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Wikipedia

South African Navy

The South African Navy (SA Navy) is the naval warfare branch of the South African National Defence Force.

South African Navy
Founded1861 (historical)
1922 (official)
Country South Africa
TypeNavy
Size6,816
1,071 (reserve)
Part of South African NDF
Garrison/HQSaldanha Bay, Simon's Town, Western Cape, South Africa
ColorsGreen and white
Commanders
Minister of Defence and Veteran AffairsThandi Modise
Chief of the NavyVice Admiral Monde Lobese
Master at Arms of the NavySenior Chief Warrant Officer Matee Molefe[1]
Notable
commanders
Admiral Hugo Biermann, Vice Admiral Refiloe Johannes Mudimu
Insignia
Ensign
Jack

The Navy is primarily engaged in maintaining a conventional military deterrent, participating in counter-piracy operations, fishery protection, search and rescue, and upholding maritime law enforcement for the benefit of South Africa and its international partners.[2][3]

Today the South African Navy is one of the most capable naval forces in the African region, operating a mixed force of sophisticated warships, submarines, patrol craft, and auxiliary vessels, with over 7,000 personnel; including a marine force.

With formerly deep historical and political connections to the United Kingdom, the first emergence of a naval organisation was the creation of the South African Division of the British Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve in 1913, before becoming an nominally independent naval service for the Union of South Africa in 1922.[4]

In its history, South African naval vessels and personnel have participated in the First and Second World Wars, as well as the South African Border War. In the apartheid post-war era, the South African Navy was extensively aligned with NATO and other Western nations against the Soviet Bloc.[5]

History

Beginnings

Officially, the South African Navy can trace its origins back to the creation of the South African Naval Service on 1 April 1922. Unofficially, however, the Navy has an unbroken association with the Natal Naval Volunteers, formed in Durban on 30 April 1885, and the Cape Naval Volunteers, formed in Cape Town in 1905.[4] Loosely, and indirectly however, the earliest naval establishment was the Port Elizabeth Naval Volunteer Brigade, founded in 1861.[6] On 1 July 1913, following the creation of the Union of South Africa in 1910,[7] the South African Division of the Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve (RNVR[SA]) was established, although with complete organisational and operational control being directed by the Royal Navy.[4][8]

First World War

 
SAS Immortelle, circa 1935

As part of the British Empire, South Africa went to war against the Central Powers on 4 August 1914,[9] despite significant Afrikaner opposition.[10] A total of 412 South Africans served in the RNVR[SA] during the war, with 164 members volunteering for the Royal Navy directly.[11] One officer and eight ratings died during the course of the war.[11]  South Africans would see service on warships in European waters and the Mediterranean, as well as participate in the land campaigns in German South West Africa and German East Africa. Under Royal Navy jurisdiction, the RNVR (SA) patrolled South African waters in converted fishing vessels, helping in mine clearance in response to the operations of the German raider Wolf in 1917,[12][13] as well as protecting the strategically important Royal Navy naval base at Simon’s Town.

Interwar

On 1 April 1922, the South African Naval Service (SANS) was formed and, alongside the RNVR (SA), tasked with the protection of territorial waters, minesweeping and hydrography.[11] In the same year, the SANS commissioned the small hydrographic survey ship HMSAS (His/Her Majesty’s South African Ship) Protea, two minesweeping converted trawlers HMSAS Immortelle and HMSAS Sonneblom, and the Training Ship General Botha - all formerly in Royal Navy service. As a result of the Great Depression in 1929, coupled with lack of government investment, the SANS by 1939 had been forced to return all vessels to the Royal Navy.[14] At the outbreak of the Second World War, the service had only three officers and three ratings in its ranks.[4]

Second World War

The British declaration of war against Germany on 3 September 1939 threw South Africa into a constitutional dilemma due to her status as an autonomous Dominion within the Commonwealth. Prime Minister J.B.M. Hertzog and other anti-British factions of the coalition United Party called for strict neutrality, whilst the more anglophile Deputy Prime Minister Jan Smuts advocated that South Africa was constitutionality, and morally, obliged to support Britain and fight fascism.[10] Two days later, after a close parliamentary vote of 80 to 67 in favour of Smuts, South Africa followed Britain and declared war on Germany.[10]

During October 1939, Rear-Admiral Guy Halifax, a retired Royal Navy officer living in South Africa, was appointed Director of the South African Naval Service, later renamed Seaward Defence Force (SDF) in January 1940.[15] Overseeing a large industrial program of converting civilian whalers and fishing trawlers into military vessels, despite being highly primitive, over 80 such craft would go on to be the backbone of the South African naval forces.

In South African waters, the SDF, in partnership with the Royal Navy, ensured maritime control around the strategic Cape Sea route and was primarily involved in coastal patrol, mine clearance, and significant anti-submarine operations between 1942 and 1945 due to a sustained U-Boat offensive, with over 100 merchant ships being sunk off the South African coast.

 
Members of the South African Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve serving on board HMS Nelson during WWII

South African naval vessels similarly contributed to the Mediterranean theatre,[16] and later the Far East.[17] From 1941, South Africa assisted in escorting convoys along the North African coast, including the resupply and eventual evacuation of Tobruk, embarked on mine clearance operations, successfully engaged enemy submarines and undertook harbour salvage tasks. In 1942, a unified national naval service emerged following the successful amalgamation of the SDF and RNVR(SA), creating the South African Naval Forces (SANF).[8] As the war came to its end, South Africa received its first purpose-built warships, three Loch-class frigates from the Royal Navy.[14] Deployed to the Far East under British command, South Africa later contributed to operations to liberate Japanese held territory.[17]

In total, over 10,000 service personnel volunteered for service in the SANF, and its predecessors, with 324 losing their lives and 26 battle honours gained.[11]

Post war

A year after the end of hostilities, on 1 May 1946 South African Naval Forces were reconstituted as part of the Union Defence Force before undertaking its final name change in July 1951, when the SANF officially became known as the South African Navy.[5] The year 1948 was a turning point, not only for South Africa as a country following the National Party's electoral victory, but also the direction of the Navy.[18] British influence became increasingly diminished and curtailed across the service. In 1952, the previously used ship prefix of HMSAS (His/Her Majesty's South African Ship) changed to just SAS (South African Ship),[19] in 1957, the Royal Navy transferred control of Simon's Town naval base to the SA Navy after 70 years of occupancy and later, in 1959, the St Edward's Crown, which had featured in the Navy cap badge and other insignia, was replaced by the Lion of Nassau from South Africa's coat of arms.[20]

 
SAS Jan van Riebeeck in British service as HMS Wessex

In the immediate post-war years the South African Navy underwent significant levels of qualitative, and quantitative, expansion as the Royal Navy disposed of its surplus war materiel.[21] In 1947, two surplus Algerine-class minesweepers, were acquired from the United Kingdom, HMSAS Bloemfontein and HMSAS Pietermaritzburg, as well as a Flower-class corvette which was converted into the hydrographic survey ship HMSAS Protea. In 1950, South Africa further expanded her naval capability and purchased the first of two former British W-class destroyers, SAS Jan van Riebeeck, in 1952 SAS Simon van der Stel,[22] and later, the Type 15 anti-submarine frigate SAS Vrystaat (formerly HMS Wrangler).[23]

By the early 1960s, the South African Navy was fast reaching its highpoint of international inclusion and is generally considered to be the golden age of a well balanced, modern, and effective service optimised for conventional naval engagement alongside friendly Western international partners.[21]

From 1962 to 1964, the South African Navy received three Type 12 President-class frigates: SAS President Kruger, SAS President Steyn and SAS President Pretorius respectively.[22] These were first rate, ocean going fast fleet anti-submarine escorts that propelled the South African Navy into the age of a modern warship operator on equal footing with the West.[24] The order of three Daphné-class submarine from France in 1968[25]—to operate submarines for the first time—again catapulted the service further. The early 1970s would see the South African Navy operating at the height of its blue-water power projection ability with the first of the Daphné-class submarines, SAS Maria van Riebeeck, being commissioned in 1970, with SAS Emily Hobhouse and SAS Johanna van der Merwe entering service the following year.[25]

The second half of the 1970s however saw South Africa facing severe amounts of international isolation and criticism. In 1973 the UN labelled the policy of apartheid a "Crime against Humanity",[26] magnified further by the brutal state repression and subsequent mass incarcerations and deaths following the Soweto uprising in 1976[27] and the death of prominent anti-apartheid activist Steve Biko in 1977.[28] The following year a UN arms embargo, loosely in place since 1962, became mandatory.[29] The ensuing international economic disinvestment from South Africa was stepped up, placing huge strains on the economy. Coupled with these severe problems, the cornerstones of the country's regional foreign policy faced collapse and complete transformation with the end of Portuguese rule in Angola and Mozambique in 1975,[30] and the negotiated settlement in Ian Smith's Rhodesia to the end of white minority rule in 1979.[31] As South Africa became increasingly involved in the Border War in South West Africa (modern day Namibia) and Angola, the Navy began to readjust its previous international outlook and organisation. The then Minister of Defence, P. W. Botha successfully sought military connections with Israel and nine "Reshef"—Warrior-class in South African service—missile strike craft were ordered in 1974.[22] Following the Soweto uprising and subsequent mandatory arms embargo, South Africa had been forced to accept the cancellation of another significant naval procurement of two new Type-69A light frigates and two Agosta-class submarines from France.[32]

In 1987, South Africa commissioned the locally designed and built Fleet Replenishment ship SAS Drakensberg. Constructed in Durban, it remains the largest and most sophisticated warship to ever have built in South Africa. Three years earlier, the Navy's other support ship, SAS Tafelberg, had undergone a refit that greatly increased her amphibious capabilities. A real boost for the Navy's influence, Tafelberg could deploy a company strength landing force, six landing craft, two medium helicopters and be equipped with a small hospital.[32][21] Throughout the decade, the South African Navy continued to participate in the Border War and coastal protection. For 23 years (1976–1989) the South African Navy maintained determined sea control around Southern Africa and provided valuable support to land operations.[33] By the end of the 1980s, as white minority rule was coming to a negotiated end, the Navy had lost all of its major surface warships, had a drastically reduced anti-submarine/anti-aircraft capability across the board, and almost complete international isolation.[11] As South Africa disentangled itself from external and internal security operations, the South African Defence Force underwent severe budgetary cuts. The Navy endured a reduction of personnel by 23%,[21] the disbandment of the Marines, the closure of two Naval Commands (Naval Command East and Naval Command West), two Naval Bases at Cape Town and Walvis Bay, and the termination of the relatively advanced program to domestically build replacement submarines.[34] A positive for the Navy during this period however was the acquisition of the multipurpose sealift/replenishment ship SAS Outeniqua, a former Soviet-built Arctic supply vessel, in September 1992 as a replacement for the 35 year old Tafelberg.[35]

Despite the austere cutbacks, the Navy was leading the way for a South Africa that was slowly being welcomed back into the international community, even before the landmark elections of 1994. In 1990, the survey vessel SAS Protea became the first South African naval vessel to visit Europe since 1972, and in the same year SAS Drakensberg and two Warrior-class strike craft, SAS Jan Smuts and SAS Hendrik Mentz, sailed for Taiwan in what would be the first time South African vessels had been in the Far East since 1945. Other international visits in the following years included Zaire, Kenya, Bangladesh, Turkey, France, Portugal, and Uruguay.[11] As the "Rainbow nation" was lauded following the ANC victory in the first free democratic elections in 1994, one of the starkest symbols of this new era was the explosion of foreign warships and dignitaries visiting South African ports, often from countries that did not have a previous connection, such as Russia, Poland and Japan.[20] In 1994, 21 foreign vessels from eight countries called at South African ports, with 26 visits from 12 countries in 1995, and 27 from ten countries in 1996. In 1997 the navy celebrated 75 years, with 15 countries sending ships for the festivities.

