Talk:National Army Naval Forces (Faneria): Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox military unit
Early Naval Forces
| unit_name                    = Army Sea Bureau
Royal Navy
| native_name                  = ''Biùro Mara an Fyddin Feadaral an Fhainn''
| image                        =
| image_size                    = 230px
| caption                      = Seal of the Sea Bureau
| dates                        = {{start date|1543}}–present
| country                      = {{flag|Faneria}}
| allegiance                    = <!-- Used to indicate the allegiance of units which are not part of the regular armed forces of a sovereign state; can usually be omitted otherwise. -->
| branch                        =
| role                          = {{plainlist|
*[[Naval warfare]]
*[[Sea denial]]
*[[Maritime security]]
*[[Sealift]]
}}
| type                          = [[Navy]]
| size                          =
* approx. 180,000 personnel
* 31 heavy surface combatants
* 123 light surface combatants
* 35 submarine combatants
* 65 patrol and littoral ships
* 165 auxiliaries and civilian craft
| command_structure            =
| garrison                      = Army Hydrospace Command Center, [[Sethsport]]
| garrison_label                = Headquarters
| nickname                      =
| patron                        =
| motto                        = "''Fhasen Here''" (From the Gods' fresh waters to the Great Sea's spray)
| colors                        = Blue, White, Black {{color box|#000080}}{{color box|#FFFFFF}}{{color box|black}}
| colors_label                  = Colors
| march                        =
| mascot                        =
| equipment                    =
* 1 aircraft carrier
* 2 light carriers
* 1 helicopter carrier
* 4 landing support ships
* 4 battlecruisers
* 23 [[cruiser]]s
* 55 [[destroyer]]s
* 1 [[frigate]] (under Customs Bureau)
* 57 [[corvette]]s
* 12 [[landing ship tank]]s
* 68 [[landing craft]]
* 43 special-purpose ships
* 28 [[patrol ship]]s (under Customs Bureau)
* 36 [[patrol boat]]s (under Customs Bureau)
* 10 [[mine countermeasures vessel]]s
* 35 [[submarine]]s
* 23 supply ships (not in chart)
* 19 intelligence ships (not in chart)
| equipment_label              =
| battles                      = Since 1991: [[Great War]]<br />[[Vandarch Canal Crisis]]<br />[[Malokan Months' War]]<br />[[Final War of the Deluge]]
| anniversaries                =
| decorations                  =
| battle_honours                =
| website                      =
| commander1                    = double decker dude
| commander1_label              = [[Commander-in-Chief of the Russian Navy|Commander-in-Chief]]
| commander2                    = double dude
| commander2_label              = First Deputy Commander-in-Chief
| commander3                    = dude
| commander3_label              = Deputy Commander-in-Chief
| commander4                    =
| commander4_label              =
| notable_commanders            = <!-- Insignia -->
| identification_symbol        =
| identification_symbol_label  =
| identification_symbol_2      =
| identification_symbol_2_label =
| identification_symbol_3      =
| identification_symbol_3_label =
| aircraft_helicopter          =
| aircraft_helicopter_attack    =
| aircraft_helicopter_cargo    =
| aircraft_helicopter_multirole =
| aircraft_helicopter_observation =
| aircraft_helicopter_utility  =
| aircraft_trainer              =
| aircraft_transport            =
| aircraft_helicopter_transport =
}}


==Origins and History==
During the later half of the 19th century, the Royal Navy adopted a construction and fleet composition strategy called the 2:1 Plan, which heavily favored regional dominance within the Vandarch Sea instead of seriously challenging foreign great powers on the open ocean.


===Royal Navy===
Civil War


===Revolutionary Peoples' Army Naval Service===
During the Fhainnin Civil War, the Royal Navy initially sided with the Royalists, as the fleet was a point of pride for the Throne and sailors were not subjected to much difficulty or combat during the Fourth Kin War. Naval assets conducted bombardments of rebel positions along the shore and even up the Rhydwel, but were unable to stop the overrunning of their bases, leading the fleet elements within the Vandarch to seek clemency or defect to other countries around the sea, namely Hendalarsk and Eldmora-Regulus.


===Army Sea Bureau Reorganization===
The Republicans were eager to retain as much of the fleet as possible, but were unable to stop the defection of the majority of the High Seas Fleet, forcing a major reconstruction and retraining project in the following decades.


