The Naval Review
Transcription
The Naval Review
• THE NAVAL REVIEW TO PROMOTE THE ADVANCEMENT AND SPREADING WITHIN THE SERVICE OF KNOWLEDGE RELEVANT TO THE HIGHER ASPECTS OF THE NAVAL PROFESSION. Founded in October, 1912, by the following officers, who had formed a Naval Society: Captain H. W. Richmond R.N. Commander K. G. B. Dewar R.N. Commander the Hon. R. A. R. Plunkett R.N. Lieutenant R. M. Bellairs R.N. Lieutenant T. Fisher R.N. Lieutenant H. G. Thursfield R.N. Captain E. W. Harding R.M.A. Admiral W. H. Henderson (Honorary Editor) It is only by the possession of a trained and developed mind that the fullest capacity can, as a rule, be obtained. There are, of course, exceptional individuals with rare natural gifts which make up for deficiencies. But such gifts are indeed rare. We are coming more and more to recognise that the best specialist can be produced only after a long training in general learning. The grasp of principle which makes detail easy can only come when innate capacity has been evoked and moulded by high training. Lord Haldane Issued quarterly for private circulation, in accordance with the Regulation printed herein, which should be carefully studied. Copyright under Act of 1911 All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage or retrieval system, without permission from the Editor in writing. Vol. 86 No.2 APRIL 1998 Contents Page EDITORIAL 99 ARTICLES: OXFORD STRATEGIC STUDIES GROUP: AN ADDRESS THE REQUIREMENT FOR A NATO LED FOLLOW ON FORCE IN BOSNIA HERZEGOVINA A NAVAL REVOLUTION? 101 106 110 'AN EMPTY BOX' - HOW ACCURATE IS JACQUES DELORS' ORIGINAL ASSESSMENT OF THE WESTERN EUROPEAN UNION? BOMBING BAGHDAD - A 'JUST WAR'? 114 118 MARITIME RULES OF ENGAGEMENT - A POSTWAR HISTORY OF THE BRITISH CHURCHILL AND THE NAVAL ASSAULT ON THE DARDANELLES - II 121 128 134 SWIMMING TO VICTORIOUS 140 AN INCIDENT IN THE FIRST COD WAR ... 142 143 145 146 147 150 153 154 EXPERIENCE - II LEADERS AND MANAGERS: CHALK AND CHEESE ... RADIO ASTRONOMY AND NAVAL GUNNERY: THE UNLIKELY ALLIANCE... THE VICTORIA AND CAMPERDOWNCOLLISION, 1893 FROM THE NAVAL REVIEW THIRTY YEARS AGO END OF AN ERA? MIDSHIPMEN JOIN THEIR FIRST SHIPS IN THE MED IN 1940 FORBIDDEN AREAS KIPLING AT SEA FOR THE ROYAL NAVY, ON THE PROSPECT OF LEAVING THE PAINTED HALL AND THE CHALK GALLERY AT GREENWICH PALACE, 1998 CORRESPONDENCE 156 157 SUEZ 40 YEARS ON - THE BEGINNING OF THE END OF BRITISH PRESTIGE IN THE EAST HMS CENTURION - THE MANAGEMENT OF FEAR - THE SINKING OF SS KHEDIVE ISMAIL SHIPS IN CONVOY - A LITTLE HISTORY - AFO 1/56 REVISITED - SUBJECTIVE ISSUES - A CONFUSING ISSUE - HELM OR WHEEL ORDERS - THE SHOVEWOOD - EARTHQUAKE RELIEF IN 1939 - POLARIS HISTORY REVIEWS-I 167 REVIEWS -II 179 NEW MEMBERS, OBITUARY AND ACCOUNTS 188 I Editorial vast extent. The contact number is 0181 312 6704, Fax 01813126533. Secondly, the Queen's House is mounting an exhibition commemorating the 300th Anniversary of the visit of Tsar Peter the Great to Britain, from 2 April to 27 September. He learned much about shipbuilding and navigation, and the British learnt a bit about Russian ways too. In addition to the Exhibition, there is a Conference from 9 to 11 July. Finally, the Open Museum at the NMM is running a course on the Victorian Navy on Tuesdays from 28 April to 16 June. An impressive list of speakers has been planned. Further information from Caroline Tilbrook on 0181372 6747. Thisissue April is the cruellest month ... members who know their Eliot, and their Editor, may think it surprising that it has taken 15 years to prise out that quotation. Well, it has happened now. This issue does seem always to generate an immensely varied crop of contributions, exceptionally difficult to summarise in an Editorial. If anyone is looking for a theme, therefore, they will look in vain I fear. We can instead, I am delighted to say, find a rich spread in both historical time and topic: from an authoritative statement of joint and maritime policy (both words carefully chosen) from the Deputy Commander of the Fleet through a reassessment of the Revolution in Military Affairs, interesting appraisals of Bosnian and Iraqi issues, the WEU factor, to Maritime Rules of Engagement ... certainly members may look for a read-across from each of those to the next. Finally, of the contemporary articles - and this is not to discount the value of the historical material that is also well represented - I hope members will not be daunted by the dense structure of 'Leaders and Managers'. I don't think Alston meant it to be easy reading, but he did mean it to be read. Fleet Air Arm Officers' Association Essay Prize To encourage a well informed debate upon the important contribution Naval Aviation has to make to the Defence of UK interests worldwide, including the promotion of the Nation's economic well-being through regional stability, the Fleet Air Arm Officers' Association has established an annual Essay Prize of £500 to the most significant entry. The topic for 1998 is to be focused on the important issue of the Carrier Replacement Programme and should be encompassed within the broad title Carrier 2000: A Consideration ofNaval Aviation in the Millennium. Entries of five to ten thousand words are invited from Serving Officers of the Royal Navy or Royal Marines, or Officers of any other Service who have served with the Fleet Air Arm. Essays should be submitted to Director Naval Historical Branch at 3-5, Great Scotland Yard, London SW1 2HW, marked 'FAAOA Essay Competition', to be received by 31 May 1998. A decision on the winner, assuming it is of sufficient merit, will be made by a panel of judges whose decision is final. Copyright of the winning entry will belong to the FAAOA who would expect to print it in professional journals as well as their own journal 'Fly Navy'. The Guinness Prize 1997 There was, almost inevitably, no embarras de richesse in candidates for the 1997 Guinness Prize (awarded for the best article by a member of the rank of Lieutenant or below) as there was in 1996. There was however a clear winner with an article of exceptionally high quality: Lieutenant George Franklin in 'Learning to Learn' displayed clarity of thought and ~xpression as well as ample research skills. Many congratulations then, and £150, to Lieutenant Franklin. 'lational Maritime Museum The Museum rates three paragraphs, albeit Jrief, this time. The first is the longest-term: the \1useum reminds users of its Picture Research ~oom, still in operation in spite of the extensive mgoing works. The collection, both of Jhotocopies of pictures in the NMM's Jossession and of original photographs, is of Binding service In the January issue the Secretary-Treasurer offered his services in arranging a binding 99 100 EDITORIAL service for members. Take-up on this has been slow so the notice is being repeated just this once. Anyone interested in getting their back copies bound, at a cost per volume of about £30, please contact the Secretary-Treasurer on 01243 782553 (preferably after 18(0), or Fax 01243 775285, or of course by post. General Meeting of The Naval Review will be held in the Gunroom at The Naval Club, 38 Hill Street, London WI at 1730 on Wednesday 27 May 1998. Members will be most welcome and need merely to identify themselves to the Club's receptionist on arrival. RICHARD HILL Annual General Meeting By courtesy of the Committee, the Annual Oxford Strategic Studies Group: An Address Introduction y subject tonight is Maritime Manoeuvre - or perhaps for reasons which should become clear, the maritime contribution to the manoeuvrist approach. Let me begin, if so well-informed an audience will forgive me, with some brief remarks on the changes that affect the international security context for this is, or certainly should be, the starting point. And my starting point is the changed strategic situation. When I was staff college commandant in 1988, I used to tell my students that the Soviet Union was about to collapse and we had better think about it; well now it has and we can all agree that life has changed and that change has removed the cold war lid from the international cauldron, disturbed the strategic symmetry of that era and ushered in a much greater use of the threat of force to coerce and a corresponding need to revert to force to back up diplomatic and peace support activity. It has, of course, been absolutely the norm to see the collapse of the Berlin Wall as ending a 40 year rift across Europe. But it has also marked the end of a rather longer period of strategic inertia. And in the case of Britain it was the first time in over 200 years that we were in a position to think about politicostrategic issues, freed from the immediate need to defend our own territory. Since 1793 our hands had been tied in this way first by the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, then by the gaining and garrisoning of an empire, and finally by two world wars and the alliance system ofthe cold war. In fact for almost 200 years the persistence of a major immediate threat on the continent of Europe has been, on and off, a recurrent and constant worry to defence planners. The recent shift has offered a strategic choice, and we have at last the opportunity to return to that enduring refrain which has always been an essential element of British military strategy, maritime power. But let me make it absolutely clear that when I say maritime power, I do not mean just naval power, but rather diplomatic, air, sea and land power deployed on and from the sea - the Full Joint Monty! M 101 Then there is the technological revolution. An exciting feature certainly, but it is a double edged sword too. For example: C4I advances by the wealthiest nations add huge capability but, through their cost, seriously threaten interoperability; cruise missile precision gives the west a dramatic coercion capability but technology has also given our adversaries the potential for· weapons of mass destruction, a capability against which it is expensive, for some nations too expensive, to defend. A third trend, New Ways of War, is largely the result of the first two. New ways of war have developed. Indeed, if I was totally politically correct I might not talk of war at all. The Gulf War was a good example ofjust how much things have changed: There was time to build up forces, develop political and military pressure, and choose the moment of attack. There were guaranteed and relatively secure points of entry. There was almost unlimited host nation support. And the sea lines of communications, on which so much depended particularly during the mounting phase, were unchallenged. But in the uncertainty of life, it would be very dangerous to use the Gulf War as our only template. For it could all be very different: Disputes can flare up and spread, often quicker than we can respond. Overflying rights cannot be guaranteed - and we have seen examples. For instance in March '97 when the RN's Ocean Wave deployment took on the flying role for Op Jural over Iraq, or during the current Iraqi crisis, when it is by no means clear that host nations will allow their bases to be used for all the purposes we might intend. Indeed the plain fact is that we cannot be certain in all circumstances of airfields, ports, and neighbouring states willing to give support. This is hardly surprising nor is it unreasonable. Different countries inevitably have different perspectives and interests. There is a considerable proliferation of 102 OXFORD STRATEGIC STUDIES GROUP: AN ADDRESS advanced weapons notably, from a mantlme perspective, the wide proliferation of conventional submarines. How different the Gulf War supply lines might have been if Gaddafi or some other difficult leader had had a couple of operational boats. Iran already has the missile and submarine capability to close off the Straits of Hormuz - what price sea lines of communications then? And how would we cope with a significant land based anti-ship missile capability if we could not attack it from the air because we could not get near enough? So, while the Gulf War was certainly a milestone in terms of international diplomatic and military co-operation there are dangers in seeing it as a paradigm of all future military activity. Nonetheless, looking as far ahead as we can see for, as Churchill remarked, it is unwise and difficult to look further, there are at least some constants. As a given, operations seem certain to be at some distance from the UK and probably to be coalition in character. They are likely to be expeditionary and focus on the littoral for this is overwhelmingly where people live and issues are decided. This means deployability and strategic lift and it means access to entry points. These operations will be to a large extent discretionary. Casualties will be politically difficult to accept. Operations may well be difficult to terminate and withdrawal may become as much, and as difficult, a part of our operational vocabulary as entry. It will be necessary to identify the points of maximum leverage, the fulcra of political influence which may be as much psychological as material. I could go on but I hope I have shown that, for military planners, we are a long way from the certainties and clearly drawn scenarios of the cold war and are dealing with a variety of pieces of string of quite indeterminate lengths, and, indeed, of unknown and untested elasticity. I think at this stage a definition of terms might be useful with regard to Manoeuvre and Manoeuvre Warfare. Manoeuvre is defined as force which comprises movement plus fire, or fire potential, to achieve advantage. Manoeuvre Warfare is defined as a style of warfare which seeks to collapse an enemy's cohesion and effectiveness through a series of rapid violent and unexpected actions that create a turbulent and rapidly deteriorating situation with which he cannot cope. I would claim that this changed military and political world is a world for which maritime power was designed. I have already said, and I want to repeat and underline that maritime power does not mean naval power in the narrow sense. It means the use of the sea - that wonderfully free route to almost anywhere to deliver sea, land and air power to the point of decision; to provide transport, mounting bases, airfields for all comers, store depots, barracks, fire support, refugee havens and even entertainment whenever it is needed, and to shelter and protect it, given the right equipment. It is a thoroughly joint contribution to a joint endeavour although I shall necessarily lean tonight on naval examples because that is what I know about. There will, I know, be those who will talk about its relatively low speed - and I hope that they will challenge me in the debate that follows this because there are issues worth exploring here. Of course not all operations will directly involve maritime forces. However a significant proportion are likely to be conducted around the periphery of land masses, where centres of population, resources, industrial production, political control and trade are concentrated, and where crises involving British interests may occur. Effective operations in these 'littoral' areas, which straddle the boundary between land and sea, are potentially of crucial importance either as the scene of an operation itself or as the focus for deploying and sustaining forces deeper inland. Maritime, land and air forces have different but complementary attributes. For example: the sustained reach, forward presence, mobility and leverage of maritime forces; land force capacity for shock action, protection and the ability to take and hold ground; and air power's ubiquity, speed, responsiveness and reach. As an element of joint operations, use of the sea offers unique access, in terms of OXFORD STRATEGIC STUDIES GROUP: AN ADDRESS movement, concentration of fire-power, surprise or overt presence, to gain an advantageous position. Maritime forces can be used to deter an aggressor by deploying into a region at an early stage, at virtually no risk and if necessary, in considerable strength; they can then apply packages of mixed land air or sea force against key targets, if appropriate, to prevent or impede a potential aggressor from using force, with limited danger of major escalation. In other words as well as supporting operations on shore, maritime power can stop crises ever happening or nip them in the bud. In sum, I believe the sea is for us a preeminent medium because, above all, it provides that fundamental element - the ace in the pack - Access. By history, tradition and skill we are better placed, certainly than any other European nation to exploit this medium and to develop a theory of Manoeuvre Warfare based on the joint use of the sea - a theory which is rooted in traditional virtues yet highly relevant to and congruent with modern needs, well-established in doctrine and providing as much strategic choice and operational flexibility as is likely to be achievable. Let me refer to it as a composite joint projection capability and set out to describe its components and explain its application. What we are talking about is a balanced, versatile force to confront a range of scenarios. It needs lift, combat power, sustainability, flexibility and the minimum possible dependence on outside help. It must integrate and exploit joint assets, 'co-operate' with other, perhaps unfamiliar, partners. It must be deployable not simply transportable. How about these things as a basis: Real Time Forward Intelligence. Deployable air power tailored to the operation. Surgical Strike of the type afforded by Cruise Missiles. Land forces able to secure entry without necessarily having access to ports or airfields. Attack Helicopters. Fire Support. Protection and sustainability, including 103 care of casualties. Special Forces. Strategic C4ISR suitable for a commander of any cloth, as appropriate for the operation. All of these things are already available to us in UK and able to deploy across the maritime space to wherever we need them. If I had listed instead: Aircraft Carriers with tailored Air Groups (including of course RAF and Army aircraft). Submarines and TLAMs for both intelligence and stealth. An amphibious capability followed up by armoured land forces. Fleet fuel and heavy store auxiliaries and ROCONS. Air defences, ASW & MCM assets. Organic helicopters. Gunfire and Offensive Air Support. The huge C4I power of the JFHQ (Afloat), you would properly have accused me of promoting the RN. But I am not. I am listing those elements of naval capability which can contribute to the joint manoeuvre and projection force to bring about the resolution of a problem on land where it must necessarily be resolved. The point is, you see, carriers, command platforms, amphibious and logistic capabilities are a service I, as an Admiral, offer to whichever commander and force elements need to use them. And how will they be used? The modern operating space is most likely to be a joint operating area (lOA), and on many occasions as we have already seen will be a three dimensional area spanning sea and land - the Littoral. The actual conduct of the likely sort of operation within this space will generally require four phases - Defining the JOA, Shaping the JOA, exploiting the JOA and subsequent operations (which ~ay range from developing large scale force, through peace enforcement or peace keeping to termination whether successfully or under unfavourable conditions). I mention this last because there tends to be an assumption these days that our military operations will necessarily be 104 OXFORD STRATEGIC STUDIES GROUP: AN ADDRESS successful. This is a very risky assumption and the problem of force extraction under attack is a very demanding one in which you may have to rely solely on your own assets that you have brought with you, and can control. The key feature of all these phases is to bring and apply the right tool to the right task in the right place at the right time. Experience has shown us that tools are often most usefully applied if applied early, which is why we have always aimed to deploy our ships widely rather than keep them at home - it is not an accident but usually planned that ships are so often in an area of interest, ready to make their impact at a time and precise point of political choice. Indeed, the freedom of the seas, freedom for use, freedom from boundaries and frontiers is why the sea is so valuable an arena for joint force manoeuvre. And here perhaps I should remind you of a fourth dimension to the joint picture - the political dimension. For once manoeuvre begins and we have to consider graduated application of force, the political process absolutely must go hand in glove with the military process. I hope that I have created a picture of a theory of manoeuvre, based on the use of the sea as a free and open medium of deployment, designed to bring a carefully co-ordinated joint force package under the command of the most appropriate commander into a position to apply a precisely targeted military lever in the manner best designed to achieve the desired political aim. Let me now be a little more concrete about some of the detailed military features of this package. I want to outline now just four things - Adaptive Force Packages, Platform to Objective Manoeuvre, Precision Attack and Sea Basing. In many respects, Adaptive Force Packages, that is force packages tailored to the task in hand, are an obvious idea. What is perhaps less obvious up to now is the full joint flavour of these. There has, for example been a tendency to regard aircraft carriers as naval units, purveying Naval aircraft almost in competition with the Air Force. This is nonsense. Of course, aircraft are best operated from properly equipped land bases but these are not always available. So we must learn to see aircraft carriers as joint airfields operated by the Navy for all three services and, hopefully, other nations. This may allow us to produce force packages which are not only militarily tailored and integrated but politically tailored and integrated too. The UKlNL Amphibious Force is another example of the latter. One could go on on this theme but I hope the point is clear. Now let me tum to Platform to Objective Manoeuvre. This is where the shaping and exploiting phases of a campaign really start. The important feature here is to understand that this phase really must be three dimensional if it is to have the pace and power to overwhelm the opposition's command, control and will - shades of Liddell-Hart perhaps. Anyone who tells you that amphibious assault or parachute vertical desant are the only way to conduct entry operations is living in the past. We have to develop a joint three dimensional approach to this subject though from a maritime perspective you will at once see the key role of both tailored Carrier Air Groups and Amphibious Forces and perhaps I should mention the revival of raiding as a manoeuvre option. The same general thought colours my view on Precision Attack which is also a truly three dimensional business. Indeed we particularly need to remember the fourth (political) dimension here because it is an area in which the key political needs of minimum casualties to our own side, minimum collateral damage to the other side and maximum use of the appropriate fulcrum are vitally important. Thus, whilst raiding parties, special forces or more thoroughly constituted land forces may be appropriate, so too very often will be the precision of long range sea based (and therefore relatively invulnerable) cruise missiles, smart artillery and, of course, aircraft. In this latter context it is worth remarking on the great amount of work we, the RN, and the RAF have put in to developing the operation of RAF ground attack GR7s from our aircraft carriers recently demonstrated in Bosnia and, as we speak, deployed in the Gulf. This really is the way ahead. Finally, before attempting a brief summary, OXFORD STRATEGIC STUDIES GROUP: AN ADDRESS I want to mention the four dimensional virtues of Sea Basing. I think I have said enough to convey my firm belief that sea platforms are flexible joint assets, which provide ideal vehicles for area services, weapons and resources of all sorts, most importantly in the area of logistics and sustainability, all of it .well adapted for its prime purpose of facilitating and supporting land operations in pursuit of political ends. But Sea Basing has other advantages too. Crucially, from a political (and of course practical) point of view, it allows the projection of force to be carried out with a very small land footprint, reducing financial and diplomatic cost and concentrating and easing the protection problem; any of you who witnessed the problems of the deployment of 24 Air Mobile Brigade to Bosnia as a theatre reserve in the summer of 1995 will recognise the value of this. It allows, too, the exercise of Joint Force Command from offshore unless and until it is more sensible to move ashore; the digitisation of the battle space may make this even more valuable. It allows the maintenance in theatre and convenient re-supply of all the impedimenta that make up logistic sustainability. And lastly it allows considerable in-theatre tactical mobility (manoeuvrability in terms of this talk) - up to 400 km a day along a coast providing opportunities for tactical surprise and exploitation. A powerful hand indeed. Let me now attempt a summary, although I fear that in some areas I have skimmed the surface. I have tried to proceed from an, admittedly, somewhat swift description of the way the politico-military world currently is, via a smuggled assumption that we in Britain can and should playa significant military role in the management of the world, to some thoughts about what that means for the planning and use of military force where that is an appropriate instrument. I am suggesting 105 that, in these new circumstances, a theory of the use of military force based principally upon the principles of Joint Adaptive Force Packages and the philosophy of Manoeuvre Warfare is appropriate. I have argued, and believe as strongly as I can say, that this use of force must be four dimensional, integrating air, land, sea and political aims and tools. And I have suggested that all of this enhances the traditional worth of maritime assets flexibility, low political risk, access, reach, mobility and sustainability allowing maritime power to be employed across the range of crisis and political activity, and conferring the ability to give an almost infinite range of signals. I have proposed a view of maritime force as being, above all, joint and one in which the naval assets are to a large degree the servants of purposes which frequently, not always, but frequently will be finally executed on shore and by land forces. But I hope also to have persuaded you that Maritime Manoeuvre, the maritime contribution to this venture, offers a more sensitive application of force or influence, enabling intervention at a time and place of political choice, and an opportunity to exploit joint assets in a more manageable risk environment. Importantly the assets available to us today by and large allow this approach to be adopted - and incremental improvement, which is both technically easily feasible and, given clear thinking, financially affordable will enhance the effect. Perhaps I might close by remembering Lord Grey's 1912 remark that 'the British army should be a projectile to be fired by the British navy' and suggesting that today he might say something more like 'air and land power are precision munitions to be launched from the sea.' J. J. BLACKHAM VICE ADMIRAL The Requirement for a NATO led follow on force in Bosnia Herzegovina Introduction HEN the Stabilisation Force (SFOR) took over the responsibility for military operations in Bosnia Herzegovina (BiH) on 20 December 1996 United Nations Security Council Resolution (UNSCR) 1088 mandated that all NATO-led forces would be withdrawn from BiH by 20 June 1998. These forces would then subsequently be withdrawn from Croatia and redeployed and reassigned. At the time that SFOR was sanctioned, there was optimism that an 18 month mandate would suffice in achieving the end state of selfsustaining peace in the country. This was premised on the successes of its predecessor, the Implementation Force (IFOR), in halting the fighting between the Former Warring Factions (FWF). It was determined that a force approximately half the size of IFOR could continue to provide the safe and secure environment required for the International Organisations (10) to conduct their work in establishing democracy to the country and facilitating the return of the hundreds of thousands of displaced persons, refugees and evacuees (DPRE), who had been displaced as a result of the conflict. Although significant progress has been made in BiH, sadly the conditions for a complete withdrawal of NATO-led forces are not prevalent and therefore the requirement for a Follow on Force (FOF) to take over post 20 June 1998, is considered mandatory. This paper aims to highlight the significant events of SFOR's tenure to date and determine unequivocally the necessity for a FOF. W SFOR evolution SFOR comprises approximately 32,000 troops based in BiH and an additional 3,000 in Croatia made up of troops from the various services of over 35 nations. Up to 24 nonNATO nations provide approximately 18% of the troop strength which is indicative of the world's commitment to the problem in BiH. A total of 27 ground manoeuvre battalions are based in BiH and are distributed throughout the territory of the three Multi-National Divisions (MND). These divisions oversee a third of the tOountry each and are commanded by the framework nations, UK, US, France and Germany. These combat battalions are supported by effective air power and strong, mobile reserves which are based both inside BiH and outside the theatre, predominantly in Italy. The reserves comprise the Operational Reserve which is an air mobile reserve based in BiH and exercised regularly, capable of providing reinforcement to any of the three MND sectors quickly and the Strategic Reserve (six battalion equivalents) based around a US Marine Expeditionary Unit which is available at 4-17 days notice. This element of the reserve is exercised regularly and the next major exercise, Dynamic Response 98, will take place in theatre from 25 March -7 April 1998 and involve 1,500 troops from six troop contributing nations. Thus, SFOR provides a credible force of sufficient strength to enforce the military aspects of the General Framework Agreement for Peace (GFAP). This document was the product of the Bosnia Proximity Peace Talks held at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio from 1-20 November 1995, under the auspices of the Contact Group. It was subsequently signed in Paris on 14 December 1995 and defines those measures that the Parties, the Republic of Bosnia Herzegovina, the Republic of Croatia and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, agreed to in order to reach a peaceful settlement of the conflict. Annex lA of the GFAP deals with the military aspects of the settlement and is the authority for SFOR to conduct its business in the country in carrying out the specific tasks listed. Military achievements SFOR's primary task of enforcing the cessation of hostilities has been accomplished superbly and BiH remains at peace with the risk of any military confrontation between SFOR and Entity Armed Forces (EAF) very unlikely. The EAF have been substantially compliant with the requirements of Annex lA of GFAP and this has resulted in the 106 REQUIREMENT FOR NATO LED FOLLOW ON FORCE IN BOSNIA HERZEGOVINA establishment of a safe and secure environment. All EAF heavy weapons remain strictly controlled in cantonment sites which are regularly inspected by the MNDs. The MNDs approve, monitor, and report on all movements and training conducted by the EAF and on average, SFOR monitors over 750 distinct activities each month. SFOR also maintains a visible presence throughout BiB and especially along the 1,400 km Zone of Separation which separates the Republika Srpska (RS) from the Federation through patrols (150 per day on average) and the establishment of temporary checkpoints. In essence, no military activity can be conducted without SFOR's approval and any attempt to bypass this authorisation process or deviate from the agreed activity is met with severe penalty. SFOR has also provided significant and often crucial support to civilian tasks while maintaining a secure environment and achieving its military tasks. In particular, SFOR has been instrumental in supporting a significant nationwide police restructuring programme and, since August 1997, has extended its authority over the specialist police forces (paramilitary police) in BiH by treating them as forces subject to the provisions ofGFAP Annex lA. This has led to the disbanding of all specialist police and the confiscation of their weapons. SFOR has contributed to promoting freedom of movement by repairing war damaged transport networks which is fundamental to the re-integration of the population. Throughout 1996 and 1997, IFOR and SFOR have been instrumental in assisting in the re-opening of the railway network in BiH. Additionally, 2,566 km of theatre roads have been maintained by SFOR engineers with NATO funds totalling $22.7 million. Additionally, IFOR and SFOR have installed or repaired 64 bridges. Civilian control of the airspace and airports in BiB has been progressing and the Federal Aviation Authority (FAA) has completed initial inspections of Banja Luka, Mostar, Sarajevo, and Tuzla airports and all but Tuzla are now open to civilian traffic. The military de-mining campaign has 107 developed a significant, operationally effective and productive capability during 1997. Even during the winter the SFOR Commander directed that training and reequipping the EAFs should be conducted when the weather precluded actual de-mining, so that the campaign could resume at full strength in the spring of this year. This policy also strengthened the relation between demining and training/movement and obliged the entities to produce detailed plans for counter-mining operations for 1997 against priorities laid down by SFOR. Statistics illustrate the success of this policy. More than 20,000 mines were removed and destroyed from marked mined areas and an additional 1,100 unexploded objects have been removed. However, when these successes are put into perspective, the sheer enormity of the problem becomes clear. These 20,000 mines represent approximately 5% of known mines and it is estimated by the United Nations Mine Action Centre (UNMAC) that only 50% of the total number of minefields are documented. Civil implementation The long-term success of the NATO-led military effort depends significantly on the achievement of the complex civilian tasks carried out, under the co-ordination of the High Representative (HR), by the many international agencies and non-governmental organisations working in BiH. The mandate of the HR is to oversee the implementation of the civil aspects of the GFAP which include the establishment of political and constitutional institutions, economic reconstruction, the promotion of human rights and the encouragement of the return of DPREs. SFOR has established close links with the five principal lOs (Office of the High Representative (OHR), Organisation for Cooperation and Security in Europe (OSCE), United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), International Police Task Force (IPTF) and United Nations Mission in BiH (UNMBiH» and of particular note has been SFOR's well-coordinated and executed support to the OSCE during the BiH Municipal Elections, 13-14 September 1997. This accomplished one of the most significant 108 REQUIREMENT FOR NATO LED FOLLOW ON FORCE IN BOSNIA HERZEGOVINA steps for promoting democracy in BiH. The RS Parliamentary Elections held on 22-23 November 1997 were conducted in a free and fair manner, and the seven types of elections scheduled for next September will mark another step in propelling democratisation forward. Arms Control has been another notable success with over 6,500 heavy weapons being neutralised. Co-operation between the OSCE and SFOR has ensured that the Entities' arms reductions as stipulated in the Florence Agreement, met the ceilings stipulated. A major cause of the war in BiH was irresponsible nationalist media and the persistence of this approach led to OHR requesting the assistance of SFOR in taking control of the RS radio transmitters in October 1997 and preventing the broadcast of inflammatory and biased reporting. The transmitters will be returned once the RS agrees to restructure its radio and TV organisation and create a democratic and nonprejudicial media. The main responsibility for carrying out the civil tasks lies with the BiH authorities; however, continuing concerted pressure by the International Community (IC) is necessary to sustain momentum in the peace process. The Sintra and the Bonn Peace Implementation Council Meetings have given new impetus to civil implementation of the GFAP and applied additional pressure on the Parties to move towards compliance. However, peace and the institutions of civil society to uphold it, remain fragile. The war has left a legacy of bitterness and distrust and this has manifested itself in extremely slow progress. Areas of particular concern and which need impetus are the lack of functioning governmental and administrative structures, the protection of human rights, police reform and the rule of law, a proper economic strategy to include the fight against corruption and revenue evasion, and to complete successfully the return of DPREs. Approximately 150,000 refugees and 160,000 internally displaced persons have returned, representing about 15% of the overall total. Almost all have resettled in areas of ethnic majority. The return of refugees and DPREs to minority areas, together with the freedom of movement to do so, have not been achieved to an appreciable degree and remain a major stumbling block to progress. Within BiH, citizenship is not legally defined and there is still no common flag, passport or currency despite continual encouragement, from the HR. Most recently, the HR has used his powers to enforce a solution where stalemate persists, but this approach only highlights the continued intransigence between the Parties. There are no public corporations and the full normalisation of BiH's relations with its immediate neighbours has not taken place. The police are still sometimes used to obstruct the implementation.f.)f election results, do not deal effectively with politically or ethnically motivated crimes, are responsible for documented cases of abuse of persons in custody and more generally, are not sufficiently obliged by the political leadership to advance the goals of the Peace Agreement. The requirement to bring persons indicted for war crimes (PIFWC) to face trial at the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) remains paramount. Although the Croats, under considerable pressure, have recently handed over most of the Bosnian Croat PIFWCs, this issue will continue to cause problems, with the parties reluctant or refusing to co-operate willingly with the IC in the investigation and arrest of suspected criminals within their own communities. The complete failure of the RS and the FRY to carry out this obligation is indicative of their reluctance to comply. Economic growth While there is some progress in the reconstruction of infrastructure throughout BiH, most projects are still directed at the Federation because of its willingness to comply with the Peace Agreement. Except for some limited areas such as telecommunications, the status of reconstruction in the RS is substantially behind due to its intransigence and flagrant unwillingness to pursue the goals of Dayton. Economic disparity between the Federation and the RS is a serious issue. The estimated 1997 Gross Domestic Product (GDP) for the Federation is over 2~ times that of the RS. The average REQUIREMENT FOR NATO LED FOLLOW ON FORCE IN BOSNIA HERZEGOVINA monthly wage for a Federation worker is DM 270 versus DM 85 for a worker in the RS. Throughout BiH, substantial work remains, with housing and education system reconstruction being of particular importance to long-term stability. The way ahead IFOR and SFOR have been the greatest single contributor to subregional security since the signing of the Peace Agreement. NATO's plans to consider options for a multinational FOF to SFOR post June 1998 have been welcomed by the IC, for without this force, it is assessed that the fragile peace would be broken and the civil war would resume shortly thereafter. Such a force must be capable of providing deterrence as well as supporting civil implementation efforts. In addition, this FOF must be stationed inside BiH in order to demonstrate resolve, support the lOs, and provide for a quick response to any crisis. The mere presence of a disciplined, capable, and professional force, backed by clear political guidance, will deter EAF aggression. It is also imperative that the force be mission, vice time dependent, for it iG.