Does the Royal Navy Need a Bigger Navy? (Part 1)
The House of Commons Defence Committee has released a
report into the Royal Navy, its size, availability, and its future. The
report, selectively peppered with nautical phrases and a reworked quote
from Jaws, puts across a strong view on both the current state, and the future
state of the Royal Navy.
The report starts with what feels like the now obligatory assessment that somehow the world has changed, and we’re all about the grey zone now. To be honest reading these constant statements that the world has changed is getting a little bit dull. If you drill into it, has the world really changed, or are we just doing the same basic jobs with different names?
If you review the map in the report of the current deployments and tasks of the Royal Navy, the chart shows a series of deployments to global locations that has remained practically unchanged in decades.
The ships may have changed, as has the technology, but the core
tasks have not. The Royal Navy continues to deliver maritime presence around
the world through a combination of hi-low mix deployments, from the Carrier
Strike Group through to the low-end maritime policing carried out by the RIVER
class OPVs.
Its hard to spot any deployment on that list that wasn’t previously
present in 2010, 2000 or 1990. In fact, you could argue that the disposition
and missions are not dissimilar to 1910, 1900 or 1890 – the ports are similar,
the roles are similar although the ships are different (and the Russians were
less of a challenge back then).
To suggest that the world has changed is perhaps a strong statement – rather the threat continues to evolve, but the core role of the RN remains unchanged - to deter an attack of the UK, to defend our interests and allies and to provide security in challenging places for those who call for it.
A read of the full paper identifies what can be seen as
three core themes – we don’t have enough working ships at sea, we’re scrapping
ships but also delaying new ships, and the ships we have don’t seem to have enough
offensive weaponry on them. Are these concerns reasonable though?
There is a persistent
debate to be had on warship availability and whether the Royal Navy has enough
ships to do the job asked of it. On the one hand, parts of the force is elderly
and approaching life expiry, but on the other the Type 45s have allegedly got propulsion
issues.
The challenge for the Royal Navy is less about the number of
ships it has, and more about the amount of time at sea it can get with them.
There is little point in having 20 warships if only 4 of them can go to sea for
want of crew or equipment. Similarly, having 20 warships on paper, where it
turns out several of them are in the middle of years long refits and don’t
possess engines or weapons is also not terribly helpful.
The RN took the decision in the Integrated Review to pay off
two Type 23s that were due a major refit, to free up two theoretical ships
company worth of crew and save on refit and life extension costs.
On paper the RN is now down two escorts, but in reality,
this reduction will have no impact on practical ship availability. Both ships
were due to have been out of service for several years, and by the time they
would have returned to the fleet, other ships in the form of the Type 26 and 31
will be entering service. The net loss to the RN is minimal in terms of days at
sea doing maritime tasking, and the gain is the ability to free up crew to take
on other roles elsewhere in the system.
The problem is that we look at the availability of ships
from a zero-sum game of ‘I have this many ships, therefore my navy is good
versus my opponent who has this many fewer ships, so they are weaker than me’.
We don’t focus on availability for sea, we don’t think about tasking and how it
can be done, and we don’t focus on how to keep ships on station for the long
term, not just the short-term numbers.
Image by Ministry of Defence; © Crown copyright |
This was evident in the discussion on the Type 45, where the
report seemed to think that the Royal Navy only had one Type 45 available earlier
this year. This seems to be a very specific way of interpreting information.
Of the 6 ships in the Type 45 force, the RN has historically
aimed to keep about 2-3 of the 6 at sea on deployment or worked up and ready to
deploy in short order. This is a stretching target that many navies would
struggle to do.
Warship generation is a difficult task – think of it like
taking a car for a drive. Its relatively easy to take a ship to sea and do some
gentle steaming, much like you may go for a Sunday drive. Now think about the
jump to having a formula one car in a race, with a whole team of people ready
to support and maintain it if things go wrong – deploying a worked-up warship
is akin to this, with huge amounts of work and effort needed to be ready to not
just sail, but also operate and fight at the highest intensity if required.
The Royal Navy has excelled at ensuring that its Type 45
force hits sustainable levels of deployed and worked up availability to ensure
the force is ready and able to go to sea if needed – not for a Sunday drive,
but as a Formula 1 racer. The effort needed to do this is huge, and beyond many
navies to sustain on an enduring basis.
