Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Harjit Sajjan Launches Review To Decide Future Size And Shape Of Canada's Military

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Apr, 2016 12:49 PM
    OTTAWA — The Trudeau government has embarked on its long-awaited review on the future of the Canadian Armed Forces, something it hopes to have completed in time for the next federal budget cycle.
     
    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan laid out the process Wednesday and asked for public input.
     
    "We need to do a defence review to actually determine not only the capabilities that we need, but also help us with how they're going to be employed," Sajjan told a news conference.
     
    "The defence review is going to be the guiding principle for this.... It's not just about having the necessary tools. How you employ them is also critical as well."
     
    Consultations will take place between now and the end of July and will look at the future size of the military, the kinds of missions it will undertake and the type of equipment it will have.
     
    The Liberals already have a clear idea of where they believe the military fits within Canada's foreign policy framework, having promised during last fall's election campaign to end its bombing campaign against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant in favour of a new training-focused mission, as well as renewing the country's traditional focus on United Nations peacekeeping endeavours.
     
    That said, Canada has had a checkered history when it comes to laying out and following through on its defence priorities.
     
     
    Vice-Admiral Mark Norman, the commander of the Royal Canadian Navy, told a conference last week that the last defence strategy — cobbled together under the Harper Conservatives in 2008 — was more of an "in-house product" that reflected desires and opinions coming from within the government.
     
    The so-called Canada First defence strategy laid out an ambitious wish list of equipment to be purchased, most of which ended up becoming either unaffordable within a year of the plan being announced or stuck in a moribund procurement system.
     
    Prior to that, the last attempt to fashion a defence strategy came in 1994, when the Chretien government wrote a full-fledged white paper, most of it aimed at slashing spending and reducing the ranks.
     
    It mandated a cut in the number of full-time members to 60,000, a reduction in reservists to 23,000 and the wholesale streamlining of National Defence headquarters.
     
    Two decades later, Justin Trudeau's Liberals promised a "leaner, more agile" military and to follow through on reductions at DND.
     
     
    The 1994 white paper also promised to replace the air force's Sea King helicopters and the navy's aging supply ships — purchases that still haven't been completed.
     
    Before that, the Mulroney government in 1987 produced a white paper that called for, among other things, acquiring nuclear submarines to patrol under Arctic ice. The end of the Cold War two years later and massive defence cuts that were part of the so-called "peace dividend" left many of those plans in tatters.
     
    Therein lies the lesson, say defence analysts.
     
    Retired colonel George Petrolekas of the Conference of Defence Associations Institute said the Trudeau government has not defined what it considers to be affordable.
     
    Until it does, the public and the defence community will be spinning their wheels on a whole series of good ideas that could potentially go nowhere, he warned.
     
    "I just think we're throwing darts against the wall to see what sticks," Petrolekas said. "If it is not wrapped within a fiscal framework and fiscal wherewithal, it means nothing."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Tata Steel To Sell U.K. Plants: Crisis As Threat Of 40000 Job Losses Looms

    Tata Steel To Sell U.K. Plants: Crisis As Threat Of 40000 Job Losses Looms
    Prime Minister David Cameron held a crisis meeting at 10 Downing St., and said the government would do "everything it can" to keep steelmaking in Britain.

    Tata Steel To Sell U.K. Plants: Crisis As Threat Of 40000 Job Losses Looms

    Winnipeg Man Creates Social Media Accounts With Real Police Officer's Name, Busted

      Police say they received multiple complaints from across North America about a police officer inappropriately using social media and other online forums.

    Winnipeg Man Creates Social Media Accounts With Real Police Officer's Name, Busted

    Aggravated Sex-Assault Conviction Upheld For Ottawa Man Who Hid HIV-Positive Status

    Aggravated Sex-Assault Conviction Upheld For Ottawa Man Who Hid HIV-Positive Status
    In a ruling this week, Ontario's top court upheld the December 2012 jury conviction against Steven Boone, who argued the complainants would have had sex with him anyway.

    Aggravated Sex-Assault Conviction Upheld For Ottawa Man Who Hid HIV-Positive Status

    Heather Rankin Goes Solo — And Enlists Rapper For Remake Of Tears For Fears Hit

    Heather Rankin Goes Solo — And Enlists Rapper For Remake Of Tears For Fears Hit
    It's an unlikely match — she's a petite traditional singer from small-town Cape Breton with tidy hair, and he's a sneaker-clad emcee who dons backwards hats and spits rhymes about his gritty Halifax suburb.

    Heather Rankin Goes Solo — And Enlists Rapper For Remake Of Tears For Fears Hit

    Nature Of Policing Makes It Ripe For Unprofessional Behaviour: Canada's Top Mountie Says

    Nature Of Policing Makes It Ripe For Unprofessional Behaviour: Canada's Top Mountie Says
    RCMP Commissioner Bob Paulson told members of the Vancouver Board of Trade on Thursday that harassment and bullying in the workplace is unacceptable.

    Nature Of Policing Makes It Ripe For Unprofessional Behaviour: Canada's Top Mountie Says

    Newfoundlanders Say Next Supreme Court Justice Should Come From Their Province

    Newfoundlanders Say Next Supreme Court Justice Should Come From Their Province
    The Supreme Court of Canada will soon have a vacancy, and the president of the Law Society of Newfoundland and Labrador says it's time the new justice came from her province.

    Newfoundlanders Say Next Supreme Court Justice Should Come From Their Province