-evident that many stalling tactics have been employed in the past by the nationalist politicians in the knowledge that the SFOR mandate expires in June and that the international resolve will wane. To realise military efficiency and to demonstrate international resolve, a FOF must be built on a core of NATO troops allowing for non-NATO contingents to be incorporated. A continued Russian contribution would greatly assist in military and political crisis management, and is therefore considered essential. While SFOR is smaller than IFOR, it actually assumed more diverse tasks and became more closely integrated with civil implementation. The primary military task of preventing the Entities from resuming hostilities remains; however, with most GFAP military tasks accomplished, SFOR has been able to devote more resources to supporting tasks. This is clearly the way ahead as SFOR 109 is now able to offer more support to civil implementation due to the reduced risk of direct military confrontation and a closer relationship with civil organisations. SFOR's continuing support will allow the lOs and NGOs to maintain the momentum of economic recovery to spur investment, wider employment opportunities and inspire DPRE returns. In order to sustain this momentum, SFOR must continue with what has been its key to success: an overwhelmingly deterrent force with clarity of mission and purpose, robust rules of engagement, and strong, unambiguous political support. Conclusion The long-term success of the NATO-led military efforts depends also on the achievement of the complex civilian tasks carried out, under the co-ordination of the HR, by the many international agencies and nongovernmental organisations working in BiH. The SFOR contributing nations need to consider, on an urgent basis, how best to build on the progress achieved so far and how to accelerate both the pace and scope of implementation. In most tasks, the commitment and responsibility of BiH leaders must be emphasised, and they must be held accountable for their actions. There are also areas in which international efforts can be improved and this has been highlighted by the preparedness of the HR to use his powers to resolve issues which cannot be resolved by the Parties themselves within the specified time periods laid down in the Peace Implementation Council meetings. The IC has made major investments of time, money and people to end the conflict and to begin the rebuilding. Shifting emphasis and resources from military to civilian tasks will be very cost-effective for the longer term, and will provide a solid basis for successful conclusion of the military mission inside the country. S. M. BRAND COMMANDER, RN .. A Naval Revolution? ANY readers will be aware that much post-Cold War military literature concerns the 'Revolution in Military Affairs' (RMA), especially in the United States. New information-based technologies are alleged to be ready to transform the character of war, bestowing unchallenged military superiority on the only state able fully to exploit the new information-based systems - the USA, and to a lesser extent its principal allies. Near-perfect situational awareness and ever-more surgically-precise weaponry will allow the West to intervene wherever it chooses, virtually cost-free, as during the Gulf War. Other views are less sanguine, mindful of the limitations of complete technological superiority in Vietnam and Somalia, to name just two. Most definitions of an RMA begin with the application of new technologies to produce new operational concepts, with accompanying organisational change. The result is a fundamentally altered nature of warfare.' Where significant technological innovation simply leads to existing tasks being performed more efficiently, or in different ways, the term 'Military-Technical Revolution' is coined, implying less profound change in the overall character of war. Whichever may be at hand, it has considerable implications for the future nature of the naval profession. In some important respects, the current RMA has its origins at sea. It was a American sailor, Admiral Owens, who coined the phrase 'System of Systems" to describe a new era of warfare, in which new information technologies transform the nature of conflict. Precision, Stealth and Information, the widelyaccepted hallmarks of the RMA, have long been staple elements of operations at sea. Yet if such concepts actually are not new, just how 'revolutionary' is the application of new technology to the maritime environment? As in the other warfare environments, we need to assess the RMA at sea on two levels: Firstly, how radically different are the new information-based and other systems entering service now and in the future? Secondly, what does this mean for the future nature of warfare at sea? Conversely, we should also ask, if naval M operations are to be very different in the future, to what extent is this attributable to new technologies? All innovations, technological or not, can be two-edged swords. It may be trite to say that change is as much a challenge as an opportunity, or indeed vice versa, but it is nonetheless true. This is especially so as potential opponents may adapt just as much as we do. Getting the right perspective on the RMA at sea is important, not as a subject of endless academic fascination, but because if the nature of war at sea is changing fundamentally, we need to understand how much, in what ways and for what reasons. In this way we can ensure that whether technological or doctrinal imperatives are forcing the pace, the other is adapted to keep pace. RMAs are not new to mariner:~. About 150 years ago, warfare at sea had not changed dramatically for over three centuries. Since then, weapons technology has advanced more than in all of Man's previous experience at sea. Despite a continuous process of change, we can identify four particularly intensive phases of development, two largely technologypushed (the mid-nineteenth century industrial revolution, and the innovations of the 1960s), and two mainly operationally-driven (both world wars). By the 1880s iron (later steel) hulls, steam propulsion and breech-loading guns truly had transformed the nature of war at sea, though Mahan in particular was still able to identity unchanging fundamentals. The First World War saw mines, torpedoes, submarines, wireless, and, tentatively, aircraft, making naval warfare multi-dimensional for the first time. World War Two brought the maturing of sensor technology radar and sonar, and of carrier aviation, and saw the demise, after five centuries, of the big gun-armed warship. The period of the 1960s is instructive, not least because it is largely overlooked in studies of the relationship between war and technology, perhaps because there were relatively few comparable breakthroughs in land warfare. Nuclear weapons, nuclear propulsion, jet aircraft, guided missiles, 'smart' torpedoes and mines, 3D radar, and 110 A NAVAL REVOLUTION? perhaps most significant in view of the current information-based RMA debate, electronic warfare, computerised combat systems and related data links, all appeared or matured in roughly the period 1955-1967. Equally important was the assumption by navies of a strategic bombing role (by means of submarine-launched ballistic missiles), previously the prerogative of air forces. If a fifth 'spurt' of technological and therefore tactical development at sea is now upon us, what form does it take? Is it simply a 'military-technical revolution' (as arguably the 1960s were), or is it more profound? A recent series of wargames conducted by the USN, to investigate the implications ofthe RMA for the Navy, came to mixed conclusions. 3 Escalating costs, reducing budgets, equipment lead-times, so-called 'sunk decisions' (ie alreadydetermined givens), and existing force structures (over three-quarters of naval units in service in 2010 are already in commission or under construction)', all mean that much is predictable for' the next 30 years or more. Equally, the types and significance of new technologies have been so widely studied and discussed, that the principal features of a putative military-technical revolution are known (though we should always be wary of nasty surprises). Most, though by no means all, of the new systems are information-based. The extent to which they stem from commercially-derived technologies has been often commented upon. Most previous innovations this century have originated from military requirements, but this has not always been so - steel and steam were not developed with naval applications primarily in mind. The greatest changes foreseen in naval warfare today are focused on computing power and new communications networks, leading to 'Third Wave Warfare', or Information Warfare (IW). Much of IW is not unique to the maritime environment, but the US Navy in particular does have its own implementation programmes. One is Copernicus, a plan to collate and fuse allsource information ashore, providing specially-tailored information packages to units afloat. It is an architecture rather than a discrete system - it cannot be seen or touched, 111 but exemplifies what Admiral Owens has in mind with his 'system of systems'. This and other concepts provide for wide-area surveillance and real-time data transmission and fusion, leading to 'dominant battlespace knowledge', which in tum permits, amongst other things, 'precision massed fires'. The fog of war will be, if not eliminated, at least dissipated.' We should not over-state the changed role of information at sea, however, as elsewhere. Fundamentally, the role of information has not changed. It has always, if translated into real knowledge, been a prime need for the warfighter. New technologies and, importantly, related concepts, simply allow existing jobs to be done more efficiently and effectively. Notwithstanding the still somewhat futuristic claims of I-War proponents, we have not yet done away with the need to deliver ordnance on target, and suggestions that one day we will be able to do so should, for some time at least, be treated with considerable scepticism. There is also doubt as to the real significance of the greatly increased availability of information at all levels of command. Does more information increase 'battlespace awareness', or simply swamp the decision-maker? Does it allow greater delegation of authority in 'flatter' command structures, or concentrate decisionmaking in ever-fewer, ever-more senior hands? There are other technological developments to note, in the fields of weapons and sensors. Supersonic, stealthy, manoeuvring cruise missiles with multi-mode seekers, hypersonic (Mach 8 plus) missiles, directed energy weapons (lasers), and rail guns are the naval weapons of the future. Advanced hull forms such as Surface-Effect Ships and Trimarans, submarines with non-nuclear Air Independent Propulsion (AlP), Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), and 'Stealth' designs incorporating substantial signature reduction measures, are all developments coming to fruition. Other growth areas include non-acoustic submarine detection, increasing use of satellite surveillance, positioning and communications, computer-based decision aids, infra-red surveillance and tracking and more advanced radars. Of particular note is the American 112 A NAVAL REVOLUTION? Cooperative Engagement Capability (CEC). CEC is driven by the twin requirements to defend against current and future advanced anti-ship missiles, and provide sea-based theatre ballistic missile defence. It provides 'sensor-netting' such that all participating units have, in theory, identical tactical pictures, indeed the same tactical picture, with all source information of a quality as if it were the unit's own, and exchanged by horizon-range microwave links. This complete 'sensor-to-shooter' connectivity is achieved through the sharing of unfiltered sensor measurement data, rather than the processed track information characteristic of existing data links. The longstanding problem of 'dual-tracking' is to be replaced by the positive advantages of 'composite tracking'. Such an ability certainly represents a significant advance over existing coordinated but not integrated individual electronic combat and weapon systems, but nonetheless is part of a constant process of evolution, that began with the first non-real time data links, video links and Over-theHorizon targeting methods. It is claimed that concepts like CEC will produce a shift away from 'platform-centric' warfare towards 'network-centric' warfare. 6 The idea that individual ships are merely part of a larger, composite whole, however, would be familiar to eighteenth century admirals, as well as to the principal commanders at Jutland, and notwithstanding the Nelsonian interlude in between.' Elements of CEC will also provide new levels of integration with airborne and land-based systems like AWACS and PATRIOT, though to some extent this integration is more novel to the USN than some others, the RN in particular. In passing we should note a real concern on the part of America's allies. The ability to participate effectively in alliance or coalition operations increasingly depends on having connectivity with the dominant partner - the United States. This is especially so at sea, where genuinely multi-national forces do operate together at much lower levels than elsewhere. No other nation can afford to 'buyinto' the RMA on anything like the same scale. The ability to operate alongside American forces is not a new priority, however. And several factors combine to keep the problem manageable. Connectivity with US systems is essential, but not necessarily having all the same sensor and weapon capabilities. Connectivity is aided by the increasing use of 'open architecture' systems adhering to common protocols, many of them commercially-derived. The Americans themselves are, for political and economic reasons, giving a much higher priority to ensuring technical and operational compatibility with allies, than they ever did during the Cold War. So while connectivity with technologically advanced Americans cannot be taken for granted, it is neither a new problem nor an insurmountable one. Not all innovations at sea are technological. A dramatically-changed strategic environment, as well as the development of new technological systems, has already brought about 'revolutionary' new operational doctrines. Indeed, some commentators have suggested that the true RMA is a doctrinal one.' This is so because, for the first time this century, the United states Navy and its maritime allies have no 'peer competitor' to dispute control of the oceans. Even during the era of 'Pax Britannica' last century, the Royal Navy was faced from the l860s on by a succession of naval rivals, principally France, Russia and Germany. The demise of the Soviet Union has removed any conceivable challenge to Western naval supremacy. The Mahanian ideal of Command of the Sea has been achieved by the West, almost by default, though we should not overlook the role of Cold War naval competition in Communism's decline. Suddenly, navies have to address the exploitation, rather than the winning, of Command of the Sea. Or at least that is so on the open oceans. Western Command, or its lesser brother Control, of the seas is a good deal less secure in the littoral regions, and it is precisely in the littorals that they are to operate. This is so because, with no-one around to dispute the high seas, navies can concentrate on exercising significant, even decisive influence over events ashore, which as Sir Julian Corbett reminded us, is where great issues between nations are decided.' The move into the littorals (other peoples' coastal areas) ANAVAL REVOLUTION? is exemplified by Forward Naval Presence, seeking to have an early, decisive and direct effect on events ashore, through various forms of Power Projection. However, in these coastal regions an increasing number of states are able to dispute intervening powers control of the littoral, and western navies face the conflicting requirements of close-in Presence and standoff precision engagement (enabled by many of the new systems). Going in 'harm's way' in other states' local environments challenges the ability of US forces to achieve 'Information Superiority', 'Dominant Manoeuvre', 'Precision Engagement' and 'Full Dimensional Force Protection', all buzz-words from Joint Vision 2010, the United States' latest conceptual template. 1O • Despite concerns about the extent to which Western control of the oceans can be exploited in the littorals, the profoundly altered nature of naval operations should not be under-rated. We must also recognise the inter-relationship of technological and strategic change in the new maritime environment. Technology enables navies to perform many of the new missions required by the new political landscape, and conversely, doctrinal changes and innovative operational concepts are also 'pushed' by the availability of new systems. Though the doctrinal adaptation required to translate technological innovation into real change is stressed by almost every writer on the subject, rather fewer recognise that an RMA need not have a technological origin at all. This may, however, be precisely the situation today. New systems are certainly enabling navies to do new things, principally by extending their reach, and also to do old things more effectively, mainly through better use of information. But many of the current and future technological changes are more evolutionary than revolutionary, and so too, therefore, is their effect on naval operations. As ever, the effect of technological change can also be a two-way street, and where not, is often offset by asymmetrical styles of warfighting (in other words, doctrines) that can do much to negate the advantages of new systems. Moreover, asymmetries of warfighting may be more than just those of style and method. In post-Cold War interventions by 113 western powers, their own interests may be at stake, but hardly the survival of their country or regime, as it was during the Cold War. For local states, the objects of such interventions, the stakes may be a good deal higher. With more at stake, our adversaries are likely to show less restraint, and therefore more fully to exploit more limited means. True change in the nature of war at sea may therefore be more 'demand-pulled' than 'supply (or technology)-pushed'. That is, the altered strategic environment may have far more to do with the new style of maritime operations, than availability of new hardware. The dressing-up of long-established principles of warfighting in new conceptual jargon should not obscure the fact that real change has occurred. Information and manoeuvre are nothing new, and nor is their importance. True change at sea lies in unchallenged supremacy and its exploitation, however partial its practical application. J. R. STOCKER LIEUT. CDR RNR References 'See Colin S. Gray 'The Changing Nature of Warfare?' in Naval War College Review Newport, RI: Spring 1996 p.9 'Joseph S. Nye and William A. Owens 'America's Information Edge' in Foreign Affairs Vol.75 No.2 MarchiApril 1996. 'See Captain E. A. Smith USN The Navy RMA War Games Series: April 1995-November 1996' in Naval War College Review Vol. L No.4 Autumn 1997. 'ibid p.20. 'See Captain James Stavridis The Second Revolution' in Joint Force Quarterly No.8 Spring 1997. 'See Stacey Evers 'US Navy seeks fast track to revolution' in Jane's Defence Weekly 26 November 1997. 'See Andrew Gordon The Rules of the Game: Jutland and British Naval Command (London: John Murray, 1996). "See for example Jan Breemer 'The End of Naval Strategy: Revolutionary Change and the Future of American Naval Power' in Peter T. Haydon and Ann L. Griffiths (eds) Maritime Security and Conflict Resolution at Sea in the Post-Cold War Era (Halifax NS: Dalhousie University, 1994). 9Julian S. Corbett, Some Principles of Maritime Strategy: Originally published 1911, edited by Eric Grove (Brassey's: London, 1988) p.16. "See Admiral Jay L. Johnson 'The Navy in 2010: A Joint Vision' in Joint Force Quarterly No. 14 (Washington DC: Winter 1996-7). 'An Empty Box' - How Accurate is Jacques Delors' Original Assessment of the Western European Union? T HE Western European Union (WEU) has been the focus of much attention since its rise from obscurity in 1984 as part of an attempt to strengthen the European pillar of the transatlantic alliance.' This article will analyse the events, both political and military, that have led the WEU to where it is now, and will aim to pinpoint the position it holds within the critical triumvirate of NATO, EU and US viewpoints. It will then argue that, far from being an 'empty box', the WEU, by embracing and then fully utilising the Combined Joint Task Force (CJTF) concept, may well hold the key to the conundrum of disparate defence and security aims within Europe and across the transatlantic divide and thereby become the acceptable, independent continuation lock between the EU, NATO and the US. In 1988 the WEU invoked Art. VIII(3) of the Modified Brussels Treaty for the first time following the Iran-Iraq war. However it was Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in 1990 that had the effect of driving the WEU to become, in an informal way, the security arm of the then EC'. The link between the WEU and the EC intensified during the period of Desert Shield and Storm when, in an attempt to demonstrate European solidarity as a significant player in the Gulf, the Foreign Ministers adopted a form of shuttle diplomacy between the WEU and EU forums.' These events provided the catalyst for the formalisation of the expanding links between the WEU and the EC with the Foreign and Defence ministers agreeing in February 1991 that the WEU, in principle, should become a bridge between NATO and the EC<. At the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London a month later Jacques Delors, in his first ever speech on security policy, called on the EC to 'shoulder its share of the political and military responsibilities of our old nations". He went on to say that he wanted the WEU to have its own multilateral forces and to come under the EC's wing. This statement sparked much debate and was a view with far from universal agreement during the series of Intergovernmental Conferences (IGCs) held during the remainder of 1991 which culminated in the NATO Summit in November and Maastricht in December. The NATO summit delivered a crucial endorsement of the move towards an integrated European defence policy when it formally supported the initiation and development of a European 'Security Identity'. In the debate the following month at Maastricht the WEU was awarded a 'stronger operational role'·, although this has to be caveated by the fact that there was still disagreement on the crucial issue of whether the CFSP should be established with common defence as an integral part of the union, or whether the WEU should remain an independent organisation. This rhetoric at the end of 1991 was perhaps best opined by the Economist when it summarised that 'the Maastricht wording [on collective security and defence 1 will offend no one; it will convince no one either". Having looked at the background to the second stage of WEU revitalisation post the Gulf War it is necessary to analyse how far the June '97 Amsterdam IGC took forward the development of the WEU. The Summit resulted in a crucial re-wording of the Treaty of the Union with regard to the relationship of the EU to the WEU. Maastricht stated 'the Union requests the WEU, which is an integral part of the development of the union, to elaborate and implement decisions and actions of the Union which have defence implications." At Amsterdam the wording was changed to 'the Union will avail itself of the WEU to elaborate and ... '9. To examine the significance of both the change of words from 'request' to 'avail itself' when describing the relationship between the WEU and the EU, and to attempt to rationalise the reasoning behind the deletion of the prescriptive definition of the role the WEU 114 'AN EMPTY BOX' was to have had within the EU, it is necessary to go to 1995 and examine the member states' views and, pivotally, the views then held by the US. In February 1995 the Prime Minister, John Major, spoke out strongly in an address before a special session of the WEU in London against 'encumbering the Union with military responsibilities' and argued that it would do nothing to enhance the EU's political and economic influence in regional security issues 10. The British view, shared by others, was that the WEU should act either as a 'bridge' between the EU and NATO or as a 'wholly owned subsidiary of both'. However during this debate the Achilles heel of the WEU, its lack of political machinery and military equipment to be able to mount operations and deploy forces quickly, was uppermost in all politicians' and military planners' minds. The answer was delivered in a report by the WEU Council to its Assembly in March 1995 when it said 'the strengthening of the WEU's operational role depends ... on NATO's elaboration of the Combined Joint Task Force (CJTF) concept'll. The degree to which the CJTF concept of a deployable, multinational, multiservice formation generated and tailored for specific military operations would be embraced would be dictated in general by NATO and in particular by the US. Also, since it would depend on potentially huge commitments of US resources to Europe or European derived interests, public opinion in the US would be critical. Barbara Conry, foreign policy analyst at the Cato Institute in Washington, argued that the WEU, as the 'security arm of the European Union', should replace NATO as the prime guarantor of European Security. Her argument was based on the perception that whilst Europe has at its heart many common security interests, in contrast the views of the US and Europe were steadily diverging 12 • Happily for Europe and the WEU, Conry's views were not shared by the Clinton Administration as, far from wanting to pull back from their commitments to NATO, they wanted to embrace Europe and allow it, with US support, to continue to strive for a united, peaceful Europe. Having held up the relative 115 success of the IFOR forces in Bosnia as an example of what NATO could achieve, the US believed that the lessons learnt could be applied to make the alliance more effective and flexible in the conduct of post-Cold War operations. They envisaged that these changes would be centred around the CJTF concept which would allow for greater flexibility in the deployment of NATO forces and assets involving different mixes of contributing nations. A formal declaration of intent, political and military, was made by the US Secretary of Defence, William J. Perry, in a speech to the WEU Transatlantic Forum in June 1996 when he said '... [the] CJTF will permit such things as operations led by the WEU using NATO assets, and it will allow the European members to strengthen their new security and defence identity' 13. So could the WEU be effective with the crutch of the CJTF and could it mount an effective operation? The Economist noted that any CJTF-Ied operation, with elements of the alliance's HQ structure matched to those troops involved, could be run by the WEU 'should the Americans choose not to join' the relevant task force l4 . The distinction is important. It has to be accepted that US support forces would be involved in any large scale or out-of-area operation due to the inevitable requirement for strategic lift, intelligence and communications facilities that only they could provide. As soon as any substantial front line forces were involved it is highly unlikely that anything other than a NATO command structure, with direct US involvement, would be acceptable to the Americans. The realistic, although somewhat cynical, view was that in private the US would continue to play down the theme of Europeanisation and argue that there was unlikely to be a security crisis in Europe that they would not want to be involved in, and therefore there would be little need for a WEU-led force. The French view that since it had taken some time to involve the US in Bosnia, then perhaps there may well be an occasion when Europe would be left alone, may also have had some validity at the time l5 . So back to 1997 which would be a repeat of 1991 with dual summits of the EU and NATO .~~~~~~~~~------------------------------- 116 'AN EMPTY BOX' in June and July respectively. The Amsterdam Summit resulted in a political agreement on the future role of the WEU within Europe. The carefully crafted statement allowed for differing conclusions to be drawn by the member states, with the Telegraph headlining 'Tony Blair last night claimed victory in his battle to prevent the EU being turned into a military alliance' .16 It commented that as Blair had also claimed to have ruled out any commitment for a merger between the WEU and EU the foundations for a European Army, pressed for by France and Germany, would not be laid. So was Blair's view signalling the end of the WEU dream? Tim Butcher, the Defence Correspondent in the Telegraph, thought not. Also commenting on the day after the Amsterdam Summit 17 he agreed that Blair's opposition to the WEU was clear, but only in terms of it (the WEU) being put forward as a predominant force to NATO. However the overall message from the detractors, principally the UK but supported by Denmark and the four EU neutral states, and commentators post Amsterdam was clear; the WEU was not, and could not be, a substitute for NATO, but it could and should be complementary. The following month the NATO summit met in Madrid and whilst fully aware of the revised EU position on the WEU, they were also clear about the manner in which the US had laid out its stall with regard to loaning NATO forces to a WEU-sponsored, CJTF-Ied, operation. It was therefore not surprising that the Madrid Declaration reflected what had been signalled earlier in the year by the US Secretary of Defence when it declared 'We reaffirm . .. our full support for the development of the ESDI by making available NATO assets and capabilities for WEU operations. With this in mind, the Alliance is building ESDI grounded on solid military principles and supported by appropriate military planning and permitting the creation of militarily coherent and effective forces capable of operating under the political control and strategic direction of the WEU. We endorse the decisions . .. in this regard which serve the interests of the alliance as well as of the WEU'''. This unequivocal endorsement of the use of WEU-Ied NATO forces was coupled to a directive to continue with further development of the CJTF concept which went so far as to note that WEU-Ied CJTF's could allow for the possible participation of non-NATO forces as part of the development of ESDP'. So what of the future of the WEU? It is clear that NATO is forging ahead with both the CJTF and a willingness to encourage and embrace the ESDI which includes the provision for the WEU. The position of the Europeans is perhaps harder to define. Britain, as the strongest proponent against the formation or adoption of a European Defence force, argues for maintaining the status quo with the WEU remaining as an autonomous organisation but cannot argue against the concept of its operating as an alternative to NATO, albeit with full NATO support both politically and militarily, in an agreed fashion at an agreed time. This appears, post Amsterdam, to be the agreed EU line. In so far as the WEU is concerned, the hook on which a workable and acceptable NATO-WEU link can be hung and maintained is of course the CJTF. With such a ringing endorsement by NATO in Madrid and, crucially, the support that the US has given, it would take a volteface of monumental proportions to prevent the further development of a CJTF structure that would enable a WEU-led, NATO-supported, operation being mounted in the future. Finally, the long-term position of the US has to be considered. There is no doubt that the Americans are fully supportive in the open arena of the development of ESDI, and are keen to see the CJTF con~pt put into effect with the WEU leading forces including NATO units. However, it is also clear that there is not unilateral support for NATO and NATO operations beyond the shores of the continental US. It is not unrealistic to surmise that the development of the WEU as an organisation that could lead NATO forces with limited US forces, and perhaps no frontline US assets at all, could satisfy the US electorate that their 'boys' were not going to be drawn into a future European security crisis. The WEU has come a long way since 1984 'AN EMPTY BOX' and, whilst it may not have developed exactly as Jacques Delors envisaged, it now holds a key position at the heart of tpe NATO, EU and US triumvirate. The reasons are not just military, and certainly not just driven by the imperatives of European Defence and Security but does it matter? It has the support of the EU in its current form as they can avail themselves of it when required; it satisfies individual national considerations and it is backed by NATO and the US. Despite the somewhat machiavellian manner in which it has evolved the WEU has an assured future and, far from being an empty box, it has the potential to be both effective in its own right and to ensure a continuing hard link between Europe, NATO and the US. R. C. R. WELLESLEY COMMANDER, RN References 'Gates, D. (1995): 'The UN and Europe's Security Institutions: Dashed Expectations?', The Strategic and Combat Studies Institute Occasional No. 14. 'Duke, S. (1996): The Second Death (or the Second Coming?) of the WEU', Journal of Common Market Studies Vol. 34, No.2, June 1996. 'Salmon, T. (1992): Testing Times for European Political Co-operation: The Gulf and Yugoslavia, 117 1990-2', International Affairs, Vol 68, No.2. 'Duke, S. (1996), n.2. 'Grant, C. (1994): 'Delors, Inside the House that Jacques Built' (Nicholas Brealey Publishing). 'Gates, D. (1995), n.!. 'Economist (1991) 'Europe's Dutch Treat', 14 December. "Maastricht Treaty Art J 4.2 (My italics). 'Amsterdam Treaty Art J 7.3 (My italics). "'Smith, Sir Dudley, President of the WEU Assembly in 'UK Argues for WEU to Remain Autonomous' Aviation Week and Space Technology (AWS) Vol 144 Iss 11, 11 March 1996. "WEU Doc 1458 (1995) The Future of European Security and Preparations for Maastricht II. "Conry, B., 'The Western European Union as NATO's Successor', Cato Institute Policy Analysis No. 239, 18 September 1995. www.cato.orglpubs/pas/pa-239.htm. "Perry; William J., US Sec of Defence: Speech 'Second Chance to Build a Whole Europe' delivered to WEU Transatlantic Forum, Washington, 25 June 1996. www.defenselink.mil: 80. "Economist (1996), 'NATO acquires a European identity' 8 June 1996. "Economist 8 June 1996. "Helm, T & Lockwood, C. 'Blair heads off European Army' The Daily Telegraph, 17 June1997. "Butcher, T. 'EU forces lack the clout to take on NATO's role' The Daily Telegraph, 18 June 1997. '"Art. 18, Madrid Declaration on Euro-Atlantic Security and Co-operation - issued by Heads of State and Government at the meeting of the North Atlantic Council in Madrid, 8 July 1997. "'Art. 17, Madrid Declaration, 8 July 1997. Bombing Baghdad - a 'Just War'? HE Gulf crisis over United Nations' time without causing disproportionate harm.' inspectors carrying out inspections in In much of the debate I would suggest that Saddam Hussein's palaces appears to be over some at least have been guilty of muddled and a bombing campaign averted - at least for thinking. In particular I believe that there has the present. As a member of the Church of been muddle concerning the legal and moral England I was interested by the arguments issues as to whether Iraq might be attacked. offered by church leaders as to whether the The legal and moral issues are separate but country would have been right to have carried have been identified with one another in some out an attack on Iraq. A statement by the quarters. Much Christian thinking about the Bishop of Oxford, an expert in the ethics of warfare, suggested that subjecting the legitimacy of war uses the Just War criteria. potential conflict to the Just War criteria These, indeed, were used by the Bishop of resulted in no clear conclusion being reached. Oxford and the Archbishop of York. These He concluded, 'I have spoken to military criteria are a historical set of criteria by which experts, strategic experts and others. No one any potential conflict can be judged. The feels at all certain about which is the right, that criteria began with Saint Augustine and have is, the least destructive course of action.' In subsequently been refined by Aquinas and his speech in the House of Lords he was bold other figures up to the present day. They state enough to admit that governments 'may be in that a war is just where (i) it is undertaken by possession of facts unknown to the rest of us a legitimate authority; (ii) it is undertaken for and indeed there may be an actual policy that a just cause; (iii) it is undertaken as a last is different from the declared one. For these resort; (iv) there is a formal declaration of war; reasons a certain reticence from church (v) those engaging in the war must have a leaders is appropriate at this stage.' In his reasonable hope of success; (vi) the evil and speech in the House of Lords, however, he damage which the war entails must be judged shifted his position a little by agreeing that in to be proportionate to the injury it is designed the end of the day military strikes could not be to avert; (vii) non-combatants must be ruled out as an ethical option. immune from attack; and (viii) the methods of Then the Archbishop of York set out very war must not result in disproportionate harm clearly in the Yorkshire Evening Press the for any of the populations involved, or for problems that would have been involved third parties. whatever the decision taken. Surveying many Cardinal Hume's letter suggested that there of the issues and dilemmas in a similar fashion might be disproportionate harm caused to the to the Bishop of Oxford, he concluded that Iraqi population. There was also the 'there are no easy options or answers in this suggestion that the military objective itself present crisis.' He did imply, however, that in was unclear. If the objective was to destroy the end of the day a bombardment could be Saddam Hussein's arsenal of chemical and seen as a moral option. Oxford and York biological weapons then this is an objective seemed very close. which was unlikely to have been achieved. From the opposite side of the globe the Chemical and biological stockpiles are simply Archbishop of Melbourne urged his too mobile. If, however, recognising this fact, government to reconsider its decision to send the aim were to have been to destroy as much troops to support the American intervention. of that arsenal as possible but also to inflict He clearly saw any attack on Iraq as wrong. such damage on the Iraqi military machine On the Roman Catholic side Cardinal Basil that the delivery of such weapons would have Hume wrote to the Prime Minister saying, 'I been seriously weakened then such an must confess to having strong doubts about objective might have been achievable. The whether it is possible to identify a specific military planners and politicians would have military objective which stands a good chance had to have made a pragmatic judgment based of being secured by the use of force at this upon available intelligence. Whether the T 118 BOMBING BAGHDAD - A 'JUST WAR'? achievement of such an objective would have involved 'disproportionate harm' would again be a matter for the politicians and military planners. Most of us, including Cardinal Hume, do not have the necessary facts. For our discussion on the morality of a bombing campaign it could be argued that the relevant criteria could have been met. The more difficult question is to decide whether, in the words of the Just War criteria, the bombardment would have been for a 'just cause.' Certainly Saddam' s arsenal sounds horrific. According to the United Nations Iraq may have as much as 200 tons of the VX chemical, enough to kill everyone on earth according to the US Defence Secretary, William Cohen. 1 It is also suggested that Saddam Hussein may have stocks of botulinum toxin and bacterium clostridium. Robin Cook, the British Foreign Secretary, said in the House of Commons debate that 'the volume on which Saddam hopes to produce such weapons is on such an irrational scale that it leaves frightening questions over his intentions. ' I believe that with regard to the possession of chemical and biological weapons that the United Kingdom and the United States had the law on their side. The 1991 cease fire resolution required Saddam Hussein to make a disclosure within 15 days of all Iraq's nuclear, chemical and biological weapons and their capacity to deliver them. The maintenance of the cease fire depended on that condition being met. Intelligence provided by Lieutenant General Hussein Kamil, Saddam Hussein's son in law, indicated that that condition had not been met. It was he who provided the information which pointed to concealment of biological and chemical weapons in Saddam's presidential palaces. Legally, therefore, the cease fire became ineffective. As such one could rightly argue that the bombing campaign was legal. However, I would argue that the cease fire resolution itself, when it was originally formulated, did not envisage a situation some seven years down the line when the war might be restarted. I would suggest that a war ought only to be restarted following the agreement of the United Nations Security Council. In the 119 debates in both the British House of Commons and the House of Lords it was said that we should not allow the authority of the United Nations to be flouted. That is correct but I would suggest again that at this stage of the proceedings an attack on Iraq should only have been begun where the United Nations Security Council had itself officially called for such action. The statement put out by the Bishop of Oxford did say that the legitimate authority for prosecuting a war in this instance was that of the United Nations. That being the case I believe that he denied his own premise when he declared that military strikes could be seen as a moral option according to the Just War criteria. It is all right saying that the authority of the United Nations should not be flouted; but how would it have looked if the United Nations themselves had not sanctioned a bombardment? It would have meant that one half of the Security Council would have been doing something with which the other half disagreed. I would therefore agree with Lord Owen when he said that 'it would be far, far preferable if we can get unanimity among the United Nations Security Council and a resolution authorising the use of force'. The Foreign Secretary himself seemed at one point to agree with Lord Owen when he said that 'there should be a further Security Council resolution to demonstrate to Saddam Hussein and the rest of the world that any action that is taken by the US and the UK is action that has the support of international consensus.' Mr Cook could have been in the unenviable position of ordering an attack on Iraq having failed to have obtained the Security Council's agreement. Mr Cook wanted the moral authority as well as the legal authority but might have been forced to act with the backing of legal authority only. Gerald Kaufman, in his speech in the House of Commons debate, suggested that clearance from the UN would have been 'laudable', but not necessary. I suggest that such clearance would have been necessary for any bombardment to have been just. In the Gulf War of 1991-2 a coalition of thirty nations joined forces against Saddam Hussein. In the latest stand off only the United 120 BOMBING BAGHDAD - A 'JUST WAR'? States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and New Zealand were willing to attack Iraq. And on purely pragmatic grounds would a war that set much of the west against nearly all of the Arab nations have been a good course of action? And what if Middle Eastern terrorist organisations and the state of Israel had come into the frame? Saddam Hussein has backed down on this occasion. I believe it may not be too long before he puts the United Nations to the test again. This time it will be Britain's job to ensure that wide ranging support is forthcoming from within the United Nations before any military action is initiated. Going it alone, or nearly alone, might be legally justifiable but it would not be morally correct. And the purely practical consequences of failing to gain such support could be disastrous. One final observation: what emerges from this short paper, and very clearly from the Archbishop of York's article and the statements by the Bishop of Oxford, is that the Just War criteria alone offer only limited guidance in helping us to decide whether a war is just. There are many pragmatic consequences to be weighed and decisions to be taken, often based on political judgment and military intelligence. The Just War criteria alone are unable to determine the morality of a conflict in such a complex situation.' DAVID G. KIBBLE LIEUT. CDR, RNR References 'Army Quarterly and Defence Journal, 128, 1998, p.109. The journal also reports that the key workers in Iraq's biological weapons effort were educated in the UK and that UN weapons inspectors suspect that Iraq may have conducted tests of biological weapons on prisoners captured in the Iraq-Iran war. 2 Cf also David G. Kibble, 'A Theology for the Nuclear Debate,' Churchman, 99,1985. Maritime Rules of Engagement - a Postwar History of the British Experience - II Further developments - from the Falklands to the Gulf The Falklands Conjlict y the end of the 1960s rules of engagement were laid down in national publicati;ns on tactical and fighting instructions, based on the experience to date which was updated during the 1970s, not least as a consequence of the so called fish wars off the coast of Iceland, though these were based more on stopping and riding off Icelandic gunboats than on warfighting. By the time of the invasion of the Falkland Islands in 1982 the UK had reached the stage of combining all the rules for land, sea and air operations into a single national joint warfare publication available for all three services which had been extant for three years. At this stage the first ever edition of NATO maritime rules had been in force a mere two and a half years and there was no question that any other than UK national rules would be used for the operation, even though they were tailored to a confrontation with the Warsaw Pact and certainly not to a sea train stretching 12,000 miles. It also became evident that different rules were needed for a. the Total Exclusion Zone, b. the approaches to the Total Exclusion Zone and c. the area around Ascension Island, particularly as it was considered most important not to precipitate hostilities in any way. It was therefore decided to take the national joint warfare publication rules but amend them by special prefixes and suffixes, looking at specific rules for specific operations. 