The acute need to re-equip the navy, including the wider Armed Forces after the lifting of apartheid-era sanctions, was addressed by the Strategic Defence Package of 1999.[36] Better known as the infamous "Arms Deal", the acquisitions in the package, and those persons involved, have been repeatedly subject to substantive allegations of corruption, fraud and bribery.[37] A total of R30 billion (US$4.8 billion in 1999) was pledged to the purchase of modern military equipment. For the navy, its share led to a total transformation from a "brown-water" force of ageing missile patrol craft and short-range submarines, to a force with significant “green-water” combat capability once again.[38] In 2001, with an initial request of five vessels, later reduced to four, the German Meko A200SAN general purpose corvette design was procured (designated frigates in South Africa), along with four British Super Lynx naval helicopters, and three German Type 209/1400 diesel-powered submarines. Also under construction from 1991 were three locally built T-Craft inshore patrol boats.[21] As South Africa approached the millennium, and beyond, the ANC government gradually returned the Navy to a level of maritime power last seen in the 1960s and 1970s, and successfully reintegrated the service back into maritime operations with regional and international partners.[11]

South African Navy

Surface fleet

Commissioned into service from 2006, at a total cost of R9.65 billion, the four Meko A200SANs, the Valour class in South African service, became "easily the most powerful surface combatants in sub-Saharan Africa, and...restored South African naval pre-eminence."[39] Constructed with principles of stealthy design, the class has a 50% smaller radar signature of similar vessel size, 75% less infrared emissions, 20% lower life-cycle cost, 25% lower displacement and 30% fewer crew members.[40] Specifically designed to conduct sustained operations in the sea conditions found off the South African coast, the four frigates are able to undertake a range of tasks from maritime law enforcement, to civil support, and military operations such as area denial, gunfire support and intelligence collection. The embarked SuperLynx helicopters significantly improve and extend surveillance, as well as all-round operational capabilities. With a return to operating general-purpose, multi-mission warships, the Valour class have been hailed as modern, impressive and major regional anti-surface, anti-air, and anti-submarine platforms. SAS Amatola, SAS Isandlwana, SAS Spioenkop, and SAS Mendi possess two four-cell launchers for eight Exocet surface to surface missiles, 16 to 32-cell domestically built Umkhonto VLS missiles for air defence, a single OTO Melara 76-millimetre (3.0 in) main gun, a twin Denel 35 mm (1.4 in) Dual Purpose Gun, two Oerlikon 20 mm (0.79 in) cannon, and two 12.7 mm (0.50 in) remotely operated guns.[40]

As the SA Navy has a strength of only four primary surface warships, in an effort to improve asset availability in more routine littoral patrol operations and ease the stress on sophisticated, but ill-suited, warships, three previously decommissioned Warrior-class strike craft were modernised and recommissioned as offshore patrol vessels (OPVs) between 2012 and 2014 - SAS Isaac Dyobha, SAS Galeshewe and SAS Makhanda.[41][42] SAS Galeshewe has since been officially placed in reserve.[43]

Primarily, the Warrior class undertake the more traditional naval task of patrolling South Africa's exclusive economic zone and upholding maritime law enforcement. Ordinary tasks include anti-smuggling, monitoring against illegal immigration, search and rescue, fishery inspection, and routine border protection. With the ability to operate far out into the Cape and handle the often rough seas, the OPVs are also expected to complement the navies combat ability, particularly when undertaking anti-piracy patrols in the Mozambique Channel.[44]

Reflecting their new policing role, the Warriors' old Skerpioen missile launchers and the rear 76 mm gun was removed. In replacement, the craft have gained the capacity to support a small rigid-hulled inflatable boat (RHIB) and a limited contingent of Naval Infantry for boarding suspect vessels, as well as maintaining their original 20 mm cannon and 12.7 mm heavy machine guns.[45]

As of 2020, two River-class coastal mine countermeasures vessels are still in service with the SA Navy, however, they are believed to have lost their mine-hunting capabilities due to the retirement of the antiquated PAP104 autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs). Whilst still maintaining a decompression chamber for operational diving, the River class are now deployed on general coastal defence duties, and are equipped with a single Oerlikon 20 mm cannon, two 12.7 mm machine guns, and a RHIB.

Alongside the Warrior and River classes are the more modern T Craft class, with three entering service from 1992. Constructed with twin-hulled catamarans of glass-reinforced plastic sandwich construction, three have also been built for Israel in 1997. The T Craft, with their far lighter construction and smaller size, undertake maritime security patrols considerably closer to the shore and inspect various inlets and bays. SAS Tobie, SAS Tern, and SAS Tekwane are equipped with a single 12.7 mm Browning machine gun and have the capacity to embark a RHIB with a small complement of Naval Infantry to inspect vessels.[46]

Submarine fleet

Between 2004 and 2008, three German built Type 209/1400 submarines were delivered as a like for like replacement for the obsolescent Daphné-class submarines. The Heroine class represents a significant upgrade of the navy's sub-surface force due to considerable advancement in underwater performance and endurance.[47]

 
South African submarines SAS Charlotte Maxeke (S102) and SAS Queen Modjadji (S103), accompanies the United States Navy Los Angeles-class submarine USS San Juan (center), into False Bay in Simon's Town, South Africa on 4 November 2009

As of 2020, South Africa is one of only three states on the African continent, along with Algeria and Egypt, that currently operate submarine assets, and the only state in the sub-Saharan region. With near subsurface supremacy, the SA Navy operates a strong conventional underwater naval deterrent against any theoretical continental state actor.[48] At the same time, this capability was at risk of eroding. As of 2019, two of the submarines were reported to be in need of "urgent and complete" refits. The recommended approach was to move to a contracting phase in 2020. The Armscor annual report to parliament indicated that should the refits not take place, the submarine capability would not available after FY2022/23.[49] As of March 2021, the contracting phase had still not been initiated and no dates had been announced for any upgrades of the submarines.[50]

In August 2021 it was reported that Charlotte Maxeke was being refitted at the Armscor Dockyard. Funding in the amount of R189 million had reportedly been made available to ensure the completion of the refit during the 2023/24 financial year. Funding for the refit of Queen Modjadji was not available, though the reported focus of the Navy was to prioritise essential maintenance and repair of SAS Manthatisi (which had been last refitted during 2013/14) to ensure "expedited operational availability."[51]

Highly sophisticated vessels, the Heroine class' utility, aside from traditional anti-ship engagement and area denial, is its intelligence collection via special forces deployment. A series of modifications have been made to the class so as to undertake these clandestine operations.[21]

Currently fitted only with regular torpedo tubes, the Heroines do have optional UGM-84 Harpoon integration capacity for further anti-ship potential, however, as of 2020, this has not been utilised. Similarly, whilst currently not able to deploy any land attack armaments, Germany is developing a medium-range missile, the IDAS, for their own Type 209s which would primarily be targeted against air threats, but also small surface vessels and coastal land targets.[52]

Auxiliary fleet

With the retirement of SAS Outeniqua in 2004, SAS Drakensberg is the sole fleet replenishment ship with the primary role of supporting combat vessels at sea.[53] Drakensberg is also modified to carry two RHIBs, as well as two landing craft utility (LCU) for limited amphibious use. Since the end of minority rule, Drakensberg has undertaken numerous humanitarian and anti-piracy operations, consistently shown the ‘rainbow flag’ on global voyages of goodwill, and reintegrated South Africa back into international naval exercises.[54]  

The SA Navy continues to operate the specialist hydrographic survey vessel SAS Protea, which was commissioned in 1972.[55]

Marines

The South Africa Marine Corps was first established as a sub-branch of the Navy in 1951 until 1955 and then reformed in 1979 until 1990, both times with the primary purpose of protecting the country's harbours.[15] The Marines also acted as regular infantry during the war until 1988, as well as performing counter-insurgency operations inside South Africa.[56] The Marines had an amphibious landing capability by operating from SAS Tafelberg and SAS Drakensberg, with an elite company, named the Marine Amphibious Company (MAC), being formed to ensure beach-head capability for landing large task forces, along with a small elite reconnaissance detachment between 1983 and 1989. The Marines were disbanded on 18 January 1990, following a major restructuring of the Navy at the end of the South African Border War.[57]

In 2005, the decision was taken to create a Naval Rapid Deployment Force so that South Africa could commit more to peacekeeping operations across the continent, particularly in the Great Lakes region. In 2006, this force became the Maritime Reaction Squadron. The Maritime Reaction Squadron provides an amphibious, diving and small boat capability to the Navy, deploying infantry-trained South African Navy personnel in various peacekeeping roles within the African continent, as well as assisting in boarding operations at sea, and humanitarian and disaster relief.[58]

The squadron consists of the following components:[59]

  • Operational Boat Division (OBD) with 10 Namacurra-class harbour patrol boats and six Lima-class utility landing craft
  • Reaction Force Division (RFD) consisting of one naval infantry company with a command and support element
  • Operational Diving Division (ODD) consisting of four operational diving teams of 17 divers.

Current deployments

 
The Standing NATO Maritime Group (SNMG) 1 in formation with South African navy warships SAS Amatola (F145), SAS Isandlwana (F146) and the submarine SAS Manthatisi (S101) while participating in Exercise Amazolo

The SA Navy maintains the traditional role of providing a credible military deterrent, protecting South African interests against possible enemy attack, and participating in African Union peacekeeping missions. As the likelihood of a naval engagement against a conventional enemy is extremely unlikely, the South African Navy today is primarily engaged in counter-piracy, fishery protection, and anti-smuggling operations.[21]

Deploying at least a single Valour-class frigate or one Heroine-class submarine, along with aircraft from the South African Air Force, the SA Navy undergoes exercises with others, such as the United States Navy (Exercise Shared Accord/Southern Accord),[60] NATO naval battlegroups (Exercise Amazolo), the French Navy (the annual Exercise Oxide),[61] the German Navy (the biennial Exercise Good Hope),[62] the Royal Navy (ad hoc exercises when visiting South African waters),[63] the Indian Navy (the biennial Exercise IBSAMAR), and the navies of Uruguay and Brazil (Exercises Atlasur and IBSAMAR)[64]

The navy also provided air and sea security for the 2010 FIFA World Cup by deploying three frigates as guard ships off the cities of Durban, Port Elizabeth and Cape Town.[65]

Operation Copper

Since 2011, one of the SA Navy's major and long-standing focuses has been that of the anti-piracy initiative, Operation Copper. After increased pirate activity in the Mozambique Channel (a crucial import/export sea lane for South Africa),[66] and subsequent requests for help from fellow Southern African Development Community (SADC) members (Mozambique and Tanzania), the navy has routinely deployed assets in an effort to provide maritime security in the region.[67]

Since the operation first began, every Valour-class frigate has been deployed to the region on rotation, with the refurbished Warrior-class OPVs also being utilised. In 2012, the replenishment ship SAS Drakensberg was likewise deployed to the region, and alongside European warships, successfully captured seven Somail pirates. Elements of the Navy's Maritime Reaction Squadron (MRS) are routinely embarked on deployed warships so as to give the ability to board suspect vessels.[56]

Gaps in deployment have previously occurred as a result of mechanical issues, as well as the South African Air Force withdrawing C-47TP maritime patrol aircraft in 2016 from Mozambique due to maintenance problems and lack of sufficient aircrew.[68] In 2018 the SA Navy notably deployed two warships simultaneously for Operation Copper, and were independent of foreign support.[69]

Piracy, and other maritime crime, has fallen substantially in the Mozambique Channel since the SADC operation began in 2011. Due to the success of the operation, expenditure for the future 2021/22 deployment is estimated to be R38.9 million, down from R154 million the previous year.[70]

Operation Copper's mandate could be subject to official change as a result of increasing Islamist violence in the Cabo Delgado province of Mozambique.[71] On 9 August 2021, the SADC formally announced the deployment of troops into the troubled province. Alongside regional partners such as Botswana, Tanzania and Zimbabwe, the South African government has informed parliament that it intends to deploy 1,495 personnel to Mozambique. SAS Makhanda, a modernised Warrior-class patrol OPV, has reportedly been seen in Pemba, the capital of Cabo Delgado province.[72]

