TR Aircraft Carrier and Amphibious Ship Programs

Fairon

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Do we have the capability to build nuclear reactors for submarines and aircraft carriers, and nuclear power plants for energy? How can we develop this on our own?

That would require political will, though. That too is uncertain, at least for future governments.

We certainly do not have the capability.

All I am saying is we can't get it from the Russians either. We will end up wasting the money if we work with the Russians.
 

No Name

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From what I can find, an average French and British carrier group looks something like this.

France has one carrier, four destroyers, a stealth frigate, a supply ship, and a nuclear-powered submarine.

The British carrier group has one carrier, two destroyers, two frigates, one submarine solid store ship, a fleet tanker

I believe it wouldn't be too difficult for Turkey to build a carrier group equal to France and Britain. Turkey could also increase its carrier group capabilities by using USVs as an alternative to adding additional ships.
 

dBSPL

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There are dozens of our companies that contributed to the project. The congratulatory message of Havelsan, one of the most important of these, and some of systems on the ship:

ADVENT Combat Management System
Command and Control Information System
Ship Information Distribution System
Ship Information System
CCTV System
Message Operating System
Video Teleconferencing System
Electronic Status Board


For Aselsan it is impossible to fit their systems into a tweet so they just post a congratulatory message. lol.
 

Nilgiri

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Name all large naval campaign from WW2, Falklands and Indo-Pak war of 1971, the carriers...not submarines are the dominant tools for sea control. Classic case is the Ghazi v Vikrant of 1971. Not only that the Ghazi failed to wrestle sea control, it failed its task to even come close to the Vikrant. While the Vikrant and its carrier battle group proved its utility, dominating the bay of Bengal and deny their use for Pakistan.


If Turkiye wants to play great power and it wants its power projected the farthest away from shore as possible in the fastest amount of time and in the most flexible manner, aircraft carriers...not submarines are the way to go.

Its just the law of physics that dictate aircraft could cover an area larger and at a much faster pace than slow submarines which its biggest dilemma is creating noise while going faster or stay silent while going slow...

Aircraft carrier operation are assigned for ocean size sector of operation while submarines, due to their limitation are usually assigned in a much smaller sector of operation.

Nobody really cares if countries come out with latest nuclear submarines, but once they start building carriers (especially supercarriers) all eyes are in constant monitor of progress from keel laying to commissioning, that shows just how much value a carrier offered to any blue water navy. Case study: the Type 003 the most studied PLAN ship and its 004 successor.


Please remember this, naval groupings are usually centered around surface ships, not submarines...that's why blue water navy has the Carrier Strike Group (CSG) or Surface Action Group (SAG) but there's yet to be a Submarine strike group.

In a CSG, the submarines are subservient to the carriers not the other way around.

Yeah overall I agree.

Flicking through the last few pages of convo just now, if I was in Turkiye's position, I would concentrate on the exact mission sets (current and future) and likeliest domain space(s) for up to 2030, 2040 and 2050.

Rather than worry about terminology like "blue water" and meeting criteria in top down way.

A military and its branches in the end must be customised to its nation's context in the end. If its ends up being classified as "blue water" at some point (do good things and good things happen), so be it. But thats not the driver for planning.

I use 30 years because thats roughly the average lifetime of a large warship that lock in large amounts of investment and human resource involved in all stages.

In my view, there is little to no benefit in the SSN approach for Turkiye when this macro approach is fully analysed the way it should be (by say Turkish defence analysts and planners).

It adds little value compared to the extra costs (and time + further resource involved of building the commensurate broader capacities)....relative to developing SSK programs further (with AIP and then potentially middle section extension for ballistic+cruise missiles like the Koreans have done) for those mission sets where submarines have little equal to them.

i.e the basic Cost benefit analysis of having a number of SSNs versus a larger number of SSKs (keeping input resources + time the same) in the context of the likeliest area of deployments (are you maximising what an SSN has if your military for large part has its most relevant threats closer to it rather than an ocean away).

i.e This approach would give maximum return on investment than starting many things afresh for little benefit in an SSN powerplant etc.

SSN's have a very specific heritage for certain navies with mission sets and domain spaces different to what Turkiye has once you look at the details.

It is the "ocean away" that baked in the SSN approach of the USN for example (over a very large amount of development time, both technologically, financially and doctrinally)....and as to why "long range domain space" countries are looking to emulate there too.

i.e Is the cost worth it for others, compared to advancing the SSK? I think for Turkiye, the answer is clear studying Korea and Japanese projects for example.

The LHD approach w.r.t Anadolu was picked (over LPD or lesser) as one member at some point earlier talked about quite well, with a view of what Turkiye's context is in the region.

i.e where and how Turkiye wants to project a higher tier of military power (at the optimal investment amount for it) going forward.

i.e Turkish defence planners have already committed to CSG concept (regionally) and will build this out capability +support wise with time....given exactly what a carrier in the end offers in a top tier unparalleled way in as you put it "sea control mission"

i.e the denial and dominance aspects of this w.r.t what multi-vectored airborne assets have the potential to do like no other platform....and building out support assets from that.

It was a big hamstrung blow the F-35 did not come to pass on Anadolu, which is long story of its own....but the approach was fundamentally a sound one (if everything went to plan) at its genesis and then execution.

