OK folks,
I think I have the airlift solution. May not be sexy or popular, but it will work. The starting point is to recap the airlift requirment, which is predicated on Ireland becoming the 'Plus' in the Nordic Plus EU Battlegroup as expected, alongside Sweden (lead), Finland, Norway and the Baltic states:
- national support, including MATS
- support to Irish contributions to international EU/UN military and humanitarian missions - preferably including casualty evacuation back to Ireland
- support to Nordic Plus Battlegroup training exercises - at least quarterly
- support to RW training, including exercises and exchanges in Scandanavia (Nordic Plus SFTG), Germany, France and elsewhere in Europe - at least quarterly
Solution: IAC Boeing 737-700QC with secure digital satcom,
a palletized casualty evacuation kit and a palletized VIP seating kit.
Make the 737 availabile to support other members of the Nordic Plus group for troop rotations, medevacs and non-vehiclular cargo airlift in return for dedicated vehicle/bulk cargo airlift missions by Swedish/Norwegain C-130H's (presently being upgraded) and Finnish C-295's, and access to SALIS AN-124 missions from members Sweden, Finland & Norway - maybe once/twice a year other than a crisis deplyment. Offer the 737 to the UN and EU for similar missions, and for transporting delegations, on a cash-payment basis. When Sweden and Finland join the NATO SAC C-17 program early next year, they extend joint access to C-17 missions for Ireland if required.
In other words, the IAC's 737 will fly regularly, moving Irish, Swedish, Finish and Norwegian troops and cargo around Europe, Africa and the Mideast, while Nordic C-130's and C-295's do the same with Irish cargo and the odd RW packet. When big moves come along in conjuction with Nordic Plus training and ops - moving LAV's, etc., they go via SALIS AN-124's or SAC C-17's.
Too easy as my Canadian friends like to say, and could be in place by 2008. And yes, there is the likelihood of scheduling conflicts between MATS taskings and other taskings, but that's not difficult to work out. Most MATS missions will still be done by the Lear and the G-IV, which needs a mid-life upgrade, but still has a lot of life left in it. Similar G-IV's, recently upgraded, are good enough for the Swedish and Dutch governments. Finally, the palletized VIP fit for the 737QC would not be anything like a "flying palace". Several business class pallets and several convertible lounge pallets. No fancy bedroom, no gourmet galley, no marble bathrooms and no shower.