12 special rules, with one other subsequently added on, were drawn up for submarine operations which were significantly different from those that had been envisaged against the Soviet Union. Of course it is easy to write national rules for a single operation and the experience of the Falklands indicated that it was probably better to re-write or adjust the rules so that they are tailored to the particular operation, although this does not obviate the need for flexibility. The definition of a hostile act, for example, is reasonably easy to specify and understand, but B the interpretation of hostile intent is fraught with difficulty. On the other hand international operations are more likely to need a library of rules contained in a more specific standard reference book, given the differences in the various national approaches. It is worth mentioning in passing that the perceived need by NATO to write special ROE for the' Adriatic operation SHARP GUARD, which was in fact carried out by a Royal Navy captain using all the residual British experience on the subject, reflects much of the authoritative thought on this aspect of the matter which considers that it is better to rewrite rules for particular operations. The special isolated position ofthe Falkland Islands and South Georgia did indeed facilitate the rule of engagement problem in that there were unlikely to be any other nationalities in the area, but this did not apply to the route of the transit to the area through the South Atlantic and the force had considerable problems with reconnaissance aircraft. At one time the Task Force Commander even expressed a wish to shoot down the shadower in 'flagrant defiance of my own Rules of Engagement, perhaps to save ships and lives in my own force'. He then asked for a change in rules and to his surprise received approval subject to the aircraft being within a specific range and positive identification. After several passes outside the range an aircraft came heading straight for the force next day. With missile systems locked on and about to fire, a final check revealed that the aircraft was on a direct line running from Rio de Janeiro to Durban and positive identification by a Sea Harrier revealed a Brazilian civil airliner, the consequences of the shooting down of which, could have had such a reaction that it might have caused the operation to be abandoned in the face of world hostility and horror,' Such are the problems of ROE in the period before hostilities and they take one back to the classic argument between hostile intent and act. 121 • 122 MARITIME RULES OF ENGAGEMENT - A POSTWAR HISTORY - II Admiral Woodward goes into great detail in discussing the considerable problems of the commander of a major force in interpreting ROE in this interim period before hostilities are joined and, what is more, ensuring that all his commanders had a similar outlook to his on interpreting them. The difficulty of reconciling the politicians' aim for the British to be seen as not being the instigator of hostilities and the commander's very real fear that he could not afford to lose a carrier is covered in graphic detail. However once he reached the vicinity of the total exclusion zone with the freedom to engage any Argentine targets in it, many of his problems disappeared and he had a much more straightforward approach. As Admiral Woodward put it on his passage down south, in considering a response to one commanding officer who was champing at the bit and eager to push ahead of the force and take early action, 'I shall have to amplify the ROE so that all the Commanding Officers can know what I am thinking rather than apply their own interpretations.' 10 One of his commanding officers, Commander Chris Craig, later himself to be the commander of a Royal Navy wartime task force, this time in the Gulf Conflict, testifies to the efficacy of this principle in that, as a consequence of regular contact with the commanding officers over secure speech, none had any doubt as to his intentions and also all were put on their mettle by snap unexpected questions which tested out the potential response within the ROE. By the time Commander Craig came into action in mid-May he felt that he had unambiguous and very robust ROE which allowed him to conduct a highly successful night engagement under the principle that he only required belief that the contact he engaged was involved in clandestine operations. Thus he opened fire at six miles, sank the target at four miles and it was never seen. The lesson he drew from his experience was the importance of initial homework by constructing and anticipating scenarios." While there was a balanced sense of restraint, there was also the strong feeling that one must not be a catalyst for disaster and must not take the first hit. The self defence clause overriding all other rules was seen as a most helpful escape avenue should one prove necessary. The one really difficult problem was to change the rules of engagement to allow an attack to be carried out on the cruiser Belgrano outside the total exclusion zone before contact with her was lost and this was complicated by the fact that the submarines were being controlled from the UK and not by the Task Force Commander. 12 Lessons learnt In the subsequent analysis of the operation, in spite of the single nation scenario, it was considered that the ROE in use were too elaborate and there was a feeling that political control was getting in the way of warfighting. By the end of the 1980s it was decided that the rules should be rewritten and geared around three key elements. In the first place they had to be revised to avoid their containing a mixture of prohibitions and permissions, which one expert described as a deadly combination because eventually they will come into conflict. Permissions should go into the operation order because they are missions, whereas limitations should be contained in the ROE and in some ways this bears a resemblance to the French approach to the subject which will be briefly explained in the summary. The second key element was that one had to determine the political aim out of three choices, de-escalation, preserving the status quo or escalation (these are known as political objectives) and, finally, once this was established it is most important to have sufficient forces to be able to enforce the given ROE. This last point is not well understood by politicians, and experts in the military see the period from the Falklands War to the Gulf Conflict as a ten year education process for the politicians in the United Kingdom. Closely aligned with the determination of the political aim is the principle used by UK forces of adopting what is called a profile of operations which in practice means that the force is allocated a group of rules to conform with the desired profile and aim of the force concerned. This does not mean that changes cannot be made as circumstances change, but it provides an initial suite of complementary rules designed to meet the aims of the operation. MARITIME RULES OF ENGAGEMENT - A POSTWAR HISTORY - II North Atlantic exercises There was another field which contributed to the British development of thought in this area and this was in the Atlantic Strike Fleet, of which a Royal Navy force formed a significant part in the form of the Second Carrier Strike Group, later to become the ASW Strike Force. During the mid-1980s when Admiral Mustin was COMSTRIKFLTLANT and Admiral Oswald was COMASWSTRIKFOR the dialogue between the two national afloat commanders was particularly good. It was to this force that ROE would most likely be pertinent and the relatively recent publication of NATO ROE in 1979 gave the subject an impetus that was eagerly taken up by the two nations whose own national policies were well ahead of the rest of the world, but who, until the NATO rules were published, lacked a common forum for exercising the philosophy. Therefore great premium was placed on the subject, which was given added emphasis by the potential problems, which were even more relevant to the forces in the Mediterranean, posed when a Soviet 'Charlie' class submarine was marking a carrier. The debate centred around deciding what actions in such circumstances might constitute hostile intent. The Naval Warfare Committee was a forum in which the Atlantic Strike Fleet commanders met to discuss such issues and Admiral Mustin's admonition that 'no Commanding Officer is required to wait for incoming mail' is fondly recalled. There was also an arrangement for what was called battle fleet input training in which ROE games were frequently played. However, the consequence of this was that it highlighted the differences and disparities between NATO and national doctrines on the subject and from a British perspective this was most evident at the level of the UK Commander in Chief Fleet, who also held the NATO posts of CINCHAN and CINCLEASTLANT.13 It was incidentally to this appointment that Sir Julian Oswald, with his heightened sense of perspective on the subject, went next in 1987. The Gulf War Here was a situation unique in post war history in an operation that reflected, 123 particularly in the build-up period, known in the USA as DESERT SHIELD, the fact that nations in general find it easier to dispose maritime forces as a symbol of concern, than land or air forces which represent real commitment, not least because ships can be confined to international waters thus not infringing any territorial rights and are politically less contentious to the electorate. Thus in 1990 after the invasion of Kuwait by Saddam Hussein relatively few nations disposed land or air forces to the support of the allied operations, but large numbers sent maritime forces to the area, such that there was an embarrassment of resources. This complicated the embargo operations, particularly as the national ships or groups operated under differing ROE. Worse, the reluctance of nations to compare ROE suites definitely precluded, with very few exceptions, combined boarding operations. If nations found it easier to allocate ships to the allied effort, the ROE attitude of each nation soon revealed the real commitment to effective action. Although the precise rules were not known, it was evident that differences in ROE stemmed from the degree of robustness of nations in putting themselves forward with real intent. If the starting point of commitment is clear then so are the ROE. In those countries with a similar system of political control to that of the United Kingdom there was probably a lack of clarity within the civil service and in presenting the issues to ministers. Even in the UK MOD there was perhaps a reluctance to push the civil service secretariat to think all the issues right through. However, the preparation was there and all ships being deployed to the Gulf sent their command teams to the Maritime Tactical School to play in all aspects games focused around ROE. In assessing the main players among other nations the US, Australia and France did not share rules with the UK. The Dutch, if perhaps under some political constraint, were known to be in unison, but there is a history of common effort between these two nations engendered by a great similarity in approach and mutual respect to which can be added the experience and confidence gained over many 124 MARITIME RULES OF ENGAGEMENT - A POSTWAR HISTORY - II years of operating together in the UKINetheriands Amphibious Force. There were some combined boarding operations, generally between American, Australian and British forces, not least in the action against the Ain Zalah in December 1990. This was a time of considerable political concern because at that period there was a so called 'peace ship' (Ibn Khaldoon) with considerable numbers of women on board also proceeding to the Gulf and it was felt that this would need to be handled fairly sensitively. There was no doubt that the US had the most robust set of rules of all the nations and as far as the boarding operations were concerned there was concern among other nations that they were too forceful, an attitude that resulted in a very heavy handed approach to the crews of the ships boarded. The Royal Marine boarding parties, who themselves had the potential to be extremely tough if ever required to do so, felt that there was too much emphasis on physical restraint and not enough premium placed on the deterrent aspect of the operation. This had the consequent presentational risk of something going seriously wrong, leading to condemnation in the world forum at a time when the allied forces should have been seen to have been operating well within the tenets of international acceptability, not least with a 'peace ship' with women onboard in the offing. In a microcosm these attitudes reflect the differences between the European and American approach to the whole subject. At the time it was an edgy process and emphasised the need for a combined plan of action. Forward Commitment From the UK perspective there was immense frustration and inconvenience created by nations not being honest in saying what forces they would commit and what they would do and the UK Commander, Commodore Craig, could not overemphasise that point. There was a monthly meeting of WEU Maritime Interdiction Force which paralleled the meetings being held in Paris, France then having the Chair of the Union, but one senior source nevertheless described the dedicated WEU area as 'positively cloying' to the tactical deployment of forces. Even with British liaison officers aboard the US command ships and a good dialogue with Admiral Arthur in USS Blue Ridge and Admiral March in USS Midway, the UK force commander found the Americans ultra sensitive and unforthcoming about the plan for war. This affected the degree of forward commitment which was considerably constrained by this state of affairs. Commodore Craig is convinced that this led to the substantial mining threat because the area was not covered. Forces were not permitted north of a line from the Dhorra Oilfield and therefore the allies were not allowed to deploy maritime patrol aircraft in the threatened area to track and counter the mining effort or allocate forces to establish a hold in the fighting area. Even the Canadians and Australians were not in a position to say how far forward they would be committed. The Belgians, whose potential contribution to the mine countermeasure (MCM) effort was considered essential, remained outside the Persian Gulf and were thus a constant source of frustration." This somewhat unsatisfactory state of affairs eventually resolved itself to a certain extent by the formation of a BritishlUS forward force with the WEU group acting in a support role further south in the Gulf. The Canadian, Australian and Dutch line hardened to allow them to support the battle group. There was considerable debate about the comparability and proportionality of risk and indeed the subject of proportionality was examined exhaustively. It was considered that, for example, because of its significance a disproportionate amount of risk in defending the mine countermeasure force was acceptable. However, there were additional complications for even at the very late stage after the tum of the year the UK MCM force under its command ship RFA Sir Galahad was available to the US under UK operational control, but there was still uncertainty over tactical control. Worse, the Royal Navy Type 42 destroyers were under US tactical control but until the ROE were rationalised in early January, only days before the ultimatum to MARITIME RULES OF ENGAGEMENT - A POSTWAR HISTORY - II Saddam Hussein expired, it was not possible for them to be fully and positively integrated into the US battle group, to the disadvantage of all concerned. As usual in this rationalisation process everything hung on the definition of hostile intent and it was evident that the US had infinitely more robust rules for their units than had the UK. The British had a sensible blend of self defence measures, but it was appreciated that HMS Cardiff was the most vulnerable as the most forward ship. Nevertheless the rules at that time only permitted engagement within a five mile radius unless there was positive identification further out, which was considered highly unsatisfactory. The UK combined forces theatre commander gave approval for a relaxation of the engagement rules, but was clamped down on by the MOD and his licence for approval removed. This was the precursor for some fairly hectic diplomatic activity and about a week before the expiry of the ultimatum the two sets of rules, UK and US, were rationalised and the forces were totally integrated. There is a feeling in the UK, emphasised as one of the lessons learnt from the campaign, that had the British naval commander been a two star instead of a one star officer, it is possible that it might have made a difference and the problem been resolved in a much more timely manner to the benefit of all forces concerned. This is one of the lessons to be learned for future coalition operations. It also reflects the need for pragmatic judgments when examining ROE for maritime forces, for which the stakes are much greater than, for example, for air forces in a very complex environment. Operating Problems Once hostilities had commenced there were, with one exception which will be discussed in a moment, no problems over ROE if forces were subject to attack, but there were questions over contacts in the northern part of the Gulf, largely created by the US national procedures that allowed no foreign disclosure. Thus the war plan for dealing with incursion from seaward was foggy, even where it concerned the protection of mine 125 countermeasure vessels, vital to the clearance of the assault and bombardment areas. In the anti surface warfare operations British Lynx helicopters combined with the US Seahawk helicopters in the Northern Persian Gulf, but a great number of possible targets went unengaged because of differences in attack criteria. This was because, despite British briefings, the Americans did not appreciate, or accept, the fact that the capability of the Lynx helicopter was superior to that of the Seahawk. Thus, although the Anti Surface Warfare Commander clearly agreed the attack criteria, the fact that the Lynx had the ability to use its passive equipment and identify targets and was cleared by UK procedures to close targets closer than the Seahawk was ignored. All helicopters were limited to the attack criteria for the Seahawk, with the consequence that many targets that could have been engaged by the Lynx helicopters were in fact left unmolested. This was one of the few areas in which the Royal Navy had a definite edge over its ally, but this was not conceded, to the advantage of the enemy. Both ROE and attack criteria should be constructed to take advantage of the capabilities of all the forces available. The potential for blue on blue engagement was not a problem initially, but in due course other Arab nations were more willing to participate and when nations like Qatar began operating Mirage Fl aircraft it was almost a minor miracle that none of these was engaged. Operations in the minefields off the Kuwaiti coast created special problems. The UK was firmly in favour of a total exclusion zone and was supported in this aim by the US MCM commander in USS Tripoli. All were conscious that a 'leaker' could get through the air defence network in spite of its comprehensiveness: at risk were mission essential forces and more than $1.5 bn if one were forced to express the commitment in hard cash terms. However, the US forces would not even consider this because of the substantial numbers of aircraft returning from raids, but it does reveal how the less glamorous forces can be given less than due consideration of the risks to an operation. Without doubt the possibility of attack on the 126 MARITIME RULES OF ENGAGEMENT - A POSTWAR HISTORY - II MCM force was a constant matter of concern among those with a direct interest. Key ROE Lessons from the Campaign Several lessons come out of the Royal Navy experience during this campaign. a. It is no use designing a constructive set of rules, if the political dimension is omitted. This aspect has to be considered by the military. b. When conducting multinational operations with a high risk of escalation and pre-emption the initial war planning must include ROE rationalisation among all the nations participating. c. The earliest possible statement of commitment must be achieved before this rationalisation of ROE. d. If they are to be effective and not risk potential escalation, medium tension operations must be rationalised at the outset and not as affairs develop. e. Paradoxically, low tension ROE are more complex and have more potential for embarrassment and the 'peace ship' provides a good example. If someone is killed during one of these episodes then there is an international incident. f. The correct interpretation of hostile act/intent remains the only thing that matters. If you get that wrong you are in serious trouble. g. Intelligence is a boon, but the importance of correct filtering of the product in a lean, timely manner is fundamental to the manner in which one deals with the ROE problem. For example, if you do suddenly find a 'Ieaker' heading your way from the coastline, what is your collateral? In this day of a plethora of intelligence there is a desperate need for informed filtering of the information. Central control of the decision making process In considering this subject it is important to bear in mind that the power within the MOD lies in the Central Staff formed of officers of all three services with substantial civilian participation in the form of MOD civil servants, the upper echelons of whom wield considerable power. These last are not political appointees, but are professional civil servants who spend much longer in the Ministry than their military counterparts. They act as advisers to the politicians and are not unknown to put themselves into the position of advising others what ministers are thinking and how they are likely to respond. In this environment civil servants and politicians had great difficulty in accepting that Rules of Engagement reflected a choice when it was proposed to improve the book, which hitherto was little more than a signal code with limited flexibility, to one which had a comprehensive set of rules, escalating to a high level of engagement, but which gave the politicians many options in responding to a given situation. The possibility of substantial advances and improvement in the system were according to one significantly influential figure bedevilled by this approach of the civil servants and he felt that there was a delay of some ten years in the development of theories in this field. Because they did not understand the subject they had an almost malign intention to hold back the military and feared giving them too much power, particularly at the higher levels of the rules. This assessment parallels the kinder and perhaps less accurate viewpoint mentioned above that there was a ten year education process for ministers, but there is no doubt that the consequences were highly disadvantageous for the introduction of an effective set of rules and this was to come to light in due course. Even today after the Gulf Conflict there is a feeling that with really good intelligence and superb communications we have the infrastructure for the implementation of rapid and effective ROE, yet expeditious responses could still be constrained by the political process. There is a perception among the military in some quarters of the Ministry of Defence that other European nations have a less constrained system and are able to clear changes more quickly. This is not entirely true, though the British system is probably the most thorough of all, but in being so is also probably the most constrained. The French system is worth mentioning here because it has an admirable MARITIME RULES OF ENGAGEMENT - A POSTWAR HISTORY - II logic about it. It is divided into two sections, rules of engagement and rules of behaviour. Control of the former, which involves anything which leads to the actual firing of a weapon, is very firmly in the hands of the French Government. However, the latter, which involves every other aspect of interaction between forces, such as proximity of approach to potentially hostile units or the conduct of boarding operations, remains under the control of the military. Thus the rules of behaviour can be invoked without involving politicians, but there is a guiding principle felt by all concerned that the government must never be put in an embarrassing position. Politicians and particularly civil servants in the UK have greater control, but this does have the end product that the political aim is fully reflected in any operation and at the end of the day, in a democracy, the military are the servants of the politicians. It is interesting to note that when Iran began to acquire Kilo class submarines, the Royal Navy wished to change the anti-submarine warfare rules for ships on the Armilla patrol in the northern Indian Ocean, Arabian Sea and Persian Gulf. Without the imperative of conflict, by the time the issue had been debated with civil servants, law officers and politicians, it took six months to implement the changes, a period which left the Royal Navy feeling distinctly uneasy. However, there is no doubt that all the potential ramifications had been thoroughly addressed and argued and that the rules subsequently adopted met every political requirement. In peacetime of course there is the luxury of time and issues can be over analysed, as they almost certainly were in this case, whereas once conflict is likely speedy action is essential and any delay in the latter circumstances can be critical so that rapid decisions have to be made. In general highly placed commanders have a concern that they must avoid taking a hit, particularly on a high value unit, whereas there is a determination on the political front that military forces should not be seen to be too aggressive unless the enemy performance warrants it and this tension between the two 127 schools still exists today. Nevertheless there is a feeling among the military that they do have the ability to judge when to respond and interpret hostile intent and act. Whereas they feel they might not be able to do anything about the launch vehicle, they do feel confident in the ability to destroy the missile subsequently fired and thereby avoid taking action that might initiate hostilities or raise the level of conflict prematurely. There is a maturity and stability in this attitude born of sound training and professionalism, balanced by an acute awareness of the political dimension. General principles Rules today must give adequate authority without the need to refer back to the operating authority. When examining political directives it is most unlikely that one will ever be asked to escalate the situation, but if this did occur it is essential that the force commander has robust ROE with which to defend his own units. As far as the freedom to change rules of engagement is concerned, bearing in mind the very high quality special communications and intelligence picture available, it is desirable that the MOD should increase the extent to which responsibility is delegated to an authority with accountability, preferably the theatre commander, but if not that, at least to the controlling four star headquarters. This, however, is something the civil servants and politicians might well have difficulty in accepting, but would lead to a much more effective mechanism for implementing rules to suit the tactical situation. G. A. S. C. WILSON References 'Admiral Sandy Woodward, One Hundred Days (Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, 1992) pp. 101-103. lOibid, p.100. "Author's conversation with Commodore C. J. S. Craig, CB, DSC, Royal Navy, 28 July 1993. "Admiral Sandy Woodward, One Hundred Days (Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, 1992) p.153-8. "Author's conversation with Admiral of the Fleet Sir Julian Oswald, GCB, 26 July 1993. "Author's conversation with Commodore C. J. S. Craig, CB, DSC, Royal Navy, 28 July 1993. , Leaders and Managers: Chalk and Cheese BEGAN this piece originally as an Idescription examination of Professor Norman Dixon's of Authoritarian and Autocratic Officers, sometimes, also referred to as Regulators and Ratcatchers, see below. Professor Norman Dixon: 'On the Psychology of Military Incompetence' ... (A) The Authoritarian Officer: The Authoritarian Officer joins the Armed Forces to make a virtue out of various personality disorders which make him particularly adaptable to military life. These problems can, allegedly, range from childhood scatology, through parental neglect, sexual repression and virility self doubts, to a need for peer group approval and promotion with which the peacetime armed services award conformity. He draws self esteem from the status imparted by his rank and uniform. He defers naturally to seniority and obeys orders to the letter, loves order and ceremony, is meticulous in attention to detail and is often paranoid about cleanliness. He is strong in sequential reasoning processes, suppresses his imagination, rejects information which conflicts with his (and his seniors') preconceptions, and is fearful of using his initiative. He is often prudish, idolises women (a state of mind assisted by unfamiliarity), shuns publicity and seeks safety in secrecy. He keeps an unblotted copybook and thus gains unhindered advancement in peacetime. But he is easily disorientated by the crisis and dilemmas of war, and responds inappropriately or not at all. The Autocratic Officer: The Autocratic Officer is approximately the reverse of the above. He tends to think laterally, rather than serially, and his convictions often follow instincts. He uses his initiative as a matter of habit. He is receptive to the possibility that his juniors might be right or his seniors wrong, and takes his career in his own hands when he believes the latter to be the case. His attitude to hierarchy and military bull is casual or even overtly ironical; he tends to be individualistic, or negligent, about dress. His peacetime career ascent is often difficult because he lacks the docility convenient to his immediate seniors and he is typically considered disruptive. In wartime it falls to him to clear up the mess pioneered by the Authoritarian Officer who gained preferment over him in the years of peace. Whilst this examination has its place I rapidly came to the conclusion that it was also unhelpful in that it did not explore or identify the requirement, selection and training of Leaders and Managers nor suggest that there are good and bad officers who might portray Authoritarian or Autocratic traits. In this, Dixon's statement might be accused of being both divisive and simplistic in that it fails to address the different shades of leadership and management styles necessary in both a wartime and peacetime Navy, whilst appearing to agree with the old adage that both Authoritarian and Autocratic Officers are born and not made; that education has no place to play. In this I disagree. On the other hand, a Senior Officer, in his opening remarks to a recent Maritime Warfare Course, asked the question 'would anyone wish to employ the Autocratic Officer, no matter how admirable his qualities'? The question that appeared to fall from both these observations was 'do we, as a Navy, require a balance of different types of officers, or not?' It is my conjecture, if we are to succeed through both war and peace, that one of our most critical requirements is to identify the different types and ensure that they are promoted and retained for when they are needed most, in other words 'keeping our powder dry'. This piece sets out to look at how to differentiate and cater for the differing requirements of Leaders and Managers. The second question that I attempt to answer in this paper is 'how we go about achieving a healthy balance between the Managers and Leaders', accepting that officers who exhibit the full range of Authoritarian traits will always be bad officers, leaders or managers. Managers Versus Leaders - A Few Thoughts 'Managers do Things Right: Leaders 128 LEADERS AND MANAGERS: CHALK AND CHEESE do the Right Thing' Anon (B) 'Steady State is Managed: Change is Led' (C) 'Leaders identify Solutions: Managers understand Problems' (D) 'Leaders need Champions: Managers seek Sponsors' (E) 'Leaders are Loved and, or, Hated: Managers are Liked/Disliked' (F) 'Managers Staff Work: Leaders Staff Issues and People' (G) 'Leaders Teach their People: Managers Train them' (H) 'Leaders are Guided by Laws: Managers Apply the Rules' (J) 'Leaders are Remembered: Managers are Forgotten' (K) Managers - A Thought 'Wineglass "Stem" Theory: Recognition and Management of the environment - superiors, peers and juniors' (L) Leaders - Possible Identifiers 'Leaders are defined by Risk; they are Not Risk Averse' (M) 'Wars make Leaders: Leaders Win, or Lose, Wars' (N) 'Leaders Know and can Articulate the Truth' (P) Good and Bad Management and Leadership Attributes 'The promotion of one's people: not as a means to promotion' '" (Q) 'The Control of Delegation' (R) 'The Constructive use of Limitations' (S) 'The Division of Them and Us' (T) 'The Constructive use of No: to Positively do Nothing' (U) 'The Inspiration of Excellence: not Fear of Fault' (V) 'The Tyranny of Blame: Find the Scapegoat' (W) A Few Other Thoughts / Observations 'The Majority is always Wrong' George Bernard Shaw (X) 'Truth is in the Middle' (Y) 129 'To Achieve the Big Idea Sell the Small' '" (2) Discussion One of the questions that I have sought to answer above is what defines a Managerial style from a Leadership one. An Autocratic Officer is probably a Leader: he is inspirational, intuitive (A) and he is at his best in a state of change (C) often looking for answers, outwith his own or the collective experience (S). By contrast, Managers may be either Authoritarian or Autocratic: they are more likely to be risk aware, preferring compromise and the collective support of the majority (X) to back-up their decisions. What Professor Norman Dixon fails to acknowledge is that different types of officers are necessary within an Armed Force that is likely to spend 95% of its time at peace. This, then, raises the question as to how we retain our good Managers and Leaders in peace. Here, the reward factor comes into play. The Authoritarian Officer is likely to feel rewarded by the personal esteem of promotion, honours and patronage within the system (A) (Q). The Autocratic Officer, Manager or Leader, will, by contrast, judge himself against the job he is presently in, those colleagues he is working for and the esteem that individual and team success should bring with them (V). In other words, the good Officer will, by instinct, seek out personal challenge, whereas the Authoritarian Officer is, typically, risk averse (M). The Leader needs Managers to manage the status quo (C) thus releasing him to lead those start up, get well or change driven projects where leadership is fundamental to success (A). As soon as that challenge is over, the risks defined (M) and change has become the status quo (C) the Autocratic Leader will, by inclination, wish to move on. The timing of this can be significant. The Manager type, being naturally risk aware (not averse) (M), will seek out those jobs with a proven track record or where the hard decisions have already been made. In an appointing cycle, where success lags failure, one will often see an officer being awarded for the efforts of his predecessor, for which he has contributed 130 LEADERS AND MANAGERS: CHALK AND CHEESE nothing. If one thinks of the good Leader or Manager who has dragged his failing Department together, re-engineered the systems and defined the Refit it will often be his successor who gains the credit for the improved reliability whilst he is left unrewarded. It is, therefore, quite possible, that without careful management the Appointing Cycle will frequently penalise the good, unless Captains and Squadron Staff give credit where credit is due (E) (G) (Q). Similarly, an Autocratic Leader or Manager who takes over a project from an Authoritarian Officer may be equally disadvantaged. In this case, it is likely that his predecessor, being risk averse (M), has not taken the difficult decisions, has watched his six, ensured that he is never seen to be a problem and that he is, apparently, meeting his milestones (A) (B) (C) (D) (G) (J). His successor, of a different mould, then discovers that the project is behind time and that the Prime Contractor has bitten off more than he can chew. The good Leader or Manager will not instinctively try to apportion blame (B) (G) (W), instead he will seek to scope the problem or identify solutions and keep the Project sponsors informed (D) (P). So, let us say, he reports that his hi-profile project will be behind time to a Senior Executive Officer (SEO), for whom delay is unacceptable. The SEO, in true Executive fashion, tells him that delay will not be tolerated and that he is held personally responsible (W). The Equipment Project Manager (EPM) then reports to his Procurement Line Manager who tells him that the funding necessary to advance the project to meet the timelines will not be available and, that by the way, 'he could far more readily wreck his career than could the SEO' (V) (W). In this case, one would suggest that the EPM is trapped between a rock and a hard place: the honesty which defines him (D) (P) will be penalised by the culture in which he finds himself (T) (V) (W). This brings us onto the tricky question of promotion or, more bluntly, why Managers are preferred to Leaders. One reason is that Autocratic Leaders will, by nature, offer solutions to problems (D) that have not yet been confronted. This also extends into the 'Yes' approach typical of many officers who cannot or will not say 'No'. By contrast, the successful Leader will, invariably, use 'No' as an answer (D) (U). In other words, he is capable of confronting the issue and making a positive and defendable decision to do nothing, rather than saying 'Yes' and hoping the problem (D) will go away. In a peace time environment, where one is not expected to 'rock the boat', it will always be the more risk aware Manager, who agrees and rarely says 'No', that will be preferred. This is not simply a question of 'Who will rid me of this turbulent Priest', but a recognition that Managers are generally more aware of their situation than Leaders and are prepared to cultivate their seniors (E) (L). Moreover, it is also true to reflect that 'like' will usually promote and prefer 'like' (F) (Q) (X). Thus, in peace time, Managers will climb the slippery pole faster than Autocratic Leaders, irrespective of ability. By contrast, the Autocrat will only be promoted if he is championed and that will invariably be by one of his few in-number like minded Autocratic Officers promoted despite the prevailing system (E). Note I: In order to better identify