Dilandu wrote:Hm, i actually forgot about the second-rate battleships on the Pacific... so, the RN would have something like 13 to 8. But with Mediterranian under French control, and without Panama Channel it took a good part of a year to circumnavigate back to Atlantic, and it may not worth the risk - to leave the Indian Ocean unprotected (and if something happened to Idnia - like french-inspired full-scale rebellion - the United Kingdom would be in Really Bad Position)
None too sure of that estimate, Dilandu.
Unlike the Baltic Fleet, the Brits had an entire chain of coaling stations and they were accustomed to trans-oceanic deployments. Moreover, USS Oregon steamed from San Francisco to Florida, around the tip of S. America (distance 16,000 miles) in just 36 days for the Spanish-American War in (by the strangest coincidence) none other than the year of 1898. Near as I can calculate it, from Hong Kong to Portsmouth around the Cape of Good Hope is only about 13,500 nautical miles (15,470 statute miles), or roughly 96% of the same distance, and I'm pretty sure the Royal Navy would have been able to steam as expeditiously as the (then) much less experienced USN. (In addition, Oregon was designed as a short-legged, low-endruance coast-defense battleship, so the British battleships were probably longer-legged and considerably better seaboats than she was. HMS Centurion, I know, was designed for 6,000 miles, whereas Oregon's designed cruising radius was only about 4,000.) So it would be more like 34 days than "a good part of a year." That would mean the RN could call in its reserves from overseas a lot more quickly than you're assuming . . . and the French would know it. That might, ah . . . mitigate their enthusiasm for water sports in the Med. For that matter, assuming the French preparations took a couple of weeks and the RN got wind of them, the battleships could be close to half way home before the French could launch an attack. In fact, assuming the attack was preceded by a period of worsening tensions (which I think would almost have to be the case for something this drastic to actually happen), they might well already be in European waters (even without using the Suez Canal en route) by the time the balloon went up.
That sort of ability to redeploy rapidly is one of the things I was getting at when I pointed out the huge advantages the RN's unsurpassed worldwide deployment stance gave it. It's sort of like the difference between the US and the rest of NATO today. The US military has the logistic reach to support not only itself but its allies at immense distances; at this moment in time, no one else in the world does. The Brits in the 1880s-1890s had that same unique level of ability to deploy naval assets
As for bad things happening in the overseas battleships' absence, I doubt it would have been much of a problem. Bringing in the battleships wouldn't necessarily require the Brits to withdraw any of their cruisers and/or lighter units from those distant stations, so I doubt it would leave them any more exposed to a "French-inspired, full-scale rebellion" in India or anywhere else than they'd have been if the battleships had been left on the distant stations. Things might get a little interesting in places like the China Sea, but unless the French were prepared to significantly reinforce their own fleet in the Far East (which would mean reductions in the force available for this Exciting Mediterranean Adventure of yours ), I doubt the Empire would be especially exposed to danger by recalling the second-class battleships. On the other hand, those same second-class battleships would be pretty capable of holding their own against their French counterparts, I think.