Operation Corona

For the continued safeguarding of South Africa's borders, Operation Corona aims to combat illegal fishing, poaching, and smuggling within its territorial waters. The SA Navy plans to carry out five maritime patrols in line with Operation Corona, with 84 days of surface and 22 days of subsurface patrols allocated for the financial year 2020/21.[73] Deploying to known hotspot areas, the SA Navy works alongside other Government departments such as the SA Police Service and Department of Environment, Forestry and Fisheries, in an effort to deter rather than arrest.[74]

Future of the South African Navy

As the SA Navy enters the 2020s, the service faces significant challenges if it is to arrest its current decline.[21] At the opening of the South African Maritime Security Conference on 31 May 2018 in Cape Town, Chief of the Navy Vice Admiral Hlogwane warned that:

‘the navy sits at the crossroads where its very existence is threatened... Some of the countries in the SADC are injecting financial resources to build their military capacity through acquisition programmes. Conversely, South Africa is on a path of reduced defence expenditure.”[75]

At a speech a year later on 12 July 2019, Hlongwane, recognising the struggling economy, again reminded his audience that:

“in the absence of a clear and present military threat, the government will find it difficult to justify spending large sums of money on defence. The platforms acquired under the Strategic Defence Packages (four frigates and three submarines) are beginning to suffer from lack of funds for support and maintenance, [and] urgently require refits in order to keep them operational to the end of their 30-year design lives...while the new hydrographic survey vessel and IPVs are modern robust ships fully suited to perform their missions, they will not significantly improve the combat capability of the SAN which is required to defend our country and national interests in terms of our constitutional mandate...the naval balance of power is shifting on our continent.”[76]

Budget

The South African defence budget has been on a downward trajectory since 1994 when expenditure was 2.56% of GDP. In 2010, that level was 1.12%, and in 2020, expenditure is expected to fall to around 0.95%, its lowest level since 1960.[77][78] For 2020/21, the Defence Budget totals R52.4 billion (£2.4 billion[79]),[80] with the SA Navy being allocated R4.9 billion (£226 million[79]), roughly 9%.[81] South African defence spending however has not matched recent inflation levels, an average of 5% annually,[82] which has pushed the Department of Defence deeper into financial difficulties and operational consequences.  

As a whole, the Defence Budget for 2020/21 has been given 87% of its required funding, a shortfall of R9.4 billion (£433 million[79]).[80] The SA Navy for 2020/21 has been allocated only 65% of what is reportedly required, a shortfall of R2.8 billion (£130 million[79]). As a result of the declining financial situation, the Navy has warned that it will seriously struggle to maintain its current capabilities, levels of investment, and international commitments.[81] As a result of Covid-19, as well as ongoing problems within the South African economy, GDP is expected to fall by 5.6% in 2020/21, with significant ramifications for the country and the South African Navy.[83]

Operational hours

In 2013/14, the SA Navy operated with an annual target of 22,000 hours at sea. By 2018/19 this number had been lowered to 12,000 hours, with a further reduction to 10,000 hours annually from 2019/20.[84] By its own admission, the Navy requires a minimum of 12,000 hours (500 days) at sea per year to sufficiently train personnel, with an absolute minimum of 7,800 hours dedicated annually to fulfil its Force Employment obligations of border protection, maritime security, and anti-piracy operations.[85] Despite these requirements, by 2019/20 the SA Navy is financially resourced for only 6,000 hours at sea, and only 4,320 hours allocated for Force Employment operations. Vice Admiral Hlongwane has warned:

“Should sea hours be reduced below 10 000 per year, the SA Navy will decline rapidly and...any further reduction in sea hours will impact severely on individual and team training at sea, maintaining safety at sea and the safe navigation of all SA Navy vessels.”[85]

Skills recruitment

In addition, the SA Navy is facing an acute skills shortage which is severely frustrating vessel availability. Vice Admiral Hlongwane stated that "the Navy Engineering capability is now extremely limited, which will increasingly impact on the safety and seaworthiness of ships and submarines and their ability to deploy."[86] It is currently a cause for concern whether or not the SA Navy has the required skills to fully crew multiple highly sophisticated warships and submarines simultaneously.

Future acquisitions

Despite the current budgetary crisis within South African defence spending, the purchase of the three new inshore patrol vessels (IPVs), termed Project Biro and also the procurement of a new hydrographic survey vessel, Project Hotel have been approved in recent years. These acquisitions have been linked to the Government's broader aims of development of the ocean economy - Operation Phakisa.[87][88] With 90% of imports and exports dependent on the sea, South Africa's exclusive economic zone which is reportedly rich in natural resources, and the estimated loss of nearly $23bn annually to illegal and unregulated fishing, the SA Navy has successfully argued that maritime security is crucial to the national interest and economic development.[89]

Project Biro

Since 2013, the ambition for the SA Navy was the domestic construction of three offshore, and a minimum of six (later reduced to three) inshore patrol vessels as a replacement for the increasingly aged Warrior-class OPVs and River-class OPV/IPVs, as part of Project Biro. However, in 2018 it was confirmed that only the three MMIPVs (multi-mission inshore patrol vessel) would be constructed, with the OPVs being cancelled as a cost-saving measure.[90] The new vessels will also be named the Warrior-class, and cost R3.6 billion.[43]

Whilst the introduction of these three modern IPVs will immediately play a crucial role in maritime law enforcement, it has been regretted by analysts that the offshore craft option was not also financially feasible. It had been hoped that the OPVs, with their helicopter carrying abilities, would have played a much more effective role in policing South Africa's extensive exclusive economic zone (1.5 million km),[91] particularly in the rough seas of the Cape. It was even reported in 2011 that nine OPVs could be constructed, without any IPVs, due to the rough sea state off the coast and the practical experience gained which favoured larger vessels.[92]        

In 2021, it was announced that the aging Warrior-class OPVs would undergo phased decommissioning as the new Warrior-class IPVs come online.[93]

First laid down in February 2019 at Damen Shipyards Cape Town (DSCT), the timeline of delivery to the SA Navy of all three vessels is March 2022, June 2023 and September 2024 respectively. Armscor, the state acquisition agency, has an option from DSCT to purchase additional inshore patrol vessels at the same price the original three were bought for.[43]

Project Hotel

The second future acquisition programme for the SA Navy falls under Project Hotel, the replacement of the sole hydrographic survey vessel SAS Protea. The construction of this new vessel, currently being built by Durban based Sandock Austral Shipyard, will represent a major upgrade in capability for the Navy. Whilst SAS Protea was built in 1972, her replacement will be based on Vard Marine's VARD 9 105 science vessel, specifically adapted for South African service and ‘incorporates the latest hydrographic and oceanographic sensor suite’.[94] The ship will be an evolution from the Vard Marine designed HMS Echo and HMS Enterprise which have been in Royal Navy service since 2002.[95]

Also as part of Project Hotel, the SA Navy will receive two next-generation survey motor boats, one sea boat, and another inshore survey motor boat to be kept ashore in reserve, as well as upgrading shore-based hydrographic infrastructure.[96] The project has a current completion date target of August 2023, with the first of the motor boats being launched in September 2020.[97]

Issues

As of 2020, the SA Navy's main projects are under serious threat from years of underfunding, as well as recent budget cuts. Allocation of funding for Projects Biro (modern inshore patrol vessels) and Hotel (replacement hydrographic survey vessel), as well as the Army's Project Hoefyster (new infantry combat vehicles), amounts to R2.8 billion (£129 million),[79] however the required level of funding needed is expected to be R13.7 billion (£633 million),[79] nearly a R11 billion shortfall (£508 million).[79] It is currently unclear how these projects will be financed if they continue to proceed.[98]

Similarly, Project Syne and Project Napoleon, the planned and urgently required midlife overhauls for the Valour class and Heroine class respectively, are both currently on hold due to lack of adequate funding. According to a 2021 Department of Defence (DoD) progress report, the full repair cost requirement of R1.470 billion is only 53.4% funded, with R786 million allocated.[99] The SA Navy is currently finding it difficult to effectively resource the growing backlog of refits, maintenance periods, and repair projects that are needed. With each delay due to financial insufficiency and every vessel that continues to operate without adequate maintenance, the SA Navy is pulled deeper into a vicious cycle of exacerbating known issues and escalating longer-term costs, until a point of forced reduced vessel availability.

Command, control & organisation

The command structure is depicted below.[100]: 59 [101] The Chief of the Navy, based at Navy Headquarters at the Navy Office (SAS Immortelle) located in Pretoria, is head of the South African Navy. All operational forces, including ships and submarines, fall under the control of the Flag Officer Fleet who is based in Simon's Town.

 

Chief of the SA Navy
Vice Adm M. Lobese[102]
Deputy Chief Navy
R Adm
Chief of Naval Staff
R Adm Gladys Mbulaheni[103]
Chief Director Maritime Strategy
R Adm D.M. Mkhonto[104]
Flag Officer Fleet
R Adm Musawenkosi Nkomonde
Director Maritime Plans
R Adm (JG) W van Niekerk[102]
Director Naval Personnel
R Adm (JG) X. T. Hakoma[105]
Director Maritime Warfare
R Adm (JG) H T Matsane[106]
Chief of Fleet Staff
R Adm (JG) L M Hendricks[106]
Director Fleet Force Preparation
RAdm(JG) A de Wet[106]
Inspector General (SA Navy)
R Adm (JG) S Msikinya[105]
Director Naval Logistics
R Adm (JG) F. A. Hans[107]
Director Maritime Intelligence
R Adm (JG) M Bongco[108]
Director Fleet Logistics
R Adm (JG) Joseph Ikaneng[109]
Director Fleet Human Resources
-
Naval Budget Manager
Mrs R. Mamaguvhi[102]
Director Naval Transformation
R Adm (JG) I Mzimande[106]
Director Maritime Diplomacy & Strategy
R Adm (JG) M.J. Josias[102]
Director Naval Engineering Services
R Adm (JG) B Mvovo[106]
Flag Officer Commanding NB Simons Town
R Adm (JG) J. Dlamini[102]
Director Naval Reserves
R Adm (JG) R. Ndabambi[102]
Director Fleet Quality Assurance
Capt (SAN) M. A Boucher

Fleet Command

Fleet Command includes all vessels and units of the Navy other than Naval Headquarters, Pretoria. Fleet Command is based in Simon's Town under control of Flag Officer Fleet.[100]

Four directorates are responsible for the day to day control of Fleet Command:[100]: 70 

  • Director Fleet Force Preparations (DFPP) is responsible for the day-to-day running of the ships and submarines and for ensuring their operational readiness. The Maritime Reaction Squadron and NavComCens also report to DFFP
  • Director Fleet Human Resources (DFHR) is responsible for all training and manning and also controls the training units.
  • Director Fleet Quality Assurance (DFQA) is responsible for the output of Fleet Command and monitoring quality assurance throughout Fleet Command
  • Director Fleet Logistics (DFL) is responsible for all Logistics units as well as for the maintenance of the fleet.

Naval bases

 
A view of Simon's Town and the naval base

The Navy operates the following Naval Bases:[100]: 149 

  • Naval Base Simon's Town – the largest and main naval base currently used by the South African Navy.  Constructed by the Dutch East India Company in 1743, and later developed by the Royal Navy, the base was transferred to South Africa in 1957 as part of the Simon’s Town Agreement and expanded in 1975. Simon’s Town is the homeport of the frigate and submarine flotillas, as well as housing training facilities.
  • Naval Base Durban – constructed during the Second World War to better serve the deployment of naval vessels off the eastern coast of Africa, particularly after the Japanese declaration of war in 1941.[17] In 2002 Durban was downgraded to a Naval Station with much of the infrastructure being taken over by the Army and later abandoned. In 2012, the decision was taken to renovate and expand the facilities. However, it was announced in 2020 that due to budget constraints, the reclassification of Durban as a fully operational Naval Base would be delayed.[citation needed] The station is currently home to the fleet's offshore patrol flotilla and will continue to be so after the delivery of replacement offshore/inshore vessels.[110]
  • Naval Station Port Elizabeth – provides support to the fleet and host to visiting ships, however no major vessels are based here.[111]

Training units

  • SAS Saldanha – located on the West Coast and provides training and development for ratings.[112]
  • SAS Wingfield – located in the Greater Cape Town area. Historically provided practical training for apprentices, but now offers training to both ratings and officers.
  • SAS Simonsberg – located in Simon’s Town and provides training in gunnery, anti-submarine warfare, communications, diving and seamanship. Simonsberg also includes:
    • Maritime Warfare Training Centre.
    • Submarine Training Centre, East Yard.
    • Nuclear, Biological, Chemical, Damage Control Training Centre.
    • Military Training Centre, West Yard.
  • South African Naval College - located in Gordon's Bay, the establishment provides training for naval officers.

