Hood said:
SAAB are opposing a non-competitive selection for the E-7. SAAB is planning an offer which would integrate the Erieye radar and SAAB ESM onto the current A330 Voyager fleet.

Don't need a competition to say that paying to put a much much smaller radar on a much bigger platform isn't as cost/effective as buying off the shelf.

I'm not sure why so many of the uk defence commentariat want a competition.
 
Of course, the MoD will quite probably put the SAAB kit in a G550 rather than the Global Express and flog the Sentinels.

Or am I being cynical?

Mind you, they could do the usual British 'leapfrog' and put the kit in a HALE UAV.

Chris
 
The Sentinel fleet is only scheduled to survive until 2021 (who knows if another reprieve will come in), but I guess rebuilding them into AEW configuration would be complicated and expensive.
Would a business jet really have enough endurance and internal space for the role? The MoD seem keen on having lots of operators and its not beyond the realms of fantasy to see them taking on some of the Rivet Joint/Airseeker role.

I think the desire for a competition is partly from the mistaken assumption that such contests are 'fairer' and provide 'value for money' etc. (yawn), partly because of the large amount of business that seems to be honing Boeing's way lately, and partly because the various oversight bodies have no faith in the MoD to spot and execute a good deal.
 
Looks like the E-7 is more or less a done deal for the U.K.

“Final assembly of the E-7 aircraft and radar combination would be undertaken in the UK and Boeing have confirmed that it intends to use the same facility to meet any future E-7 sales opportunities for other customers. Through-life, we anticipate that support and training would be undertaken within the UK, directly leading to UK jobs.”

https://ukdefencejournal.org.uk/final-assembly-of-e-7-aircraft-and-radar-combination-to-be-undertaken-in-the-uk/
 
The National Audit Office is still warning of an up to £14.8 billion shortfall in the MoD equipment budget over the next ten years.
It wants the MoD to be clearer about which programmes its actually going ahead with or dropping, the tendency to delay acquisitions adding additional costs for no benefit.

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2018/nov/05/mods-potential-14bn-budget-shortfall-may-make-equipment-unaffordable

https://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/uk-watchdog-concerned-by-defence-funding-shortfall-453465/

EDIT: added Flightglobal link. Of interest is that the E-7 acquisition is still unfunded at the current time.
 
The MOD likes to prevaricate and 'update' specs at whim it seems and has done for longer than I have been on the planet. Get it done and PLAN for updates once in service, or go back to wasting more money as is the current/past practice.
 
To be fair, the Treasury is a major obstacle to any sane defence policy at the best of times.
 
Military procurement
A morality play in one (interminable) act.

MOD: We want the moon - on a stick.
Treasury: Well, you can't have it.
MOD: Can we have the moon on its own, then?
Treasury: No. We'll let you have the stick, though.
MOD: Can we have a stick with a sort of moon-y bit on one end?
Treasury: Actually, we have just had to cut back. You can have one end of the stick only, for now. We'll fund the other end in five years time.
MoD: Dear Industry, please quote for a one-ended stick.
Industry: That's not possible.
MoD: Then you don't get the order.
Industry: OK, we've had a rethink, If you order a stick and specify one end, we'll deliver what you ask for.
MoD: OK
Industry: Here it is, then.
MoD: This stick has two ends. We only ordered one end.
Industry: We always told you a one-ended stick was impossible.
MoD: But you accepted our order.
Industry: That was on an unspecified basis for the other end, you never said /not/ to include it.
Treasury: This stick fails to meet our strict instruction. The other end will have to come off.
Industry: That will cost, and we give no performance guarantees of the result.
Treasury: How much?
Industry: [Whipser]
Treasury: HOW MUCH??!?
Industry: Take it or leave it.
MoD: We are getting desperate.
Treasury: Well, OK then, but just this once.
Industry: here you are, then.
MoD: It still has another end.
Industry: Yes, but it's not the same other end, we sawed that off.
MoD: And it's still useless, the moon-y bit is hopeless.
Industry: We can fix that - at a price.
Treasury: How much?
Industry: [Whipser]
Treasury: HOW MUCH???!!!?
Industry: Take it or leave it.
MoD: We are getting increasingly desperate.
Treasury: Well, OK then, but just this once.
ad nauseam...
 
https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/18/11/13/2045211/the-british-army-is-carrying-out-a-massive-test-of-military-robots-and-drones

Hmmmmm.
 
