Ah, but AFV’s or arty aren’t the type of system that is going to be providing force protection against the type of threats we are now facing and the incoming we are receiving.
Whether there are basing rights or not, unless we park a DDG in Dubai harbour we have literally nothing to protect our own forces
against the threat they face, either at the low end or the high end.
We’ve been watching Group 3 drone strikes in Ukraine for longer than Marles etc have been in office and we STILL can’t do diddly squat about them…
Yes, it's unlikely we could deploy significant AD to AMAB today. More than one would think, especially at the cUAS level, but very little against IRBM or the like. We would either rely on allies or passive defence. I was protected under a reasonable dome of IAMD when I deployed last, with most provided by the US but us and allies also contributed. But I'd also point out, in this case, Tehran striking UAE is so stupid that it wouldn't feature on a planners likely events. Even assuming that we had 100% knowledge as to the time and location of US/Israel strikes, I'm not sure I could justify deploying eNASAM or cUAS beyond what was in theatre.
Now, will that change going forward? I'd be surprised if there wasn't a reasonable cUAS built in to almost every deployment. But I wouldn't expect automatic eNASAM deployment. I especially wouldn't see a MRGBAD or ABM unit deploy (they will be focused on Australia). I think we will still leverage (especially) US and allied air defence.
The Modern War Institute (West Point) has an
interesting article providing insight into the range of considerations for defending deployed personnel. With regard to the ADF in Al Minhad the following comment from the article is relevant:
"Despite all the expensive technology involved in defeating drone threats, some of the simplest and cheapest options—like sandbags and concrete—are still among the best protection measures. Bunkers remain an essential component to static defenses."
Passive protection reduces casualties by ~8x more than active defences in a reasonable sized strike against a target in the north with civilian population around. It can also cover more spaces. Obviously passive + active is better; but in the short-medium term its generally more cost effective to pursue passive. Of course, you should always use passive (because active hasn't got a 100% success rate), but I was surprised at the casualty difference.
Sober thinking when reflecting on RAAF Darwin and Tindal without IAMD or defensive structures of resilience. I can just see those exposed B52's at Tindal being big targets out in the open.
le sigh - yup. It's frustrating.
The frustrating bit is that you can link it straight to deterrence (which is hard enough for us to do in the first place). Lets say it takes 6 missiles to kill 75 Sqn. One hits between 4 hangars, one hit the fuel farm, then another two on the maintenance hangars or accommodation. That's not too bad - lets say a MAJ can authorise that (putting aside striking another nation etc).
Now, lets put a 2nd fuel farm in, spread each one out a bit (that's 2, maybe 4 missiles now). Add in bunkers for people and build some additional nodes (that's now 4 - 6 missiles) and a HAS for each aircraft (that's gone from 3 to 12 missiles). Now the strike has to be 22+ missiles. No MAJ can approve that - it has to be escalated, possibly to COL. Add in dispersed ops (75 Sqn operating from 3 locations), add in decoys and deceptions - you could be talking 60 odd missiles. That's a BRIG or MAJGEN call.
Now - they may shoot. And 60 missiles will kill 75 Sqn. But, we've injected delay into the decision cycle. For a MAJ to approve to a BRIG to approve may take 2 - 4 hours. Maybe even longer. With modern tempo, what can BLUEFOR do in that 'free' 4 hour window. 75 Sqn could strike a target, defend some strategic air, conduct a deception task to support allied operations - lots of things. All of which will influence that BRIG thinking process - maybe they can't afford to strike Tindal now.
Giving BLUEFOR 1 - 6 hours for a few million in peacetime? That's cheap. Do that across the north, across FBW and FBE and now instead of a 40 missile strike knocking out the ADF you need to commit 500 missiles - even the deepest magazines is going to blink at that escalation in need.
I know this is being looked at but where is the hurry up? Clearly a Integrated Air and Missile Defence capability solution will not be up prior to the Davidson window which leaves us very vulnerable and very reliant on our partners to defend our airspace, which is poor form IMO.
I can't think of anyone who doesn't acknowledge its importance. There are a number of structural delays with purchasing active defences and there are.... challenges... in convincing people dressed in blue and others who might look after estate of the importance of passive.
Also, in all seriousness, passive can cost a fair chunk. Bunkers for people are easy. HAS a little harder. Duplicating a fuel farm? Ooof. Duplicating, say, HMAS Coonawarra or RAAF Darwin? Double oof. So there are some practical challenges.
It’s also interesting to observe recent significant losses of naval assets whilst docked in port, both from subsurface and I’m guessing from air strikes.
The notion of safety whilst in port is demonstrably false.
/rant on. When you say that AUKUS Pillar 1 is the main pillar of your deterrence by denial strategy then it becomes the #1 target! Which isn't in the north!! /rant off
Yes. You are 100% right.
Look, I get that fighters are cool. But SSNs are hard to find (I think every Navy and Air Force agrees with that). So why would you strike some fighters that
might carry some GBU and (maybe in the future) an anti-ship weapon when you can kill SSN in the port and their logistics?
In my view, since the announcement of SSNs, HMAS Stirling is the priority ADF base requiring IAMD. No where in the north.