having been on the bridge
of a Type 23 conducting a Seawolf firing when the round blew up seconds after
launch, Humphrey is only too aware of what can go wrong, even in the most benign
of conditions.
Testing means launching a missile and then hoping that it doesn’t
explode or go wrong or roman candle out of control (as happened to the RussianNavy a few years ago) and that it then finds the right target and sinks it as
intended.
These tests are also important to ensure that weapons work
as planned. No amount of scientific research or theoretical concepts can ever
remove the doubt that on the day, a CO could order a missile fired in order to
strike a target, only for it not to work. In WW2 there were huge problems with
torpedos not detonating on all sides, a reminder that complex advanced
munitions often experience a lot of design challenges that only live firing can
identify.
The Royal Navy along with allies has traditionally used the
deep north Atlantic waters for this task. Off the coast of the UK in various
exercise areas are the watery graves of many former RN vessels, sacrificed to
test weapons against. There is something moving about seeing the footage of a
former home and vessel being torn to pieces in such a violent way. It is for
the this reason that the RN is often reluctant to publish many images of test
firings, particularly the final moments of a ships life, due to the impact it
may have on her former crew.
When a target ship is used, there is a desire to get as much
value as possible from it, and due to the nature of the tests, ships can often
sustain a surprising amount of punishment. As they have been stripped of all
flammable materials, explosives, fuel and other items that can cause secondary
damage, the ship is essentially an inert lump of metal. This means that they
can take a surprising amount of punishment before they sink. Accounts suggest some ships can take multiple
impacts of anti-ship missiles, gunfire and torpedos before finally succumbing
to their injuries.
The US Navy has even sunk
an aircraft carrier (USS AMERICA) to test the effect of missiles on these class
of ships, although the findings naturally remain highly classified. Just one
picture has ever leaked out of the death of the AMERICA (below).
The purpose of these sorts of firings is to confirm that
missiles are working as intended, that their guidance systems, telemetry and
other associated systems do what is expected of them, and that there is confidence
that warshots drawn from the stockpile will work. They are also a good chance
to use up stocks of missiles approaching their life end, where the warhead life
is almost over and where it is not economical to extend it.
These firings are closely supervised in the UK to ensure
civilian and wider safety. The MOD has a total of nine 12m
long range safety craft capable of 28kts in service, operated under contract
to ensure that where necessary the range can be safely patrolled and secured –
these vessels, newly built, form part of a wider package of support craft operated
on behalf of MOD doing many roles that the RN or RMAS used to carry out.
As the ships sink, they do so far from land or maritime and
aviation traffic, and hopefully away from posing a risk to others. By contrast
conducting live firing trials in the Gulf always poses a challenge, with
significantly more constrained room to manoeuvre, far more merchant traffic
around and the risk of things potentially going wrong in often contested
waterways.
There is too a risk that in conducting these firings, poor
communication, bad judgement or a willingness to fire when the range wasn’t
known to be clear will potentially produce very tragic outcomes, and
potentially an international incident. This firing demonstrates that things can
and do go wrong very quickly at sea.
But it is important to not get cocky and assume that this can only happen to navies that we don’t get on with. Tragic accidents happen far more regularly than people perhaps realise, and act as a reminder that operating at sea is inherently a very dangerous business. The Royal Navy, US Navy and other NATO navies will all have had their fair share of near misses, things going wrong and on occasion fatalities as a result of something not going right on the day. We should be wary of assuming that somehow this couldn’t happen to us.
One final thought is that there is a risk in some quarters
that people will see a fundamentally mission killed ship and assume that this
means all ships are vulnerable. As noted most test firings occur against inert
targets, not active vessels. There is considerable difference in the ease of firing
a missile against a hulk waiting for it, or against a warship closed up and
expecting to come under fire.
There are a whole raft of hard and soft kill countermeasures
available to prevent missiles seeping through and hitting their targets. For
instance, the Royal Navy has invested heavily over many years in ‘soft kill’
measures like ESM and decoys, which rightly remain almost entirely outside of
the public eye, and for good reasons. Similarly there is also a range of more
visible systems like Phalanx CIWS or anti-missile systems like Sea Viper and
Sea Ceptor designed to intercept incoming missiles.
While this incident may have demonstrated that the C802
missile can hit (either intentionally or by accident) an Iranian warship not expecting
to come under fire, it tells us very little about the effect the missile could
have on a ship closed up at action stations. We must be hasty in drawing too
many conclusions, although it is likely many questions will be asked about how
the missile ended up hitting the Konarak, and what went so badly wrong.
In summary, the sea is an extremely dangerous place, and awful
things can happen very quickly. This incident is testament to the need to invest
as much in training, communication, effective command and control and other
measures intended to keep ships operating safely and effectively as it is about
the need to put ever more visually impressive guns onboard a vessel.
Friendly fire incidents happens but somtimes happen shamely due to lack of safety measures, i remember during 1990's while nato exercise in the mideteranean sea american navy ship fired a sea-sparrow against a turkish navy ship leaving dead sailors and casualities inspite of very high coordination provided by link11 system. I guess the iranian incident represent ambigeous situation rather than just a mistake.
ReplyDeleteThe uncaptioned 3rd picture is HMS Leander, F109.
ReplyDeleteMy first ship, always sad to see this picture.