Looking to the Future - The Royal Navy Four Decades On From the Falklands War
The Falklands War ended 38 years ago this week, which means
that the war is now as far away from us as D-Day was from the forces of 1982. The
war was arguably the only occasion in British naval history in which the
aircraft carrier force represented a strategic centre of gravity, and
highlighted the ability of the Royal Navy to work in effective large task
groups.
While it is a perennial easy headline to write about how the
UK has less warships than in 1982, and how the islands are at risk of attack /
invasion and occupation by Argentina (presumably given the much denuded state
of the Argentine forces via the medium of particularly aggressive mutated
ill-tempered penguins), it is helpful to reflect on how far the Royal Navy has
come in the intervening four decades.
This is particularly visible in the recent news that the
strike carrier HMS QUEEN ELIZABETH is now at sea off the UK coast conducting
fixed wing flying operations with RAF and RN F35 strike fighters. The ship has,
following a period of operational sea training moved to the next stage of
working up and force generation as she prepares to carry out the final part of
carrier trials and move to her first operational deployment next year.
It has taken some time, and 10 difficult years without a
fixed wing presence in the RN, but the fact is that today the Royal Navy is the
proud owner of a pair of phenomenally capable aircraft carriers that permit it to
project power across the globe at a time and place of its choosing.
The news that fixed wing flying ops are underway is just one
part of the wider evolution underway in the RN, as a variety of projects and capabilities
come good after years of work to design and develop them.
For example the Fleet Air Arm has recently been conducting
test firings of the Martlet anti-ship missile, which will provide a very potent
ability to deter surface vessels. Part of the replacement for the venerable Sea
Skua system, this missile will considerably add to the anti-surface capabilities
of the fleet, and help protect the carrier too.
At the same time the Crowsnest system continues to be tested
pending entry into service. The former Sea King AEW/ASACs capability was a key lesson
that came out of the Falklands War, and over the following 30 years played a
central part in many UK operations, both at sea and on land, where its versatility
as an ISTAR platform was hugely appreciated by commanders.
The replacement system will be welcomed as a means of
enhancing the visibility and awareness of the carrier task group and when added
to the considerable ISTAR capabilities of the F35 platform, it becomes clear
that the UK is on the verge of significantly increasing its capabilities for
both maritime strike and ISTAR – both of which were key areas of the Falklands
campaign.
This return to capability is encouraging too as it highlights
that when properly managed, the armed forces are able to take ‘capability holidays’
that do not become permanent gaps. Having chosen for sound strategic reasons to
take a gap in operating carriers for around 10 years, there was always a fear
that as other assets dropped away too, the UK would find it much easier to take
the decision to permanently remove the capability from service.
Instead the Royal Navy and RAF have been effectively able to
manage this risk and are now finally seeing much missed capabilities and platforms
replaced by even more impressive successors. This is a very positive
development, and worth remembering as defence reviews and spending rounds
approach – it is possible to go on capability holiday and go back to work!
While much of the attention has focused naturally on the carrier
as the centrepiece of events, it is worth focusing on the wider significant
shifts occurring in how the Royal Navy operates. It is no exaggeration to say
that there is a genuine revolution occurring at the moment, which will
significantly alter the way that ships operate and deploy, and it is important to
understand this.
For decades the RN has operated mostly around the singleton deployer
model, where a vessel would go to sea by herself, or with an RFA support ship
and conduct a deployment and then return. Occasional wider groups would be set
up for set piece operations – OCEAN WAVE 97, TAURUS 09 or COUGAR 13 are all
good examples of how the RN operated group deployments. But, at its heart the
RN has for decades been a singleton deployer navy, and has run a force
generation and basing cycle to match this.
Significant change is now afoot – the quiet rebranding of
the First Patrol Boat Squadron into the Coastal Forces Squadron (fingers
crossed the name HMS HORNET is recommissioned too in some way!) and the
establishment of the Overseas Patrol Squadron for the management of the Batch 2
River class points the way to how the RN plans to use these extremely capable
vessels in future.
The new model of RN operations is likely to see five
corvette sized ships permanently based in the Falklands, West Indies, Gibraltar
and the Asia Pacific region on an enduring basis, while the Batch 1’s continue in
their OPV role. This is in addition to a Type 23 being permanently based in
Bahrain too.
Within the next 18 months, the Royal Navy will become one of
only four navies in the whole world to operate ships that are permanently based
abroad (the others being the US, France and the Netherlands – which has a small
ship based in the West Indies). The Royal Navy will have potentially 2 FPBs in
Gibraltar, 5 OPVs, 1 frigate, 4 MCMVs and an RFA permanently based away from
home – that is a very substantial global presence by any reasonable standard.
