The Harrier Jump Jet is the aircraft that did what it took when it mattered. It was all we had in the way of airpower when the Argies tried to steal the Falklands. This does not mean that the Harrier is a leading edge fighter. Argentina is not a first class military power. Its aircraft were adequate for strafing civilians but that was about it. We were proud of a British invention but the design compromises meant that performance was sacrificed. An honest assessment is at How The US Got Stuck With The World's Worst New Fighter.
Cameron gave them away in 2010, which is why our nice new aircraft carrier has no aircraft to carry. The Russians will see the funny side of that.
A DEAD STATESMAN
I could not dig: I dared not rob:
Therefore I lied to please the mob.
Now all my lies are proved untrue
And I must face the men I slew.
What tale shall serve me here among
Mine angry and defrauded young?
Kipling: EPITAPHS 1914
Rather my sister a whore than my brother a craphat...
Politically correct doesn't mean morally correct
From http://www.defencemanagement.com/news_story.asp?id=16612
15 June 2011
The Ministry of Defence has denied reports that Britain's Harrier
jump jets are to be sold to the US Marine Corps for spare parts.
A report in The Daily Telegraph suggested a £34m deal had already been
finalised, and a 'Ministry of Defence insider' quoted in the newspaper
said that selling Harriers to the US was "not a bad option in terms of
cooperation".
Britain's Harriers, as well as aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal, were
scrapped following last October's Strategic Defence and Security Review.
As a result of the scrapping, the UK will not have carrier strike
capability until the first of the Queen Elizabeth class aircraft
carriers come into service in 2019.
The US AV8B Harrier fleet's lifespan is being extended due to delays in
the production of its replacement, the Short Take-Off and Vertical
Landing (STOVL) variant of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter.
A Ministry of Defence spokesman said: "As decided in the SDSR, Harrier
aircraft will be disposed of through whatever means will get best
value-for-money for the UK taxpayer while ensuring appropriate future
use of the assets.
"Discussions about options for disposal are ongoing."
15
June 2011
Guess we could always lend-lease them back..... and pay 50 times their
value!
AW Employee -
Yeovil
15
June 2011
WOW,another 'scoop' by the Telegraph and it's regular source of
information 'A ministry of Defence insider'
Sad really to see what was once a relatively respected paper printing
these sort of stories week after week.
You expect this from the 'Sun' and the 'Mirror',now we are getting to
expect it from the 'Torygraph'. Sad.
michael - notts
15
June 2011
Michael, yes sadly the Telegraph is now a joke regarding defence
reporting.
Andy -
Colchester
15
June 2011
Does anyone remember when Defence correspondents had a former military
background??
For those politicians who don't know what thats about ... it's the
knock-on effect of miniaturising the Armed Forces!!!!
Norman - UK
16
June 2011
Sham that we got politicians (some jumped up middle aged guy who gots
lots of money and no idea and wants to rip the tax payer off)deciding
the fate of the British armed forces, why not let the miltary it self
choose what it going to cut, or why not just cut all the miltary might
as well, there all crazy
Tom -
Northampton
16
June 2011
I am old enough to remember when the Telegraph had Desmond Wettern
reporting for them on all matters concering the Navy,his reporting was
informed and did much to keep the RN in the public eye unlike our
present 'sea blind' governments.
Howard -
Farnborough,Hants,UK
16
June 2011
i work on the harriers and nothing has been confirmed as of yet
vstol - raf
cottesmore
16
June 2011
Selling them to america and then going to buy F35 Joint strike fighter
from america. What a joke!!
Adam - Jarrow
16
June 2011
From article: "... As a result of the (Harriers') scrapping, the UK will
not have carrier strike capability until the first of the Queen
Elizabeth class aircraft carriers come into service in 2019..."
