A Global Navy for A Global Britain - CSG21 in the Pacific
The Royal Navy has continued to demonstrate its impressive global reach and presence in the Pacific Ocean. The Carrier Strike Group deployment has been operating across the region, with ships calling in various ports, and jointly operating with friends and allies in a range of exercises.
Perhaps the defining point of the deployment thus far has
been the stunning images released showing HMS QUEEN ELIZABETH steaming
alongside a pair of US carriers, and a Japanese helicopter carrier, along with
escorts and support ships. This image of a coalition of willing allies working
together at sea sends a powerful signal to a variety of nations.
For the Royal Navy the CSG21 deployment has marked a welcome
return to operating strike carriers globally for the first time in many years. It
has been an extremely useful deployment that has helped not only visibly
demonstrate the renewed British interest in the Indo-Pacific, but also begin to
rekindle defence links that had become somewhat atrophied in previous years.
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Image by Ministry of Defence; © Crown copyright |
For example, there have been a wide range of visits into different ports, admittedly curtailed in excitement for the crew by the challenges of managing COVID restrictions, but which have been a good chance for the Royal Navy to carry out its timeless function of defence diplomacy. This has been a good chance for the ships and crew to represent the UK abroad, and serve as the backdrop to a variety of talks, engagements and opportunities to help further enhance diplomatic interests and links in the region.
The presence of the ships has permitted a thickening of defence relationships that have perhaps not played centre stage for some time. For example, joint exercises with Five Power Defence Arrangement partners, marking the 50th anniversary of this organisation which provides a valuable security framework for partners to work together in SE Asia.
More widely there have been other chances for wider training,
for example there will shortly be joint exercises in the Middle East fusing
together regional British Army training with the exercise to help practise and
develop closer working links and future operating concepts. This helps remind
us that the CSG21 deployment is more than just about ships and is about a truly
joint way of operating that is central to how the British armed forces will
deliver the outcome of the Integrated Review.
Although less prominent, or high profile, one of the most
important parts of this deployment has been the ability to test and prove the logistics
chain that underpins support to the military. All too often attention is
focused on the ‘headline capabilities’ – the tanks, ships and aircraft that
look impressive right up until you try to work out whether they can be deployed.
Logistics networks, supply chains and the ability to operate
from allied bases is not glamorous, but it’s the difference between having an
impressive military parade at home, and being able to actually deploy and operate.
In this case the ability to come alongside and support from locations like Guam,
Singapore and Japan, for refuelling and storing, maintenance and other
essentials, and then return to sea is extremely important.
Not all countries with aircraft carriers have this sort of
access globally. Being able to have a trusted relationship with another nation
to the point where you can enter their ports, support your warships and then
stay deployed is invaluable. It also speaks to the existence of effective
working relationships at all levels, and testing processes and procedures to
make sure they are fit for purpose – CSG21 has helped act as a good test to
make sure things work as planned.
There is a wider message here about the other enablers – for
example the RAF strategic airlift force that will have been supplying the
ships, and the UK’s ability to deploy and support airpower to underpin the
maritime. We take logistical support like this for granted, but that’s unfair –
the logistics teams underpinning the deployment are vital and often forgotten.
The final key point that needs to be remembered here, and is
often lost amid the understandable national pride about the CSG21 deployment is
that this is intentionally an international by design force. Not only is the
USMC embarked on the QUEEN ELIZABETH, but the Dutch frigate HNLMS Evertsen and
the US destroyer ‘The Sullivans’ are also integrated into the force.
The UK has realised that international operations are the
way forward, and that future deployments will be done in coalition, not
isolation. Working together on deployments like this is critical to build the
links and trust required to operate together in wartime. We should not
underestimate the considerable value likely to be accrued from this sort of
joint deployment.
Of course one area where this is of considerable importance
is looking beyond the photo opportunities. While task group photos are all well
and good for the media imagery, what really matters is building the operational
links that can be used to work together properly on operations.
For the UK this deployment is a gentle reintroduction to a
theatre that it has been absent from now in a meaningful way for many years. This
is about re-establishing links, beginning joint exercises and starting to work
up meaningful work that helps build strong and mutually beneficial working
relationships in the future.
The challenge is how to build on these links though and
prevent this being a one off occurrence. The deployment alone in isolation is
probably not going to do much in longer term benefits unless it is followed by
more meaningful engagement in the not too distant future. International
operations work best when there is regular co-operation and meaningful exercising,
not just occasional PHOTEX opportunities.