Personnel

As of the end of the financial year 2018/19, there were approximately 6,816 active uniformed members of the SA Navy, just short of the 7,071 target.[113] In addition, there are a further 1,071 civilian staff that further support the Navy.[114]

In 2006, the old Naval Reserve Units that were modelled on the Royal Naval Reserve system were closed down. A new Navy Reserve system was created consisting of roughly 1,000 reserve posts. These posts are pooled and members are drawn from them as needed to augment full-time units and ships' companies.

Uniforms

From 1922 to the 1940s the SA Navy was effectively an extension of the Royal Navy, and therefore wore the same uniforms and similar insignia. As British influence was gradually curtailed, in 1959 the British Crown in the SA Navy cap badge was replaced with the Lion of Nassau from the crest of the country's coat of arms. A black beret later replaced the peaked cap in working uniforms.[100]

In 2000 the new Coat of Arms was unveiled and the Chief of the Navy tasked Fleet Command to look at revising the Navy uniforms to reflect the new coat of arms. This saw new rank insignia for non-commissioned officers being implemented as well as the introduction of a side cap.[115]

Ranks

Due to historical influence, the rank system is based on that of the Royal Navy.[116]


Naval ensign

Naval jack

Ships and weapons

Ships

Combat fleet

Image Class/name Type Origin Number Entered service
 
Heroine class Submarine   Germany 3 2005[117]
 
Valour class Frigate   Germany 4 2004[118]
 
Warrior class Strike Craft Offshore patrol vessel   Israel  South Africa 2[119] 1979[120]
  Warrior-class inshore patrol vessel Inshore Patrol Vessel   South Africa 2 1 on order for delivery in 2024[121]
 
T class Inshore patrol vessel   South Africa 3 1992[120]
 
Namacurra class Harbour patrol boat   South Africa 21 1981[120]
 
River-class minehunter Mine counter measures vessels/ Offshore Patrol Vessel   South Africa 4 [122][123] 1981[124] 2 in refit

Support fleet

Image Class/name Type Origin Number Entered service
 
SAS Drakensberg Replenishment vessel   South Africa 1 1987[125]
 
SAS Protea Hecla-class survey vessel   United Kingdom 1 1972[125] (replacement under construction)
 
Tugboat Coastal & Harbour tugs   South Africa 5 1995–2016[126]
Lima-class utility landing craft Landing Craft Utility 6 1990[127]

Air force maritime aircraft

Although the SA Navy does not operate any aircraft itself, aircraft used on ships or supporting are operated by 22 Squadron SAAF:

There is a planned programme to equip the frigates with UAVs to supplement the helicopters. Previously before its retirement, the SAAF operated the Westland Wasp for the SA Navy in the anti-submarine warfare role.

Naval weapons systems

Weapon systems of the South African Navy
Type Manufacturer Model Photo Origin Platform
Anti-ship missile MBDA Exocet MM40 Block 2[129]     France Valour-class frigate (8 missiles in 2 quad-packed launchers)
Surface-to-air missile Denel Dynamics Umkhonto IR Block 2[130]     South Africa Valour-class frigate (16/32 missiles in a vertical launching system)
Torpedo Atlas Elektronik 533mm (21") Atlas Elektronik SUT 264 heavyweight torpedo     Germany Heroine-class submarine (8 bow tubes with 14 torpedoes)
Naval gun Oto Melara/Otobreda OTO Melara 76mm/62 compact     Italy Valour-class frigate (1 foredeck gun), Warrior-class Offshore Patrol Vessel (1 foredeck gun)
Close-in weapon system Denel Land Systems Denel 35mm Dual Purpose Gun     South Africa Valour-class frigate (2 GA35 rapid-fire automatic cannons mounted side by side in an unmanned low radar observable turret)
Autocannon Oerlikon/BMARC GAM-BO1 20 mm cannon     Switzerland Valour-class frigate (2 guns), Warrior-class Offshore Patrol Vessel (2 guns), SAS Drakensberg (4 guns), River-class minehunter (1 gun)
12.7mm Heavy machine gun General Dynamics, FN Herstal, U.S. Ordnance or Manroy Engineering (UK) M2 Browning     United States
7.62mm General purpose machine gun Browning Arms Company, FN Herstal or Denel Land Systems Browning M1919, FN MAG or Vektor SS-77     South Africa

Gallery

See also

Notes

References

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External links

  • South African Navy home page
  • Ships of the South African Navy, Past & Present 21 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  • South African Navy uniform regulations