In fact, the UK govt and the MoD have not defined in policy or planning
documents 'when' (IE: exactly what year) the UK's planned new aircraft
carriers are to enter service AND the UK govt and the MoD have not
defined by way of purchse agreements or policy decisions when, if at
all, fixed-wing aircraft will be purchased/acquired for either or both
of the undergoing construction new carriers:
http://www.cabinetoffice.gov.uk/resource-library/strategic-defence-and-security-review-securing-britain-age-uncertainty
-
contains links to UK's 2010 SDSR report + links to "Future Force 2020
Fact Sheets" #1- #21...
http://download.cabinetoffice.gov.uk/sdsr/factsheet6-royal-navy.pdf
(extremely vague)
http://www.cabinetoffice.gov.uk/sites/default/files/resources/Factsheet9-Carrier-Strike.pdf
(extremely vague and NOT impressive)
Many reputable reports state that the first of the UK's planned new
aircraft carriers will not be commissioned into service and provided
with fixed-wing aircraft until 2023 or later:
"Delayed aircraft carrier will lack jets for three years", 14_05-2011:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/may/13/delayed-aircraft-carrier-lack-jets
----------------
The May 18-2011 House of Commons' Defence Committee hearing testimony
indicated a severe inability of the UK MoD and Royal Navy to plan for
post 2014 due to the UK Treasury not committing any budget increases
2015- 2020...
At the hearing, testimony also indicated that the MoD is currently
planning to NOT re-generate the armed services' capabilities lost* due
to last autumn's SDSR-mandated cuts after 2015 because the Treasury has
currently committed to provide only flat-growth budgets to the MoD 2015-
2021:
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201012/cmselect/cmdfence/uc761-iv/uc76101.htm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/democracylive/hi/house_of_commons/newsid_9487000/9487619.stm
(video)-
32:48 - 34:50
http://news.bbc.co.uk/democracylive/hi/house_of_commons/newsid_9487000/9487619.stm
(video)-
46:40- 47:30 ;
The UK Treasury's alleged refusal to commit funding increases to the MoD
post 2014 contradicts principles that "Future Force 2020" is predicated
on...
'Future Force 2020' is the planning benchmarks connected to the 2010
Strategic Defence and Security Review (SDSR)...
--------------------
"Nato's internal strains worsen over Libya",, 15_06-2011:
- ft.com/cms/s/0/d9e40adc-9772-11e0-af13-00144feab49a.html#axzz1PMzkF7mB
:
"... Admiral Pierre-François Forissier, head of the French Navy, said
the aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle, now deployed off Libya, would be
'unable to play any operational role in 2012' if it was kept off Libya
until the end of the year..."
---------------
UK Aircraft Carrier Fix??:
The UK needs SEVERAL viable, technologically-up-to-date
defensive-systems-equipped and aircraft-launch-catapult equipped
aircraft carriers (including modern Conventional Take-off and Land
fixed-wing aircraft) NOW!!! not in 12 years...
With its stretched defence budget and severe fiscal and trade deficits,
the United States govt could welcome prospects of reducing its navy's
costs for a decade- by a trusted international partner with a
universally esteemed naval history in effect, subsidizing and
co-administering a small proportion of the US's international naval
presence and duties:
Towards this objective- why couldn't the UK "volunteer" to (at least
partially) fund and provide the bulk of the manpower required for the
operations of one of the US's newer Nimitz class supercarriers 2011
until 2022 or later???....
If a temporary induction to the Royal Navy of a Nimitz class
supercarrier occurred, this would- in the immediate term- enable the RN
to re-generate and maintain naval fast-jet capabilities and to practise
legitimate 'aircraft carrier battle group' and Amphibious Assault
routines pre-2022: when the UK's currently undergoing simultaneous
re-design and construction 'big deck' aircraft carriers are due to be
completed and the aircraft designed to be deployed off them acquired...
Similarly, manning a Nimitz class supercarrier with a mixed-crew of US
and UK service personnel- including experienced US Commanders- could
work well and have many productive benefits for both countries...
And following this procedure would only significantly improve US Navy
and Royal Navy interoperability and collaboration generally 2011-
2030...
So, why set objectives so low (while self-flagellating the country) and
continue aiming for the not-clearly-defined-decade-down-the-road when
taking bold but financially careful steps now could have vastly better
outcomes both for the country's standing in the world and its long term
future??
----------------
The RN's capabilities were badly damaged and degraded under the previous
Labour govt...
The incredibly dangerous-to-UK-national-interests' state of affairs that
the current coalition govt inherited ought to be being urgently
rectified- not amplified!!!
Roderick V.
Louis - Vancouver, BC, Canada
17
June 2011
Roderick you must spend all day on the forums searching for snippits of
information.
