CDR: The Navy has announced it is starting to pay off the MCDV fleet. What do you want to see as a replacement of the MCDV?
VAdm Topshee: The Kingston class has been fantastic since its introduction into service in the 1990s. They've deployed to places no one ever thought they would go. The name gives it away: Maritime Coastal Defence Vessel. They were not supposed to ever go to Hawaii or repeatedly cross the Atlantic. They've proven to be remarkably flexible in what they‘ve done. The problem I face as we look at building the River Class Destroyers to take over the response capability of the main surface combatant from the Halifax class, and we recognize that we've got the Harry DeWolf class that can go up in the north, is there’s a gap between those two. We need something that can deal with most threats that isn’t going to provide air defence or protection to anyone else, but can defend itself in a fight, and is not afraid of ice. So not an icebreaker, but can go to the ice edge and can rip about at speed near ice. That should be consistent with a hull form that still allows it to have a sonar and still allows it to move with enough speed to be relevant as a combatant. It’s basically the same capability set that’s currently in the Halifax class, shrunk down to a smaller package with an ice edge capability, roughly a Polar Class 6. So that’s what we're talking about as a Continental Defence Corvette, and we're working to develop the high-level mandatory requirements for what exactly that would look like. We deliberately chose the name Corvette because we're trying to indicate that it’s a tier of combatant — it definitely can fight, but it’s not the thing that’s the heart of the fleet.
CDR: Would you want it to have a flight deck that would be able to accommodate a Cyclone helicopter?
VAdm Topshee: The Cyclone has been a colossal disappointment. I'm exceptionally disappointed in Lockheed Martin/Sikorsky. | think they‘ve delivered an absolute lemon. It is amazing what the incredible aviators at 12 Wing manage to do with it. The availability, the maintenance, the cost, it all needs to get better — it needs to get drastically better. And for all of those reasons, there’s no world in which | will design a Canadian Continental Defence Corvette to carry a Cyclone helicopter, because there’s no world in which Il see that becoming a useful helicopter, and if that changes, great, but by the time it does, we'll probably be really good at uncrewed and remotely operated systems.
CDR: Thank you, Admiral.