The MOD is conducting an operational analysis study to establish the size of its future helicopter inventory and capabilities.
Speculation is that a high-speed helicopter could be acquired to replace the Puma and Merlin fleets and may affect the planned buy of further Chinooks.
It would seem the FVL would be a logical contender (similar language of "urban canyons" being used as a justification), although I would be surprised if the MOD went entirely towards US-buys for the entire helicopter fleet given the industrial base Leonardo have in the UK.
Of course this could well be hints of an Osprey purchase too, which has been rumoured for some time.

https://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/uk-military-studies-high-speed-helicopter-benefits-455543/
 
The latest announcements are somewhat out of the blue.

Two ferries or container ships will be converted into amphibious warfare vessels to operate alongside Bulwark and Albion. This seems to indicate a change of heart given both ships were slated for the axe (the cynic in me foresees the two merchant conversions taking their place in reality - the political wag could have fun with this, given the Conservative's problems with ferries lately).
Also, for £7m a squadron of anti-radar swarming drones which will be acquired by the end of the year.
Neither concept seems fully fleshed out yet though.

https://www.ft.com/content/4ee70c9a-2df6-11e9-ba00-0251022932c8?fbclid=IwAR032mKapJD9cwS8JCJ9a2m-ntRWaV47Qr16h0wVudsM0QMsvoONP-sDQKU
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/feb/11/uk-will-deploy-drone-squadrons-after-brexit-says-defence-secretary-gavin-williamson
 
Harpoon was meant to retire this year but has been extended to 2023. A full replacement is not scheduled until 2030 so the MoD has issued an intention to purchase an interim SSM to fill the gap 2023-30.
First delivery of the ship installed equipment is required by December 2022, delivery of the first missiles December 2023 with a contract for 4 years with a potential option to extend to 9 years. The cost is estimated at £100-200 million. It's not clear if this is yet a funded line in the Modernising Defence Programme.

Possible off-the-shelf choices are:
LRASM, either air or ship launched
NSM which could also be carried by the F-35
RBS15 Mk3
Harpoon Block II+
Exocet MM40 Block 3 C

If this is an interim choice, I guess the money would be on Harpoon Block II+ but its hard to imagine the 2030 requirement not being one of these types anyway so it might make sense to make the change now if a new missile is desired.

https://ukdefencejournal.org.uk/uk-looking-for-new-interim-anti-ship-missiles/
 
GTX said:
Flyaway said:
Boeing seeks UK decision on Wedgetail jet buy this year - executive

AVALON, Australia (Reuters) - Boeing hopes Britain will decide this year on plans to buy E-7 Wedgetail early warning jets, an executive said, after talks last year sparked a row over competition in arms procurement.

Seems a good decision to me.

Maybe the USAF should consider it to rather than I believe the stalled E-3 upgrade.

Update: UK orders Boeing E-7A AEW&C
 
I have a feeling that this isn't going to work out too well.



By the way this thread, and it's sister thread, Re-arming the Bundeswehr: Which Projects?, should really be over in the Alternative History and Future Speculation forum.
 
The National Audit Office is still damming the MoD's spending, now has a shortfall of £13bn in the 10-year re-equipment plan.
It sounds likely that RFA Argus won't be refitted or replaced after 2024.
Also, Boeing was paid £6.4m just to delay submitting invoices so that the main spending would take place in future years and with retrospective Treasury approval.
Still seems there are only funds for 48 F-35s and delays to Protector will add £187M to future budgets plus £50M to retain Predator in service.
Meanwhile the MoD claims £7.8bn in efficiency savings.

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news...ebukes-mod-over-3bn-military-budget-overspend
 
To re-arm the UK would basically first:
- Improve pay and living conditions to retain and recruit people so the current force is manned.
- Acquire sufficient spares so the current force can be utilised efficiently.

Doing the above will cost a lot. It won’t involve any more actual platforms and certainly not additional ones.

After that, look at scales of efficiency - so only buy what we already have, no new systems.

Then look at the things we are always short of in every conflict:
1) helicopters. More chinny’s, Wildcats (don’t like it, but it is what we have), Apaches and Merlins. Do not ever buy Osprey. Replace Pumas.
2) troops we can get somewhere and which generate SF. More RMs and light-medium infantry (but properly supported).
3) warships able to do GP tasks, ie gun/c4istar/RMs & boats/helo. So any of T26/31/45/“46”. Get the ships deployed on stations again to show flag and vitally, build a collective picture of what occurs in these places plus build those ships experience of operating. Balance that with Task Force Ops to restore the RN’s historic advantage - inherant flexibility from single ship ops to battle actions. Do not try to specialise the types - every ship must be used and thus able to do both.
4) supports - logistics logistics logistics. Should have been (1) really, but all the aircraft, ships and vehicles to actually move and sustain the above.
 