individual strengths a number of companies now ask for subordinates to report on their people, along with their superiors. This is an interesting move away from simple open reporting and towards a more global picture of the person. The results of this type of comparative open reporting would be interesting. It would be my conviction that the Autocratic Leader is more likely to win the praise of his peers and juniors than from his seniors (E) (F) (K). Similarly, the Manager is more likely to be praised by his seniors than his juniors (E) (F) (L). The question as to how the individual inspires and directs his people is also a good indication of style. In this respect one can see that the Autocratic Leader or Manager will, more naturally, seek to promote his people than will the Officer who feels threatened by any success other than his own. This is a maxim close to my heart, in that I believe all good Leaders and Managers owe it to their LEADERS AND MANAGERS: CHALK AND CHEESE people to promote their people. This is not the same as getting them promoted, but that the good Officer identifies within his people their own strengths and weaknesses (S) and promotes their abilities to cope (Q). Given a particularly hi-profile project, involving a major visit, I identified that I had little time for the simpering Staff Officer and that my phone techniques left much to be desired. I had in my team an excellent POWRNS Writer of the old school who not only knew a friend in the right place but had super phone techniques and who would get the required result. In this case, I was happy to delegate the task (Q) (R), whilst maintaining the protective cloak of responsibility for failure, (V) not (W). Whilst working in NATO for a senior Officer I fell into conversation on the art of staff-work. The General made a particularly interesting observation by asking me 'whether or not I meant staff work or staffing, and had the difference between the two ever been pointed out to meT This came as a revelation to me. With respect to this article the difference between the two attributes is suggested at (G). Taking the same line of reasoning further one can also conclude that poor Officers are more likely to find fault in other people's 'staff work' (W) than they are to acknowledge the excellence of the solution provided therein (V). This leads on to how Managers and Leaders work within a defined environment and how they bring on their people. It is my contention that Managers are more likely to understand and work within the rules than are Leaders, who will more likely be guided by them (1). The fact that Managers are likely to apply rules to their working environments means that they will, typically, be more prescriptive than a Leader. With respect to bringing on their people, therefore, the Manager is more likely to instill a regime of quantifiable training to achieve the required Performance Standard than the good Leader who will, more readily, achieve the same by Teaching from experience and first principles (1) (H). One of our greatest Generals of the Second World War was General Slim who, not by accident perhaps, had also been a teacher. In the setting of this piece he is also a good 131 example of the Autocratic Officer who got to the very top because of war. Nelson and C. C. Walker provide similar Naval examples of good teachers, autocrats and leaders of men who came to the top at a time of crisis but would not otherwise have done so. This leads on to a more stark conclusion that Leaders are found if not created by crisis, specific situations or war, (N) whereas Managers thrive within the status quo (C). The corollary to this is that, whilst Managers can win and lose the peace, Leaders have the capacity to win and lose the war (N). Finally, I come to the two maxims which have received little attention through this piece, that dealing with truth being in the middle (Y) and that to sell the big idea one sells the small (Z). Truth has to be found and looked for: it is not necessarily at the centre or the Centre of Gravity, on the side of the big battalions nor the lone voice (X), but somewhere in the middle. It is the courageous man that looks for the truth when so easily he can manage the facts readily available to him. The good Leader or Manager is also capable of achieving his aim by giving his people a series of tasks within their mien (Z). Again I am reminded of working for an excellent leader who enabled me to triumph whenever I thought I had caught up with his thinking, only to realise that he was already two steps ahead. In this way the Leader is not over ambitious, he has defined the big idea (or Truth) but knows that to achieve this he must approach it incrementally, at the speed of advance of his people, and, sometimes, by subterfuge (D). Returning to the concept of Truth, I am reminded of one of the,great lines spoken by the formidable actor Jack Nicholson in the film 'A Few Good Men'. In the final, remarkable court room drama, he states to the effete Prosecutor (in his faggoty white uniform) 'You cannot handle the truth'. In the final analysis I would contend that it is only the brave who can handle the truth for it is only they that know it (P). Whatever is thought of Mountbatten he was a Leader of Men and nowhere more so than when he addressed the Commonwealth Armies of India and Burma to tell them that 'they were the forgotten Army, but that he intended to make them otherwise' 132 LEADERS AND MANAGERS: CHALK AND CHEESE (K). This was the truth, his people knew it was and loved him the more for making it so plainly obvious to them all and into a rallying call from which their great triumphs emerged. Churchill also knew the truth and, even in our darkest moment, had the courage to use it to inspire the people of the Empire. Our greatest leaders not only knew the truth, they embodied it and the people they led found trust and confidence within the truth they espoused, no matter how dark (P). Spotting the difference - selecting the few One of the results of this examination of the differences between Leaders and Managers appears to be that at times other than crisis, it will be difficult to identify which officers will come to the fore in an emergency. We probably all like to think of ourselves as Leaders, which clearly cannot be the case. The defining difference appears to be that of timing and situation, however this might also be unclear. Good Managers are risk aware, which does not mean that they cannot manage or take risk when the situation so requires. Similarly, bad officers will not necessarily make good Leaders just because they are obnoxious and difficult to get on with in peace time (A). The good Manager, who does things right, staffs the work required, trains and promotes the skills of his people, understands the problems and risks at hand, manages his working environment, knows his limitations, delegates, and applies the rules deserves sponsorship and might, easily, be confused as a good Leader. The good Leader, who does the right thing, responds to change, staffs issues, identifies solutions, teaches and promotes his people's abilities to cope, imaginatively applies the law, inspires his team, knows his limitations and delegates constructively should also deserve similar sponsorship to the good Manager. The reason that he does not is probably that the Leader will also take things that extra mile beyond that of a Manager: he will state the truth as he sees it, he will take risks that managers would not, and he will be loved and respected by his people who recognise him as their leader. In this, Leaders and Managers might be like Venus and Mars, Chalk and Cheese, so different from each other that many Managers cannot comprehend the strengths of Leaders for their apparent fool hardiness, lack of docility, disruptiveness (A) and, sometimes, jealousy. Ironically, one concludes that the very strengths that define our good Leaders will act against them in the risk averse, safe, mono-culture of a peace time Navy. The question thus raised is how to identify and then to promote the Leaders? This might at first appear difficult but, given the self selecting process for Manager types, it actually comes down to educating our good Managers to identify and realise the potential of our prospective Leaders. This might indeed be a big step for the Navy: it would challenge many of the precepts taken for granted within a peace time Navy whilst acknowledging that Managerial principles might not always be right (X). Such a process would require something of a leap of faith, which might be enhanced by an open reporting system that looked down as well as up. Leaders will always be in the minority: in any hierarchical system there will always need to be more Indians than Chiefs. In this respect the Manager, who identifies and promotes the Leader, will actually be securing his own position within the peace and, ironically enough, the war. The problem is that the promotion of Leaders will entail a certain amount of risk. There are good Leaders and bad Leaders, some who lead their people to failure and others to success and where the difference between the two (often intuition or luck) can rarely be calculated objectively. The answer might be to use a template to identify prospective Leaders at an early stage and to ensure fair representation within a typical career profile. In this way one is actually managing the risks and providing guidelines (1) for our Managers to apply. The identification of Leader or Manager type profiles would also greatly enhance our ability to provide constructive career advice and to retain those we might otherwise lose. Conclusion One of the questions I ask in this article is if Leaders need Managers and vice versa. The fact is that both groups need each other if they are to thrive and make it to their respective LEADERS AND MANAGERS: CHALK AND CHEESE tops. There are good Managers and good Leaders and most of us probably occupy a position that is somewhere between the best of them both. The key point is that Leaders and Managers are very different people and that we need them both. It is also true to reflect that business also needs Leaders and Managers and that it is the Leaders who will, more generally, make it to the top, supported by their more management orientated staff. The bigger the reward, the bigger the risk, and so businesses can also be described by whether they are led (Industry, Commerce or Trade) or managed (Banks). Most businesses are pyramidical in structure, therefore it follows that there will always need to be more Managers than Leaders and that there will always be highly competent Leaders who will suffer the personal sadness of never realising their potential. The trick would appear to be to identify those people who are our Leaders and those who are our Managers and to attempt to ensure that they are not discriminated against. This is not easy and will certainly require organisations requiring us to look more closely at how our officers are developed, identified and nurtured. In his article on 'Critical Chaos', Admiral Lees (NR, Jan '98) misunderstands the key point I was making. The fundamental truth in my piece was that our people are not simply units of work (or supporting elements) but that they are disutilities that react differently to the levels of investment we make 133 in them. In this I was trying to illustrate the fact that the ratio of equipment to manpower expenditure had probably swung too far against our people and that some readjustment was necessary. In his article, Admiral Lees goes on to state that a service only requires uniformed personnel ... 'to kill or be killed'. Not only do I abhor this statement, which appears to fly in the face of our people as our first and best deterrence to war, but it also raises the fundamental question of whether or not we can have war without people, leaders without war? A peacetime navy gets the leadership it deserves. Whether by design or by size our officers appear to be growing for ever greyer and less well defined (K). Perhaps we should begin to ask ourselves more clearly what we wish to be remembered for and how we might better define our purpose and people. Who will remember our Senior Officers of today, tomorrow? As things stand we are more likely to remember the names of those who have been recently court martialled by the navy than those officers whose decisions brought them there in the first place. Leadership is not exclusive to the Armed Forces but we are more usually defined by our Leaders than our Managers. Perhaps it is time to look again at how we can best employ, promote and equally develop our people without prejudice and favour? ALSTON Churchill and the Naval Assault on the Dardanelles - II T would be invidious to blame Churchill alone for this tragedy of missed opportunity for in working through his strategy for a naval assault he was able to take advantage of a singular absence of cross examination from the War Council and a failure by senior officers in the Admiralty to express their concerns. In the initial stages of the planning of the naval attack, there was little sign of the dissent from the naval staff that was to mark the subsequent months. During Churchill's exchanges with Carden in early January, several senior Admirals were in some way or other consulted and none presented any outspoken opposition to it. However, it is fair to say that Churchill's advisers in the Admiralty were, from the start, very much less enthusiastic about the plan than the First Lord. While the latter was forging ahead with his proposals, more sanguine characters had been at work studying the practicalities of a naval attack. On 5 January, for example, Admiral Sir Henry Jackson sent Churchill a memorandum that wholeheartedly condemned any plan to 'rush' the Straits. He estimated that such an operation would result in numerous battleships being sunk by mines - six out of eight in an initial squadron with further losses as subsequent squadrons fought through - a 'fatal error', he stated, which would leave the ships vulnerable to the Turkish fleet and totally annul their use. 23 One explanation for the failure of the Admirals to present any real early opposition to the First Lord's plan is found in Churchill's self-centred management style. With an incredibly active brain, a vivid imagination and a huge capacity for work, Churchill was too much even for Fisher and always outreasoned and out-manoeuvred him. It is a testimony to his powers that he was able so reasonably to browbeat such an adversary and not surprising, perhaps, that the other Admirals were unable or unwilling to stop him in full flight. In any event, Churchill was moving fast in the early days of 1915, totally confident that his naval plan was right, and his I staff were left in his wake. By the time they caught up, he had already secured War Council approval. If goings on in the Admiralty gave cause for concern, even more worrying was the manner in which Government Ministers, and in particular the War Council, handled the Dardanelles issue. From the moment when its members unquestioningly endorsed Churchill's plan as announced at the meeting of 13 January, the War Council failed to press Churchill on the details. They, like the Admirals, seem to have been swept along by the force of Churchill's persuasive reasoning and stand guilty of allowing themselves to be dazzled by the prospect of claiming the glorious prizes that would certainly have accrued from success and failing to consider the basic question of whether this was a practical operation of war. As the Dardanelles Commission concluded: 'Looking at the position which existed on 13 January, we do not think the War Council were justified in coming to a decision (on the naval plan) without much fuller investigation ... We hold that the possibility of making a surprise amphibious attack on the Galipoli Peninsula offered such great military and political advantages that it was mistaken and ill-advised to sacrifice this possibility by hastily deciding to undertake a purely naval attack."4 To compound the initial error, Asquith and his Ministers then failed effectively to confront the implications of the increasing groundswell of concern within naval circles for fear of rocking the boat. As early as 20 January, Hankey had informed Asquith of Fisher's increasingly open unease but he wrote to Venetia Stanley that he did not want Churchill to know 'of course'''; a man of compromise and consensus, he was not able to deal effectively with the growing dissension. It was Fisher's concerns that were to present the first and most vocal challenge to the naval assault. Despite his initial enthusiasm for the venture, he had, by mid January, so convinced himself that the 134 at CHURCHILL AND THE NAVAL ASSAULT ON THE DARDANELLES-II Galipoli campaign would bleed the resources of the Grand Fleet dry, that he was on the point of resignation. By 28 January, Asquith was well aware of this and called a meeting with him and Churchill, which appeared to resolve some of his concerns. However, at the War Council meeting in the afternoon, as Churchill was outlining the preparations for the naval assault, Fisher made to resign from the meeting and was only dissuaded by the personal intervention of Kitchener. Nonetheless, the groundswell of concern continued to spiral to the extent that on 10 February, Hankey felt obliged to write to Balfour that, while he supported the principle of an assault on the Dardanelles, 'from Lord Fisher downwards every naval officer in the Admiralty who is in the secret believes that the Navy cannot take the Dardanelles position without troops. '26 On 13 February Admiral Jackson sent a memorandum to Carden with information and suggestions on the reduction of the Dardanelles defences and included some strong views about the need to have landing parties to ensure the destruction of the forts, stating that full advantage would only be obtained by the occupation of the Peninsula by military force as the enemy field army would make passage of the Straits impossible by all except the most powerfully armed vessels. He concluded by stating that a naval bombardment was not considered to be a sound operation unless there was a strong military force to assist or at least to back it up.n Carden must have been completely confused. On the one hand ordered to conduct a naval assault on the Dardanelles without military assistance, he was on the other being advised that such an operation was untenable without the very assistance that he was to be denied! At last the Prime Minister called an emergency War Council meeting for 16 February at which Kitchener, having himself already been separately advised that a naval assault was considered unsound, agreed to send the 29th Division in support. He also agreed that, if necessary, Australian and New Zealand (ANZAC) troops and the Royal 135 Naval Division would be sent from Egypt. This meeting, although late in the day, seemed to have set the Galipoli campaign back on track with the promise of troops to assist the Navy. Totalling some 50,000 men, it was a significant force. However, while the Navy thought that these troops were to be used from the outset, Kitchener decreed that they were only to be committed to secure the passage of the Straits once the Navy had forced its way through. The Dardanelles Commission summarised the situation succinctly: 'The scope of the intended military operation was left in doubt.'28 Ironically, Churchill fully appreciated how dangerous this situation was and tried to work on the unimaginative, but immensely powerful, Kitchener. But as he put the dilemma himself: 'I had no right at this stage to complain if Lord Kitchener had said, "I am not going to land on the Peninsula." I could not have said, "Oh! you have broken faith with the Admiralty." On the contrary, we had said we would try it without committing him to that, and he would have had a right to complain if we had turned round and immediately demanded that he should undertake this very serious military operation.''' So, despite the now well understood requirement for active military assistance to force the Straits, the venture still remained a naval one. Even worse, three days after the 16 February War Council, Kitchener was allowed to withdraw the 29th Division. Churchill still harboured hopes that the Royal Navy might yet succeed and pressed Carden to continue with the bombardment that had commenced on 19 February 1915. The challenge facing his fleet was immense. A study of the Turkish defences of the Straits would have revealed a comprehensive range of defences which the Navy was ill-equipped to overcome. These consisted of a range of medieval fortresses with huge fixed gun emplacements, from those at Sedd el Bahr and Kum Kale at the entrance to the Straits up to those at Derma and Nagara at the entrance to the Sea of Marmara. They also included no 136 CHURCHILL AND THE NAVAL ASSAULT ON THE DARDANELLES-II fewer than six forts clustered around the Narrows which dominated, at 1,600 yards, this the shortest point of the Dardanelles Straits from the plateau of Kilid Boor and the hills behind Chanak. Although cumbersome and inaccurate, the huge batteries of guns within these forts were capable of inflicting severe damage on warships in the Straits as was to be proved during the campaign; in particular, any fleet passing through the Narrows themselves would be subjected to a murderous weight of fire. Positioned between these forts were mobile batteries of howitzers which were dug in along the entire length of both sides of the Straits and presented a far more accurate, if less deadly, threat to the fleet; the British minesweepers operating in the Straits were particularly easy targets for these guns. The final layer of defence was formed by the minefields that had been sown from a position eight miles up the Straits for six miles through to the far end of the Narrows. Early ideas to run the Fleet straight through these fields had sensibly been rejected and Commodore Roger Keyes was put in charge of preparing a sweeping force to remove them. However, the insoluble problem that beset the fleet's commanders as they tried to force the Straits was that they could not allow the battleships to get close enough to reduce the forts at the Narrows until the mines had been cleared. Conversely, the minesweepers could not get near the minefields until the guns were silenced. On 19 February, Carden opened his bombardment of the outer forts of Sedd el Boor and Kum Kale and again on 25 February with greater effect; many of the guns were silenced or abandoned. At the same time parties of Royal Marines were landed at the tip of the Peninsula to finish off the work that the Navy had started by spiking the surviving guns of the forts, a tacit acknowledgment even at this stage of the importance of combined operations. With the outer defences breached, 26 February saw the Intermediate Defences attacked for the first time from within the Straits where mobile howitzers, although not causing serious damage, were disconcerting enough to prevent the warships from establishing an effective fire. There was little that the ships could do to silence their harassers as these batteries were well concealed in the hills and could be moved to different locations from one day to the next. On 7 and 8 March, the Fleet turned its attention to the Narrows defences but to little effect; the mobile howitzers continued to prove impossible to hit while the forts and other fixed batteries were difficult to reduce at such long range. And all the time the morale of the Turkish gunners spurred on by their German tutors was rising. Equally worrying for Carden was the complete inability of Keyes' minesweeper fleet to make any progress in dismantling the fields in the Narrows. These vessels were small civilian manned fishing trawlers that were barely capable of making way against the strong currents in the Straits and which proved to be singularly vulnerable to the harrowing fire of the mobile howitzer batteries. Their crude sweeping wires ill equipped for the task, these improvised vessels were themselves vulnerable to the mines they were supposed to clear and rarely managed to reach the Kephez mineflelds. On 10 March they succeeded but were forced to withdraw after one of them was blown up by a mine and on 13 March a concerted effort resulted in four of the six sweepers involved being severely damaged by howitzer fire. At this stage, with morale in the Fleet sinking fast and under pressure from his masters at home to make rapid progress, Carden decided that it was time to launch a full-scale attack on the Narrows. Before he could see his plan realised, however, his health failed and he was replaced by his second in command Rear Admiral John de Robeck. De Robeck rapidly concurred with his predecessor's plan, and preparations for an assault involving 18 battleships and countless cruisers and destroyers were commenced in earnest. On 18 March, this mighty force steamed into the Straits in three waves to launch itself at ever reducing ranges at the Narrows forts with the aim of overpowering them by weight of sustained shelling. However, the ships were themselves subjected to a heavy fire. The CHURCHILL AND THE NAVAL ASSAULT ON THE DARDANELLES-II French battleship Gaulois had to be beached after suffering shell damage under the waterline and HMS Inflexible also had to retire temporarily with substantial damage to her superstructure. Nonetheless, after 2 'j, hours of bombardment, the minesweepers were sent forward. From this point the assault floundered in the face of the Straits' defences; as the French battleship Bouvet was pulling back from her bombardment to make way for the minesweepers, she was rent by a huge explosion, probably caused by a mine, and capsized with the loss of most of her ship's company. Then, in a spate of incidents, several more battleships were lost or critically damaged; HMS Inflexible hit a mine and had to struggle out of the Straits, HMS Irresistible was torpedoed and later sank, and the French battleships Suffren and Ocean were respectively seriously damaged and sunk by plunging shells from the Narrows forts. As a final signal of the futility of the Fleet's efforts the minesweepers fled in the face of the relentless howitzer fire with barely a mine swept. In the face of such losses, de Robeck decided to disengage and regroup. But what of the Turkish defenders? Commodore Keyes felt that they were a 'beaten foe' .'" But Colonel Kannengiesser, now in charge of a detachment of Turkish troops, testifies differently in his memoirs. Reflecting on the state of the forts at the end of the 18th, he writes of the minimal nature of the damage that the huge medieval forts had suffered." At Kale Sultanie, for example, there was extensive damage to the surrounding buildings and houses but little structural damage to the fort itself while at Hamidie only two guns had been destroyed. In all, of 176 guns, the Fleet had destroyed only four with no more than ISO defenders killed. In return the Fleet had lost almost 700 men with three battleships crippled and three sunk out of a total of 18. Even more significantly, only one line of mines had been swept from the Straits and there seemed little chance of the minesweepers making any more progress with the mobile howitzers still as persistent as ever. The single ray of hope was the Turkish shortage of ammunition with some of the forts 137 down to only a few dozen more long-range high explosive shells. There was also no reserve of mines. The medium howitzers and minefield batteries, however, still had 50% of their stocks left. It has been argued that fate dealt the Navy a cruel hand on 18 March and that a series of unfortunate events, such as the sinking of the Bouvet by a minefield that had only been laid a few nights before, conspired to sabotage a promising plan. However, a closer examination of the day's battle will show that the natural defensive qualities of the Straits, complemented by an effective combination of military defences, were the factors that won the day; the heavy guns of the forts sank the battleships, the howitzers repelled the minesweepers, and the mines that therefore could not be swept in turn sank more battleships. The only hope the Navy had of breaking through the Narrows was that the Turks did indeed run out of ammunition. A renewed attack on the scale of the 18th would not have been possible but it is true to say that the Fleet, significantly but not irretrievably damaged, could have re-engaged the next day. Some of the forts might well have run out of heavy shells but further ships would have floundered in the assault. The key to the matter though was the mobile howitzer and minefield batteries, which could not be silenced at any cost, and which would have continued to make it impossible to sweep the mines regardless of whether the forts had been silenced or not. In any event, even if a battered Fleet managed to force its way past the Narrows in spite of the attention of the unswept minefields and the mobile batteries, there was no clear idea of what it was then meant to do. Assuming a weakened and reduced Fleet managed to see off the Turkish fleet and the powerful Goeben and Breslau, it would then probably commence a bombardment of Constantinople aimed at causing panic and toppling the government. But, regardless of any short term political impact, in effect the Squadron would have been bottled in; with the defences at the Straits still very much intact and able to operate again once fully resupplied, there would be no way out and no means of re-supply or re-fuelling. Once the 138 CHURCHILL AND THE NAVAL ASSAULT ON THE DARDANELLES-II , , \"') , ~, Pc'f\C.'~ fo,,", o l't\\l\t~dcl ~ C't\o'\)'\ ~ \\ouo'h. Qcal1.n"" CHURCHILL AND THE NAVAL ASSAULT ON THE DARDANELLES-II Turks had realised the futility of the Fleet's position, de Robeck would have had two options; fester in a Russian Black Sea port for the duration of the war or make a dash back out of the Straits, tail between legs. In the event, de Robeck called off the attack until military forces could be called in to assist. Professor Reguer is not the only historian to have censured him for his decision. However, just as there was no fundamental failing with his conduct of the attack on the 18th, there was no fault in his logic now in cutting his losses rather than continuing with an assault which promised further major losses but little chance of success. Of course, by doing so, his actions indirectly led to the hugely greater catastrophe of the land campaign but it was hardly within his remit to make predictions about the possibilities of success in a military operation. What he, and Carden before him, had come to realise after two months of battering their ships on the Strait's defences, was that there had never been a genuine fighting chance of success. And so, with the Navy's failure, began a notorious and heroic struggle in the stinking, fly infested trenches on the narrow shores of the Galipoli Peninsula. Many have argued since that Churchill's brave plan was sabotaged, on the brink of success, by weaker men and thereby absolve him of much of the responsibility for the horrors that followed. In fact the naval assault was never a realistic proposition. In any event it is clear that the weakness of Turkish dispositions at Galipoli in early 1915 support the proposition that a determined joint military and naval operation at that time would have overrun the entire Dardanelles. In early 1915, the wartime government was on the verge of ordering just such an attack until Churchill intervened. 139 Those that argue that Churchill was not the only motive force behind the naval attack point to the fact that he was by no means the most powerful man in the War Council; that accolade undoubtedly fell to Kitchener. But whereas Kitchener could prevent policy by his veto, it was Churchill, with his incredibly active mind and a brimful of plans and ideas, who was the most influential. This was Churchill's plan in its entirety and he who, lacking the direct power of Kitchener, relied on his highly persuasive arguing and infectious enthusiasm, as well as a generous helping of duplicity, to ensure that it was his plans and ideas that were implemented. In doing so over Galipoli, he became personally responsible for sabotaging a plan that could have shortened the war by many months and even years. It is a paradox that one can admire the brilliance of Churchill's political skills, his energy and imagination and the sheer force of his personality, all of which made him a source of inspiration in the War Council but, equally, be appalled by the manner in which his complacency and flawed judgement led him to make one of the most costly errors of the First World War. (concluded) H. K. ACKLAND LIEUTENANT, RN References "Jackson, Admiral Sir Henry, Memorandum, 5 Jan 1915 (Gilbert). "Dardanelles Commission First Report. "Asquith - Venetia Stanley, 20 Jan 1915 (Gilbert). "Hankey - Balfour, 10 Feb 1915 (Gilbert). "Dardanelles Commission First Report. "Dardanelles Commission First Report. "Rhodes James. 3OKannengeiser. 3'From Rhodes James and Kannengeiser. Swimming to Victorious 7'YfE following account is contributed by 1 Captain R. Pelly, to whom the story was told. The visit to Malta had nothing to do with tourism. Valletta, or rather the company's agent there, Giovanni Muscat and Co., was at the end of a tour I had begun three months earlier in March 1967 with Athens and Istanbul, going as far east as Saigon and Hong Kong then back over the same track. Muscat's knew their job, so the brief report I wrote to Head Office in my room at the Astra Hotel in Sliema after lunch left four hours free to enjoy a sunny Maltese afternoon before dinner. Across Sliema's promenade the sea lay blue, sparkling and still so I put on my bathing trunks, walked across the sizzling pavements and along the stone jetty by the side of the old fort. Before taking the steps down to the water I glanced out to sea and took in a large vessel apparently stationary on the horizon, then in I went. In that flat, calm sea I decided to put some distance between myself and the island to see the place from a different perspective. Using backstroke I pulled away from land until first the walkers, then the cars and buses, and finally the palm trees along the promenade became hazy then lost to view. Now I could see the island of Malta from end to end shimmering white in the June heat. As the land got too far away to be interesting I took a look at the sea around me: plenty of fishing boats, handy to resort to if a wind got up, and on the seaward horizon, now a lot closer, the large vessel seen from the jetty had materialised into an aircraft carrier. So I changed backstroke for breaststroke and slowly the great bulk came nearer. Eventually, I found myself 150 yards or so from the bows rising like a great cliff of steel in front of me and I could see the name Victorious. Men gathered on the flight deck to look at the lone swimmer treading water and soon a commanding voice floated down with the question 'Hey you, what are you doing down there?' The call seemed to come from one of three officers grouped at a large aperture on the hangar deck, so I shouted back, 'I'm waiting.' 'What are you waiting for?' 'I'm waiting for someone to invite me aboard for a drink.' After this there was a brief pause from on high, punctuated by laughter from the flight deck, then 'Do you want a drink?' 'Wouldn't you if you had swum from Malta?' was my reply. 'All right then, come aboard.' 'How?' 'Swim round to the starboard side and climb eight companion ladders, then you have got to the hangar deck'. So this I did, and padded across the steel plates past the parked aircraft to where a Lieutenant Commander and two Lieutenants stood silhouetted against the light waiting to receive their self-invited guest. The Lieutenant Commander said 'Welcome aboard - you haven't swum from Malta have you?' 'Well, I certainly haven't walked', I answered. 'So how long did it take you?' asked one of the Lieutenants. 'I don't know', I replied, 'I don't normally swim with a watch on. What time is it now?' 'Quarter past five', was the answer. 'That makes just over two hours, then. I went in just after three.' Soon a large pink gin arrived and I toasted my reluctant hosts, at which the younger Lieutenant asked me if I had served in the Royal Navy. 'No', I said, 'Royal Air Force, and in the RAF you have to know how to swim in case the Navy is a bit late!' Laughter all round at this one, though I noticed the senior officer was starting to get a worried look about him. Then it came out. 'Tell me,' he said, 'Are you going to swim back?' 'To tell you the truth', 1 replied, 'I hadn't really thought about it. I'm enjoying this pink gin too much'. This wasn't the answer the senior officer wanted and a few minutes later he brought up 140 SWIMMING TO VICTORIOUS the subject again. 'No', I said, 'I'm not going to swim back. The light is going already and I might miss Malta altogether.' 'Well,' he asked again, 'how are you getting back?' So I said, 'I'll hitch a ride on one of your liberty boats. That will be all right, won't it?' 'There are no liberty boats,' came the ominous reply. 'We are on emergency standby because of the crisis between the Arabs and the Israelis.' This crisis I knew something about, having visited Amman, Cairo and Tripoli on my way to Malta during the past ten days. Cairo had been especially tense (though it hadn't stopped me negotiating our firm's biggest export order ever) and now things were coming to the boil with the so called 'Six Day War' about to break out. Which left me at the end of a delightful swim, and nearing the end of my pink gin, being presented with the problem of how to leave Her Majesty's aircraft carrier Victorious in gathering darkness without benefit of boat. So I stalled and tried to play for time, 141 dredging up (imaginary) rights of British subjects on board a British warship. 'It's a good job I'm a taxpayer, then,' I suggested. 'I'm sure you will be able to offer me a comer somewhere for the night with all this space lying around.' But the Lieutenant Commander strangled that idea at birth with 'No no, that's quite impossible - as I told you, we're on emergency standby and we can receive orders to sail at any moment!' Just as I could see myself descending again to the now darkening waters and trying to feel my way back to Sliema - or anywhere - relief came to hand in the form of a Maltese bumboat which had come to do a bit of trading with the crew. The return journey took twenty minutes and I arrived back at the Astra in good time for a substantial Maltese dinner of roast beef and Yorkshire pudding. Perhaps, even after 30 years it isn't too late for former Pilot Officer Philip Astington, Royal Air Force 1950-52, to say a thank you to those officers of Victorious who treated with such consideration that unexpected (and unwanted) guest. An Incident in the First Cod War W HILE writing a short account of a less benign incident than that related below about the run-up to the dispute about fishing rights with Iceland, I dredged the following memory from the depths of my subconscious. I was the Sub in the 'Daring' class Diana, and we were patrolling to the south of Grindevik in an attempt to protect our fishing boats from the unwelcome attentions of the Icelandic gunboats, when we received a report that a trawler had been boarded and taken over by a party from the Thor. We were either ordered or volunteered to regain her. Our Captain, Bill Graham, sent for me and handed me a loaded revolver with a stem admonition not under any circumstances to use it. A few moments later it was 'Slip' and the starboard whaler was on its way across the mercifully and unusually calm sea. The boarding party consisted of the Captain of the Forecastle, Petty Officer Bertie, and, I think, seven sturdy seamen. As we approached the trawler I could see a gang of desperadoes lining her bulwarks, 142 armed with axes, cutlasses and ... was that the dull gleam of the blued steel of old .303s? We were still six feet from the trawler's side when Bertie grabbed me by the seat of my trousers, or so it seemed, and doubtless with Lieutenant Turner's leap from the Cossack to the Altmark in mind, propelled me bodily on board. As Kipling nearly wrote: ' ... the vartue av the ould (sailor) that knows his orf' cers work and does ut for him at the salute'. No salute for me though but ... 'twixt the stirrup and the ground I mercy asked and mercy found' ... by the time I had brandished my pistol in an effort to inspire fear into the hearts of the desperadoes - they had gone! Out of the corner of my eye I saw a boat heading back to the Thor, but I was more occupied with accepting a generous tot of rum and subsequently a basket of fresh cod. I was greeted as a hero on my return to the Diana but Petty Officer Bertie and I knew better! A. B. H. NELSON Radio Astronomy and Naval Gunnery: The Unlikely Alliance EMBERS of The Naval Review may well scratch their heads in puzzlement over the improbability of the above title. Radio astronomy is a very precise science, pinpointing stars billions of light years away from Earth. Naval gunnery on the other hand, at least when I was serving during our conflict with Herr Hitler, was imprecise, especially in the anti-aircraft department. The tale of how the one aided the other was told to me last autumn. My wife and I had been invited to stay with Sir Bernard Lovell, the creator and first Director of Jodrell Bank. I wanted very much to see over the telescope, and my host promised that he would give me a personally conducted tour the next morning. Bernard Lovell then became somewhat enigmatic when he said 'and I think that as a former naval officer, you will find something of especial interest at Jodrell'. The next day's weather was quite glorious, the sun shining out of a cloudless blue sky, making my visit to the radio telescope all the more pleasant. Since a great part of it consists of a vast complex of steel girders open to the elements I was glad that my tour would be in the dry and not in pelting rain. The sheer size of the radio telescope fills one with awe mixed with admiration for those whose foresight and ingenuity created it. The dish measures two hundred and fifty feet in diameter, and on that beautiful morning it was a wonderful and futuristic sight. I was introduced to the Senior Engineer and we entered the Control Room. Here the first link with the Service appeared in the form of the Duty Controller who had been a Petty Officer Radar Mechanic. The Control Room had a huge window which looked out on to the telescope. Bernard Lovell told me of one awful night when, during a storm of hurricane force, he was summoned from home as the telescope was in danger from the high winds. He gave orders to turn it so that it presented the least resistance, but he said it was touch and go. A clock on the wall showing sidereal time was a reminder, if one was needed, that this M was a place which dealt with the stars. We stood beneath the telescope only a foot or two away from its circular tracking. Bogies were supported on the railway tracking and suddenly they moved a few inches. It was brought home to me that our planet was turning and the telescope with it. .. The three of us arrived at a door which was situated at the bottom of one of the tall pillars supporting the dish. I was extremely pleased to see that this led to a lift, and this took us up some two hundred feet. Just when I was feeling relieved that my fear of heights was not to be put to the test, Bernard Lovell led us to the bottom of a twenty foot vertical steel ladder up which he began to climb with the agility of a teenager. My fears were now to be realised and as I followed him, I tried not to look down. Lovell seemed quite unmoved by the climb and said 'I promised my engineers that when I reached eighty I would not climb this more than twice a year. 1 think I have now climbed it fifty times since then.' We walked a little way along a narrow passage and then Bernard Lovell opened a door saying 'here you are'. I looked down at rows of huge steel teeth and realised that I was looking at the mechanism on which the dish was tilted. 