The modern Sea Bureau performs numerous tasks, and oftentimes its ships are not even operated by Army personnel, at least entirely - the Bureau's patrol craft and most of its icebreakers, while registered as military ships, are operated by various minor organizations involved in customs, coastal patrol, ice clearing, and antipiracy operations in Fhainnin coastal waters and waterways. This practice is due both to a desire to inflate the official numbers of ships available to the Army for public image and posturing as well as easy tracking of strategically valuable and otherwise armed vessels outside the direct command structure of the Army itself. As a result, some vessels are discounted entirely in terms of actual military significance.
Revolutionary Peoples' Army Naval Service


As a result, the Sea Bureau takes on a long list of roles - antipiracy, coast guard, customs and shipping escort, combat operations, transport, rescue, and first response duties all fall within the maritime forces' jurisdiction, only then breaking into delegation to civilian government organizations.
Under the RPAN, Fhainnin naval forces changed significantly, with the defection of several ships to other nations becoming an issue as the navy lost many skilled crew to Royalists, many of which fled the country and did not return even after blanket pardons were handed out. As a result, the RPAN was in disarray, as while its new equipment was par with its expected opponents, the officers and crews in charge spent most of the 1910s simply organizing themselves and re-learning how to perform operations.


After 1922 and the rebranding of the RPAN as the Army Naval Bureau, a series of live fire gunnery practices using outdated hulks, along with numerous practice sorties, brought the navy back into some standing. By 1930, the fleet was in stable condition, albeit with a larger compliment of small surface vessels and 6 dreadnaught-battleships compared to the 15 pre-dreadnaughts and 7 dreadnaughts of the Royal Navy before the Revolution. This was partly due to the last Royal dreadnought in service being converted to a prototype aircraft carrier, copying the Urcean experiments of the late 1920s with converted ships, and partly due to the desire to focus on mine warfare due to the dense island environment of the southern Vandarch, where the first confrontation with any HLE naval elements would take place in the event of war.


==Organization==
Second Great War
Postwar Reorganization
1978 Reforms
Modern Day


===Insignia===
The modern Naval Bureau performs several major roles, mainly involving support operations near colonial possessions and protecting metropolitan Faneria. It acts as an antipiracy force, a cargo and supply carrier, and combat force, and natively hosts its own fleet of icebreakers that are often deployed alongside civilian shipping in the Nordska and Kilikas.
 
===Doctrine===


Going into the second quarter of the century, the composition of the Army naval service is changing as older, larger warships become slightly less prominent compared to a larger force of smaller surface combatants. While the light support carrier doctrine employed by the Army remains a key point in Fhainnin strategy within the Vandarch Sea and in its littoral waters along the open ocean, budget cuts and the lack of a serious neighboring rival make lobbying for a larger navy a weak political position. Currently, the Army plans to phase out much of its older surface fleet in favor of modern designs. While the total number of heavy surface combatants will drop, a larger array of small vessels is planned. Forays into missile boats in particular are in vogue for white-water operations, though the overall trend in modern naval design is a greater integration of air assets with naval ones, as evidenced by the fact that the vast majority of new designs take landing pads into account compared to older Fhainnin designs, many of which lagged behind in this area.
Going into the second quarter of the century, the composition of the Army naval service is changing as older, larger warships become slightly less prominent compared to a larger force of smaller surface combatants. While the light support carrier doctrine employed by the Army remains a key point in Fhainnin strategy within the Vandarch Sea and in its littoral waters along the open ocean, budget cuts and the lack of a serious neighboring rival make lobbying for a larger navy a weak political position. Currently, the Army plans to phase out much of its older surface fleet in favor of modern designs. While the total number of heavy surface combatants will drop, a larger array of small vessels is planned. Forays into missile boats in particular are in vogue for white-water operations, though the overall trend in modern naval design is a greater integration of air assets with naval ones, as evidenced by the fact that the vast majority of new designs take landing pads into account compared to older Fhainnin designs, many of which lagged behind in this area.
Line 111: Line 31:
Technologically, a majority of the fleet is second-line, or constructed between 1980 and 2010, with roughly fifteen percent of its ships being newer and another ten percent or so being constructed prior to 1980. This ageing has made for a considerable cost in maintenance and refits to keep the fleet operational. The main symptom of this was the production of smaller missile boats meant for mass production in the 1970's, bloating the fleet with over fifty light vessels in line with the posturing the navy preferred. In 2012, policy was changed to reflect a growing budget and need to maintain a technological edge rather than rely on dated equipment, demanding that naval production focus on role-dedicated destroyers and air power over the previous cruiser-centered model, along with the discontinuation of later missile boat programs and reforms in the design and planning process.
Technologically, a majority of the fleet is second-line, or constructed between 1980 and 2010, with roughly fifteen percent of its ships being newer and another ten percent or so being constructed prior to 1980. This ageing has made for a considerable cost in maintenance and refits to keep the fleet operational. The main symptom of this was the production of smaller missile boats meant for mass production in the 1970's, bloating the fleet with over fifty light vessels in line with the posturing the navy preferred. In 2012, policy was changed to reflect a growing budget and need to maintain a technological edge rather than rely on dated equipment, demanding that naval production focus on role-dedicated destroyers and air power over the previous cruiser-centered model, along with the discontinuation of later missile boat programs and reforms in the design and planning process.


