Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Military Drone Plan Grounded Amid Continuing Debate Over Fleet Needs

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 17 Aug, 2014 01:17 PM
    OTTAWA - The Canadian military's almost decade-long quest to buy unmanned aerial vehicles has been partly hung up by an internal debate about whether the air forces needs one — or two — different fleets of drones.
     
    A series of internal briefings, stretching back over two years, show that military planners were forced to go back to the drawing board in early 2013 after consultations determined what the country wants to accomplish with the remotely piloted planes might be too broad for just a single type of aircraft.
     
    That has flummoxed the air force, which had drawn up its requirements and operational concepts based on a single fleet.
     
    The military expects the drones to not only provide surveillance at home and abroad, but also carry weapons, such as Hellfire missiles, for precision strikes during overseas missions.
     
    One briefing, prepared for former associate defence minister Kerry-Lynne Findlay in early 2013, says five of eight companies that responded to a request for information in the fall of 2012 proposed a mixed fleet.
     
    The documents show the federal government was prepared to spend to up $3.4 billion to buy and service military drones over 20 years, but those numbers are being revisited because of the delay.
     
    National Defence's new military acquisition guide shows the government doesn't plan to spend any money on UAVs until 2019-20.
     
    With the political firestorm over the F-35 stealth fighter in mind, the Privy Council Office, the bureaucratic wing of Prime Minister Stephen Harper's office, told the military it wanted to see three viable, "fully costed options."
     
    The documents, obtained by The Canadian Press under access-to-information legislation, also show that the air force has tried and failed six times since 2005 to acquire either a permanent fleet of drones or temporary capability.
     
    It did succeed in getting a small fleet of Israeli-built Herons for operations in Kandahar, but that was only because the Manley commission, which examined the war in Afghanistan, made it a condition of Canada's continued involvement.
     
    The leased aircraft were handed to the Australians following the end of Canada's Kandahar deployment in 2011.
     
     
    Drones are becoming ubiquitous not only in many modern militaries, but commercially.
     
    The fact National Defence hasn't been able to get its act together shouldn't be surprising given the budget restraints imposed on it, said University of Ottawa defence analyst Philippe Lagasse.
     
    The air force's budget and expectations for replacement aircraft are often directed toward single fleets and having industry come back to say expectations don't match the technology must have thrown officials for a loop.
     
    "Should it be going faster? Sure," said Lagasse. "Is it easy to do? No."
     
    It is hard to move faster when National Defence has been saddled with so many competing projects and no overarching policy guidance, he added.
     
    A rewrite of the government's defence strategy has been in a holding pattern before cabinet since late last fall.
     
    The newly released documents underscore the importance of drone technology, describing it as a "critical enabler" without which surveillance of the country's vast expanses "will be less effective."
     
    The absence of unmanned aerial vehicles is also being keenly felt as the military looks at other nations and sees what it could be doing — especially on the domestic front where it has been called upon to deal with the aftermath of floods and storms.
     
    "Had a (UAV) capability existed it would have been utilized in most, if not all, recent natural disasters," said an April 2013 slide presentation drawn up by the project management office.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Aboriginal Women suffer disproportionately from violence, says RCMP

    Aboriginal Women suffer disproportionately from violence, says RCMP
    An RCMP report has put forth a shocking disproportionate number of female aboriginals being victims of violent deaths as compared to non-natives. The report also mentions that police have solved cases involving both groups at almost a similar rate.

    Aboriginal Women suffer disproportionately from violence, says RCMP

    Jason Kenney to introduce new Temporary Foreign Worker rules: report

    Jason Kenney to introduce new Temporary Foreign Worker rules: report
    Federal Employment minister Jason Kenney will be brining in at least two new rules pertaining to businesses that want to hire temporary foreign workers, according to a CBC report. 

    Jason Kenney to introduce new Temporary Foreign Worker rules: report

    RCMP cancels Amber Alert after locating Alberta girls

    RCMP cancels Amber Alert after locating Alberta girls
    The mother of two Alberta sisters who abducted them is in custody and the girls are now safe.

    RCMP cancels Amber Alert after locating Alberta girls

    Free, online textbooks developed for skills training

    Free, online textbooks developed for skills training
    British Columbia is now developing 20 open, online textbooks specifically for post-secondary skills training and technical programs.

    Free, online textbooks developed for skills training

    RCMP issues Amber alert for Alberta sisters

    RCMP issues Amber alert for Alberta sisters
    The RCMP has issued an Amber alert after the trio were spotted in BC.

    RCMP issues Amber alert for Alberta sisters

    Female student told shorts inappropriate, distract classmates and teachers

    Female student told shorts inappropriate, distract classmates and teachers
    A 13-year-old female from Nova Scotia is facing detention after school administers said her jeans shorts were too short.

    Female student told shorts inappropriate, distract classmates and teachers