Tourists spot SA activity off Pemba |
Publication |
DefenceWeb |
Date | 2011-03-23 |
Reporter | Leon Engelbrecht |
Web Link | www.defenceweb.co.za |
BAE
Systems says the government
should reconsider its options
for Project Hoefyster, the South
African Army's quest for a
new-generation infantry fighting
vehicle. The company,'s Land
Systems SA (LSSA) unit, better
known as “OMC”, says its RG41 is
more modern and cheaper than the
locally-customised version of
the Patria AMV currently slated
for production as the “Badger”.
“Technology has evolved
significantly in the years since
Project Hoefyster was first
launched,” LSSA managing
director Johan Steyn says. “It
makes sense then to look at
newer solutions such as [the]
RG41 now available, which
largely meet the technical
requirements and could provide
cost savings and broader
economic benefits for the
country.”
Background
Hoefyster was registered as
a project in 1997. Early reports
speculated that the MOWAG
Piranha IV was a shoo-in for the
deal, as OMC had then just been
bought out by Vickers Defence
Systems – a British concern –
that had licensing rights to the
Piranha IV. Counter-speculation
at the time favoured the Piranha
III, currently in use by the US
Army as the Stryker basis for
the armoured personnel carrier (APC).
News of local developments came
at African Aerospace and Defence
2002, when Dr Stefan Nell's Land
Mobility Technologies (LMT)
company proposed a family of 6x6
and 8x8 vehicles built to a
common design. Nell told the
author at the time the 8x8 would
be the basis of the new ICV
while the 6x6 variant –
identical in all respects bar
the fourth axle – would serve as
armoured personnel carrier for
the motorised infantry. As such
it could then replace the aging
Casspir and Mamba APCs. Both
designs, dubbed “Honeyguide”
after a local bird, made maximum
use of commercial-off-the-shelf
technology. An electric drive
proposal was also on the drawing
board. Nell was adamant that the
Army preferred a local solution
rather than an import. Talk at
the show was that a decision on
a preferred “Hoefyster” design
to be further engineered and
developed would be made in
January 2003.
It is not clear if such a
decision was made. It appears
that at least four domestic
companies, including LMT, OMC
and the Mechanology Design
Bureau (MDB) were given seed
money to develop prototypes. In
early 2004 it was reported that
the LMT design had victored. All
were 8x8 designs designed to
carry the Denel LCT35 turret
specified for the design.
Scarcely had the news filtered
out when Armscor, the arms
acquisition agency, re-opened
the competition and called on
local and international
companies to tender for the
deal.
RfP
The Request for Proposals (RfP),
reference number MFT/2003/564,
asked eight South African
companies and four international
defence contractors to put
forward ideas and quotes by
February 25, 2005. Domestic
companies asked to tender were
state arms manufacturer Denel as
well as private companies LMT,
Benoni-based OMC, IST Dynamics,
Industrial and Automotive Design
SA, MDB, Advanced Technologies &
Engineering of Midrand, Grintron
and Intertechnic. The four
overseas contractors approached
were GIAT Industries of France,
Mowag Motorwagenfabrik AG of
Switzerland and the pan-European
Aeronautic, Defence and Space
Company (EADS). The South
African companies in particular
were keen to bid and happily
showed off their ideas to
selected journalists.
But, in February 2005, when the
bids were due, only one was
received, from a
consortium involving Patria of
Finland, Patria's part-owner,
EADS, Denel, OMC and Land
Mobility Technologies (LMT). The
vehicle the group proposed was
Patria's 8x8 Armoured Modular
Vehicle (AMV), as redesigned for
southern African conditions by
LMT. The vehicle hulls were to
be built by OMC and the turrets
as well as guns would be
provided by Denel.
Questioned in 2005 about the
paucity of bids, then-Department
of Defence's (DoD) chief of
acquisition and procurement,
Bruce Ramfolo said the tender
process followed on their behalf
by Armscor was sound and
"neither Armscor nor DoD are
able to force any industry to
participate." Ramfolo did not
directly answer a question on
why a foreign hull was preferred
to a local design, saying
instead that "no decision
regarding the bid has been made
and therefore no decision on the
design has been made.”
In May 2007 then-Minister of
Public Enterprises
Alec Erwin announced in his
budget vote that the Army had
awarded DLS a R8.4 billion
contract to acquire 264
locally-engineered Patria AMV in
five variants: section carrier,
command, mortar, support and
anti-tank. A R1.048 billion
order to develop a prototype of
each was awarded later that same
month. One of each is currently
undergoing evaluation. Once
accepted by the military, 12
pre-production vehicles will be
built. The first 37 production
vehicles will be built by Patria
in Finland.
In December 2010 the Ministry of
Public Enterprises said the
“Department of Defence will make
the decision on whether or not
to proceed with the
Industrialisation and Production
Phase before the end of
2010/11,” a reference to the
state financial year ending this
month.
Rumours regarding the demise of
the programme have circulated
for years, driven in part by a
lack of news on the project and
apparently interminable delays.