===Fleets===
*{{wp|Novara-class cruiser}}
 
*{{wp|Erzherzog Karl-class battleship}}
Vandarch 1st Squadron
*{{wp|250t-class torpedo boat}}
Vandarch 2nd Squadron
*{{wp|Huszár-class destroyer}}
Vandarch 3rd Squadron
*{{wp|Tátra-class destroyer}}
Vandarch 4th Squadron
*{{wp|Kaiman-class torpedo boat}}
High Seas Squadron
*{{wp|Cobra-class torpedo boat}}
Northern Squadron
*{{wp|Russian destroyer Novik (1911)}}
Eilada Squadron
*{{wp|Ognevoy-class destroyer}}
Maloka Squadron
*{{wp|Finnish coastal defence ship Väinämöinen}}
Misc. Task Forces
*{{wp|Zenta-class cruiser}}
 
*{{wp|Kynda-class cruiser}}
Attached Forces
*{{wp|Kresta I-class cruiser}}
Vandarch Naval Aviation Brigade
*{{wp|Kresta II-class cruiser}}
2. Foot Marines Brigade
3. Mechanized Marines Brigade
3. Foot Marines Brigade


*{{wp|Sverdlov-class cruiser}}
*{{wp|Kara-class cruiser}}
*{{wp|Slava-class cruiser}}
*{{wp|Kashin-class destroyer}}
*{{wp|Udaloy-class destroyer}}
*{{wp|Sovremenny-class destroyer}}
*{{wp|Riga-class frigate}}
*{{wp|Ropucha-class landing ship}}
*{{wp|Neustrashimyy-class frigate}}
*{{wp|Grisha-class corvette}}
*{{wp|Moskva-class helicopter carrier}}
*{{wp|Kiev-class aircraft carrier}}
*{{wp|Kuznetsov-class aircraft carrier}}