south, african, navy, navy, naval, warfare, branch, south, african, national, defence, force, founded1861, historical, 1922, official, country, south, africatypenavysize6, 8161, reserve, part, south, african, ndfgarrison, hqsaldanha, simon, town, western, cape. The South African Navy SA Navy is the naval warfare branch of the South African National Defence Force South African NavyFounded1861 historical 1922 official Country South AfricaTypeNavySize6 8161 071 reserve Part of South African NDFGarrison HQSaldanha Bay Simon s Town Western Cape South AfricaColorsGreen and whiteCommandersMinister of Defence and Veteran AffairsThandi ModiseChief of the NavyVice Admiral Monde LobeseMaster at Arms of the NavySenior Chief Warrant Officer Matee Molefe 1 NotablecommandersAdmiral Hugo Biermann Vice Admiral Refiloe Johannes MudimuInsigniaEnsignJack The Navy is primarily engaged in maintaining a conventional military deterrent participating in counter piracy operations fishery protection search and rescue and upholding maritime law enforcement for the benefit of South Africa and its international partners 2 3 Today the South African Navy is one of the most capable naval forces in the African region operating a mixed force of sophisticated warships submarines patrol craft and auxiliary vessels with over 7 000 personnel including a marine force With formerly deep historical and political connections to the United Kingdom the first emergence of a naval organisation was the creation of the South African Division of the British Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve in 1913 before becoming an nominally independent naval service for the Union of South Africa in 1922 4 In its history South African naval vessels and personnel have participated in the First and Second World Wars as well as the South African Border War In the apartheid post war era the South African Navy was extensively aligned with NATO and other Western nations against the Soviet Bloc 5 Contents 1 History 1 1 Beginnings 1 2 First World War 1 3 Interwar 1 4 Second World War 1 5 Post war 2 South African Navy 2 1 Surface fleet 2 2 Submarine fleet 2 3 Auxiliary fleet 2 4 Marines 2 5 Current deployments 2 5 1 Operation Copper 2 5 2 Operation Corona 3 Future of the South African Navy 3 1 Budget 3 2 Operational hours 3 3 Skills recruitment 3 4 Future acquisitions 3 4 1 Project Biro 3 4 2 Project Hotel 3 4 3 Issues 4 Command control amp organisation 4 1 Fleet Command 4 2 Naval bases 4 3 Training units 4 4 Personnel 4 4 1 Uniforms 4 5 Ranks 4 6 Naval ensign 4 7 Naval jack 5 Ships and weapons 5 1 Ships 5 1 1 Combat fleet 5 1 2 Support fleet 5 2 Air force maritime aircraft 5 3 Naval weapons systems 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditBeginnings Edit Officially the South African Navy can trace its origins back to the creation of the South African Naval Service on 1 April 1922 Unofficially however the Navy has an unbroken association with the Natal Naval Volunteers formed in Durban on 30 April 1885 and the Cape Naval Volunteers formed in Cape Town in 1905 4 Loosely and indirectly however the earliest naval establishment was the Port Elizabeth Naval Volunteer Brigade founded in 1861 6 On 1 July 1913 following the creation of the Union of South Africa in 1910 7 the South African Division of the Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve RNVR SA was established although with complete organisational and operational control being directed by the Royal Navy 4 8 First World War Edit SAS Immortelle circa 1935As part of the British Empire South Africa went to war against the Central Powers on 4 August 1914 9 despite significant Afrikaner opposition 10 A total of 412 South Africans served in the RNVR SA during the war with 164 members volunteering for the Royal Navy directly 11 One officer and eight ratings died during the course of the war 11 South Africans would see service on warships in European waters and the Mediterranean as well as participate in the land campaigns in German South West Africa and German East Africa Under Royal Navy jurisdiction the RNVR SA patrolled South African waters in converted fishing vessels helping in mine clearance in response to the operations of the German raider Wolf in 1917 12 13 as well as protecting the strategically important Royal Navy naval base at Simon s Town Interwar Edit On 1 April 1922 the South African Naval Service SANS was formed and alongside the RNVR SA tasked with the protection of territorial waters minesweeping and hydrography 11 In the same year the SANS commissioned the small hydrographic survey ship HMSAS His Her Majesty s South African Ship Protea two minesweeping converted trawlers HMSAS Immortelle and HMSAS Sonneblom and the Training Ship General Botha all formerly in Royal Navy service As a result of the Great Depression in 1929 coupled with lack of government investment the SANS by 1939 had been forced to return all vessels to the Royal Navy 14 At the outbreak of the Second World War the service had only three officers and three ratings in its ranks 4 Second World War Edit The British declaration of war against Germany on 3 September 1939 threw South Africa into a constitutional dilemma due to her status as an autonomous Dominion within the Commonwealth Prime Minister J B M Hertzog and other anti British factions of the coalition United Party called for strict neutrality whilst the more anglophile Deputy Prime Minister Jan Smuts advocated that South Africa was constitutionality and morally obliged to support Britain and fight fascism 10 Two days later after a close parliamentary vote of 80 to 67 in favour of Smuts South Africa followed Britain and declared war on Germany 10 During October 1939 Rear Admiral Guy Halifax a retired Royal Navy officer living in South Africa was appointed Director of the South African Naval Service later renamed Seaward Defence Force SDF in January 1940 15 Overseeing a large industrial program of converting civilian whalers and fishing trawlers into military vessels despite being highly primitive over 80 such craft would go on to be the backbone of the South African naval forces In South African waters the SDF in partnership with the Royal Navy ensured maritime control around the strategic Cape Sea route and was primarily involved in coastal patrol mine clearance and significant anti submarine operations between 1942 and 1945 due to a sustained U Boat offensive with over 100 merchant ships being sunk off the South African coast Members of the South African Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve serving on board HMS Nelson during WWIISouth African naval vessels similarly contributed to the Mediterranean theatre 16 and later the Far East 17 From 1941 South Africa assisted in escorting convoys along the North African coast including the resupply and eventual evacuation of Tobruk embarked on mine clearance operations successfully engaged enemy submarines and undertook harbour salvage tasks In 1942 a unified national naval service emerged following the successful amalgamation of the SDF and RNVR SA creating the South African Naval Forces SANF 8 As the war came to its end South Africa received its first purpose built warships three Loch class frigates from the Royal Navy 14 Deployed to the Far East under British command South Africa later contributed to operations to liberate Japanese held territory 17 In total over 10 000 service personnel volunteered for service in the SANF and its predecessors with 324 losing their lives and 26 battle honours gained 11 Post war Edit A year after the end of hostilities on 1 May 1946 South African Naval Forces were reconstituted as part of the Union Defence Force before undertaking its final name change in July 1951 when the SANF officially became known as the South African Navy 5 The year 1948 was a turning point not only for South Africa as a country following the National Party s electoral victory but also the direction of the Navy 18 British influence became increasingly diminished and curtailed across the service In 1952 the previously used ship prefix of HMSAS His Her Majesty s South African Ship changed to just SAS South African Ship 19 in 1957 the Royal Navy transferred control of Simon s Town naval base to the SA Navy after 70 years of occupancy and later in 1959 the St Edward s Crown which had featured in the Navy cap badge and other insignia was replaced by the Lion of Nassau from South Africa s coat of arms 20 SAS Jan van Riebeeck in British service as HMS Wessex In the immediate post war years the South African Navy underwent significant levels of qualitative and quantitative expansion as the Royal Navy disposed of its surplus war materiel 21 In 1947 two surplus Algerine class minesweepers were acquired from the United Kingdom HMSAS Bloemfontein and HMSAS Pietermaritzburg as well as a Flower class corvette which was converted into the hydrographic survey ship HMSAS Protea In 1950 South Africa further expanded her naval capability and purchased the first of two former British W class destroyers SAS Jan van Riebeeck in 1952 SAS Simon van der Stel 22 and later the Type 15 anti submarine frigate SAS Vrystaat formerly HMS Wrangler 23 By the early 1960s the South African Navy was fast reaching its highpoint of international inclusion and is generally considered to be the golden age of a well balanced modern and effective service optimised for conventional naval engagement alongside friendly Western international partners 21 From 1962 to 1964 the South African Navy received three Type 12 President class frigates SAS President Kruger SAS President Steyn and SAS President Pretorius respectively 22 These were first rate ocean going fast fleet anti submarine escorts that propelled the South African Navy into the age of a modern warship operator on equal footing with the West 24 The order of three Daphne class submarine from France in 1968 25 to operate submarines for the first time again catapulted the service further The early 1970s would see the South African Navy operating at the height of its blue water power projection ability with the first of the Daphne class submarines SAS Maria van Riebeeck being commissioned in 1970 with SAS Emily Hobhouse and SAS Johanna van der Merwe entering service the following year 25 The second half of the 1970s however saw South Africa facing severe amounts of international isolation and criticism In 1973 the UN labelled the policy of apartheid a Crime against Humanity 26 magnified further by the brutal state repression and subsequent mass incarcerations and deaths following the Soweto uprising in 1976 27 and the death of prominent anti apartheid activist Steve Biko in 1977 28 The following year a UN arms embargo loosely in place since 1962 became mandatory 29 The ensuing international economic disinvestment from South Africa was stepped up placing huge strains on the economy Coupled with these severe problems the cornerstones of the country s regional foreign policy faced collapse and complete transformation with the end of Portuguese rule in Angola and Mozambique in 1975 30 and the negotiated settlement in Ian Smith s Rhodesia to the end of white minority rule in 1979 31 As South Africa became increasingly involved in the Border War in South West Africa modern day Namibia and Angola the Navy began to readjust its previous international outlook and organisation The then Minister of Defence P W Botha successfully sought military connections with Israel and nine Reshef Warrior class in South African service missile strike craft were ordered in 1974 22 Following the Soweto uprising and subsequent mandatory arms embargo South Africa had been forced to accept the cancellation of another significant naval procurement of two new Type 69A light frigates and two Agosta class submarines from France 32 In 1987 South Africa commissioned the locally designed and built Fleet Replenishment ship SAS Drakensberg Constructed in Durban it remains the largest and most sophisticated warship to ever have built in South Africa Three years earlier the Navy s other support ship SAS Tafelberg had undergone a refit that greatly increased her amphibious capabilities A real boost for the Navy s influence Tafelberg could deploy a company strength landing force six landing craft two medium helicopters and be equipped with a small hospital 32 21 Throughout the decade the South African Navy continued to participate in the Border War and coastal protection For 23 years 1976 1989 the South African Navy maintained determined sea control around Southern Africa and provided valuable support to land operations 33 By the end of the 1980s as white minority rule was coming to a negotiated end the Navy had lost all of its major surface warships had a drastically reduced anti submarine anti aircraft capability across the board and almost complete international isolation 11 As South Africa disentangled itself from external and internal security operations the South African Defence Force underwent severe budgetary cuts The Navy endured a reduction of personnel by 23 21 the disbandment of the Marines the closure of two Naval Commands Naval Command East and Naval Command West two Naval Bases at Cape Town and Walvis Bay and the termination of the relatively advanced program to domestically build replacement submarines 34 A positive for the Navy during this period however was the acquisition of the multipurpose sealift replenishment ship SAS Outeniqua a former Soviet built Arctic supply vessel in September 1992 as a replacement for the 35 year old Tafelberg 35 Despite the austere cutbacks the Navy was leading the way for a South Africa that was slowly being welcomed back into the international community even before the landmark elections of 1994 In 1990 the survey vessel SAS Protea became the first South African naval vessel to visit Europe since 1972 and in the same year SAS Drakensberg and two Warrior class strike craft SAS Jan Smuts and SAS Hendrik Mentz sailed for Taiwan in what would be the first time South African vessels had been in the Far East since 1945 Other international visits in the following years included Zaire Kenya Bangladesh Turkey France Portugal and Uruguay 11 As the Rainbow nation was lauded following the ANC victory in the first free democratic elections in 1994 one of the starkest symbols of this new era was the explosion of foreign warships and dignitaries visiting South African ports often from countries that did not have a previous connection such as Russia Poland and Japan 20 In 1994 21 foreign vessels from eight countries called at South African ports with 26 visits from 12 countries in 1995 and 27 from ten countries in 1996 In 1997 the navy celebrated 75 years with 15 countries sending ships for the festivities The acute need to re equip the navy including the wider Armed Forces after the lifting of apartheid era sanctions was addressed by the Strategic Defence Package of 1999 36 Better known as the infamous Arms Deal the acquisitions in the package and those persons involved have been repeatedly subject to substantive allegations of corruption fraud and bribery 37 A total of R30 billion US 4 8 billion in 1999 was pledged to the purchase of modern military equipment For the navy its share led to a total transformation from a brown water force of ageing missile patrol craft and short range submarines to a force with significant green water combat capability once again 38 In 2001 with an initial request of five vessels later reduced to four the German Meko A200SAN general purpose corvette design was procured designated frigates in South Africa along with four British Super Lynx naval helicopters and three German Type 209 1400 diesel powered submarines Also under construction from 1991 were three locally built T Craft inshore patrol boats 21 As South Africa approached the millennium and beyond the ANC government gradually returned the Navy to a level of maritime power