There is no doubt the political desire exists for much more to
be done in the Indo-Pacific, but while we can laud the success of this
deployment, the more difficult question is about the longer term goals of it –
what is the desired outcome here? Is it long term security co-operation that
evolves into bilateral and multilateral security relationships with leading
players (e.g. Japan or Australia), or is it to develop defence export
opportunities that could benefit the UK defence industry?
Also, the deeper challenge will come when a security crisis
breaks out in the region at a time when there are significant UK forces present.
At some point it seems inevitable that difficult decisions will need to be made
about the extent to which UK forces will move from being a presence, to being operationally
committed, and what this may mean for longer term relationships.
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Image by Ministry of Defence; © Crown copyright |
Part of the challenge is that given the fanfare of the CSG deployment, the bar has been set reasonably high for UK engagement in the region. Future deployments will be calibrated against the commitment shown for this one, and if in future smaller forces, or no carrier could be read as a reducing interest and commitment to the region.
One is perhaps mindful here of previous efforts by the UK to
establish a drumbeat of global deployments after the withdrawal of forces from
the Far East – for example the global deployments of the 70s, or the task group
deployments of the 80s. These looked high profile, but were often not followed
by further visits for many years, allowing the good engagement done to whither
on the vine.
If the commitment to the region is serious and long term,
then this means that the UK will need to consider carefully how to build on the
CSG21 deployment for future trips. A drumbeat of regular engagement, e.g. CSG23/25/27
would be a chance to thicken some of the links built here, and develop it into
a more meaningful security relationship with the region.
CSG21 is an operational success, but it is too early to say
if it becomes a policy failure. If properly supported, and further enabled by near
identical deployments on a routine basis for the next 10-15 years, then it will
be bedded in as a key tool in British defence and security policy delivery. But
if it is abandoned, toned down or pared back (e.g. to singleton deployer or
only going as far as the Gulf), then all the warm words and vision will be lost
with nothing to show for it.
It doesn’t perhaps seem to be clear if this is about a
serious long-term renaissance of the British maritime presence in the Pacific,
or about exploiting a short-term opportunity which may, or may not, be squandered.
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Image by Ministry of Defence; © Crown copyright |
On the positive side though, there does seem to be a very
clear shift in RN thinking. The CSG21 deployment is just part of the commitment
to the region, and the presence of the RIVER class patrol ships TAMAR and SPEY,
who will be forward deployed into the region, will help provide a permanent RN
presence locally to keep links at a working level.
These ships will be crucial to filling the gap between the bigger
deployments and in showing the UK is serious about its commitment to the
region. They will be hard worked and although small, will be a vital regional
presence to help show the UKs enduring commitment to the region.
There is much to be very positive about here – even 10 years
ago the prospects of a British carrier strike group operating in the region
would seem slim. That an extremely capable force is now doing this, not as part
of a one-off, but instead as part of what seems, on initial planning, to be a
coherent and regular programme of deployments speaks volumes about the hugely
positive aspirations that the Royal Navy has for its future.
One final thought is that, for the Royal Navy, this deployment
has been done not as a ‘main effort’ to the detriment of all other fleet
activity, but instead as part of the wider fleets routine deployments. If you consider
that at the same time as the CSG21 deployment was underway, the RN has deployed
ships in the West Indies for hurricane support and wider counter narcotics operations,
maritime security patrols off the coast of West Africa and the Falklands, ongoing
Mine Warfare work and maritime security patrols in the Gulf as well as routine
deployments and operations from home waters to the Med and elsewhere, you realise
just how busy the fleet is – and how global its focus is.
The icing on the cake perhaps is that in September the RN
managed to get both carriers at sea, conducting fixed wing operations with the
F35, helping build the tempo and availability of the carrier force. After years
of vision, planning, construction and trials, we’re now at the stage where the
UK has got two operational and deployable fixed wing strike carriers, and appears
to be entering a ‘drumbeat’ of working up for global deployments with them. Its
an incredibly exciting time for the RN.
For the Royal Navy CSG21 has been a good test of its ability
to deploy some of the most advanced warships and aircraft in existence to the
other side of the planet and operate them there for a sustained period. It appears
to have passed this test with flying colours.
There are very, very, few navies capable of doing what the
Royal Navy is doing right now – deploying, sustaining and recovering a carrier
strike group and its component parts helps mark out the RN as one of the worlds
leading naval powers.
Excellent article Sir Humphrey ,hopefully we have 'turned a corner'.
ReplyDeleteLets hope the LRG based in Oman can keep up the visits between CSG's.
ReplyDelete