Global Navy, Global Presence, Global Britain in Action - OP FORTIS Summed Up
After 7 months, 49,000 miles, 44 nations interacted with, 18
different exercises and almost as many pints of milk as No10 hosted parties in lockdown
later, the Carrier Strike Group is home.
Their return to Portsmouth, Plymouth and Portland (RFA) over
the last few days, as well as RNAS Culdrose and Yeovilton and also RAF Marham
marks the closing of one chapter, and the opening of a very long book.
It has been a high profile and extremely successful deployment,
marking the return by the Royal Navy to conducting international task group
deployments with fixed wing strike carriers on a global basis.
Over the next few days and weeks, there will be a chance to reflect
more on what detailed lessons can be drawn from the CSG deployment, but some initial
thoughts stand out.
Image by Ministry of Defence; © Crown copyright |
Firstly, OP FORTIS has shown that the Royal Navy belongs in that tiny clutch of navies, atop the very pinnacle of global naval power. Able to deploy, sustain and operate in conditions ranging from benign port visits, to conducting operational missions over Syria, and do so across the globe at a time and place of its choosing.
It did this not just as the sole effort of the fleet, but as
one part of a globally deployed and focused force. At the same time as the CSG
was in the Indian and Pacific Ocean, the Royal Navy was also at sea, on task in
the Med, Gulf, South Atlantic, West Indies, North Atlantic, Arctic and other
oceans – all conducting operations.
It was an extremely vivid demonstration of reach, in sending
ships a long way and being able to use them in a variety of different operations,
ranging from supporting UK interests in the Med to conducting sanctions busting
operations in the Far East off North Korea. Along the way the exercise programme
proved that there are a wide range of countries keen to work with the UK, engage
with it and do more work on bilateral and multilateral security together.
The CSG is a very visible manifestation of the flexibility of
maritime power in action, able to flex from a variety of tasks at different
times, ramping up from defence engagement to defence watches as the
circumstances required. To do this requires more than just ships in isolation,
it requires good people, good equipment and good training all brought together in
a shared purpose to do more than just the sum of their parts.
This was the culmination not just of two decades of vision, build
and delivery, but also of many years of hard work bringing together many
different disparate groups and training them up into an effective operational
force. There are a lot of enabling organisations from waterfront offices, to stores
depots to operational HQs who have played a part in making this happen. It really
was a team effort.
We’ve seen first-hand that the Royal Navy is able to work
well as a tool of international engagement. The ships have hosted formal talks,
been the backdrop to diplomatic missions, supported industry demonstration days
and helped deliver a positive image of modern Britain. This is classic Royal
Navy business, but to see it done so elegantly and effortlessly (at least from
the outside) reminds us of how hard it is and how much work goes into making it
look so effortless.
At the same time we’ve seen these ships help thicken international
defence engagement across the board – from building new links, reinforcing growing
friendships (such as with Ukraine against their belligerent neighbours), bolstering
older ones (such as with the Indian Navy or the Japanese Maritime Self-Defence
Force) and of course working with friends old and new in exercises like the Five
Power Defence Agreement (FPDA), which marked its 50th anniversary this
year.
While there is perhaps a cynical view held by some that the
deployment was a sustained PHOTEX interrupted by the occasional days flying
programme, we have to look at what it was trying to do. It was the first big
test of the carrier strike concept away from home, operating for a sustained
period far from traditional baseports and supply chains, and demonstrating that
the UK could bring defence assets to bear across the globe.
The message from this first CSG is that the UK can, and that
it has opened doors to future operations too. COVID may have made many of the
softer engagement more challenging, but as restrictions lift, and the world
reopens again, future CSG’s will be able to cash in credit gained during this
one as a means of thickening links even further.
At the same time this deployment helped prove the RN’s resilience
and supply chain works in a way that few other navies can do. To be able to draw
on three distinct aspects – firstly the overseas network of UK bases, from the
naval base at Gibraltar (which last week had no fewer than 5 major RN/RFA
vessels alongside), to the RN facilities in Diego Garcia and Singapore, this
deployment has reminded us that the RN enjoys an extremely capable global
logistics footprint.
Secondly, we’ve been reminded that the RFA has undergone a renaissance
with the delivery of the TIDE class tankers, which are now well established at
the heart of the RFA force. Without the magnificent MOD Civil Servants in the
RFA who crew these ships, the CSG would have had a very different experience.
Of course concerns remain of the fragility of the stores ship situation, with
FORT VICTORIA experiencing a fire early in, which highlights the increasingly
desperate need to get the FSS competition underway and new ships in service
ASAP.