'This' said Lovell, 'is the connection between astronomy and naval gunnery'. He went on to explain how the rings of teeth came to be there. As so often happens in designs large and small, cash projections are not always in line with reality. When the telescope was being built, the dish turning mechanism was a major factor, and money was beginning to be tight. It was here that the naval service of Professor P. M. S. Blackett was of infinite value. Blackett had served as an RN two-striper in Barham when she was Flagship of the 5th Battle Squadron at Jutland. He knew what he was talking about. (When I proposed writing this article and showed Bernard Lovell the draft, he was astounded to learn that I had been present when Barham was sunk in the Mediterranean in November 1941 .* He had no idea we kept battleships for so long!) 143 144 RADIO ASTRONOMY AND NAVAL GUNNERY: THE UNLIKELY ALLIANCE On 5 July 1950, at one of the innumerable conferences discussing building progress, Blackett made his proposal. He said that the problem of how the telescope was to be driven was similar to that of aiming and controlling the guns of a battleship. He told Lovell to visit the Admiralty Gunnery Establishment at Teddington and thither Lovell repaired with colleagues on 20 July. To quote from Bernard Lovell's book Astronomer by Chance: 'J. M. Ford of Teddington and his naval colleagues thought our problem was simple in comparison with that of controlling the gun turret of a battleship and advised us to talk to Metropolitan Vickers about the use of their "metadyne" control system. This was an electrical drive system that would give the telescope an acceleration proportional to the displacement from the required position. By this time our Consulting Engineer H. C. Husband had become concerned about the size of the gear racks that would be needed to drive the elevation. Ford also solved that problem. He advised Husband to obtain some of the 25-foot diameter racks used to drive the 15-inch gun turrets in a battleship. Husband soon secured a major bargain over the question of these large racks. On 3 August he journeyed to the ship-breaker's yard in Inverkeithing where the battleships Royal Sovereign and Revenge were being broken up. There he discovered that one of Royal Sovereign's turrets had not yet been broken down and that two complete 15-inch gun turret racks of Revenge were in perfect condition. Husband warned me that "to produce two new racks and pinions of this quality would cost several thousand pounds". By mid-September the ship-breakers told Husband that the rack and pinion from Royal Sovereign was freed and lying aboard the ship and that we could have it for £250 and also the two from Revenge when they had been freed. By any standards this was a bargain offer' . It was in this way that the Royal Navy assisted indirectly in the construction of the radio telescope at Jodrell Bank. My tour of the telescope over, Bernard Lovell and I realised that we had omitted to arrange a rendezvous with my wife and his guest. We separated and searched but returned without success to the Control Room car park. 'Bernard', I said, 'this is ridiculous. Here you have a wonderful instrument capable of pinpointing with unerring accuracy the positions of stars billions of light years away and we can't find the people we are looking for!' We found them among the stars ... in the Planetarium! ADRIAN HOLLOWAY 'see my book From Dartmouth to War published by Buckland Publications, reviewed in NR April '94. The Victoria and Camperdown collision, 1893 N the afternoon of 22 June 1893 thirteen battleships and cruisers were exercising O off Tripoli in what is now Lebanon when the after he had ordered all the officers off the bridge. We had a very big funeral this morning & we shall have them for the next week. There is no chance of getting the Victoria up as she went down in 75 fathoms of water. The Camperdown is in a very bad way, her bows are very nearly under water & divers & people have been working all night & all day; there are two holes in the bows big enough for a man to walk through & the great fear at present is that the watertight bulkhead will give way with pressure when she will go straight down. It was horrible when we first got there in the boats, there were dozens of men nearly all more or less mangled & as we got nearer we could see them being sucked down by the wash right in front of our eyes & within half a dozen yards of you. Two of the fellows who past out of the Brittania with me were drowned. I remain yours sincerely, H. Tweedie Victoria (the C-in-C's flagship) and the Camperdown (flagship of the second-incommand, Rear-Admiral Markham) collided. The Victoria was sunk with the loss of 359 lives including the Commander-in-Chief, Vice-Admiral Sir George Tryon. On the next day the 16-year-old Naval Cadet Hugh Tweedie of the battleship Dreadnought wrote the following letter to his mother. It had been a make-and-mend at the time of the collision (which was at 1534) and all the midshipmen and cadets not on watch were asleep in the gunroom. HMS Dreadnought 23rd June, Tripoli My dear Mother, Before you get this letter you will have heard of the frightful disaster. It happened about half past three when we were all in the gun-room & we suddenly heard the pipe 'Away all boats'; it struck us as very funny that all boats should be called away just as we were going into harbour but we ran up just in time to see the Camperdown crash in the Victoria. She filled rapidly in the bows & in little over five minutes she gave a sudden lurch & went down with all hands on board. Our boats were there almost as soon as she disappeared & between us we saved 10 I officers & men [110 according to his Captain's memoirs). The Nile's boats saved 82 & the Camperdown's 52, the remainder saved 10, three of our men died since & one of the Nile's making a total of 249 out of a ship's company of over 600. 5 Mids were saved & 8 drowned, out of 50 officers 25 were drowned & 8 were out of the ship. The Captain, Hon Maurice A. Bourke, was saved. I don't know whether he is any relation to the Bourkes at Pulborough [his uncle was rector of Pulborough, Sussex). The Commander-in-Chief was last seen on the top of the chart house The fleet had been in two divisions in line ahead, led respectively by the two flagships, with the Nile immediately astern of the Victoria, and the Dreadnought astern of the Nile. Tryon, who was regarded as the greatest tactician of the age, ordered the ships in the two columns to alter course in succession sixteen points, turning inwards, although the distance between the columns (six cables) was known to be too narrow for this evolution. After a few minutes the Camperdown rammed the Victoria. Admiral Markham in the Camperdown assumed that Tryon would order some further manoeuvre to avoid a collision, but with his death it is not known wh~ was in Tryon's mind. Of the Victoria's ship's company of 600 there were only 241 survivors. The Camperdown, though damaged, was able to steam to Malta with an escort for repairs. At the court-martial held on the loss of the Victoria, it was found that the 'collision was due to an order given by ViceAdmiral Tryon'. Hugh Tweedie ended his career as a full 145 146 THE VICTORIA AND CAMPERDOWNCOLLISION. 1893 Admiral and Commander-in-Chief at the Nore, retiring in 1935. In his autobiography The Story ofa Naval Life (1939) he recalls that after picking up survivors from the Victoria the boats were employed in salvaging wreckage. He found himself alongside a chest of drawers which was too large to get into his boat, so they broke into it and extracted all the clothes. They were found to belong to the future Admiral Jellicoe, the commander of the Victoria, who at the time of the collision was in bed in his cabin with a temperature of 103°. Cadet Tweedie's letter is published for the first time with the kind permission of his daughter, Mrs John Carver, and at the suggestion of Captain R. G. Tosswill, to both of whom I express my warm thanks. HUGH OWEN CAPTAIN, RN From The Naval Review Thirty Years Ago ROM the point of view of the country and the Royal Navy the most important event in 1968 was the commissioning of HMS Resolution, the first of the four 'R' class Polaris submarines. This was a great achievement as it was within the time scale set. The three submarines Repulse, Renown and Revenge were to commission at approximately six-month intervals following. In the previous year 'Moryak' was to propose that the manning of Polaris submarines should be done by a separate force which he called the Polaris Submarine Force and it should be reconstituted as a National Deterrent Force. This set off the big guns of the Chief Polaris Executive and our former Editor Admiral McGeoch, to refute this argument. The chief Polaris Executive, Admiral Mackenzie, dismissed the suggestion because 'this is no job for "nice old cups of tea" or for civilianisation'. Admiral McGeoch in a carefully considered commentary on the submarine scene at the time admitted that 'Moryak' was persuasive and powerfully played on emotions. It was therefore possible F 'that the absurdity of his proposition might pass un-noticed by many, were it not pointed out . . .' which he then sought to do in the January 1968 issue. Technological change began to run like a forest fire and 'A Bit' in the July 1968 issue wrote 'If the Navy is to be fully effective in the future, it must have a corps of officers who have been trained in the techniques of handling information as part of their basic education. ' Thirty years ago the Soviet military threat was a dark shadow which cast a baleful influence on world peace. But there was a glint of sunshine as depicted by 'J.E.' in the October 1968 issue. He wrote 'the expansion of Soviet maritime power is a coherent policy capable of supporting equally effectively either the legitimate aims, or any illegal expansionist ambitions, of Russia. At present it represents for NATO a political challenge rather than a direct military threat.' Discuss? .. PARAVANE End of an Era? A CHRISTMAS card on offer this year (/997) by King George's Fund for Sailors depicts a stern view of HM Yacht Britannia as she passes the Royal Naval College, Greenwich. Both are about to be decommissioned. The title of this far from festive picture is 'End of an Era '. Twenty years ago the distinguished historian Richard Gllard MA FRSL contributed to Vol. I, No.1 of the Nautical Review an account of 'Pepys and the sea officers', here reproduced by permission. Members of The Naval Review, after reading it, may ask themselves If it is the era initiated by Pepys, with the help of King Charles II, which is alleged to have ended: the Royal connection, the combination of civil with professional administration, the association with Greenwich as centre of maritime art and science, and above all the spirit of 'all of one company' infusing the officer corps. Ian McGeoch AY 29 would be dedicated, if his life had afforded a title to sanctity, to King Charles II. Up the river in Chelsea the pensioners of his splendid hospital observe the feast of their founder with appropriate conviviality. It was his birthday. It was the day on which, amid scenes of delirious rejoicing, he re-entered London in 1660, the day, more than any other, to be celebrated as the anniversary of his Restoration. Pepys, as one of the most vivid reporters who have ever described London, whose Diary gives us, and for the Restoration period especially, the very form and pressure of the time, might at first sight offer rich material for an account of this historic day. In fact, however, he was not among those taking part. He had stayed behind aboard the Royal Charles with his cousin and patron, Sir Edward Montagu, soon to be ennobled as Earl of Sandwich. He spent the morning writing letters, including one to find out how much his employer would have to pay for his institution as a Knight of the Most Honourable and Noble Order of the Garter, and after dinner on board went ashore with his master for a most agreeable and refreshing ride. From the top of Kingsdown cliffs they watched the Fleet fire M salutes in honour of the King's birthday and in the evening there was supper and music in the Great Cabin. Pepys was coming to the end of the first of two long periods in his life spent in a warship at close quarters with the sea-officers - the second was his voyage to Tangier at the very end of the reign now opening. It is his relation to this body of men that I propose to discuss. It was a subject that, in the whole course of his life, probably claimed as much of his time and attention as any other It was certainly one to which his contribution was of the first importance. Sea-officers, Pepys and his contemporaries said. Naval officers, we say. Why the difference? Pepys was distinguishing between people like himself who were officers of the navy - as we would put it, officials of the navy board - and people like Sir John Narbrough or Captain Wyborne - to name two of his particular friends - who occupied their business in great waters. Some of Pepys' colleagues, Penn and Batten most notably, had great experience in both spheres. Even Pepys himself could technically claim to have been a sea-officer. On 13 March, 1669, we read in the diary: But that which put me in good humour both at noon and night, is the fancy that I am this day made a Captain of one of the King's ships, Mr Wren having this day sent me the Duke of York's commission to be Captain of 'The lerzy' in order to my being of a Court-Marshall for examining the loss of 'The Defyance' and other things; which do give me occasion of much mirth, and may be of some use to me, at least I shall get a little money by it for the time I have it; it being designed that I must really be a Captain to be able to sit in this Court. A few days later he was not so much amused. Packing a Court-Martial with bogus Captains was a dangerous precedent. It was exactly the way to promote the favouritism and inefficiency that Pepys spent his whole life in fighting. So he privately compromised and determined that though playing his full part in the inquiry - 'I did lay the law open to 147 148 END OF AN ERA? them and rattle the Master-Attendants out of their wits almost' - he would withdraw when the Court was reaching its conclusions. The sea-officer proper, the naval officer of our day, cannot historically be considered merely in his professional capacity. He occupies a prominent position in English society, in our literature, in our manners and our morals. For the mid-twentieth century Noel Coward's In Which We Serve exemplifies the pattern: courteous, reliable, unself-seeking, balanced, competent, unemotional. We remember that King George V and King George VI were both brought up as naval officers and we observe that the present heir apparent is so serving. A century and a half ago, at the high noon of the Royal Navy, Jane Austen portrays a large cast of naval officers to whose domestic virtues she pays memorable homage in the last sentence of her last novel. Social and professional divisions The sea-officers of Pepys' day were, so to speak, the rude forefathers of these paragons. Unlike their successors in the twentieth century, or even in Nelson's day, they were contract labour, not permanent members of a profession with a recognised system of promotion and seniority. They were divided, socially and professionally, into two classes, the gentlemen and the tarpaulins. The tarpaulins, as their name suggests, were the real professional seamen who would earn their living in merchant ships when there was no billet for them in the King's. The gentlemen were scions of noble or landed families who recognised military leadership as one of the obligations of their position. One personified competence, the other the mental and social qualities of a class that had been bred to command and was likely to have had the advantage of a liberal education. It was Pepys' aim to fuse the two, an aim which by the time of Nelson and Jane Austen had to a great extent been achieved. The means he employed were as various and resourceful as himself. Perhaps nowhere in his official life can we find a fuller expression of his personality. He based himself on the traditional wisdom of the apprenticeship system. The young gentleman must first and foremost serve at sea and obtain certificates from his commanding officers as to his 'sobriety, diligence, obedience to order and application to the study and practice of the art of navigation'. But literacy and cultivation of mind - those quintessentially Pepysian qualities were given their proper importance. The young officer was required to keep ajournal- not, one hastens to add, on the model of that unique and secret document on which his own fame rests. And finally, in December, 1677, the Board of Admiralty agreed to the establishment of an examination, based on these requirements, for the rank of Lieutenant. The hallmark of the modern profession was originated, designed and carried through entirely by Pepys. It is worth remembering that examinations for admission to the Civil Service were not established for another 200 years. But institutional reform is only part of the story. One does not have to read far in Pepys to recognise his passionate interest in people and his skill in handling them. The stream of letters to individual officers that poured out of the Admiralty office during his two tenures of the Secretaryship taught the sea-officers what was required of them and set standards that have never since been entirely forgotten. To take but one example. In the spring of 1675 the Captain of the Phoenix died while she was on the West Indies station, and the Governor of the Barbados, Sir Jonathan Atkins, a personal friend of Pepys, appears to have secured the command for his son, instead of allowing the Lieutenant to succeed to the Captain's place ... 'Justice' ... wrote Pepys in a letter to the soi-disant Captain Atkins ... 'must be preserved in all matters of that kind or the whole discipline of the navy must be abandoned, in which nothing is less to be controverted than the right of a lieutenant to succeed to the command of the ship upon the death of his captain, at least until he shall come within the reach of His Majesty or the Lord High Admiral.' 'As to my own particular, besides the impartiality which I pretend to govern myself by in all other cases, there will be little ground to suspect me of any other dealings in this, the END OF AN ERA? lieutenant being one I never saw, much less have any personal concernment for ... while on the other hand I have that especial regard to my noble friend, your father, Sir Jonathan Atkins, as would easily incline me to the giving preference to a son of his on any fair occasion. But right is right and shall never on any consideration receive interruption where I can prevent it, and least of all where the prejudice attending his Majesty from it may be of importance a thousandfold more than the benefit of the private person that is to be gratified by it.' This is the note that the sea-officers came to recognise in their tireless correspondent. Clarity, firmness, discipline, order: the whole backed up by the timeless certainties of morality 'Right is Right' so characteristically reinforced by an explanation of the practical disadvantages one incurs by flouting them. And underlying it all is the idea of the service as a continuous entity, to whose future as well as whose present one's actions must refer. How incalculable have been the benefits of instilling that spirit. Pepys, like his friend and mentor in these matters, Sir William Coventry, was generally accused of favouring the tarpaulins at the expense of the gentlemen. This was politically both dangerous and unpopular, since in the early years of the reign the tarpaulins were bound to be officers who had held commissions under the Commonwealth and Protectorate, whereas the gentlemen were almost certain to belong to Royalist families. It is true that almost all Pepys' closest friends among the sea officers were tarpaulins. Sir John Narbrough, the great admiral who was also a great navigator, and Sir John Berry, who had entered the service as a boatswain, both came into the Royal Navy from the merchant service, without so far as is known 149 having served under the Commonwealth. But it was their professionalism and their conspicuous attention to duty that won them Pepys' high regard, not their political or social origins. And he had no prejudice against aristocrats, provided they were ready to learn their job. On the contrary he wanted more aristocrats in the navy, not less, because he rightly saw that parliament was an essentially aristocratic and landed club - witness the amount of time it spent adding to the already excessive number of game laws - and naval affairs would never get a proper hearing there until aristocrats could be brought to contemplate a naval career. But it must be a career, and they must accept discipline. As Drake had put it 'I would have the gentleman to haul and draw with the mariner, and the mariner with the gentleman.' Young sparks who came on board for a battle as though they were going for a fortnight's grouse shooting were worse than useless. In all this Pepys was running counter to the spirit of the society in which he lived. To obey orders was still felt to be the part or a servant, a mechanic, an artisan or a tradesman. The pride and honour of a gentleman were, by our standards, morbidly egocentric. In the Civil War the Royalist commanders were forever taking the huff with each other and sometimes with difficulty, restrained from fighting duels when they should have been concentrating on the enemy. Professionalism in the army and the navy had grown fast under Cromwell, but Charles II was a very different man to work for. Yet the sea-officers with whom Pepys, down at Deal, passed such an agreeable day while the King was riding into London close enough for us to have heard the huzzas were products of the Cromwellian system. Perhaps their professionalism contributed to his own. -Midshipmen join their First Ships in the Med in 1940 'T ET's put on our pyjamas,' said Michael. .L What an enormously good idea it seemed and so it was. There was much rummaging in over-night bags and in quite a short time we were all in pyjamas, which were or something approaching the native costume of the land through which we were passing in the not too clean Egyptian train. We were thirty-six midshipmen, all apparently calm and self-possessed young men, mostly seventeen years old, although a few of eighteen or nineteen, crossing the Egyptian isthmus from Suez to Alexandria to join our first ships in His Majesty's Eastern Mediterranean fleet, otherwise known as the Med Fleet. Inside ourselves, each according to his temperament, it was different; the apparent nonchalance was superficial. We had left the troop transports at Port Tewfik early that morning wonderfully clean in our long white duck trousers and high necked tunics which were already becoming grubby with the ubiquitous yellow dust of the desert. The war was entering its second year and no one was under any illusion that 'it would be over by Christmas' and we were keen to play our part. We had chosen the Royal Navy: we were professionals. The question of defeat did not enter our heads; the British Empire always won in the end, although we knew that it also started wars badly. We had left Liverpool in September, the Battle of Britain was on, and the blitz had hardly started. Our airmen were wonderful, but even in the unlikely event of their being overcome, we could not seriously envisage Hitler's armies crossing the Channel in the face of the Royal Navy. After leaving Britain and its blackout and with no responsibilities on the voyage in the quite comfortable accommodation of the luxury liners that made up our troop convoy it had seemed more like peacetime every day. Troopships were not even 'dry' in those days. The soldiers on board - an anti-aircraft regiment - were not so lucky; two thousand in hammocks crammed together below decks. We did not worry about them, they were soldiers and not our responsibility anyway. There was the gorgeous expanse of Table Bay that we entered one morning, the fascinating girls who drove us for brief visits to colourful racecourses and entrancing nightclubs were intoxicating. A few bombs dropped very wide off Italian Somaliland before lunch time drinks one day were a diversion, but the burnt out hull of the liner Georgie swinging at anchor in Suez Bay was a grim reminder that after all we were on the serious business of war. It was already dark when our train pulled into Alexandria station, so the almost white duck suits into which we had changed once more, in the poor Egyptian blackout went unnoticed. Bundled into battered local taxis, already dusty and weary, we were hardly ready to appreciate that moment of moments, not to be forgotten by any young man, when he joins his first ship! Through darkened, yet thronging, streets we were taken to what we came to know as 'No.6 gate'. Here the boats of the fleet were awaiting the new arrivals. We were divided according to ships. Warspite, Valiant, Malaya, Orion, Ajax, the famous names that we had only heard on the BBC rang out, called by the coxswains and midshipmen who were driving the boats and they entered into our lives for the first time. The boats, motor cutters and picket boats, jostled each other along the wharf. Starlight reflected in the wavelets. Then 'whoosh!' And phosphorescence as boat after boat pulled away into the blackout. The water was close at hand for in the tide-less Mediterranean, there was no need for high jetties. We trotted up the port after ladder onto the quarterdeck of the Valiant and saluted in the dark. The blackout here was complete. A tired and somewhat bedraggled lot, we were guided to a space between decks, a flat as we learnt later it was called, were given seamen's hammocks and bedding which we laid out on the deck, put on our pyjamas and were soon in an exhausted sleep. Sometime later we heard over the ship's broadcasting system a sound that was to be the 150 --MIDSHIPMEN JOIN THEIR FIRST SHIPS IN THE MED IN 1940 background of much of our time in the Med, but having nowhere to go or duties to perform, we let noise of rushing feet and slamming doors pass us by and huddled down on our makeshift bedding; some of us were anxious lest our last moments had come before we had even started on our lives of adventure. 'Tumpa tumpa tum, tumpa tumpa tum,' went the bugle, 'Repel aircraft! Repel aircraft!' went the voice, over and over again for what seemed an age. The impression was that the enemy aircraft were actually landing on the ship, but it was probably no more than a reconnaissance over Alexandria. Then the 'thump! thump!' of a 4.5-inch battery, four of Valiant's heavy anti-aircraft guns, firing a barrage into the sky. It was not until later that Michael confided that he had missed the directions to the heads. Caught desperately short he had found himself wandering around in the pitch dark of the blacked-out quarterdeck. He relieved himself on what can only have been the barbette of Y 15-inch turret. Horrors! This should have been a matter for the Guinness Book of Records at another time. The Gunroom, where twenty-two midshipmen and three lieutenants ate, played and where several also slept on the settees and armchairs, was a long space amidships on the starboard ship's side under the catapault deck. Most of the space was taken up by a long wooden table up against the settee on the ship's side with chairs on the inboard side. At this table the entire mess could, on the rare occasions that called for it, almost all sit down together. There was just room on the inboard side for an electric fire and a club fender against the bulkhead and four or five black leather covered armchairs. The pantry was at the forward end, a tiny space which gave onto the mess by a small square serving hatch. This square was big enough for Farmer Helps, as one of our term was known, to aim a full plate of victuals at Petty Officer Steward Hancock with accompanying expletives, if they failed to take his fancy. Petty Officer Hancock would dodge smartly, grinning broadly and clearly enjoying the horseplay more than anyone, and the plate would smash against the not far off pantry bulkhead. 151 The food was plain but ample, for which we were stopped 10/3d a week out of our midshipmen's 5/- a day. The most enjoyable meal was probably breakfast, with plenty of toast, butter and marmalade and the small Egyptian eggs fried and served on fried bread, of which, despite a slight flavour of garlic, snotties would often consume four or even six portions. Midshipmen were supposed to be 'under instruction' and an officer known as the Snotties' Nurse had the duty of supervising this. But the pressures of warfare and other ship's duties, both on the students and on the ship's officers who were supposed to be the instructors, and in particular on the Valiant's Snotties' Nurse who was the ship's navigating officer and one of the most heavily burdened officers, was so great that I do not remember more than a dozen lectures during my time onboard. An exception was the Journal or Log, which all midshipmen were required to keep. These were a test in observation and should show that the snotties were absorbing more than just their daily round. They were read at monthly intervals by the Snotties' Nurse and also initialled by the Captain himself. Breakfast with the Captain was an ordeal. During a quieter time in harbour two snotties the name was an unfair survival from the youngsters' runny noses - were detailed for breakfast with the Captain. Reporting to the steward at 8 am in the large after cabin was the start. Where to put your hands while waiting in the highly polished ante-room was in itself a problem. In a moment the Captain was there and doing his best to put his visitors at ease, which 1am sure did not come naturally to him. Our Commanding Officer was probably wronged by his nickname 'Black Morgan' thanks to his generally taciturn manner. It seemed difficult on the bridge or quarterdeck to extract more than a gruff 'Wouf! Wouf!' or something that sounded like it. At breakfast the effort at conversation on both sides banished the pleasure of an excellent English breakfast, served by his steward on the miraculous shining white fluted china as supplied by the Admiralty for post Captains' messes. What should have been a highlight .. 152 MIDSHIPMEN JOIN THEIR FIRST SHIPS IN THE MED IN 1940 was quickly forgotten by the guests. Their duties onboard and in particular their action stations, for the fleet was at four hours' notice for steam in one of the most active war zones at that time, was a preoccupation for the newly arrived midshipmen. From positions of really high responsibility to more mundane tasks were the lot of the snotties. The ship's officers, and in particular the ship's Gunnery Officer, a Lieutenant Commander of fearsome aspect, but actually the kindest and most considerate of all the officers, a graduate from that mythical place, the naval gunnery school at Whale Island in Portsmouth, were carefully weighing them up. The most important jobs were concerned with the ship's anti-aircraft defence. For this the Valiant had been recently modernised and carried twin turrets of 4.5-inch high angle guns set in batteries of four guns, each group covering one quarter of the ship. Then came the much-vaunted 'Chicago Pianos'. These were enormous mountings, each with eight 30mm barrels and vast trays of belted ammunition. The shells self-destructed at 3,OOOft and when firing made a satisfactory thumping sound of great intensity. Within 24 hours of joining Valiant the fleet put to sea for a sweep along the North African coast. This large fleet, all leaving the restricted harbour of Alexandria after dark, as was their wont, with radio silence and no more than dimmed navigation lights, seemed a miracle. My action station was in B IS-inch turret under Lieutenant Henry Barnes, a large delightful pre-war officer who enjoyed his comforts. We settled in the small office at the rear of the huge turret, its austere metal walls hung with a few telephones, but softened by ample rugs and cushions supplied by Henry himself, together with Thermoses of tea and tins of plum cake. The more sinister aspect was the two mountings of point five-inch guns, four to each mounting, on the roof of the turret. The IS-inch gun crews manned these against close air attack. The turret officer, Henry, and his midshipman naturally, went up with the gun's crews. Happily this did not arise for several weeks (when the aircraft carrier Illustrious was put out of action by Stukas) and I had moved to a less exposed action station. When 'repel aircraft' was sounded, in harbour as at sea, to get inside B turret I had to run along an exposed deck within just a few feet of the muzzles of a 4.5 inch battery; my fear was that the guns might start firing before I had dipped through the hole under the overhang of the large 15 inch turret. Happily this never happened to me. J. KANE LIEUT. CDR, RN Forbidden Areas One N 1935 we paid a visit in the small aircraft carrier Hermes to three ports in Japan, ending in a visit to Nagasaki. We were to sail for exercises with the rest of the China Fleet at 1800 on a Sunday. The Petty Officers' Mess had been given permission to go on a picnic in a cutter to one of the small islands in the harbour. I was on duty in the afternoon and was horrified to see our cutter and the Petty Officers being towed by a Japanese steamboat past the ship and up to the top of the harbour. We got in touch with our Consul who learnt that the Petty Officers had landed on a most secret island and were being interrogated to see if they were spies. Our Captain, the Hon. George Fraser, was very reluctant to make a signal to the Commander-in-Chief to say we were unable to sail. Just about the time we were due to sail the Consul said that if the Captain landed in full dress and bowed and apologised to the Governor of the Port it was possible that the Petty Officers and cutter would be allowed to return. This is what happened and we sailed about two hours late. The men had just lit a fire on the island and were starting to cook a meal, when they were aware of Japanese Marines, armed and in full combat gear, crawling towards them through the bushes. I 153 Two Two or three days before, three of us went for a walk in the hills overlooking the city. We had been walking for some time and commented that there was no one about, when we came to a large notice in several languages including English, which said we were in a prohibited zone. Luckily we were able to retrace our steps without being spotted. Three In the Spring of 1938 we arrived at Gibraltar in the Cornwall, which was at the time a Boys' Training Ship. We had landed Lord Chatfield at Marseilles, after he had attended the combined exercises of the Home and Mediterranean Fleets. We learnt that the previous week the pocket battleship Deutschland had been at Gibraltar. She had given leave and shortly afterwards the top of the Rock was seen to be covered with German officers and men in uniform. The authorities were naturally very concerned and questioned the Army sentries by the entrance to the Forbidden Zone. Their orders were that only officers and men from the armed forces in uniform were to be allowed through. Nothing was said about nationality. RICHARD PHILLIMORE COMMANDER, RN p Kipling at Sea F Rudyard Kipling is thought of at all these days it is probably as the writer of stories of IIndia, its people and its Army. Having been educated in England at a school which prepared boys for Sandhurst and Woolwich (his eyesight debarred him from the Army) he returned to India and saw a lot of both the 'Indian Army' and the 'Army in India' and of the native people, and a lot of his writing reflects that. But he wrote about much more than those. In prose and verse he depicted vignettes of English history from Roman times, the men and manners of modem England, war in the trenches and, rather surprisingly, about the sea and ships. Kipling's affection for the Navy began in 1891 when after a serious illness in England he was returning to India via the Cape and on board the 'gigantic three thousand ton liner, the Moor', he met a Naval Captain who was en route to take up a new command at Simons Town. A 'life-long friendship' began, and he introduced Kipling to the Naval society of Cape Town 'where the Admiral of the Cape Station lived in splendour, with at least a brace of live turtles harnessed to the end of the little wooden jetty, swimming about until due to be taken up for turtle soup'. He goes on to describe a 'rag' at the Naval Club there after 'a polite suggestion to a newly appointed Lieutenant-Commander that the fore-topmast of his tiny gunboat wanted staying forward'. That was undoubtedly the germ of Kipling's story 'Judson and the Empire' in the book Many Inventions. In that tale he brings to life the relationships among the ship's company of a small ship a century ago and the extent to which comparatively junior officers, out of touch when detached, were expected to have some knowledge of international politics and to use initiative. Another that must have come from stories heard was 'A Flight of Fact', from Land and Sea Tales, which deals with a naval aircraft's crew who found themselves with problems while flying about a Pacific archipelago. Once again his detail is accurate and surprising. 'We'll meet again,' said my Captain, 'and if ever you want a cruise, let me know.' From this must have sprung the invitation to embark in the Flagship for the Channel Fleet manoeuvres, as recounted in 'Their Lawful Occasions' in the book Traffics and Discoveries. He 'missed his ship on sailing' and took part instead aboard a small torpedo boat. ('''Join us - buy a 'am an' see life," said Petty Officer Second Class Pyecroft.') In my youth I knew a retired naval officer who had then been in that same boat. He told me that Kipling, made free of the ship by her captain, talked with every one aboard her (there were not many). 'He knew just how to phrase a question to produce the greatest information,' he told me, 'and after a couple of days he knew more about that ship than any one man in her.' 'Lawful Occasions' shows it. He must, however, have been at sea in a big ship at some time, for the tenseness in a ship of the Fleet at sea in fog is well described in his poem 'The Wet Litany' preceding 'Their Lawful Occasions'. 