===Equipment and Assets===
{| class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible"
<br />
{| class="wikitable"
|+
|+
!Ship Class
!IRL Class
!Produced
!IRL Full Load Displacement
!Years Produced
!IRL Years
!Planned
!IC Class
!Sunk
!IC Dimensions
!Mothballed
!IC Years
!Active
!Images
!Type
!Displacement
!Air Compliment
!Notes
|-
|-
|SM-1921
|{{wp|Cobra-class torpedo boat}}
|34
|135 t (133 long tons)
|1927-1941
|
| -
*Produced: 1890s
|25
*Service: 1890s-1919
|1
|
| -
|
|Fire Support Destroyer
|
|630 tons
| -
|
|
|-
|-
|SM-1943
|{{wp|Zenta-class cruiser}}
|19
|2,503 long tons (2,543 t)
|1943-1951
|
| -
*Produced: 1896–1901
|14
*Service: 1899–1918
|2
|
| -
|
|Fire Support Destroyer
|
|1,330 tons
| -
|
|
|-
|-
|SM-1950
|{{wp|Erzherzog Karl-class battleship}}
|4
|10,472 long tons (10,640 t)
|1950-1953
|
| -
*Produced: 1902–07
| -
*Service: 1906–1918
|1
|
| -
|
|Fire Support Frigate
|
|2,400 tons
| -
|
|
|-
|-
|SM-1978
|{{wp|Huszár-class destroyer}}
|14
|420 t (410 long tons)
|1980-1987
|
| -
*Produced: 1905-1909
|1
*Service:
|6
|
|7
|
|Fire Support Destroyer
|
|3,798 tons
|
| -
|''Sovremenny''-class destroyer basis
|-
|-
|SM-1995
|{{wp|Russian destroyer Novik (1911)}}
|5
|1,590 long tons (1,620 t)
|1995-1999
|
| -
*Produced: 1910-1911
| -
*Service: 1911-1941
|1
|
|2
|
|Fire Support Destroyer
|
|4,518 tons
|
|1 Helicopter or VTOL
|3 sold to Cape in 2003
|-
|-
|SM-2002
|{{wp|Novara-class cruiser}}
|4
|4,417 tonnes (4,347 long tons)
|2004-2006
|
| -
*Produced: 1911–1915
| -
*Service: 1914–1941
| -
|
|4
|
|Fire Support Destroyer
|
|3730 tons
|1 Helicopter or VTOL
|
|
|-
|-
|SM-2015
|{{wp|Tátra-class destroyer}}
|10
|1,050 long tons (1,070 t)
|2016-present
|
|1
*Produced: 1911–1914
| -
*Service: 1913–1937
| -
|
|10
|
|Fire Support Destroyer
|
|3,981 tons
|1 Helicopter or VTOL
|
|
|-
|-
|SM-2019
|{{wp|250t-class torpedo boat}}
|3
|320–330 t (315–325 long tons)
|2020-present
|
|14
*Produced: 1913–1916
| -
*Service: 1914–1963
| -
|
|3
|
|Fire Support Destroyer
|
|5,136 tons
|1 Helicopter or VTOL
|
|
|-
|-
|STL-1961
|{{wp|Kaiman-class torpedo boat}}
|7
|209–211 t (206–208 long tons)
|1963-1970
|
| -
*Produced: 1904–1910
| -
*Service: 1905–1930
|3
|
| -
|
|Air Defense Destroyer
|
|1435 tons
| -
|
|
|-
|-
|STL-1970
|{{wp|Finnish coastal defence ship Väinämöinen}}
|3
|3,900 t
|1972-1975
|
| -
*Produced: 1929-1932
| -
*Service: 1932-1966
| -
|
|3
|
|Air Defense Destroyer/Special
|
|2365 tons
|
| -
|Experimental and research class
|-
|-
|STL-1997
|{{wp|Ognevoy-class destroyer}}
|14
|2,860 t (2,810 long tons)
|1998-2004
|
| -
*Produced: 1938–1948
| -
*Service: 1944–1960
| -
|
|14
|Air Defense Destroyer
|3815 tons
|1 Helicopter or VTOL
|Kashin-class destroyer basis
|-
|STL-2003
|2
|2005-2012
|2
| -
| -
|2
|Research Ship
|4375 tons tons
|1 Helicopters or VTOL
|Deep Sea or Environmental Studies Research
|-
|STL-2013
|11
|2015-present
|3
| -
| -
|11
|Air Defense Destroyer
|3760 tons
|1 Helicopter or VTOL
|
|
|-
|STL-2020
|1
|2021-present
|16
| -
| -
|1
|Air Defense Destroyer
|3710 tons
|1 Helicopter or VTOL
|
|
|-
|STB-1946
|6
|1948-1953
| -
|3
| -
| -
|Mine Warfare Frigate
|1360 tons
| -
|
|
|-
|-
|STB-1981
|{{wp|Sverdlov-class cruiser}}
|11
|16,640 tonnes (16,377 long tons)
|1982-1999
| -
| -
|6
|1
|Mine Warfare Destroyer
|3,290 tons
| -
|''Udaloy''-class destroyer basis
|-
|STB-2001
|4
|2001-2006
| -
| -
| -
|3
|Mine Warfare Destroyer
|3,600 tons
|1 Helicopter or VTOL
|1 gifted to Prevalia in 2006
|-
|STB-2010
|6
