Close X
Friday, October 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada Not Required To Provide Minimum Number Of Jets To NATO: Report

The Canadian Press, 04 Aug, 2016 12:00 PM
  • Canada Not Required To Provide Minimum Number Of Jets To NATO: Report
OTTAWA — Canada is not required to provide a certain number of fighter jets to NATO, says a Defence Department report that's raising fresh questions about the Liberal government's rush to buy a new warplane.
 
The report, published in June 2014 by the research arm of National Defence, says that while Canada supports NATO and contributes aircraft and other military assets when possible, "there is no hard minimum requirement for the NATO commitment."
 
That means the only actual requirement Canada must meet in terms of providing fighter jets is its obligation to defend North America along with the U.S.
 
The government has repeatedly stated in recent months that the military does not have enough CF-18s to both defend North America and fulfil its obligations to NATO. It says that is why a new plane is needed sooner rather than later.
 
But neither the government nor the Defence Department have said how many jets Canada actually needs, saying that to reveal the numbers would jeopardize national security.
 
The comments have coincided with the Liberals backing away from their election promise to hold a competition to replace Canada's aging CF-18s. Critics have accused the Liberals of manufacturing a crisis to justify buying a new jet other than the F-35 stealth fighter without a competition.
 
While it's true NATO does not have a set minimum requirement for committing fighters, Canada nonetheless regularly commits a number of airframes to the alliance, said National Defence spokesman Daniel Le Bouthillier.
 
"This number can vary and is based on NATO defence planning targets that we strive to meet as strong, reliable members of the alliance," Le Bouthillier said in an email.
 
"Our priority is to ensure that the alliance remains modern, flexible and agile to face the threats of today and tomorrow."
 
During last month's NATO leaders' summit in Poland, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said that in addition to taking leadership of a battle group in Latvia, Canada would send up to six CF-18s to Europe in the coming months to help patrol allied airspace.
 
 
The Defence Research and Development Canada report suggests that a maximum of 36 aircraft are required to be operational at any time to help defend North America, and that "anything beyond this number is in excess of the current requirement."
 
Those planes don't all have to be on high alert waiting for an attack, the report says. Some can be involved in training or NATO operations, and would be called back if required.
 
Canada currently has 77 CF-18s, but Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan has said only about half of them are operational at any given time. The report confirms those numbers, but also says the military can make do with 65 fighter jets.
 
Defence analyst David Perry of the Canadian Global Affairs Institute said the report may not shoot down the government's arguments for rushing to replace the CF-18s, "but it certainly points out the fact that a lot of this is very ill-defined."
 
"All of this makes it pretty hard to follow what the government is saying because they can't actually talk about the numbers, which are at the root of how they're defining this problem."
 
The Liberals promised during last year's election that they would hold an open competition to replace the CF-18s. But they also promised not to buy the F-35, creating a potential legal situation should the government be seen to be discriminating against the stealth fighter.
 
The U.S. air force declared this week that the F-35A, the version the previous Conservative government had planned to buy, was ready for combat.
 
Postmedia reported in June that the government was considering whether to use an exemption in federal procurement laws to buy Boeing Super Hornets as an "interim" measure to address the capability gap. That would let it sole-source the planes without fear of a lawsuit.
 
While the government insists no decision has been made, it says replacements are needed fast and has refused to commit to a competition. It launched consultations with industry last month to determine a path forward, and an announcement is expected in the fall.

MORE National ARTICLES

Kamloops Senior Mauled To Death By Dog In Her Backyard, Coroner Investigating

Kamloops Senior Mauled To Death By Dog In Her Backyard, Coroner Investigating
Seventy-eight-year-old Kathleen Green was mauled to death at her home on the southern Interior reserve Saturday night by a dog that was tied up in the backyard.

Kamloops Senior Mauled To Death By Dog In Her Backyard, Coroner Investigating

'Bigger Than Thou': Awestruck Snowmobilers Won't Stop After 5 Avalanche Deaths

'Bigger Than Thou': Awestruck Snowmobilers Won't Stop After 5 Avalanche Deaths
The day after a colossal avalanche killed five snowmobilers in eastern British Columbia, Thea Pelletier climbed aboard her machine and returned to the backcountry wilderness.

'Bigger Than Thou': Awestruck Snowmobilers Won't Stop After 5 Avalanche Deaths

Two B.C. Byelections See Parties Field Testing Tactics Ahead Of 2017 Election

Premier Christy Clark's Liberals, the New Democrats and the Greens are knocking on doors and waving signs to court votes and field testing tactics and attitudes in advance of the provincial election 16 months away.

Two B.C. Byelections See Parties Field Testing Tactics Ahead Of 2017 Election

Longtime Mobster Rocco Zito, 87, Shot Dead In His Toronto Home

Longtime Mobster Rocco Zito, 87, Shot Dead In His Toronto Home
Police have said Zito was pronounced dead after suffering a gunshot wound in a house on Toronto's west end. They said officers tried to save the man's life.

Longtime Mobster Rocco Zito, 87, Shot Dead In His Toronto Home

Ex-Radio Star Jian Ghomeshi: From Obscurity To Fame To Infamy To...?

Ex-Radio Star Jian Ghomeshi: From Obscurity To Fame To Infamy To...?
On Monday, the courts will begin sorting out whether he engaged in consensual "rough sex," as Ghomeshi claims, or whether, as three women claim, he sexually assaulted them.

Ex-Radio Star Jian Ghomeshi: From Obscurity To Fame To Infamy To...?

Kejriwal opposes minimum qualification for auto-rickshaw licence

Kejriwal, who is in city since January 27 for naturopathy treatment at a private hospital, said he would soon write to union Road Transport Minister Nitin Gadkari to scrap the clause by amending the Act.

Kejriwal opposes minimum qualification for auto-rickshaw licence