last seen in the 1960s and 1970s and successfully reintegrated the service back into maritime operations with regional and international partners 11 South African Navy Edit SAS Isandlwana docked at the V amp A Waterfront Cape Town Surface fleet Edit Commissioned into service from 2006 at a total cost of R9 65 billion the four Meko A200SANs the Valour class in South African service became easily the most powerful surface combatants in sub Saharan Africa and restored South African naval pre eminence 39 Constructed with principles of stealthy design the class has a 50 smaller radar signature of similar vessel size 75 less infrared emissions 20 lower life cycle cost 25 lower displacement and 30 fewer crew members 40 Specifically designed to conduct sustained operations in the sea conditions found off the South African coast the four frigates are able to undertake a range of tasks from maritime law enforcement to civil support and military operations such as area denial gunfire support and intelligence collection The embarked SuperLynx helicopters significantly improve and extend surveillance as well as all round operational capabilities With a return to operating general purpose multi mission warships the Valour class have been hailed as modern impressive and major regional anti surface anti air and anti submarine platforms SAS Amatola SAS Isandlwana SAS Spioenkop and SAS Mendi possess two four cell launchers for eight Exocet surface to surface missiles 16 to 32 cell domestically built Umkhonto VLS missiles for air defence a single OTO Melara 76 millimetre 3 0 in main gun a twin Denel 35 mm 1 4 in Dual Purpose Gun two Oerlikon 20 mm 0 79 in cannon and two 12 7 mm 0 50 in remotely operated guns 40 As the SA Navy has a strength of only four primary surface warships in an effort to improve asset availability in more routine littoral patrol operations and ease the stress on sophisticated but ill suited warships three previously decommissioned Warrior class strike craft were modernised and recommissioned as offshore patrol vessels OPVs between 2012 and 2014 SAS Isaac Dyobha SAS Galeshewe and SAS Makhanda 41 42 SAS Galeshewe has since been officially placed in reserve 43 Primarily the Warrior class undertake the more traditional naval task of patrolling South Africa s exclusive economic zone and upholding maritime law enforcement Ordinary tasks include anti smuggling monitoring against illegal immigration search and rescue fishery inspection and routine border protection With the ability to operate far out into the Cape and handle the often rough seas the OPVs are also expected to complement the navies combat ability particularly when undertaking anti piracy patrols in the Mozambique Channel 44 Reflecting their new policing role the Warriors old Skerpioen missile launchers and the rear 76 mm gun was removed In replacement the craft have gained the capacity to support a small rigid hulled inflatable boat RHIB and a limited contingent of Naval Infantry for boarding suspect vessels as well as maintaining their original 20 mm cannon and 12 7 mm heavy machine guns 45 As of 2020 two River class coastal mine countermeasures vessels are still in service with the SA Navy however they are believed to have lost their mine hunting capabilities due to the retirement of the antiquated PAP104 autonomous underwater vehicles AUVs Whilst still maintaining a decompression chamber for operational diving the River class are now deployed on general coastal defence duties and are equipped with a single Oerlikon 20 mm cannon two 12 7 mm machine guns and a RHIB Alongside the Warrior and River classes are the more modern T Craft class with three entering service from 1992 Constructed with twin hulled catamarans of glass reinforced plastic sandwich construction three have also been built for Israel in 1997 The T Craft with their far lighter construction and smaller size undertake maritime security patrols considerably closer to the shore and inspect various inlets and bays SAS Tobie SAS Tern and SAS Tekwane are equipped with a single 12 7 mm Browning machine gun and have the capacity to embark a RHIB with a small complement of Naval Infantry to inspect vessels 46 Submarine fleet EditBetween 2004 and 2008 three German built Type 209 1400 submarines were delivered as a like for like replacement for the obsolescent Daphne class submarines The Heroine class represents a significant upgrade of the navy s sub surface force due to considerable advancement in underwater performance and endurance 47 South African submarines SAS Charlotte Maxeke S102 and SAS Queen Modjadji S103 accompanies the United States Navy Los Angeles class submarine USS San Juan center into False Bay in Simon s Town South Africa on 4 November 2009As of 2020 South Africa is one of only three states on the African continent along with Algeria and Egypt that currently operate submarine assets and the only state in the sub Saharan region With near subsurface supremacy the SA Navy operates a strong conventional underwater naval deterrent against any theoretical continental state actor 48 At the same time this capability was at risk of eroding As of 2019 two of the submarines were reported to be in need of urgent and complete refits The recommended approach was to move to a contracting phase in 2020 The Armscor annual report to parliament indicated that should the refits not take place the submarine capability would not available after FY2022 23 49 As of March 2021 the contracting phase had still not been initiated and no dates had been announced for any upgrades of the submarines 50 In August 2021 it was reported that Charlotte Maxeke was being refitted at the Armscor Dockyard Funding in the amount of R189 million had reportedly been made available to ensure the completion of the refit during the 2023 24 financial year Funding for the refit of Queen Modjadji was not available though the reported focus of the Navy was to prioritise essential maintenance and repair of SAS Manthatisi which had been last refitted during 2013 14 to ensure expedited operational availability 51 Highly sophisticated vessels the Heroine class utility aside from traditional anti ship engagement and area denial is its intelligence collection via special forces deployment A series of modifications have been made to the class so as to undertake these clandestine operations 21 Currently fitted only with regular torpedo tubes the Heroines do have optional UGM 84 Harpoon integration capacity for further anti ship potential however as of 2020 this has not been utilised Similarly whilst currently not able to deploy any land attack armaments Germany is developing a medium range missile the IDAS for their own Type 209s which would primarily be targeted against air threats but also small surface vessels and coastal land targets 52 Auxiliary fleet Edit With the retirement of SAS Outeniqua in 2004 SAS Drakensberg is the sole fleet replenishment ship with the primary role of supporting combat vessels at sea 53 Drakensberg is also modified to carry two RHIBs as well as two landing craft utility LCU for limited amphibious use Since the end of minority rule Drakensberg has undertaken numerous humanitarian and anti piracy operations consistently shown the rainbow flag on global voyages of goodwill and reintegrated South Africa back into international naval exercises 54 The SA Navy continues to operate the specialist hydrographic survey vessel SAS Protea which was commissioned in 1972 55 Marines Edit Main article South Africa Marine Corps The South Africa Marine Corps was first established as a sub branch of the Navy in 1951 until 1955 and then reformed in 1979 until 1990 both times with the primary purpose of protecting the country s harbours 15 The Marines also acted as regular infantry during the war until 1988 as well as performing counter insurgency operations inside South Africa 56 The Marines had an amphibious landing capability by operating from SAS Tafelberg and SAS Drakensberg with an elite company named the Marine Amphibious Company MAC being formed to ensure beach head capability for landing large task forces along with a small elite reconnaissance detachment between 1983 and 1989 The Marines were disbanded on 18 January 1990 following a major restructuring of the Navy at the end of the South African Border War 57 In 2005 the decision was taken to create a Naval Rapid Deployment Force so that South Africa could commit more to peacekeeping operations across the continent particularly in the Great Lakes region In 2006 this force became the Maritime Reaction Squadron The Maritime Reaction Squadron provides an amphibious diving and small boat capability to the Navy deploying infantry trained South African Navy personnel in various peacekeeping roles within the African continent as well as assisting in boarding operations at sea and humanitarian and disaster relief 58 The squadron consists of the following components 59 Operational Boat Division OBD with 10 Namacurra class harbour patrol boats and six Lima class utility landing craft Reaction Force Division RFD consisting of one naval infantry company with a command and support element Operational Diving Division ODD consisting of four operational diving teams of 17 divers Current deployments Edit The Standing NATO Maritime Group SNMG 1 in formation with South African navy warships SAS Amatola F145 SAS Isandlwana F146 and the submarine SAS Manthatisi S101 while participating in Exercise AmazoloThe SA Navy maintains the traditional role of providing a credible military deterrent protecting South African interests against possible enemy attack and participating in African Union peacekeeping missions As the likelihood of a naval engagement against a conventional enemy is extremely unlikely the South African Navy today is primarily engaged in counter piracy fishery protection and anti smuggling operations 21 Deploying at least a single Valour class frigate or one Heroine class submarine along with aircraft from the South African Air Force the SA Navy undergoes exercises with others such as the United States Navy Exercise Shared Accord Southern Accord 60 NATO naval battlegroups Exercise Amazolo the French Navy the annual Exercise Oxide 61 the German Navy the biennial Exercise Good Hope 62 the Royal Navy ad hoc exercises when visiting South African waters 63 the Indian Navy the biennial Exercise IBSAMAR and the navies of Uruguay and Brazil Exercises Atlasur and IBSAMAR 64 The navy also provided air and sea security for the 2010 FIFA World Cup by deploying three frigates as guard ships off the cities of Durban Port Elizabeth and Cape Town 65 Operation Copper Edit Since 2011 one of the SA Navy s major and long standing focuses has been that of the anti piracy initiative Operation Copper After increased pirate activity in the Mozambique Channel a crucial import export sea lane for South Africa 66 and subsequent requests for help from fellow Southern African Development Community SADC members Mozambique and Tanzania the navy has routinely deployed assets in an effort to provide maritime security in the region 67 Since the operation first began every Valour class frigate has been deployed to the region on rotation with the refurbished Warrior class OPVs also being utilised In 2012 the replenishment ship SAS Drakensberg was likewise deployed to the region and alongside European warships successfully captured seven Somail pirates Elements of the Navy s Maritime Reaction Squadron MRS are routinely embarked on deployed warships so as to give the ability to board suspect vessels 56 Gaps in deployment have previously occurred as a result of mechanical issues as well as the South African Air Force withdrawing C 47TP maritime patrol aircraft in 2016 from Mozambique due to maintenance problems and lack of sufficient aircrew 68 In 2018 the SA Navy notably deployed two warships simultaneously for Operation Copper and were independent of foreign support 69 Piracy and other maritime crime has fallen substantially in the Mozambique Channel since the SADC operation began in 2011 Due to the success of the operation expenditure for the future 2021 22 deployment is estimated to be R38 9 million down from R154 million the previous year 70 Operation Copper s mandate could be subject to official change as a result of increasing Islamist violence in the Cabo Delgado province of Mozambique 71 On 9 August 2021 the SADC formally announced the deployment of troops into the troubled province Alongside regional partners such as Botswana Tanzania and Zimbabwe the South African government has informed parliament that it intends to deploy 1 495 personnel to Mozambique SAS Makhanda a modernised Warrior class patrol OPV has reportedly been seen in Pemba the capital of Cabo Delgado province 72 Operation Corona Edit For the continued safeguarding of South Africa s borders Operation Corona aims to combat illegal fishing poaching and smuggling within its territorial waters The SA Navy plans to carry out five maritime patrols in line with Operation Corona with 84 days of surface and 22 days of subsurface patrols allocated for the financial year 2020 21 73 Deploying to known hotspot areas the SA Navy works alongside other Government departments such as the SA Police Service and Department of Environment Forestry and Fisheries in an effort to deter rather than arrest 74 Future of the South African Navy EditAs the SA Navy enters the 2020s the service faces significant challenges if it is to arrest its current decline 21 At the opening of the South African Maritime Security Conference on 31 May 2018 in Cape Town Chief of the Navy Vice Admiral Hlogwane warned that the navy sits at the crossroads where its very existence is threatened Some of the countries in the SADC are injecting financial resources to build their military capacity through acquisition programmes Conversely South Africa is on a path of reduced defence expenditure 75 At a speech a year later on 12 July 2019 Hlongwane recognising the struggling economy again reminded his audience that in the absence of a clear and present military threat the government will find it difficult to justify spending large sums of money on defence The platforms acquired under the Strategic Defence Packages four frigates and three submarines are beginning to suffer from lack of funds for support and maintenance and urgently require refits in order to keep them operational to the end of their 30 year design lives while the new hydrographic survey vessel and IPVs are modern robust ships fully suited to perform their missions they will not significantly improve the combat capability of the SAN which is required to defend our country and national interests in terms of our constitutional mandate the naval balance of power is shifting on our continent 76 Budget Edit The South African defence budget has been on a downward trajectory since 1994 when expenditure was 2 56 of GDP In 2010 that level was 1 12 and in 2020 expenditure is expected to fall to around 0 95 its lowest level since 1960 77 78 For 2020 21 the Defence Budget totals R52 4 billion 2 4 billion 79 80 with the SA Navy being allocated R4 9 billion 226 million 79 roughly 9 81 South African defence spending however has not matched recent inflation levels an average of 5 annually 82 which has pushed the Department of Defence deeper into financial difficulties and operational consequences As a whole the Defence Budget for 2020 21 has been given 87 of its required funding a shortfall of R9 4 billion 433 million 79 80 The SA Navy for 2020 21 has been allocated only 65 of what is reportedly required a shortfall of R2 8 billion 130 million 79 As a result of the declining financial situation the Navy has warned that it will seriously struggle to maintain its current capabilities levels of investment and international commitments 81 As a result of Covid 19 as well as ongoing problems within the South African economy