I fear that in the post-corona budget there will be liitle scope for increasing Defence expenditure. The UK tax base has been slaughtered while the needs of the health and social care sectors plus pressure for a virtual wage for the slew of people whose jobs will not return.
Added to this, there is no appetite for any wars of intervention. A version of Trumpian foreign policy in a Brexit UK will force us to even look at our NATO commitments. Why should the UK pay to defend Eastern Europe while Germany is free to spend money on its own people as shown by the disparity in corona response? Trident will continue because it allows a Tory PM to nuke Putin's Russia.
I fervently hope the above scenario does not happen but it does seem likely.
 
This thread started a bit more emphasizing hardware and maybe it would be better, to keep it this way. That the current situation
quite probably will affect procurement probably in all armed forces worldwide is a fact, but this thread is in the "Alternative History" section.
And I know, it's extremely difficult, totally bothersome and annoyingly uncomfortable, but point 2 of the forum rules still is valid and,
let me stress this: For ALL members !

There are no problems with discussing politics, though most real crackerbarrels probably aren't usable due to COVID-19, but there

are many political fora for exchanging political opinions. But, please, not here !
 
Right now the UK is heading towards a critical choice.
Accelerate or deccelerate.
Accelerate and borrow more on the basis inflation and a falling Pound draws the sting from it.
Or raise taxes and contract the economy further.
At this moment the interests of the ruling class and those at the top will prefer to make the rest pay more.
Rather than accept a lesser differential between them and the majority.
But such a path is ultimately self defeating and can literally destroy the order they sit at the top of.

Clear eyes and a determination to make the UK a success requires nerves of steel. To betray the top tier's increasing advantage and jam the foot hard on the accelerator.

Betray defense now is complete madness considering just how unstable things will become.
 
I started this thread back in 2015 in the Bar as a then topical discussion because the UK had been operating under the then-Coalition's 2010 defence policy.
Five years later I think it still belongs in the Bar. We have a Military Section for announcements and discussions of individual bits of kit.
My original question about what kit? and how much? was broader. In 2015 we were still involved in wars outside Europe and Syria in particular was open for consideration.
Now in 2020 we are more or less out of the quagmire of the Middle East and the War in Terror. Many are keen to get into a new Cold War with Russia and China, probably believing it has already been forced on us.
This is a very political topic but it does drive how we answer the question I posed back in 2015.
 
Via the SNAFU blog:

Meanwhile:

Talk about doubling down on boneheadedness!
 
I would suggest there are 2 main types of missions we will be undertaking,

1- peacekeeping, training, war on terror etc. Small contingents of all services, APC's and wheeled armour. No tanks, air support from apache(flying from CV if needed) plus fast jets in the area.

2- All out war, allied with the US/Nato/EU/G20. Everyone's focus on this seems to favour the Pacific(AKA China). This seems very neat to ignore/reject any serious threat from Russia. Russia = Tanks. Pacific = Ships plus aircraft, plus marines etc.

So we keep our challenger 2, do an update, keep 100 in use, park the rest up.

Buy Osprey for its speed and range, good for deploying SF/marines.

Recon seems like a good idea, so more drones, long range, maritime.

We have P8 on order, so thats good.

Strike - drones/loyal wingman/more submarines to carry cruise missiles.

Arsenal plane? C17 lobbing paletized weapons, and a P8 or drone to guide them in. Mass attack covered.
 
Via the SNAFU blog:

Meanwhile:

Talk about doubling down on boneheadedness!
That SNAFU one is awesome as is the discussion underneath.

What is being done to the Amphibs/RMs is criminal given their contribution to UK ops has been vastly in excess of the rest of the RN for decades.

CEPP is indeed the massive elephant in the room. Question is has anyone got an elephant gun? How do we get out of the death spiral it is creating?
 
There are rumours that the RAF is pushing to order F-35As for the next tranche to save on costs compared with the F-35B as part of the forthcoming defence spending review.
There are rumours of Whitehall breifings to the Treaaury and "invented facts" over the costs (shades of F-111K over CVA-01).
It may well be the RAF is focusing on replacing the Tornado and figures the USMC migbt always be around to bail out the Navy if they need more than 48 F-35Bs in mass operations? Certainly seems to signal the RAF has no interest in STVOL for non-carrier operations.

The source is the usual unnamed industry souces, report in the Daily Telegraph (linked via msn to avoid the paywall).
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/ukne...-money-on-outdated-f-35-warplanes/ar-BB16UpHw
 
F-35A is much cheaper and can do things that B cannot. Whereas B can operate from a ship (although 138 at a time can't). It's difficult to see the controversy.

