Author: Laura Walters

Search and rescue missions are tense for Squadron 5; silent. Crew members keep a close eye out the windows, looking for signs of movement;strange objects. Counter-piracy missions, and anti-warfare training are louder. There's constant chatter: is the ship a threat, whose is it, what's it doing, what happens next.

And there's no shortage of banter says Squadron 5 executive officer Glen Donaldson.

Like his new boss, New Zealand Defence Force chief Air Marshal Kevin Short, Donaldson started out as a navigator in the maritime surveillance aircraft, and he will defend the P-3K Orions to the scrapyard.

When the planes came to New Zealand in the 1960s they were supposed to last 30 years.

In the past seven years the Orion patrols have helped save 911 lives. They've been a part of operations cracking down on piracy and smuggling off the Horn of Africa, surveillance of the volcano in Vanuatu, assessing damage from Cyclones Winston and Gita in the Pacific, surveillance of critical infrastructure after the Kaikoura earthquake, and fisheries monitoring.

The Boeing P-8A Poseidon maritime patrol planes (pictured) will replace a fleet of retiring P-3K Orion planes.

Maritime surveillance is a key part of the work carried out by the New Zealand Defence Force (NZDF).

But the P-3s the country's been relying on to patrol its neighbourhood, and support its defence partners across the world, have seen their best years. Servicing that used to take three weeks is taking up to three months - emergency alerts at the base are on the rise, and costs are soaring.

Defence Minister Ron Mark has announced the Government will buy four Boeing P-8A Poseidons to replace the defence force's ageing fleet of P-3K Orions. The purchase has been a longtime coming.

But Donaldson says it will be sad to say goodbye to an old friend.

The P-8s, known as submarine killers, mark a new era in defence procurement, with one expert calling this the most significant defence purchase in a generation.

And these planes will cost the country more than $2.3 billion.

It also marks a clear direction in terms of allies, and the potential global threats brewing across the globe.

Boeing P-8A Poseidon

NZ buys four maritime surveillance planes with anti-submarine warfare and search and rescue capabilities.
 
 
  • Four Boeing P-8A Poseidons will be delivered to the New Zealand Defence Force and begin operation by 2023.
  • The planes are designed for: anti-submarine warfare; anti-surface warfare; armed intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance; interoperable, command, control and communications; stand-off targeting and strike support; search and rescue.
  • Cost: $2.3 billion.
  • Crew: 9
  • Max take-off weight: 85,820kg
  • Max speed: 907kmh
  • Combat radius: 2222km (4 hours); ferry range: 8300km
  • Lifespan: 25 years/25,000 hours

WHY THE P-8S?

The new planes, which will come into operation from 2023, come as the Government ramps up its rhetoric around the growing threat to the international rules-based order.

Earlier in the year Foreign Minister Winston Peters launched his Pacific reset in reaction to the growing influence of "non-traditional players" in the region.

Last week, Mark took the finger pointing further when he name-checked China in his rebooted defence policy paper, raising concerns over the country's growing economic and military power, and its actions in the Pacific, Antarctica, and the South China Sea.

The Government is clear it feels there's a deterioration to the global order. It wants wholesale knowledge of what's going on in the seas at the bottom of the world, while being able to defend its area of responsibility, and have the ability to fight back alongside its allies.

It's not clear how many submarines patrol the Pacific, or the Southern Ocean - that's the point of submarines, Donaldson says: they don't want you to know they're there.

Any guess of how many are gliding through the oceans in New Zealand's neighbourhood would be speculation, but China is ramping up activity in the South China Sea, and it's pouring resources into advancing undersea technology.

The P-3s have never had to fire in anger, but that doesn't mean the same will go for the P-8s.

NZDF's Short says the Government needs its military force to have a response option - even the threat of being able to carry weapons and fire is a response.

 

NZDF chief Air Marshal Kevin Short says NZ need to have the option to go into combat, if required.

The Government wants broad capability - that's search and rescue through to anti-submarine warfare (ASW), and anti-surface warfare.

"Unless you buy that upfront, you never have that option," Short says.

Professor Robert Ayson, from Victoria University's Centre for Strategic Studies, says this is the most important defence capability choice in a generation.

In 2016, following the release of the former government's defence white paper, Ayson wrote the maritime dimension "looms large" in terms of New Zealand's future decisions.

"Underwater missions have for some time been an area of domestic political sensitivity, with concerns that an ASW capability may lock the NZDF into overseas combat missions that might not necessarily be in the national interest.

"However, more than a decade and a half after the Clark government rejected a modernisation of the Orion's ASW capabilities, the current proposal to do just that has raised barely a ripple," Ayson wrote in 2016.

The political context in New Zealand is now more amenable to buying more advanced maritime capabilities, he says.

The purchase also says who New Zealand wants as its allies. Australia, the US, and the UK all have the P-8s, along with India, Norway and South Korea.

WHAT CAN THE PLANES DO?

If New Zealand needed to fire in anger, these planes have what it takes.

Donaldson says the high-end combat capability, also means the planes are well-equipped for search and rescue and fishing, or smuggling surveillance.

They have a combat management system, where all the different censors and stations operate together on a computer network with a database system.

A synthetic aperture radar system works over land and sea, detecting objects. The system can take a rough quality photograph, and can identify ships at 100 nautical miles.

The radar can detect a small cross-section of metal, like a small dinghy during a search and rescue mission, or a submarine mast.