Damn man open your door and take a walk around that stunning city of
yours!
James - GB
17
June 2011
Roderick V. Louis - Vancouver, BC, Canada
Can you stop cutting and pasting the same boring crap on different news
items and enter a proper discussion with people?
Rob - Telford
17
June 2011
why are museums & private collectors being denied the opportunity to buy
some?
Lee - Kettering
19
June 2011
"why are museums & private collectors being denied the opportunity to
buy some?
Lee - Kettering"
i'd love to have a harrier to show off to the neighbours on my front
lawn, haha!
Roderick V. Louis - Vancouver, BC, Canada.
I agree with everyone else here, give it a rest! The MOD will only be
able afford to operate one carrier in the end, never mind several!!
Andy
20
June 2011
I agree with everyone else here, give it a rest! The MOD will only be
able afford to operate one carrier in the end, never mind several!!
Andy
Don't know where that comes from. 1 Carrier is worse than useless to be
quite frank. It simple means you think you can prepare to act like you
have a CVBG but you can't really because you suffer from maintenence
loss, refit loss. Numerous other issues.
The MoD letting industries charge them £6 for 60p light bulbs, £102 for
£22 bolts, tens of pounds for ashtrays in the old Nimrods that were
basically Mr.Kippling holders and Political delays are what has made the
carrier expensive.
Short term delay in a build will only ever result in a long term
increase in cost by a considerable amount.
Quite frankly Britain CAN afford at least 2 carriers. Britain needs the
2 carriers for a varity of reasons. Still, political, diplomatic and
economic ignorance is costing this country high.
I'm finding it increasingly hard to understand how people can't see then
need for Power Project and Amphibious capability as well as standard
escort and patrol ability from the Royal Navy. Everyone seems oblivious
to how much this little tiny Island depends on trade that moves through
several destablised area. Or on the needs of other BRITISH nationals
throughout the world who don't happen to be on the UK where you can earn
£20,000 on benefits.
Quite frankly we need a good wake up call, a slap round the face would
do us the world of good in realising that all this "We don't need a
military, no one is interested in us" is rubbish. They might not be
interested in us but they would be very interested in the North Sea
Reserves, the Antartic territories, the potential Oil in the Falklands
not to mention the strategic choke points like Gibralter and our bases
in Cyprus.
Of course we should just give it all away and pay tribute to other
nations in the hope they decide not to cut us off....
Tell you what, people who think that can go away on holiday for 2 weeks,
leave your house unlocked and your bank cards on the table. If it's not
been stolen, your accounts aren't drained dry and your house isn't a
mess then I'll accept you may be right. Untill then I'll believe;
There are bad people in the world who would take everything I have...
Some of these bad people are powerful men who are interested in not what
I have, but what my country has. To stop these men I need to be able to
convince them that I can hit them hard enough I'm not worth their time.
Anthony -
Bristol, United KIngdom
21
June 2011
For those that maybe don't understand why we need 2 operational carriers
rather than 1, an analogy may be drawn using that common mode of
transport - the car.
Most of us have one because it is convenient to use for commuting,
shopping and leisure. Those of us with children probably used it on the
school run/social taxi etc. Occasionally, maintenance was needed - MoT,
service, tyres & exhaust etc. That resulted in a planned trip to a
garage to get said maintenance done. However, it resulted in some minor
inconvenience as you couldn't use the car during this time. Therefore an
alternative solution needed to be found. Public transport is an option
in town, less so in rural areas. Very difficult with the weekly shop.
Total pain if you lived any distance from work. Unplanned trips were
probably impossible to complete. Breakdowns (unplanned maintenance) are
a catastrophy, as no work-rounds can be planned.
Now apply those lessons to a major military platform (ship, aircraft,
armoured vehicle etc) and if you only have 1 to use, your mission
capability is lost while the platform is down for maintenance. More than
1 platform allows (limited) capability to be retained and training in a
non-operational environment.
AW Employee -
Yeovil
22
June 2011
This government knows the price of everything and the value of nothing.
In Defence terms its policies are quite mad.
It does not matter if this story is true, if the Harriers are not flying
from an RN carrier with FAA colours then something has gone seriously
wrong.
James - Army