In the case of the 45 fleet, this summer saw two 45s
deployed at sea as part of the Carrier Strike Group, one of which had a temporary
period alongside to conduct unplanned maintenance. Was it mildly disruptive –
yes, a little bit. Did it cause the operation to be cancelled, or the ship to
return home – no, it did not.
Ships having issues while deployed is a tale as old as time
and is neither surprising nor something to worry particularly about. The RN has
intentionally put very good logistics support chains in for a reason to ensure that
things can be fixed if they go wrong. This isn’t a problem unique to the RN either
– one of the UK’s strengths is that it can pull into friendly ports and rely on
host nation support to carry out a turbine change – by contrast the Russians
need to deploy their Task Groups with a rescue tug precisely because when they
break down, there are very few friendly ports to go to.
At the same time as the UK had two Type 45s worked up, on
deployment and away from UK waters for 7 months, a third Type 45 was in a short-term
maintenance period. These are utterly routine events that every warship does – they
are a chance to carry out odd jobs, conduct routine maintenance and ensure the
ship is ‘match fit’.
In this case the maintenance period was for a fully worked
up warship that was about to deploy on operations, and which had the need arisen
could have gone to sea extremely quickly if required. To suggest that the RN
was somehow at fault for failing to ensure Type 45 availability, when 50% of
the force was either deployed, or available at short notice for sea is disingenuous
at best – particularly given this was a snapshot of the summer leave period
when historically ships are alongside.
This of itself highlights a concern about the creeping level
of ‘strategic oversight of tactical issues’. We have seen in recent years the
use of open source media to focus on ships comings and goings, and then assume
when a ship doesn’t sail that there is something wrong and that the RN is
broken.
The level of scrutiny into the ‘why hasn’t HMS DIAMOND
sailed’ when she was in Singapore was ridiculous – there was all manner of speculation
on the net about what was wrong, had she broken down, had something else
happened, all of which was reliant on rumours and not official information.
We’ve seemingly got to a position now where RN ships cannot
do anything without some kind of comment or assumption that because they’ve not
sailed, they must have broken down. The reality is that programmes change
regularly, plans change, and events change, and there is no requirement or need
for the RN to provide a running commentary on what its ships are up, much to
the dismay of various hostile intelligence services.
Nothing has changed in terms of how this is handled onboard ship,
and plans can and do change with astounding regularity depending on events.
What has changed is our ability as a species to monitor and comment, and as
such CO’s now find themselves and their ships subject to an incredible amount
of scrutiny from amateur armchair admirals, loudly proclaiming something is
wrong to their internet echo chamber.
Image by Ministry of Defence; © Crown copyright |
A wider issue of concern both of the Committee and armchair
admirals is that of the armament of ships and whether RN vessels are relatively
speaking lacking in offensive weaponry.
A perennial subject of debate is the lack of anti-ship guided
weapons or the seeming lack of ships bristling with weaponry compared to
Russian or Chinese peers. A better question though is ‘why do these Russian
ships need so many weapons – is it because they think the threat is real, or
because they need to be certain that something / anything may work if required’
-arguably the latter is more likely than the former.
The RN has historically had a bit of an odd relationship
with surface launched anti-ship missiles – although it has operated them for
almost 50 years, they’ve never really been heavily invested in. Only two main
types of missiles have been bought – Exocet and Harpoon, the latter is now
approaching its 35th anniversary of first RN use, and they’ve never
been mounted in large numbers of RN ships (4 & 8 respectively).
By contrast the RN has been an incredibly keen leader in the
field of light weight antishipping missiles on helicopters, and in layered gun
defences, but it has sought to try to keep the investment in areas where the there
is more chance of positively IDing a ship and ensuring the correct one is destroyed.
Such long-range systems are not cheap and require time in
the dockyard to install, and time to test and integrate. In the case of the
interim solution, it has emerged that the total cost of procuring a few sets to
cover a roughly 5-year gap would be in the £250m bracket – that is a lot of
money to deploy a limited coverage on a few ships for a very specific mission
set.
The challenge facing financial planners is working out where
the best investment is overall for the Royal Navy. Is it better to spend money
on a short term solution to cover a capability gap in an area that has
historically been a relatively low priority (noting that the RN has chosen for
years to not fund upgrades or replacements), or to defer this and spend the
money elsewhere – but in doing so ensure funding is ringfenced for the medium term
to get a proper replacement in service.