GDP is expected to fall by 5 6 in 2020 21 with significant ramifications for the country and the South African Navy 83 Operational hours EditIn 2013 14 the SA Navy operated with an annual target of 22 000 hours at sea By 2018 19 this number had been lowered to 12 000 hours with a further reduction to 10 000 hours annually from 2019 20 84 By its own admission the Navy requires a minimum of 12 000 hours 500 days at sea per year to sufficiently train personnel with an absolute minimum of 7 800 hours dedicated annually to fulfil its Force Employment obligations of border protection maritime security and anti piracy operations 85 Despite these requirements by 2019 20 the SA Navy is financially resourced for only 6 000 hours at sea and only 4 320 hours allocated for Force Employment operations Vice Admiral Hlongwane has warned Should sea hours be reduced below 10 000 per year the SA Navy will decline rapidly and any further reduction in sea hours will impact severely on individual and team training at sea maintaining safety at sea and the safe navigation of all SA Navy vessels 85 Skills recruitment Edit In addition the SA Navy is facing an acute skills shortage which is severely frustrating vessel availability Vice Admiral Hlongwane stated that the Navy Engineering capability is now extremely limited which will increasingly impact on the safety and seaworthiness of ships and submarines and their ability to deploy 86 It is currently a cause for concern whether or not the SA Navy has the required skills to fully crew multiple highly sophisticated warships and submarines simultaneously Future acquisitions Edit Despite the current budgetary crisis within South African defence spending the purchase of the three new inshore patrol vessels IPVs termed Project Biro and also the procurement of a new hydrographic survey vessel Project Hotel have been approved in recent years These acquisitions have been linked to the Government s broader aims of development of the ocean economy Operation Phakisa 87 88 With 90 of imports and exports dependent on the sea South Africa s exclusive economic zone which is reportedly rich in natural resources and the estimated loss of nearly 23bn annually to illegal and unregulated fishing the SA Navy has successfully argued that maritime security is crucial to the national interest and economic development 89 Project Biro Edit Since 2013 the ambition for the SA Navy was the domestic construction of three offshore and a minimum of six later reduced to three inshore patrol vessels as a replacement for the increasingly aged Warrior class OPVs and River class OPV IPVs as part of Project Biro However in 2018 it was confirmed that only the three MMIPVs multi mission inshore patrol vessel would be constructed with the OPVs being cancelled as a cost saving measure 90 The new vessels will also be named the Warrior class and cost R3 6 billion 43 Whilst the introduction of these three modern IPVs will immediately play a crucial role in maritime law enforcement it has been regretted by analysts that the offshore craft option was not also financially feasible It had been hoped that the OPVs with their helicopter carrying abilities would have played a much more effective role in policing South Africa s extensive exclusive economic zone 1 5 million km 91 particularly in the rough seas of the Cape It was even reported in 2011 that nine OPVs could be constructed without any IPVs due to the rough sea state off the coast and the practical experience gained which favoured larger vessels 92 In 2021 it was announced that the aging Warrior class OPVs would undergo phased decommissioning as the new Warrior class IPVs come online 93 First laid down in February 2019 at Damen Shipyards Cape Town DSCT the timeline of delivery to the SA Navy of all three vessels is March 2022 June 2023 and September 2024 respectively Armscor the state acquisition agency has an option from DSCT to purchase additional inshore patrol vessels at the same price the original three were bought for 43 Project Hotel Edit The second future acquisition programme for the SA Navy falls under Project Hotel the replacement of the sole hydrographic survey vessel SAS Protea The construction of this new vessel currently being built by Durban based Sandock Austral Shipyard will represent a major upgrade in capability for the Navy Whilst SAS Protea was built in 1972 her replacement will be based on Vard Marine s VARD 9 105 science vessel specifically adapted for South African service and incorporates the latest hydrographic and oceanographic sensor suite 94 The ship will be an evolution from the Vard Marine designed HMS Echo and HMS Enterprise which have been in Royal Navy service since 2002 95 Also as part of Project Hotel the SA Navy will receive two next generation survey motor boats one sea boat and another inshore survey motor boat to be kept ashore in reserve as well as upgrading shore based hydrographic infrastructure 96 The project has a current completion date target of August 2023 with the first of the motor boats being launched in September 2020 97 Issues Edit As of 2020 the SA Navy s main projects are under serious threat from years of underfunding as well as recent budget cuts Allocation of funding for Projects Biro modern inshore patrol vessels and Hotel replacement hydrographic survey vessel as well as the Army s Project Hoefyster new infantry combat vehicles amounts to R2 8 billion 129 million 79 however the required level of funding needed is expected to be R13 7 billion 633 million 79 nearly a R11 billion shortfall 508 million 79 It is currently unclear how these projects will be financed if they continue to proceed 98 Similarly Project Syne and Project Napoleon the planned and urgently required midlife overhauls for the Valour class and Heroine class respectively are both currently on hold due to lack of adequate funding According to a 2021 Department of Defence DoD progress report the full repair cost requirement of R1 470 billion is only 53 4 funded with R786 million allocated 99 The SA Navy is currently finding it difficult to effectively resource the growing backlog of refits maintenance periods and repair projects that are needed With each delay due to financial insufficiency and every vessel that continues to operate without adequate maintenance the SA Navy is pulled deeper into a vicious cycle of exacerbating known issues and escalating longer term costs until a point of forced reduced vessel availability Command control amp organisation EditThe command structure is depicted below 100 59 101 The Chief of the Navy based at Navy Headquarters at the Navy Office SAS Immortelle located in Pretoria is head of the South African Navy All operational forces including ships and submarines fall under the control of the Flag Officer Fleet who is based in Simon s Town Chief of the SA NavyVice Adm M Lobese 102 Deputy Chief NavyR Adm Chief of Naval StaffR Adm Gladys Mbulaheni 103 Chief Director Maritime StrategyR Adm D M Mkhonto 104 Flag Officer FleetR Adm Musawenkosi NkomondeDirector Maritime PlansR Adm JG W van Niekerk 102 Director Naval PersonnelR Adm JG X T Hakoma 105 Director Maritime WarfareR Adm JG H T Matsane 106 Chief of Fleet StaffR Adm JG L M Hendricks 106 Director Fleet Force PreparationRAdm JG A de Wet 106 Inspector General SA Navy R Adm JG S Msikinya 105 Director Naval Logistics R Adm JG F A Hans 107 Director Maritime IntelligenceR Adm JG M Bongco 108 Director Fleet LogisticsR Adm JG Joseph Ikaneng 109 Director Fleet Human Resources Naval Budget ManagerMrs R Mamaguvhi 102 Director Naval TransformationR Adm JG I Mzimande 106 Director Maritime Diplomacy amp StrategyR Adm JG M J Josias 102 Director Naval Engineering ServicesR Adm JG B Mvovo 106 Flag Officer Commanding NB Simons TownR Adm JG J Dlamini 102 Director Naval ReservesR Adm JG R Ndabambi 102 Director Fleet Quality AssuranceCapt SAN M A BoucherFleet Command Edit Main article Fleet Command SA Navy Fleet Command includes all vessels and units of the Navy other than Naval Headquarters Pretoria Fleet Command is based in Simon s Town under control of Flag Officer Fleet 100 Four directorates are responsible for the day to day control of Fleet Command 100 70 Director Fleet Force Preparations DFPP is responsible for the day to day running of the ships and submarines and for ensuring their operational readiness The Maritime Reaction Squadron and NavComCens also report to DFFP Director Fleet Human Resources DFHR is responsible for all training and manning and also controls the training units Director Fleet Quality Assurance DFQA is responsible for the output of Fleet Command and monitoring quality assurance throughout Fleet Command Director Fleet Logistics DFL is responsible for all Logistics units as well as for the maintenance of the fleet Naval bases Edit A view of Simon s Town and the naval base The Navy operates the following Naval Bases 100 149 Naval Base Simon s Town the largest and main naval base currently used by the South African Navy Constructed by the Dutch East India Company in 1743 and later developed by the Royal Navy the base was transferred to South Africa in 1957 as part of the Simon s Town Agreement and expanded in 1975 Simon s Town is the homeport of the frigate and submarine flotillas as well as housing training facilities Naval Base Durban constructed during the Second World War to better serve the deployment of naval vessels off the eastern coast of Africa particularly after the Japanese declaration of war in 1941 17 In 2002 Durban was downgraded to a Naval Station with much of the infrastructure being taken over by the Army and later abandoned In 2012 the decision was taken to renovate and expand the facilities However it was announced in 2020 that due to budget constraints the reclassification of Durban as a fully operational Naval Base would be delayed citation needed The station is currently home to the fleet s offshore patrol flotilla and will continue to be so after the delivery of replacement offshore inshore vessels 110 Naval Station Port Elizabeth provides support to the fleet and host to visiting ships however no major vessels are based here 111 Training units Edit SAS Saldanha located on the West Coast and provides training and development for ratings 112 SAS Wingfield located in the Greater Cape Town area Historically provided practical training for apprentices but now offers training to both ratings and officers SAS Simonsberg located in Simon s Town and provides training in gunnery anti submarine warfare communications diving and seamanship Simonsberg also includes Maritime Warfare Training Centre Submarine Training Centre East Yard Nuclear Biological Chemical Damage Control Training Centre Military Training Centre West Yard South African Naval College located in Gordon s Bay the establishment provides training for naval officers Personnel Edit As of the end of the financial year 2018 19 there were approximately 6 816 active uniformed members of the SA Navy just short of the 7 071 target 113 In addition there are a further 1 071 civilian staff that further support the Navy 114 In 2006 the old Naval Reserve Units that were modelled on the Royal Naval Reserve system were closed down A new Navy Reserve system was created consisting of roughly 1 000 reserve posts These posts are pooled and members are drawn from them as needed to augment full time units and ships companies Uniforms Edit From 1922 to the 1940s the SA Navy was effectively an extension of the Royal Navy and therefore wore the same uniforms and similar insignia As British influence was gradually curtailed in 1959 the British Crown in the SA Navy cap badge was replaced with the Lion of Nassau from the crest of the country s coat of arms A black beret later replaced the peaked cap in working uniforms 100 In 2000 the new Coat of Arms was unveiled and the Chief of the Navy tasked Fleet Command to look at revising the Navy uniforms to reflect the new coat of arms This saw new rank insignia for non commissioned officers being implemented as well as the introduction of a side cap 115 Ranks Edit Main article South African military ranks Navy Due to historical influence the rank system is based on that of the Royal Navy 116 Naval ensign Edit Ensigns of the South African Navy 1922 1946 1946 1951 1951 1952 1952 1959 1959 1981 1981 1994 27 April 1994 11 November 1994 1994 present Naval jack Edit Jacks of the South African Navy 1922 1928 1928 1982 1982 1994 1994 presentShips and weapons EditShips Edit Main articles List of active South African Navy ships and List of decommissioned ships of the South African Navy Combat fleet Edit Image Class name Type Origin Number Entered service Heroine class Submarine Germany 3 2005 117 Valour class Frigate Germany 4 2004 118 Warrior class Strike Craft Offshore patrol vessel Israel South Africa 2 119 1979 120 Warrior class inshore patrol vessel Inshore Patrol Vessel South Africa 2 1 on order for delivery in 2024 121 T class Inshore patrol vessel South Africa 3 1992 120 Namacurra class Harbour patrol boat South Africa 21 1981 120 River class minehunter Mine counter measures vessels Offshore Patrol Vessel South Africa 4 122 123 1981 124 2 in refitSupport fleet Edit Image Class name Type Origin Number Entered service SAS Drakensberg Replenishment vessel South Africa 1 1987 125 SAS Protea Hecla class survey vessel United Kingdom 1 1972 125 replacement under construction Tugboat Coastal amp Harbour tugs South Africa 5 1995 2016 126 Lima class utility landing craft Landing Craft Utility 6 1990 127 Air force maritime aircraft Edit Although the SA Navy does not operate any aircraft itself aircraft used on ships or supporting are operated by 22 Squadron SAAF 1 Atlas Oryx medium utility helicopter deployed on the SAS Drakensberg 128 4 Westland Super Lynx 300 Mk64 ASW and ASuW helicopter deployed on the Valour class frigates 128 There is a planned programme to equip the frigates with UAVs to supplement the helicopters Previously before its retirement the SAAF operated the Westland Wasp for the SA Navy in the anti submarine warfare role Naval weapons systems Edit Weapon systems of the South African NavyType Manufacturer Model Photo Origin PlatformAnti ship missile MBDA Exocet MM40 Block 2 129 France Valour class frigate 8 missiles in 2 quad packed launchers Surface to air missile Denel Dynamics Umkhonto IR Block 2 130 South Africa Valour class frigate 16 32 missiles in a vertical launching system Torpedo Atlas Elektronik 533mm 21 Atlas Elektronik SUT 264 heavyweight torpedo Germany Heroine class submarine 8 bow tubes with 14 torpedoes Naval gun Oto Melara Otobreda OTO Melara 76mm 62 compact Italy Valour class frigate 1 foredeck gun Warrior class Offshore Patrol Vessel 1 foredeck gun Close in weapon system Denel Land Systems Denel 35mm Dual Purpose Gun South Africa Valour class frigate 2 GA35 rapid fire automatic cannons mounted side by side in an unmanned low radar observable turret Autocannon Oerlikon BMARC GAM BO1 20 mm cannon Switzerland Valour class frigate 2 guns Warrior class Offshore Patrol Vessel 2 guns SAS Drakensberg 4 guns River class minehunter 1 gun 12 7mm Heavy machine gun General Dynamics FN Herstal U S Ordnance or Manroy Engineering UK M2 Browning United States7 62mm General purpose machine gun Browning Arms Company FN Herstal or Denel Land Systems Browning M1919 FN MAG or Vektor SS 77 South AfricaGallery Edit See also Edit South Africa portal War portalList of South African military chiefs Military history of South Africa South African environmental patrol vessels South African Naval MuseumNotes EditConstructs such as ibid loc cit and idem are discouraged by Wikipedia s style guide for footnotes as they are easily broken Please improve this article by replacing them with named references quick guide or an abbreviated title January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message References Edit Wingrin Dean 2 February 2018 New Master