Image by Ministry of Defence; © Crown copyright |
Finally we’ve seen in action the strength of our
international partnerships and friendships. This has ranged from support in
naval bases around the world, including Guam and Japan, where RN and RFA vessels
were able to spend time alongside, to Australia which hosted the visit of HMS
ASTUTE. Central to this was the RAF ability to operate an air bridge to help
provide strategic airlift to keep mail, spare parts and people on the go – the Royal
Navy stays at sea globally in no small part because the RAF air transport force
enables this to happen – this must never be forgotten.
When issues have happened, the UK has been able to draw on the support of our allies in different ways. When Admiral Radakin, in his outstanding RUSI speech this week noted that one of the UK’s core strengths is that it can draw on friendships and partnerships that our foes cannot, he could not have done better than refer to OP FORTIS.
From relying on an impromptu but fixable maintenance period
in Italy for HMS DIAMOND, to enjoying support from partner nations in
recovering the sunken RAF F35 (proof to some ‘in 1966 we wuz robbed’ conspiracy
theorists that not content with taking over the Fleet Air Arm, the RAF now has
its sights on the RN Submarine Service too), the UK has been able to use
support from friends and allies to further its own goals.
Speaking of the RAF, and to avoid any suggestion or doubt –
this deployment summed up in one visible way the ongoing strength and depth of
the links between the RAF and the Royal Navy. This has been going on for so
long that it had, to the author at least, seemed obvious, but to some,
apparently this blog is a biased ‘pro RN and anti RAF article’.
To avoid any doubt – this deployment could not have happened
without the RAF. The strength and links between the FAA and RAF on the F35
force and 617 squadron are exceptional and proof of the close operational links
that exist. Purple jointery runs through this trip, from the RAF embarking as a
matter of routine, to working with the Army on exercise in Oman. Please do not think
or assume that this is somehow an RN only event – it is, and like every future CSG
always will be, a joint affair.
This can be no better demonstrated than by the fact that throughout
the deployment the US Marine Corps were embarked on HMS QUEEN ELIZABETH, while
the US and Netherlands Navies provided vessels throughout the whole deployment
as an integrated part of the group. This is proof of the fact that the UK not
only wants to work with international partners, but that it can actually persuade
international partners to turn up, contribute and give their assets to work in
support of UK naval goals – proof of the high regard others hold the RN and its
capabilities in.
More widely the deployment helped showcase a range of exciting new capabilities and test them in stretching conditions for the first time. This has been a chance to put much of the RN’s exciting and capable new equipment into service and show what it can do for real, helping prove it as being fit for purpose and more than just a concept.
Perhaps the most important lesson we have been reminded of
in all of this is that the single most important aspect in all of this deployment
is people. Once again the incredible women and men of the Royal Navy, Royal
Marines and Royal Air Force have shown they have every inch the skills,
tenacity and drive that previous generations have had, and that they are fit to
act as standard bearers for their Service.
This has not been an easy deployment, disrupted by COVID, huge
amounts of work up training, very long hours and often frustrations born from
lack of shore time in exotic locations due to COVID, the crews have demonstrated
a stoicism and willingness to put up with this, and make the best of it. They’ve
shown they can step up when required, swiftly moving in a short space from sailing
peacefully, to facing off against potential aggression, and conducting
operations in an operational environment for real, and do so time and again.
Without people, OP FORTIS would have been nothing.
We must not think of this as a one off, this is not a once
in a lifetime operation, but something that is now the routine and incredibly
exciting future for the Royal Navy. Tonight the ships rest, but some remain at
very high readiness to go to sea again in a hurry if called upon, and others
will be working up for the next cycle of deployments.
The CSG is now the beating heart, and bright future of what
the RN does, but by no means the only thing. Carrier Strike is here to stay at
the centre of a Royal Navy which operates around the world every day of the
year. With ships permanently based in five different oceans and bases, people and
assets globally always deployed, this is a navy which does the business day in,
day out.
OP FORTIS proved that Global Britain is more than just a slogan,
it’s an operational statement of fact.
Now for CSG22: pop down to the Falklands with an amphibious task group for exercises. Just to ram the point home :-)
ReplyDeleteI'm loath to say this but so what. We have spent millions doing what, preparing for a war with China ?
ReplyDeleteWell summed up Sir Humphry .
ReplyDeleteA fascinating article showing that at a nation we can still punch above our weight.
ReplyDelete