'The Ballad of the Clamperdown' in Barrack Room Ballads, written in the 1880s, describes a fictional battle fought by an early turret-gun ship which was ended by boarding the enemy when her two turrets had been put out of action. During the First World War he wrote much about the Navy and its tasks in both prose and verse. The stresses of Channel patrol were well depicted in 'Sea Constables' in Debits and Credits, while in The Five Nations are the poems, 'Cruisers', and 'Destroyers'. The Submarine Service is recognised, though in pre-war exercises, in Traffics and Discoveries by the verses introducing 'Their Lawful Occasions' beginning, The wind went down with the sunset, The fog came up with the tide, When the Witch of the North took an eggshell With a little blue devil inside. In his little book, The Fringes of the Fleet Kipling describes the wartime doings of the sweepers, submarines, and patrols in the Channel, sometimes in prose, sometimes in verse, always accurately. The Royal Marines were not overlooked, and in The Seven Seas is a poem, 'Soldier and Sailor Too', while in Traffics and Discoveries 154 KIPLING AT SEA is an entertammg tale, 'The Bonds of Discipline', of how a cruiser's ship's company staged a display of sloth and indiscipline culminating in an 'execution' of a Royal Marine for mutiny, for the misinformation (though the term had not arrived then) of a French spy masquerading as a Portuguese refugee. Kipling's writings kept the Navy well in the public eye, but his seafaring was not with the Navy alone. Some of his tales of marine engineering were set in merchant ships, and others, such as 'An Unqualified Pilot' in Land and Sea Tales or 'A Disturber of Traffic' in Many Inventions dealt with the difficulties of river pilotage or with lighthouse service. While living for some years in the United States he had met a Doctor Conland, who had been with the cod fishing fleet on the Grand Banks of Newfoundland in his youth. From his experiences came another full book, Captains Courageous. Kipling wrote, 'My part was the writing, his the details.' In the course of writing the story, Kipling said, he and ConIand moved among the fishermen of Boston harbour, 'assisted hospitable tugmasters to shift schooners round the harbour, and boarded every craft that looked as if she might be useful' - an example of Kipling's quest for detail. In his autobiography, Something of Myself, he describes how his inherited ability with words was enhanced by the wide reading of which he was made free in his Headmaster's library. Study of the varying styles of the writers there gave him the flexibility of style with which he later wrote. He was born in India, and went straight from his English school to being a reporter on a big Indian newspaper, which gave him a grounding in expressing much in the fewest words and experience in eliciting facts with the fewest questions, and a close acquaintance with the Army and the native people. It was his training as a reporter that refined in him the ability to create a picture with the minimum of words, and that trained him to get his colour from the men - and women - he met by the use of keen observation and by listening to them. It is his skill in depicting 155 detail, and particularly technical detail, that makes his writing so fascinating, though he did not do it unhelped, and says in his autobiography, 'I have had miraculous escapes in technical matters. Luckily men of the sea and the engine room do not write to the papers.' Elected to the Athaneum at the age of thirty-three, he 'realised that if one wanted to know anything from forging an anchor to forging antiquities one would find the world's ultimate expert there at lunch. [There was] an old General who had begun life as a Middy in the Crimea before he entered the Guards. He was a fearless yachtsman and dealt with me faithfully if I made technical errors in any tale of mine that interested him.' One of the surprising aspects of Kipling's writings is his apparent familiarity with ship construction, and steam engines both on rails and at sea. The former is illustrated in 'The Ship that Found Herself in the book The Day's Work. The story begins with the launching of a freighter, and the woman who launched her saying, 'Isn't she a beauty!', to which the captain designate replies, 'Now, she's just irons and rivets and plates put into the form of a ship. She's got to find herself yet.' The rest is a detailed description of the inter-relationship of every part of her and how they come to settle in to 'pull together' in an Atlantic storm on her maiden voyage. Kipling includes in that story the part played by the engines, and it is a good technical account, too, but more detailed and technical are his 'Devil amid the Deep Sea' and 'Bread upon the Waters', both also in The Day's Work, while 'M' Andrew's Hymn' from The Seven Seas used to be found framed in many a Chief Engineer's cabin. He was indeed not just a teller of stories of India, and the Navy of his day owed much to him for what would now be termed his 'P.R.' writings on its behalf. Today, we can learn from his writings some amusing stories and some idea of the Navy as it went about its business then. He's still worth reading. 1. LENNOX-KING COMMANDER, RNZN -For the Royal Navy, on the prospect of leaving the Painted Hall and the Chalk Gallery at Greenwich Palace, 1998 'Nautis sublevandis destinata' H ERE, you'd have dined on hard-tack like a king, Your King, meanwhile, promoted to a god Over your head; instead, the old men trod - Between the bases where the columns spring And Dome fronts Dome - that vault from Wing to Wing, Trampling their pipe-stubs down to dust, dry-shod Through a white, meridian sea. Their steady plod Stacked memory here: it meant the mirroring Of Hospital in College, West in East, And like raked embers, warmed the rising yeast Which worked on, Course by Course, towards this Hall; Until we sensed, above its silvered feast Time's crest, toppling towards us like a wall As each prospective Tenant pitched his stall. 2312/98 ROBERT COCKCROFf 156 Correspondence SUEZ 40 YEARS ON Sir,-I originally decided to keep my trap shut after reading John Winton's article in the October 1996 issue, but, after chattering recently with some of my senior staff at the time, I now think that a full response is called for in answer to his criticisms of a ship we were all very proud of. I am in a position to do this as I left her in July 1956 - sadly for me not long before ~uez - after an initially difficult, but finally rewarding, two and a half years as her 'Chief. I think that lowe it to the splendid team that I led in the second commission to correct the rather sour impression he leaves on record. I would like to start by clearing away one side issue that may have had a bearing. I am absolutely astonished that there was no official recognition of the bravery and efficiency shown by those, of whom he was one, concerned with extinguishing the extremely serious hangar fire. John has told me about this and I can only assure him that, had I still been there, the outcome would have been very different. No names, no pack drill, and some of those concerned are no longer with us, but I think that the whole affair reflects adversely on the senior officers concerned. I am equally astonished, however, at his rather emotionally critical comments on his ship. It is simply not true that she was 'chronically accident prone on an almost operatic scale'; and nor were her sailors 'convinced that the ship builders had locked a black leprechaun up inside her', at least not the sailors I spoke to! And his comments about 'everything being designed to work in the most awkward time consuming and labour-intensive way' are just plain silly as applied to one ship. Eagle was designed the same as any other Fleet Carrier to meet war requirements. A little over the top, then, John? You have to accept that life in an operational Carrier is life at full stretch. Challenging; exhilarating; fascinating - and, in the nature of it, filled with potential hazard. Lesser mortals should keep out. My father and I, between us, spent some seven or eight years in Carriers as 'Chief' and 'Senior' and as I write this I am looking at photographs of a mangled 'Flycatcher' being hoisted back on board out of the drink; and the wreckages of a 'Blackburn Bison' and a 'Fairey IIIF' being hauled out of the side netting. And a lot more. I pass on to a 'Firebrand' crashing on Implacable's flight deck and bursting into flames; then to 'Attackers' and 'Sea Hawks' crash-landing on Eagle. These are just a few vignettes of life up-top in a carrier. Along with these go full-power or near it, on the engines six to eight times a day; around a hundred launches and recoveries; for days on end, and sometimes in marginal weather. All systems go, and it ill becomes anyone to cry havoc when just occasionally something goes wrong. I fear that leprechauns are in the eye of the beholder. Eagle did not have a good start in life. I have no intention of pointing the finger of criticism at anyone here, but when I took over she was neither an efficient ship nor an entirely happy one. It was not necessarily the fault of the people concerned - with one or two exceptions - but rather, in my view, of the system. The Engine Room Department provides all the power for flying operations; the speed for launching and recovery; and the operation of the catapults, barriers, and arrestor wires. Fuelling the aircraft too. Total teamwork and integration with Commander (Air) and his men is an absolute must. If the machinery is not kept in tip-top condition then flying efficiency will suffer. Proper upkeep is essential. The concept of Planned Upkeep was not new to me. I had learnt much from my father who had led the way here for many years in the Royal Navy, and practised it in total understanding and co-operation with those illustrious sailors Admirals Fisher, Noble and Horton. At the end his running of the Maintenance Command in Western Approaches was a vital factor in the winning of that battle. I treasure a crumpled piece of paper in my possession which says at the end '(Wildish) has contributed in great measure to the successful outcome of the U-Boat War. I know of no other officer, not actually in the 157 158 CORRESPONDENCE battle line, who is more worthy of special recognition for his services during this war'. Max Horton was not one to cast bunches of roses around indiscriminately, and this was for planned upkeep on a vast scale. What did I find in the Eagle? Totally unreliable flight machinery above all else. To this day I can hear the voice of 'Buster' Hallett (Cdr Air) over the 'bullhorn'; 'Chief! see you at flight-deck level. The arrestor gear is VIS. The jets have three, repetition three, minutes left before they must divert. How long before the gear is ready?' And I remember Walter Couchman, highly intelligent FOHS, and my other boss as his SEO, writing behind my back to complain to the Engineer-in-Chief about the unreliability of the catapults. We sorted this out and talked of what to do. Before he hauled down his Flag he sent a directive to my Captain, Holland-Martin, which, in effect, said 'Eagle has never in this commission achieved the operational capability for which she was designed. You are to investigate why, and make proposals'. Northey (Executive Officer) was detailed off as Chairman, and the small Committee included me and a Lieutenant Commander on the Flying staff. If I tend to blow my own trumpet here it is only because it was my department that had failed - for whatever reason - and it was up to us to find a better way forward. I sought, and got, agreement to two major proposals:(a) an operating cycle basically comprising two weeks' intensive flying (Monday to Friday week), followed by a week's self-maintenance in harbour. (b) the operational period to be spent continually at sea, replenishing under way, thus avoiding the daily light-up and shut-down that engines don't like and nor do their minders. We set a target of a hundred sorties a day, dawn to dusk, to meet the flying requirement, a target considerably higher than performance to date. These concepts were accepted and the Carrier Cycle became a fact of life. While all this was going on two determined, and talented, Captains in the Engineer-in-Chiefs Department were beavering away at an important related project - the preparation of fully documented maintenance schedules for ship's machinery. Captains D. J. Hoare (later Rear Admiral and DAMR) and A. F. Turner (later Admiral and 4SL) both had AlE backgrounds and were intent on introducing aircraft style upkeep to ships. We got together and Eagle got the first fully programmed ship's machinery maintenance system ever in the Royal Navy, to go along with the Carrier Cycle. I was delighted. All this took place during Eagle's refit and installation of the interim angled deck, and our new Skipper joined, a press on aviator, the highly decorated Captain E. D. G. Lewin. I was lucky here. Appalled at what he had heard of Eagle's past record he was determined on a clean sweep of all remains of the first commission. My head was on the block; but my Appointers stood firm and I stayed on to a wholly fulfilling relationship with 'Drunky'. I remember our first meeting on board when he listened to my run-down on affairs, and then quietly said 'Chief I have spent much of my life flying behind a single reciprocating engine. You don't have to lecture me on the need for proper maintenance. Rather you and I, together, have got to persuade our Admiral'. So a future opened up full of hope. It wasn't an easy start. It never is with a new commission. I commanded an outfit of some twenty-five officers and around five hundred men. Fortunately many of the Chief ERAs and Chief Stokers were volunteers to stay on from the last commission, and they were a grand lot. However of the three hundred, or so, junior rates some two hundred were straight out of training. So there was a lot to get on with, and - yes, incidents did occur. There were some floods, and I think, a minor fire, and there was the major flood in the boiler room that Philip Seymour referred to in the January issue ( and I am particularly grateful to him for his kind words). But it all soon started to click. Our near full-power six times a day, and firing the main armament a hundred times a day, became routine. Team work with the Air Department was superb, and one day we hit a record two hundred and one sorties. Showed up the Americans, too, when operating with them and cross decking. We were all very proud. All? .. CORRESPONDENCE Anyone who has read Neil McCart's book will discover the full story of the success that followed for Eagle for another four commissions. His tale is one of continued splendid operational achievement interspersed with routine planned self-maintenance. In his words 'so ended the career of one of the most powerful warships the Royal Navy had ever possessed. She had also been one of the happiest and most efficient, serving the country well'. I am proud to have served in her, and to have played a small, but formative, part in her long and successful career. I hope that my words will help to set the record straight. D. B. N. WILDISH VICE ADMIRAL THE BEGINNING OF THE END OF BRITISH PRESTIGE IN THE EAST Sir,-In 'The beginning of the end of British prestige in the East' (NR, Oct. '97) Commander Humphrys comments that the Prince of Wales 'had carried out a bitty programme without gaining much useful fighting experience,' ... Really? It was her gunnery officer who spotted that the Prinz Eugen was leading the Bismarck, which in consequence was not being engaged by the Hood; and it was a hit by the Prince of Wales which led to the Bismarck being sunk, despite the calamity of l4-inch turrets jumping off their roller paths. As to morale, having served with her captain, John Leach, I can only suggest that, had she been a private ship when sent out east, she might well have been happier. It was her fate to be victim of the errors of two admirals; the first failed to deploy correctly, and the second scorned the air threat. The Prince of Wales was a magnificent ship, finely commanded. IAN MCGEOCH Sir,-I read Comdr Humphrys' interesting article while in Singapore staying with my son, who has an influential situation there and is in a position to make judgments of the present climate of opinion, which I discussed extensively with him. I was also able to go to the Singapore Archives, now housed in a new building and beautifully kept. 159 Humphrys' article largely coincides with my recollections, but there are a few points 1 can add and perhaps stress a few others. The vital operational factor was of course the lack of air cover. With adequate cover there is little doubt that the two capital ships· could have destroyed the Japanese transports and totally frustrated the invasion. The unavailability of Indomitable was most unfortunate, but to send the two ships without air cover, in the full knowledge that the RAP's capability was far from adequate, demonstrated a lack of understanding of the characteristics of ships' armament which was, to put it mildly, reprehensible. We had other carriers. This failure has often been attributed to Tom Phillips, which is most unjust. He was not gullible enough to think that in his position he could succeed, and strongly resisted the expedition without air power. The fault lies much higher up, partly at the Admiralty but certainly at Cabinet level. With a man like Churchill, with his mastery of rhetoric, one must exonerate the Board and operational staff. If you have never argued with Churchill you can have little idea how dictatorial and opinionated he was. He always thought he knew better than senior officers and had a vastly exaggerated belief in the power of naval guns, whose difference from the military weapons he never understood. In January 1941 a conference of commanders in the Far East recommended 582 aircraft should be supplied, which the Chiefs of Staff reduced to the figure of 336. But Churchill wrote: I do not remember to have given my approval for these very large diversions of forces ... The political situation in the Far East does not seem to require, and the strength of our Air Force by no means warrants, the maintenance of such large forces in the Far East at this time. Instead of 582 aircraft the RAF had only 158 obsolescent Swordfish, Wildebeeste and Brewster Buffaloes, many unairworthy. Only Hurricanes could match the Zeros, and 200 were sent to Russia in 1941. Even so the local RAF optimistically estimated they could destroy 70% of the enemy aircraft - without knowing how many would be opposed. 160 CORRESPONDENCE Phillips vigorously resisted the expedition without air cover. His previous appointment had been VCNS and he knew Australia was uneasy. Sir Earle Page had been sent to London to represent to the War Cabinet the need for reinforcements and Smuts was of the same view. On the way out, at Capetown, Phillips flew to see him and Smuts telegraphed London of the danger of a 'first class disaster' . When he sailed from Singapore Phillips left Admiral Palliser behind to ensure the RAF provided what little assistance it could, but on 9 December Palliser signalled Phillips that no air cover would be available. The decision was on the orders of the Air Vice Marshal Pulford, Air Officer Commanding. There was little point in Phillips breaking wireless silence and ample arguments against it. But carriers and RAF reinforcements were available; the aircraft fruitlessly sent to Russia would have saved Malaya, and four months later we had three carriers in the Eastern Fleet. But the decision of the civilian Governor, Sir Shenton Thomas, to forbid the sounding of sirens, in case it should frighten the civilian population, until 15 minutes before the bombs began to fall, when it was too late, (the RAF station had to be awakened at 0400) is inexplicable. The Military commander, General Percival, surrendered 'unconditionally'. There is debate about the 'unconditional' nature of the surrender. The word did not appear in the surrender document, of which Percival was given no copy, but I have seen a transcript of the negotiations in which the question was put to Percival: Yamashito: Unconditionally? Percival: Yes. Phillips should never have been placed by the politicians in the absurd position he was. 'The surrender of Singapore is the blackest page in our military history for all time.' The attack was not an isolated one. It was the Japanese intention to attack Ceylon and Calcutta similarly, with the object of taking India. Of 32 RAF planes, 25 were lost. Nagumo, out at sea, sank Cornwall, Dorsetshire and Hermes. But at Ceylon his losses meant he had only two out of five carriers at the Battle of the Coral Sea a month later. From memory, Tenedos was the only one of Force Z to escape and when Colombo was bombed, she was sunk in the harbour. She, and the AMC Hector lay upright on the bottom, their upper decks awash, in the next billet to my ship, until the end of the war. But my visit to Singapore has convinced me that a magnificent little country has arisen. The mixture of races and religions working in friendship together - Muslim and Hindu, Chinese and Japanese, Malay and European, Christian and Buddhist, Jew and Gentile, is an example to Northern Ireland and the Balkans. All are proud of the order and prosperity of their efficient country. All work hard for that prosperity and my son confirms the impression I gained so strongly - that it is far from the end of British Prestige in the East. The admiration and - yes - affection the people of all racial origins have for Great Britain is stronger than ever. They have not forgotten that the Englishman, Raffles, started the planting of rubber in Malaya and founded Singapore (without authority!) GEOFFREY PENN Sir,-Having read the correspondence on Cdr Humphrys' article with great interest, especially the 'red herring' of Indomitable's crucial non-availability, may I add a postscript which is not generally known. Whilst serving as NA in Tokyo in 19681969, the office was constantly assailed by unusual requests. A relevant one was from the former Commander (E) of the Repulse (then in his 70s) who was on a World Tour. He wished to call in at Tokyo to have the opportunity to host a dinner for as many of the original Japanese aircrew we could muster who took part in the successful sortie against our big ships. We found about a dozen rather surprised volunteers who were pleased to be entertained royally at the Okura Hotel and no doubt surprised to be given recognition and praise of their behaviour by their 'ex' enemy. This was to thank them for making sure that the Cdr (E) plus a dozen other survivors on a lone Carley raft from Repulse were picked up by one of the destroyer escorts which were CORRESPONDENCE 'conned' to their position by one of their aircraft. Throughout, the destroyers were allowed to pick up all survivors unmolested and the Commander was determined that he would show his appreciation and thanks for conduct which the official 'histories' (he said) had signally failed to do. P.P.S. At about this time, many Japanese were keen to go to Europe and the UK for the first time. Our office had to spend considerable time locating people in the UK they wanted to see again, having 'met' them in the war, in one way or another. With the cooperation of the Admiralty and War Office we were mostly successful, but it was time consuming for both ends of the system. As a minor personal 'retaliation' on my part, I asked my Japanese Naval Liaison Officer (later a large rumbustious NA in London with an outsize sense of humour) to see if he could locate the ex-Gunnery Officer of the Haguro with which we, in the 26th DF had come to blows on 16 May 1945. I thought a lunch would be interesting and illuminating to discuss that memorable encounter. The invitation went out, and he reported that the ex-Gunnery Officer was overcome with all manner ofjoy, delight and honour to be asked, but apologised as only a Japanese can, to be excused 'this time'. Having become a very public figure, and one of Japan's wealthiest TV tycoons, I don't doubt he had no wish to be reminded of the part he played in the Haguro's sinking that night. My informant and I with gin in our hands and tears in our eyes agreed it was 'Game, Set and Match' once again! I never did know his name! JOHN ROBATHAN CAPTAIN, RN HMS CENTURION Sir,-In the October issue I asked whether any member knew about the service of the World War I battleship HMS Centurion in World War II. I have received information from Mr 1. A. Allan of New Zealand who kindly sent me some information which was published in Blackwood's Magazine in January 1946. She was designed to masquerade as HMS Anson but soon after commissioning in April 1941 she was 161 earmarked to be sunk at the entrance to Tripoli harbour, thus blocking the port. Admiral Cunningham had previously refused to detail Barham for such a task. However this operation was cancelled and Centurion was told to proceed to Alexandria via the Cape. But this destination was also altered and Centurion sailed for Bombay where she was to remain for nine months. Then an event occurred which put Centurion back again in the limelight. She was now to masquerade as Duke of York and make amends for the damage to Queen Elizabeth and Valiant by Italian underwater charioteers. She was filled to overflowing with food and other necessities and proceeded in convoy for Malta. Within three days Centurion was hit by a 1,000lb bomb and returned to Alexandria with a heavy bow down angle. After repairs she was intended to block the Suez Canal if need arose. But other tasks were ahead of her and early in 1944 she was detailed as a blockship for the Normandy landings. Her last resting place was the beach off Varreville in Normandy. As to her speed, she once touched 18 knots and she was converted to oil burning. PATRICK TAILYOUR Sir,-Early in 1938, during my first term as a Cadet (E) in HMS Erebus, we were taken to see HMS Centurion, as a technological development in which we should take an interest. It certainly interested me. All this took place almost 60 years ago, but my memory of its machinery installation is still reasonably clear. The machinery layout was the standard for 'Dreadnought' type battleships. There were four shafts, direct driven by the main turbines; high pressure turbines (200 psi) were sited in small wing engine rooms and discharged their exhaust steam through the longitudinal bulkhead that separated the wing engine rooms from the centre one, into two large LP turbines, which due to the line of the shafting, had to be mounted low down, so that there was no space to fit the condensers underneath them. The exhaust steam from the LP turbines was led, by huge rectangular ducts, beautifully encased in mahogany strip over the lagging, to p 162 CORRESPONDENCE two condensers sited towards the crown of the compartment. To go astern, there was a separate astern turbine on the forward end of eachLP. The auxiliary machinery was spread around the main engines and there were, as far as I can remember, one or two dynamos in the centre engine room. The remote control was fitted only to the main throttles; I cannot remember whether it was fitted to the astern as well as the ahead throttles, but I think not. The auxiliary machinery in the engine room was left to look after itself and did not, in general, need altering, once set. Forward of the engine rooms was a number of boiler rooms, each containing either four or six small Babcock (I think) boilers, but they may have been three-drum, then called Yarrow. Saturated steam, of course. I am certain that the boiler rooms used for remote control had been converted to oil firing - it would have been quite impracticable to try to use coal. I think that two boiler rooms were converted, but it may have been only one. There was some arrangement for putting on and taking off sprayers by remote control and also for varying the fuel pump pressure, to control boiler pressure over a limited range, but I remember being told that it was a bit inflexible, which limited the power to manoeuvre the ship and, I think, that we were told that they could not stop by remote control, other than by using what later generations came to call the 'Scram button'. I am pretty certain that there was no form of automatic boiler control, where the boiler followed the demand for steam, but I may be wrong about this. I think that we were told that the maximum speed in remote control was 12 knots and the ship could, of course, be steered remotely from the destroyer. In its target role, the ship was fired on to hit by shells up to six inch. Above that, the bigger guns used 'Throw-off' firing, so that they did not hit the ship intentionally. We were shown how much damage even a six inch practice shell could do and we were told that, due to Sodd's Law, the aerials for the remote control were quite frequently shot away. It was clear that the whole business was great fun and that the people involved were wildly enthusiastic about their jobs. Allowing for the relatively primitive electronics of the day, it was remarkably successful. Regrettably, we did not go to sea in the ship. DAVID GARSTIN CAPTAIN, RN THE MANAGEMENT OF FEAR Sir,-Admiral Le Bailly's article on the management of fear was thought provoking. Readers looking for a different style of management may care to read Fabulous Admirals by Geoffrey Lowis wherein will be found the following. Admiral Lord Howe was awoken one night by the Officer of the Day. 'My Lord,' he panted, 'the ship is in grave danger. A gale blows and we drag anchors on to a lee shore. But have no fear, my Lord. We are exerting ourselves to the utmost to make sail and avert disaster. ' The Admiral looked calmly at his lieutenant. 'Tell me sir,' he replied, 'how fear feels. I can see how it looks.' D. T. FROST COMMANDER, RN THE SINKING OF SS KHEDIVE ISMAIL Sir,-Spencer Drummond's interesting review of The Sinking of the SS Khedive Ismail (NR Book Review II, Jan 1998) reminds me of our own experiences in CS4 under Rear-Admiral A. D. Read flying his flag in my ship, the Newcastle, with I think Kenya and Norfolk, or another of that great County-class. We left Calcutta in a hurry early in 1944, refuelled at Colombo, and steamed at best speed, about 22 knots, to Port Louis, Mauritius, where we again refuelled and changed evaporator coils (a story in itself of two excellent Mechanicians) before sweeping south the same day, eventually I believe beyond 35"S, in search of one of the two submarine supply ships known to be in the Indian Ocean. We returned to Grand Port Mauritius, where we awaited news from the RAP's very long-range Catalinas and elsewhere, which led us to send the Rocket and Relentless to seek out what must have been the Charlotte Schliemann somewhere NW of Mauritius. They found her one tropical dawn, were mistaken for cruisers, CORRESPONDENCE and the supply ship fired her scuttling charges; that was lucky because, when the destroyers fired their torpedoes, recently loaded in Mombasa, not one of them went off, and it transpired that the enemy had a 9.2in gun and might well have blown them out of the water. Perhaps Paladin and Petard had obtained their torpedoes from the same dud batch. Later our squadron, with the woolworth carrier Boxer (?) left Colombo or Trincomalee for a sweep near the equator, in search of the other supply ship; I remember being amazed that the Swordfish could operate at all in such atrocious sea conditions. I believe that enemy was also sunk; she may well have been the one on which the Japanese Ro.110 (sunk the day before) and the 1.27 (which sank the Khedive Ismail on 12 February - and nearly the Paladin too when her hydroplane sliced into her engine room) were depending to continue their attacks along the several regular shipping lanes passing not far from Addu Atoll. Losses in that convoy included a number of Admiral Somerville's staff being transferred from Mombasa to Trinco or Colombo; amongst them were several Wrens, some of whom had I believe taken passage with me from the Tail of the Bank in the troopship Llangibby Castle to Suez, and then in the Henderson-line's coal burner Salween, in which we coaled ship at Aden and then crossed the Line with due ceremony before landing in Mombasa. I remember one of the few survivors became my boats' ERA in the Newcastle, and took time to recover from his ordeal. MICHAEL RANKEN SHIPS IN CONVOY Sir,-I was intrigued by the correspondence in the recent issues ,regarding 'Ships in Convoy' to see the name Commander Alex Cherry mentioned in the text. I have often wondered what became of him as his book Yankee RN had a profound influence on my appreciation of the war at sea and of the RN as a service. Writing from a unique perspective he was able to bring to life the way the Service operated, especially the interactions of personalities within the traditions which at that time gave so much support to the many thousands of HOs 163 which swelled the ranks of the Regular Service. I was intrigued by his story, especially his decision not to transfer to the USN where he was promised a Brass Hat and destroyer command and the later disappointment when he was passed over for command in the RN. Reading between the lines it seems he came into conflict with his Commanding Officer and the death of Captain Walker RN was a greater blow to him that one would have thought. Some years ago I ended up being the First Lieutenant of one of our Frigates and found sympathy in the experiences Commander Cherry underwent. I did try then to contact the publishers of the book to find out if I could contact him, but alas they were no longer in existence. So what did happen to him? Did he revert to being a Wall Street Stockbroker? It is an intriguing question to which somebody must know the answer. R. J. MARTIN COMMANDER, RNZN A LITTLE HISTORY Sir,-I read OTH' s letter bemoaning the lack of a naval history chair at Oxbridge with considerable interest, having been called upon by no less a personage than the Pro-ViceChancellor of the University of Hull, with begging bowl! I feel sure you are aware of it, but it may be of interest to the membership at large, that the U of H has set up a Maritime Historical Studies Centre. There is already a Lectureship which focuses on the economic aspects of maritime history, and they are working towards the establishment of a Lectureship on the technical and scientific aspects, plus a range of scholarships etc. etc. In today's climate I think it would be too much to ask that a specifically Naval History chair be set up, not least because it is impossible to disentangle the political, economic, social, technical etc. strands which make up the whole of maritime history - and not forgetting geography, climatology, archaeology. . . Therefore Hull's initiative must be the next best thing, and I would think that it merits the wholehearted support of the members of the Review. The address is the Maritime 164 CORRESPONDENCE Historical Studies Centre, U of H, Hull HU6 7RX, tel. 01482 465608, Fax 466126, and I feel sure that Professor Lloyd (the PVC) would be delighted to hear of NR interest, and probably only too happy to write you an article about it. R. F. CHANNON CAPTAIN, RN AFO 1/56 REVISITED Sir,-MEO's 'AFO 1/56 Revisited' (NR, Jan. '98, p.32) stirred some memories. I was promoted Midshipman (from Cadet) on 1 January 1956 and was looking forward to shipping my white stripe which, to an outsider, made one look more important than one's seaman equivalent. Having gone to great expense to put it on my No. 5s I was bawled out by the DSO of HMS Glasgow when I joined her on 6 January for being improperly dressed. All Officers in HMS Glasgow had been required to remove coloured stripes on I January 1956 but were encouraged to sport the appropriately coloured handkerchief in the top pocket. Not too difficult for Pussers. MEO mentions that the Seaman Specialisation kept its hands firmly on the levers of power, but later on in my career I experienced what I call reverse prejudice from the hierarchy of my Branch. I was the Supply Officer of HMS Dainty and it was my third ship as a Bridge Watchkeeper. As well as my normal watchkeeping duties I was the action officer of the watch and special sea duty officer of the watch and I was allowed the odd RAS and alongside. My CO, then Commander Peter Maslen, suggested that I should apply to take the various command examinations and so I applied for Gunnery and TAS and, reasonably, asked for an exemption in Supply and Administration. The response was a handwritten note from the Chief Naval Supply and Secretariat Officer telling me to wind my neck in, stop rocking the boat and concentrate on matters Supply and Secretariat. Whether this response was prompted from the Master Race I shall never know but, like MEO, I have never quite understood the mystique of ship command and why that should be a prerequisite for the ultimate post in the RN. But then, I was not allowed to find out. C. M. 1. CARSON COMMODORE, RN SUBJECTIVE ISSUES Sir,-I write with reference to the very interesting article 'Subjective Issues' by Lt Cdr Martin Dawson (NR, Jan. '98), but would like to take issue with him on two points. Firstly he says that apart from Aircraft Carriers, Corvettes and LSTS were probably the two most important classes of vessel in our winning the 1939-45 War. Although I may be considered biased, I feel the Submarine Service should join his elite. If not a war winner, it was certainly a war saver, particularly in the Mediterranean viz the 10th Flotilla in Malta. He then goes on to say that Corvettes and LSTs (not quite - there were some in Malta 1948- circa early 50s) were scrapped from 1945, this through the unfeasibility of appointing RN officers other than in Command or as First Lieutenants, or in certain staff appointments. I believe this to be wrong in fact, as Reserve Qualified Officers held equal status in seniority with their RN counterparts. In my own case in 1944/46 the submarine Scotsman was commanded by Lieutenant A. H. B. Anderson DSC RNR and the 'Jimmy' was Lieutenant H. C. Robjohns RNZNVR. Both the other RN Lieutenant and I were very happy to serve under these two very fine officers, as indeed was the whole ship's company: some half of whom were Active Service. There were quite a few successful RNR and RNVR operational submarine COs with RN First Lieutenants. In fact I believe I am correct that Lieut. Cdr E. P. Young DSC of the Storm then went on to become the only non-RN Commander SM in HMS Cyclops (Captain SM7) - where he was much respected. CFTP A CONFUSING ISSUE Sir,-I write to confess to becoming confused whilst reading the correspondence column in the Jan '98 issue. Many of the articles and letters in recent years have been from retired RN and serving or retired RNR officers CORRESPONDENCE exhorting serving RN officers to become more commercial, cost conscious and like the real world of business. I am sure that they have a number of good points which we should, indeed, follow. Lt Cdr H. W. F. Baynham RNR (Alumni, NR Jan '98) should, therefore, have been surprised if staff were employed to find old boys from his old public school, not surprised that his request was denied. And, please, do remember there can be bad PR for spending public money: 'Navy spends thousands searching for old school ties'. And imagine the fun the press could have if we followed the advice of Lt Cdr John Howard RN (Conduct Unbecoming an Officer and a Gentleman) who appears, in his last paragraph, to be encouraging expenditure on what he calls 'old boys and girls clubs' as a higher priority than that given by the current line management. Lord Irvine's £650k could soon seem a minor indiscretion? On a different, but also confusing, note Lt Cdr J. R. Stocker RNR (Horizon Names) believes that the Type 42 Destroyers (Edinburgh, York. Glasgow, Nottingham, Newcastle etc) are named after towns. As a resident of Scotland's capital city and former MEa of HMS Edinburgh it was at this point that I regretted not having a dram before reading the Naval Review. DAVID GRIFFITHS LIEUT. CDR RN HELM OR WHEEL ORDERS Sir,-HM Bark Endeavour, in which the Shipwright's Clerk served (J anuary 1998, page 46), also employed my son on the two earlier legs of the ship's UK cruise, and I was able to visit her in Plymouth later. She is steered using a wheel mounted just forward of the mizzen mast, which in turn is just forward of the fore end of the tiller, which sweeps the quarter deck at ankle height. A rope wound round the drum on the wheel shaft is led via blocks to either side of the ship and then back to the tiller. If the helmsman is in any doubt as to which way he is moving the rudder he has only to turn round and see the tiller. Turning the top of the wheel to port moves the tiller to starboard and the rudder to port: 'arrnonious with the motions, as 165 they used to say at (B)RNC. My son noticed that the rope may be led in several ways. The present lead of the rope embraces the drum less than if it were to be rove so that putting the wheel to port would put the rudder to starboard and involves a tighter turn around the blocks on the deck either side of the drum. The alternative lead would be fair with a greater wrap on the drum, possibly less effort required of the helmsman, and you have the convention 'wheel to port, tiller to port' which I presume applied in the late l700s. He felt that he was turning the wheel the 'wrong way' but then he is used to a tiller. A small piece of evidence, if such it is. Captain Bromley-Martin's recollection (July 1997, p.278) is that in the 1920s the wheel went the same way as the rudder whatever the person conning the ship ordered, and that this applied also in HMS Victory and power boats around 1928. Recent correspondence in The Times initiated by FOSM confirms that at some time in the nottoo-distant past - before the 1930s - while the orders followed the 'tiller' convention, rudders moved the same way as the wheel. Can one conclude that merchant ships of the mid to late 18th Century followed an older fashion - Endeavour having been built as a Whitby collier - but that the Royal Navy was leading the way towards harmony in its ownbuild ships? The Times letters were on 7, 12, 16 and 19 February 1998. In the other naval dimension, in the early 1950s submariners changed their depth orders from the amount the submarine should descend from its afloat condition to 'keel depth', so that some 30 feet or so had to be added to the previously accustomed 'depth'. HMSIM Talent suffered a bent fin on going from periscope depth to avoid a surface vessel because, if I remember right, 60 feet was called for instead of the necessary 90. Was this incident sufficient to impress on the submariners the need to follow the new practice: and did the surface fleets really escape unscathed when the wheel orders changed, as stated by Captain MacKenzie RNR in The Times of 12 February? G. C. CHAPMAN, COMMANDER, RN 166 CORRESPONDENCE THE SHOVEWOOD Sir,-I am pleased that my version of 'The Shovewood' and its subsequent variations were published in the Review, because now the venerable tale has been given a new lease of life among at least the current generation of young officers. J. LENNOX-KING COMMANDER, RNZN EARTHQUAKE RELIEF IN 1939 Sir,-A Mr J. Fielding has written to the Anglo Chilean Society asking for help in locating photographs of the earthquake disaster which struck Chile in January 1939, in the Concepcion/Ta1cahuano area. Some 30,000 people are believed to have perished. At the time Mr Fielding was serving in HMS Ajax. Both HMS Ajax and HMS Exeter made all speed to the area and landed members of the ships' companies to render assistance to the Chilean authorities (alongside the Chilean Navy) in rescuing the trapped, giving medical help, restoring water and power supplies and in opening up communications. The photographs he took were subsequently lost as a result of war damage. If any Naval Review members are able to help, they should write to: J. E. Fielding 46 Slaidburn Drive Accrington Lanes BB5 OJJ ROGER VENABLES CAPTAIN, RN POLARIS HISTORY Sir,-August 1996 saw the end of Polaris patrols with the decommissioning of HMS Repulse, marked by an impressive ceremony at Faslane in the presence of John Major. I believe it would be fitting for an account now to be written of that most successful 30 year Polaris deployment. Advantage could be taken of numerous fresh memories available, and any relaxation in security restrictions which may now be acceptable. May I use The Naval Review as a means of floating the idea, which could also have occurred to others, like myself, who were associated with the programme from start to finish. I would, of course, be delighted to assist any reader who has the journalistic urge to take the lead. COMMANDERP. W. HONEY, RN 37 Field Lane The Hamptons Appleton Cheshire WA4 5JR Book Reviews-I BROADSHEET 1997/8 This issue of Broadsheet is the thickest yet and also the most upbeat. It has without doubt been thought right that the Navy's official annual, the organ of leadership and management, should emit a confident note: if the trumpet give an uncertain sound, who shall prepare himself for battle? That this is editorial policy is made clear by the editor himself on page I. Commander Lee Hulme in a brief Editorial writes that the publication 'seeks to emphasise our successes and the value, capability and utility of the modem Royal Navy ... shining out from these pages you should sense the energy in our people... A Service which is justifiably proud of itself and its achievements.' On the facing page the First Sea Lord's Foreword is no less confident but acknowledges the 'uncertainties engendered by a Defence Review', the 'manpower shortages that still bedevil us' and the phenomenon of 'change fatigue' - others call it change-upon-change. Nonetheless, after an exceptionally busy year, he sees the Navy as having a first class story to tell. In one sense, 1997 was a relatively easy year to report. The Ocean Wave deployment was the largest out-of-area (dreadful phrase as if we should be confined to any 'area' except the sea itself) excursion for very many years, and included all major elements of Britain's maritime forces: carrier with embarked air group, amphibious forces (40 Commando reinforced by 45 Commando for an exercise in Brunei), nuclear powered submarines and no less than seven RFAs in support. It lasted in all for seven and a half months. No wonder it keeps popping up throughout the Broadsheet: a running gag, as farceurs used to say. Not that there was much farce, as reported in Broadsheet, though clearly a lot of enjoyment for the 4,500 men and women who took part and had opportunities to see parts of the world that were almost routine to, and therefore less appreciated by, previous generations. 