I find that an interesting observation. The question to be asked is who operates the equipment, who fixes the equipment and who makes the decisions? The Officers bring the information together and make the decisions. I would not say they have any more knowledge then the Sonar operators, Rad Techs etc.
Each has their own set of expertise, so yes a CANTSA operators is going to know more about the specifics of CANTAS, and a armament tech is going to know more about the in-and-outs of CIWS, but, and I will probably get POUNCED on for saying this, but I would argue that officers (specifically the OROs) know the most
overall. They need to know a little bit about every weapon and sensor, they need to know all Air, Surface, and Sub-Surface tactic thoroughly, they need a full understanding of task group coordination and operations, and no one else on board is as well trained in CMS doctrine management than OROs. Plus, anecdotally, I've seen plenty of frustrated officers walk over and "teach" a fully qualified Fire Control operator how to use their kit... I even saw it happen once with HMS.
This statement is worrying in some respects but also sends some assurance that we are getting well trained Officers. From the website it takes four plus years to turn out a MARs Officer. Are there streamlines that can be done? Can we and do we have a modified training plan in case of major war where we can train Merchant Marine Officers and Crew in a shorter timeline?
Depends on what level your are talking about. From basic training to the completion of NWO Basic (what used to be called NWO 3 and 4) is a little as 1-1.5 years (if everything lined up
perfectly) to 3-4 years (because of back-logs in training or inability to line up courses leading to time on PAT platoon). Once that's done, they are only considered qualified to be a "2nd Officer of the Watch". They are the "assistant" to the Office of the Watch. To get fully qualified as an Officer watch, they have to two things. First they have to stand a minimum of 600 hours of watch on the bridge. Once that's done, they have to go attend the NWOPQ course. This course refines their basic OOW skills, and also teaches them advanced topics like AAW and ASW manoeuvring. Once they graduate this course, they will be promoted to Lt(N) and considered a fully-qualified Bridge Watch Keeper (BWK). The length of time it takes to complete those 600 hours and the NWOPQ course really depend on platform availability. Getting 600 hours of bridge time could take between 75 and 100 sea-days depending on the watch rotation (1 in 4 vs 1 in 3). And, depending on how much the ship that you're assigned to is actually sailing, getting those 75-100 sea days could take a long time. I would say low end 1 year, high end 2 years. So combining these numbers, you have a low of 2.5-3 years from enrolment to qualified BWK, to a high end of 5-6 years, so 4 years is probably about right. Regardless, once you've achieved this, you still just BWK. Next you have to go onto your Director level/WarfareOfficer course and tour to be a "junior" ops room watch officer (meaning running the ops room, but not actually "fighting" the ops room). Call that 2-3 more years. Then you go ashore for 2-5 years before coming back to the ship as an ORO (the one who's really "fighting" the ops room).
It's not a quick process. Could it be shortened? Maybe a bit. For training "warfighting" officers, you could skip all the lessons on constabulary ops, counter piracy, boardings, etc, but that wouldn't shave off much time. The real bottle neck is sea time and platform availability.
The Navy as a whole is built bureaucratically with all the force readiness, logistics, training, development, and administrations organizations needed to support (and justify, really) a fleet of 33+ ships, and so they hire and "aim" to train enough officers to continue to fill all the billets of all those "2nd line" organizations. Part of their career before getting to those "staff" jobs involves training and serving in those "1st line" positions (i.e. on ships) but unfortunately, we don't actually have 33 ships, and the ships we do have aren't sailing anywhere near as much as they need to.
Have we have made operations/ expectations so complicated that they are unrealistic for sustainment in operations?