And they have colour and thermal imaging, and can shoot high-definition video from tens of kilometres away.

Acoustic systems pick up noises underwater, made by ships or submarines, and send the data back to the planes, and the communications systems pass all the data back to NZDF's joint forces.

There are self-detection missile approach warning systems. And of course, the plane carries weapons, including torpedos.

Members of the US Navy, aboard the Boeing P-8A Poseidon plane.

 

WHAT WILL THEY ACTUALLY DO?

About a tenth of Squadron 5's hours are currently dedicated to search and rescue operations, while patrolling fisheries and customs in New Zealand waters and the South Pacific accounts for about a quarter to a third of its time.

The squad's international output - like the joint counter-piracy work in the Middle East - accounts for about half of their flying hours, and about a third of the hours go into training.

That high-end capability training for things like ASW and anti-surface warfare keeps the NZDF personnel ready for any maritime surveillance operations they might need to carry out.

Donaldson says heightened activity in the South China Sea will continue, and New Zealand has an important part to play in maintaining the freedom of navigation and sealines in the highly contested area.

But it's unclear exactly what capabilities, or bits of tech built into the P-8s New Zealand will need to use on a regular basis.

Former Green Party MP, and procurement critic, Keith Locke says New Zealand would be better off taking a more "non-aligned" stance in relation to the stand-off between the US and China, working with each power on the merits of the situation, and helping to mediate conflicts where necessary.

The alignment with the US comes at a literal cost, he says. The P-8s are "gigantically expensive".

"New Zealand could have bought four high-tech surveillance planes, without the anti-submarine capacity, at a fraction of the cost, and they would have been much more useful to New Zealand," Locke says.

And he suspects the more the surveillance planes are geared towards combat, the less they'll be available for monitoring fisheries in the South Pacific and Antarctica.

Meanwhile, Greens defence spokesperson Golriz Ghahraman says the Government has spoken a lot about the rules-based order, but buying these planes isn't walking the talk.

"We need to move away from following the old world order of the US, UK, Australia and diverse from investing in the war industries and focus on what we can do best, instead," she says.

"Our practice of investing in the war industry is part of eroding the move towards non-proliferation of arms, of not relying on war and the use of force to solve disputes.

"If we want a commitment to the rules-based system, we have to practise what we preach."

 

The RNZAF Orions are past their best years, and are becoming increasingly expensive to maintain.

Regardless of what the Green Party thinks, New Zealand has now committed to buying the planes, and China's watching.

Following the release of Mark's defence policy paper, the super power hit back, saying China has "lodged stern representations with New Zealand on the wrong remarks it has made".

"We urge New Zealand to view the relevant issue in an objective way, correct its wrong words and deeds and contribute more to the mutual trust and cooperation between our two countries," the foreign ministry spokeswoman said.

And following the announcement of the P-8 purchase, Beijing-based defence expert Li Jie, who is often quoted in pro-China state media, said the planes were "a big threat to China's submarines".

The Beijing-based military commentator told the Global Times - a tabloid of the People's Daily, one of the official newspapers of the Communist Party of China - China needs to improve the stealth abilities of its submarines as more western countries, including New Zealand, upgrade their ASW capabilities.

Defence Minister Ron Mark says the planes will support the Pacific reset.

HOW MUCH WILL THEY COST?

To have the option of engaging in anti-sub warfare, NZ will pay a cool $2.346b.

The planes will be delivered and begin operations from 2023, with the Orions being scrapped by 2025. The capital cost will be spread out to the 2026 financial year.

Last year, when the US approved the sale, the four planes were costed at US$1.46b ($2.16b).

More than 50 per cent of the additional cost is due to moving Squadron 5 from Whenuapai in Auckland, to Ohakea in Manawatū.

The move involves building hangars, working accommodation, strengthening taxiways and support areas, as well as building a simulator house, and infrastructure.

Short says the move is the right one, with Whenuapai's runway no longer long enough to facilitate the takeoff of large planes, once weaponised.

Whenuapai will be around for decades to come, but eventually the inability to extend the runway will see the closure of the northern air force base.

 

Green MP Golriz Ghahraman says NZ's continued investment in the war industry erodes the global goal of non-proliferation of arms.

WHERE DOES THE MONEY GO?

Meanwhile, the money for the actual purchase will go to the companies building, and fitting out the planes. New Zealand needs to put in its order now, so it gets into the production line before Boeing stops taking orders.

The prime contractor will be The Boeing Company, with another couple of dozen smaller contractors in charge of delivering the internal communications, radar, and weapons systems, including BAE and British Aerospace company, General Electric, Raytheon - the major US weapons and electronics contractor - and Northrop Grumman, one of the world's largest arms traders.

Boeing's website boasts its ability to deliver on-time, and on-budget. And when the last of the P-8s arrive at the hangar in Ohakea, the P-3s will be off to be scrapped.

Though one may make it into the private collection of film director and military buff Peter Jackson, Short says. Maybe.


Royal New Zealand Air Force Orion display at Classic Fighters 2003 airshow in Blenheim, New Zealand.

Article: https://www.stuff.co.nz/national/politics/105452173/new-subkiller-planes-may-never-fire-in-anger-but-govt-wants-the-option
:
Note from Nighthawk.NZ:

 This is an older article.

Star InactiveStar InactiveStar InactiveStar InactiveStar Inactive
 
Powered by OrdaSoft!