|2010-2019
| -
| -
| -
|6
|Mine Warfare Destroyer
|3,630 tons
|1 Helicopter or VTOL
|
|
|-
*Produced: 1948–1959
|STB-2022
*Service: 1952–2000
|0
|planned 2023
|8
| -
| -
| -
|Mine Warfare Destroyer
|3,925 tons
|1 Helicopter or VTOL
|
|
|-
|SC-1935
|28
|1935-1950
| -
|21
| -
| -
|Patrol and Escort Frigate
|230 tons
| -
|
|
|-
|SC-1951
|30
|1951-1974
| -
|7
|4
| -
|Patrol and Escort Boat
|457 tons
| -
|
|
|-
|SC-1980
|18
|1980-1988
| -
|1
|2
|12
|Patrol and Escort Corvette
|660 tons
| -
|
|
|-
|-
|SC-2004
|{{wp|Riga-class frigate}}
|16
|1,416 tons
|2004-present
|6
|
|
| -
*Produced: 1951-1958
|16
*Service: 1952-1985
|Patrol and Escort Corvette
|730 tons
| -
|
|
|-
|SC-2020
|1
|2020-present
|4
|
|
| -
|1
|Patrol and Escort Frigate
|1135 tons
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
|CO-1984
|{{wp|Kashin-class destroyer}}
|3
|4,390 tons
|1986-1998
| -
|
|
|1
*Produced: 1959–1986
|2
*Service: 1962–2020
|Hospital Ship
|8,120 tons
|2 Helicopters or VTOLs
|
|
|-
|CO-2017
|1
|2019-present
|1
|
|
| -
|1
|Hospital Ship
|18,980 tons
|4 Helicopters or VTOLs
|
|
|-
|SE-1967
|4
|
|
| -
* [[File:49KashinClassDestroyerMediterraneanJan1970.jpg|150px]]
|1
* [[File:Sderzhannyy1980.jpg|150px]]
| -
* [[File:KrasnyyKavkaz1985.jpg|150px]]
| -
* [[File:Soobrazitelnyy1960-1994(DN-SC-87-01472).jpg|150px]]
|Missile Boat
* [[File:INS Ranvijay at annual bi-lateral naval field training exercise.jpg|150px]]
|260 tons
* [[File:Slavnyy(DN-SC-86-00986).jpg|150px]]
| -
|3 sold to ______ in 1976
|-
|-
|SE-2002-1
|{{wp|Kynda-class cruiser}}
|41
|5,500 tons
|2003-present
|3
| -
|2
|36
|Missile Boat
|430 tons
| -
|
|
|-
*Produced: 1960–1965
|SE-2002-2
*Service: 1962–2002
|22
|2006-present
|12
| -
| -
|21
|Missile Corvette
|725 tons
| -
|1 gifted to Vandarch Canal Garrison
|-
|LB-1922
|5
|
|
| -
|
|
| -
| -
|Submarine
|
|
| -
|
|
|-
|-
|LB-1934
|{{wp|Kresta I-class cruiser}}
|36
|7,500 tons
|
*Produced: 1964–1967
*Service: 1967–1994
|
|
| -
|
|
|1
| -
|Submarine
|
|
| -
|
|
|-
|-
|LB-1940
|{{wp|Kresta II-class cruiser}}
|17
|7,535 tons
|
*Produced: 1966–1977
*Service: 1969–1993
|
|
| -
|
|
| -
| -
|Submarine
|
|
| -
|
|
|-
|-
|LB-1956
| *{{wp|Grisha-class corvette}}
|1
|1,070 tons
|1957
| -
|
|
| -
*Produced: 1966-1981
| -
*Service: 1970-present
|Submarine
|
|
| -
|Initially 18 planned, others scrapped
|-
|LB-1963
|4
|1968-1969
| -
|
|
| -
| -
|Submarine
|
|
| -
|
|
*[[File:Project1124M-1990-1.jpg|150px]]
*[[File:Ternopil (ship, 2002).jpg|150px]]
|-
|-
|LB-1978
|{{wp|Kara-class cruiser}}
|12
|9,700 tons
|1980-1991
|
| -
*Produced: 1968–1979
| -
*Service: 1971–2014
|2
|1
|Submarine
|
|
| -
|6 sold abroad in 1986
|-
|LB-1990
|19
|1991-1998
| -
| -
|4
|15
|Submarine
|
|
| -
|
|
|-
|LB-2001
|16
|2002-2018
| -
| -
| -
|15
|Submarine
|
|
| -
|One scrapped due to mechanical error
|-
|-
|LB-2018
|{{wp|Slava-class cruiser}}
|4
|11,490 tons
|2018-present
|4
| -
| -
|4
|Submarine
|
|
| -
*Produced: 1976–1990
*Service: 1982–present
|
|
|-
|CM-1931
|18
|1931-1948
| -
|7
| -
| -
|Line Cruiser
|16,784 tons
| -
|
|
|-
|CM-1955
|2
|
|
| -
| -
| -
| -
|Line Cruiser
|8990 tons
| -
|
|
|-
|-
|CM-1963
|{{wp|Udaloy-class destroyer}}
|1
|7,570 tons
|
*Produced: 1977–1994
*Service: 1980–present
|
|
| -
| -
|1
| -
|Line Cruiser
|7695 tons
| -
|
|
|-
|CM-1967
|4
|
|
| -
| -
| -
| -
|Line Cruiser
|9310 tons
|1 Helicopter or VTOL
|
|
* [[File:AdmiralSpiridonov1986.jpg|150px]]
* [[File:Russian navy anti-submarine ship Severomorsk.jpg|150px]]
