The Start of Something Special - CSG21 & HMS QUEEN ELIZABETH
The Royal Navy currently has two aircraft carriers at sea
off the coast of the UK in different stages of working up. HMS PRINCE OF WALES
is undergoing sea training and getting ready to carry out a range of flying trials
and duties this year ahead of embarking on her programme.
Meanwhile HMS QUEEN ELIZABETH is now at sea with at the
heart of a Carrier Strike Group standing up alongside her. At the time of writing,
she has now embarked around 18 F35 fighters, and about 9 Merlin helicopters,
ensuring that there are nearly 30 aircraft on board.
This represents one of the largest carrier air groups to
operate from a Royal Navy carrier in decades, and in terms of raw capability,
is to date, the single most potent airwing ever embarked by a British aircraft
carrier.
The result is an asset that is truly joint in nature, and
which will be of benefit both to all three UK services, but more widely allies
too.
Nowhere is this truer than the fact that a core part of the
airwing is derived from the presence of 10 US Marine Corps F35 jets, supported
by a large contingent of US military personnel onboard. They form an integral
part of the ships company and will be embarked throughout the deployment.
This marks the first time in history that a significant US
military force has embarked on a foreign vessel in peacetime as an integrated
part of a ships airwing for an operational deployment.
Although highly limited ‘cross decking’ has occurred, usually linked to landing/recovery
and possible overnight stops, interoperability is far more limited than some
people imagine. In fact other than the odd training deployment (such as a small
number of French aircraft embarking for maintaining carrier skills, or the
occasional south American ‘touch and go’) it is difficult to find any record of
this ever occurring before.
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Image by Ministry of Defence; © Crown copyright |
Integrated is a quite different concept to that of just
landing and taking off. It means that the jets and their crew are part of an
integrated weapon system, at the disposal both of the local commander and more
senior political decision makers in both nations, to be employed as seen fit.
It means crews embarking as part of the ships company,
working seamlessly together as one to plan the mission, arm the aircraft, prepare
them for take-off, before conducting a mixed multi-national mission, then
recovering to the ship where the aircraft will be serviced by a mixed crew. In other words, the US Marines embarked
onboard are an organic part of the ship and are treated as such.
It is difficult to find words to describe adequately just
how big a deal this is – it means that the Royal Navy has built an aircraft
carrier that the US armed forces feel comfortable embarking a fully worked up
squadron of jets on and conducting routine operations off. The level of
planning that has gone into this is huge – it means the right IT, the ability
to embark different stores, and ensure that any minor national differences on
equipment are properly supported.
From a planning perspective it means that the US is prepared
to put its most advanced fighter aircraft onto a foreign vessel and let it be
employed operationally – meaning full discussion of tactics, ‘sneaky tricks’
and other very sensitive issues around how to not just exercise together but go
to war together as a joint force.
This is a big deal – there are no other countries on earth that
do this, and it demonstrates a huge level of trust and support between the two
nations.
Some will mock this, incorrectly seeing it as the UK somehow
being reliant on ‘Uncle Sam’ to bail them out and put planes on decks. Such a
view is tediously inaccurate nonsense. The UK F35 force is still building up to
strength and deliveries of the initial 48 (with more very likely) and while
this is going on, will not always have l8 aircraft available to deploy.
This doesn’t mean we won’t – it just means that for a little
bit longer there may be a smaller than expected UK fixed wing presence. Over
time, as the UK commitment grows, expect to see the airwings grow and over time
there will almost certainly be 20+ jets onboard plus supporting helicopters.
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Image by Ministry of Defence; © Crown copyright |
What this deployment of a joint airwing offers is a toolbox
of enormous flexibility to British and American policy makers and military planners.
It provides an asset that can be used to support NATO or other coalition operations,
or if needs must could support bilateral airstrikes instead.
We already know that the airwing will be conducting operations
over Syria to take the fight to Daesh in the coming weeks and months. For the first
time since 1942 and the “USS ROBIN” (aka HMS VICTORIOUS) the combined air forces
of the Royal Navy, Royal Air Force and United States Navy & Marine Corps
will be going on operations from the shared deck of one carrier.
This is perhaps the ultimate demonstration of the
flexibility of the concept – providing a platform that both nations can use to
best effect. It is a good example of just how effective the working
relationship is that both countries feel comfortable committing their assets to
what are essentially wartime operations on the first operational deployment of
the ship.
The deployment of the CSG21 team represents the first of
many deployments like this, which could run for decades to come. It
demonstrates the incredibly close links between the two nations and is a timely
reminder of the versatility of the carrier platform.
In what has been a busy week for the Royal Navy, it is worth
also briefly remembering that this deployment is not the only game in town.
Elsewhere the amphibious forces are stepping up for a deployment into more
northern waters, with HMS ALBION helping prepare to lead a deployment that will
demonstrate the value of the Royal Navy amphibious capabilities.
Meanwhile there remains a global presence including ships
deployed right now in the Med, West Indies, South Atlantic and Gulf, all of
whom are actively supporting operations. Even as the world begins to look to
life beyond the pandemic, the Royal Navy remains tirelessly on patrol and
supporting operations globally.
This has ranged from delivering vaccines to remote overseas
territories like Tristan De Cunha, to tackling the threat of mines in the Gulf.
This week marks 15 years of a continuous presence by Royal Navy mine warfare vessels
in the region, which today houses some of the busiest RN facilities in the
world.
As the UK shifts to an Indo-Pacific tilt, and attention focuses
on reopening post pandemic and a return to more ‘normal’ military operations,
deployments like CSG21 will mark the return for global task group deployments. There
is a lot of very exciting activity ahead, and this remains an exciting time for
the Royal Navy and its partners. CSG21
is the start of something very special.
Very true, it is a really significant achievement. If in the future, RAF modernisation could be harmonised to an even greater extent with that of the Navy (the Tempest programme won't provide an interoperable platform, unfortunately, but maybe some of the other drone initiatives and lighter catapult systems envisaged for the carriers could), this would give the UK a very powerful set of tools and options. If the Army could be convinced to ditch commitments to large armoured forces and focus on new ways of war with lighter, more mobile forces, forget about massed armoured manoeuvre, and go light-medium and truly expeditionary, the UK's foreign policy and defence toolkit would be very formidable indeed.
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