At Arms for the Navy Defenceweb Archived from the original on 4 February 2018 Retrieved 5 February 2018 Role of the SA Navy Page 3 www navy mil za Archived from the original on 23 May 2012 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Fact file The SA Navy s mandate defenceWeb 4 November 2008 Retrieved 1 October 2020 a b c d Potgieter T D 2000 Maritime defence and the South African Navy to the cancellation of the Simon s Town agreement Scientia Militaria South African Journal of Military Studies 30 2 doi 10 5787 30 2 173 ISSN 2224 0020 a b Heitman Helmoed Romer 1985 South African war machine Bromley Galago ISBN 0 946995 80 X OCLC 122701325 South African Navy History www globalsecurity org Retrieved 30 September 2020 South Africa Act South Africa 1909 Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 30 September 2020 a b History of the SA Navy www navy mil za Retrieved 30 September 2020 Stevenson D David 1954 2005 1914 1918 the history of the First World War Stevenson D David 1954 London Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 190434 4 OCLC 688607944 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c Steyn Richard 2015 Jan Smuts unafraid of greatness Johannesburg ISBN 978 1 86842 694 2 OCLC 930862265 a b c d e f g Wessels Andre 30 July 2009 The South African Navy and its Predecessors 1910 2010 A Century of Interaction with Commonwealth Navies PDF SMS Wolf German Raider National Museum of the Royal New Zealand Navy 14 September 2012 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Schmalenbach Paul 1979 German raiders a history of auxiliary cruisers of the German Navy 1895 1945 Annapolis Md Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 824 7 OCLC 6530715 a b Colledge J J 1987 1989 Ships of the Royal Navy Annapolis Md Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 652 X OCLC 17457850 a b 5 National Security South Africa a country study Federal Research Division Library of Congress 1997 ISBN 0 8444 0796 8 Retrieved 28 February 2012 Wessels Andre December 1994 The first two years of war the development of the Union Defence Forces Journal for Contemporary History a b c Wessels Andre June 1996 South Africa and the war against Japan 1941 1945 Journal for Contemporary History Book 4 Industrialisation Rural Change and Nationalism Chapter 3 Afrikaner Nationalism in the 1930s and 1940s by Albert Grundlingh South African History Online www sahistory org za Retrieved 30 September 2020 Militaria periodical for military history Volumes 10 11 Director General Personnel 1980 page 12 a b South African Navy Unlikely Ambassadors www navy mil za Archived from the original on 8 November 2007 Retrieved 30 September 2020 a b c d e f g h Baker Deane Peter 2012 The South African Navy and African Maritime Security Naval War College Review 65 2 145 166 JSTOR 26397290 via JSTOR a b c Du Toit Allan 1992 South Africaʼs fighting ships past and present Rivonia Ashanti Pub ISBN 1 874800 50 2 OCLC 28233391 English John I 2008 Obdurate to Daring British fleet destroyers 1941 1945 Windsor World Ship Society ISBN 978 0 9560769 0 8 OCLC 836982554 Bennett Chris Rear Admiral 2006 Three frigates President Class frigates bring the SA Navy to maturity Durban Just Done Productions Pub ISBN 978 1 920169 02 2 OCLC 85497021 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b SAS Assegaai to be preserved as museum defenceWeb 15 December 2008 Retrieved 30 September 2020 1973 UN Convention on Apartheid as a Crime Against Humanity DOCUMENTS Politicsweb www politicsweb co za Retrieved 30 September 2020 The Soweto Uprising Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 30 September 2020 Mangcu Xolela 1966 Biko a life London ISBN 0 85772 277 8 OCLC 867081392 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Security Council Resolution 418 UNSCR unscr com Retrieved 30 September 2020 Abbott Peter 1933 Modern African wars Botham Philip Rodrigues Manuel Ribeiro Heitman H R Helmoed R Chappell Mike Volstad Ron Hannon Paul Illustrator London ISBN 0 85045 728 9 OCLC 15260394 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Report Of The Special Committee On The Situation With Regard To The Implementation Of The Declaration On The Granting Of Independence To Colonial Countries And Peoples United Nations General Assembly 2 January 1980 via JSTOR a b Wessels Andre December 2006 The South African Navy during the years of conflict in southern Africa 1966 1989 Journal for Contemporary History 32 3 283 303 Steenkamp Willem 1940 2006 Borderstrike South Africa into Angola 1975 1980 3rd ed Durban Pretoria Just Done Productions ISBN 1 920169 00 8 OCLC 774843141 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Bennett Chris Rear Admiral 2011 South African naval events day by day 1488 to 2009 Simon s Town South Africa Naval Heritage Trust ISBN 978 0 620 43014 2 OCLC 730229500 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Jane s fighting ships 2004 2005 Saunders Stephen 107th ed Coulsdon Surrey UK Jane s Information Group 2004 ISBN 0 7106 2623 1 OCLC 56023988 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Williams Rocky 2004 National defence reform and the African Union PDF SIPRI Yearbook Armaments Disarmament and International Security Stockholm International Peace Research Institute 237 Feinstein Andrew 10 January 2007 Bright hopes betrayed The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Hill Liezel SA navy to have all new corvettes and submarines by 2007 www engineeringnews co za Retrieved 30 September 2020 South Africa Boosts Naval Capabilities But can it afford an expansion Manohar Parrikar Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses idsa in Retrieved 30 September 2020 a b Fact file Valour class small guided missile frigates defenceWeb 8 February 2010 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Revamped strike craft ready for counter piracy duty defenceWeb 17 July 2014 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Navy commences upgrade of fourth strike craft defenceWeb 10 May 2013 Retrieved 30 September 2020 a b c First Project Biro vessel to be handed over next month defenceWeb 16 February 2022 Retrieved 16 February 2022 Navies versus Coast Guards Defining the Roles of African Maritime Security Forces Africa Center for Strategic Studies Retrieved 30 September 2020 Southern African Shipyards refurbishing Navy strike craft defenceWeb 30 October 2012 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Patrol Forces www navy mil za Archived from the original on 14 August 2012 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Fact file Heroine class diesel electric submarine defenceWeb 9 February 2010 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Submarine Fleet Strength by Country 2020 www globalfirepower com Retrieved 30 September 2020 SA Navy frigate and submarine midlife upgrades on hold defencewebco za 22 October 2019 Retrieved 31 August 2021 Midlife upgrades for SAN platforms on hold pending funding Armscor defencewebco za 1 March 2021 Retrieved 31 August 2021 Martin Guy 20 August 2021 Refit of SA Navy frigates and submarines stalled by lack of funding Defence Web Retrieved 29 October 2021 IDAS Missile System Naval Technology naval technology com Retrieved 30 September 2020 SANDF gets rid of surplus News24 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Gerber Jan Terrorism Insurgency in Mozambique can spread to neighbours Military Intelligence warns News24 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Fact file Hecla Protea class hydrographic vessel defenceWeb 15 February 2010 Retrieved 30 September 2020 a b Manganyi Calvin January 2012 South African Journal of Military Studies Resurrection of the marine capability in the South African Navy the Maritime Reaction Squadron Scientia Militaria South African Journal of Military Studies 40 3 429 471 Pitta Robert 1993 South African Special Forces Fannell Jeff London Osprey ISBN 1 85532 295 1 OCLC 29710035 Maritime Protection Squadron www navy mil za Retrieved 30 September 2020 Exercise Xena testing Maritime Reaction Squadron defenceWeb 26 November 2009 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Africa U S Army STAND TO www army mil Retrieved 30 September 2020 No Exercise Oxide this year defenceWeb 18 September 2020 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Exercise Good Hope V concludes www dod mil za Retrieved 30 September 2020 Royal Navy in exercise with SA sub defenceWeb 7 April 2014 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Exercise IBSAMAR between India South Africa Brazil begins tomorrow The Economic Times Retrieved 30 September 2020 Navy ready to defend World Cup defenceWeb 10 March 2010 Retrieved 30 September 2020 mozambique Maritime patrol mission in the Mozambique Channel Operation Copper extension for another year to cost South Africa R154 million Mozambique Retrieved 30 September 2020 Operation Copper still up and running defenceWeb 24 March 2014 Retrieved 30 September 2020 SAAF no longer part of Op Copper in Mozambique defenceWeb 19 March 2015 Retrieved 30 September 2020 SA Navy two platform deployment returns from Op Copper duty defenceWeb 10 August 2018 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Ramaphosa authorises extension of SA s continental military deployments defenceWeb 19 March 2021 Retrieved 5 September 2021 SA in conversation with Mozambique on Op Copper defenceWeb 11 May 2021 Retrieved 5 September 2021 SADC mission in Mozambique launched Janes com Retrieved 5 September 2021 Five maritime patrols this year under Operation Corona defenceWeb 23 June 2020 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Annual Performance Plan APP 2018 19 PDF South African Department of Defence p 80 Navy Defence acknowledges it is in danger of sinking defenceWeb 5 June 2018 Retrieved 30 September 2020 SA Navy falling behind other African states defenceWeb 15 July 2019 Retrieved 30 September 2020 South Africa Military Spending Defense Budget 1960 2020 www macrotrends net Retrieved 30 September 2020 South Africa ratio of military expenditure to gross domestic product GDP 2008 2018 Statista Retrieved 30 September 2020 a b c d e f g South African Rand to Pound Sterling Exchange Rate 01 10 2020 a b Annual Performance Plan APP 2020 PDF South Africa Department of Defence p 78 a b Ibid Page 86 Inflation rate South Africa Statista Retrieved 30 September 2020 South Africa gross domestic product GDP growth rate 2021 Statista Retrieved 30 September 2020 Annual Performance Plan APP 2020 South Africa Department of Defence p 68 a b Defence budget sinks Navy defenceWeb 16 September 2019 Retrieved 30 September 2020 SA Navy in danger of losing frigate and submarine capabilities due to declining budget defenceWeb 19 September 2019 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Annual Performance Plan APP 2018 19 PDF South Africa Department of Defence p 39 ISSAfrica org 28 November 2014 Avoiding the siren s song will Operation Phakisa deliver prosperity ISS Africa Retrieved 30 September 2020 SA at sea over illegal fishing in its waters The Mail amp Guardian 19 May 2016 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Project Biro on schedule with delivery for mid 2021 defenceWeb 9 June 2020 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Sea Around Us Fisheries Ecosystems and Biodiversity www seaaroundus org Retrieved 30 September 2020 Seaforth world naval review 2011 Waters Conrad Barnsley Seaforth 2010 ISBN 978 1 78346 631 3 OCLC 960976553 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link DoD updates cabinet on major acquisition projects defenceWeb 18 June 2021 Retrieved 5 September 2021 Sandock Austral Shipyards making progress with Project Hotel defenceWeb 27 May 2020 Retrieved 30 September 2020 VARD 9 105 Vard Marine Retrieved 30 September 2020 First survey motor boat for South African Navy launched Janes com Retrieved 30 September 2020 Paramount Maritime launches survey motor boat for SA Navy defenceWeb 25 August 2020 Retrieved 30 September 2020 SA Navy projects under threat from budget cuts defenceWeb 3 September 2020 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Refit of SA Navy frigates and submarines stalled by lack of funding defenceWeb 20 August 2021 Retrieved 5 September 2021 a b c d e Bennett Chris Soderlund Arne G 2008 South Africa s Navy A Navy of the People and for the People ISBN 978 0 620 41446 3 Mudimu J 18 May 2007 Presentation on the Transformation of the SA Navy PDF Archived PDF from the original on 18 March 2014 Retrieved 3 August 2012 a b c d e f Organigram of the SA Navy PDF navy mil za Navy RSA Department of Defence Retrieved 27 July 2017 permanent dead link New SANDF two stars named Defenceweb 27 May 2020 Retrieved 28 May 2020 New director maritime strategy for SA Navy Defenceweb 23 March 2018 Archived from the original on 26 March 2018 Retrieved 27 March 2018 a b More generals and admirals for the SA national defence force DefenceWeb 29 October 2021 Retrieved 31 October 2021 a b c d e SANDF adds to its one star numbers DefenceWeb 18 February 2021 Retrieved 19 February 2021 Organisational Structure SA Navy 14 December 2021 Retrieved 10 January 2022 PROMULGATION APPOINTMENTS AND OR PROMOTIONS OF BRIG GENS R ADM JG FOR THE FINANCIAL YEAR 2020 21 PDF Dept of Defence 17 February 2021 Retrieved 19 April 2021 Adriaanse Dominic 28 March 2018 Hard to say goodbye says outgoing Naval College chief Independent Newspapers Archived from the original on 29 March 2018 Retrieved 28 March 2018 Plans for Salisbury Island elaborated defenceWeb 16 March 2012 Retrieved 30 September 2020 PORT ELIZABETH Africa Ports Retrieved 30 September 2020 SAS Saldanha Home Page www navy mil za Retrieved 30 September 2020 Annual Performance Plan APP 2018 19 PDF South Africa Department of Defence p 153 Ibid Page 157 Ibid Vision amp Mission www navy mil za Retrieved 30 September 2020 Fact file Heroine class diesel electric submarine defenceWeb 9 February 2010 Retrieved 16 May 2022 Fact file Valour class small guided missile frigates defenceWeb 8 February 2010 Retrieved 16 May 2022 SAS Galeshewe decommissioned Defenceweb 23 November 2020 Retrieved 26 November 2020 a b c Patrol Forces Navy mil za Archived from the original on 14 August 2012 Retrieved 3 August 2012 Navy adds first MMIPV to fleet inventory on Wednesday defenceWeb 16 May 2022 Retrieved 19 May 2022 Campbell Keith 4 October 2013 South African Navy mulls future requirements as fleet remains active engineeringnews co za Engineering News Archived from the original on 7 February 2014 Retrieved 26 November 2014 McVeigh Steve 25 June 2013 SA Navy in process of refurbishing www bairdmaritime com Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 26 November 2014 Mine Warfare Forces Navy mil za Archived from the original on 8 June 2010 Retrieved 3 August 2012 a b Auxiliary Equipment Navy mil za Archived from the original on 10 July 2012 Retrieved 3 August 2012 Tugs Navy mil za Archived from the original on 5 June 2010 Retrieved 3 August 2012 SA Navy to commission Maritime Reaction Squadron defenceweb Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 19 July 2014 a b Maritime Aircraft South African Navy Archived from the original on 22 March 2015 Retrieved 24 July 2014 Engelbrecht Leon Fact file Valour class frigates defenceWeb defenceweb co za Archived from the original on 20 March 2016 Retrieved 6 November 2016 FRIGATES navy mil za navy mil za Archived from the original on 17 July 2012 Retrieved 24 July 2014 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Navy of South Africa South African Navy home page Ships of the South African Navy Past amp Present Archived 21 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine South African Navy uniform regulations Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title South African Navy amp oldid 1127942271, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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