But the concept of having at least one CSG is baked into the Turkish navy now I feel.

That means SSK approach (for the underwater domain) at the same time as that is the most optimal route looking at numbers/range/cost ratios.

Fiscally though Turkiye has to get its economic challenges (like the inflation) under control though, both in costings perspective and stability needed for funding and human resource commitments.

I will wait and see what further replies/convo arise now (esp. from Anmdt whom I hold in very high regard here on these matters)
 

Chocopie

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? South Korea is not building nuclear submarines.I appreciate that you are paying attention to our economic development and the growth of our nuclear power industry. But we Korean are focusing on light aircraft carriers, not nuclear submarines.
It isn‘t decided yet what will come after KSS-III. A batch of 3 new 4.000+ t attack submarines with VLS (possible nuclear propulsion).

Plans of CVX has been changed from light to medium aicraft carrier (CATOBAR, 60.000+ t full displacement) with navalized KF-21.


Sadly, under the Yoon administration both projects won‘t evolve much. As a good pro-US and pro-Japanese dog he is catering to their security wishes: a Korea without SSN, CBG and nuclear deterence.
 

UcanTost

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When looking at the LHD and tb3 super wide wing dimensions, i dont think the carrier can use the drones and its elevator at the same time. Nor do i think its safe enough for helicopters to be parked or even land/take off on the deck. There is no space when drones have to use its own power and brakes to take off and land. Where are the helis going to go?
 

Sanchez

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When looking at the LHD and tb3 super wide wing dimensions, i dont think the carrier can use the drones and its elevator at the same time. Nor do i think its safe enough for helicopters to be parked or even land/take off on the deck. There is no space when drones have to use its own power and brakes to take off and land. Where are the helis going to go?
Yup, apart from the single parking spot in front of the forward elevator and behind the Phalanx, there is no safe place for holding any other birds on the deck while fixed wing ops are underway. And I really doubt that single parking spot can be used for helicopter operations, never seen it on Spanish or Aussie ships. Do give me a video of it being utilized for take off and landings if anyone can find it.

fv6OhcV.jpg
 

urban mine

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What Turkiye needs most are AAW destroyers and heavy multi-purpose frigates (AAW, ASW) and indigenously designed 3,000+ t SSK (with domestic AIP or Li-Ion batteries) like the MILDEN. These projects alone will eat up all naval budget resources in the coming decade.

And these warships and submarines would be the escort base for a future aircraft carrier group, if Turkiye decides to buy into this expensive adventure.
I mean, if you had to choose between a nuclear submarine and an aircraft carrier.
Isn't it funny, the same arguments that Korean military enthusiasts used to have are happening here.
 

Chocopie

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I mean, if you had to choose between a nuclear submarine and an aircraft carrier.
Isn't it funny, the same arguments that Korean military enthusiasts used to have are happening here.
For Korea: I‘m all for nuclear-propelled submarines with SLBM. In the next decades we have to go nuclear and SSN are the perfect deterrence. Every dollar spent will secure the survival of our people.

An aircraft carrier is expensive and not a real strategic deterrence. It will show them Chinese and Japanese: „Ni hao and konichiwa, f*ckers, see, we have fancy toys too.“
 

dBSPL

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Rolls-Royce SMR will support international efforts to decarbonise energy systems, with a forecast to target £250bn of exports. Memorandums of Understanding are already in place with Estonia, Turkey and the Czech Republic.

Whether it was Erdoğan's personal dream or whether it represented the will of the state because there was such a preliminary study in the background, nuclear-powered naval platforms (submarines and aircraft carriers) have been mentioned many times in the past. In the last year or so, there have been constant statements such as 'we will build a full-scale version of this', 'we will build a much more advanced version, similar to the best ones in the world', although without this emphasis. Although this is not a supercarrier, I believe that the ideal is similar to that of France's De Gaulle or, more recently, the nuclear-powered, all-electric, new generation aircraft carrier that France is currently working on. Of course, we are a long way from that point. But 15 years ago, we had a hard time imagining even the MMU. When we took the steps sequentially and in a planned manner, we made many impossible things doable. We will push this stage, if not with the second ship after TCG Anadolu, then with the third ship. It is obvious that we want to go down that path. To what extent ideals and reality coincide, and whether it will be possible to create a suitable industry and achieve economic size, are things to be discussed separately.

Regarding the SMRs, my curiosity is whether bringing this technology to our country will give us the leverage to provide propulsion systems for giant naval platforms in next or later decades..
 

what

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Its good to see serious defence publications paying more attention to our developments.
 

dBSPL

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Turkey’s ‘Drone Carrier’ Amphibious Assault Ship Enters Service​


Australian defense enthusiasts are particularly deep-interested in the project, and for good reason: the other daughter of the same mother also serves in the Australian navy.

In addition to Spain and Australia: Italy, UK, Japan and Korea may also turn to similar solutions if we will successful with this concept, and some may even plan to procure directly from the systems will be used by the Turkish navy.
 
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Zafer

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President Erdoğan says "one times bigger" which means twice the size. TCG Anadolu is 27436 tonnes so we are talking about 55000 tonnes. I take this as a balpark value and give it 10k tonnes which gives 65k tonnes which is the weight of HMS Queen Elizabeth.
 

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