* [[File:RFNS Admiral Levchenko DDG-605.jpg|150px]]
|-
|-
|CM-1988
|{{wp|Sovremenny-class destroyer}}
|16
|8,000 tons
|
|
| -
*Produced: 1976–2004
*Service: 1980–present
|
|
|12
| -
|Line Cruiser
|9380 tons
|1 Helicopter or VTOL
|
|
|-
|CM-2002
|10
|
|
| -
|
|
|1
* [[File:Boevoy1987Yaponskoe-more.jpg|150px]]
|8
* [[File:Stoykiy.jpg|150px]]
|Line Cruiser
* [[File:Destroyer Okrylenny.jpg|150px]]
|9255 tons
* [[File:Rastoropnyy&O'Bannon1992.jpg|150px]]
|1 Helicopter or VTOL
* [[File:Destroyer Bezuderzhnyy.jpg|150px]]
|1 sold abroad in 2019
* [[File:HydrocosmosEra2019-01.jpg|150px]]
|-
|-
|CM-2004
|{{wp|Ropucha-class landing ship}}
|12
|
|
| -
|
|
| -
*Produced:
|12
*Service:
|Line Cruiser
|8990 tons
|1 Helicopter or VTOL
|
|
|-
|CM-2016
|3
|
|
|6
|
|
| -
|3
|Line Cruiser
|11,605 tons
|1 Helicopter or VTOL
|
|
|-
|-
|CT-1958
|{{wp|Neustrashimyy-class frigate}}
|1
|4,400 tons
|1958
| -
|
|
| -
*Produced: 1986–present
| -
*Service:
|Shore Support
|9,125 tons
| -
|
|
|-
|CT-1987
|4
|1990-1996
| -
|
|
|1
|1
|Shore Support
|11,425 tons
|3 Helicopters or VTOLs
|1 sold abroad in 2019
|-
|CT-2012
|3
|2014-2018
| -
|
|
| -
|3
|Shore Support
|12,355 tons
|4 Helicopters or VTOLs
|
|
* [[File:Frigate Neustrashimy (FF 712) 188.jpg|150px]]
|-
|-
|LD-1923
|{{wp|Moskva-class helicopter carrier}}
|27
|1927-1946
| -
|
|
| -
| -
|Icebreaker
|19,590 tons
| -
|
|
|-
*Produced:
|LD-1984
*Service:
|38
|
|1985-2000
| -
|
|
|6
|29
|Icebreaker
|17,805 tons
|1 Helicopter or VTOL
|
|
|-
|LD-2006
|9
|2008-present
|2
|
|
| -
|8
|Armed Icebreaker
|25,430 tons
|2 Helicopters or VTOLs
|1 sold to private company in 2019
|-
|-
|CS-1925
|{{wp|Kiev-class aircraft carrier}}
|4
|
|
| -
|2
| -
| -
|Battleship
|
|
|47,619 tons
*Produced:
|1 given to Fiannria as war debt, 1 converted to CE-1928.
*Service:
|-
|CS-1936
|3
|1937-1942
| -
|1
|1
| -
|Battlecruiser
|
|
|28,810 tons
|1 given to Fiannria as war debt
|-
|CS-1966
|1
|
|
| -
| -
| -
| -
|Battleship
|
|
|43,619 tons
|Used as live fire target for 1014 centennial founding day show
|-
|CS-1990
|3
|
|
| -
| -
|1
|1
|Battlecruiser
|22,090 tons
|1 Helicopter or VTOL
|1 sunk as target in livefire test
|-
|-
|CS-2000
|{{wp|Kuznetsov-class aircraft carrier}}
|3
|
|
| -
| -
| -
|3
|Battlecruiser
|22,680 tons
|1 Helicopter or VTOL, 1 stored
|
|
|-
*Produced:
|CS-2019
*Service:
| -
|2019-present
|1
| -
| -
| -
|Battlecruiser
|24,540 tons
|2 Helicopters or VTOLs
|
|
|-
|CE-1928
|1
|1929
| -
|1
| -
| -
|Support Carrier
|
|
|14 light fixed wing craft
|Experimental conversion carrier.
|-
|CE-1934
|7
|1934-1978
| -
|3
| -
| -
|Support Carrier
|43,150 tons
|STOBAR configuration, 25 light fixed wing craft, 2 Helicopters (later)
|3 given to Fiannria as war debt; 1 built 1978 to restart carrier program
|-
|CE-1980
|1
|1981
| -
| -
|1
| -
|Carrier
|48,650 tons
|CATOBAR configuration, 25 fixed wing craft, 3 Helicopters or VTOLs
|Proof-of-Concept for CATOBAR and nuclear carrier programs.
|-
|CE-1988
|1
|
|
| -
| -
| -
|1
|Helicopter Carrier
|21,470 tons
|8 Helicopters or VTOLs
|
|
|-
|-
|CE-1999
|1
|
|
|*Draft:
*Beam:
*Length:
*Displacement:
|
|
| -
|
|
|1
|Support Carrier
|48,230 tons
|STOBAR configuration, 28 fixed wing craft, 4 Helicopters or VTOLs
|
|
|-
|CE-2004
|1
|2007
| -
| -
| -
|1
|Carrier
|69,930 tons
|STOBAR configuration, 34 fixed wing craft, 10 Helicopters or VTOLs
|
|
|-
|CE-2015
|1
|2018-present
|1
| -
| -
|1
|Support Carrier
|47,760 tons
|STOBAR configuration, 20 fixed wing aircraft, 4 Helicopters or VTOLs
|
|
|}
|}