At the same time the escort force will be refocused onto delivering
support to the carrier task group in a much more organised way. The days of
singleton deployers are all but gone forever, as the future RN focuses on
training, operating and fighting as a Task Group Navy for the first time in
several decades.
This is a genuinely exciting time – with superb new ships
entering service and the regeneration of equipment leading to an increase in
capability, the Royal Navy is entering the 2020s in potentially a very good
place from an equipment perspective. It
will be one of only two, possibly three navies to have a 24/7/365 carrier strike
group available, and will help reinforce its position as one of the leading
navies on the planet.
While the outlook is very positive, there are also
considerable challenges that need to be managed too. For starters COVID-19 has
blown an enormous hole in financial plans around the world, and it remains
completely unclear about what this may mean for defence budget plans.
No one can say with any certainty how the MOD will fare from
the next spending round, or what damage is being inflicted to the defence
industrial base right now that could have much longer term strategic ramifications
– while the major companies may survive, the UK aerospace, defence and security
industry consists of thousands of smaller companies that feed into it, meaning
that a failure two or three levels below the big primes may have a significant
impact on longer term projects that right now is just now recognised.
The defence review too may have to make difficult decisions
on both funding and also operational priorities as the wider geopolitical uncertainties
around the future of NATO, insecurity in the Asia-Pacific region and the
growing tensions in the ‘High North’ all point to a world where there will be
plenty of crises to get involved in, but only a finite amount of capability to deploy.
Whether the RN aspirations to remain a carrier task group
focused navy survive the defence review is not yet clear (nor is any other Service
aspiration). While the desire to do this is doubtless at the very heart of both
RN and RAF planners thinking, it remains to be seen if it can happen or not, and
if the carriers remain in service as figureheads, but denuded of the critical
supporting enablers that make the difference between being a fighting navy and
a decorational navy.
These challenges come too at a point when the RN is still
struggling as part of wider MOD to reconcile significant shortfalls in the budgetary
position and trying to ensure its headcount and career structure remains
relevant. While overall numbers look reasonable, trying to fill the gaps of experience
and structural shortfalls in a wide range of areas is going to be vital to
keeping ships at sea – this is why there is a raft of measures being adopted to
improve retention, for example the adoption of the PWO badges for those individuals
who have passed the highly demanding PWO course (or as their possibly jealous
colleagues may suggest, it’s a special badge for those who didn’t do well enough
at school to get a proper naval job).
There are no doubt significant challenges ahead too on the
force generation front – the Type 23 force is coming back to sea in reasonable
numbers, but it also is getting elderly and fragile. Any delays to Type 31 or
26 as part of the defence reviews dreaded ‘defer, descope, delay’ options could
be keenly felt on the front line.
Also the RFA may have acquired some superb new tankers, but
is now seemingly reliant on one 30 year old store ship with two others in
reserve (the FORT class being the last active Falklands veterans in UK
service). While the carrier group is potent, ensuring that the supply ships
needed to keep them operational a long way from home are available is perhaps
the single most important priority in the surface fleet right now – failure to invest
in the FSS project would mean that the UK has acquired a carrier, but no means
to keep the force at sea fuelled and stored for war on an enduring basis, and
is also forced between supporting the carrier group, or supporting the
amphibious or other forces instead.
There is a worry that difficult decisions taken some years
ago around ship availability, crewing and readiness for different issues are
coming home to roost now, and that the real challenge is ensuring that the RFA
remains relevant and able to operate for the medium term.
Overall though it is worth taking a positive view on the
situation – four decades on from the Falklands and the Royal Navy is arguably
in a much better position than it was in 1982. More modern ships, more capable
platforms and while fewer in number, are individually better equipped and
fitted to carry out the roles asked of them.
When combined with a clear vision of what the role of the Royal
Navy is in supporting national interest around the world, the sense is that for
all the challenges it faces (and there is no navy on the planet that doesn’t face
challenges on a daily basis), the UK continues to enjoy the services of a world
class navy that remains very much the headmark standard to which others aspire
to be.
Interesting and informative. I wish the RN well, although I don't expect to see its ships here in Aotearoa much, if at all, in the coming years. Some OPVs based at Singapore might be a good idea - the RNZN could work with them from there?
ReplyDeleteIs it that France and the Netherlands base at least one ship abroad, or is it that France and the Kingdom of the Netherlands both include land outside Europe?
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The notion that 'singleton deployments' is a bit dubious, given current NATO taskings that essentially require them. It is also not credible to argue that there were 'sound strategic reasons' for allowing a capability gap to emerge in fixed wing naval aviation. The 'reason' amounts to nothing more than a parsimonious Treasury being willing to take a massive gamble with national security to feed an obsession with an arbitrary deficit reduction target.
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