33 different countries were visited in all. Even old stagers, counting carefully, might be hard put to match that. Of course not every unit visited every country; nevertheless it was a most impressive deployment and did wonders for British reputation in many fields. One aspect is particularly well noted in Broadsheet and that was the deployment for a month of No. I (Fighter) Squadron RAF, four of whose Harrier GR7s embarked in Illustrious off Muscat and continued operating from her, via Abu Dhabi and India, finally disembarking in Malaysia for a long ferry home. Wing Commander Leakey RAF writes 'the already lengthy arm of carrier projected air power has been shown to be significantly enhanced by inclusion of the GR7 into tailored Carrier Air Groups - so making best use of all UK military capabilities'. Amen to that. Joint operations are indeed another running theme of the 1997 Broadsheet. Members will be aware of the emphasis being placed by all higher levels of the Navy's leadership on this aspect of Britain's defence posture in the postcold war era, and it is not just the Strategic Defence Review that is driving the Service in this direction, but conviction that it is the right way to organise our forces for the diverse, often unexpected, challenges likely over the next many years. Thus the key 'From the Ministry' pieces in Broadsheet set out simple truths about the influence of technology, the nature of modem conflict and the increasing importance of littoral areas, and blend them into a case whose terms may be well known to many of us but bear repetition. News from sea, scattered around the publication though focussed in a section headed 'The Front Line Building on Success', looks generally good. It is indeed astonishing how much is being done by our lean and leanmanned ships and submarines, air squadrons and amphibious forces, supported let's never forget by the Royal Fleet Auxiliary. Part of this efficiency - management-speak might give it a more ponderous title - is due, though no official would dream of saying so, to the diminution of cold-war pressures and the prerogatives of NATO, both formally in the way of exercise commitments and earmarking, and informally in providing enough coppers on the block north of the 167 ..... 168 BOOK REVIEWS-I Tropic of Cancer to reassure our European allies. There are still some such commitments and they are willingly shouldered in contributions to Standing Naval Forces, Partnership for Peace operations and staff and liaison work, but the old compulsions are less. Most of the high workrate though is due to sheer, well, efficiency: but one must recall that an engine running at maximum efficiency has not much margin. That brings the reader on to what is clearly the most worrying problem of all to today's management: gapping. A two-page article called 'Stretching over the Gaps' is frank about its extent and how it came about, and hopeful about the way in which it is being handled. There is 'global gapping', that is to say unfilled complement billets, of 11 % in the Royal Navy and 16% in the Royal Marines, mostly in 'other ranks', and at present it is rising. Historians might not think that amounted to crisis level - there have been many instances of much worse figures in wartime let alone peace - but it is more than uncomfortable, particularly in acute shortage categories where sea-shore ratios are being remorselessly squeezed and family life is the first sufferer. It is the theme of the article that this acute situation arose principally because the Defence Costs Studies of the late '80s and early '90s prescribed a one-third cut in naval (RN and RM) numbers from 1990 to 1998 and in the outturn, for the RN, this fell almost entirely in the period 1992-96. A decision then had to be made on how to strike the balance between imposing massive redundancies or turning off the recruiting tap completely. It is clear that the decision tended quite significantly towards the latter course. As a Flag Officer Admiralty Interview Board who saw his entry target reduce from 800 at his appointment in 1981 to 350 when he left in 1983 (both figures approximate), and saw some of the crazy situations that resulted from that roller-coaster, your reviewer is not likely to give an impartial view on the merits of these difficult choices The article in Broadsheet admits that so far there has been an 'inability to re-establish our recruiting market position'. Enough said, perhaps. Some sympathy must lie with the manpower planners as they go about their grisly task, but with only a trace of bitterness it must be said that there has grown up a mystique about manpower planning, and that officers and civil servants steeped in it may not be the best people to recommend policies to meet radical new demands. The new Naval Manning Agency may find answers that were previously not apparent or not adopted. All will wish it well. There are references in several parts of Broadsheet to the new three-tier commission for officers, due to come into effect on 1 April 1999. Beyond the bare bones of a l2-year Initial Commission, a second-tier Career Commission to age 37 for pension and a Full Term Commission to 55 - each subject to selection at the appropriate stage - your reviewer ended with a pretty fuzzy impression of the flesh. All kinds of questions crowded in: some about entry, some about training, some about ex-ratings, some about promotion prospects. May we perhaps expect a more comprehensive treatment in the next Broadsheet: or would some NR member in the field write a factual article for these pages, within the bounds of confidentiality? It is important that those now outside the Service about half the Review's current membershipshould know as much as can properly be told, for it is often they whom parents or potential candidates will approach for advice in the first instance. Both the Controller and the Chief of Fleet Support have limited Broadsheet space this time. The Controller has the easier task of exposition; after all, conceptual studies turn into plans, and plans into craft and equipment, and you can have descriptions and yes pictures of both. Support is a more abstract subject viewed in the round, and needs highly charged treatment to make the right impact on the reader. It lends itself to some sort of storytelling - A Month in the Life of a Paperclip, if one may be flippant - by way of explanation, to satisfy those who want to know, and some do, why all the changes in organisation and management have come about and in what way things are now better. BOOK REVIEWS-I It is good to see twelve pages of feature articles covering the International Festival of the Sea (Portsmouth, 28-31 August 1998), the great changes in progress at Faslane, the Royal Naval Museum Portsmouth's Development Plan, King George's Fund for Sailors, The Nautical Institute and a memoir of Captain Walker of Western Approaches fame. These form a suitable pendant to another highly distinguished edition of Broadsheet. Some, to whom a bottle tends to look half empty, may think it over-optimistic, its tone more confident than the facts justify. Maybe it errs on that side: so it should. If the Navy doesn't blow its own trumpet, no one will. RICHARD HILL THE MARINE ENGINEERS' REVIEW Most members of the NR will have received Broadsheet 97/98. The article by the Controller, 'Naval Procurement Programme', covers the same ground as the RN Ships section of this review which will therefore be limited to qualifying remarks only, drawn from the Marine Engineers' Review among other sources. The Broadsheet also included a long article on HMS Ocean. Many of the intentions for new-design ships and equipment are now released at Conferences. These are reported under the heading now retitled 'Ship and Equipment Design Conferences' . Ships RN Despite the Controller's article, there are press reports that the CNGF (Type 42 replacement) project is suspect from the standpoints of in-service date (the first three ships by 2004) and scope (UK requirement reducing from 12 to eight ships, Italy from six to two and France from four to two - a total reduction from 22 to 12 ships). There are suggestions that the project is at least two years late, that the specifications are too rigid for three separate national requirements and that MOD is looking at alternative proposals for ships with more global capabilities. An interesting comparison of HMS Albion and Bulwark with LPDs under construction or in service with the navies of the Netherlands, 169 Spain, France and the USA (2 classes) shows remarkable similarities between the ships. The complement for the RN version seems to have reduced from 325 (NR Oct '97, p.388) to 265, and considerable attention has been paid in it to the configuration of the superstructure and airflow over the helideck to improve airborne operations. The new USN LPD 17 class (now the 'San Antonio' class) is somewhat larger than the others. The Trimaran Demonstrator (NR, Oct '97 p.392 and April '96, p.l77) is expected to be ordered in 1998. It will be about 325ft long, 66ft beam (over the three hulls) and displace 1,000 tons. It will have diesel electric machinery of 6,700 shp, giving a top speed of 23 knots and 18 knots in sea state 6. HMS Tracker, the first of two new 66ft high speed coastal training craft, has been delivered by BMT Marine Procurement to the 1st Patrol Boat Squadron for attachment to the Oxford University RN unit. The design is derived from the P2000 'Archer' -class vessels. The DERA owned and operated research vessel, Colonel Templer (NR, April '95 p.165), has been re-engined with diesel electric machinery driving a single azimuthing thruster with contra-rotating propellers. This will reduce high levels of radiated and environmental noise. Her primary role is to provide a deep-sea platform for data gathering, research trials of sonobuoys, active dipping sonars and other airborne sensors, on a world-wide basis. This role requires extremely accurate positioning. RAN The first of the class of six minehunters (NR, Oct. '97 p.436), HMAS Huon, was launched at Newcastle, NSW, on 25 July 1997. She will commence trials in April 1998 and be handed over at the end of the year. The design is based on the Italian 'Gaeta' class MCMV, with a monocoque grp hull. Details and equipment were given in the above reference. These may be updated at acceptance. USN The USS Bataan (NR, Oct '96 p.399), the fifth of seven 'Wasp' class amphibious assault -- I 170 BOOK REVIEWS-I carriers, has joined Amphibious Group 2 of the Atlantic Fleet and the last ship will be named USS Iwojima. Full details were given in the above reference. The first ofthe three 'Seawolf' class SSN is now well into her sea trials. They are larger than the 'Los Angeles' class (the last being USS Cheyenne and not USS Greeneville as previously reported) with surface/submerged displacement 7,460/9,150 tons compared with 6,330/7,177 tons, shorter, 326ft compared with 360ft, and greater beam of 40ft compared with 33ft, and thus with greater volume. They are fitted with eight torpedo tubes and carry a mix of up to 50 Tomahawk and Sub-Harpoon missiles, and Mk 48 Adcap torpedoes or mines. Speed is stated to be 'over 35 knots' and extremely quiet. The complement is 130, living in cramped conditions, including in the torpedo space. Construction of the third boat has not yet started and cost is reported to have escalated very considerably. It was this cost escalation that led to the New Attack Submarine (NSSN) (NR, Oct. '97 p.389) of similar capabilities but cheaper design. Agreement on sharing the programme between EBDiv and Newport News (NNS) has been achieved for the first four boats, with EBDiv being the lead design yard, and building of compartments, assembly, testing and delivery shared between the two yards. The new Sealift Command 'Bob Hope' class prepositioning support ships (NR, April '97 p.158 and NR, Oct '97 p.389) will shortly enter service. These are very large ships, 950ft long, 106ft beam and draught 34.5ft, displacement 62,000 tons full load, speed 24 knots and endurance 13,000 miles. Up to seven, diesel driven, are being built at Avondale, New Orleans and there is a similar order at San Diego, but gas turbine driven. The military payload is 13,260 tons including wheeled and tracked vehicles (including main battle tanks), and 300 troops. They are RoRo vessels with stem and side ramps and 55 ton cranes serving hatches. Bollinger Shipyards, Lockport, NY, has a $23.2m contract to build 14 'Cyclone' class diesel propelled patrol boats. Displacing 328 tons, they are based on a Vosper Thomeycroft hull design, with Paxman engines. USS Thunderbolt of this class was at Imdex (see below). Germany The FGN has two classes of MEKO frigates building or on order (MEKOMEhrzwec KOmbination or multipurpose combination). Four Type 123 'Brandenburg' class are currently completing, displacing 4,600 tons while the Type 124 'Sachsen' class are larger, displacing 5,600 tons. The latter are intended to meet a NATO requirement for a multi-purpose frigate with an AAW bias and task force command facilities. Considerable attention has been given to stealth and the weapon design combines European sensors and software with US missiles, including the Sea Sparrow, and other weapons. There are Memoranda of Understanding with a range of countries for different design aspects. Propulsion is by CODAG (Diesel and Gas) rather than CODQG (QI) plant. Contracts for three ships with an option for a fourth have been placed with a consortium of builders, the first ship to be delivered in 2002 and the rest at two year intervals (see also the review of the MECON conference below). The FGN is also ordering the K-130 corvette. This is a 272ft vessel designed for Baltic operations, with better sea-keeping qualities and endurance than an FPB. 15 are planned, with the first 5 to be delivered in 2002-7. A large contract has been placed for a Type 702 'one stop' replenishment ship, capable of extending a Task Force endurance from 21 to 49 days. Delivery will be in 1999, with an option for a second ship. She will be to commercial standards, length 566ft, beam 79ft and draught 24ft, displacement 19,670 tons and a speed of 19.5 knots. She will have a hangar for two MH 90 helicopters, a helideck able to take Sea Lynx and Sea King, and three RAS points. Complement will be 139 with accommodation for 233. The German Customs Authority has acquired an 80ft CustomslPolice launch, the Granitz. She is capable of all-weather operation in the North Sea and in ice. BOOK REVIEWS-I Norway The 14 'Hauk' class FPBs are to be modernised with new combat management, communications and navigation systems, sensors and structural updates. The first will return to service in late 2000 and the rest will follow at 3-4 month intervals. An optional contract for providing 6-8 weapon systems for the 'Skjold' class surface effect FPBs is under consideration. A shiphandling simulator is being purchased for the Bergen Royal Naval Academy for delivery in December 1998. It will simulate seagoing characteristics for the principal RNorN vessels. A similar simulator is planned for the Italian Naval Academy at Leghorn. Morocco The Logistic Support Vessel Dakhla has been built in France. She has wide capabilities, including supply of dry and liquid stores, particularly to support the new OPVs, troop carrying with vehicles, and acting as a disaster relief vessel. The machinery and bridge are aft with cargo access by side door and cranes. Length is 226ft, beam 38ft and draught 13.75ft, displacement 2,160 tons, speed 12 knots on diesel machinery and endurance 4,300 miles. Israel The first of three 'Dolphin' class SSK, built in Germany, is on trial following a long history of changed contracts. She has three diesel generator units mounted abreast, giving a very short submarine. The bulk of the spaces are on a two-deck layout. Turkey Five wooden-hulled 'Circe' class minehunters, built in 1972-3 have been acquired from France, where they are being refitted and updated. It was decided not to build new ships. UAE An early decision is expected on a contract for eight 213ft ocean-going patrol boats. Possible builders include VT, NNS, France, Germany and the Netherlands. 171 Qatar The first two 184ft strike craft, Huwar and Barzan, built at Vosper Thornycroft (VT) Portchester and Southampton, have arrived in Qatar. Details were given in NR April '96 p.174. Saudi Arabia The government has taken up the option for the third stretched 'La Fayette' class frigate (NR, April '96 p.174). The defence system will be a 32 cell vertical launch Aster SAMS. Displacement is now stated to be over 4,000 tons. Cambodia A Malaysian shipyard has shipped two 44 ton fast patrol boats of German design. They are 69ft long, beam 19ft and draught 4.3ft. Speed is 34 knots. Malaysia After four years of negotiation, the first six of 20 New Generation Patrol Vessels will shortly be ordered from the Malaysian Naval Dockyard at Lumut. These are a variant of the MEKO A-IOO corvette design, 297ft long, 44ft beam, 1,900 tons displacement and speed in excess of 30 knots. They carry a 16 cell VLS, 8 SSMs, a CIWS, 1 medium and 2 small guns, 4 fixed torpedo tubes and a medium helicopter. They are of stealth design. See also the report of the MECON Conference below. The former light frigate Hang Tuah, now a coastguard/training ship, has recently been completely re-engined. She was built by Yarrows in 1965 as the despatch vessel for President Nkrumah of Ghana and later became HMS Mermaid before transfer to Malaysia. The original machinery was identical to the RN type 41/61 diesel frigates. Philippines The three remaining 'Peacock' class patrol vessels from the Hong Kong squadron were delivered direct from Hong Kong by their RN crews, after the handover. Chile Chile has acquired from Germany six of their 'Tiger' class missile armed strike craft, 172 BOOK REVlEWS-I two in 1997 and four in 1998. These originally entered FGN service in 1972-4 and only 10, embodying the latest updates, remain in FGN service. Although of German design the majority were built and all were outfitted in France. and other propulsion equipment for the AlP driven German Type 212 submarine. The UDT is at least an annual event with two gatherings planned for 1998 - UDT Pacific in Sydney in February and in London in June. Bahamas The Royal Bahamas Defence Force has ordered its largest vessels, two Europatrol 375 US built but VT designed patrol vessels. They are 200ft long, beam 29ft and draught 8.5ft, displacement 375 tons, speed 24 knots on three shafts and a range of 3,000 miles at 15 knots. They are designed to US specifications for damage stability, damage control, firefighting and life saving. They can remain fully operational in sea state 6 and can cope with 70 knot beam winds. The contract also includes options for four 141ft 'Nassau' class patrol boats. MECON '97 Ship and Equipment Design: Conferences There have been a number of important conferences including Underwater Defence Technology (UDT) in June 1997 and Mecon '97, both in Hamburg, the British only Royal Navy and British Army Equipment Exhibition (RNBAEE) and the International Maritime Defence Exhibition (lmdex '97) at Greenwich in October 1997. Many plans for future warships and their equipment were revealed at them. UDT '97 This three-day conference and exhibition included 99 papers. It was followed by a NATO confidential sitting covering another 30. The emphasis was on mine warfare, ship design and signature management, at some expense to sonar matters. The emphasis in mine warfare lay in aspects of saving lives and rapid clearance of safe channels. The development of unmanned drones - floating magnetic and acoustic generators - driven ahead of a control vessel or from a mobile shore station, and both cheaper than an MCMV, is a prime interest. Much attention was paid to simulators and surface systems for the Italian and Norwegian navies and to the C2 system and the development of fuel cells This was the first in a planned series to explore developments in the MEKO programme. It lasted two days, was attended by 81 representatives of 24 navies and a large number of MEKO programme ship and equipment manufacturers, and included 32 papers - all in English. The MEKO system evolved in the late 1960s, comprising a series of ship platforms able to carry a wide range of alternative weapon and propulsion systems, prepackaged with standard services connections, and tested in standard forms, for easy installation and subsequent updating. The hulls and major components are supplied by a range of countries including Germany, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Sweden, the UK and the USA or are built under licence by the customers. The use of this system can enable the interval between keel-laying and commissioning to be as little as two years. MEKO ships are found world-wide including Nigeria (1981 - one ship), Argentina (1983-90 - seven ships) and then Turkey (8), Portugal (3), Greece (4), Australia (8), New Zealand (2) and Germany itself. Early designs displaced about 3,600 tons but the later 200 series reduced to 3,000 tons with the same weapon fit. The FGN has a number of different designs including the larger FI23 and 124 frigates and the K-130 corvette (see above). The newest designs shown at MECON include the A-200 series frigate and the A-lOO corvette. The former is a 3,800 ton ship with CODAG propulsion driving propellors on diesels on the outer shafts and a gas turbine driven centre line water jet of 31,000 equivalent shp for sprint operation. As the exhaust discharges through the transom it is water cooled with a much reduced IR signature and a considerable reduction in BOOK REVIEWS-I space required for uptakes and funnels. Speed exceeds 29 knots. Complement is much reduced, to 130. The A-100 corvette is being built for the Malaysian navy - see above for details. RNBAEE Press reports state that this went almost unnoticed between MECON and IMDEX, as far as the RN was concerned. The items of interest were the models of the VT Sea Wraith II stealth frigate and the BAeSEMA Cougar light frigate. These are both enlarged versions of those shown at Euronaval '96 (NR April '97 p.160) now respectively 443 and 387ft long compared with 380 and 312ft. A 16.5 ft long self-propelled model of Sea Wraith II is being built to demonstrate the sea-keeping capabilities of the wave-piercing hull form. Both were also shown at IMDEX. Another BAeSEMA proposal was Project Barracuda, envisaging an SSBN operating as a mother ship with two SSK. IMDEX '97 The conference included addresses by lSL, Chief of Defence Procurement, the Chief Executive of DERA, the Assistant Secretary of the Navy (US) and senior representatives from the US (including the Director of the Joint Strike Fighter Program) and Italy. It included a very wide range of ship and weapon design topics. The exhibits included Sea Wraith II, Project Cougar and the Swedish YS 2000 'Visby' class corvette. This vessel, also now building, is of stealth design, 236ft long, displacement 600 tons. There are different configurations, MCM, ASW, minelaying and air defence. Canada has a contract for an integrated towed array, variable depth and hull mounted sonar suite for the first four ships, of which 16 are planned. There was also a large floating exhibition of ships. These included the RSwN Gotland A19 class SSK, the first operational SSK with AlP, and the 425 ton missile-armed 'Goteborg' class. Denmark showed two Stanflex 300 series grp hulled vessels in two configurations, for ASW and missile firing. The latter carries 2 quad Harpoon SSM, a 6 173 cell Sea Sparrow VLS and launch tubes for Bofors wire-guided torpedoes - all in a 177ft hull. They also showed a multi-support vessel for 'peace keeping' operations to replace existing fisheries patrol vessels. In addition there was a number of existing vessels including the French frigate Tourville, an FGN Type 332 minehunter, an Irish corvette, the RNethN frigate Karel Doorman and a 'Walrus' class SSK, HMS Lancaster and a new USN patrol boat USS Thunderbolt, (see above). There were large exhibits of guns and missiles and a smaller section dealing with propulsion machinery including the WR 21 gas turbine. INEC '98 This will be the next event of interest, to be held at HMS Sultan in April 1998. The subject is 'Surviving the War' and themes will include peacetime preparation for wartime survival including equipment and system design for survivability, damage control and firefighting, platform management and human aspects. Other items On the environmental front, MOD(N) is conducting an audit on the sources of oilywater waste from ships. The mixture of oil, water and fuel from bilges is a major problem when designing shore plant for handling such mixtures. The IMO requirements for reduction of NOx and SOx in diesel exhaust emissions have now been relaxed somewhat to avoid the need to fit reduction equipment to existing ships. This is clearly helpful to warships already in service but could have a big effect on machinery to be installed after 1 January 2000. A Netherlands shipping company became, in 1997, the first to operate legally with electronic charts as the main navigation system and a number of British companies are similarly involved. The Dutch government laid down the following requirements: The charts must be supplied by an official Hydrographic Office - in this case the UKRO. Two completely separate Electronic Chart Display Information Systems .. 174 BOOK REVIEWS-I (ECDlS) had to be fitted, capable of accepting Raster (RCDS) and later ECDIS charts. With no paper charts on board, track charts have to be kept as a record. Permission to sail without a lookout during darkness was only granted on an experimental basis - to be approved by the Master. The Shipping Company was responsible for training bridge watchkeepers who had to have 12 months' prior experience. Electronic chart file correcting requires about 20 minutes' work per week for a file of about 400 charts. The RNethN is using virtual reality techniques for validating bridge and operational area layouts for their Air Defence and Command Frigate, thus saving on mockups. A fibre optic gyro compass has been developed, also in the Netherlands, initially for integrated bridges and high speed craft. It has no moving parts or fluids but uses three fibre optic coils as sensitive rate sensors to measure the earth's speed of rotation. In conjunction with two electronic level sensors, true north can then be detected. It has a short settling time of only 30 minutes. A method of handling helicopters on frigate and destroyer decks eliminates the need for handlers on deck. It uses control beams, operated from a console moving along transverse and longitudinal rails set in the flight deck. Shipbuilding ship repair and naval bases The Fleet Maintenance and Repair Organisation (FMRO) ceased to be the last Government owned and operated ship repair facility on 2 November 1997 when it was taken over by Fleet Support Ltd, comprising VT, VSEL and GEC Marine. The FMRO had 'risen from the ashes' of the old Portsmouth Dockyard on 1 October 1984, initially with 2,800 employees, and led a charmed life amid the closure of the other familiar Dockyards and Naval Bases. In its early days, under the direct control of CinC Fleet, it continued to refit Type 42 Destroyers, to give extensive DEDs to a wide range of ships and SSKs and to carry out major repairs including the fire damage to HMS Illustrious. Its commercial status will enable it to widen its scope to handle commercial ship repairs. The former Naval Base at Rosyth has been handed over to a commercial consortium for development as a business, retail, leisure and industrial site. The Dockyard, now employing about 3,000 people, remains. The Dockyard site had been bought in 1903 and construction completed in 1925 although it was put into care and maintenance until WW2, apart from being used commercially as a shipbreaking facility for German warships scuttled at Scapa Flow. Commercial shipbuilding in the USA is of great interest as the warship building programme runs down (in relative terms!). The President has signed the Maritime Security Act stating that 'The American Flag must always sail in the sea lanes of the world ... critical role played by the US Merchant Marine in protecting our interests and allies'. The NNS is already building a line of tankers, some for foreign owners, and the former Philadelphia Naval Shipyard has been bought by a commercial shipbuilding company. As a contrast in UK, the Chairman of the Wear Dockyard Group has commented that 'if we don't start building ships soon we will end up as an island nation which can't build a canoe through lack of skills ... a hell of a state of affairs . . . every country should have a smaller, leaner, more efficient shipbuilding industry'. His own contribution is to take on 75 apprentices since his present labour force are in their 50s and 60s. Two commentators, one at Imdex, have remarked on the adverse effect of the privatisation of the dockyards on the availability of skills to the RN and its ability to react in times of stress. There are some signs of improvement, mostly related to the offshore industry, with work in hand at Harland and Wolff, Kvaemer Govan, VSEL Barrow (three small tankers outside the naval programme) and Cammell Laird where investment in facilities has been put in hand. However this compares very unfavourably with large commercial shipbuilding programmes in Germany, BOOK REVIEWS-I France, Italy, Finland, Russia and Spain, let alone in the Far Fast. Other maritime matters: Personalities A new marine agency will be created on I April 1998 by combining the Coastguard and Marine Safety Agencies with headquarters in Southampton. Vice Admiral Sir Christopher Morgan is to be the next Director General of the Chamber of Shipping, succeeding Admiral Sir Nicholas Hunt. R.B.B. US NAVAL INSTITUTE PROCEEDINGS July-December 1997 The United States Naval Institute is also the Institute of the US Marine Corps. The point needs to be made at the beginning of this review, because the six months covered here have been so dominated by the Corps that one might be forgiven for thinking it had conducted a coup d'etat over the whole organisation. So concerned was your reviewer after writing that first paragraph that he looked for confirmation through the contents list of all six issues of the Proceedings under review. In statistical terms, confirmation wasn't there. Of the 80 major articles listed, 14 were written by USMC people, and observing that the Corps is one of five constituencies covered by the Proceedings - the others being the surface fleet, naval aviation, submarines and the Coast Guard this appears in no way disproportionate. Yet, in terms of impact, the sense of dominance remains. Partly this is due to the articles' choice of subject matter and partly to the forthrightness, often indeed passion, with which views are expressed. In both areas the Marines have, it seems to me, taken the high ground. It begins with, oh how the hollow tones resound, the topic of Women in Combat Roles. Many and many are the strands, more even in the USA than here, but those making up this particular line go back to 1979 when James Webb (naval academy graduate, Vietnam veteran, subsequently a Secretary of State for the Navy) wrote an article for the Washingtonian magazine entitled 'Women Can't Fight'. 175 That was a long time ago, and scarcely likely on its own to trigger a response now. According to Colonel Paul E. Roush, USMC (Retired), now a Professor in the US Naval Academy's Leadership Ethics and Law Department, there have recently been several similar articles or statements by Webb which impelled Roush to mount a heavy counterattack ('A Tangled Webb', August 1997). Roush seeks to demolish what he regards as Webb's unjustified criticism of double standards under training - particularly in physical attainment - and weakening of warrior ethos. Roush also strongly supports current Congressional policies and laws which not only admit women to most forms of training for war (an exception is Marine Corps combat units, which Roush does not mention, but of which more later) against what he implies are unconstitutional attacks by Webb. His line is encapsulated in the words 'Urging that Midshipmen be permitted publicly to speak out in opposition to the law of the land while they remain on active duty is inexcusable' . There is much even stronger stuff in Roush's article and it is unsurprising that the correspondence columns of the Proceedings for the next four months were full of comment and advocacy. Of the 16 contributions, nine were in favour of Webb, four for Roush, and three put arguments on both sides although all of those were critical of Roush's style, and allegations against him of selective quotation and misinterpretation were numerous. Your reviewer will not, as if you ever expected it, attempt his own assessment of the relative merits. To do so would be to claim a knowledge not only of all the writing that has gone before, but of atmosphere and practice in US training and operations, and such a claim would be unfounded. That views are passionately held and expressed is only too apparent, and it is not only Tailhook that bites deep. One is tempted to ask if it all need be taken so seriously. Would it be unbearably flippant to put in the terms of Sellar and Yeatman's 1066 and All That - like the Cavaliers, Webb is Wrong but Wromantic, while like the Roundheads, Roush is Right but Repulsive? And, more to the point, is there a F 176 BOOK REVIEWS-I middle ground in the American military that says this is how it is, so we had better get on with it and make it work? One senior retired officer, again from the US Marine Corps, clearly does not think so. Major General J. D. Lynch ('All Volunteer Force is in Crisis', September 1997) begins his article 'The social fabric of the US military is showing signs of wear. This should come as no real surprise, since the society from which it springs also is showing signs of serious decay'. This profoundly pessimistic tone pervades the article but it quickly adjusts its focus towards, yes, women in combat roles. General Lynch contrasts the 'major problems' faced by the US Army (ratio of women to men 'inching toward one in four', though it is still resisting assigning women to 'narrowly defined combat fields') and the US Navy (paying a potential 'wartime price of degraded combat readiness' and a 'peacetime price ... of shipboard pregnancies') with the Marine Corps, 'the only service to have avoided integrated male/female recruit training'. He believes the Corps must continue to defend this position - 'Anything less means the end of the Marine Corps as we know it' but is not certain it can do so, given the pressures of legislators and publicists. Those pressures, he argues, are not exerted by the public at large; quite the reverse: 'if the public does not like what it sees ... there will be no joining'. This, he suggests, is already happening and much of it is due to a visibly weakened defence establishment. What emerges, however, from General Lynch's article is not simply a polemic against fashionably correct attitudes which are at variance, as he sees it, with the desires of the American public. For that polemic is based on a view of the military's mission that is in fact quite extreme. It comes out at an early point in the article: ' ... it's time to wake up. It's time to sound reveille. It's time to return to the basic truth that a nation's military exists to destroy the nation's enemies and nothing more. In short, the military exists to kill'. This bald statement stands unqualified by any other in the article. There is nothing about deterrence, breaking the enemy's will to fight, or establishing dominance, let alone coercion through manoeuvre, graduated response or the whole range of intervention, constabulary or benign operations. Indeed there is specific reference to 'confusion stemming from an added emphasis on humanitarian and peacekeeping operations such as the Somalian and Haitian failures and the increasingly likely failure in Bosnia. However debilitating all that may be. . .' One may be forgiven for concluding that in General Lynch's view, any work other than killing is, for the military, an aberration. I must confess that I found this aspect of General Lynch's article disturbing, as I did the fact that my point above was picked up by only one Proceedings correspondent, and he a civilian from Columbia University (November 1997, p.19). He correctly observes, quoting Clausewitz, that 'as the military is the instrument of war, so too by its very nature, it must be an instrument of policy'. Implicitly, the extreme view of the military's role is considerably modified by other Marine Corps contributions. In particular, the three published entries to the Marine Corps Essay Contest (November 1997) get down to the business of how best amphibious operations, with a wide range of missions and applications of force, may be run. The winning essay is in fact by a US Navy Commander, Terry Pierce, who addresses the important but (in an atmosphere full of explosive vapours) relatively safe question of expeditionary force command. He concludes, drawing upon American World War II and subsequent experience, that 'a Navy commander should be ... in charge of naval manoeuvres on the sea and from the sea - a time-honoured naval tradition'. It was slightly surprising that he did not mention the Falklands, where surely some lessons were to be learned, but he may have wished to stay in more familiar waters. The subject will not go away though, particularly now that modem networked command, information and communication systems allow calls for precise fire from units far out at sea in support of forces ashore that may be widely scattered both as to location and to level of command. BOOK REVIEWS-I This preoccupation is apparent in both the other published entries. Captain Harold R. van Opdorp, Jr, USMC, accepts that the goal is dominant battlefield awareness and that technology is one of the primary movers towards that goal, but warns that 'Technology Alone Cannot Win'. He sees drawbacks in too great a reliance on the system-of-systems approach that is increasingly dominating American military thinking: a multitude of allseeing eyes leading to comprehensive knowledge, certain appraisal and precise application of violence. Captain van Opdorp is none too happy about the ability of communication systems to handle this amount of information and sceptical of the ability of the system to manage and filter data so that the relevant material reaches the right people without swamping them. He goes on to discuss uncertainty, quoting Tom Paine and van Creveld, and continues with 'Shared Picture does not mean Shared Understanding'. Here he shows the well-known picture that on one view represents a stylish young woman with a feather in her hair, and on the other a shawled crone. Even with some foreknowledge of this picture, your reviewer had great difficulty focusing on the crone and constantly reverted to the stylish young woman, so presumably Captain van Opdorp's point is made. Finally, Captain van Opdorp makes the point that a subtle, thoughtful enemy may be able to 'work around' Dominant Battlefield Awareness and quotes examples from the Vietnam War where the Viet Cong, by 'surprising the Americans and separating them from their firepower', were able to achieve many successes. I fancy this parallel will be contested by the Sea Dragon establishment on the ground that the detection of hostile forces, even if they are in penny packets, is now so certain that none can move without American commanders knowing where they are and what they are doing. The debate will continue, but one can hear the Great Duke ('guessing what was at the other side of the hill') applauding Captain Opdorp from down below, and Copenhagen's hooves drumming approval from Stratfield Saye. 177 The third winning article is in many ways the most interesting of the three. It is written by Sergeant Dallas E. Shaw, USMC, and is entitled 'It takes More than Technology'. This is a title very similar to Captain van Opdorp's and maybe the general theme is the same, but the approach is different. It is well summarised in the lead-in: 'Can technology make a typical grunt squad capable of carrying out deep reconnaissance missions 150 miles behind enemy lines? Can it substitute for the rigorous training and intense indoctrination required of a Recon Marine?' The shoulder headings in the article are also indicative. There are only two: Master the Basicsffhen Add the Technology. It could not be simpler or more orthodox, nor, if some of the Sergeant's anecdotal evidence is borne out by general experience, could it be more necessary. 'I asked him [a squad member] which way was east. He informed me "I ain't got the compass" ... this was at 0800, so I told him that on planet Earth, the sun rises in the east. . .' Preparation only for 'best-case scenarios, where high-speed gear never fails its operator' is, argues Sergeant Shaw, training for failure. He lobbies nevertheless for certain add-ons to currently-held equipment, moving into sets of initials unfamiliar to those not initiated in such things. But by that time, did not one believe every word he said? There is so much common sense in this essay that it deserves consideration at every level. Which brings us back, by a rather tortuous route, to the scope and range of the Corps' operations and training. Certainly all the essays are predicated on the need for an effective warfighting posture: but surely, as it seems to your reviewer, they recognise a need for sophisticated responses, at many levels of command, to a variety of situations. They will need to, in years to come. If you don't know who the enemy is, but think you 'exist to kill', well... The point is made, though not explicitly (Commentary, November 1997), by Colonel Hays Parks, USMC (Retired), a distinguished trial lawyer with many Proceedings articles to his name. He describes an incident in the Vietnam War which, while nothing like so r 178 BOOK REVIEWS-I dreadful as the My Lai massacre, was sufficiently serious to be classed as multiple murder. In brief, 16 unresisting women and children were shot dead in the village of Son Thang on 19 February 1970, by a patrol from the US Marine Corps. The incident was fully investigated at the time, but according to Hays Parks there was some resistance within the Corps to publication of details in their Gazette, and it was not until the publication in 1997, by the Naval Institute Press, of a book confined to this one incident that the full story was made available. It has chilling aspects quite apart from the murders. The returning patrol lied about the circumstances of the incident, reported less than half the true number of dead, represented those as killed in action and produced a previously-captured weapon as false corroboration. There was also evidence of competition in body-counts as shown on a battalion 'kill board'. In spite of obstacles the matter was fully investigated and brought to trial, and two Marines were convicted of multiple murder; one other, this having been his first patrol at the age of 18, was convicted on 15 counts of unpremeditated murder and later committed suicide. Colonel Hays Parks argues persuasively that it is necessary to bring all this to light now so that the lessons may be relearnt. The military must maintain the quality of its people; it must be sensitive to the special challenges of counter-insurgency operations; it must eschew simplistic 'body-count mentality'; it must train its junior officers to face such dilemmas; it must have enough people learned in the law of war to have the necessary influence. At two points Hays Parks quotes the words 'Marines don't do that'. It is clearly a generally expressed view. He shows that they did, on occasion; they might argue that, supplied as they now are with higher quality human material and more discriminating systems, they no longer do. That's as hereafter may be, and all that has gone before in this review is relevant. But it does lead to one much broader point. There is an underlying assumption in most American military thinking - preoccupied with firepower as it is, emphasising warfighting as it does, racked by competing specialisms as it appears to be - that the USA is a benevolent nation. Essentially it desires the good, not only for itself but for human kind. I believe this to be true. Given America's military and economic power, if it were not true the rest of the world would be groaning under tyranny. Sometimes, when the USA is pushed to the limits of its tolerance, the possibility of worse outcomes peeps out. But the world is, on the whole, lucky. There is much more in these six issues of Proceedings that cannot be covered in the necessary detail in this review. Pleas for gunfire support to remain an option; for deepwater ASW to stay on the agenda; for the Coast Guard to keep up technologically; for shipborne aircraft to keep pace with other developments: all will be found here and there. Some may be rather crude lobbying for particular constituencies, but all are of interest. Least noticeable in the last six months have been the submariners; they are used to running silent and deep, have come to terms with the curtailment of Seawolf and are no doubt regrouping round NSSN. As always, the Proceedings are lively and highly professional. They are not so immersed in technospeak and initialese as they used to be, and are the better for it. Good reading. RICHARD HILL Book Reviews-II THINKING ABOUT NUCLEAR WEAPONS WHITEHALL PAPER No 41 by SIR MICHAEL QUINLAN (RUSI, 1997 - £6.50) If I were asked to choose whose thoughts about Nuclear Weapons one would most like to read, Michael Quinlan's name would come top of my list - by a mile. In this short offering - at 84 pages somewhere between a book and a booklet - we are gently (but firmly) led through the core issues surrounding nuclear weapons, their possession and deployment, by a uniquely qualified, highly intelligent and totally morally responsible writer who enjoys the added benefits of a razor sharp mind and charming facility with the pen. Michael Quinlan covers in tum the three D's; Deployment, Deterrence and Disarmament. In successive posts in the MOD he held escalating responsibility for advising on nuclear policy and he certainly does not dodge the politically and ethically difficult issues raised by the deployment of nuclear weapons. His irresistible logic is perhaps at its most telling in the section on deterrence, where he disposes neatly of a number of false, misleading or unprofitable concepts and leads us back inexorably to his starting point, the simple thesis that deterrence is about persuading the potential attacker that the game is not worth the candle - and that this has worked, does work, and will continue to work. The section on disarmament bears very careful reading because it treats fairly, but dismisses, several of the ideas which have been even more fashionable since the end of the Cold War - Alternative Defence, No First Use, Minimal Armouries, and even the Strategic Defence Initiative. It was not until he reached Appendix I that your reviewer encountered a thought which much troubled him. In addressing the hypothetical question of a situation in which the UK defence budget was so reduced, at the height of the Cold War, that the British Government would have had to make a choice between making cuts in British Forces for the North German plain of a severity unacceptable to our allies, or foregoing the modernisation of UK nuclear capability, he would probably have advised in favour of the latter. I find this hypothetical, probable recommendation troublesome, and for me it does not lie easily with the whole rationale, spelt out so well in earlier chapters, for the UK possession of an independent nuclear capability. Surely a more attractive option (and one infinitely preferable for the US) would have been to maintain and when necessary, modernise our nuclear capability and invite our continental European Allies to fill the gaps on the ground. That shows no lack of commitment to their defence. I thoroughly recommend this book and believe it will become a widely used and respected plane of reference. JJRO INTELLIGENCE IN PEACE AND WAR by MICHAEL HERMAN (Royal Institute of International Affairs/ Cambridge University Press, 1996 - £16.95) The last twenty-five years have seen a vast number of books about Intelligence. Many of them have dealt with single aspects, others have portrayed the history of particular intelligence happenings; only a very few have looked at Intelligence in its own right as a powerful instrument of national policy. And none, to your reviewer's knowledge, has produced such a unique overview ofthe whole intelligence scene as Michael Herman has managed to write. Written in plain and easily readable English with the notes and references on the related page, the extremely complex subject is divided into six sections comprising twenty chapters and a final Summary showing the power of modern intelligence. For anyone with the time and opportunity and access to a large library there are no less than ten pages of recommended reading. The whole book derives from wide and obviously scrupulous research, very considerable personal experience and, quite clearly, deep reflection. The 400 pages, thanks to the elegant and helpful layout provide an easily assimilated set of intelligence experience and principles with a bearing on 179 r 180 BOOK REVIEWS-II most Western intelligence systems. I concur with the verdict of a former HC Chairman that it will probably become a standard text. It is pleasing too that, despite the continued sensitivity about intelligence publications, it received official security clearance. The Intelligence services are an important but always controversial part of modern governance. Their failures are often the subject of many column inches, their triumphs hardly ever see the light of day. Military, economic, political, security intelligence, decisions on how to 'cut' the always hard won and in these days usually reducing financial 'cake', and the need for efficiency in public administration call for a particular brand of management if the national interest is to be adequately served. Herman explores and throws much light on these complex problems and on what sort of intelligence strategy in the broad and in detail we need in the post Cold war, post modern world. In a recent Paper published by our Minister in Bonn, he asserts 'The kind ofworld we have depends on the kind of states that compose it, for the pre-modern world success is empire and failure is disorder; in the modern systems success is balance and failure means falling back into war or into empire. For the postmodern state success means openness and transnational co-operation. The open state system is the ultimate consequence ofthe open society. But there is nothing inevitable about the survival of the post modern state in what remains a basically hostile environment. ' This century has seen the advance (if that is not a contradiction in terms) from the premodern (empire type) world through attempts in two world wars to maintain some sort of international political balance to the postmodem (ED type) open and transnational world where an admiral (not this one) can communicate instantaneously with a friend driving a stern wheeler on the Irrawaddy whose Burmese Chief Engineer was a Manadon product. The changes in the nature of the intelligence product needed by governments, arising from such fundamental changes in world conditions, technological advance, political, military and social near chaos, are almost impossible to grasp. Herman's book covers the role in the future, as he sees it, for intelligence in peace and war and the anarchic conditions now beginning to prevail in so many Nations. The October 1997 NR reviewed Herman's shorter essay on the role of the Defence Intelligence Staff (DIS). In this book this is set in the wider context of the merits and difficulties of both centralised and more split up national intelligence organisations. He avers, with considerable supporting evidence, that we need some sort of central agency for a detailed holistic study of countries in all their political, military and economic detail. The HC, he suggests, is good at pulling things together but does not direct research. He argues his belief that it is time to reformulate the DIS Charter and give it explicitly dual roles - serving the MoD and the military for defence intelligence on one hand, but acting as a national analysis agency on the other - and staff it for the job. In this, as he mentions, he is returning to the original concept when the three Service organisations and the scientific and technical and economic expertise of the Joint Intelligence Bureau were brought together in and after 1964. Your reviewer is not up to date with 'the pecking order' of the Chief Scientific Adviser to the MoD and the Chief of Defence Intelligence. But in your reviewer's experience it is essential that they should have the same level of access. In today's technological world the multiplicity of data bases in the scientific establishment sometimes lead to quite different conclusions from those arising from secret intelligence sources. Some politicians, as today we are only too well aware, are hypnotised by scientific predictions. In your reviewer's day as DGI he served two governments. One had a Prime Minister and Defence Secretary who tended to believe they knew everything but who bowed obsequiously to 'science', and a Foreign Secretary deeply interested in intelligence who also possessed profound wisdom. The other government had a Prime Minister almost obsessed by intelligence and a Defence Secretary and Chancellor, who if not obsessed, wished to be kept up to date and who were prepared to argue and discuss different viewpoints in an always refreshing BOOK REVIEWS-II and earthy way; while the Foreign Secretary seemed far less interested in the scientific or intelligence views other than those from M16. Herman does not deal with this problem directly, but the type of organisation he seems to favour would certainly provide politicians with more firmly based advice. With all the changes now in train in the corridors of Whitehall it is almost too much to expect that such a fundamental re-hash of our Intelligence Community might be embarked upon. But Herman's book shows what well may be the best path for the future. It is to be hoped that there are amongst those in Government and the highest ranks of the Civil Service, men and women of understanding, who will institute action. LOUIS LE BAILLY VICE ADMIRAL THE IMPERIAL WAR MUSEUM BOOK OF WAR BEHIND ENEMY LINES by JULIAN THOMPSON (Sidgwick & Jackson - £25) This latest book by Maj Gen Julian Thompson aims to give the general reader some idea of what it was like for a British Serviceman to operate behind enemy lines in the Second World War. Almost exclusively, he restricts his consideration to those 'who penetrated the enemy's rear, but fought in uniform expecting to be treated by the enemy in accordance with the laws and usages of war'. This definition thus excludes most SOE and OSS operations but sweeps up the majority of those conducted by units that we would now consider as 'Special Forces'. The fall of France and the Italian threat in Africa saw Britain alone and at bay. The need to hit back at the enemy, at a time when conventional units were inappropriate for the conditions, generated the Commandos and the Long Range Desert Group. These were the first of a proliferation of 'private armies' which subsequently operated in almost every theatre of the War. They scored some notable and dramatic successes, the St Nazaire Raid being one, but overall, their tangible output was perhaps not all that was expected of them. This has caused some to question their value. Gen Thompson suggests the fairest means of 181 judging their effectiveness as being in considering the balance of 'return' set against 'investment'. With this question hanging, he presents comprehensive accounts of the many different units and their most significant campaigns behind the lines. For his part, comment is generally limited, in the main leaving the reader to consider the balance and judge for himself. As the author clearly intends, the story's colour and subjectivity flow from his generous use of personal accounts from the players and their critics, some recorded at the time and some relatively recently. Whilst, of course, the author has had the opportunity to introduce bias in his selection of 'witness statements', weighting is not apparent. The book presents a convincing and even case. Unsurprisingly, the story is littered with accounts of military and human achievements of the highest order, generally in the face of the overwhelming odds that one associates with special forces. Soberingly, for each of these there are a greater number of tales of failure caused by the most frustrating combinations of the frictions of war and some disasters born of quite astonishing incompetence and amateurism. The conduct of a commando attack aimed at killing Rommel in a house on the north African coast would be funny but for the tragic consequences of its failure. In contrast, there are many incidents of consummate professionalism. The SAS's Paddy Mayne finished the war as one of the two most highly decorated British Army officers, having achieved a personal score of enemy aircraft destroyed more than double that of any allied air 'ace'. Whilst one associates 'behind the lines' activity with the efforts of small teams of determined men there were most notable exceptions. Many will be surprised to read of the Chindit Expeditions which saw brigade and divisional level deep penetration into Burma. These incursions were supported, logistically, almost exclusively by air, including the glider borne delivery of artillery, vehicles and mules. Fire support too was air delivered. Casualty evacuation was undertaken by light aircraft from hastily cut F 182 BOOK REVIEWS-II jungle strips in deep strongholds that, on occasion, endured a distinctly 'Khe San' experience. The enigmatic Wingate was behind these schemes. Although it was not of his conception, he was the first allied leader to prove the capability of air supply to operations of this type. General Thompson uses very simple and direct English which complements the vernacular and often highly idiosyncratic styles of his veterans. The combination makes highly digestible reading and draws one on easily through some 400 pages of narrative. There are useful maps and good photographs of many of the key characters. As the story progresses, the reader is likely to become increasingly uneasy about the balance of investment against return. A considerable number of lives were lost and, at face value, it seems that a disproportionate amount of effort was dissipated in projecting special forces behind the lines. Certainly the author quotes some contemporary critics who dismiss almost totally the contribution of special forces to the Allied victory. What, of course, cannot be accurately quantified, is how much of the enemy's potential was drawn from their main effort in hunting down these irritants. Although a few teams, notably the LRDG, were an outstanding success, there were clearly too many of these special units, resulting in duplication of effort, redundancy and direct conflict of interests. Too many units were led astray on the personal hobby horses of their commanders. In the tailpiece, General Thompson identifies an absence of strategic level direction and coordination as the underlying cause of the overall inefficiency of the special forces' efforts. But he concludes by reminding the reader that this was a book about people and, in the main, they were obviously a special bunch. Most of the action and the majority of characters are, at best, only vaguely familiar to today's reader. To better understand the British special forces today, you probably need to know where they came from. This book is an education and is strongly recommended. M. J. D. NOBLE MAJOR, RM BATTLECRUISERS by JOHN ROBERTS (Chatham Publishing - £30) I'm not quite sure what it is about battleships and battlecruisers - they seem to exert the same fascination as steam trains - certainly to judge by the continuing literary output on the subject. After my unflattering review of an earlier volume from Chatham Publishing (A. S. Pavlov's on Soviet Warships Oct '97), I am delighted to be able to say that this book is beautifully produced - indeed the photographs and line drawings are one of its main selling points. The author has written widely on warships in the Dreadnought era and many of the photographs are from his own collection. Roberts is also his own draughtsman and the line drawings are of a uniform high quality (again oddly in contrast to the Pavlov volume). The inside back cover contains a 1:250th plan of HMS Queen Mary in 1913 side elevation, deck plans and several sections through, but my favourites are the two perspective drawings of a 12" turret and the Queen Mary's bridge superstructure. One could (ie I have!) pore over them both, if not for hours, then certainly for several minutes. But what of the written content? Roberts starts with an Introduction, in which he outlines the historical background to the development of the battlecruiser and follows this by an 'Origins' chapter in which, drawing heavily on Admiralty minutes, he tells of the arguments that surrounded their evolution not really helped by the fact that Fisher never seemed to be 100% clear what they were for. Then follow two chapters on the design and construction of the first (pre-WWI) and the second (post-1914) groups. Looking at the drawings, one is struck by how simple these ships - especially the pre-WWI ones - were. They were nothing but platforms on which to put turrets. Line drawings often simplify a design by leaving out much of the extraneous equipment, but, in this case, the photographs emphasise how focussed on their one task these ships were. The second half of the book contains three, very comprehensive, chapters on Machinery, Armament and Armour. There are certainly enough detailed facts and figures here for the most ardent battlecruiser fan - such BOOK REVIEWS-II as that the communication tubes in Renown were 3" and 4", but they were al13" in Repulse. In his final chapter, Roberts tries to sum up Fisher's battlecruisers. They started in 1905 as simple armoured cruisers, faster and armed with bigger (12") guns. The first ships were quickly outclassed by the German response in effect fast (unfortunately faster) second class battleships. The arms race continued, with the German ships being, generally, better armoured and so more capable of taking punishment. Their smaller tube boilers and lighter calibre but higher velocity guns, plus much lower habitability standards, contributed significantly to this superiority. The Battle of the Falklands was the battlecruisers' one and only undisputed success. The loss of Indefatigable, Queen Mary and Invincible at Jutland was, at the time, blamed mainly on the weakness of their horizontal armour and, although the German deck armour was no thicker, this criticism was never really shaken off. The primary cause of the catastrophic losses at Jutland was the instability of our ammunition and associated weaknesses in magazine design. However, by Jutland advances in battleship design (the Queen Elizabeth's) had made it no longer necessary to choose between armour, speed and armament and the end of the short era of the battlecruiser was in sight. Roberts concludes that, with the benefit of hindsight, the battlecruiser should not have been built, but that the widely-held perception that the battlecruiser was a failure is wrong - the ammunition was at fault, not the platform. I enjoyed this book - it is clearly a labour of love, especially in the illustrations - and, if you want a reasonably compact, but full, account of the battlecruiser as a ship type (there are many more and better books on Fisher's influence on the design), I would recommend this one. ANDREW WELCH COMMANDER, RN SILENT HUNTERS: GERMAN U-BOAT COMMANDERS OF WORLD WAR II ed. THEODORE P. SAVOS (Savos Publishing Company/Greenhill Books, 1997) There is a view that too much attention has 183 been given already to the Battle of the Atlantic and that the time has come to draw a line under this historical episode as everything of value has already been extracted. But still new works continue to emerge, some repackagings of work done earlier, some actually attempting new perspectives on the longest maritime struggle of the Second World War. One such school which has grown up over the last few years, notably in America, has looked at the series of campaigns that form the Battle from the German perspective; Silent Hunters clearly falls into this category but its approach is somewhat different from many in selecting six submarine captains and considering their lives and careers, each examined by a different writer. Although a point is made of suggesting that these were typical rather than outstanding officers, there is a clear bias towards the 'ace', reflected in the title of two of the chapters. In only one case, Heinz Wilhelm Eck, to whom we shall return, was this really true and then only in terms of his attainments. Engelbert Endrass is described in an almost elegiac fashion by Erich Topp. This approach, which would tend towards the mawkish in any other hands, is acceptable, perhaps moving, as Topp himself was not only a very successful captain and indisputably an ace, but because of his especial affinity and sense of kameradschaft - comradeship.- with Endrass, who was lost at sea in December 1941, sunk by Walker's group. The next four chapters, being written by uninvolved historians, lack this sense and are more factually based. Timothy Mulligan writes crisply on KarlFriedrich Merten, whose South Atlantic adventures included carrying over 100 survivors from sunken German surface raiders. Mulligan stresses Merten's humanity and humour. Gaylord Kelshall, who served in the Trinidad and Tobago Coastguard, tells of Ralph Kapitsky whose U-615 succumbed in the Caribbean only after an epic struggle with a number of aircraft and in which the dying Kapitsky exercised great leadership. Fritz Guggenberger, a Bavarian, has a very considerable claim to fame, at least in British eyes, as the man who sank the Ark Royal. Eric Rust, who wrote an excellent description of a r 184 BOOK REVIEWS-II single year's intake of German officers in Crew 34, contributes this chapter which is a thoroughly workmanlike production. Jordan Vause, who previously wrote a biography of Wolfang Liith, tells of the career of Victor Oehrn, who although a more than competent captain, made his name first as one of the most competent of Donitz's staff. Subsequently, whilst serving in the Mediterranean area, he managed the curious feat of being wounded and captured in the African desert before being repatriated to Germany, partly as a result of his injuries and to some extent because of his pioneering self-research into anorexia. Latterly, he again served Donitz directly. This chapter, too, is competent. The last contribution is an unusual one compared to the rest of the book. It is by far the longest one, the officer at its centre Heinz-Wilhelm Eck - is probably the least accomplished officer described and most of what is described takes place after the war. In this account Dwight Messimer only briefly recounts Eck's career and period in command of U-852 which sank the Greek freighter Peleus in the South Atlantic in March 1944 before herself being lost to aircraft in May off the Hom of Africa. Unfortunately for Eck, his war diary survived. The sinking of Peleus was fairly routine; what followed was not. U-852 cruised amongst the wreckage and survivors attempting to obliterate both by machine-gun fire. The most distasteful aspect was probably the willing and enthusiastic participation of the submarine's doctor. Eck and several of his crew were tried for this in October 1945 and executed. Messimer gives over most of his long account to the trial and his perception of its unfairness. His final judgment that what occurred was Siegerjustiz - victor's justice is tenable but unbalances the book as a whole. In a sense, however, this provides a key to understanding much of this school of literature better. In most, but not all, instances of the genre there is a clear perception of the German submariner as hero. Another way of looking at this is to consider whether such a work would be likely to be produced today about American or British submarine captains in quite the same style: this would seem unlikely. Perhaps this is just the wheel of historical fashion turning rather slowly. On the other hand heroes beget myths which are unhealthy. For this reason the book, good as it is in several ways, should be read with both caution and a dash of scepticism. W. J. R. GARDNER LIEUT. CDR DON'T STEP ON A STONEFISHl by COL DAN RASCHEN, Royal Engineers (Retired) (Buckland Publications Ltd, London, 1993 -£14.95) Following my review of Diplomatic Dan (NR, Jan. '98), Colonel Raschen gave me this book. Our editor thought it worthwhile to alert NR members to the existence of it. It covers reconnaissance undertaken in 1960 by two sappers (Major Raschen plus one) into the possibility of using explosives to clear boat channels to various coral islands in the Gilbert and Ellice groups (now Kiribati and Tuvalu respectively, as all NR readers will surely know). I was lucky enough to have visited the area just one year before, and the problem of boat access was sorely evident; many channels were a 'channel' in name only. Christmas Island, where Major Raschen was based - commanding the RE detachment there -lies nearly 2,000 miles east of Tarawa (main island in the Gilberts) and there's not much in between! He was only a mediocre swimmer, wore spectacles, and suffered from seasickness in small vessels; furthermore, he started with no knowledge of Pacific atolls, and found it difficult to get much useful information in advance. But acting on first principles, and with enthusiastic co-operation from others, he built up an enviable stock of practical knowledge, so much so that the four-week reconnaissance was entirely successful. The subsequent operation (by Royal Engineers, but not including him) was of great and lasting benefit to the islanders. His Annex 'Thoughts on Atolls' contains his ideas about the formation of coral atolls and is thoughtprovoking, while inevitably leaving some matters unresolved; we simply don't know enough, methinks. I found this a delightful, fascinating book. BOOK REVIEWS-II Never afraid to admit to ignorance, or mistakes that he made, he enlivens the tale with many droll observations; he very much engages our sympathy. But do follow his advice - don't step on stonefish, they are very nasty. HILARY FOXWORTHY COMMANDER RN MY ROAD LEADS ME SEAWARDS by MICHAEL BADHAM (New Millennium Publishers - £9.95) This is a long book, over 500 pages, because it is two books in one. The first 200 pages concern the author's service in the Navy, culminating with the attainment of submarine command. Under the 'golden bowler' scheme he chose to leave in 1959 because, as he says 'I had a life of my own to lead'. He then chose to embark on a 'lunatic voyage' to Australia in a sailing boat with his family of wife, two children and a dog and three friends the sailing boat being a 57 year old RNLI lifeboat. When he got to the Caribbean he was seduced by the opportunity of chartering in order to make some money. His friends who had signed on for Australia then left. He spent 17 years in the chartering business in the Caribbean and on the New England coast and Bermuda, first in Westering the converted lifeboat and then in one of the first Trimarans, Spearhead, which he had built and sailed himself across the Atlantic. His final spell as a charter skipper, after being an owner, was as a paid employee as skipper! However it was not all plain sailing. One of the most impressive and suspense ridden experiences is his anticipation of Hurricane Esther. His detailed precautions should be incorporated in any future seamanship manual. He rode it out entirely alone and it is an example of consummate seamanship combined with cool courage. Eventually chartering as well as the sea also showed its hidden dangers and the sequel was tragic. I will not reveal the circumstances, you must read the book to discover it. A minor criticism is that the editorial could have done with some excision, being occasionally prolix. An index too would have been helpful - the assignment of names to 185 inanimate objects such as George, Edward, Siegfried and Smith and the parade of people mentioned, was not always easy to identify. A glossary too would have assisted those not so seaman-like as the author. However there is no doubt that Mike Badham is a courageous and highly competent seaman and navigator. It is surprising their Lordships didn't promote him and put him back on the Active List; but then of course he would not have wanted that. Highly recommended. PATRICK TAILYOUR WITH ZEAL AND ABILITY A personal record 1896-1945 by CAPTAIN A. D. DUCKWORTH, RN (Obtainable from Brig. G. Duckworth, Weir Cottage, Bickton, Fordingbridge, Hants SP6 2HA - £9 (inc p&p» Older members, not only Supply Officers, may remember A. D. Duckworth's invaluable book An Introduction to Naval Court-Martial Procedure which ran to four editions in the 1930s and' 40s. Those who served under oldfashioned captains may recall the first words of their flimsies, 'with zeal and ability', which Captain Duckworth has taken for the title of his most interesting and entertaining autobiography. Joining his first ship, Inflexible, the Mediterranean fleet flagship, as an Assistant Clerk (alias Paymaster Cadet) in 1913, he moved to the Invincible in time for the Battle of the Falklands Islands and was in the Birmingham at Jutland. His unique photographs of the Falklands action were published in the press, and on his return home he was summoned to Buckingham Palace to show them to the King. For his first twenty years he was employed entirely on the secretarial side, mostly abroad and mostly in Commander-in-Chiefs' offices, with exotic peace-time cruises. His first pussering job came on promotion to Paymaster Commander in 1934 in the Carlisle, flagship on the South Africa Station. In June 1938 came a most unusual mission, a job with the Non-Intervention Committee working with representatives from France, Germany and Italy on a manifestly impractical • 186 BOOK REVIEWS-II scheme to end the Spanish Civil War. Duckworth spent June to December 1938 in Germany with a German staff not the least interested in non-intervention and well aware that Germany and Italy were determined to continue their vigorous assistance to General Franco at the same time as they were secretly preparing for all-out war. His account of this 'highly ridiculous situation' is almost beyond belief. The outbreak of war found Duckworth converting the RAF Station at Donibristle into an RN Air Station and subsequently 'mothering' the newly opened stations at Crail, Arbroath and Macrihanish. In December 1942 he joined the Warspite and saw service in the East Indies, the final days of the capture of Sicily, the surrender of the Italian Fleet, and Salerno where she was damaged by two glider bombs. In May 1944 he was appointed to the Naval Control Commission for Germany in Norfolk House, London, planning the control of ports and harbours as soon as they were captured. He was based in Germany from June to December 1945 when he took voluntary retirement to become Secretary of the Royal Institution of Naval Architects. Autobiographies of Supply Officers are rare. This one is exceptionally interesting, perceptive and enjoyable, and should prove a profitable source for historians of the administrative and social sides of the Royal Navy. HUGH OWEN CAPTAIN, RN I I MORRISON OF THE BOUNTY by JAMES SHAW GRANT (AcairLtd., Stornoway, 1997 -£11.95) I am not a 'Bounty buff'; before I read this book, I knew only the main outlines, that Captain Bligh had been cast off in an open boat, Fletcher Christian eventually made it to Pitcairn, Bligh made it (near-miraculously) back to England, many of the mutineers were apprehended, several were hanged. With a confused recollection of Charles Laughton playing Bligh in the first film, my knowledge ended there. This book came as a revelation; for instance, the film, made in 1937, relied heavily on Morrison's journal- which I didn't know existed. Morrison was boatswain's mate in the Bounty, was asleep when the mutiny happened, and had nothing to do with it. He remained in the ship, and eventually got to the island of Toobouai, then to Tahiti. The frigate Pandora came there to apprehend mutineers: he gave himself up voluntarily; he was tried and condemned to be hanged, but reprieved because of his excellent (self-conducted) defence. He stayed in the Navy, became a gunnery instructor, and Admiral Troubridge deliberately acquired him as the gunner for his flagship; he was drowned when Blenheim foundered in 1807. (As well as his journal, Morrison wrote a fascinating account of Tahiti which runs to 40,000 words.) It all makes a wonderful story. And James Shaw Grant tells it well. The mutiny itself, adventures on Toobouai and Tahiti, appalling hardships in the Pandora, and the drama of his trial and reprieve are all covered fully and perceptively. But the point of the book is not just to recount Morrison's heroic exploits; it is to stress that he came from the Isle of Lewis, and to draw many comparisons between 18th and 20th century Lewis matters. It packs about 100,000 words into 200 pages; I found it very rewarding and illuminating, and recommend it highly. H. L. FOXWORTHY COMMANDER, RN BOOKS RECEIVED The following books have been received and are gratefully acknowledged. Space and subject do not allow a full review; it is hoped that the following brief notices, which are made without any value judgment or recommendation, will be helpful in bringing the books to the attention of members with specialised interests. Ocean Bridge: the History of RAF Ferry Command, by Carl A. Christie (University of Toronto Press, 1997,458 pp. Paperback, £15): comprehensive study of the subject including organisation, operations, routes, losses. Chaos Theory: The Essentials for Military Applications, by Major Glenn E. James USAF (Newport Papers No. 10, US Naval War BOOK REVIEWS-II College, 1996, 125 pp. Paperback, no price quoted): covers theory and mathematics in simple terms, followed by chapters on occurrence in military systems and situations, with opportunities for exploitation. What Color Helmet?, by Myron H. Nordquist (Newport Papers No.12, US Naval War College, 75 pp. Paperback, no price quoted): Addresses history of peacekeeping under the United Nations and examines the need to reform peacekeeping mandates in the 'mixed "war-peace settings" , now likely to be encountered. Three Tiffies and a Sweeper, by Alfred E. Deeble (Pentland Press, 1997, 145 pp., £15): 187 with a Foreword by Vice Admiral Sir Louis LeBailly. Story of three friends (usually) in a ship of the 'Algerine' class during the Second World War. Plenty of hard-lying stories, engineering tribulations and runs ashore. Femhurst Books, who specialise in work on small craft, have announced publication of their latest brochure of some 100 titles. They offer a 20% discount off any of their books to anyone applying for a free copy of the brochure before 31 May 1998. The address is Femhurst Books, Duke's Path, High Street, Arundel, West Sussex BNI8 9Al, Tel. 01903 882277. Entitlement to the discount should be claimed at the time of ordering the brochure. » L New Members The following have enrolled as members since ACKLAND, H. K. ANDERSON, M. E. J. BARROW, M. 1 September 1997: LIEUTENANT SUB-LIEUTENANT HON. MIDSHIPMAN BENBOW, T. J . BENNETT, P. M. BISSETT, P. K. ... DANNREUTHER, R. P. DOUGLAS, D. C. FITZGERALD. G. D. FORTESCUE, R. C. GAMLEN, T. R. GARRATT, J. K. HUDSON, G. M. HUMPHRYS, J. A. KEANE, M. L. ... LIEUT. CDR LIEUTENANT CAPTAIN LIEUT. CDR SUB-LIEUTENANT LiEUT. CDR DOCTOR LIEUTENANT COMMANDER LAURANCE, M. A. LOWER, I. S. MCPHAIL, A. J. MERCER, A. P. MICALLEF, R. ... MOO~HOUSE, P. J. N. NAIL,'Y. A. NIMMO-SCOTT, S. O'REILLY, S. A. COMMANDER COMMANDER HON. MIDSHIPMAN COMMANDER PALMER, A. PHILLIPS, A. E. W. LIEUT. CDR HON. MIDSHIPMAN, RNR PRESTON, A. M. PROWSE, M. A. REED, A. W. REID, W. A. REILLY, P. J. REYNOLDS, P. A. SHARMAN, J. M. SHAW, K. N. G. SHIRLEY, W. P. SHUTTS, D. STEEDS, S. M. . .. TAYLOR, K. A. . WHEAL, A. J . HON. MIDSHIPMAN LIEUT CDR (re-joined) LIEUTENANT SUB-LIEUTENANT LIEUTENANT COLONEL, RM LIEUT. CDR LIEUT. CDR LIEUT. CDR LIEUTENANT LIEUT. CDR COMMANDER LIEUTENANT SQUADRON LEADER, RAF LIEUTENANT LIEUT. CDR, RNR HEO, MOD CIVIL SERVICE Prize membership for a period of two years has been awarded to: CASTLE, C. D. ... FITZGERALD, G. D. GAYFER, M. J. MORLEY, D. S. NICKISSON, D. J. SUB-LIEUTENANT SUB-LIEUTENANT LIEUTENANT SUB-LIEUTENANT LIEUTENANT, RM 188 Obituary We regret to report the deaths of the following members in the period 1 September 1997 to 1 March 1998: Date joined 1922 1963 1952 1989 1995 1950 1954 1948 1953 1983 1956 1938 1949 Member CAPTAIN G. C. BLUNDELL, CBE R. J. BROOKE COMMANDER F. J. G. COOK, ESQ LIEUTENANT T. A. GREEN V. HOLT, CVO, L. JORDAN, OBE COMMANDER T. D. KITSON, OBE LIEUT. CDR. C. R. VRD, RNVR COMMANDER C. MRS JOHN LITTLER LIEUT. CDR P. NEALE LIEUT. CDR G. M. W. ROWBOTHAM LIEUT. CDR A. W. SPENCE, MBE CAPTAIN G. H. STANNING, DSO ADMIRAL OF THE FLEET SIR WILLIAM STAVELEY, GCB, DL 189 F THE NAVAL REVIEW Registered Charity No. 214610 TRUSTEES: Admiral Sir James EBERLE, GCB, LLD Captain A. B. SAINSBURY, VRD, MA, RNR Captain P. G. HaRE, RN H. U. A. 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WILDER & Co Chartered Accountants 3, Station Approach Worcester Park Surrey KT47NB March 1998 ¥ THE NAVAL REVIEW 192 NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 DECEMBER 1997 1. 1997 £ 1996 £ 10,572 33,000 12,000 10,622 30,000 10,572 33,000 12,000 10,622 30,000 £96,194 £96,194 £115,540 £106,113 INVESTMENTS 2,421 units - M & G Charifund Income Units £34,593 6%% Treasury Stock 2004 £12,019 IOX% Conversion Stock 1999 £10,000 Allied Domecq PIc 9%% Debenture Stock 2019 48,356.05 units - Charities Aid Foundation Income Fund MARKET VALUE as at 31 December 1997 No adjustment has been made for the increase in the value of the Investments. £ 2. FIXED ASSETS Cost of Computer and Printer Less: Depreciation Net Book Value 2,817 2,816 £1 The cost of the Computer Equipment has being written off over three years on a straight line basis 3. ACCOUNTS PAYABLE AND SUBSCRIPTIONS Subscriptions in advance PAYEandNIC Accruals £1,200 £1,426 £416 £1,599 £1,404 £402 £3,042 £3,405