Latest revision as of 20:48, 27 September 2022

Early Naval Forces Royal Navy

During the later half of the 19th century, the Royal Navy adopted a construction and fleet composition strategy called the 2:1 Plan, which heavily favored regional dominance within the Vandarch Sea instead of seriously challenging foreign great powers on the open ocean.

Civil War

During the Fhainnin Civil War, the Royal Navy initially sided with the Royalists, as the fleet was a point of pride for the Throne and sailors were not subjected to much difficulty or combat during the Fourth Kin War. Naval assets conducted bombardments of rebel positions along the shore and even up the Rhydwel, but were unable to stop the overrunning of their bases, leading the fleet elements within the Vandarch to seek clemency or defect to other countries around the sea, namely Hendalarsk and Eldmora-Regulus.

The Republicans were eager to retain as much of the fleet as possible, but were unable to stop the defection of the majority of the High Seas Fleet, forcing a major reconstruction and retraining project in the following decades.

Revolutionary Peoples' Army Naval Service

Under the RPAN, Fhainnin naval forces changed significantly, with the defection of several ships to other nations becoming an issue as the navy lost many skilled crew to Royalists, many of which fled the country and did not return even after blanket pardons were handed out. As a result, the RPAN was in disarray, as while its new equipment was par with its expected opponents, the officers and crews in charge spent most of the 1910s simply organizing themselves and re-learning how to perform operations.

After 1922 and the rebranding of the RPAN as the Army Naval Bureau, a series of live fire gunnery practices using outdated hulks, along with numerous practice sorties, brought the navy back into some standing. By 1930, the fleet was in stable condition, albeit with a larger compliment of small surface vessels and 6 dreadnaught-battleships compared to the 15 pre-dreadnaughts and 7 dreadnaughts of the Royal Navy before the Revolution. This was partly due to the last Royal dreadnought in service being converted to a prototype aircraft carrier, copying the Urcean experiments of the late 1920s with converted ships, and partly due to the desire to focus on mine warfare due to the dense island environment of the southern Vandarch, where the first confrontation with any HLE naval elements would take place in the event of war.

Second Great War Postwar Reorganization 1978 Reforms Modern Day

The modern Naval Bureau performs several major roles, mainly involving support operations near colonial possessions and protecting metropolitan Faneria. It acts as an antipiracy force, a cargo and supply carrier, and combat force, and natively hosts its own fleet of icebreakers that are often deployed alongside civilian shipping in the Nordska and Kilikas.

Going into the second quarter of the century, the composition of the Army naval service is changing as older, larger warships become slightly less prominent compared to a larger force of smaller surface combatants. While the light support carrier doctrine employed by the Army remains a key point in Fhainnin strategy within the Vandarch Sea and in its littoral waters along the open ocean, budget cuts and the lack of a serious neighboring rival make lobbying for a larger navy a weak political position. Currently, the Army plans to phase out much of its older surface fleet in favor of modern designs. While the total number of heavy surface combatants will drop, a larger array of small vessels is planned. Forays into missile boats in particular are in vogue for white-water operations, though the overall trend in modern naval design is a greater integration of air assets with naval ones, as evidenced by the fact that the vast majority of new designs take landing pads into account compared to older Fhainnin designs, many of which lagged behind in this area.

