History:
Part II (1904-1921):
1904: The nationalist Unie (Union) Party gains a majority in parliament and appoints an outspoken, albeit charismatic, former Minister of State named I Nyoman Antara as prime minister. Antara is passionately devoted to making Nusantara safe and secure from “foreign adventuring” as he calls it and his government would soon embarks on a massive expansion of the military, particularly the Navy, by the end of the decade.
1905: The islands of the Celebes are formally annexed by Nusantara after decades of the latter’s involvement in the affairs of the native groups – including interventions in several inter-tribal wars. This was the last major territorial acquisition which created the nation familiar today.
The overwhelming Japanese victory in the Russo-Japanese War over the Russian Empire makes them the dominate power in the region – although this fact is slow to catch on in the West. Prime Minister Antara, however, recognizes the potential threat to Nusantara immediately and along with his political ally and close friend, Navy Minister Guus van der Waal, creates an ambitious plan to expand the Navy’s capabilities which is presented to Parliament by the fall of the year. The Naval Act of 1905 is passed by a significant majority in the Parliament. The Act calls for the addition of two battleships, two armored cruisers, six protected cruisers and twelve destroyers. In addition, the Act calls for the expansion of both the Surabaya and Tanjung Priok Navy Yards to allow the new ships to be built locally as part of an overall effort to reduce and eventually eliminate any need for foreign sources to supply ships or armament. This expansion plan would delay any new construction until early 1907.
1906: With the commissioning of HMS
Dreadnought in December the Royal Navy turned the naval world on its head – effectively rendering any existing battleship obsolete – including those of Britain herself. Within six years thirteen other nations (including Nusantara) were either building dreadnoughts or had contracted to have them built, with the resulting naval arms races between Britain and Germany and the major South American countries of Brazil, Chile, and Argentina, being particularly fierce.
1907: First significant oil strikes in Nusantara mark the beginning of a new and highly profitable industry for the country. A state-owned company; Nusantara Nationale Olie (NNO) was chartered to administrate and expand the new industry. NNO’s monopoly was broken four years later by a private company; Djoyosuroto-Visser, in April of 1911.
The battleships
Toba and
Dieng, scheduled to be laid down in Surabaya and Tanjung Priok in the spring of 1907, were postponed in light of
Dreadnought’s launch the previous year as the Navy Ministry re-evaluated their plans. A complete redesign was not feasible due to time constraints, but the existing design was heavily modified with input sought from the three countries actively building dreadnoughts; Britain, Germany, and the US. The result was a semi-dreadnought design with a mishmash of features that nevertheless proved to be successful in every respect save speed and maneuverability. The ships were finally laid down by mid-1908, but unfortunately, due to their protracted build times, were still obsolete when they commissioned in 1912-13. Meanwhile, construction of the armored cruisers
Bengkulu and
Gorontalo begins. One ship was contracted out each to the private yards of Guret Shipwrights and Berlage en Prawiro. Both had been laid down by late summer. In addition, the Navy Ministry also began researching foreign submarine designs, primarily British and American. In April of the following year, a single US C-class submarine is ordered as an evaluation and training boat.
1908: Construction of the new protected cruisers (
Mamberamo class), as well as the class of modern turbine-driven destroyers (
Saffier class) called for by the 1905 Naval Act begins. Most of these ships are built by private shipyards throughout Nusantara – for many of these firms these vessels were their first naval contracts.
1909: The first Nusantara submarine; KNS
Istinggar, is shipped from the US and commissions into the Navy in December. Over the next few months the boat is put through her paces and both the Navy Ministry and the Admiralty were very impressed with her performance, and in April of 1910 orders were placed for two improved D-class boats from Electric Boat Company which commissioned as the
Pandat class by late 1911. These new boats marked the beginning of a period of the Nusantara Navy paralleling US submarine development – including building US-designed submarines under license in Nusantara – that continued into the early 1930’s.
1910: With the
Toba class battleships still under construction, the Navy Ministry was becoming increasingly aware that the new ships would be effectively obsolete when completed, so the decision was made to introduce a new Naval Act to authorize a class of “dreadnought” battleships.
Almost immediately, intense debate broke out over the proposed class. The Procurement Board was split not only on the desired specifications for the new ships but also whether to contract them out to a foreign shipyard or build them locally – which would require another expensive expansion of existing shipyards. Finally in June Navy Minister van der Waal stepped in and forced a decision – the Board would set final specifications no later than the end of September before seeking design proposals abroad. When those specifications are released it had also been decided that a group of five ships would be needed and that the class ship would be built by the winner of the contract with the rest built in Nusantaran yards. By mid October, design proposals had been submitted by six shipbuilding firms in Germany, the UK, and the United States. The Board debated for nearly six months before reaching a decision and selecting Germaniawerft’s Project 733 design in early April of 1911.
Meanwhile, a complete fleet-wide ship type reclassification occurs within the KNM. Many ships, mostly cruisers and torpedoboats are re-designated under the new system which, with occasional updates, is still used today by the Nusantara Republic Navy.
1911:
Indragiri, the sixth member and final member of the
Mamberamo class, is launched. When she commissioned in the fall of 1912, she joined
Mamberamo, Kahayan, Pulau, Musi, and
Batang Hari, as the first Nusantaran warships fitted with steam turbines – using British Parsons designs built under license. Originally rated as protected cruisers, these ships were re-classed as light cruisers while building and as was commonplace at the time, the guns for these ships were foreign-sourced – specifically from Krupp in Germany with whom the Nusantara government had a good working relationship originally established with the earlier
Cipinang class ships.
Meanwhile, after signing the contract for the first new battleships with Germaniawerft in May of 1911, construction of the class ship – tentatively called the
Rinjani – was delayed another three months while the Navy and Finance Ministries argued over funding for the new ships. Finally, PM Antara forced a compromise allowing the bill to be presented to Parliament, which was passed in September. It was during that time that Germaniawerft made final changes to the design while Krupp began building the first of a projected forty-eight 343mm (13.5”) guns designed especially for these ships.
1912:
Rinjani is finally laid down in the Germaniawerft yards in Kiel, Germany, in March. Her projected completion time was twenty-eight months, which would prove to be optimistic. In Nusantara, Rinjani’s first sister-ships;
Kerinci and
Merbabu were laid down in the Surabaya Navy Yard in July and October respectively.
Talakmau and
Sindoro, the fourth and fifth ships of this class were delayed until either slipways became available at Surabaya or the still under construction 200 meter, 25,000 ton dry-dock in Tanjung Priok was completed.
In early December, KNS
Amethist, the last of the twelve new turbine-driven
Saffier class destroyers, is commissioned. These were the first Nusantaran ships to use exclusively oil-fired boilers and were very successful as well as long-lived, three;
Robijn (D-29),
Ebbehout (D-34), and
Groen (D-37) surviving to serve during WWII.
1913: The completed dry-dock at the Tanjung Priok Navy Yard allowed construction of the fourth
Rinjani class ship;
Talakmau, to begin. Her keel was laid in September. The final ship in the class;
Sindoro was laid down the following January after
Kerinci was launched in late November.
1914: The conflict later known as the Great War breaks out with the June assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand – heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary – in Sarajevo. By August all the major powers of Europe had been pulled into the conflict and the warships under construction for foreign nations by Britain, Germany, and France were either abandoned in favor of more pressing wartime projects or seized to prevent their use by an enemy state.
This was the fate of the
Rinjani. She had launched slightly behind schedule in August of 1913 and as a result was still fitting out when the British Royal Navy established a blockade of Germany a year later and thus was trapped in Kiel. As the battleship was nearly complete including the installation of her main armament, this resulted in the German government seizing the ship for use by the Imperial German Navy and she commissioned into the Kaiserliche Marine in February of 1915 as SMS
Weissenburg. Back in Batavia, the Antara Government was furious of course, but there was realistically little they could do. The situation worsened when Krupp advised that due to the blockade they would be unable to ship any additional guns or ammunition ordered for the ships building in Nusantara beyond what was already delivered or en route. This meant there would be enough guns available to complete
Kerinci and
Merbabu but not
Talakmau or
Sindoro. Construction was halted on the latter two ships in mid September pending a decision on their disposition.
1915: The Koninklijke Nusantara Luchtmacht (Royal Nusantara Air Force) is created by act of Parliament in January and formally established March 11th. Its initial roster of aircraft is somewhat “eclectic” and includes British Airco DH.2’s, French Voisin III’s, and even a pair of American Curtis Model H-4 flying boats. The first KNLu airbase is established early the following year outside the city of Malang.
Both completed members of the re-named
Kerinci class commissioned during 1915,
Kerinci in late April and
Merbabu in mid July.
Talakmau and
Sindoro had been canceled the previous November and the latter was scrapped on the slipway beginning in January, but
Talakmau was close enough to being launched to warrant consideration of converting her to another use. Over the next several months the Navy Ministry and the Admiralty debated. In May of 1915 the decision was made to convert the ship to a hybrid battleship/aircraft carrier (similar in concept to the British
Furious when first commissioned). Work resumed in late September and the ship – renamed
Havik after the goshawks found in the Celebes islands – was launched in April of 1916.
1916: The Antara Government proposes the Naval Act of 1916, which called for a second class of dreadnoughts, a pair of battlecruisers, additional destroyers and submarines, as well as establishing a new naval base at Medan and three naval stations; one each in Borneo, the Celebes, and Timor. However, when the Act was introduced into Parliament, the members of the opposition parties balked at the projected costs, which would have tripled the naval budget. Combined with the ongoing Great War raging in Europe which had already seen a number of campaigns and naval actions in the Pacific – including an Australian invasion of German New Guinea – this set off a firestorm of debate which dragged on for months, with Antara and the Unie Party increasingly seen as warmongering expansionists.
The situation continued to worsen until finally it culminated in the June 9th assassination of Prime Minister Antara and four other high-ranking officials while on a state visit to the newly established Malang Airbase. Quickly capitalizing on the tragedy (or opportunity depending on one’s loyalties) the opposition Kamerdikan and Sociaal Progressief (Social Progressive) Parties formed a coalition government under Prime Minister Maarten Suratinoyo, who moved quickly to kill the 1916 Naval Act which enraged the remaining prominent hardliners in Parliament, but was otherwise widely supported.
The year concluded on a sour note as well. In early November, the cruiser KNS
Tor (CL-18) was sunk by the Japanese armored cruiser
Chikuma off Australia when the Japanese ship mistook the Nusantara vessel for a German raider. Although the Japanese government insisted the incident was an unfortunate accident and no malice was intended, in the political chaos following the Antara assassination the situation threatened to spiral out of control. Britain, caught in the middle (Japan an ally and Nusantara a long-time trading partner), tried to smooth things over diplomatically with little success. The Netherlands forced a solution by invoking the seldom-used provision in the Nusantaran constitution allowing them oversight of foreign policy. They re-imposed Nusantara’s neutrality in exchange for a formal apology and restitution from Japan. Thus the crisis which had come at a critical time for the Allies was averted – but relations between Nusantara and Japan never really recovered.
1917: PM Suratinoyo continues to slash military spending across the board. The only naval programs to continue relatively unaffected were the
Havik conversion and the submarine program. Overseas, the United States declares war on Germany in April. By the summer of 1918 American servicemen were arriving in Europe at the rate of 10,000 a day.
1918: In late January,
Havik is commissioned. She is an odd-looking ship, resembling her half-sisters retaining the forward and amidships 343mm twin turret, but with a flying off deck, handling cranes, and aircraft hangers located aft of the redesigned superstructure. Many in the Admiralty wondered about this strange vessel and what use she was to the navy as initially this hybrid carrier carried no aircraft due to spending cuts. She would finally receive her first complement of planes (initially surplus Sopwith Camel 2F.1’s) about six months later.
In Europe, the defeat of the final major German offensive by the Allies in mid-July marked the beginning of the end for the Central Powers. On November 11, 1918, an armistice was in place ending the fighting in Europe which remained in place until the Treaty of Versailles was signed on June 28th of 1919 officially ending the Great War.
1919: The Koninklijke Nusantara Kustwacht (Royal Nusantara Coast Guard) is established on February 7th. The organization replaces the Nusantara Maritime Revenue Agency and to date is the last new service branch to be added to the country’s military. The KNK inherited the previous service’s cutters and support vessels, most of which were built in the 1890’s and are now outdated. It will be several years before the issue of replacement ships is taken up by the still cost-conscious Parliament, however.
1920: As a condition of the German surrender and provisions of the Versailles Treaty, a few warships were portioned out to the Allies as reparations. SMS
Weissenburg was one of the few German capital ships not interned at Scapa Flow and as such was to be ceded to the Allies. Originally allotted to the US, the ship was returned to Nusantara following a formal request from the latter leading to negotiations between the two governments in May. After inspection and repairs, the battleship was commissioned into the Nusantara Navy under her original name of
Rinjani in early August becoming one of only two battleships seized at the outbreak of the Great War which returned to active service with their original owners – the other being the Chilean dreadnought
Almirante Latorre (ex-HMS
Canada).
1921: In the United States, the Harding Administration calls a disarmament conference in Washington DC in late November to try and curb the new postwar naval arms race between the former wartime allies. Participants included the US as host country, the UK, Japan, France and Italy. Signed on February 6, 1922, the Washington Naval Treaty limited the construction of capital ships as well as establishing tonnage limits as well as what ships had to be scrapped to comply with the treaty and when existing ships could be replaced.
In Nusantara, the conference was watched with great interest, and although not a participant, the county was directly effected by Japanese, and to a lesser extent by American and British, naval policy and strategic planning – especially in the event of any future conflict in the Pacific. Long-range planners in the Navy Ministry saw a golden opportunity to achieve parity or near-parity with their most likely opponent – Japan – and began drawing up plans to make that a reality.
Warships: 1904-1921
I. Capital Ships
Toba class semi-dreadnoughts:
Originally intended to be an improved
Marapi with a heavier secondary battery, the
Toba class was originally slated to be laid down during 1907, but was delayed after the launch of
Dreadnought in 1906 led to an extensive, albeit not complete, redesign. Design assistance was sought from Britain, Germany, and the US with the inevitable result of the final plans having features of all three nations’ ships. This delayed the start of construction until 1908 and combined with the lengthy build time meant the new battleships were obsolete before they could even put to sea.
Despite this, when the ships finally commissioned they proved to be highly successful, although they never reached their design speed of 19 knots and maneuvered poorly due to their single rudder. These flaws notwithstanding, they were excellent sea-boats and stable gun platforms. This was borne out by the
Toba riding out the 1927 storm that sank the cruiser
Batang Hari and damaged several other ships in the formation unscathed – she even drew alongside the stricken cruiser in the violently rough water and took off survivors.
Dieng, meanwhile, took the gunnery proficiency award four times over her career – a testament not only to her crew’s superb training and accuracy but also the ship’s inherent stability.
Both ships were given a modest refit in 1916 where their bridges were enlarged and two additional 12-pounder (3”) guns were installed on each main turret roof. They were otherwise unchanged for the next eight years.
After WWI, the pair continued in front-line service despite being thoroughly obsolete by this point until, in a controversial decision, the Admiralty chose to modernize both ships.
Dieng entered drydock in February of 1924,
Toba four months later. When they re-commissioned in 1925 they had changed considerably in appearance. They were given twelve new oil-fired boilers built by Herkenhoff en Zonen (Herkenhoff & Sons) replacing the old SKR coal-burning units which required new, more efficient uptakes and funnels. The submerged torpedo tubes were removed, the upper superstructure and masts were replaced and the 4” casemate guns were replaced with twelve British QF 4-inch Mk V HA guns built under license by the Nationale Bewapeningswerken (National Armament Works) which had been established in early 1924. The
Toba class were thus among the first Nusantaran warships fitted with duel-purpose guns.
After rejoining the fleet, the battleships continued in front-line service for another seven years before being decommissioned in 1931. They had remained as popular with their crews as ever so when two years later they were to be sold off and scrapped, there was such an uproar from their former officers and crew to spare at least one of the ships for the Museum of Naval History that the Navy Ministry designated
Toba for that role while
Dieng went to the breakers by the end of 1934.
Toba was moved to Teluk Bayur by December of 1933 where she can be seen today. Last refurbished in 2015, she remains a popular attraction and is the only surviving semi-dreadnought in the world and along with the Imperial Japanese Navy’s
Mikasa – Admiral Togo’s flagship at the Battle of Tsushima – the only remaining example of the pre-dreadnought battleship.
In class: (2)
Toba, Dieng
Built: 1908-1913
In commission: 1912-1931
Displacement: 18,160 ts normal, 19,415 ts full load
Dimensions: Length (o/a) 150.0m, length (w/l) 147.0m, beam 26.0m, draft 8.5m
Propulsion: 3-shaft, 3 x SKR 4-cyl vertical triple expansion engines, 14 x SKR boilers; 18,420 ihp
Performance: 19.0 knots (design), 18.25 knots (actual)
Range: 9,000 nm at 10 knots
Armor: Krupp cemented armor. Belt 279mm tapering to 127mm ends, deck 51-76mm, main turrets 229-305mm, main barbettes 254mm, secondary turrets 178-254mm, secondary barbettes 229mm, casemates 127mm, forward conning tower 254mm, aft conning tower 152mm
Armament: 4 (2 x 2) 12”/45 Mk X, 8 (4 x 2) 10”/45 Mk VII, 14 x QF 4”/40 Mk III, 8 x QF 12-pdr Mk II, 4 x 450mm torpedo tubes (2 port, 2 starboard submerged)
Crew: 878-935
Next up: Dreadnoughts!
Cheers!
Stealthjester