Nah, a minehunter was enough for Norway.What has a Norwegian rock to do with this?? Do you mean that a German MTB/Gunboat ran ashore on the norwegian coast?
Nah, a minehunter was enough for Norway.What has a Norwegian rock to do with this?? Do you mean that a German MTB/Gunboat ran ashore on the norwegian coast?
Quoting myself there - Emden got the job. Left Wilhelmshaven on January 30th, planned to stay in OEF until end of June.There will be one frigate needed as replacement for Augsburg in CTF150, which i somewhat suspect will be Karlsruhe (F212). Would fit in anyway, being a Type 122 that would replace a Type 122. Either her, or Emden (F210), which would also be available.
Wow nice pics. The German Navy has better hang around in that region, since Germany has been scoring some impressive wins in tenders around the area recently (from the Meko 200 to the U209 to the still unclear contract with Angola).Some nice pics of the German Task Group (moored in Simons Town Naval Base) to participate in Exercise Good Hope III with South African forces, has been posted here...
http://saairforce.co.za/forum/viewforum.php?f=3
(The link won't work properly.. so follow it and then go to the thread on Exercise Good Hope III.)
"Good Hope" is a joint Luftwaffe/Marine exercise with their South-African counterparts, and by now a well-established series it seems.The German Navy has better hang around in that region
True, but after the potential Angolan deal for a Meko 200, let's not forget Nigeria... they really need new ships and their largest ship is a Meko 360 of the 1980s..."Good Hope" is a joint Luftwaffe/Marine exercise with their South-African counterparts, and by now a well-established series it seems.![]()
Beneficial for both sides, as the SAN and SAAF get some training, while Germany gets to train "conventional naval warfare", and test out systems (such as F124 software upgrades). And it's about the only opportunity for the German Airforce and Navy to do live-fire anti-ship missile exercises with airborne assets.
The other markets in the area are somewhat... complicated. In particular as there's little money to be had there.
Namibia and Mozambique both mostly get handed-down vessels from the SAN; Namibia's Navy also has some connections to Brazil, while Mozambique has more recently been bolstered by (free) US handdowns.
isn't the biggest problem with Nigirain MEKO 360 is that they can't afford to operate it [i rember reading about the difficulty of them getting it to Trafalgar 200 celebration's]True, but after the potential Angolan deal for a Meko 200, let's not forget Nigeria... they really need new ships and their largest ship is a Meko 360 of the 1980s...
cheers
True, but there's a lot of money from oil around and the democratic government is becoming stronger. With the lack of security in the oil-rich Delta region there is an urgent need to improve patrol capabilities.I could see Nigeria in the market for some cheap off-the-shelf large OPVHs to replace Aradu and those originally two Vosper Mk9 corvettes. Maybe the 450-ton Lürssen and 400-ton Combattante FACs too to some extent. All originally from the 70s, and pretty much inoperable.
Or rather: their entire combat force.
The vintage 1940's patrol ships that the USCG shafted them with 5 years ago probably won't make it more than a decade either.
And they really need some new light patrol/utility aircraft or helos for the Naval Air Arm.
Germany has only recently started to get into the OPV/coast guard market really. Angola would be the first significant sale in that regard for TKMS. I don't really see the money or capability to reliably operate frigates in Nigeria.
Interesting. If the Bundeswehr needs 8000 to 13500 lane metres, it could met that with 3-5 ships (as you say) similar to the Point class (2600 lane metres) - which were, after all, German-designed & mostly German-built - if the ownership, or RN-style PFI option, is taken.I've done a [small series of posts] on my blog covering a conference last October about the new "Basis See" strategy.
Parts 4 and 5 are probably the more interesting ones for the general public.