Modern Fanerian battlegroup composition segregates tasks into distinct roles for each ship - primarily air defense, mine and antisubmarine warfare, surface warfare, and air support. Generally, any ship can perform multiple roles, but each specializes in a particular field and is expected to operate in that role unless circumstances require otherwise.

Ship design is typically funneled into a single production model, with a great deal of competition between design variants. The design process for lighter Fhainnin vessels also involves prototype construction and testing, and increasingly involves computer simulations as well. The army has displayed gaps in its production lines between ship classes over the years, indicating an ad-hoc design process. It is currently believed that the army is conducting panels to standardize the design process further to create some overlap and ensure regular updates to the naval service's assets.

Technologically, a majority of the fleet is second-line, or constructed between 1980 and 2010, with roughly fifteen percent of its ships being newer and another ten percent or so being constructed prior to 1980. This ageing has made for a considerable cost in maintenance and refits to keep the fleet operational. The main symptom of this was the production of smaller missile boats meant for mass production in the 1970's, bloating the fleet with over fifty light vessels in line with the posturing the navy preferred. In 2012, policy was changed to reflect a growing budget and need to maintain a technological edge rather than rely on dated equipment, demanding that naval production focus on role-dedicated destroyers and air power over the previous cruiser-centered model, along with the discontinuation of later missile boat programs and reforms in the design and planning process.

IRL Class IRL Full Load Displacement IRL Years IC Class IC Dimensions IC Years Images
Cobra-class torpedo boat 135 t (133 long tons)
  • Produced: 1890s
  • Service: 1890s-1919
Zenta-class cruiser 2,503 long tons (2,543 t)
  • Produced: 1896–1901
  • Service: 1899–1918
Erzherzog Karl-class battleship 10,472 long tons (10,640 t)
  • Produced: 1902–07
  • Service: 1906–1918
Huszár-class destroyer 420 t (410 long tons)
  • Produced: 1905-1909
  • Service:
Russian destroyer Novik (1911) 1,590 long tons (1,620 t)
  • Produced: 1910-1911
  • Service: 1911-1941
Novara-class cruiser 4,417 tonnes (4,347 long tons)
  • Produced: 1911–1915
  • Service: 1914–1941
Tátra-class destroyer 1,050 long tons (1,070 t)
  • Produced: 1911–1914
  • Service: 1913–1937
250t-class torpedo boat 320–330 t (315–325 long tons)
  • Produced: 1913–1916
  • Service: 1914–1963
Kaiman-class torpedo boat 209–211 t (206–208 long tons)
  • Produced: 1904–1910
  • Service: 1905–1930
Finnish coastal defence ship Väinämöinen 3,900 t
  • Produced: 1929-1932
  • Service: 1932-1966
Ognevoy-class destroyer 2,860 t (2,810 long tons)
  • Produced: 1938–1948
  • Service: 1944–1960
Sverdlov-class cruiser 16,640 tonnes (16,377 long tons)
  • Produced: 1948–1959
  • Service: 1952–2000
Riga-class frigate 1,416 tons
  • Produced: 1951-1958
  • Service: 1952-1985
Kashin-class destroyer 4,390 tons
  • Produced: 1959–1986
  • Service: 1962–2020
Kynda-class cruiser 5,500 tons
  • Produced: 1960–1965
  • Service: 1962–2002
Kresta I-class cruiser 7,500 tons
  • Produced: 1964–1967
  • Service: 1967–1994
Kresta II-class cruiser 7,535 tons
  • Produced: 1966–1977
  • Service: 1969–1993
*Grisha-class corvette 1,070 tons
  • Produced: 1966-1981
  • Service: 1970-present
Kara-class cruiser 9,700 tons
  • Produced: 1968–1979
  • Service: 1971–2014
Slava-class cruiser 11,490 tons
  • Produced: 1976–1990
  • Service: 1982–present
Udaloy-class destroyer 7,570 tons
  • Produced: 1977–1994
  • Service: 1980–present
Sovremenny-class destroyer 8,000 tons
  • Produced: 1976–2004
  • Service: 1980–present
Ropucha-class landing ship
  • Produced:
  • Service:
Neustrashimyy-class frigate 4,400 tons
  • Produced: 1986–present
  • Service:
Moskva-class helicopter carrier
  • Produced:
  • Service:
Kiev-class aircraft carrier
  • Produced:
  • Service:
Kuznetsov-class aircraft carrier
  • Produced:
  • Service:
*Draft:
  • Beam:
  • Length:
  • Displacement: