Infanteer said:
Why would we do that? CANSOFCOM isn't an orphanage for anyone with a C8 and some hands and feet skills, and naval boarding is not a SOF mission. Maritime counter-terrorism is, but these two are apples and oranges.
Infanteer with the money answer as always! Certain Navy folk seem to have this idea that anyone with a rifle should be someone elses job.
They also don't understand the difference between what NTOG does and Maritime Counter-Terrorism. Using JTF-2 for boarding actions against wooden Dhows is a colossal waste of a pretty scarce resource.
Underway said:
I find it intersting that the East Coast sailors are talking about how NTOG doesn't really do its job. NTOG since its formation has been much more active with the West Coast fleet in drug busts and boarding actions. I agree that some criticisms are valid. It does take sailors away from their trades. And despite their best efforts NTOG is a friction point on the ships during deployment when they are not boarding people.
A lot of this is just whinging though. It's the classic Riders, Day Workers, Shift Workers gripes that never go away.
"NTOG doesn't stand watches" ... "NTOG takes up too much space" ... "NTOG doesn't do anything" blahblahblah
If NTOG value is an issue its that it idea may have missed the timing for when it would have been truely valuable. With the return to great power competition some anti-terrorism drug interdiction missions are on the back burner.
I think people forget why NTOG was created. My understanding is the way the RCN treated NBP in the 90s and 00s was borderline negligent and we should be thankful that no incidents occurred where someone was killed due to inadequate training.
As things can always go South quickly:
https://youtu.be/Woz2VraNRKY
This new way is far better and is the way of the future. The RCN is just playing catchup to every other Navy who already has this capability.
I also think the unit can potentially be used for other tasks as well. They already have been used for SFCB but they could also be attached to a CJTF, they could be used to guard a Controlled Access Zone or provide enhanced force protection.
As for NST, when they showed up on my deployment they were professional and excellently trained for their job. Took it much more serious then the ships company did. And they allowed the ships company to properly relax as it took all those FP spots out of the dutywatch rotation. There were also friction points but that was more due to sorting out CoC issues with their IC and not something that really was a criticism of the concept.
I don't doubt they take it more seriously or are better at it than the Ship's Company. That's not a hard metric to really beat though. I find the way the RCN conceptualizes FP strange. It's heavy on legalese, leaves COs with limited options and I don't find the levels particularly useful.
There is little flexibility in it and a lot of the time, it's a meaningless manpower suck that simply fulfills a checklist rather than analyzing what the actual threats are and allocating resources accordingly.
What I would optimally like to see is NTOG assume FP duties if there is a threat that is actually warranted. You've got the personnel there so use them. NTOG should also develop a designated marksman and crew-served weapon capability that could also be utilized for enhanced FP which I believe is in the early stages of development atm.
Oh yah, ditch the .50 cal and go with a C6 for FP. .50 cal is complete overkill, way higher chance of collateral damage in an actual FP scenario. It also has a rate of fire that is about half what a C6 is so you get about half the rounds landing in your beaten zone that you would with a C6. That's kind of a big deal in a small boat attack scenario when you might be bobbing around in the water and accuracy becomes a problem.
.50 cal also isn't portable. Single 2 person C6 team in the hangar would be able to move rapidly to any part of the upper deck and could be held in the FPO's back pocket for use as required.
Sure, if there is a requirement, crew .50 cals but very often there is little need and it isn't a very flexible solution.