Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Cost Of Iraq And Nato Reassurance Missions 'Classified' In Coming Budget: DND

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Apr, 2015 11:50 AM

    OTTAWA — Parliament may have approved a year-long extension to the country's combat mission in Iraq and Syria, but the Harper government is once again refusing to say how much it will cost taxpayers.

    Nor will it reveal the estimated pricetag for upcoming involvement in NATO's reassurance operations in eastern Europe.

    Late Tuesday, the federal Treasury Board tabled its reports on plans and priorities for the coming fiscal year, which is a rough guidebook to upcoming departmental spending.

    The costs of Operation Impact and Operation Reassurance are classified, according to National Defence.

    Dave Perry of the Canadian Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute says he's astonished.

    He says it is the first, and only, time since this form of Parliamentary reporting was created in 1996-97 that a cost estimate for an international operation was withheld because that information was deemed classified.

    "I have absolutely no clue why this information is being withheld, and I'm astounded that it is," said Perry, an expert on defence spending who has written several detailed analyses of the effects of Conservative government's spending cuts on the military.

    "I can't think of any reason why this information would — for the first time ever — now be considered classified and not releasable."

    New Democrat defence critic Jack Harris accused the government of not only keeping the public in the dark, but watchdogs such as the parliamentary budget office, which had a tough time compiling its own estimate on the war earlier this winter.

    "This looks like Mr. Harper wants a blank cheque for this war, with no one having access to the numbers," he said. "They've already refused the PBO access, now the public will be kept in the dark."

    A spokeswoman for Defence Minister Jason Kenney said she was unable to comment late Tuesday on the decision.

    The Liberals said it was unacceptable.

    "The only thing that is transparent about this government is the lengths it will go to stonewall the public,” said Liberal defence critic Joyce Murray. "There is simply no rationale, other than the desire to avoid scrutiny and accountability, that explains the decision to classify this information."

    The House of Commons approved a motion late Monday to extend the campaign against the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant for a year, and expand airstrikes into Syria.

    In Europe, Canada has sent a frigate to patrol with NATO's standing fleet, CF-18s for air policing over the Baltic and ground troops for land exercises with other allied nations. All of it is meant to show western solidarity in the face of Russia's annexation of Crimea.

    More deployments and training are expected this year.

    But it was over the cost of the mission in Iraq where the Conservatives fought a pitched battle with Opposition parties.

    Former defence minister Rob Nicholson stonewalled the accountability demands of the New Democrats and Liberals, who pointed out the Americans keep a running, publicly reported tab of their expenses.

    The wall of silence ended in early February with the appointment of Jason Kenney to the portfolio.

    He promptly released the estimated cost to the end of the fiscal year, which amounted to $122.5 million. Although Kenney warned at the time that the figure at the end of the fiscal year could very well be higher, depending on whether the mission was renewed.

    National Defence has also declared the revised estimates for that mission — and the one in eastern Europe — to be classified.

    It notes that authority to spend money on both missions will come through supplementary appropriations before Parliament, but given that an election is expected this fall it will likely be a year, or more, before those figures are tabled.

    The numbers add to a heightened level of secrecy surrounding both missions.

    Access to flight crews carrying out the bombing campaign in Iraq — and now Syria — is non-existent. The military claims the Kuwait government won't allow journalists on its air bases.

    Special forces, who are based in northern Iraq, do not allow media access. All information comes through tightly censored briefings at National Defence headquarters.

    The department also prohibits photographs that identify soldiers taking part in overseas operations, including troops who recently left for a training exercise in Eastern Europe.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New Brunswick Forecasts $477m Deficit, Hikes Gas Taxes, Cuts Teaching Jobs

    New Brunswick Forecasts $477m Deficit, Hikes Gas Taxes, Cuts Teaching Jobs
    FREDERICTON — New Brunswick's Liberal government has introduced an $8.6-billion budget that increases taxes for the wealthy, bumps up the price of fuel, promises to close some courthouses and cut nearly 250 teaching jobs.

    New Brunswick Forecasts $477m Deficit, Hikes Gas Taxes, Cuts Teaching Jobs

    Bring All Branches Of Government Under Information Law, Watchdog Urges

    Bring All Branches Of Government Under Information Law, Watchdog Urges
    OTTAWA — A federal watchdog says the Access to Information Act should be extended to all branches of government — including the offices that support Parliament and the courts.

    Bring All Branches Of Government Under Information Law, Watchdog Urges

    Tender Call Finally Issued In Decade-long Plan To Replace Military Search Planes

    Tender Call Finally Issued In Decade-long Plan To Replace Military Search Planes
    OTTAWA — The Harper government has issued a long-awaited call for tenders to replace Canada's aging fixed-wing search planes, more than a decade after the project was first proposed.

    Tender Call Finally Issued In Decade-long Plan To Replace Military Search Planes

    Murder Trial To Start Sept. 8 For Man Charged In 2012 Quebec Election Shooting

    Murder Trial To Start Sept. 8 For Man Charged In 2012 Quebec Election Shooting
    MONTREAL — The trial for the man charged in Quebec's 2012 election-night shooting has been scheduled to start on his 65th birthday.

    Murder Trial To Start Sept. 8 For Man Charged In 2012 Quebec Election Shooting

    Canadian Investment In Renewable Energy Up 8 Per Cent In 2014, Sixth In World

    Canadian Investment In Renewable Energy Up 8 Per Cent In 2014, Sixth In World
    OTTAWA — A United Nations-sponsored report says Canada remained among the top 10 countries in the world for investment in renewable energy last year.

    Canadian Investment In Renewable Energy Up 8 Per Cent In 2014, Sixth In World

    Lack Of CFIA Meat Inspectors Is Putting People At Risk: Agriculture Union

    Lack Of CFIA Meat Inspectors Is Putting People At Risk: Agriculture Union
    EDMONTON — The union representing Canada's meat inspectors says there is a critical shortage of inspectors that is putting the safety of consumers at risk.

    Lack Of CFIA Meat Inspectors Is Putting People At Risk: Agriculture Union