We are likely to be on the cusp of new hypersonic missile technology
that could revolutionise how missile wars are fought – is it better to save the
funding and invest in a long term capability solution, or buy into something as
an interim measure that may or may not do the job, and could actually become a
long term ‘not quite as good but we’ve bought it so we may as well keep it’
solution?
Obviously plenty of people would like to see RN ships
bristling with weapons, but that is neither always practical nor affordable.
The more weapons you install, the more time you need to keep ships alongside
for to refit it and integrate it, and then you need extra people and eat into
the ships design reserves to install the kit. Every change has an impact, both positive
and negative, and they’re not always worth it.
For example, is it worth the RN investing in buying corvettes
armed with lots of anti-ship missiles, as suggested by some in the report? This
design works well for a coastal navy that needs to deter aggression and which
is headcount poor, doesn’t need bigger ocean going ships and where it needs to
fire a mass of missiles quickly onto a fairly well known target set when you
aren’t too concerned about who else you hit.
For the Royal Navy a group of heavily missile armed
corvettes would potentially be little more than a liability – poor seakeeping
would make them of little relevance for a globally deployed navy, while they
would be too small to easily take a hit and survive – but you’ve invested so
much in them in terms of weapon load out that they have become high value
targets in their own right -unable to defend themselves effectively without
being overwhelmed, you’ve compromised significantly on the design to deploy
ships you cannot afford to lose in combat, but which cannot protect themselves.
Corvettes are great for some navies, but they are not, and
should not, be the answer for the Royal Navy when it comes to handling the
challenge of anti-surface warfare.
Image by Ministry of Defence; © Crown copyright |
What this debate perhaps better highlights is not whether
the ships are under armed, but the funding puzzles that the MOD has to balance
off. Each upgrade or new piece of equipment installed requires a complex web of
multi-year funding and support to ensure it can be ordered, built, installed, operated,
and supported.
It is not as simple as saying ‘here is a cheque for £X
Million’, rather it is about balancing off competing priorities which may pose
challenges over several years, across different budgets and trying to ensure that
whatever is purchased can be installed without impacting on ships time at sea.
It also means finding the right people, and training infrastructure to ensure
the kit can be used, and in putting support contracts in place too.
All of this is expensive and requires proper scrutiny. It
may seem easy from the outside to go ‘why not spend money on a long rang
anti-ship missile’ – but if buying that missile means sacrificing several other
equally important projects, is this still the right course of action.
While people will want to say, ‘well we just need more money’,
this isn’t really the realistic answer to the problem. The RN has got a lot of delegated
authority to reprioritise and move funds around to focus on tackling the challenges
that it thinks it needs to address. Imagining up more money, at a time of fiscal
restraint and where there is already an extremely generous financial settlement
in place for the MOD (relative to many other departments) is unrealistic.
This will disappoint people, but the RN, like the rest of
Government, must play the hand that it is dealt. If it feels that on balance the
combination of longer-term investment in exceptionally capable SSGW is better
to free up short term funding for other projects, then this is a trade-off that
has not been arrived at without considerable scrutiny and analysis, using data
not available to external audiences. We may not like the answer, but it will have
been reached for the best reasons at the time.
There is a wider question perhaps of what this fiscal decision
means for the wider impact of the Royal Navy – is a navy with reduced anti-ship
capability best placed to deter its opponents, and what message does it send?
Having the ability to shoot down high-speed tennis balls is one thing, but how
do you respond by means other than a strongly worded letter?
Considering this challenge of balancing off the credibility
of deterrence, with the wider perspective on the challenges of shrinking the
fleet to grow the fleet, and how the UK retains a credible shipbuilding capability
not just now, but for the long term are all complex and serious questions to consider.
They are also arguably a step too far in a blog that is
already approaching 3000 words long, so will form the second part of this article
in due course as otherwise, we’re going to need a bigger blog…
The last three paragraphs represent the concerns of most.
ReplyDeleteWe shall see. Will there be a Jubilee review next year and what sort show will we get. Will be a rehearsal for the next coronation fleet review.
ReplyDeleteHere is a reminder of the last one. https://youtu.be/_6qDYrqfjRQ