South African Army director
strategy Brigadier General Eddie
Drost in November last year told
the National Assembly's
Portfolio Committee on Defence
and Military Veterans landward
renewal – a stated top priority
for the DoD – “is not coming to
fruition” with most projects “on
hold because of cost
escalation”. He did not say
whether this included Hoefyster.
The RG41
Showing the RG41 to the
media yesterday, Steyn said the
RG41 is a clean-sheet design and
"is more cost effective than its
global competitors.” The wheeled
armoured combat vehicle was
unveiled at the Eurosatory
exhibition in Paris last June
and boasts what BAE Systems says
is a unique modular mine
protected design that allows
field repair to the hull – not
just to the suspension and
driveline.
The company says the lower hull
structure of the RG41 consists
of five modular units joined
together and bolted under the
top structure of the vehicle.
Any damaged modules can be
removed and replaced
individually with prefabricated
replacement sections. This task
can be completed by second line
maintenance in an operational
theatre, saving time and money,
said Dennis Morris, President of
Global Tactical Systems, the BAE
Systems business unit Land
Sytems South Africa and OMC
answers to. “The RG41 offers
exceptional protection,
capability and flexibility,”
Morris added. “Current conflicts
require maintenance and repairs
be done in the field and the
RG41’s unique design allows
operators to achieve their
missions while maximising
vehicle operational readiness.
RG41 represents the ultimate
synthesis of combat power and
affordability, ideal for
conventional and unconventional
units,” he added in a media
statement issued in Paris.
The RG41 is 7.78m long, 2.28m
wide and 2.3m high with 14.9
cubic metres of usable cabin
space. Its mass is 19 000kg and
the payload 11 000kg, meaning
the new 8x8 can carry a range of
light and medium turrets as well
as direct and indirect-fire
weapons. Steyn says the design
is easy to customise and can be
configured as a command vehicle,
section combat vehicle,
ambulance, engineering vehicle,
fire support vehicle or
according to customer
specification. Steyn adds the
vehicle can easily take the
various turrets developed by DLS
for Hoefyster. He added the
company's intent was “to supply
the weapon platform only” in
support of DLS as the level-5
prime contractor.
New design
The vehicle's local comment
is more than 70% and would
benefit around 100 local
suppliers if ordered. An
estimated 2000 jobs could be
created, he added.
The RG41 project started in 2008
at company expense “to meet the
ever-increasing demand for mine
protected vehicles in the modern
combat environment”. The
company, in product notes, say
the 8x8 is a development of
previous LSSA prototypes and
“benefits from many years of
development experience.”
Officials add designers had no
specific customer in mind for
the company-funded development.
“The design uses RG series
technology which has been combat
proven around the world in
numerous different
environments.” Steyn says some
R25-30 million has been spent
prototyping and qualifying the
vehicle. The end result is a
vehicle 10-20% cheaper than the
international constitution. “The
price of a vehicle starts on the
drawing board, not the factory
floor,”Steyn added.
DLS would not immediately
comment on the matter, saying it
might call a media briefing next
week. Ish Moeketsi, Senior
Manager: Strategic Relations at
DLS said the suggestion that
government not order the AMV-derivative
was an “over-simplification of a
much broader and complex
contracting process that
obviously began long time ago of
which the third party was aware
of. In order to give credibility
and fairness to these incorrect
perceptions, it will be
appropriate for Denel to give
correct facts so that this could
result in a balanced
perspective.”
With acknowledgements to Leon Engelbrecht and defenceWeb.
This is going to be another
interesting one.
Like A400M Loadmaster for the
SAAF, Hoefyster is another
project started in the Mbeki
era.
Very strange decision to choose
a Finnish platform design.
When the RSA is and has been one
of the top military and
especially fighting vehicle
producers in the world for over
30 years.
But then of course Moeletsi
Mbeki has dumped his shares at
OMC.
But Hoefyster is just like GBADS
(Protector, Guardian) in that
onnly one bid was received for
the main contract - from a
consortium of previous
competitors.
VSHRADS to the SA Army. So early
did Thales get its contract that
the missiles' use by dates have
now expired.
Wasted expenditure?
Nah.
Redistribution.
And remember who Thales is / was
?
Thales is the self same company
as Thomson-CSF who bribed the
current president of this realm
for 500kZAR per year until its
SA subsidiary ADS started paying
of dividends.
For what you ask?
Well, for two things :
to protect Thales and ADS (now called Thales Defence Systems) from the corruption investigation into the frigate acquisition (Project Sitron); and
for his permanent support for Thales's future projects.
Dinkum.
This is court tested fact right
up to the Supreme Court of
Appeal.
And we had these folkers on the
line, Zuma, Thales, Thyssen,
Chippy Shaik, inter alia right
ready to go to jail for 15
years weeks.
But all the president's men, Mo
Shaik, Mokotedi Mpshe, Leonard
McCarthy, Willie Hofmeyer, Menzi
Simelane, Anwa Dramat, et al and
inter alia just gonad tugged a
little and our line carefully
created over 10 years was gone
in a puff.
But back to Hoefyster, don't be
surprised to see the DLS/Patria
R8,4 billion contract go down in
the splodge of merde.
And waiting in the wings will be
BAE, the Guptas and a couple of
baby Zumas.
The Bumiputerians.