Hollywood's 1st Entertainment & Celebrity News Website Published by a Maori New Zealander

OUR AMPHIBIOUS ARMY – ALREADY HAS IT’S HAND OUT

I was going to get a photo opportunity at the Diwali festival of lights. Afterwards, I was going to open up a brand new account at bank of india in recognition that India, alongwith Australia supply all of the banking software to do all of the money flow systems via banks in New Zealand… but then I thought, hey wait a minute, shouldn’t I wait for Iwi Bank to open first, and don’t I have to find out what amphibious means?

Yeah. According to the New Zealand army, apparently, Kiwis do need to know what this word means. I thought it was the name of some weird fish that told lies about the economy (and any other topic you asked it as well)  in a tie, on the television. But no. According to the Merriam Webster Dictionary, here’s what they say it means: am·phib·i·ous – adj \am-ˈfi-bē-əs\

Definition of AMPHIBIOUS
 

1. combining two characteristics
2 a : relating to or adapted for both land and water <amphibious vehicles> b : executed by coordinated action of land, sea, and air forces organized for invasion <an amphibious landing>; also : trained or organized for such action <amphibious forces>
3 able to live both on land and in water <amphibious plants>
am·phib·i·ous·ly adverb
am·phib·i·ous·ness noun

 
Origin of AMPHIBIOUS
Greek amphibios, literally, living a double life, from amphi- + bios mode of life — more at quick

First Known Use: 1643
 
Other Automotive Termsarticulated, block, choke, clutch, diesel, neutral, transmission
 
- – -
On a more serious note, here’s what the editorial of the NZ newspapaer (The Herald) says about it:
 
“There is a certain logic to a reshaping of the Defence Force that will compel the three separate services to “talk, think and breathe” joint operations. It is the culmination of decisions taken over the past decade, the thinking behind the 2010 Defence White Paper, fiscal restraints, and the need to retain military credibility. From 2015, all deployable parts of the Defence Force will have to be ready to join the new Joint Amphibious Task Force when and if required. This will undoubtedly enhance the army’s ability to keep more people for longer in combat areas and be better prepared for peacekeeping operations and disaster relief. It will not, however, come without a cost.

The rivalry between the army, the navy and the air force has long been a catalyst for bringing out the best in all of them. An esprit de corps has flourished in each. That will now have to be subsumed. “We are moving away from an environment where each service currently focuses on its own environment, which has driven us in the past to have single ships, single aircraft and small unit operations,” said the Chief of the Defence Force, Lieutenant General Rhys Jones.

To a degree, that has already happened, especially since the air force lost its strike wing. Shorn in size, it is now essentially a transport and maritime surveillance wing. In that context, it seems rational enough to bring it under a joint-operations umbrella. Those who drafted the Defence Capability Plan can also point to tensions between the services, which reached an unhealthy level as they competed for funding under the previous Government. Yet notwithstanding this, there will undoubtedly be some sorrow at the loss of the services’ individual pride and purpose. An impact on morale cannot be discounted.

The capability plan suggests that the drive to create a more coherent and integrated Defence Force, with the Joint Amphibious Task Force at its core, will not preclude the deployment of individual components. But with the training and exercising required to make the force as effective as possible, it seems unlikely there will be as much latitude for such deployments. Would there, for example, be the same potential to dispatch the frigates Te Kaha and Te Mana to the Gulf, as occurred when they supported Operation Enduring Freedom?

The 2010 Defence White Paper was significant in its abandonment of the idea that this country occupied a benign strategic environment. Instead, it talked of more challenging times in the next 25 years, not least in the South Pacific. There, the outlook was said to be one of “fragility”. This region is the intended theatre of the Joint Amphibious Task Force. Indeed, the lack of air cover means it could not operate independently elsewhere. Further afield, the force will have to participate in coalition operations.

The capability plan covers the period to 2020. During this, the Defence Force will receive little in the way of new equipment. The Defence Minister acknowledges that its Orion and Hercules aircraft and NH90 helicopters will be required to fly well beyond normal civil parameters. That may, as Wayne Mapp suggests, be “routine” for military aircraft, but this does not make it wholly desirable.

The Joint Amphibious Task Force cannot be effective if it has to make do with equipment past its use-by date. With every malfunction, morale suffers. With every breakdown, coalition partners come to regard this country as more and more of a liability. The Government has put off the expense of a large-scale re-equipment programme until after the end of the decade. At that point there will be no option if New Zealand is to retain a credible military force.”

How are we going to pay for all this, if Iwi bank hasn’t even opened its doors yet? Shucks. We better have a garage sale and a beehive cake bake for our troops. I know, we’re not in a position to borrow ANY money from the Bank of India, at least for the next five or so years. We are maxed out, as a nation in debt, at the minute.  I also hear that 1500 troops have been let go, from the army, so – I guess this task force is for the young and the new recruits.

Seriously though, I’m all for it. We actually live on Aotearoa – a unique marine reserve that our ancestors discovered. The marine reserve needs protecting.

~Posted by Horiwood.Com, Aotearoa New Zealand, Polynesia Asia-Pacific. 10.10.11~

 

About these ads

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 557 other followers