It basically just seems to be the same RN crowd trying to do in the RAF and in doing so get the taxpayer to spend many £bn than it needs to.
 
The more things change, the more they stay the same.
The Army wants mechanised forces to stand up to Russia in Europe.
The Navy wants to keep its big ships rather than becoming a frigate/submarine force.
The RAF wants to provide airpower its way.
As in 1957, 1966, 1975, 1981, 1990, 1997, 2010 et al the winner will be HM Treasury, whose mandarins have always exploited divisions.
 
The more things change, the more they stay the same.
The Army wants mechanised forces to stand up to Russia in Europe.
The Navy wants to keep its big ships rather than becoming a frigate/submarine force.
The RAF wants to provide airpower its way.
As in 1957, 1966, 1975, 1981, 1990, 1997, 2010 et al the winner will be HM Treasury, whose mandarins have always exploited divisions.
Based on the experience of history:

1) The Army is right as we cannot ignore the continent and will always stand and fight there. Thus it should be able to.

2) The Navy is utterly trapped in past glories. It will keep trying to be a big ship navy until it has just one (really big) ship and no people (other than 100s of Admirals of course). How it gets out of it’s largely self imposed decline is unknown.

3) Fighting without airpower is murdering your people. The RAF is right to want to be able to fight with the best airpower available.

4) Above all, the Treasury is right that the Services cannot be trusted with money because they waste it even more than they waste time and lives.
 
More rumours.... this time of scrapping Challenger.
No major updates since 1998 and the costs looking high, so they might get the chop.
Warrior looking shaky too.

I get the feeling that whatever the truth about these rumours that something big is going to go in this review, something to elevate it to the 1957, 1966, 1975, 1981 and 2010 levels of axe wielding that will give folks like us something to talk about for decades to come.

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/ukne...viscerated/ar-BB18mc71?ocid=spartan-ntp-feeds
 
More rumours.... this time of scrapping Challenger.
No major updates since 1998 and the costs looking high, so they might get the chop.
Warrior looking shaky too.

I get the feeling that whatever the truth about these rumours that something big is going to go in this review, something to elevate it to the 1957, 1966, 1975, 1981 and 2010 levels of axe wielding that will give folks like us something to talk about for decades to come.

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/ukne...viscerated/ar-BB18mc71?ocid=spartan-ntp-feeds
I hope your wrong. Hopefully this is just a full review, maybe they will compare updating them, versus new build Leo2, but only buy 100 or so. Given our history of trips to Europe, it strongly suggests we need some tanks.

Maybe the purchase would count as foreign aid??
 
I am in a minority on this, but I think the tome has come for the UK to becpme a tank using rather than a tank building nation.
The armoured force was justified first by the needs of BAOR and then by the Balkans anf Iraq crises..
Since then the UK has become significantly weaker economically. Covid now makes it essential to fix major weaknesses in our health and education systems. The days of wars of liberal intervention are over. We are told every day how successful the major European powers are compared with the UK. Good, let them deal with Putin.
The UK has spent blood and treasure on wars every year except 1968, we deserve a break to fix problems at home.
 
I am in a minority on this, but I think the tome has come for the UK to becpme a tank using rather than a tank building nation.
The armoured force was justified first by the needs of BAOR and then by the Balkans anf Iraq crises..
Since then the UK has become significantly weaker economically. Covid now makes it essential to fix major weaknesses in our health and education systems. The days of wars of liberal intervention are over. We are told every day how successful the major European powers are compared with the UK. Good, let them deal with Putin.
The UK has spent blood and treasure on wars every year except 1968, we deserve a break to fix problems at home.
The world doesnt need another tank model, we can build either leo or M1 at telford, and we probably only need 100 or so. be a good sweetener for a trade deal.
 
I'm not sure how we would move them overseas anyway. There might be heavy cuts on the amphibious fleet and then we're reliant on the few C-17s we've got.
The MOD would cock it up, they would be one-off special models with oodles of extra gizmos and special mods to bump up the price. Or on this government's run of competency they would turn out to be old T-72s from a Ukrainian 'Dell Boy' or tanks with treads that can't cope with 'unsuitable leaves' in the autumn.

I tend to get sceptical about the usual "cyber warfare" and "sunrise capabilities" as being the motivations. I'm sure buying specialised computers and facilities is expensive (no doubt in hardened bunker data centres etc.) as so is attracting specialists who know what they are doing. But its the kind of nebulous secret world where money evaporates or where you see less return for your money. I guess the Generals in 1878 felt the Balloon and aviation was never going to go anywhere so who knows?
 

Similar threads

Back
Top Bottom